summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 19:55:57 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 19:55:57 -0700
commit8365c9061af561d04c20a98549b5140d6e918161 (patch)
treecdc162912c1d8717959f38428aa7f520d18f8635
initial commit of ebook 31535HEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--31535-8.txt8583
-rw-r--r--31535-8.zipbin0 -> 158815 bytes
-rw-r--r--31535-h.zipbin0 -> 242504 bytes
-rw-r--r--31535-h/31535-h.htm10753
-rw-r--r--31535-h/images/cover.jpgbin0 -> 74348 bytes
-rw-r--r--31535.txt8583
-rw-r--r--31535.zipbin0 -> 158783 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
10 files changed, 27935 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/31535-8.txt b/31535-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9bca690
--- /dev/null
+++ b/31535-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,8583 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Monk of Cruta, by E. Phillips Oppenheim
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Monk of Cruta
+
+Author: E. Phillips Oppenheim
+
+Release Date: March 7, 2010 [EBook #31535]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MONK OF CRUTA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Alcina Hadwin, Suzanne Shell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+[Transcriber's note: All typographical errors have been corrected. All
+other inconsistencies in the text, including an unfinished sentence,
+have been left as is.]
+
+
+
+
+A MONK OF CRUTA
+
+BY
+
+E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM,
+
+_Author of "The Peer and the Woman," "A Millionaire of Yesterday,"
+Etc., Etc._
+
+ NEW YORK:
+ J. S. OGILVIE PUBLISHING COMPANY,
+ 57 ROSE STREET.
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1894, BY
+ F. TENNYSON NEELY.
+
+
+
+
+A MONK OF CRUTA.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAP. PAGE
+
+ I. "THE BLACK-ROBED PHANTOM, 'DEATH'" 11
+
+ II. "THE NEW ART" 32
+
+ III. "THE DANCING GIRL" 39
+
+ IV. "ADREA'S DIARY" 47
+
+ V. "THE FAR-OFF MUTTERING OF THE STORM TO COME" 50
+
+ VI. "AN ASHEN GREY DELIGHT" 61
+
+ VII. "WHO ARE YOU, AND WHAT YOUR MISSION" 73
+
+ VIII. "I AM WEARY OF A HOPELESS LOVE" 80
+
+ IX. "AH! HOW FAIR MY WEAKNESS FINDS THEE" 91
+
+ X. "I AM BUT A SLAVE, AND YET I BID THEE COME" 104
+
+ XI. "ADREA'S DIARY" 114
+
+ XII. "WE ARE LIKE SHOOTING STARS, WHOSE MEETING IS THEIR RUIN" 122
+
+ XIII. "THE PATH THAT LEADS TO MADMEN'S KINGDOMS" 129
+
+ XIV. "THE POISON OF HONEY FLOWERS" 136
+
+ XV. "AND MOST OF ALL WOULD I FLY FROM THE CRUEL MADNESS OF LOVE" 144
+
+ XVI. "'TWIXT YOU AND ME A NOISOME SHADOW CAST" 154
+
+ XVII. "IF LOVE YOU CHOOSE, THEN LOVE SHALL BE YOUR RUIN" 159
+
+ XVIII. "SOFTLY GLIMMERING THROUGH THE LAURELS AT THE QUIET
+ EVENFALL" 166
+
+ XIX. "BLOOD CALLS ALOUD FOR BLOOD AND NOT FOR HANDS ENTWINED" 174
+
+ XX. "THE NEW, STRONG WINE OF LOVE" 180
+
+ XXI. "ADREA'S DIARY" 185
+
+ XXII. "OH! HEART OF STONE, YET FLESH TO ALL SAVE ME" 195
+
+ XXIII. "MY LIPS ARE CHARGED WITH TRUTH, AND JUSTICE BIDS ME SPEAK" 206
+
+ XXIV. "THE SHATTERED VASE OF LOVE'S MOST HOLY VOWS" 218
+
+ XXV. "A BECKONING VOICE FROM OUT A SHADOWY LAND" 224
+
+ XXVI. "LATE THOU COMEST, CRUEL THOU HAST BEEN" 232
+
+ XXVII. "GRIM FIGURES TRACED BY SORROW'S FIERY HAND" 241
+
+ XXVIII. "ADREA'S DIARY" 249
+
+ XXIX. "ADREA'S DIARY" 263
+
+ XXX. "ADREA'S DIARY" 275
+
+ XXXI. "ADREA'S DIARY" 280
+
+ XXXII. "THE LORD OF CRUTA" 291
+
+ XXXIII. "THE DAWN OF A SHORT, SWEET LIFE" 298
+
+ XXXIV. "A VOICE AND FIGURE FROM THE DISTANT PAST" 308
+
+ XXXV. "FROM OUT LIFE'S THUNDERS TO A STRANGE, SWEET WORLD" 322
+
+ XXXVI. "LOVE THAN DEATH ITSELF MORE STRONG" 329
+
+
+
+
+A MONK OF CRUTA.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+"THE BLACK-ROBED PHANTOM 'DEATH'"
+
+
+"Father Adrian!"
+
+"I am here!"
+
+"I saw the doctor talking with you aside! How long have I to live? He
+told you the truth! Repeat his words to me!"
+
+The tall, gaunt young priest drew nearer to the bedside, and shook his
+head with a slow, pitying gesture.
+
+"The time was short--short indeed. Yet, why should you fear? Your
+confession has been made! I myself have pronounced your absolution;
+the holy Church has granted to you her most holy sacrament."
+
+"Fear! Bah! I have no fear! It is a matter of calculation. Shall I see
+morning break?"
+
+"You may; but you will never see the mid-day sun."
+
+The dying man raised himself with a slow, painful movement, and
+pointed to the window.
+
+"Throw up the window."
+
+He was obeyed. A servant who had been sitting quietly in the shadows
+of the vast apartment, with his head buried in his hands, rose and did
+his master's bidding.
+
+"What hour is it?"
+
+"Three o'clock."
+
+"Gomez, strain your eyes seaward. Is there no light on the horizon?"
+
+"None! The storm has wrapped the earth in darkness. Listen!"
+
+A torrent of rain was swept against the streaming window pane, and a
+gust of wind shook the frame in its sockets. The watcher turned away
+from the window with a mute gesture of despair. No eye could pierce
+that black chaos. He sank again into his seat, and looked around
+shuddering. The high, vaulted chamber was lit by a pair of candles
+only, leaving the greater part of it in gloom. Grim, fantastic shadows
+lurked in the corners, and lay across the bare floor. Even the tall
+figure of the priest, on his knees before a rude wooden crucifix,
+seemed weird and ghostly. The heavy, mildewed bed-hangings shook
+and trembled in the draughts which filled the room, and the candles
+flickered and burnt low in their sockets. Gomez watched them with a
+sort of anxious fascination. His master's life was burning out,
+minute for minute, with those candles. Twenty-five years of constant
+companionship would be ended in a few brief hours. Gomez was not
+disposed to trouble much at this; but he bethought himself of a snug
+little abode in Piccadilly, where the discomforts now surrounding them
+were quite unknown. Surely, to die there would be a luxury compared
+with this. He began to feel personally aggrieved that his master
+should have chosen such an out-of-the-way hole to end his days in.
+Then came a rush of thought, and he was grave. He knew why! Yes! he
+knew why!
+
+The dying man lay quite still, almost as though his time were already
+come. Once he raised himself, and the feeble light flashed across a
+grey, haggard face and a pair of burning eyes. But his effort was
+only momentary. He sank back again, and lay there with his eyes half
+closed, and breathing softly. He was nursing his strength.
+
+One, two, three, four, five! The harsh clanging of a brazen clock
+somewhere in the building had penetrated to the chamber, followed by a
+deep, resonant bell. The man on the bed lifted his head.
+
+"How goes the storm?" he asked softly.
+
+Gomez stood up and faced the window.
+
+"The storm dies with the night, sir," he answered. "The wind has
+fallen."
+
+"When does day break?"
+
+Gomez looked at his watch.
+
+"In one hour, sir."
+
+"Stay by the window, Gomez, and let your eyes watch for the dawn."
+
+The priest frowned. "Surely the time has come when you should quit
+your hold on earthly things," he said quietly. "What matters the dawn!
+soon you will lose yourself in an everlasting sleep, and the dawn for
+you will be eternity. Take this crucifix, and pray with me."
+
+The dying man pushed it away with a gesture almost contemptuous.
+
+"Is there no light on the sea yet, Gomez?" he asked anxiously.
+
+Gomez leant forward till his face touched the window pane. He strained
+his eyes till they ached; but the darkness was impenetrable. Yet
+stay,--what was that? A feeble yellow light was glimmering far away
+in the heart of that great gulf of darkness. He held his breath, and
+watched it steadily. Then he turned round.
+
+"There is a light in the far distance, sir," he said. "I cannot tell
+what it may be, but there is a light."
+
+A wave of excitement passed over the strong, wasted features of the
+man upon the bed. He half raised himself, and his voice was almost
+firm.
+
+"Push my bed to the window," he ordered.
+
+The two men, priest and servant, bent all their strength to the task,
+and inch by inch they moved the great, creaking structure. When at
+last they had succeeded, and paused to take breath, the light in the
+distance had become stronger and more apparent. Together the three men
+watched it grow; master and servant, with breathless eagerness, the
+priest with a show of displeasure in his severe face. Suddenly Gomez
+gave a little cry.
+
+"The dawn!" he exclaimed, pointing to the north of the light. "Morning
+is breaking."
+
+Sure enough, a grey, pallid light was stealing down upon the water.
+The darkness was becoming a chaos of grey and black; of towering seas
+and low-lying clouds, with cold white streaks of light falling through
+them, and piercing the curtains of night. There was no vestige of
+colouring--nothing but cold grey and slate white. Yet the dawn moved
+on, and through it the yellow light in the distance gleamed larger and
+larger.
+
+"Hold me up," ordered the man on the bed. "Prop me up with pillows!"
+
+They did as he bade them, and for the first time his face was fully
+revealed in the straggling twilight. A flowing grey beard, still
+plentifully streaked with black, rested upon his chest; and the eyes,
+steadily fixed upon the window pane, were dark and undimmed. A long
+illness had wasted his fine features, but had detracted nothing from
+their strength and regularity of outline. His lips were closely
+set, and his expression, though painfully eager, was not otherwise
+displeasing. There was none of the fear of death there; nor was there
+anything of the passionless resignation of the man who has bidden
+farewell to life, and made his peace with God and man; nor, in
+those moments of watching, had his face any of the physical signs of
+approaching death.
+
+"Ah!"
+
+They started at the sharp, almost triumphant exclamation which had
+escaped from his white lips, and followed his long, quivering finger.
+Above that glimmering light was a faint, dim line of smoke, fading on
+the horizon.
+
+"It is a steamer, indeed," the priest said, with some interest. "She
+is making for the island."
+
+"When is the supply boat due?" Gomez asked.
+
+"Not for a fortnight," the priest answered; "it is not she, it is a
+stranger."
+
+There was no other word spoken. Soon the dawn, moving across the great
+waste of waters, pierced the dark background behind the steamer's
+light. The long trail of white, curdling foam in her track gleamed
+like a silver cleft in a dark gulf. The dim shape of her sails stole
+slowly into sight, and they could see that she was carrying a great
+weight of canvas. Then into the grey air, a rocket shot up like a
+brilliant meteor, and the sound of a gun came booming over the waters.
+
+"Can she make the bay?" Gomez asked suddenly. "Look at the surf."
+
+They all removed their eyes from the steamer, and fixed them nearer
+home. The darkness had rolled away, and the outlook, though a little
+uncertain in the misty morning light, was still visible. Right before
+the window, a little to the left, a great rocky hill, many hundreds
+of feet high, ran sheer down into the sea, and facing it on the right,
+was a lower range of rocks running out from the mainland. Inside the
+natural harbour thus formed, the sea was quiet enough; but at the
+entrance, a line of white breakers and huge ocean waves were leaping
+up against the base of the promontory, and dashing over the lower
+range of rocks. Beyond, the sea was wild and rough, and the steamer
+was often almost lost to sight in the hollow of the Waves.
+
+"Ah!"
+
+The faces of all three men underwent a sudden change. Three rockets,
+one after another, shot up into the sky from the top of the rocky
+hill, leaving a faint, violet glow overhead. The dying man set his
+teeth hard, and his eyes glistened.
+
+"Three rockets," he muttered. "What is the meaning of that signal,
+Father?" he asked.
+
+The priest looked downward, pityingly. "It is a warning that the
+entrance to the bay is unsafe," he answered. "Take comfort; it is
+the hand of God keeping from you those who would distract your dying
+thoughts from Heaven. Take comfort, and pray with me."
+
+He seemed strangely deaf to the priest's words, and made no movement
+or sign in response. Only he kept his eyes the more steadfastly
+fixed upon the steamer, now plainly visible. His face showed no
+disappointment. It seemed almost as though he might have seen across
+the grey sea, and heard the stern orders thundered out from a slim,
+motionless figure on the captain's bridge. "Right ahead, helmsman!
+Never mind the signal. There's fifty pounds for every man of you if we
+make the bay. It's not so bad as it looks! Back me up like brave lads,
+and I'll remember it all your lives!"
+
+Almost, too, he might have heard the answering cheer, for a faint
+smile parted his white lips as he saw the steamer ploughing her way
+heavily straight ahead, paying no heed to the warning signal.
+
+On she came. The priest and the servant started as they saw her
+intention, and a sharp ejaculation of surprise escaped from the
+former. Side by side, they watched the labouring vessel with strained
+eyes. Her hull and shape were now visible in the dim morning twilight,
+as she rose and fell upon the waves. It was evident that she was a
+large, handsome pleasure yacht, daintily but strongly built.
+
+Close up against the high, bare window the three watchers,
+unconsciously enough, formed a striking-looking group. The priest,
+tall, pale, and severe, stood in the shadow of the bed-curtains, an
+impressive and solemn figure in his dark, flowing robes, but with the
+impassibility of his features curiously disturbed. He, who had been
+preaching calm, was himself agitated. He had drawn a little on one
+side, so that the cold grey light should not fall upon his face and
+betray its twitching lips and quivering pallor; but if either of the
+men who shared his watch had thought to glance at him, the sickly
+candlelight would have shown at once what he was so anxious to
+conceal. It was little more than chance which had brought this man
+to die in his island monastery, and under his care; little more than
+chance which had revealed to him this wonderful secret. But the agony
+of those last few hours, and the gloomy words of the priest who leant
+over his bedside, had found their way in between the joints of the
+dying man's armour of secrecy. Word by word, the story had been
+wrested from him. In the cold and comfortless hour of death, the
+strong, worldly man felt his physical weakness loosen the iron bands
+of his will, and he became for a time almost like a child in the hands
+of the keen, swiftly-questioning priest. He had not found much comfort
+in the mumbled prayers and absolution, which were all he got in
+exchange for his life's secret,--and such a secret! He had not,
+indeed, noticed the fixed, far-away gaze in the priest's dark eyes as
+he knelt by the bedside; but his prayers, his faint words of comfort,
+had fallen like drops of ice upon his quickened desire to be brought
+a little nearer to that mysterious, shadowy essence of goodness which
+was all his mind could conceive of a God. It had seemed like a dead
+form of words, lifeless, hopeless, monotonous; and all that faint
+striving to attain to some knowledge of the truth--if indeed truth
+there was--had been crushed into ashes by it. As he had lived, so must
+he die, he told himself with some return of that philosophic quietude
+which had led him, stout-hearted and brave, through many dangers. And,
+at that moment when he had been striving to detach his thoughts from
+their vain task of conjuring up useless regrets, there had come what
+even now seemed to be the granting of his last passionate prayer. The
+man whom he had longed to see once more before his eyes were closed
+forever upon the world, with such a longing that his heart had grown
+sick and weary with the burden of it, had been brought as though by a
+miracle almost to his side. He knew as though by some strange instinct
+the measure of his strength. He had no fear of dying before his
+heart's dearest wish could be gratified. If only that fiercely
+labouring vessel succeeded in her brave struggle, he knew that there
+would be strength left to him to bear the shock of meeting, to bear
+even the shock of the tidings which could either sweeten his last few
+moments, or deepen the gloom of his passage into the unknown world.
+And so he lay there, with fixed, glazed eyes and shortened breath,
+watching and waiting.
+
+The supreme moment came; the steamer had reached the dangerous point,
+and the waves were breaking over her with such fury that more than
+once she vanished altogether from sight, only to reappear in a moment
+or two, quivering and trembling from stern to hull like a living
+creature. After all, the struggle was a brief one, though it seemed
+long to the watchers at the window. In less than ten minutes it
+was over; she had passed the line of breakers, and was in the
+comparatively smooth water of the bay, heading fast for the shore
+under leeway of the great wall of towering rocks, at the foot of which
+she seemed dwarfed almost into the semblance of a boy's toy vessel.
+Within a quarter of a mile from the shore, she anchored, and a boat
+was let down from her side.
+
+A new lease of life seemed to have come to the man on the bed. The
+morning sun had half emerged from a bank of angry purple-coloured
+clouds, and its faint slanting beams lay across the white coverlet of
+the bed, and upon his face. His eyes were bright and eager, and the
+death-like pallor seemed to have passed from his features. His voice,
+too, was firm and distinct.
+
+"Place my despatch-box upon the table here, Gomez," he ordered.
+
+Gomez left his seat by the window, and, opening a portmanteau, brought
+a small black box to the bedside. His master passed his hand over it,
+and drew it underneath the coverlet.
+
+"I am prepared," he murmured, half to himself. "Father, according to
+the physician's reckoning, how long have I to live?"
+
+"Barely an hour," answered the priest, without removing his eyes from
+the boat, whose progress he seemed to be scanning steadfastly. "Is
+your eternal future of so little moment to you," he went on in a tone
+of harsh severity, "that you can give your last thoughts, your last
+few moments, to affairs of this world? 'Tis an unholy death! Take this
+cross in your hands, and listen not to those whose coming will surely
+estrange you from heaven. Let the world take its own course, but lift
+your eyes and heart in prayer! Everlasting salvation, or everlasting
+doom, awaits you before yonder sun be set!"
+
+"I have no fear, Father," was the quiet reply. "What is, is; a few
+frantic prayers now could alter nothing, and, besides, my work on
+earth is not yet over. Speak to me no more of the end! Nothing that
+you or I could do now would bring me one step nearer heaven. Gomez,
+your eyes are good! Whom do you see in the boat?"
+
+Gomez answered without turning round from the window, "Mr. Paul is
+there, sir, steering!"
+
+"Thank God!"
+
+"There are others with him, sir!"
+
+"Others! Who?"
+
+"Strangers to me, sir. There is a man, a gentleman by his dress and
+appearance, and a child--a girl, I think. Two sailors from the yacht
+are rowing."
+
+The dying man knitted his brows, and his fingers convulsively clutched
+at the bed-clothes. He had lost something of that calm and effortless
+serenity which seemed to have fallen upon him since the safety of the
+steamer had been assured.
+
+"The boat is quite close, Gomez! Can you not describe the stranger?"
+
+"I can only see that he is thin, rather tall, and, I think, elderly,
+sir. He is very much wrapped up, as though he were an invalid."
+
+"Lift me up so that I can see them. Father Adrian will help you."
+
+The priest shook his head. "The effort would probably cost you your
+life," he said, "and it would be useless. Before you could see them
+the boat would be round the corner."
+
+"So near! God grant me strength! Gomez, give me a tablespoonful of the
+brandy!"
+
+Gomez moved silently to his side, and poured out the brandy.
+Afterwards his master closed his eyes, and there was an intense
+silence in the chamber--the deep, breathless silence of expectancy.
+
+The monastery itself, a small and deserted one, tenanted only by a
+few half-starved monks of one of the lower orders of the Church, was
+wrapped in a profound gloom. There was no sound from the half-ruined
+chapel or the long, empty corridors. The storm had ceased, and the
+casements no longer rattled in the wind. To the man who lay there,
+nursing his fast-ebbing strength, it seemed indeed like the silence
+before the one last tragedy of death, looming so black and so grim
+before him.
+
+It was broken at last. Away at the end of the corridor the faint sound
+of hurrying footsteps and subdued voices reached the ears of the three
+watchers. They came nearer and nearer, halting at last just outside
+the door. There was a knock, a quick, impetuous answer, and the
+visitors entered, ushered in by the priest, who had met them on the
+threshold.
+
+Of the two men, one advanced hastily with outstretched hand and
+pitying face to the bedside; the other moved only a step or two
+further into the room, and stood looking intently, yet without any
+salutation or form of recognition, at the dying man. The former, when
+he reached the bed, sank on his knees and took the white hand which
+lay upon the coverlet between his.
+
+"Father! My father! I would have given the world to have found you
+better. Tell me that it is not true what they say. You will pull round
+now that I have come!"
+
+There was no answer. The dying man did not even look into the handsome
+young face so close to his. His eyes, bright and unnaturally large,
+were rivetted upon the figure at the foot of the bed. His breath came
+quickly, and he was shivering; an inarticulate sort of moan came from
+his lips.
+
+"Father! you are agitated, and no wonder, to see him here. You had my
+letter preparing you; nothing that I could do would stop his coming."
+
+It was Gomez who answered, advancing out of the gloom: "There has been
+no letter."
+
+There was an instant's silence. Then the younger man rose up, pale
+as death. "God! what a fool I was to trust to mails in this
+out-of-the-way hole! Father! I shall never forgive myself. Blind idiot
+that I was, to bring him in like this."
+
+It seemed as if no one save he possessed the power of speech. There
+was a dead silence. He looked from one to another of the figures in
+that silent drama in fast-growing despair. The face of the man whom
+he had brought there revealed little, although in a certain way its
+expression was remarkable. The lips were parted in a slow,
+quiet smile, not in itself sardonic or cruel, although under the
+circumstances it seemed so, for it was difficult to associate any
+idea of mirth with the scene which was passing in that grim, gloomy
+chamber. Something of the awe inseparable from this close approach of
+death was visible in the faces of all the other watchers. Not so in
+his! It was the contrast which seemed so strange. He stood there, with
+his hands thrust deep into the pockets of his long travelling coat,
+returning the fixed, glazed stare of the dying man with a sort of
+indifferent good humour. Perhaps a very close observer might have
+detected a shade of mockery in those soft black eyes and faintly
+twitching lips, but the light in the room was too obscure for any one
+there to penetrate beneath the apparent indifference. It was he who
+broke that deep, tragic silence, and his voice, light and even gay,
+struck a strange note in that solemn chamber of death.
+
+"So you are dying, Martin, _mon ami_? How odd! If any one had told me
+one short month ago that I should have been here to watch your last
+moments, and start you on your journey to hell, bah! how mad I should
+have thought them. 'Tis a pleasure I never anticipated."
+
+His words seemed to dissolve the lethargy which his presence had cast
+over the dying man. He turned away towards the younger figure by his
+side.
+
+"How came he here?" he asked feebly.
+
+"Listen, and I will tell you," was the low reply. "I sought him first
+at Monaco, but he had not been heard of there for two years. Then I
+found traces of him at Algiers; and followed up the clue to Cairo,
+Athens, Syracuse, and Belgrade. It was at Constantinople I found
+him at last--an officer--actually an officer in the Turkish army;
+'Monsieur le Captaine,' my interpreter called him," the young man
+added, with a fine scorn in his raised voice. "Imagine it! Well,
+I gave him your letter, delivered the messages, and awaited his
+pleasure. He kept me waiting for two days before he vouchsafed
+one word of answer. On the third day he announced his intention of
+accompanying me here. Nothing that I could say made any difference.
+'His answer should be given to you in person, or not at all.' I
+wrote to you three days before we started; that letter you never had.
+Forgive me, father, for the shock! As for you," he continued, turning
+abruptly towards the motionless figure at the foot of the bed, "I have
+kept my word, and brought you here in safety, though no one in the
+world will ever know how near I came to breaking it, and throwing you
+into the Dardanelles. Ah! I was sorely tempted, I can tell you. Speak
+your answer, and go! This is no place for you to linger in."
+
+"Upon my word, you are courteous, very! But, my dear friend Martin,
+as this is to be our farewell, I must really see you a little more
+distinctly."
+
+For the first time, the man in the long overcoat changed his position,
+and came a little nearer to the bed. The movement showed him the
+priest, kneeling with closed eyes and uplifted hands before an iron
+crucifix.
+
+"Ah! we are not quite alone then, Martin, _cher ami_! the gentleman in
+the long robe appears to be listening."
+
+"He is as dead," answered the man on the bed slowly. "He is a monk;
+you can speak."
+
+He raised himself slightly on the bed. One hand remained grasping his
+despatch-box under the bed-clothes; the other was held by the young man
+who knelt by his side. His face was curiously changed; all the effect
+of his unlooked-for visitor's arrival seemed to have passed away. His
+eyes were bright and eager. His white lips were closely set and firm.
+
+"You can speak," he repeated.
+
+His visitor was leaning over the foot of the bed now, and the smile
+had quite gone, leaving his face cold and white. He spoke a little
+quicker than before.
+
+"Here is your answer, Martin de Vaux! You offer me a fortune, on
+condition that I give up to you on your deathbed the power by which I
+hold those whom you love, my slaves. Money is dear to me, as it is to
+most men, but I would die sooner than touch yours. Curse you, and
+your money, and your family! Not for all the gold that was ever coined
+would I yield up my power! My day will come, and may the evil spirit
+bring you tidings of it down into hell! Curse you, Martin de Vaux! Now
+you know my mind."
+
+The dying man was strangely calm. From under the bed-clothes came the
+faint sound of the opening and shutting of the despatch-box.
+
+"Yes, I know your mind," he repeated quietly. "You mean me to die with
+the torturing thought that I have left a poisonous reptile to suck
+the life and blood from those I love, and the honour from a grand old
+name. But I will not! We will take our next journey together, Victor."
+
+A sudden change had crept into his tone before the last sentence; and
+before it had died away, the priest and the man by the bedside had
+leaped to their feet in horror. He whom they had thought too weak to
+stir was sitting bolt upright in bed, his eyes blazing and his hand
+extended. There was a line of fire, a loud report, and then a single
+cry of agony. The man who had leaned over the foot of the bed lay on
+the ground just as he had fallen, shot dead through the heart, and a
+child, dark-skinned and thin, who had rushed in at the sound of the
+report, was sobbing passionately with her arms wound around him.
+Across the bed, still grasping the pistol, but with his hands hanging
+helplessly down, lay the man who had fired the shot. The effort had
+killed him.
+
+The priest was the first in the room to move. He slowly bent over both
+bodies, and then turned round to the other man.
+
+"Dead?" he asked, with a dry, choking gasp.
+
+"Both dead."
+
+The priest and his companion, shocked and unnerved, looked at one
+another in silence. The child's sobs grew louder, and the morning
+sunlight stole across the bare floor, and fell upon the white, still
+faces.
+
+The tragedy was over, and the seeds of another sown.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+"THE NEW ART"
+
+
+A tall, fair young man stood in the small alcove of Lady Swindon's
+drawing-room, with his eyes fixed upon the door. He was accurately
+dressed in the afternoon garb of a London man about town, and carried
+in his hand, or rather in his hands, for they were crossed behind him,
+that hall-mark of Western civilization--a well-brushed, immaculate
+silk hat. Neither in his clothes nor personal appearance was there any
+striking difference between him and the crowd of other young men who
+thronged the rooms, except perhaps that he was a trifle better made,
+and pleasanter to look at than most of them, and that the air of
+boredom, so apparent on most of their faces and in their manners, was
+in his case perfectly natural. As a matter of fact, he hated afternoon
+receptions, and was only waiting for a favourable opportunity to make
+his exit unnoticed.
+
+"Paul, my boy, you don't look happy," exclaimed a voice in his ear.
+
+Paul de Vaux turned upon the new-comer sharply. "Not likely to,
+Arthur. You know I hate all this sort of thing, and, as far as I can
+see, it's just a repetition of the usual performance--stale speeches,
+lionizing, gossip, and weak tea. I consider you've brought me here
+under false pretences. Where's the startling novelty you promised me?"
+
+"All in good time," was the cool reply. "You'll thank your stars
+you're here in a minute or two."
+
+Paul de Vaux looked at his brother incredulously. "Some sell of yours,
+I suppose," he remarked. "At any rate, no one here whom I have spoken
+to seems to be expecting anything unusual."
+
+Arthur--no one ever called him anything else--laughed, and beat an
+impatient tattoo upon the floor with his foot. He was several inches
+shorter than his brother, and altogether unlike him. Yet he, too, was
+good-looking, in a certain way.
+
+"That's just the beauty of it," he said. "Lady Swindon has prepared
+a little surprise for her guests. She's just that sort of woman, you
+know. Denison told me about it at the club, a few minutes before you
+came in for lunch. I shouldn't have bothered you to come if I hadn't
+known there was something good on."
+
+"I dislike surprises," his brother answered wearily. "Half the
+pleasure of a thing lies in anticipation, and surprises rob one of
+that. Let us go, Arthur; there are plenty here to enjoy this novelty,
+whatever it is. Come and have a weed at my rooms, and we'll talk over
+something for to-night."
+
+Arthur shook his head and laid his hand upon Paul's coat-sleeve.
+"You don't know what's coming off, old fellow; I wouldn't miss it for
+anything. Great Scott! there's the bishop. Wonder how he'll like it?
+and there's Lady May over there, Paul. You're booked, old man, if she
+looks this way."
+
+Paul leant forward with a faint show of interest, and looked in
+the direction indicated. "I thought that the Westovers went North
+yesterday," he remarked. "Lady May said that they expected it."
+
+"Likely enough. 'Gad! the performance is going to commence," Arthur
+exclaimed, quickly. "Paul, you are going to have a new sensation. You
+are going to see the most beautiful woman in the world."
+
+There was a little hush, and every one had turned towards the upper
+end of the room. Some heavy curtains had been rolled aside, disclosing
+a space, only a few yards square, which had been covered by a tightly
+stretched drugget. There was a little curious anticipation amongst the
+uninitiated. Then the comparative silence was broken by the strains
+of a waltz from a violin, somewhere in the background. No one had
+ever heard it before. There was a wilder, dreamier air with it,
+than anything Waldteufel had ever written. And, while every one was
+wondering whose music it could be, a woman glided out from behind a
+screen, and stood for a second swaying herself slightly in the centre
+of the drugget. Even that slight rhythmical motion of her body seemed
+to bring her into perfect sympathy with the curious melody which was
+filling the hushed room. And while the people watched her, already, in
+varying degrees, under the spell of that curious fascination which her
+personality and the exercise of her art seldom failed to excite, she
+commenced to dance.
+
+Long afterwards Paul de Vaux tried to describe in words, that dance,
+and found that he could not, for there was indeed a charm beyond
+expression or portrayal in the slow, almost languid movements, full of
+infinite and inexpressible witchery. Every limb of her body and every
+feature of her face followed, with a sort of effortless grace,
+the movements of her feet. Yet the general effect of the whole was
+suggestive of a sweet and dainty repose, voluptuous yet refined,
+glowing with life, yet dreamily restful. In a certain sense her
+physical movements, even her body itself, seemed merged and lost in
+the artistic ideal created and born of her performance. And so it
+was that he carried away that day no vivid thought-portrait of her
+features, only a confused dream of a beautiful dusky face, rising
+above a cloud of amber draperies, the lips slightly parted in a
+wonderful smile, and a pair of heavily-lidded eyes, which, more than
+once, had rested upon him, soft, dark, and lustrous. After all, it was
+but a tangled web of memories, yet, such as it was, it became woven
+into the pattern of his life, wonderfully soft and brilliant beside
+some of those dark, gloomy threads which fate had spun for him.
+
+The performance ended, as such performance should end, suddenly,
+and without repetition. Her disappearance was so swift and yet so
+graceful, that for a moment or two people scarcely realized that she
+was gone. It was wonderful what a difference her absence made to the
+room. The little stretch of drugget looked mean and bare. To Paul de
+Vaux it seemed as though some warm, beautiful light, omniscient and
+richly coloured, had suddenly burnt out, and left a damp chilliness in
+the air. The silence was gloomy enough after that wonderful music, but
+the babble of tongues which presently arose was a hundred times
+worse. He found himself chafing and angry at the commonplacisms which
+everywhere greeted his ear. Lady Swindon's afternoon entertainment had
+been a great success, and every one was telling her so, more or
+less volubly. There were some there, a handful of artists and a few
+thoughtful men, who were silent, or who spoke of it only amongst
+themselves in subdued voices. They recognised, in what had happened
+that afternoon, the dawn of a new art, or rather the regeneration of
+an old one, and they discussed in whispers its possible significance
+and influence. She was an artist, that woman. No one doubted it. But
+the woman was there as well as the artist. Who was she? Would she
+realize the sanctity of her mission, and keep herself fit and pure for
+its accomplishment? Had she character to sustain her, and imagination
+to idealize her calling? She was on a pinnacle now, but it was a
+pinnacle as dangerous as the feet of woman could press. If only she
+could keep herself unspotted from the world, which would do its best
+to drag her down, they all felt, painter, poet, and musician, that her
+influence with the age might rank with their own. But was it possible?
+A certain Diana-like coldness had been apparent to those who had the
+eyes to see it, even in her most voluptuous movements. They knew
+that it was not assumed for the sake of adding piquancy to her
+performance--it was there indeed. But side by side with it there
+were unprobed depths of passion in her soft, deep eyes; a slumbering
+passion even in the sinuous, graceful movements of every limb. Some
+day the struggle would come, even if it had not already commenced.
+The woman against the artist--the woman tempted and flattered by a
+thousand tongues, and dazzled with visions of all those things so
+naturally sweet to her, her own nature even, so keenly susceptible to
+love and sympathy, siding with the enemy. This, all against what? Only
+that inward worshipping of all things sweet and pure and lofty, which
+is the artist's second life. The odds were heavy indeed. No wonder
+that the select few who spoke of her that afternoon should shake their
+heads and look grave.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+"THE DANCING GIRL"
+
+
+"What do you think of it?"
+
+Paul started. He had been standing, like a man in a dream, with
+folded arms, looking across the room with idle eyes, and unconsciously
+ignoring many salutations. His brother's tone sounded oddly in his
+ears, and he looked flushed and a little nervous.
+
+"What did I think of it!" It was a difficult question to answer. He
+repeated it, and was glad when Arthur spared him the necessity of
+replying, by adding his own opinion.
+
+"It was glorious, magnificent! I'm going to find out more about her!"
+
+He strolled away, and joined one of the little groups of men who were
+discussing the performance. Paul, at first, had made a gesture as
+though to detain him, but on second thoughts he had changed his mind.
+Better let him go and find out what he could.
+
+He himself watched carefully for his opportunity, and then left the
+room. He felt like a man who has received a silent shock. Something
+fresh had come into his life, noiselessly, insidiously, without
+effort. He pressed on his hat, and passed down the steps out into the
+street, scarcely conscious of what he was doing.
+
+The rush of fresh air somewhat revived him, and he stood still for a
+moment to collect his thoughts. He felt the need of absolute
+solitude for a while, to help him to realize--or at any rate to
+understand--this thing which had happened, and with almost feverish
+haste he called a hansom from the other side of the road. The man
+whipped up the horse, but hesitated as he reached the pavement.
+Looking around, Paul saw the cause of his indecision. A woman,
+standing only a few yards behind, had called him at the same time, and
+was waiting also for his approach.
+
+There was a gas-lamp between them, and as their eyes met, he
+recognised her. Even in that flickering light, and through her
+veil, there was no mistaking those wonderful eyes. As a rule, he was
+possessed of as much _savoir faire_ as most men of his class, but at
+that moment it had deserted him. He stood there on the edge of the
+pavement, without moving or saying anything, simply looking at
+her, startled at her sudden appearance, and magnetised by her close
+presence. He had heard no footfall behind him, and the fact of her
+being alone seemed so strange to him, that he simply could not realize
+for a moment that it was indeed she who stood so close to him. The
+cabman, leaving them to decide who had the prior claim upon him, sat
+motionless, with his eyes discreetly fixed upon his horse's ears. It
+was an odd little tableau, insignificant enough to a spectator, save,
+perhaps, for the curious look in the woman's face and softly flashing
+eyes. Yet it left its mark for ever in the lives of the two principal
+figures.
+
+The curious sensation which had kept Paul standing there dazed and
+tongue-tied, passed away. Yet it did not immediately occur to him to
+raise his hat and walk on, as in any ordinary case he would have done.
+He was conscious of the exact nature of the situation, but he felt a
+strong disinclination to leave the spot; nor, strangely enough, did
+she seem to expect it. Yet something had to be done.
+
+He moved a step nearer her. He was no schoolboy, this tall,
+grave-looking young Englishman. The lines across his fair, smooth
+forehead, and by his close-set mouth spoke for themselves. He had seen
+life in many aspects, and in a certain Indian jungle village, there
+were natives and coolies who still spoke admiringly of the wonderful
+nerve and pluck of the English sahib during a terrible and unexpected
+tiger rush. But at that moment his nerve seemed to have deserted him.
+He could almost hear his heart beat as he took that step forward. He
+had intended to have made some trifling apology, and to have handed
+her into the cab, but the words would not come. Some instinct seemed
+to revolt at the thought of uttering any such commonplacism. She was
+standing on the edge of the pavement, close to the step, with her
+skirts in one hand, slightly raised. He held out his hand to her in
+silence.
+
+She gave him hers; and yet she did not at once step into the cab.
+She seemed to be expecting that little speech from him which he found
+impossible to frame, and, seeing that it did not come, recognising,
+perhaps, his suppressed agitation behind that calm, almost cold,
+gravity of demeanour, she spoke to him.
+
+"It is a shame to take your cab, and leave you in the rain! I am
+sorry."
+
+Afterwards her admirers spoke of her voice as being one of her chief
+charms; to Paul it sounded like a soft strain of very sweet, throbbing
+music, reaching him from some far distant world. Yet, curiously
+enough, it went far to dissolve the spell which her presence seemed to
+have laid upon him. He was able to look at her steadily, and standing
+upon the wet pavement in the cold, grey light of that November
+afternoon, their eyes met in a long, searching gaze. He was able even
+to notice trifles. He saw the rich fur which lined her plain, black
+cloak, and he could even admire the absolute perfection with which
+it followed the lines of her slim, supple, figure. He saw the glowing
+eyes shining out from her dusky face, and the coils of brown hair, not
+very securely fastened under her turban hat. As she put out her foot
+to enter the cab, he could even catch a glimpse of the amber draperies
+concealed by her cloak. A dancer! A public dancer! His eyes swept over
+her again, taking in every detail of her simple but rich toilette, and
+he shivered slightly. Then he answered her, "It is of no consequence,
+thank you. I can walk."
+
+"But you will get very wet! Let us make a compromise! You may come
+with me. I am going only a very little distance, and then you can take
+the cab on to your home, or wherever you want to go to."
+
+She stepped in, taking it for granted that he would accept her offer,
+and he followed her at once. He was not in the least surprised. From
+the first he had not expected to leave her, and her invitation seemed
+perfectly natural to him. She gave the cabman her address through the
+trap-door, and they drove off together.
+
+At the corner of the square, two men were standing together talking,
+and as the hansom passed within a yard or two of them both glanced
+idly in, and then started. Paul, who had been looking straight ahead
+of him, and seeing nothing, turned round, startled by a familiar
+exclamation, just in time to see his brother Arthur, and Leslie
+Horton, gazing after the cab. The incident troubled him, as much for
+her sake as his own. But, looking into her face, he could not see that
+she was in any way disturbed, although she must have seen the two men,
+and would probably have recognised them as having been present at Lady
+Swindon's reception. Her face was quite unmoved, but in a moment or
+two she asked a question.
+
+"Who was the younger and better looking of those two men; the one with
+violets in his coat, like yours?"
+
+"It was my brother," he answered simply. "I am afraid, too, that he
+recognised you."
+
+"So far as I am concerned, that is of no consequence at all," she
+answered lightly.
+
+He turned away with a sudden sinking of the heart. He knew, too well,
+that her carelessness was not assumed. How was he to interpret it?
+
+Their drive was finished in silence, and they pulled up before a
+handsome, though somewhat sombre-looking house in a back street.
+
+"My rooms are here," she remarked.
+
+He stepped on to the pavement, and assisted her to alight. The thought
+of leaving her so abruptly was painful to him, and yet he dreaded to
+hear her invite him to go in with her; nevertheless, she did so.
+
+"If you are not in a hurry, perhaps you will come in, and let me give
+you a cup of tea," she said, looking him full in the face.
+
+His heart sank. What was he to think now? And yet he was absurdly glad
+that he was not to leave her.
+
+"Do you mean it?" he asked.
+
+"Of course! I should not have asked you else. Are you very much
+shocked?" she added, with a mocking gleam in her eyes. "It is not
+proper, is it! I confess I did not think of that. But do come," she
+added, with a sudden bewitching smile.
+
+"I shall be delighted," he answered, gravely enough, but truthfully.
+He turned to pay the cabman, and followed her into the house.
+
+"My rooms are upstairs," she remarked, leading the way. "The luxury of
+a first floor is at present beyond me."
+
+Her words pleased him, but their effect died away when she opened a
+door on the first landing, and ushered him in. Such of the interior
+of the house as he had seen was handsomely furnished, but the room in
+which he stood was almost like a fairy chamber. Curtains divided it in
+the centre, and beyond he could see a table laid for dinner.
+
+"That half I use for a dining-room," she remarked, pointing towards it
+with one of her gloves, which she had just taken off. "It makes this
+room small, but it is a convenient arrangement. Do sit down!"
+
+He bowed, but remained standing, with his elbow resting upon the
+draped mantel-board. She took off her hat and coat, hanging them over
+the back of a chair, and advanced towards him.
+
+She was in her dancing dress, a floating mass of yellow draperies, and
+the firelight gleamed strangely upon her dusky, perfect face, with its
+olive colouring, and soft, glowing eyes. She came so close to him that
+a faint odour from the handkerchief in her hand stole up to him.
+
+He was playing with an ornament on the shelf, and his fingers
+tightened convulsively around it. It snapped in two in his hand; he
+did not notice it. He leaned forward towards her, and his strong voice
+vibrated with feeling.
+
+"And it was for this then, Adrea Kiros, that you ran away from the
+convent St. Lucile! My God!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+"ADREA'S DIARY"
+
+
+To-day I have made my entrance in the first scene of the drama of
+life. To-day, therefore, I commence my memoirs. Everything before goes
+for nothing!
+
+As I have removed myself altogether from all association with
+the humdrum existence which might have been mine, I am naturally
+friendless for the present. So far as the other sex is concerned, I
+fancy that that could be easily remedied. But no women are likely
+to care about making my acquaintance, and I am glad of it. I hate
+women--men, too, I think! At any rate, there will be no one of whom I
+shall make a confidant, so I have chosen you, my silent friend. I gave
+a guinea for you in Bond Street, and with your dainty morocco case
+and binding, I think you are well worth it. At any rate, you will be
+faithful so far as silence is concerned.
+
+To-day has been an eventful one. I have made my _debut_ as a dancer,
+and Paul de Vaux has been here, in this house, alone with me! That is
+hard to realize, but it is so! He has altered since he used to pay
+me periodical visits at the convent--and so have I, I imagine! Yet he
+recognised me! How pale and stern he looked when he stood up on the
+hearthrug and called me by my name! He is very handsome--handsomer now
+even than on that day when he stood by, in that chamber of death, and
+saw my father murdered, without lifting his hand. Ah! Paul de Vaux,
+Paul de Vaux! that was an evil day for you! Did you never think that
+that little brown girl, as you called her, would grow up some day; or
+did you think that she would forget! Bah! What fools men are!
+
+He remembered me! How grave he looked, and yet how tender his voice
+sounded! He did not forget that he was my guardian, and I his ward.
+How bewildered and anxious he was! Was I living quite alone, had I no
+friends, did I think it wise to lay myself open to so much notice?
+
+He had come close to my chair, and was leaning down, so that his head
+nearly touched mine. Really, when I looked up, I thought that he was
+going to take me into his arms. I looked up and laughed softly into
+his face.
+
+He said no more. I invited him to dine with me, and promised to dance
+to him afterwards. I even let my hand rest for a moment upon his
+shoulder, and whispered--but _n'importe_! He behaved just as I would
+have had him behave! He took up his hat and walked straight out of the
+room! It was rude, but it was magnificent. Ah! Paul de Vaux! you may
+struggle as long as you like, but in the end you will be mine!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+"THE FAR-OFF MUTTERING OF THE STORM TO COME"
+
+
+"Paul!"
+
+Paul had walked unannounced into his mother's favourite little
+sitting-room at Vaux Court, tired and travel-stained. She rose to her
+feet and looked at him anxiously.
+
+"Don't be alarmed, mother," he said, stooping down and kissing her.
+"There's nothing at all the matter."
+
+"Arthur is well?"
+
+"Quite well; I was with him yesterday afternoon. There's nothing the
+matter. London was boring me, that's all, and I thought I'd run down
+here and have a look at the old place, and perhaps a day's hunting."
+
+Relieved of her anxiety, Mrs. de Vaux was unaffectedly pleased to see
+her eldest son. She was a fine, white-haired old lady, dignified and
+handsome, but with very few soft lines about her comely face.
+
+"I am delighted to see you, of course, Paul! The meet is at Dytchley
+woods to-morrow! I hope you'll have a good day. Take your coat off. I
+have rung for some tea."
+
+"Thanks! How bright and cheerful the fire seems. I walked from the
+station, and it was miserably cold."
+
+"Of course it was. I wish I had known you were coming. We have so
+little work for the carriage horses."
+
+"I did not make up my mind until half an hour before the train
+started," Paul answered. "Dick Carruthers wanted me to run over to
+Paris with him for a couple of days, and I was undecided which to do.
+I heard that it was cold and wet there, though; and there is always a
+charm about this old place which makes me glad to come back to it."
+
+"There is not such another place in England," his mother remarked,
+pouring out the tea. "Although this is such an outlandish county,
+there have been a dozen people here this week, asking to be allowed
+to see over the Abbey. I always give permission when you are away, and
+there is no one stopping here."
+
+Paul drank his tea, and stretched himself out in his low chair with an
+air of comfort.
+
+"I am glad you let them see the place, mother," he said. "It is only
+right. What class of people do you have, as a rule? Clergymen and
+ecclesiastical architects, I suppose?"
+
+"Chiefly. There are a good many Americans, though; and yesterday,
+or the day before, a Roman Catholic priest. He spent the day in the
+cloisters and wandering about the Abbey, I believe."
+
+Paul looked up suddenly, and drew his chair back out of the firelight.
+For the first time, his mother noticed how pale and ghastly his face
+was.
+
+"Paul, are you ill?" she asked anxiously. "What is the matter with
+you?"
+
+"Nothing. I am only tired. It is a long journey, you know,--and the
+walk from the station. Indeed, it is nothing else. I am quite well."
+
+His mother resumed her seat. She had risen in sudden alarm. Her son's
+face had frightened her.
+
+"You look just as your poor father used to look sometimes," she said
+softly. "It always frightened me. It was as though you had a pain
+somewhere, or had suddenly seen a ghost. You are sure you are well?"
+
+"Quite, mother! You need have no fear. Arthur and I have your
+constitution, I think."
+
+His tone was deeper, almost hollow. He still kept his chair back
+amongst the shadows. Mrs. de Vaux was only partially satisfied.
+
+"I am afraid you have been keeping too late hours, Paul, or reading
+too much. Lord Westover was saying the other day that you were in a
+very Bohemian set--journalists and artists, and those sort of people.
+I am afraid they keep awful hours."
+
+"Lord Westover knows nothing about it," Paul answered wearily.
+"Ordinary London society would tire me to death in a fortnight. There
+is another class of people, though, whose headquarters are in London,
+far more cultured, and quite as exclusive, with whom association is a
+far greater distinction. I can go anywhere in the first set, because
+I am Paul de Vaux, of Vaux Abbey, and have forty thousand a year. I
+am permitted to enter the other only as the author of an unfashionable
+novel, which a few of them have thought leniently of. Which seem the
+worthier conditions?"
+
+"I am answered, Paul. Of course, in a sense, you are right. I am
+an old woman, and the twaddle of a London drawing-room would fall
+strangely upon my ears now, but I had my share of it before Arthur was
+born. If I were a man, I should want variety,--a little sauce,--and
+you are right to seek for it. And now, won't you go and have a bath,
+and change your things. You still look pale, and I think it would
+refresh you. Shall I ring for Reynolds? I suppose you have not brought
+your own man?"
+
+He stretched out his hand, and arrested her fingers upon the bell. "In
+a moment, mother. It is so comfortable here, and I really think it is
+my favourite room."
+
+He looked round approvingly. It was a curious, hexagonal chamber, with
+an oak-beamed ceiling, curving into a dome. The walls were hung with
+a wonderful tapestry of a soft, rich colour, and every piece of
+furniture in the room was of the Louis Quinze period. There was
+scarcely a single anachronism. The Martin de Vaux of forty years ago
+had been an artist, and a man of taste; and when he had brought home
+his bride, a duke's daughter, he had spent a small fortune on this
+apartment. Since then it had always been her favourite, and she was
+always glad to hear any one praise it.
+
+"I seldom sit in any other," she remarked complacently. "The blue
+drawing-room is open to-night, but that is because Lord and Lady
+Westover are dining here. I am afraid May will not be able to come;
+she has a cold or something of the sort. I wonder whether it is true,
+what they say, that she is delicate."
+
+Paul did not appear much interested. He had a purpose in lingering
+here, and it had nothing to do with May Westover's health. There was
+a little information he wished to obtain without exciting his mother's
+curiosity. But it was not exactly an easy matter.
+
+"I was interested in what you said about the visitors here,"
+he remarked. "I daresay to Americans this place must be very
+interesting."
+
+"You would think so if you saw some of them. They are a great deal too
+inquisitive and familiar for Reynolds. He detests them. It is far more
+interesting to think of that Catholic priest who was here the other
+day. He lingered about the place as though he had known it all his
+life, and loved it; and, Reynolds says, he prayed for two hours in the
+chapel."
+
+"Did you see him yourself?"
+
+"Yes, in the distance. I did not notice him particularly. I wished
+afterwards that I had. Reynolds' report of him pleased me so much. I
+daresay he was conjuring up pictures of the days when the old Abbey
+was full of grey-hooded monks, and the chapel was echoing day and
+night to their solemn chants and prayers. Sometimes, in the gloaming,
+I can almost fancy myself that I see them kneeling in long rows in
+those rich stalls, and hear the rustle of their gowns as they pass
+slowly down the aisles. I think he must have found it sad to linger
+about in that beautiful chapel, so cold, and empty, and bare. That
+is why I like Roman Catholics. They have such a strong reverential
+affection for their places of worship, and take such a delight in
+adorning them. It is almost like a personal love."
+
+Paul moved uneasily in his chair and looked steadily into the fire.
+"Then you did not notice him particularly?"
+
+"Notice him! Notice whom?"
+
+"This priest, or whoever he was."
+
+"I did not see his face, Paul, if that is what you mean. I only
+remember that he was tall. You seem very much interested in him. No
+doubt Reynolds could tell you anything you wish to know. Here he is;
+you had better ask him."
+
+A grey-headed man-servant had entered, bearing a lamp. Mrs. de Vaux
+turned to him.
+
+"Reynolds, Mr. Paul is interested in hearing about the priest who
+spent so much time looking over the Abbey yesterday. Can you describe
+him?"
+
+Reynolds set down the lamp and turned respectfully around. "Not very
+well, I'm afraid, sir," he said doubtfully. "They all seem so much
+alike, you know, sir, in those long gowns. He was tall, rather thin,
+and no hair on his face at all. I can't say that I noticed anything
+else, except that he spoke in rather a foreign accent."
+
+"You are sure he was a priest, I suppose," Paul asked carelessly. "We
+hear so much now of impostors, and of things being stolen from places
+of interest, that it makes one feel suspicious."
+
+"I am quite sure he was no impostor, sir." Reynolds answered
+confidently. "He was too interested in the place for that. He knew its
+history better than any one who has ever been here in my day. If he
+had been one of those sneaking sort of fellows, looking about for what
+he could get, he would have offered me money, and tried to get rid of
+me for a time, I think, sir."
+
+"That's true," Paul remarked. "Were you with him all the time, then?"
+
+"Very nearly, sir. He did not like my leaving him at all. He was
+afraid of missing something worth seeing. Besides, he did not ask to
+come into the house at all, not even to see the pictures. He spent all
+his time in the ruins.
+
+"That ends the matter, of course," Paul answered shortly. "There is
+nothing out there to attract pilferers. Sorry I said anything about
+it."
+
+"He asked whether you spent much of your time here, and when you would
+be down again, sir," Reynolds remarked, as he turned to quit the room.
+
+Paul looked up, and then stood quite still for a moment without
+speaking. A great fear had fallen upon him. Out of the shadows of
+the past, he seemed to see again that deathbed scene, and the tragedy
+which had brought down the curtain upon two lives. Almost he could
+fancy himself again upon his yacht, with the salt sea spray beating
+against his face, and the white breakers hissing and seething around
+him, as they made the dangerous passage towards that faint light,
+which flickered and gleamed in the distant monastery tower. They are
+safe! They reach the land; they are hurried into that great, gloomy
+bed-chamber, where chill draughts rustled ghost-like amongst the
+heavy, faded hangings, and the feeble candlelight left weird shadows
+moving across the floor and upon the walls. Again he heard the
+rattling of the window-panes, bare and exposed to every gust of wind;
+the far-off thunder of the sea, like a deep, continuous undernote;
+and, from an almost unseen corner of the chamber, the monotonous,
+broken rhythm of sad prayers for the dying, mumbled by that dark,
+curious-looking priest. And then, when the background of the picture
+had formed itself in his memory, he saw the deed itself. He saw
+the white, stricken face suddenly ablaze with that last effort of
+passionate life; he saw the outstretched arm, the line of fire, and
+the sudden change in the countenance of the man who stood at the foot
+of the bed. He saw the cool cynicism replaced by a spasm of ghastly
+fear, and he heard the low, gurgling cry dying away into a faint moan
+of terror, as the murdered man sank on to the floor, a crumpled heap.
+And, last of all, he saw that little brown girl, with her tumbled hair
+and tear-stained face, clasping the dead body and glaring at every one
+in the room, with a storm of hatred and impotent fury in her flashing
+eyes. And that last recollection brought him, like a flash, back
+to the present,--brought him swift, bewildering memories of Adrea,
+shaking his heart, and bringing the hot colour streaming into his
+face. He remembered where he was, and why he had left London. He
+remembered, too, that he was not alone, and with a little start he
+awoke to the present.
+
+Reynolds had left the room, and his mother was watching him curiously.
+He found it hard to meet her steady, questioning gaze without
+flinching.
+
+"Paul," she said slowly, "you are in trouble."
+
+He shook his head. "It is nothing, mother--nothing at all. I ought to
+beg your pardon for letting my thoughts run away with me so."
+
+She was too proud to ask him for his confidence, and at that moment
+the rumbling of a gong reached them from the distant hall. Mrs. de
+Vaux rose:--
+
+"There are a few people dining here, Paul, so you will not be late."
+
+"I will be down, mother. The usual time, I suppose."
+
+"Yes, eight o'clock."
+
+They left the room together, but parted in the hall. Mrs. de Vaux
+stayed to speak to the housekeeper for a moment, and Paul ascended
+the broad staircase alone. On the first corridor he paused, standing
+before the deep-cushioned sill of a high-arched window, and gazing at
+the ruined portion of the abbey. The air outside was frosty and clear,
+and though the moon as yet was only faintly yellow, every arch and
+cloister was clearly visible. Paul gazed down at them, as he had done
+all his life, with reverent eyes. There was something almost awesome
+in the graceful yet bold outline, and in the great age of those
+rugged, moss-grown pillars and arches, so ecclesiastical in their
+shape and suggestiveness,--as indeed they might well be, for they were
+practically the ruins of the old monastery chapel. But, as he looked,
+the expression in his eyes suddenly changed. A dark figure had passed
+slowly out from the shadow of the arches, and stood looking up towards
+the house, rigid, solemn, and motionless. Paul covered his face with
+his hands, and sank down upon the cushioned window-sill.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+"AN ASHEN GREY DELIGHT"
+
+
+"Mr. de Vaux!"
+
+Paul turned quickly around in his saddle towards the young lady who
+had addressed him. He looked into a fair, thoughtful face, whose
+general amiability was discounted, just then, by a decided frown.
+
+"I beg your pardon, Lady May! Didn't you say something just now?"
+
+"Didn't I say something just now!" she repeated, with fine scorn.
+"Upon my word, Mr. de Vaux, I think that you must have left your wits
+in London! What is the matter with you?"
+
+"The matter! Why, nothing! I'm sorry----"
+
+"Oh! pray don't apologise!" she interrupted hastily. "I think I'll
+ride on and catch papa up."
+
+He laid his hand upon her rein. "Please don't, Lady May," he begged.
+"I know I've been inattentive! I'm very sorry--really I am. Let me try
+and make up for it!"
+
+She looked into his face, and she was mollified. He was evidently in
+earnest.
+
+"Oh! very well," she said. "You mustn't think that I complained
+without due cause, though, for I spoke to you three times before you
+answered me. Oh, it's all right," she went on, as he commenced to
+frame another apology. "I don't mind now, but I really should like to
+know what is the matter with you. You have ridden all day like a man
+who valued neither his own life nor his horse's. Some of your jumps
+were simply reckless! I have heard other people say so, too! I like
+bold riding, but there is a limit; and though I've ridden two hounds
+since papa gave me my first pony, I've never seen any one try to jump
+Annisforth brook below the bridge, before,--and don't want to again,"
+she added, with a little shudder. "I know you ride fine horses, but
+you are not generally foolhardy. I saw your dark bay mare being taken
+home at Colbourne Spinneys, and I don't think she'll be fit to ride
+again this season. Old Harrison had tears in his eyes when he saw
+her!"
+
+"Harrison is an old woman about horses! I never touched Meg with the
+spurs. She was as fresh as paint, and there was no holding her."
+
+"You can't deceive me or yourself," Lady May continued calmly. "You
+have been riding for a fall, all day, and you may think yourself
+pretty fortunate that you haven't a broken neck. It seemed as though
+you were trying for one. And now that you haven't succeeded, you have
+nearly ridden ten miles alone with me, and scarcely opened your mouth.
+You are very provoking, Mr. de Vaux. I wish I had ridden home with
+Captain Fellowes."
+
+He was on the point of reminding her that the arrangement had not been
+of his making, but he checked himself. After all, Lady May had some
+grounds for her irritation. They had been friends since they had been
+children, and Paul knew that every one expected him, someday, to ask
+Lady May to become the mistress of Vaux Abbey. There had been a little
+more than intimacy even in their friendship up till twelve months ago;
+and Paul had certain recollections of their last interview, which had
+made him more than once a trifle uneasy. As a matter of fact, Lady May
+had quite made up her mind that Paul de Vaux would certainly ask her
+to marry him some time; and she had, on his account, refused two very
+eligible offers. Their people desired it, and, in her heart, Lady May
+was conscious that Paul was a little more to her than any other man
+could be. So she felt herself at first, aggrieved by his long silence
+during their ride home, which, to tell the truth, she had carefully
+planned for, and afterwards was just on the verge of being seriously
+offended.
+
+"Don't be angry with me, please," he said quietly. "You are right;
+something is the matter. I am worried."
+
+She was sympathetic and kindly at once. "I'm so sorry. Please forgive
+me for bothering you. You used to tell me your troubles once! Are we
+too old now?"
+
+He shook his head. "I hope we never shall be," he said. "I can't tell
+you all, but one thing is this. I had a letter from a man in town
+to-day--a man whom I can trust--about Arthur. You know what an
+impressionable, sensitive boy he is. Anyone who once obtains an
+influence over him can do nearly what they like with him. He seems--so
+my correspondent tells me--to have become completely fascinated with
+a--a--dancer--Adrea Kiros I think she calls herself."
+
+"I have heard of her," Lady May murmured. "She dances only at private
+houses, I think. Everyone says she is wonderful."
+
+"She is--wonderful," Paul said slowly. He was about to say more, but
+he checked himself. Lady May was watching him, and he knew that he
+could not speak of Adrea Kiros unmoved. So he went on:--
+
+"I am not complaining, for after all it is perfectly natural, but
+Arthur is certainly his mother's favorite son. You know how strict she
+is in some of her notions; so you can understand what a shock it would
+be to her if any rumors were to reach her ears. It would be a terrible
+blow to her. But, apart from that, the thing is serious in itself.
+Arthur was always delicate, and Cis--my friend--speaks of him as
+looking ghastly ill. The girl is probably only amusing herself,
+although she seems to have given him plenty of encouragement. But I
+know Ad--Adrea Kiros. She is no ordinary girl of her class. In the
+whole world I doubt if there breathes a more dangerous woman," he
+wound up, in a low tone.
+
+Lady May was quite sympathetic now, but a little mystified. "I am so
+sorry," she said softly. "Ought you not to go to London, and try what
+your influence can do with him? That is disinterested advice, at any
+rate," she added, with a little laugh, "for I don't want you to go.
+But Arthur always seemed to look up to you so! You might be able to
+get him away. Don't you think it would be a good thing if you could
+get him down here? We would make it as lively as possible for him up
+at the Castle; and, I don't know how your preserves are, but ours
+have been scarcely touched yet. Between the two of us, at any rate, he
+could have as much shooting as he liked. And I would ask the Fergusson
+girls to come and stay," she went on, getting more and more in love
+with her plan. "He was so much taken with Amy, you know, when they
+were down here before. We could get up some theatricals, or something,
+and have quite a good time. What do you think of my plan?"
+
+He was thankful for her long speech, for it had enabled him to get
+over the slight agitation which the thought of that unavoidable
+journey to London had called up in him. From the first he had felt
+that it was his duty to go. He had received this disquieting letter
+two days ago, and since then he had telegraphed twice and written to
+Arthur without getting any reply. Yes, he must go. And mingled with
+that reluctance and nameless apprehension which he felt at the thought
+of returning into her neighbourhood, he was acutely conscious, all the
+time, of a certain vague but sweet pleasure at the thought that fate
+had so ordained it. Perhaps it would be necessary for him to see
+her! A thrill of pleasure passed through him at the thought, followed
+almost immediately by a reaction of keen and bitter disgust with
+himself. He set his teeth, and quite unconsciously dug his spurs into
+his horse's sides, with the natural result that she reared up, almost
+unseating him, and then plunged forward. He had to gallop her along
+the road for a few hundred yards, and then turned round and rejoined
+Lady May. Fortunately she had not seen the commencement of the little
+episode.
+
+"Whatever was the matter?" she asked.
+
+"I fancy my spurs must have pricked her," he said apologetically. "I
+was riding quite carelessly."
+
+"Well, please don't let it happen again," she begged, eyeing his
+mare's flanks suspiciously. "Dandy is very tired now, and is generally
+good tempered; but I don't think he would stand much of that sort of
+thing."
+
+"I'm really very sorry," he said.
+
+She nodded. "All right. And now, what do you think of my plan? Are you
+going to London?"
+
+"I think your plan is a very good one indeed, and I shall run up
+to town to-morrow," he said. "It is very good of you to be so
+interested."
+
+He looked down into her face, a fair, sweet face it was, and then
+glanced away over the bare moorland which stretched on one side of
+them. It was a late November afternoon, and a faint yellow light
+was lingering in the west, where the sun had just set, colouring the
+clouds which stretched across the sky in long, level streaks. A fresh,
+healthy breeze, strong with the perfume of the sea, blew in their
+teeth, and afar off they could hear the waves dashing against the
+iron-bound line of northern cliffs. Inland, the country was more
+cultivated, but hilly and broken up with masses of lichen-covered
+rock, and little clumps of thin fir trees. He knew the scenery so
+well. The rugged, barren country, with its great stretches of moorland
+and little patches of cultivated land, with its silent tarns, its
+desolation, and the ever-varying music of the sea, they all meant home
+to him, and he loved them. It had always been so, and yet he felt it
+at that moment as he had never felt it before. The prospect of that
+journey to London was suddenly loathsome to him. The clear, physical
+healthfulness of his North-country home was triumphant, for the
+moment, over that other passion, which seemed to him then weak and
+artificial. It seemed to him also, looking down into Lady May's
+fresh, thoughtful face, that she was somehow in accord with these
+surroundings,--that she was, indeed, the link, the safeguard which
+should bind him to them, the good influence which should keep him fit
+to breathe God's pure air, and to keep himself, as he had ever striven
+to, _sans peur et sans reproche_. Paul was no sentimentalist, in the
+idle and common sense of the word. In his attitude to every-day
+life, he was essentially practical, sometimes perhaps a little too
+practical. But he was capable of strong feeling, and it came then with
+a rush. He leant over towards Lady May, and laid his hand upon her
+saddle.
+
+"You are very kind and sympathetic," he said softly. "You are always
+kind."
+
+She looked up at him, pleased, and with a soft look in her deep grey
+eyes. "You do not give me very much opportunity," she said quietly.
+"At one time you used to tell me all your troubles; do you remember?"
+
+"Yes! I remember," he answered, almost in a whisper, for they were
+riding up a grass-grown avenue,--a back way to the Abbey,--and their
+horses' hoofs sank noiselessly into the soft turf. "Sometimes I have
+dared to hope that those days may come again."
+
+She was silent, and her head was turned away lest he might see the
+tears trembling in her eyes. So they rode on for a moment or two,
+walking their horses in the dim twilight; she in the shadow of the
+grey wall and the overhanging trees, and he very close to her, with
+his hand still upon her saddle and his reins loose in his hand.
+
+"If ever they did, if ever I was so fortunate," he went on in a low
+tone, "you would find your office no sinecure. I have troubles, or
+rather, one trouble, and a great one, May."
+
+She looked at him for a moment, her eyes full of sympathy. She dimly
+remembered the time when strange stories were current in the county of
+Martin de Vaux, and their echo had remained for years. It was not for
+her to inquire about them, and she never had done so. But that their
+burden should have fallen upon Paul; it was hard! Her heart was sore
+with the injustice of it. A woman is a swift and censorious judge of
+any one who brings trouble upon the man she loves.
+
+He was a little closer to her still; and suddenly the hand which
+carried her small whip felt itself grasped in strong fingers and held
+tightly.
+
+"May----"
+
+It was not his fault this time that his mare stood still, and then ran
+backwards, dislodging the topmost stones from the grey stone wall with
+her hind quarters, and then plunging violently. This time there was
+cause for her alarm. A tall, forbidding-looking figure stood in the
+middle of the avenue, grasping the rein of Lady May's terrified horse.
+He had come out of the twilight so suddenly, and his attire was
+so unusual, that Paul and Lady May were almost as surprised as the
+animals. Paul's first instinct was one of anger.
+
+"What the----"
+
+He stopped short. The man who had startled them so had quieted Lady
+May's horse with a few soothing words, and now stood out of the deep
+shade of the overhanging trees into the centre of the avenue. Even
+here his face was scarcely visible, but his figure and attire were
+sufficient. He wore the long robes and shovel hat of a Roman Catholic
+priest.
+
+Paul broke off in the middle of his exclamation, and the arm which had
+been grasping his whip tightly sank nervelessly to his side. He was
+thankful for the twilight, which concealed the grey shade which had
+stolen into his face. Yet now that the blow had fallen, he was calmer
+than he had been in some of his anticipations of it. For it had
+indeed fallen! In the dusky twilight he had recognised the face of the
+priest, changed though it was. He rode up, and addressed him.
+
+"Have you lost your way?" he asked quietly. "This is a private road,
+and the gate at the other end is locked."
+
+The priest looked at him steadily for a moment, and then drew on one
+side, as though to let them pass.
+
+"I am sorry that I startled your horses," he said, in a soft, pleasant
+voice, marked with a strong foreign accent; "I was standing with my
+back to you, waiting for the moon to rise behind the ruins there,
+and the soft ground made your approach noiseless. And, if I am
+trespassing, I am sorry. The steward at the Abbey yonder gave me
+permission to wander anywhere around the ruins. I have perhaps
+exceeded a little his bounds."
+
+"It is of no consequence," Paul said. "You find the ruins interesting,
+then?"
+
+"Very."
+
+"There are some pictures in the Abbey you might care to see--mostly
+modern, but there is a Rubens and two Giorgiones."
+
+The priest removed his hat. "I thank you, but I am only interested in
+ecclesiastical art. These ruins are more to me than any pictures--save
+those which Rome alone possesses," he added. "I spend all my evenings
+here, and hope to be allowed to, for the short time that I remain in
+the neighbourhood."
+
+"You have my permission to come and go as you please. I am Mr. de
+Vaux," Paul said, touching his horse with the whip. "Good-evening!"
+
+"Good-evening, sir! Good-evening, madam! I thank you!"
+
+They rode on down the avenue, Paul silent and absorbed, and making no
+attempt to pursue the conversation. At the bend of the lane he turned
+round in his saddle. The priest was standing with his back to them,
+motionless and silent as a figure of stone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+"WHO ARE YOU, AND WHAT YOUR MISSION?"
+
+
+The winter moon, soft and bright and full, looked down upon the
+ruins of Vaux Abbey. A strange beauty lay upon the bare, rock-strewn
+hillside and desolate moor. Afar off a grey, brawling stream was
+touched by its light, and in its place a band of gold seemed coiled
+around the grey, sleeping hill. A black, reed-grown tarn at the foot
+of the Abbey gleamed and quivered like a fair silver shield. The dark
+pines which crowned their sandy slopes lost their forbidding frown in
+an unaccustomed softness, and every harsh line and broken pillar of
+the ruined chapel was toned down into a rich, sad softness. A human
+face, too, uplifted to the sky, so silent and motionless that it
+seemed almost set into the side of one of those groined arches, had
+lost all its harshness and worldliness in the glow of that falling
+light. It might have been the face of a saint, save for the vague
+unhappiness which shone in the clear, dark eyes; for at that moment,
+spirituality, wistfulness, and reverence seemed carved into the white,
+still features. But there was disquiet, too; and, after a while, as
+though some cloud had passed across the moon, a dark shade stole into
+the white face. The brows were contracted into a frown, and the eyes
+filled with restless doubt. Father Adrian moved away from the shadow
+of the pillar, and stood, tall and motionless, on the ruined chapel
+floor, with his eyes fixed upon the distant landscape. After a moment
+or two, his lips began to move and he commenced to speak aloud in a
+low, deep tone.
+
+"Six nights has my voice gone up to God from amongst these silent
+ruins, six nights I have prayed in rain. These fair, still evenings
+mock me! Whose is their beauty, if it be not God's; and, if there be a
+God, and if the Blessed Virgin, our Holy Mother, indeed dwells amongst
+the stars, why are their faces turned from me? Oh! that man knew a
+little more or a little less--enough to pierce the mystery of yon
+star-crowned heavens, or so little as to gaze on them unmoved and
+unfeeling! What is our little knowledge? A mockery, a dreary, hopeless
+mockery! I had better have rotted in that miserable monastery, a
+soulless, lifeless being, than have stepped out to struggle with a
+world which is only a terrible riddle to me. I cannot reason with it;
+I cannot laugh or weep with it; I am in it, but not of it! Why was I
+sent? Oh I why was I sent?"
+
+The snapping of a twig caused him to turn suddenly round. Paul de Vaux
+was advancing through the ruins, with a loose cloak thrown over his
+evening clothes.
+
+Father Adrian turned round to meet him. The two men stood for a moment
+face to face without speaking. Both recognised that this interview
+was to be no ordinary one; and in a certain sense, each seemed to be
+measuring the other's strength. It was Paul who spoke first.
+
+"We have met before, Father Adrian."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You will scarcely wonder that I am surprised to see you here in
+England. Have you left the monastery at Cruta?"
+
+"I left it a month after you did."
+
+"But your vows,--were they not for life?" Paul asked.
+
+Father Adrian smiled scornfully. "I was not bound to Cruta," he
+answered. "There had been complaints, and I was there to investigate
+them. The monastery was poverty and disease-stricken. It is closed now
+forever."
+
+"Then you are no monk?"
+
+Father Adrian shook his head. "I am, and I am not. In my youth I
+served my novitiate, but I never took the oaths. The cloisters are for
+holier men than I."
+
+"Then who are you?"
+
+"I am--Father Adrian, priest of the Roman Catholic Church, I can tell
+you no more."
+
+The moonlight was falling full upon his dark, striking face. Paul,
+with bent brows, scanned every feature of it intently. Father Adrian
+bore the scrutiny without flinching and without discomposure. Only
+once the colour mounted a little into his cheeks as the eyes of the
+two men met.
+
+"What brings you to Vaux Abbey, Father Adrian?" Paul asked at length.
+
+"To see your home," was the quiet reply.
+
+"What do you want with me? It must be something more than curiosity
+which has brought you all this way. What is it?"
+
+Father Adrian was silent. Yet his silence was not one of confusion.
+He was looking down through the gaps in the ruined chapel walls at the
+dark Gothic front of the old Abbey. Paul waited for an answer, and it
+came at last.
+
+"I wished to see the home of Martin de Vaux, the Englishman who died
+in my arms at the monastery of Cruta. For six nights I have prayed
+for his soul in Purgatory, amongst the ruins here. He died in grievous
+sin!"
+
+"Have you come to remind me of it?" Paul asked bitterly. "Perhaps
+you have repented of your silence, and have come to break the widow's
+heart by telling her the story of his last moments. Perhaps--perhaps
+in those dark hours he told you his secret--told you why he had come
+to Cruta!"
+
+"He did," said the priest gravely.
+
+"My God!"
+
+It was a great shock to Paul. Hitherto he had feared only one thing:
+that the story of his father's tragical death might come to light, and
+break his mother's heart. Now there was more to fear,--far more. He
+looked into Father Adrian's face with a new and keener interest. He
+recognised at once that everything dear to him in life might be at
+this man's mercy.
+
+"You were intrusted with this secret by a dying man," Paul said, with
+a little hoarseness in his tone. "It is to you as the secrets of the
+confessional!"
+
+The priest shook his head gently. "He refused to confess. He told me
+distinctly that it was as man to man he spoke to me."
+
+Paul looked away into the night with white, stricken face, and cursed
+his father's weakness. Supposing that this priest had discovered
+that his conscience would not allow him to keep the secret! What
+more likely! Why else was he here,--why else did he disclaim the
+confessional? There was only one other alternative! Perhaps he desired
+to trade upon his secret. Yet how was that possible? Of what use could
+money be to him? What could he gain by it? Besides, his was not the
+face of an adventurer.
+
+"I do not understand," Paul said at last. "Once more let me ask you,
+Father Adrian, why are you here?"
+
+Father Adrian looked thoughtfully away. "You ask more than I can
+tell you," he said gravely. "The time has not yet come. We shall meet
+again. Farewell!"
+
+The priest turned away, but Paul laid his hand on his shoulder.
+
+"If there is anything which you ought or mean to tell me, tell me
+now," he demanded hoarsely. "I can bear everything but suspense. I
+know only--that there was a secret. No more. Proceed! Tell me more!"
+
+The priest shook his robe free from Paul's restraining hand, and
+turned away.
+
+"Not yet! Not yet! My mind is not yet clear. We shall meet again.
+Farewell!"
+
+"But----"
+
+"Farewell!"
+
+The priest had passed from the ruins, and was already out of sight in
+the gathering darkness.
+
+"Come back, Father Adrian! One word more!"
+
+"Farewell!"
+
+The priest did not turn his head. Paul was left alone, gazing after
+him with stern, troubled face and anxious heart. It was a danger which
+he had always foreseen, always dreaded. Henceforth he must live like
+a man who paces, day by day, the brink of a volcano. At any moment the
+blow might fall.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+"I AM WEARY OF A HOPELESS LOVE"
+
+
+Paul and Arthur shared a bachelor residence in Mayfair; shared it,
+that is to say, insomuch as Paul had purchased it, and was the sole
+proprietor, and Arthur used it whenever he could get leave from his
+regiment. It was here Paul found his brother on the morning of his
+arrival in London.
+
+They shook hands in silence; Paul did not wish to say anything for a
+moment. His brother's appearance had choked him. It was one o'clock,
+but he was still in his dressing-gown; with sunken, pale cheeks, save
+for one bright spot, and with faint, dark rims underneath his eyes.
+There were a pile of blue papers and some ominous-looking envelopes
+on the table before him, and Paul could not help noticing the intense
+pallor of the hand which rested upon them.
+
+"I wish you would let a fellow know what time you were coming," Arthur
+said, rather peevishly, but with an attempt at a smile. "I didn't
+expect you till evening, so I was having a shack before dressing. I
+was late last night!"
+
+Paul banished his gravity, as far as possible, and stood with his
+hands in his pockets, leaning against the mantel-piece. He heartily
+disliked the part of mentor, and he did not wish to play it, unless he
+were obliged.
+
+"It was beastly early to get up," he said, "but the connection at
+Normanton is so much better. One has to wait two hours by the late
+train, and Normanton is such a hole. I don't know that I should have
+come up to town at all, just yet," he continued after a slight pause,
+"only that I'm on the committee at the club this term, you know, and I
+haven't attended a single meeting yet. Besides, I promised Westover
+to put him up this time, and the half-yearly meeting's to-morrow, you
+know. Got any engagement? If not, you might dine with me there. Always
+a full night election time, you know!"
+
+"Beastly sorry! but my leave's up to night," Arthur answered ruefully.
+"I shall have to go down to Aldershot by the four o'clock train, and
+do a week's close grind."
+
+Paul nodded. "I'm sorry; I'd have liked you to run down home with me
+for a few days, and see the mater. The Westovers have some very nice
+people coming to the Castle, and are going to get up some theatricals.
+Lady May says they must have you! Will you come in a week, if I work
+the Colonel?"
+
+"I'm afraid I can't," Arthur answered, with a slight flush in his
+cheeks. "I have some engagements for next week, and--and--I'm sure I
+can't manage it."
+
+"The mater'll be disappointed," Paul said quietly. "She is counting on
+seeing you, and it's some time since you were down, isn't it? Tell you
+what, old man! I'd try and manage it, if I were you!"
+
+"I can't promise! I will, if I can manage it! I'll write you from
+Aldershot!"
+
+"You don't look quite the thing," Paul said kindly. "Nothing the
+matter, is there?"
+
+"Nothing at all," Arthur assured him hastily. "I'm quite well. A bit
+of a head, that's all."
+
+"Not too many of those bits of paper about, eh?" Paul asked, pointing
+to an oblong strip of blue paper which lay, face uppermost, on the
+table.
+
+Arthur coloured, and threw a book over it.
+
+"I am sorry I saw it," Paul went on; "but it was there to be seen,
+wasn't it?"
+
+"Oh, yes! that's all right! I oughtn't to have left it about, that's
+all. I'm not exactly a Croesus, like you, you know, Paul, and now
+and then I'm obliged to raise the wind somehow. Yes! I know what
+you're going to say. My allowance is a good one, and I ought to make
+it do. But, you see, sometimes I can't."
+
+"I hope you won't mind my asking, Arthur, but is that an acceptance of
+your own?"
+
+Arthur nodded. "There are a few accounts which I must pay," he said.
+"So I'm going to ask Plimsoll to do it for me. He's a decent fellow of
+his sort, you know! Lots of fellows go to him!"
+
+Paul stretched out his hand. "Give it to me," he said, "and I will
+discount it for you. Thanks!"
+
+Paul took it, and, just glancing at the amount, threw it into the
+fire. "I haven't my cheque book here," he said, "but we will call at
+the bank on our way to the club, and I can get the money. I'm glad I
+saw it!"
+
+"It's awfully good of you," Arthur said hesitatingly. "I shouldn't
+have thought of asking you. I must owe you an awful lot already."
+
+"Never mind what you owe me! I'll write it all off, Arthur, and this
+last amount too, if you'll do me a favour. Come down home with me next
+week, as soon as you can get leave."
+
+Arthur rose to his feet, and then, leaning against the mantel-board,
+buried his face in his hands. "I can't leave London, Paul!--or, if
+I did, it could only be for a day," he said in a low tone. "I wish I
+could tell you why, but I can't; you wouldn't understand!"
+
+"I think I know," Paul said quietly. "There is some one whom you do
+not care to leave! Is that not it?"
+
+Arthur looked up quickly. His face was very white, and his lip was
+quivering.
+
+"Who told you that? What do you know?"
+
+"I know nothing! I want you to tell me. Perhaps I could help you.
+There is a--lady in the case, isn't there?"
+
+Arthur stood up on the hearthrug, and spoke, with a subdued passion
+trembling in his tone.
+
+"Yes! it's Adrea Kiros, the dancer! I daresay you've heard all about
+it! I don't see why you shouldn't! I can't leave her! I know all that
+you would say! It doesn't make any difference. She isn't good! Well!
+I know it! She doesn't care for me! I don't believe she does. She's
+as cruel as a woman can be. Sometimes, when I am away from her, the
+thought of going back makes me shudder; and yet, I could no more keep
+away than lift the roof from this house. Of course, this sounds like
+rigmarole to you. You think I'm raving! I don't blame you. Only it is
+so, and I can't help it! I am as much a prisoner as any poor devil in
+Newgate."
+
+Paul laid his hand upon his brother's shoulder, and looked kindly into
+his face. "Arthur, I'm very sorry! And don't think I don't understand!
+I do! I do not know much of A--of Adrea Kiros, but I know enough
+to tell me that she is a very dangerous woman. Can't I help you,
+somehow?"
+
+"I--I don't think you can! I don't think any one can," Arthur
+exclaimed unsteadily. He had been prepared for a lecture, for good
+advice, for a little contempt even; but his brother's attitude was
+unexpected, and it almost unnerved him. "It is the uncertainty of it
+all that is so tormenting," he went on. "Sometimes she is so kind,
+and sweet, and thoughtful, that I could almost worship her. And then,
+without any cause, she will suddenly become cold, and hard, and cruel,
+till I hate myself for bearing quietly all that she says. But I do! I
+can't help it! I am never quite happy even when she is in one of her
+sweetest moods, for I never know how long it will last. The moment I
+leave her I begin to get anxious, and wonder how she will be the next
+day."
+
+"Try what a change will do, Arthur!" his brother begged.
+
+Arthur shook his head. "It's no use; I've tried! If I went away I
+should only be miserable, and hurry back by the first train. Oh, if
+only I could make you understand!" he cried, with a little passionate
+gesture, which gained pathos and almost dignity from the expression on
+his white, sorrowing face. "Adrea is as necessary to me as the air we
+breathe! The sun has no light, and the day no ending, till I have seen
+her! She is the measure of all things to me: joy, grief, happiness,
+misery, it is her hand that deals them out to me! She can play upon
+the chords of my being as she chooses. A look or word from her can
+pull me down into hell, or transport me into a seventh heaven! Who
+gave her this power, I cannot tell! But she has it! she has it!"
+
+Paul said no more. Perhaps he recognised that, for the present at
+any rate, it was useless. He walked up and down the room for a few
+minutes, in sympathetic silence. When he spoke again he made no
+reference to the subject, but Arthur understood. "Get your things on,
+and come out to lunch with me," he said pleasantly. "I am too hungry
+to be sympathetic, and we can call at Coutts' on the way."
+
+Arthur nodded and disappeared. Paul took his chair for a while, and,
+as he sat there gazing into the fire, his face grew grey and haggard.
+Was Adrea Kiros seeking vengeance on the son of her father's murderer?
+he wondered. If so, it seemed as though she were indeed succeeding.
+How could he save Arthur? and what would happen if those rumours
+should reach his mother's ears, as some day they certainly would? At
+any rate, he would see Adrea himself before he left London. He had
+made up his mind that, if Arthur refused to listen to him, that should
+be his course.
+
+Things somehow seemed brighter when they walked down to the club
+together. Dress makes so much difference to a man, and Arthur, spruce
+and _debonair_, with a gardenia in his button-hole, and every part
+of his attire almost "faultily faultless," according to the canons
+of London fashion, presented a very different appearance to the
+tragical-looking personage of half an hour ago. There was a slight air
+of subdued feverishness about him, though, not altogether healthy, and
+the dark rims had not quite vanished from underneath his eyes.
+
+"Paul, I wonder whether you will do something for me?" he asked, as
+they were crossing Pickadilly. "I hate asking you!"
+
+"I'll try," Paul answered. "What is it?"
+
+"I don't believe you'll like it, but--the fact is, Adrea wants you to
+go and see her. I promised that I would do my best to get you to call
+with me this afternoon. If you don't mind, I wish you would," he added
+wistfully.
+
+"I will go with you certainly, if you wish it," Paul answered, not too
+cordially, for he did not wish his brother to know that it was what
+he had already planned to do. "Did she tell you that we had already a
+slight acquaintance?"
+
+"Yes! You rode home in a cab together from Lady Swindon's, didn't you?
+There was only one, and it was raining, so you shared it. Adrea told
+me that."
+
+Paul nodded. He meant, after he had seen Adrea, to consider whether
+it would not be best to tell his brother everything. But, for the
+present, her story was enough. They turned into Pall Mall, and, almost
+immediately, Arthur's hat was in his hand, and he was on the edge of
+the pavement, colouring with pleasure. A small victoria had pulled up
+by the side, and Paul found himself face to face with Adrea.
+
+She was muffled up in rich brown furs, and almost invisible, but her
+dark eyes flashed into his from underneath her thick veil. After the
+first greeting she scarcely noticed Arthur; it was Paul upon whom her
+eyes were bent.
+
+"You are in London again, then, Mr. de Vaux," she remarked. "Have you
+discovered that, after all, the country is a little _triste_ in this
+land of damp and fogs--the country in November, I mean--or is it only
+important business which has brought you up!"
+
+"The latter," he answered, "as it happens. I am glad to see that the
+damp and fogs which you complain of have not affected your health."
+
+"I am quite well, thanks," she answered. "How long are you staying in
+town?"
+
+"For less than a week, I think."
+
+"Well, it is too cold to talk here. Will you come and let me give you
+some tea this afternoon, after the fashion of you strange islanders? I
+want you to, please."
+
+Paul looked her straight in the face. "You are very kind; I shall be
+glad to," he answered.
+
+She nodded. "About five o'clock. I go to sleep till then. Shall you
+come, Arthur?" she added carelessly.
+
+"I cannot, so late as that," he answered despondently.
+
+"Ah, I forgot. You are going down to Aldershot, aren't you? Don't
+overwork yourself."
+
+She nodded, and the carriage drove on. Arthur watched it until it
+was out of sight. "She might have said a little earlier," he remarked
+despondently. "She knew I couldn't come so late as that."
+
+Paul passed his arm through his brother's and was silent. He knew very
+well that Adrea had thought of this when she had made the arrangement.
+
+They lunched together, and Paul did his utmost to make the time
+pass pleasantly for his brother. When they parted, too, late in the
+afternoon, he referred once more to Mrs. de Vaux's desire that he
+should come down to the Abbey for a few days.
+
+"I want you to think of it seriously, Arthur," he said, as they shook
+hands through the carriage window. "The mother is very anxious to have
+you, and I am sure we can make things pleasant for you. I shall speak
+to Drummond about leave if I see him to-morrow."
+
+Arthur assented dubiously, and without any enthusiasm.
+
+"Awfully good of you to want me," he remarked. "I daresay I'll be able
+to come. I'll try, anyhow--just for a day or two."
+
+The train steamed off, and Paul walked slowly back to his carriage.
+
+"Where to, sir?" the man asked.
+
+Paul hesitated for a moment. Then he gave Adrea's address, and was
+driven away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+"AH! HOW FAIR MY WEAKNESS FINDS THEE"
+
+
+Paul found no one in the hall of the house where Adrea lived to take
+him to her, so after waiting a few minutes for her maid, whom the
+porter had twice fruitlessly summoned, he ascended the stairs alone,
+and knocked at the door of her rooms.
+
+At first there was no reply. He tried again a little louder, and this
+time there was a sound of some one stirring within.
+
+"Come in, Celeste," was the drowsy answer.
+
+He turned the handle and walked in, carefully closing the door behind
+him. At first the room appeared to be in semi-darkness, for a clear
+spring day's sunshine was brightening the streets which he had just
+left, and here the heavy curtains were closely drawn, as though
+to keep out every vestige of daylight. But gradually his eyes grew
+accustomed to the shaded twilight and he could make out the familiar
+objects of the room; for although it was only his second visit, they
+were familiar already in his thoughts.
+
+Strangely enough it seemed to him, after his first hasty glance
+around, that the room was empty; but just then a sudden gleam from
+the bright fire fell upon Adrea's hair, and he saw her. He stood for a
+moment silent and motionless. She was curled up on a huge divan
+drawn close to the fireplace, with her limbs doubled under her like a
+panther's, and her arms, from which the loose sleeves had fallen back,
+clasped half-bare underneath her head. The peculiar grace of movement
+and carriage, which had made her dancing so famous, was even more
+striking in repose, for there was a faint, insidious suggestion of
+voluptuous movement in those motionless, crouching limbs, and the
+_abandon_ of the shapely, dusky head, with its crown of dark, wavy
+hair thrown back amongst the cushions. It was beauty of a strange
+sort, the beauty almost of some wild animal; but Paul felt a most
+unwilling admiration steal through his senses as he gazed down upon
+her. Her tea-gown, a wonderful shade of shimmering green, tumbled and
+disarranged out of all similitude to its original shape, followed the
+soft perfections of her outline with such peculiar faithfulness that
+it seemed to suggest even more than it concealed, leaving the gentle
+tracery of her figure outlined there like a piece of living Greek
+statuary. She turned slightly upon the couch, and a slipperless little
+foot stole out from a sea of lace and white draperies which her uneasy
+movement had left exposed, and swayed slowly backwards and forwards,
+trying to reach the ground. Her eyes were still closed, but she was
+not sleeping, for in a moment or two she spoke in a low, drowsy tone.
+
+"Celeste, I told you not to disturb me for an hour. It isn't five
+o'clock yet, is it?"
+
+He roused himself, and moved a step further into the room. "It is
+still a quarter to five, I think," he said. "I have come before my
+time."
+
+She opened her eyes, and then, seeing him, sprang into a sitting
+posture. Her hair, which had escaped all bounds, was down to her
+shoulders, and her gown, still further disarranged by her hasty
+movement, floated around her in wonderful curves and angles. Had she
+been a past mistress in the art of picturesque effects she could have
+conceived nothing more striking. Paul felt all the old fear upon him
+as he watched the firelight gleaming upon her startled, dusky face,
+and the faint pink colouring, wonderfully suggestive of a blush, steal
+into her cheeks. It seemed to him that she was as beautiful as a woman
+could be, and yet so different from Lady May.
+
+She rose, and, with a shrug of the shoulders and a quick, graceful
+movement, shook out her skirts, and pushed the hair back from her
+face. Then she held out her hand, and Paul found himself compelled,
+against his will, to stand by her side.
+
+"How strange that I should have overslept like this, and have taken
+you for Celeste!" she said. "Yet perhaps it was natural; for, Monsieur
+Paul, save Celeste, no one yet has permission to enter my chamber
+unannounced. How comes it that I find you here to laugh at my
+_deshabille_?"
+
+He was silent for a moment, while she looked at him questioningly.
+Her soft, delicate voice, with its very slight but piquant foreign
+intonation, had often sounded in his reluctant yet charmed ears since
+their last meeting; but now that he heard it again he felt how weak
+were his imaginings, and what sweet music it indeed was.
+
+"I am sorry," he answered; and the constraint which he was placing
+upon his voice made it sound hard and cold. "The porter rang for your
+maid twice whilst I waited in the hall; but as she did not come, I
+thought I had better try and find the way myself."
+
+"And I mistook your knock for Celeste's, and let you discover me
+_comme cela_. Well, you were not to blame. See, I will just arrange my
+hair here, and you need not look at me unless you like."
+
+She stood up in front of a mirror, over which she lighted a shaded
+candle, and for a moment or two her white hands flashed deftly in and
+out amongst the dark, silky coils of disordered hair. Paul sat down,
+and taking up a magazine which he found lying on the divan, tried to
+concentrate his thoughts upon its contents. But he could not. Every
+moment he found his eyes and his thoughts straying to that slim, lithe
+figure, watching the play of her arms and the grace of her backward
+pose. When she looked suddenly round, on the completion of her task,
+their eyes met.
+
+"Monsieur Paul, you are like all your sex--curious," she said lightly.
+"Tell me, then, do you admire my coiffure?"
+
+"Very much," he answered, glancing at the loose Grecian knot into
+which she had gathered her disordered hair, and confined it with a
+band of dull gold. "It is quite oriental, and it seems to suit you.
+Not that I am any judge of such matters," he added quickly.
+
+She moved away with a little, low laugh, and lit two or three more of
+the shaded candles or fairy lamps which were placed here and there on
+brackets round the room. Then she rang the bell, and gave some orders
+to the maid.
+
+"So you think my hair looks oriental," she said, sinking down upon a
+huge cushion in front of the fire. "That is what the papers call me
+sometimes--oriental. My early associations asserting themselves, you
+see. I think I remember more of Constantinople than any place," she
+went on dreamily, with her eyes fixed on the fire. "I was only a child
+in those days, but it seemed to me then that nothing could be more
+beautiful than the City of Mosques and the Golden Horn on a clear
+summer evening. Why do I think of those days?" she added, shaking her
+head impatiently. "Such folly! And yet I always think of them when I
+am lonely."
+
+He was suddenly and deeply moved with altogether a new feeling towards
+her--one of responsibility. She was alone in the world, and it was his
+father's hand which had rendered her so. How empty and barren had been
+his conception of the burden which that deed had laid upon him! Like a
+flash he seemed to see the whole situation in a new light. If, indeed,
+she had drifted into ruin, the sin lay at his door. He should have
+found her a mother; it should have been his care to have watched her
+continually, and to have assured himself that she was contented and
+happy. In those few moments the whole situation seemed to change, and
+he even felt a hot flush of shame at his own coldness towards her. He
+forgot the dancer, the woman of strange fascinations, the idol of the
+_jeunesse dorée_ of West London clubdom, and he remembered only the
+fact that she was a lonely orphan with a most womanly light in her
+soft, dark eyes, and that he had failed in his duty towards her.
+Paul was essentially a "manly" man, self-contained, and with all
+his feelings very much at his control; but at that moment he felt
+something like a rush of tenderness towards this strange, dark-eyed
+girl who lay coiled up at his feet. Involuntarily he stretched out his
+hand and laid it, with an almost caressing gesture, upon her hair.
+
+She started around, as though electrified, and looking up saw the
+change in his face. It was the first kindly look or speech she had
+had from him since they had met in London, and it had come so suddenly
+that it seemed to have a strange effect upon her. A deep flush stole
+into her face, and her eyes gleamed brilliantly. She drew a long
+breath, and underneath her loose gown he could see her bosom rising
+and falling quickly. Yet it all seemed so softened and womanly that
+the thoughts which he had once had of her seemed like a distant
+nightmare to him. The ethical and physical horror of her being--of her
+ever becoming--what he feared, rose up strong within him, and deepened
+at once his sense of responsibility towards her, and his new-born
+tenderness. He took her hand gently, and was startled to find how cold
+it was.
+
+"So you do feel lonely, Adrea, sometimes," he said softly, "although
+you have so many acquaintances."
+
+The colour burned deeper for a moment in her cheeks. She looked at him
+half reproachfully, half indignantly.
+
+"Acquaintances! You mean the people who come to see me! I hate them
+all! Sometimes they amuse me a little, but that is all. They are
+nothing!"
+
+"And you have no women friends?"
+
+"None! How should I! But I do not care. I do not like English-women!"
+
+"But, Adrea, it is not good for you,--this isolation from your sex."
+
+At the sound of her Christian name, coming from his lips so gently,
+almost affectionately, she looked up quickly. It seemed to him
+almost as though some softening change had crept over her. Was it the
+firelight, he wondered, or was it fancy?
+
+"Good for me!" she said softly. "Have you just thought of that,
+Monsieur Paul?"
+
+Again he felt that pang of conscience; and yet, was she not a little
+unjust to him?
+
+"You took your life into your own hands," he reminded her. "You chose
+for yourself."
+
+"Yes, yes!" she answered, drawing a little nearer to him, till her
+head almost rested upon his knees. "I do not blame you."
+
+"It would have been so easy before to have found a home for you," he
+went on, "and now you have made it so difficult."
+
+"There is no need," she interrupted proudly; "I could keep myself now.
+I do not want anything from you, Monsieur Paul,--save one thing!"
+
+She raised her face to his, and it seemed to him to be all aglow with
+a wonderful, new light. There was no mistaking the soft entreaty of
+those strange, dark eyes so close to his, or the tremor in his tones.
+And then, before he could answer her, before he could summon up
+resolution enough to draw away, she had stolen softly into his arms,
+and, with a little murmur of content, had rested her small, dusky
+head, with its coronet of dark, braided hair, upon his shoulder, and
+twined her hands around his neck.
+
+"Paul! Monsieur Paul! I am lonely and miserable. Love me just a
+little, only a little!" she pleaded.
+
+It was the supreme moment for both of them. To her, coveting this
+love with all the passionate force of her fiery oriental nature, time
+seemed to stand still while she rested passively in his arms, neither
+altogether accepted nor altogether repulsed. And to him, as he sat
+there pale and shaken, fighting fiercely against this great temptation
+which threatened his self-respect, his liberty of body and soul, life
+seemed to have turned into a grim farce, full of grotesque lights and
+shadows, mocking and gibing at all which had seemed to him sweet and
+pure and strong. Her warm breath fell upon his cheek, and her eyes
+maddened him. A curiously faint perfume from her clothes floated upon
+the air, and oppressed him with its peculiar richness. He was a strong
+man but at that moment he faltered. It seemed as though some unseen
+hand were weaving a spell upon him, as though his whole environment
+was being drawn in around him, and he himself were powerless. Yet,
+even in that moment of intoxication, his reason did not altogether
+desert him. He knew that if he opened his arms to receive that
+clinging figure, and drew the delicate, tear-stained face, full
+of mute invitation, down to his, to be covered with passionate
+kisses,--he knew that at that moment he would sign the death-warrant
+to all that had seemed fair and sweet and comely in his life. Forever
+he must live without self-respect, a dishonoured man in his own eyes,
+perhaps some day in hers,--for he had no more faith in her love than
+in his.
+
+He held her hands tightly in his,--he had unwound them gently from his
+neck,--and stood up face to face with her upon the hearthrug. The soft
+fire-light threw up strange, ruddy gleams, which glowed around her and
+shown in her dark eyes, fixed so earnestly and so passionately upon
+his.
+
+"Adrea," he said, and his low, hoarse tone sounded harsh and
+unfamiliar to his ears, "you do not know----"
+
+She interrupted him, she threw her arms again around his neck, and her
+upturned face almost met his.
+
+"I do know! I do know! I understand--everything! Only I--cannot live
+without you, Paul!"
+
+Her head sank upon his shoulder; he could not thrust her away. Very
+gently he passed his arms around her, and drew her to him. He knew
+that he could trust himself. For him the battle was over. Even as she
+had crept into his arms, there had come to him a flash of memory--a
+sudden, swift vision. The walls of the dimly lit, dainty little
+chamber, with all its charm of faint perfume, soft lights, and
+luxurious drapings, had opened before him, and he looked out upon
+another world. A bare Northumbrian moor, with its tumbled masses of
+grey rock, its low-hanging, misty clouds and silent tarns, stretched
+away before his eyes. A strong, fresh breeze, salt-smelling and
+bracing, cooled his hot face. The roar of a great ocean thundered in
+his ears, and an angry sunset burned strange colours into the
+western sky. And with these actual memories came a healthier tone of
+feeling--something, indeed, of the old North-country puritanism which
+was in his blood. The sea spoke to him of the vastness of life, and
+dared him to cast his away, soiled and tarnished, for the sake of a
+brief, passionate delight. The breeze, nature's very voice, whispered
+to him to stand true to himself, and taste once more and for ever the
+deep joy of pure and perfect communion with her. The voices of his
+past life spoke to him in one long, sweet chorus, and held up to him
+those ideals to which he had been ever true. And blended with all were
+memories, faint but sweet, of a fair womanly face, into whose clear
+grey eyes he could never dare to look again if he yielded now to this
+fierce temptation. A new strength came upon him, and brought with it a
+great tenderness.
+
+"Adrea, my child," he said softly, "you make me almost forget that I
+am your guardian and you are my ward. Sit down here! I want to talk to
+you."
+
+He led her, dumb and unresisting, to a chair, and stood by her side.
+
+"Adrea----"
+
+She interrupted him, throwing his arms roughly from her shoulder, and
+springing to her feet.
+
+"How dare you touch me! How dare you stand there and mock me! Oh! how
+I hate you! hate you! hate you!"
+
+Her voice and every limb trembled with passion, and her face was as
+pale as death. Before her anger he bowed his head and was silent.
+Against the sombre background of dark curtains, her slim form seemed
+to gain an added strength and dignity.
+
+"You have insulted me, Paul de Vaux! Do I not owe you enough already,
+without putting this to the score! Dare you think that it was indeed
+my love I offered you--you who stood by and saw my father murdered
+that you might be spared from shame and disgrace! Bah! Listen to me
+and go! You have a brother? Good! I shall ruin him, shall break his
+heart; and, when the task is over, I shall cast him away like an old
+glove! Oh, it will be easy, never fear! I shall do it. Arthur is no
+cold hypocrite, like you. He is my slave. And when I have ruined him,
+have set my foot upon him, it will be your turn, Monsieur Paul de
+Vaux. Listen! I will know my father's secret! I will know why he was
+murdered! I will discover everything! Some day the whole world shall
+know--from me. Now go! Out of my sight, I say! Go! go! go!"
+
+With bowed head and face as white as death Paul walked out of the
+room, with her words ringing in his ears like the mocking echoes of
+some hideous nightmare.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+"I AM BUT A SLAVE, AND YET I BID THEE COME"
+
+
+"Were there any letters for me this morning, mother?" Paul asked.
+
+"Only one for you, I think," Mrs. de Vaux answered from across the
+tea-tray. "I believe you will find it in the library. Shall I send for
+it?"
+
+Paul shook his head. "It will keep," he answered lightly. "I can get
+it on my way upstairs. Have we anything left to tell, Lady May?"
+
+"I think not," Lady May replied, from the depths of an easy chair
+drawn up to the fire. "Altogether it has been a glorious day, and such
+a scent! I don't know when I have enjoyed anything so much."
+
+"Nor I!" Paul answered heartily. "The going was superb, and that
+second fox took us over a grand stretch of country. Really, if it
+hadn't been for the walls here and there, we might have been in
+Leicestershire! May I have some more tea, mother?"
+
+Mrs. de Vaux stretched out her hand for his cup, and smiled gently
+at their enthusiasm. She had been a hunting woman all her life; and,
+though she seldom even drove to a meet now, she liked to have her son
+come in to afternoon tea with her, and talk over the run. Of late,
+too, he had seemed so pale and listless that she had been getting a
+little anxious. She had begun to fear that he must be out of health,
+or that the monotony of Vaux Abbey was wearying him, and that he would
+be leaving her again soon. But to-day she had watched him ride up the
+avenue, with Lady May, and it seemed to her that there was a change in
+his bearing--a change for the better; and, looking at him now, she
+was sure of it. A faint glow was in his cheeks, and his eyes were
+brighter. His manner, too, to Lady May pleased her more. He had ridden
+home with her; from their conversation, they seemed to have been
+together almost all day; and there seemed to be a spirit of _bon
+comeradie_ between the two, as they talked over their doings, which
+certainly pointed to a good understanding. Altogether Mrs. de Vaux was
+pleased and hopeful.
+
+And, indeed, she had reason to be, for his long day in the open
+country with Lady May had been like a strong, sweet tonic to Paul. For
+the first time since his return to Vaux Abbey he had felt that a
+time might come when he would be able to escape altogether from those
+lingering, bitter-sweet memories which were all that remained to
+him now of Adrea. On the bare, windy moor, with the glow of physical
+exercise and excitement coursing through his veins, and Lady May's
+pleasant voice in his ears, that little scene in the rose-lit chamber
+seemed for a moment very far away. Adrea, with her soft, passion-lit
+eyes, and dusky, oriental face, her lithe, voluptuous figure and the
+faint perfumes of her rustling draperies, seemed less to him then than
+a short while ago he could have believed possible. He could not think
+of that scene without a shudder,--it had left its mark in a certain
+way for ever,--but it was not so constantly present to him. He knew
+that, for the first time, a woman had tempted him sorely. He knew,
+too, and he alone, how nearly he had yielded. His sudden passion, her
+strange Eastern beauty, and the fascination which it had exercised
+over him, together with the soft sensuousness of her surroundings,
+had formed a strong coalition, and to-day he recognised, for the first
+time, how much he owed his victory to the girl who was riding by his
+side. Even in those breathless moments of hesitation he had found time
+to consider that if he yielded to Adrea's pleading, he could never
+again take Lady May's hand, or meet her frank, open gaze. The pure
+healthfulness of life which had been so dear to him would be tainted
+for ever. The moorland breezes of his northern home would never strike
+the same chords in his nature again. All these recollections had
+flashed across his mind at that critical moment, lending strength to
+resist and crush his passion. And to-day he had commenced to reap his
+reward. To-day he had tasted once more the sweets of these things, and
+found how dear they still were to him. He could still look into Lady
+May's fair, pure face unshamed, and find all the old pleasure in
+listening to her frank, girlish talk; and he could still bare his
+head to the sweeping winds, and lift his face to the sun and gaze with
+silent admiration at the faint, deepening colours in the western
+sky, as Lady May and he rode homeward across the moor in the late
+afternoon. All these joys would have been lost to him for ever,--these
+and many others. Adrea could never have repaid him for their loss.
+
+So Paul, who had come home from London pale and silent, with the marks
+of a great struggle upon him, lay back in an arm chair and watched
+the firelight play upon Lady May's fair face with more than a passive
+interest. Mrs. de Vaux's cherished scheme had never been so near its
+accomplishment; for if she could have read Paul's thoughts she would
+have known that he was thinking of Lady May more tenderly than he had
+ever done before. Meeting his steadfast, almost wistful, gaze, she
+became almost confused, and suddenly rising, she shook out the skirts
+of her riding habit, and took up her hat and whip.
+
+"It has been such a delightful rest," she said, looking away from Paul
+and speaking to his mother. "I shall never forget how good that tea
+tasted! But I really must go, Mrs. de Vaux! My poor animal is quite
+done up, and I shall have to walk all the way home."
+
+"I don't know whether I did right," Paul said, rising, "but I sent
+your groom straight on home with the mare, and ordered a brougham
+for you. She has had a long day, and I thought it would be more
+comfortable for you."
+
+She flashed a grateful glance at him. "How thoughtful and how kind
+you are! Of course it will be nicer! I was beginning to feel a little
+selfish, too, for keeping Betty out of her stable so long."
+
+"As a reward we will keep you a little longer," he remarked. "It is
+only six o'clock!"
+
+She shook her head. "No I won't stop, thanks! There are some tiresome
+people coming to dine to-night, and I must go home. Good-bye, Lady de
+Vaux!"
+
+Paul strolled down the hall with her and handed her into the carriage.
+For the first time in his life he held her hand a little tighter and a
+little longer than was necessary.
+
+"Shall you be at home to-morrow afternoon, Lady May?" he asked
+quietly.
+
+She looked up at him for a moment, and then her eyes drooped, and her
+heart beat a little faster. She understood him.
+
+"Yes!" she answered softly.
+
+"I shall ride over then! Good-bye!"
+
+"Good-bye!"
+
+He lingered on the doorstep for a minute, watching the carriage roll
+down the avenue. When it had disappeared, he turned back into the
+hall, and after a moment's hesitation, entered the library.
+
+It was a large, sombre-looking apartment, scarcely ever entered by
+anyone save Paul. The bookcases reached only half-way up the walls,
+the upper portion of which was hung with oil portraits, selected from
+the picture gallery. At the lower end of the room the shelves had been
+built out at right angles to the wall, lined with books, and in one
+of the recesses so-formed--almost as large as an ordinary-sized
+chamber--Paul had his writing-table surrounded by his favourite
+volumes. It was a delightful little miniature library. Facing him,
+six rows of black oak shelves held a fine collection of classical
+literature; on his left, the lower shelves contained rare editions
+of the early English dramatists, and the upper ones were given up to
+poetry, from Chaucer to Swinburne. The right-hand shelves were wholly
+French, from quaint volumes of troubadours' poetry to Alfred de Musset
+and De Maupassant. It was here Paul spent most of his time when at the
+Abbey.
+
+The meet had been rather a long way off that morning, and he had left
+before the arrival of the post-bag from the neighbouring town. Mrs. de
+Vaux had distributed the letters, and the one she had spoken of lay
+at the edge of the table. He stretched out his hand to take it
+up--without any presentiments, without any thought as to whom it might
+be from. An invitation, doubtless, or a begging letter he imagined, as
+he caught sight of the large square envelope. But suddenly, before his
+fingers had closed upon it, he started and stood quite still, leaning
+over the back of his chair. His heart was beating fast, and there was
+a mist before his eyes--a mist through which he saw, as though in
+a dream, the walls of his library melt away, to be replaced by the
+dainty interior of that little room in Grey Street, with all the dim
+luxury of its soft colouring and adornment. He saw her too, the
+centre of the picture--saw her as she seemed to him before that final
+scene--saw her half-kneeling, half-crouching, before him, with her
+beautiful dark eyes, yearning and passionate, fixed upon his in mute,
+but wonderfully eloquent, pleading. Oh! it was folly, but it was
+sweet, marvellously sweet. Every nerve seemed thrilled with the
+exquisite pleasure of the memory so suddenly called up to him, and his
+lips quivered with the thought of what he might have said to her.
+The strange, voluptuous perfume which crept upwards from that letter
+seemed in a measure to have paralysed him. He stood there like a man
+entranced, with the dim firelight on one side and the low horned moon
+through the high window on his left, casting a strange, vivid light
+on his pale face--paler even than usual against the scarlet of his
+hunting-coat. That letter! What could it contain? Was it a recall, or
+a fresh torrent of anger? He stood there quite still, leaning over the
+back of the high-backed oak chair emblazoned with the De Vaux arms,
+and making no motion towards taking it up.
+
+A sound from outside--the low rumbling of a gong--roused him at last,
+and he pushed the chair hastily away from him. His first impulse
+was one of anger, of shame, that he, a strong man, as he had deemed
+himself, should have been so moved by a simple flood of memories.
+It seemed ignoble to him and a frown gathered on his forehead as he
+reached forward and picked up the letter. Yet his fingers trembled as
+they tore it open, and his eyes ran over the contents rapidly.
+
+ "18 GREY STREET, LONDON, W., _Thursday_.
+
+ "Monsieur Paul, my hand trembles a little when I sit down to
+ write to you, and think of our last parting. But write to you
+ I must! I am very humble now, and very, very much ashamed!
+ Shall I go on and say that I am very sad and lonely,--for
+ it is so! I am miserable! I have been miserable every moment
+ since that day! Forgive me, Monsieur Paul, forgive me! my
+ guardian. I behaved quite dreadfully, and I deserved to be
+ punished. Believe me! I am punished. I have had scarcely any
+ sleep, and my eyes are swollen with weeping. I have cancelled
+ all my engagements this week, and I have closed my doors to
+ everybody. Oh! be generous, Monsieur Paul! be generous and
+ forgive me! I have suffered so much,--it is right that I
+ should, for I was much to blame. Will you not let fall some
+ kindly veil of memory over that afternoon. I was mad. Let
+ what I said be unsaid! Let me be again just what you called
+ me,--your ward. I ask for nothing more! Be cold, if you will,
+ and stern! Scold me! and I will but say that I have deserved
+ it! Only come to me! Come and let me hear your own lips tell
+ me that I am forgiven. I will do everything that you ask! I
+ will not see Arthur if he calls,--you shall tell me yourself
+ how to answer his letters,--I have a little pile of them here.
+ Monsieur Paul, you must come! You must come, or I shall be
+ driven to--but no! I will not threaten. You would not care
+ whatever happened to me, would you? I am very, very lonely. I
+ wish that I could have telegraphed all this, and had you here
+ to-night! But you would not have come! Yet, perhaps you would,
+ out of kindness to a solitary girl. I like to think that you
+ would have!
+
+ "Monsieur Paul, you have been good to the 'little brown girl,'
+ as you used to call her, all your life! Do not forsake her
+ now. She has been very mad and wicked, but she is very, very
+ penitent. Celeste tells me that I am looking thin and ill, and
+ my looking-glass says the same. It is because I am unhappy;
+ it is because my guardian is angry with me, and he is so far
+ away. Oh! Monsieur Paul, come, come, come to me! It shall be
+ all as you wish! I will obey you in everything. Only forgive!
+
+ "Yours,
+
+ "ADREA."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+ADREA'S DIARY
+
+ "A figure from the past I see once more as in a dream."
+
+
+This evening I have had an adventure! I am thankful, for it has
+occupied my thoughts for awhile; and for anything that does that I am
+grateful. I had been in the house all day, restless and nervous, and
+towards dusk I put on my cloak and a thick veil, and went out into the
+street. I scarcely noticed which way I went. It was all the same to
+me. A dull purple bank of clouds hung low down in the west, and the
+air was close and still. By-and-by I heard thunder, and big raindrops
+fell upon the pavement. A storm was threatening, and I longed for it
+to come and clear the air.
+
+I must have been walking for nearly an hour, when it came at last, and
+the rain fell in great sheets. I looked around for a cab, but there
+was none in sight. I had no idea where I was,--London is so vast and
+large,--and though, by the distant roar of wheels, I could tell that
+I was not far from a great thoroughfare, the street in which I was
+seemed to be deserted. Just by my side was a dark tunnel, gloomy and
+vault-like in appearance; but in that downpour any refuge was welcome,
+and I stepped back underneath it. It was like going into the bowels
+of the earth; and, every now and then, there was a roar over my head
+which made me almost dizzy. But, from round the corner, I could see
+that it was only the sound of trains passing and repassing, so I
+decided to stay until I could see a cab.
+
+Opposite to me was a man with a truck-load of oranges, and by his
+side a boy seated before a red-hot swinging can, containing chestnuts.
+There was no one else in the street, although at the bottom of it
+crowds of people and a constant stream of vehicles were hurrying
+along. On the other side of the way was a tall and grim-looking
+building, discoloured with smoke and age. It was evidently a hospital
+or institution of some sort. The windows were long and narrow, and one
+or two of them, I could see, were of stained glass. There was no brass
+plate by the front door, nor any sign. In the absence of anything else
+to do, I began to frame surmises as to what the place might be. The
+spotlessly white doorsteps and polished bell interested me;
+they seemed out of tone with the character of the place and its
+surroundings, so utterly bare and dreary. I began to wish that a
+caller would come and ring the bell, so that I could get a peep at
+the interior. But no one did, although I noticed that more than one
+hurrying passer-by glanced up at it curiously.
+
+The thunder died away, but the rain still came down heavily. If it had
+not been for my curious interest in that great ugly building opposite,
+I should have risked a wetting, and made my way down to the busy
+thoroughfare in the distance. But I was anxious to see some one enter
+or leave the place, or for something to happen which would give me
+an idea as to its character; so I waited. Half an hour passed, and my
+curiosity remained unsatisfied. There was no sign of life about
+the place; not even a tradesman had called, nor had that
+forbidding-looking portal once been opened. It was still raining fast,
+but there were signs of finer weather, and right overhead was a
+break in the clouds. I should certainly be able to leave now in a few
+minutes; but, strangely enough, all my impatience seemed gone. The
+grim-looking building opposite had fascinated me. I had no desire to
+leave the place until I had found out all about it.
+
+It was odd, that curiosity of mine; all my days I shall wonder at it.
+On the face of it, it seemed so unreasonable, and yet it led to so
+much. I have no creed, and I know nothing about philosophies, or
+perhaps to-night's adventure might have meant even more to me. But,
+indeed, it seems as though some unseen hand led me out and brought me
+into that deserted street. From to-night there must be changes in my
+life; I cannot escape from them. As yet I am too much in a whirl to
+ask myself whether I wish to.
+
+To return to that house. When I saw that the storm was clearing, and
+that I should be able to leave in a few minutes, I determined to make
+an effort to satisfy my curiosity. I crossed the road, and addressed
+the man who was sitting on the handles of his barrow of oranges.
+
+"Do you know what place that is opposite?" I asked, pointing across
+the road.
+
+He took out a filthy pipe from his mouth, and spat upon the pavement.
+I think that he must have noticed my look of disgust, for he answered
+me surlily, "No, I don't!"
+
+I turned to the boy. "Do you?" I asked.
+
+He shook his head. "Not for certain, ma'am. I believe it's some sort
+of a Roman Catholic place, though. Them gents in long clothes and
+shovel hats is allus going in and hout. 'Ullo, Bill! Here she be
+again! She's a-trying it on, ain't she?"
+
+The man looked up and grunted. I followed the boy's glance, and saw a
+tall, dark woman walking swiftly along on the other side of the road.
+From the very first her figure was somehow familiar to me, and
+
+She stopped outside the closed door, and hesitated for a moment,
+as though doubtful whether to ring or not. During her moment of
+hesitation she glanced round, and I recognised her. She could not see
+me, for I was in the shadow of the underground tunnel.
+
+"Blarmed if she ain't come again," the man growled. "She's as regular
+as clockwork! Wonder what she wants!"
+
+I felt my knees trembling; I could not have crossed the road at
+that moment if it had been to save my life. The boy looked up at me
+curiously.
+
+"Happen you know her, lady," he remarked. "She's been here at this
+time, or thereabouts, pretty near every day for a fortnight."
+
+Happen I know her! Yes, that was the boy's odd phrase. It rang in my
+ears, and I found myself gasping for breath. My eyes were fixed upon
+that tall, slender figure, clothed in sober black, waiting upon the
+doorstep with bowed head, and standing very still and motionless. It
+was like an effigy of patience. There were not two women in the world
+like that; it was impossible. She was in England, and alone--free!
+What did it mean? Should I run to her, or hide away? I glanced over my
+shoulder where the black shadows of the tunnel were only dimly lit by
+the feeble gaslight. I could steal away, and she would never see
+me. Yet as I thought of it, the grimy, barren street and the
+solemn-looking building faded away before my eyes. The sun and wind
+burned my face; the wind, salt with ocean spray, and echoing with the
+hoarse screaming of the sea-birds that rode upon it. I was at Cruta
+again, panting to be free, stealing away in the twilight down the
+narrow path amongst the rocks to where that tiny boat lay waiting,
+like a speck upon the waters. And it was she who had helped me--the
+sad-faced woman who had braved the terrible anger of the man whom we
+had both dreaded. Again I heard her gentle words of counsel, and the
+answering lies which should have blistered my lips. For I lied to her,
+not hastily or on impulse, but deliberately in cold blood. Anything,
+I cried to myself, to escape from this rock, this living death! So I
+lied to her, and she helped me. No wonder that I trembled. No wonder
+that I half made up my mind to flee away into the sheltering darkness
+of that noisome-looking tunnel.
+
+It takes long to set down in writing the thoughts which flashed
+through me at that moment. Yet when I had made up my mind the woman
+was still there, waiting meekly before the closed door.
+
+"You were speaking of her," I said to the boy, who was half-sitting,
+half-crouching against the side of the tunnel. "What was it you said?
+I did not hear."
+
+Man and boy commenced to tell me together. Their strange London talk
+puzzled me, and I could only extract a confused sense of what they
+said. The woman, to whom they rudely pointed, had called at the
+building opposite every day for a fortnight at about this hour to make
+some inquiry. Day by day she had turned away, after one brief question
+asked and answered, with bowed head and dejected manner. Yet, day by
+day, she returned and repeated it. Ever the same disappointment, the
+same despair!
+
+They knew nothing more. Her regular visits had awakened a certain
+curiosity in them, and they had commenced to look for them, and
+indulge in a little mild speculation as to her one day meeting with
+a different reception. Nothing more! There was a shade of pity in the
+boy's tone, and I gave him a shilling; then I crossed the road.
+
+As I left the kerbstone, the door opened and I heard her question:--
+
+"Has Father Adrian called or written, or sent any address yet,
+please?"
+
+The man, who had opened the door only a few inches, kept in the
+background, and I could see nothing of him, but I heard his grim,
+monosyllable reply:
+
+"No! Father Adrian has not visited or communicated with us."
+
+She turned away with a meek "Thank you," and found herself face to
+face with me. My heart smote me when I saw how poor were her clothes,
+and how thin her features.
+
+At first she did not know me; but I raised my veil, and whispered her
+name softly in her ear.
+
+She threw up her hands, and swayed backwards and forwards upon the
+pavement.
+
+"Adrea! Adrea!" she cried wildly. "My God!"
+
+A cab drove up, and I called it. She had just strength enough to enter
+it, leaning heavily upon my arm; then she fainted.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+"WE ARE LIKE SHOOTING STARS, WHOSE MEETING IS THEIR RUIN"
+
+
+To-night I have had another shock! I was sitting alone in my room
+down-stairs, dreaming over the fire, when a footstep sounded upon the
+stairs. At first I thought that it might be Paul, and I sprang up, and
+stood listening intently. What a little fool I was! I felt the colour
+burning in my cheeks, and my heart was beating. I listened to the
+tread, and the madness passed away. It was a man's footsteps, but not
+Paul's.
+
+They halted at my door, and there was a firm, deliberate knock. Before
+I could reply, the handle was turned, and a figure stood upon the
+threshold.
+
+My little chamber was in darkness, but the clear, cold voice struck a
+vague note of familiarity.
+
+"I seek Adrea Kiros! Are these her rooms? Are you she?"
+
+I struck a match with trembling fingers, and looked eagerly towards
+the doorway. A man stood there, dark, stern, and forbidding, looking
+steadfastly towards me. My memory had not deceived me! It was Father
+Adrian!
+
+"You have found me out," I said slowly. "Come inside and close the
+door."
+
+He moved slowly forward, and stood in the middle of the room. His
+face was as white as marble and as steadfast; but his dark eyes, which
+seemed to be challenging mine to meet them, were full of smouldering
+fire. I summoned up all my courage, and threw myself into a low chair,
+with a little laugh.
+
+"You are not exactly cordial," I said. "If you have anything to say to
+me, won't you sit down?"
+
+"If I have anything to say to you!" he repeated, and his whole tone
+seemed vibrating with hardly subdued passion. "If I have anything to
+say to you! Is this your greeting?"
+
+"Why, no, not if you come as a friend! But when you stand and glare at
+me _comme cela_, what do you expect? Nothing very cordial, surely!"
+
+He advanced a step further towards me. I watched him steadfastly,
+and I knew that the old madness was not dead. I was glad. It made the
+struggle between us more even.
+
+"Have I no cause to look at you sternly, Adrea?" he demanded,--"you
+who deceived us! you who lied to us, to win our aid! Where would you
+have been now had it not been for me? At Cruta! Would to God my hand
+had withered before it had set you free!"
+
+"You are very kind!"
+
+"Girl, are you mad? At Cruta you were thoughtless and gay, but God
+knows your heart was pure. Now you are a paid dancing girl!"
+
+I turned upon him suddenly, rising to my full height, and looking him
+straight in the face. He did not flinch, but a faint colour rose to
+his forehead as he continued.
+
+"Stop!" I said. "You are talking of those things which you do
+not understand. You could not possibly understand. You and I are
+different; we belong to different worlds. The things of your world are
+not the things of mine. Leave me now, and for ever, and let us go our
+own ways. We measure things by different quantities. You are a priest,
+and very much a priest, and I am a woman, and very much a woman!
+For the past I am grateful; for its sake I forget the insults of the
+present. Now go!"
+
+I knew quite well that he would not take me at my word, nor did he.
+
+"Adrea, I cannot go and lose all knowledge of you for ever," he said
+sadly. "For my own sake I would say, Would to God that I could! but it
+is impossible. Within me there is a voice which whispers 'Fly,' but
+I cannot; your future is still as dear to me as in the old days. Oh!
+Adrea! I have sorrowed and mourned lest our last parting had been for
+ever, and now, alas! I would that it had been; I would to God that I
+had never found you out!"
+
+"You can forget it," I said coldly.
+
+"I can never forget it," he answered fiercely. "Girl! you seem to me
+sometimes like a scourge! Your memory is a very nightmare of sin! You
+have brought me nothing but pain and remorse and anguish of heart. For
+all my suffering there is no brighter side; yet I cannot forget it!"
+
+Despite his fierce words, which for a moment had burned in my ears,
+I pitied him. In the old days he had been my champion, and it was his
+hand, together with hers, which had aided my escape from Cruta. So I
+spoke to him softly.
+
+"I am sorry! As I said, we are of different moulds, and we belong to a
+different branch of humanity. We are neither of us inclined to change!
+Let us go our own ways, and apart!"
+
+He was close by my side now, and his hand was resting on the back of
+my chair. I laid mine upon it for a moment; it was cold as ice, and
+shaking. The old madness was upon him indeed.
+
+"You were kind to me at Cruta," I continued. "I do not forget it, and
+I thank you for it! But we are as far apart as the poles, and we must
+continue so."
+
+The position between us seemed reversed. He stood by my side, pale and
+passionate, with his clear eyes full of a strange wistfulness.
+
+"All that you say is, in a measure, true," he said in a low tone; "yet
+do not send me away from you! Some day you may see things differently;
+some day trouble may come to you, and I may be your helper! There
+is only one thing: I would have you look upon me as a brother, and I
+would have you give me a brother's confidence."
+
+"I would gladly be friends with you," I answered, "only do not seek
+more than I choose to tell you. As for the things you charge me with,
+there is truth and falsehood in them. It is true that I have earned
+my living by dancing, but it has been in private only. Of course, you
+know nothing about it; how should you? But I am not a ballet dancer,
+as I believe you think."
+
+"You are not upon the stage, then?"
+
+"No! nor do I dance in short skirts! Some day I will give you an
+exhibition in this room! Now don't look like that," I added quickly;
+"I was only joking. I would not defile the air around your saintliness
+for the world! But I want to tell you this: my dancing is recognised
+as an art. I rank everywhere with the men and women who are called
+artists, the men and women who are ever striving to realize in some
+manner a particular ideal of beauty through different channels. The
+highest development of physical beauty in the human form is in grace
+of motion. I aim at the beautiful in illustrating this. I didn't know
+it myself until a great painter told me so, but I am beginning to
+understand. I don't expect you to; you must take it on trust."
+
+"It sounds strange to me, but I do not doubt that there is truth, some
+truth in it," he admitted gravely.
+
+"You and I look upon life, and all its connections, with different
+eyes," I continued. "What may seem sin to you, may be justified to me.
+Yet I will stoop to answer your unspoken question. As I was at Cruta,
+so I am now! It may be that I am better, for I have done a good
+action!"
+
+He held up his hand, but I took no notice.
+
+"I will tell it you. A few days ago, chance brought in my way a most
+unhappy woman. She had escaped from an odious captivity, only to find
+herself alone, friendless and penniless in a strange city. The man on
+whom she had counted for help she could not find. He had given her an
+address where she might always hear of him. Day by day she inquired
+there in vain. It may have been through no fault of his, but she was
+in sore straits."
+
+"Her name?"
+
+"I found her, and brought her home. She lives with me; she is here!"
+
+The door was opening as I spoke, and she entered. They stood face to
+face, silent with the shock of so sudden a meeting. Then he stepped
+quickly forward, and, taking her hands, drew her to him. I slipped
+away, and left them alone together.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+"THE PATH THAT LEADS TO MADMEN'S KINGDOMS"
+
+
+A north-country storm of rain and wind had suddenly blown up from
+the sea, and the few remaining followers of the De Vaux hounds were
+dispersed right and left, making for home with all possible speed. The
+sky had looked dull and threatening all day long, and with the first
+shades of twilight the rain had commenced to fall in a sudden torrent.
+There had been some little hesitation on the part of the master about
+drawing this last cover, for the hounds had had a rough day, and the
+field was small; and directly the storm broke, the horn was blown
+without hesitation, the pack was re-called, and the huntsman, cracking
+his whip, started for home at a long, swinging trot. The day's sport
+was over.
+
+There were only a handful of horsemen waiting outside when the signal
+was given, and with collars turned up to their ears, and cigars
+alight, they were very soon riding down the hill to the village whose
+lights were beginning to twinkle out from the darkness in the valley
+below. At the cross-roads, Paul, who had been riding in the midst of
+them, wheeled his horse round and took the road to Vaux Abbey amidst a
+chorus of farewells.
+
+"Are you going for the Abbey, De Vaux?" Captain Westover asked,
+reining in his horse. "Better come home with me, and dine! I'll send
+you back to-night, and they'll look after your mare all right in the
+stables. Come along!"
+
+Paul shook his head. "I'll get home, thanks!" he answered. "A wetting
+won't hurt me, and there's only a mile or two of it."
+
+Captain Westover shrugged his shoulders. "Just as you like. My people
+would be very glad to see you! By the bye, you were to have called
+last week, weren't you? Lady May was asking where you were this
+morning! Come and dine to-morrow night!"
+
+"Thanks! Unless I send word over to the contrary, I will, then!
+Good-night!"
+
+"Good-night!"
+
+Captain Westover cantered on after the others, and Paul turned off
+in the opposite direction, riding slowly, with bent head and loose
+bridle. In his pocket was Adrea's letter, scarcely a week old; and
+now that the physical excitement of the day was over, his thoughts,
+as usual, were full of it again. It was an uphill battle that he
+was fighting! All day long he had been striving to forget it! He had
+spared neither himself nor his horses in the desperate attempt to
+reach such a stage of physical exhaustion as should make his mind a
+blank--as should free it, at any rate, from those torturing memories,
+and the fierce restlessness which they begat. He had tried his utmost,
+and he had failed. His pink hunting-coat and tops, immaculate at the
+start, were covered with thick mud, and his horse (his second mount)
+was scarcely able to put one foot before the other. Yet he had failed
+utterly. Hunger and fatigue seemed things far away to him. Wherever he
+looked--out into the grey mists, which came rolling across the moor,
+soaking him with moisture, or down into the road, fast becoming a bog,
+or up into the dim sky--he seemed to see the pages of Adrea's letter
+standing out before him, word for word, phrase for phrase. Every
+sentence of it seemed to him as vivid and real as though it had been
+spoken in his ears; nay, he could almost fancy that he saw the great
+tears welling slowly out of those soft, dark eyes, and could hear the
+passionate quiver in her faltering tones. Day by day it had been a
+desperate struggle with him to resist the mad desire which prompted
+him to order a dogcart, drive to the nearest town, and catch the mail
+train to London. Beyond that--how she would receive him, what he would
+say to her--everything was chaos; he dared not trust himself to think
+about it.
+
+Yet, whenever he suffered his thoughts to dwell upon this matter at
+all, the reverse side of it all sooner or later presented itself.
+Clear and insistent above the emotion which swayed him came ever that
+uncompromising question--where lay his duty in this matter? It was
+the true and manly side of his nature, developed by instinct and long
+training, and refusing now to be overborne and swept away by this
+surging tide of passion. It rang in his ears, and it demanded an
+answer. Away in the distance, on the opposite side of the valley,
+his vacant eyes rested idly upon the many lights and dim outline of
+Westover Castle. What place had Lady May in his heart? Was there room
+for her--and Adrea? Could he see Adrea day by day, and never pass the
+barrier which he himself had set up between them? What did he wish?
+What was right? Just then everything was to him so vague and chaotic.
+
+He had been riding for nearly an hour, with his reins quite loose upon
+his horse's neck, and trusting entirely to her to take the homeward
+route. Suddenly his mare came to an abrupt halt, and Paul looked
+around him in surprise. At first he had not the faintest idea as to
+his whereabouts; then a dull roar, coming from across a narrow
+strip of moorland on his left, gave him a clue, and he saw what had
+happened. Instead of turning inland to Vaux Abbey, his horse had kept
+straight on, and had brought him almost to the sea--a good five miles
+out of his way.
+
+The situation was not a cheerful one. They were ten miles from home,
+and Ironsides, completely done up, was trembling ominously at the
+knees, and looking around at him pitifully. Paul himself was wet to
+the skin; and as he dismounted for a moment to ease his stiff limbs,
+he was conscious of a distinct inclination to shiver. The grey mists
+were rolling up all round them; and directly Paul's feet touched the
+ground, he felt himself sink ankle-deep in the wet, soft sand. It was
+all horribly uncomfortable, and more than that, it was serious; for
+immediately he had passed his hand over his horse's flanks and felt
+her knees, Paul knew that she was not in a condition for him to mount
+her again. There was no hope of reaching Vaux Abbey without rest and
+refreshments, for Ironsides at any rate.
+
+He looked steadily around him, and began to get some faint idea as
+to his whereabouts. His mare must have been deceived by following
+a private road which led to a cottage belonging to an old half-pay
+officer, Major Harcourt. They had evidently passed the cottage, and
+pursued the road almost to its termination, for where they now were it
+was little better than a sheep-track, leading through a closed gate a
+few yards in front of them into a scattered pine plantation and down
+to the sea. The only thing to do was to retrace their steps until they
+came to the cottage, and there beg shelter for a while.
+
+"We've made a mess of it, old girl!" Paul said soothingly, patting his
+mare's neck, and passing his arm through the bridle. "Come on, then!
+We'll see whether we can't find an empty stall for you at Major
+Harcourt's."
+
+They retraced their steps, the mare limping wearily along by Paul's
+side, and every now and then stopping to look at him in despair. Paul
+found a grim humour in the situation. It was the quagmire into which
+thoughts of Adrea had led him; a parable sent to show him the folly of
+such thoughts, and whither they tended. He laughed a little bitterly
+at the thought. Once, when a very young man, he had thought himself a
+fatalist. After all, perhaps it was the best thing to be! Conscience
+and duty were wearisome guides; a course of voluntary drifting would
+be rather a relief.
+
+Suddenly the mare pricked up her ears, and neighed. Paul looked
+steadily through the mist, and quickened his pace. Scarcely a hundred
+yards ahead was the dim outline of the cottage, nestled up against a
+pine grove and facing the sea.
+
+Paul was fairly well acquainted with Major Harcourt; and although
+he had seen nothing of him for some time, he had not the slightest
+compunction in claiming shelter for himself and his horse. He led her
+up the trim, winding drive to the front door, and rang the bell.
+
+"Is Major Har----" Paul began, as the door was opened; then he broke
+off abruptly.
+
+The man-servant who had opened the door, and was standing on the step,
+peering out into the darkness, was a familiar figure to him. It was
+Gomez!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+"THE POISON OF HONEY FLOWERS"
+
+
+The recognition was not immediately simultaneous. Gomez, standing on
+the step, was in the full light of the hall lamp, but Paul was still
+amongst the shadows.
+
+"Don't you know me, Gomez?" Paul asked, stepping forward. "I am Paul
+de Vaux."
+
+A shade passed across the man's face, and he laid his hand quickly
+upon his heart, as though to cease some sudden pain. Then he stood on
+one side, holding the door open.
+
+"I beg your pardon, Mr. Paul; I could not see your face out there.
+Won't you walk in, sir?"
+
+Paul dropped his mare's bridle and stepped inside. The polished
+white stone hall, with its huge fire in the centre, looked warm and
+comfortable, and away in the distance there was a cheerful rattle of
+teacups.
+
+"What are you doing here, Gomez?" Paul asked, shaking the wet from
+his hat. "I understood that you were going to take the under-bailiff's
+place."
+
+"Higgs has not left yet, sir," Gomez answered. "I have been living
+here as caretaker for Major Harcourt."
+
+"Caretaker! Isn't he at home then?"
+
+Gomez shook his head, looking keenly at Paul all the time. "Major
+Harcourt does not winter here now, sir. He has let the place,
+furnished."
+
+"What a confounded nuisance! To whom has he let it?" Paul asked
+quickly. "You see my plight, and my horse is worse off still. We lost
+our way going home from Dunston Spinnies."
+
+"Major Harcourt's tenant is a lady," Gomez answered, after a moment's
+hesitation. "She only arrived yesterday."
+
+Paul shrugged his shoulders. He was annoyed, but there was no help for
+it.
+
+"Well, will you see her at once and represent matters? I want a loose
+box for the night for my horse, and a rest for myself, and afterwards
+a conveyance for the Abbey, if possible. Tell her my name. I daresay
+she won't mind. Who is she?"
+
+Gomez said nothing for a moment. Then he drew Paul back to the door,
+and pointed out into the darkness.
+
+"Mr. Paul," he said, in a quick, hoarse whisper, "at the back of that
+hedge there is a road which leads straight up to the Abbey. It is
+a matter of six miles or so, I know, and you are tired; but that is
+nothing. Take my advice, sir, and believe me it is for your good. Get
+out of this house as soon as you can, and go home, though you have to
+walk every step. I'll look after your horse, and you can send for it
+in the morning."
+
+Paul looked into the man's face astonished. "What nonsense, Gomez!"
+he exclaimed. "Do you know what you are talking about! Why, I'm tired
+out, and almost starved. Here I am and here I shall stop, unless your
+mistress is as inhospitable as you are."
+
+Gomez bowed, and closed the door. "Very good, sir; you will have your
+own way, of course. But remember in the future that I was faithful,
+I warned you. Come this way, sir. I will send your horse round to the
+stables. The name of the lady of the house is Madame de Merteuill."
+
+A little uneasy and very much mystified, Paul followed him across the
+hall, and was silently ushered into a long, low drawing-room, a room
+of nooks and corners, furnished in old-fashioned style, but with
+perfect taste, and dimly lit with soft, shaded lamps. There was a
+bright fire blazing on the hearth, and a pleasant sense of warmth in
+the air.
+
+At first it seemed as though the room was empty, but in a moment a
+tall, pale-faced lady, with wonderfully dark eyes and grey hair,
+rose from an easy chair behind the piano, and looked at him, at first
+questioningly.
+
+"I am afraid that you will consider this an unwarrantable intrusion,"
+Paul said, bowing; "but the fact is, I lost my way riding home from
+the hunt, and my horse cannot go a yard further. As for myself,
+you can see what state I am in. I saw your lights, and have some
+acquaintance with Major Harcourt, and not knowing that he had left,
+I ventured here to throw myself upon his hospitality. My name is De
+Vaux--Paul de Vaux; and although it is some distance to the Abbey, I
+believe that we are next-door neighbours."
+
+It was beginning to dawn upon Paul that he had somehow stumbled upon a
+very strange household. During the whole of his speech, the lady whom
+he was addressing had stood silent and transfixed, with wide-open eyes
+and a terrible shrinking look of fear upon her face. She must be mad,
+Paul concluded swiftly. What an ass Gomez was not to have told him!
+While he was wondering how to get away, she spoke.
+
+"Your name de Vaux, Paul de Vaux, near Vaux Abbey?"
+
+He bowed, looking at her with fresh interest. His name seemed familiar
+to her. In a moment or two the unnatural lethargy left her, and she
+spoke to him, though still in a curiously suppressed tone.
+
+"I beg your pardon. You are welcome. I was a little startled at
+first."
+
+She rang the bell. Gomez answered it.
+
+"Bring some fresh tea, and some sandwiches and wine," she ordered.
+"Tell them in the stables to see that this gentleman's horse has every
+attention."
+
+Gomez received his orders in silence, and withdrew with darkening
+face. Paul looked after him with surprise.
+
+"Gomez does not seem particularly pleased to see me again," he
+remarked. "What is the matter with the man, I wonder?"
+
+"It is only his manner, I think," she said softly. "He was your
+father's servant, was he not?"
+
+"Yes. How did you know that?" he asked quickly. "Ah, I beg your
+pardon; he told you, of course. You will find him a faithful servant."
+
+She bowed her head, but made no reply. Indeed, Paul found it very
+difficult to start a conversation of any sort with his new neighbour.
+To all his remarks she returned only monosyllabic answers, looking at
+him steadily all the while out of her full, dark eyes in a far-away,
+wistful manner, as though she saw in his face something which carried
+her thoughts into another world. It was a little uncomfortable for
+Paul, and he was not sorry when Gomez reappeared, bearing a tray with
+refreshments.
+
+She handed him his tea in silence; and Paul, who would have been
+ashamed to have called himself curious, but who was by this time not a
+little puzzled at her manner, made one more effort at conversation.
+
+"I think you said that you were quite strange to this part of the
+country," he remarked. "We, who have lived here all our lives, are
+fond of it; but I'm afraid you'll find it rather dull at first. There
+is very little society."
+
+"We do not desire any," she said hastily. "We came here--at least I
+came here--for the sake of indulging in absolute seclusion. It is the
+same with my step-daughter. In London she had been forced to keep late
+hours, and her health has suffered. The doctor prescribed complete
+rest; I, too, desired rest, so we came here. A London house agent
+arranged it for us."
+
+So there was a step-daughter who lived in London, and who went out a
+great deal. The mention of her gave Paul an opportunity.
+
+"I wonder if I have ever met your daughter in town," he said
+pleasantly. "I am there a good deal, and I have rather a large circle
+of acquaintances."
+
+The implied question seemed to disconcert her. She coloured, and then
+grew suddenly pale. Her eyes no longer looked into his; they were
+fixed steadfastly upon the fire.
+
+"It is not at all probable," she said, nervously lacing and
+interlacing her slim white fingers. "No, it is scarcely possible.
+You would not be likely to meet her. Your friends would not be her
+friends. She knows so few people. Ah!"
+
+She started quickly. The door had opened, but it was only Gomez, who
+had come in with a tray for the empty tea-things. There was a dead
+silence whilst he removed them. Paul scarcely knew what to say. His
+hostess puzzled him completely. Perhaps this step-daughter, whose
+name, together with her own, she seemed so anxious to conceal, was
+mad, and she had brought her down here instead of sending her to an
+asylum; or perhaps she herself was mad. He glanced at her furtively,
+and at once dismissed the latter idea. Her face, careworn and
+curiously pallid though it was, was the face of no madwoman. It was
+the face of a woman who had passed through a fiery sea of this world's
+trouble and suffering--suffering which had left its marks stamped upon
+her features; but, of his own accord, he would never have put it down
+as the face of a weak or erring woman.
+
+There was a mystery--of that he felt sure; but it was no part of his
+business to seek to unravel it. The best thing he could do, he felt,
+was to get up and go. He could scarcely maintain a conversation
+without asking or implying questions which seemed to painfully
+embarrass his hostess.
+
+"I'm very much obliged to you," he said, rising and holding out his
+hand. "I feel quite a new man! If you don't mind I'd like to leave
+my mare here until to-morrow. She really isn't fit to travel. My man
+shall come for her early."
+
+"Pray do!" she answered quickly. "Ah!"
+
+She had started, and clutched at the back of her chair with trembling
+fingers. Her eyes, wide open and startled, were fixed upon the door.
+
+Paul, too, turned round, and uttered a little cry. His heart beat
+fast, and the room swam before him. He stood for a moment perfectly
+still, with his eyes fastened upon the figure in the doorway.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+"AND MOST OF ALL WOULD I FLY FROM THE CRUEL MADNESS OF LOVE"
+
+
+It was Adrea--Adrea herself! She stood there in the shadow of the
+doorway, with her lips slightly parted, and her great eyes, soft and
+brilliant, flashing in the ruddy firelight. It was no vision; it was
+she beyond a doubt!
+
+Even when the first shock had passed away, he found himself without
+words; the wonder of it had dazed him. He had thought of her so often
+in that quaint, dainty little chamber in Grey Street that to see her
+here so unexpectedly, without the least warning or anticipation, was
+like being suddenly confronted with a picture which had stepped out
+of its frame. And that she should be here, too, of all places, here
+in this bleak corner of the kingdom, where blustering winds swept
+bare the sullen moorland, and the sea was always grey and stormy. What
+strange fate could have brought her here, away from all the warmth and
+luxury of London, to this half-deserted old manor house on the verge
+of the heath? His mind was too confused in those first few moments to
+follow out any definite train of thought. The most natural conclusion,
+that she had come to him, did not enter his imagination.
+
+His first impulse, as his senses became clearer, was to glance around
+for the woman who had called Adrea her step-daughter. She was gone.
+She must have stepped out of the room by the opposite doorway; and
+with the knowledge that they were alone, he breathed freer.
+
+"Adrea!" he said, "it is really you, then!"
+
+His words, necessarily commonplace, dissolved the situation. She
+laughed softly, and came further into the room.
+
+"It is I," she said. "Did you think that I was an elf from
+spirit-land?"
+
+He had never shaken hands with her,--it was a thing which had never
+occurred to either of them; but a sudden impulse came to him then. He
+took a hasty step forward, and clasped both her little white hands in
+his. So they stood for another minute in silence, and a strange, soft
+light flashed in her upturned eyes. She was very near to him, and
+there was an indefinable sense of yielding in her manner, amounting
+almost to a mute invitation. He felt that he had only to open his
+arms, and that strange, beautiful face, with its mocking, quivering
+mouth, would be very close to his. The old battle was forced upon him
+to fight all over again; and, alas! he was no stronger.
+
+It was almost as though she had seen the hesitation--the conflict in
+him--for with a sudden, imperious gesture she withdrew her hands and
+turned away from him. There was a scarlet flush creeping through the
+deep olive of her cheeks, and her eyes were dry and brilliant. Paul,
+who had never studied women or their ways, looked at her, surprised
+and a little hurt.
+
+"You are surprised to see me here, of course?" she said, sinking into
+a low easy-chair, and taking up a fire-screen of peacocks' feathers,
+as though to shield her face from the fire. "Well, it is quite an
+accident. I wrote you rather a silly letter the other day; but you
+must not think that I have followed you down here!"
+
+"I did not think so," he answered hastily. "The idea never occurred,
+never could have occurred to me!"
+
+She continued, without heeding his interruption: "I will explain how
+we came to take this cottage. A relative of mine came to me suddenly
+from abroad. She was in great trouble, and was in search of a very
+secluded dwelling-place, where she might live for a time unknown. I
+also was in bad health, and the doctor had ordered me complete rest
+and quiet. We went to a house agent, and told him what we wanted--to
+get as far away from every one as possible. We did not care how lonely
+the place was, or how far from London; the further the better. This
+house was to let, furnished, and at a low figure. I did not know that
+Vaux Abbey was in the same county even. It suited us, and we took it."
+
+"I understand," Paul answered. "And now that you are here, are you not
+afraid of finding it dull?"
+
+She turned away from him, biting her lip. "You do not understand me!
+You never will. No! I shall not be dull."
+
+"I beg your pardon, Adrea. I----"
+
+"Be quiet!" she interrupted impetuously. "You think that I am too
+frivolous to live away from the glare and excitement of the city.
+Of course! To you I am just the dancing girl, nothing more. Do not
+contradict me. I hate your serious manner. I hate your patronage.
+Don't contradict me, I say. Tell me this. How did you find me out? Why
+are you here?"
+
+"I have been out hunting, and I lost my way," Paul answered quietly.
+"I know Major Harcourt, and, thinking he was still living here, I
+called for a rest, and to put my horse up. Your step-mother has been
+very kind and hospitable."
+
+Adrea looked at him curiously. "Indeed! She has been kind to you, has
+she? Who told you that she was my step-mother?"
+
+"I thought I understood you to say so."
+
+"Did I? Perhaps so; I don't remember. So she was kind to you, was she?
+She has no cause to be."
+
+"No cause to be! Why not?"
+
+She shrugged her shoulders, "Oh, I don't know. I'm talking a little at
+random, I think. You angered me, Monsieur Paul. I am a silly girl, am
+I not? Do you know that I have thrown up all my engagements until next
+season? I do not think that I shall dance again at all."
+
+"I am glad to hear it."
+
+"But I shall go on the stage."
+
+"There is no necessity for that, is there?"
+
+"Necessity! You mean that I have not to earn my bread. That may be
+true, but what would you have me to do? I am not content to be one of
+your English young ladies--to sit down, and learn to cook and darn,
+and read silly books, until fate is kind enough to send me a husband.
+Not so. I have ambition; I have an artist's instincts, although I may
+not yet be an artist. I must live; I must have light and colour in my
+life."
+
+Paul was very grave. He did not understand this new phase in
+Adrea's development. There was a curious hardness in her tone and a
+recklessness in her speech which were strange to him. And with it
+all he felt very helpless. He could not play the part of guardian and
+reprove her; he scarcely knew how to argue with her. Women and their
+ways were strange to him; and, besides, Adrea was so different.
+
+He stood up on the hearthrug, toying with his long riding-whip,
+puzzled and unhappy. Adrea was angry with him, he knew; and though he
+was very anxious to set himself right with her, he felt that he was
+treading on dangerous ground. He was neither sure of himself nor of
+her.
+
+"I am afraid I am a very poor counsellor, Adrea," he said slowly; "but
+it seems to me that you want women friends. Your life has been too
+lonely, too devoid of feminine interests."
+
+She laughed--a mirthless, unpleasant little laugh. "Women friends!
+Good! You say that I have none. It is true. There have been no
+women who have offered me their friendship in this country. You call
+yourself my guardian. Why do you not find me some?"
+
+"You have made it very difficult," he reminded her.
+
+She threw a scornful glance at him. "Good! That is generous. You mean
+to say that I have made myself unfit for the friendship of the
+women of your family. I thank you, Monsieur Paul. I think that our
+conversation has lasted long enough. Let me pass; I am going to leave
+you."
+
+He moved quickly towards the door, and barred her passage. There was
+a dark flush in his cheeks and a gleam in his eyes. Up till then his
+manner had been a little deprecating, but at her last words it had
+suddenly changed. He felt that she was unjust, and he was indignant.
+
+"Adrea, you talk like a child," he said sternly. "I made no such
+insinuation as you suggest! You know that I did not! Sit down!"
+
+She obeyed him; the quick change in his manner had startled her, and
+taken her at a disadvantage. She felt the force of his superior will,
+and she yielded to it.
+
+He leaned over her chair, and his voice grew softer. "Adrea, you are
+very, very unjust to me," he said. "Do you wish to make me so unhappy,
+I wonder? For a week I have been thinking of scarcely anything else
+save our last parting, and now if I had not stopped you, almost by
+force, you would have left me again in anger."
+
+His tone had grown almost tender, and, as though unconsciously, his
+hand had rested upon her gleaming coils of dark, braided hair. She
+looked up at him, and in the firelight he could see that her eyes were
+soft and dim.
+
+"You have really thought of me?" she said in a low tone. "You have
+really been unhappy on my account?"
+
+"I have!" he admitted. "Very unhappy!"
+
+Something in his tone--in the reluctance with which he made the
+admission, angered her. She moved a little further away, and her voice
+grew harder.
+
+"Yes; you have been unhappy!" she said. "And why? It was because you
+were ashamed to find yourself thinking of me; you, Paul de Vaux, a
+citizen of the world and a man of culture, thinking of a poor dancing
+girl with only her looks to recommend her! That was where the sting
+lay! That was what reddened your cheek! You men! You are as selfish as
+devils!"
+
+She stamped her foot; her voice was shaking with passion. Paul stood
+before her with a deep flush on his pale cheeks, silent, like a man
+suddenly accused. Her words were not altogether true, but they were
+winged with, at any rate, the semblance of truth.
+
+She continued--a little more quietly, but with her tone and form still
+vibrating.
+
+"What do you fear? What is that you struggle against? I have seen
+you when it has been your will to take me--into your arms, to hold my
+hands. Then I have seen you conquer the desire, and you run away, as
+though afraid of it. Why? Do you fear that I shall seek to compromise
+you?--is not that the English word? Do you think that I want you to
+marry me? Is it because you dare not, that you--you do not offer to
+take my hand, even? Tell me now! Why is it?"
+
+"For your own sake, Adrea!"
+
+"For my own sake!" she repeated scornfully. "Do you believe it
+yourself? Do you really think that it is true? I will tell you why
+it is! It is because you have no thought, no imagination. You say to
+yourself, she is not of my world. I cannot marry her."
+
+There was a silence. A burning coal fell upon the hearth, and flamed
+up; the glow reached Paul's face. He was very pale, and his eyes were
+dry and brilliant. Suddenly he moved forward, and clasped Adrea's
+hands tightly in his.
+
+"But, Adrea! are you sure that you love me?"
+
+A sudden change swept into her face. Her dark eyes grew wonderfully
+soft.
+
+"Yes!" she answered, looking up to him with a swift, brilliant smile.
+"I am sure!"
+
+He held out his arms; his resistance was at an end. It had grown
+weaker and weaker during those last few moments; now it was all over,
+swept away by a sudden, tumultuous passion, so strange and little akin
+to the man that it startled even himself. Afar off in his mind he was
+conscious of a dim sense of shame as he held her close in his arms and
+felt her warm, trembling lips pressed against his. But it was like an
+echo from a distant land. It seemed to him that a deep, widening gulf
+lay now between him and all that had gone before. His old self was
+dead! A new man had sprung up, with a new personality, and the time
+had not yet come for regrets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+"'TWIXT YOU AND ME A NOISOME SHADOW CAST"
+
+
+"Adrea!"
+
+It was a cry which seemed to ring through the room, an interruption
+so sudden and strange that they started apart like guilty children,
+gazing towards the lifted curtain which divided the apartment with
+wondering, half-fearful faces. The woman whom Adrea had called her
+step-mother stood there, pale and bloodless, with her great black eyes
+flashing, and behind her a tall, dark figure was gazing sternly at
+them.
+
+Adrea was the first to recover her composure. She was a little further
+away, and she could see only her step-mother.
+
+"What do you want?" she exclaimed quickly. "I desire to be alone! Why
+do you stand there?"
+
+There was no answer. Then the momentary silence was broken by a quick,
+startled cry from Paul, which seemed to cleave the semi-darkness of
+the room.
+
+"My God!"
+
+The dark figure had moved forward, and was standing, pale and austere,
+before them. It was Father Adrian.
+
+There was a moment's intense silence. Then Paul turned swiftly round
+to where Adrea stood, a little behind him. But the suspicions which
+had commenced to crowd in upon him vanished before even they had taken
+to themselves definite shape. Her surprise was as great as his; and,
+as their eyes met, she shuddered with the memory which his presence
+had recalled.
+
+"Paul de Vaux, I had no thought of meeting you here," Father Adrian
+said sternly.
+
+Paul met his gaze haughtily. There was a rebuke, almost a threat, in
+the priest's tone which angered him. Whatever his presence here might
+betide, he was in no way responsible for it to Father Adrian.
+
+"Nor I you," he answered. "I imagined that you were staying at the
+monastery."
+
+"I am staying there."
+
+Madame de Merteuill stepped slowly into the room. She was still
+trembling, and had all the appearance of a woman sore stricken by some
+unexpected calamity. Even her voice was faint and broken.
+
+"Father Adrian is a visitor here only--an unexpected one--like
+yourself."
+
+"Why is he here?" Adrea asked slowly. "Has he come to see us again?
+What does he want?"
+
+Father Adrian turned towards her, grave and severe. "I have come to
+see Madame de Merteuill. I bring her a message from an old man
+whom, by her absence, she is wronging. You I did not expect to find
+here,--and thus."
+
+She made no answer. The priest drew a little nearer to her, and his
+thin, ascetic face seemed suddenly ablaze with scorn and anger.
+
+"Child! your destiny is surely to bring sorrow upon all those who
+would watch over you, and shape your life aright. Where you have been
+living, and how, since your flight, I do not know. You have hidden
+yourself well! You have shown more than the ordinary selfishness of
+childhood! You have thought nothing of those who may have troubled for
+you! I do not ask for your confidence. This is enough for me: I find
+you here in his arms--his of all men in the world! False to your
+Church; false to your sex; false to your father's memory! Shameless!"
+
+She did not flinch from before him. She looked him in the face, coldly
+and without fear.
+
+"You are a priest, and you do not understand. Be so good as to
+remember that I am no longer now in your power or under your
+authority. You cannot threaten to make me a nun any longer. Remember
+that I am outside your life now, and outside your religion."
+
+"You can be brought back," he said calmly. "I have powers."
+
+"Powers which I defy. Your religion is a cold, dry farce, and I hate
+it. You cannot frighten me; you cannot alarm me in the least. You can
+do ugly things, I know, in the name of your Church; and if you had me
+back at the convent, or on that awful island, I should be frightened
+at you. Here, I am not."
+
+Instinctively she glanced toward Paul. Already in her thoughts, he was
+assuming the protector. He would not suffer harm to come to her.
+He was strong and rich and powerful. The horror of days gone by had
+already grown faint with her; it was little more than memory. It was
+gone, and could not come again.
+
+"I have not come here to talk with you, child," he answered quietly.
+"My errand has been with Madame de Merteuill, and it is accomplished,
+I go now. Paul de Vaux, our ways lie together for a mile or more, and
+I have a word to say to you. Let us go."
+
+Paul was slowly recovering from a state of mental stupor, and, with
+his discovery, something of the glamour of his late intoxication was
+passing away. He had no regret, there was nothing which he would have
+recalled; but his eyes were stronger to pierce the mists, and he was
+able to bring the weight of impersonal thought to bear upon all that
+had passed between Adrea and himself. Wheresoever it might lead, there
+was a tie between them now which could not be lightly severed.
+
+"It is time I went," Paul answered. "Adrea, I will come and see you
+to-morrow."
+
+She looked at the priest, suspicious and troubled. "What does he want
+with you, Paul?" she whispered. "Don't go with him!"
+
+"I must!" he answered sadly. "He has something to say to me which I
+wish to hear. I will come and see you to-morrow."
+
+"If you must, then, until to-morrow. But, Paul!"
+
+She drew him on one side. "Beware of him! Oh! beware of him!" she
+said quickly, her eyes full of fear. "He is a fanatic, a Jesuit. Don't
+trust him! Have little to say to him. Hush! don't answer me! He is
+watching. Good-night, beloved! my beloved!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+"IF LOVE YOU CHOOSE, THEN LOVE SHALL BE YOUR RUIN"
+
+
+Paul and his companion walked down the avenue in silence, and turned
+into the narrow, stony road which wound across the moor. The storm was
+over, and the rain had ceased. Above them, only faintly visible, as
+though seen through a canopy of delicate lace, the stars were shining
+in a cloudless sky through the wreaths of faint grey mist. Far off,
+the sound of the sea came rolling across the moor to their ears, now
+loud and threatening as it beat against the iron cliffs and thundered
+up the coombs, now striking a shriller note as the huge waves, ever
+beaten off, retreated, dragging beach and shingle with them. It
+had been an ocean gale, and the very air was salt and brackish with
+flavours of the sea. Here and there great piles of seaweed had been
+carried in a heterogeneous mass to their feet, and the ground beneath
+them was soft and sandy. But the storm had died away as suddenly as it
+had come. The tall, stark pine trees, which a few hours ago had been
+bending like whips before the rushing wind, stood now stiff and stark
+against the wan sky. There was not even motion enough in the air to
+clear away the white mists which hung around. Only the troubled sea
+remained to mark the passage of the storm.
+
+Paul was in no mood for talking. He recognised the fact that what had
+happened to him that evening must, to a certain extent, colour his
+whole life. He wanted to think it over quietly, now that he was away
+from the influence of Adrea's passionately beautiful face and pleading
+eyes. He had an inward sense of great disappointment in himself, and
+he was anxious to see how far this was justified. He was prepared for
+a rigid self-examination, and he was impatient to begin upon it.
+But, while he was still upon the threshold of his meditations, his
+companion's voice sounded in his ear.
+
+"Paul de Vaux, I have a word or two to say to you."
+
+Paul awoke with a start. "Certainly!" he said gravely. "I am ready."
+
+Father Adrian continued, speaking slowly and keeping his eyes fixed
+steadily upon Paul; "Only a few nights ago we met amongst the ruins of
+your old Abbey. You will remember that I spoke to you of your father's
+last hours, of a strange story confided to my keeping--a story of sin
+and of sorrow--a story casting its shadow far into the future. You
+remember this?"
+
+"Perfectly!"
+
+"At first you seemed to consider that this story, told to me on
+his deathbed by a man who was at least repentant, should be held
+sacred--sacred to me as a priest of the Holy Church, and sacred to you
+as his son. Yet, as you saw afterwards, it was not so. The confession
+was made to me as a man; and withal it was made by one outside the
+pale of any religion whatever. It was mine to do as I chose with! It
+is mine now!"
+
+"If it is anything which concerns me, or the honour of my family, you
+should tell me. If it involves wrongs which should be righted, or in
+any way concerns the future, you should tell me. You must have come
+for that purpose! You must mean to eventually, or why should you have
+found your way to this out-of-the-way corner of the world. Let me hear
+it now, Father Adrian!"
+
+"It will darken your life!"
+
+"I do not believe it! At any rate I will judge for myself. Let me hear
+it!"
+
+The priest looked away into the darkness, and his voice was low and
+hoarse. "You do not know what you ask!" he said. "No, I shall not tell
+you yet. It is for your own sake! Sometimes I think that I will go
+away and never tell you."
+
+"Why not? You came here for no other reason."
+
+Father Adrian shook his head. "I did not come to tell you. It was
+your home I came to see. Many hundreds of years ago Vaux Abbey was a
+monastery, sacred to the saint whose name I unworthily bear. My visit
+here was half a pilgrimage! But," he went on, his brows contracting,
+and his eyes gleaming fire, "since I came, I have been perilously near
+striking the blow which I have power to strike. You bear a name which
+for centuries was foremost in the history of our sacred Church. For
+generation after generation the De Vauxs were good Catholics and the
+benefactors of their Church. Your chapel was richly adorned, and five
+priests dwelt here always with old Sir Roland de Vaux. And now, where
+is your chapel, once the most beautiful in England; it is a pile of
+ruins, like your faith! I wander round in your villages. Your tenants
+have gone the way of their lord. Roman Catholicism is a dying power.
+Hideous chapels have sprung up in all your districts! The true faith
+is neglected! And who is to blame for it all? Your recreant family.
+You, who should have been the most zealous upholders of religion, have
+drifted down the stream of fashion, nerveless and indifferent. Oh! it
+is heresy, rank heresy, to think of a De Vaux, such as you, dwelling
+indifferent amongst the mighty associations of your name and home! I
+wander about amongst those magnificent ruins of yours, æsthetically
+beautiful, but nevertheless a living, burning reproach, and I ask
+myself whether I do well in holding my peace. I cannot tell! I cannot
+tell!"
+
+Paul was moved in spite of himself by the vehemence of his companion's
+words. The horrors of that deathbed scene at Cruta had never grown dim
+to him. He had always felt that his father had only decided to
+keep something back from him in those last moments, after a bitter
+struggle; and he was now quite sure that whatever it might have been,
+the secret had been confided to this priest.
+
+"I want to ask you a question," he said. "Whatever this mystery may be
+to which you are constantly alluding, I am of course ignorant. But you
+seem to have some understanding with the two women whom we have left
+this evening. I want to know whether Adrea is concerned in it."
+
+"She is not!"
+
+"Nor Madame de Merteuill?"
+
+"I cannot tell you!"
+
+They were in the Abbey grounds, close to the ruins, and the moorland
+lay behind them, with its floating mists and vague obscurity. Here the
+sky was soft and clear, and every pillar amongst the ruins stood out
+against the empty background of sea and sky. Father Adrian paused.
+
+"I will come no further," he said. "I am a saner man away from your
+despoiled home. There is just a last word which I have to say to you."
+
+Paul stood still, and listened.
+
+"I have borne much," Father Adrian said, "much tempting and many
+impulses; but I have zealously put a watch upon my tongue, and I
+have spared you. For the future, your happiness--nay, your future
+itself--is in your own hands. I saw your father kill the only relative
+Adrea had in this world. We saw the deed done, though we have both
+held our peace concerning it. Paul de Vaux, I am inclined to spare you
+a great blow which it is in my power to strike. I am inclined to spare
+you, but I make one hard and fast condition. Adrea is not for you! She
+must be neither your wife, nor your friend, nor your ward! There must
+be no dealings, no knowledge between you the one of the other! There
+is blood between you; it can never be wiped out! The stain is forever.
+Lift up your hand to heaven, and swear that you will never willingly
+look upon her face again, or, as God is my master, I will bring upon
+your name, and your family, and you, swift and everlasting shame!"
+
+His hand fell to his side, and his voice, which had been vibrating
+with passion, died away in a little, suppressed sob. Paul looked at
+him steadily. The perspiration was standing out upon his forehead in
+great beads, and his eyes were dry and brilliant. The man was shaken
+to the very core, and in the strange upheaval of passion he had
+altogether lost his sacerdotality. It was the man who had spoken, the
+man, passionate and sensuous, deeply moved through every chord of his
+being. The "priest" had fallen away from him, the remembrance of it
+seemed almost grotesque. Paul, too, had caught much of the passionate
+excitement of the moment.
+
+"Time!" he said hoarsely. "I must have time. A few days only. I ask no
+questions! Only how long?"
+
+"A week!" the priest answered. "A week to-night we meet here!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+"SOFTLY GLIMMERING THROUGH THE LAURELS AT THE QUIET EVENFALL"
+
+
+"Do you know who has taken Major Harcourt's cottage, Mr. de Vaux?"
+Lady May asked.
+
+Paul was silent for a moment. He sat quite still in his saddle, and
+gazed across the moor, with his hand shading his eyes.
+
+"I beg your pardon, Lady May," he said. "I thought that I heard the
+dogs. You asked me----"
+
+"About Major Harcourt's cottage. Do you know who has taken it?"
+
+"I am not sure about the name. It is a foreign lady, and her
+step-daughter, I believe. There is a clergy-man--or a Roman Catholic
+priest, rather--too; but he may be only a visitor."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+The monosyllable was expressive. Paul glanced at his companion with
+slightly arched eyebrows. What had she heard? Something, evidently,
+for there had been a coolness in her manner all the morning, and her
+clear grey eyes were resting now upon the many gables of the cottage
+just below them, with distinct disapproval. Now that he thought of it,
+Paul remembered that a dogcart from the Castle had whirled past him as
+he had turned out of the drive last night. Doubtless he had been seen
+and recognised. Well! after all, what did it matter? The time when he
+had meant to ask Lady May to be his wife seemed very far back in the
+past now. Between that part of his life and now, there was a great
+gulf fixed. Last night had altered everything!
+
+He had certainly not meant to hunt that morning, but it had been
+forced upon him. Quite early, Reynolds had come to his room to inquire
+whether he should provide breakfast for thirty or fifty, and had
+reminded him that the meet was in front of the Abbey. So, against his
+will, Paul had been compelled to entertain the hunt and join in it
+himself. Lady May had been specially invited to breakfast, but she had
+not come, and Paul had only just seen her for the first time at the
+cover side. She had greeted him coldly; and though they had somehow
+taken up a position a little apart from the others, very few words
+had passed between them. Her frank, delicate face was clouded, and her
+manner was reserved.
+
+"I believe my brother knows who they are," she continued, after a
+short silence. "He saw them at the station."
+
+Paul bit his lip, and turned away. The mystery of Lady May's manner
+was explained now.
+
+"Did he tell you, then?"
+
+Lady May toyed with her whip, and then looked Paul straight in the
+face. "Yes! he told me the name of the younger one. It is Adrea Kiros,
+the dancing girl. Mr. de Vaux, may I ask you a question?"
+
+"Certainly!"
+
+Lady May looked straight between her horse's ears, and a slight flush
+stole into her cheeks. "You must not think that I was listening; it
+was not so at all. But last night, as I was passing the billiard-room,
+I heard my brother and Captain Mortimer talking. They were coupling
+your name with this--Miss Adrea Kiros. They spoke of her coming down
+here as though you must have known something of it. They were blaming
+you, as though you were responsible for her coming. We have been
+friends, Mr. de Vaux; and so far as I am concerned, our friendship has
+been very pleasant. But if there is any truth in what they said--well,
+you can guess the rest. I want you to tell me yourself; I am never
+content to accept hearsay evidence against my friends. I prefer to be
+unconventional, as you see. Please tell me!"
+
+"Will you put your question a little more definitely, Lady May?" Paul
+asked slowly.
+
+"Certainly! Has that young person come here at your instigation? Did
+you arrange for her to come here?"
+
+"I did not! No one could have been more surprised to see her than I
+was."
+
+Lady May was growing very stiff. She sat up in her saddle, and drew
+the reins through her fingers. "You know her?"
+
+"I do!"
+
+"You visited her in London?"
+
+"I did!"
+
+"You were at the cottage last evening?"
+
+"I was! I lost my way, and----"
+
+Lady May touched her horse with her spur. "Thank you, Mr. de Vaux!"
+she said haughtily. "I will not trouble you any more. Please don't
+follow me!"
+
+Paul watched her ride down the hillside and join one of the little
+groups dotted about outside the cover-side, with a curious sense of
+unreality. After a while he broke into a little laugh, and, shaking
+his reins, lit a cigar. This was a new character for him altogether.
+He knew himself that no man had kept his life more blameless than he!
+If anything, he felt sometimes that he had erred upon the other
+side in thinking and speaking too hastily of those who had been
+less circumspect. And now, it had come to this. The woman whose good
+opinion he had always valued next to his mother's had deliberately
+accused him of what must have seemed to her a flagrant outrage on
+decency. Her words were still ringing in his ears: "Please don't
+follow me." Lady May had said that to him; it was a little hard to
+realize.
+
+A commotion around the cover below was a welcome diversion to him
+just then. A fox had got clear away, and hounds were in full cry. Paul
+pressed his hat down, and settled into his saddle with a grim smile.
+The physical excitement was just what he wanted, and in a few minutes
+he was leading the field, with only the master by his side, and
+Captain Westover a few yards behind.
+
+At the first check, Captain Westover rode up to him. "I want just a
+word or two with you, De Vaux!" he said, drawing him on one side.
+
+Paul drew himself up in his saddle, and sat there glum and unbending.
+"I am at your service," he answered. "I have had the pleasure already
+of a short conversation with your sister this morning."
+
+Captain Westover nodded. "I suppose so. I want to beg your pardon
+first for what I am going to say, De Vaux. If I make an ass of myself,
+don't scruple to say so! But I want to ask you this! Why, in thunder,
+did you let Adrea what's-her-name, the dancing girl, come down here?"
+
+"It was no business of mine! I did not know that she was coming!"
+
+Captain Westover stroked his moustache and looked puzzled. "Look here,
+old man," he said slowly, "you go to see her in London, don't you?"
+
+"I have been!"
+
+"Just so! And you were down at the cottage last night, weren't you?"
+
+"I was!"
+
+"Well! hang it all, then you must have known something about her
+coming, you know! It can't be just a coincidence. Bevan & Bevan are
+my solicitors, and by the purest accident, one day I learned that Miss
+Adrea enjoys a settlement of a thousand a year from you. They didn't
+tell me, of course. I happened to catch sight of your check on the
+table one day, and overheard old Sam Bevan give some instructions to
+a clerk. Sorry, but I couldn't help it! You're the first person I've
+breathed it to."
+
+"I am her guardian!" Paul exclaimed angrily.
+
+Captain Westover whistled. "You may call it what you like, old fellow!
+I don't mind, I can assure you! You don't seem inclined to listen to
+any advice, so I won't offer any more. But if you'll forgive my saying
+so, you're doing a d----d silly thing. Good-morning."
+
+On the whole, Paul did not enjoy his day's hunting; and before it was
+all over, he found himself once more in an embarrassing situation. For
+as he rode past the gates of the cottage, on his way home, Adrea was
+there, breathless and laughing, with her dusky hair waving loosely
+around her shapely head.
+
+"I saw you coming," she said, a little shyly, "and I was afraid that
+you would not stop, so I ran out as fast as I could. It was silly of
+me! You were coming in, weren't you?"
+
+"I think not!" Paul answered gravely. "Look how thick in mud I am, and
+how tired my horse looks!"
+
+She looked up at him with pleading eyes and parted lips. "Do come!"
+she said. "I have been expecting you all day!"
+
+She held the gate open, and stood looking up at him, a curiously
+picturesque-looking figure in the grey twilight. Her gown was like no
+other woman's; it was something between a Greek robe and a tea-gown,
+of a dull orange hue, and her dusky hair was tied up with a bow of
+ribbon of the same colour. Everything about her was strange; even
+the faint perfume which hung about her clothes, and which brought him
+sudden, swift memories of that moment when she had lain in his arms,
+and his lips had met hers. Paul felt the colour steal into his pale
+cheeks as he leaped to the ground, and passed his arm through his
+horse's bridle.
+
+"I will come, _cara mia_!" he said softly.
+
+She clasped her hands through his other arm, and whispered something
+in his ear, as they turned up the avenue together. Just then the
+sound of horses' hoofs in the road made them both turn round. Captain
+Westover and Lady May were riding by together, with their eyes fixed
+upon Paul and his companion.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+"BLOOD CALLS ALOUD FOR BLOOD AND NOT FOR HANDS ENTWINED"
+
+
+It was with a strange conflict of feelings that Paul, with Adrea
+by his side, passed across the square, low hall of the cottage,
+plentifully decorated with stags' heads and other sporting trophies,
+and into the drawing-room. It was a room which had been built, too, of
+quaint shape, made up of nooks and corners and recesses, and with dark
+oak beams stretching right across the ceiling. The furniture was all
+old-fashioned, and of different periods; but the general effect was
+harmonious, though a trifle shabby. Paul knew it well! Many an evening
+he had come in to tea there, after a cigar and a chat with the old
+Major, and lounged in that low chair by Mrs. Harcourt's side. But it
+scarcely seemed like the same room to him now. The Major and his wife
+had been old-fashioned people, and their personality, and talk, and
+surroundings, had created a sort of atmosphere which Paul had grown
+almost to associate with the place. He missed it directly he entered
+the room. What it was that had worked the change it was hard to tell.
+Adrea had been far too charmed with its quaintness to seriously alter
+anything. A little stiffness in the arrangement of the furniture had
+been corrected, and the few antimacassars carefully removed; otherwise
+nothing had been changed. The great bowls of yellow roses and
+chrysanthemums, and the piles of modern books and music lying about,
+might have been partly responsible for it; and the faint perfume which
+he had grown to associate altogether with Adrea, and which seemed
+wafted into the air as she gathered up her skirts on her way into
+the room, had a foreign flavour in it. But, after all, it was Adrea
+herself who changed the atmosphere so completely. She was so different
+from other women in her strange Eastern beauty and the leopard-like
+grace of her movements that she could not fail to create an atmosphere
+around her. Yes! it was she herself who had worked the change; just as
+she had worked so wonderful a change in him, Paul told himself.
+
+At first they had thought that the room was empty; and Adrea, who had
+entered a little in advance, turned round to Paul and held out her
+hands with a sudden sweeping gesture of invitation. Even in that
+moment, as he moved towards her, Paul had time to feel a quick glow
+of admiration at the artistic elegance of her pose and colouring. Her
+proud, dusky face and brilliant eyes found a perfect background in the
+deep orange of her loose gown, and the velvet twined amongst her dark
+hair. Her arms, stretched out towards him, were half bare, where the
+lace had fallen back, and a world of passionate love and invitation
+was glowing in her face as she leaned slightly towards him, as if
+impatient of his slow advance. But before his hands had touched hers,
+a voice from the further end of the room had broken in upon that
+eloquent silence.
+
+"Adrea! you did not see me!"
+
+They stood for a moment as though paralysed; then Adrea turned
+slowly round with darkening face. "I did not! I thought that you were
+upstairs!"
+
+She glided out of the shadows, a slim, tall figure dressed with
+curious simplicity, and with white, bloodless face. "I am going away,"
+she said, coming quite close to them, and fixing her full, deep
+eyes upon Adrea; "I am going away at once. But, Adrea, there is one
+word--just one word--"
+
+"Say it!" Adrea interrupted impatiently.
+
+She glanced at Paul. He made a movement as though to quit the room,
+but Adrea prevented him. "You need not go!" she said. "Anything that
+is to be said can be said to you as well as to me. I prefer to have no
+secrets! You were going to say something to me," she added, turning to
+her companion.
+
+"Yes! I have no objection to say it before Mr. de Vaux. I simply want
+to ask you whether you consider him a proper visitor in this house?"
+
+"I choose it! I am mistress here!"
+
+For a moment an angry reply seemed to quiver upon the woman's lips,
+but it died away.
+
+"You are right! I thank you for reminding me of it," she said quietly.
+"And yet, Adrea, hear me! You are doing an evil thing! Was your
+father's murder so light a thing to you that you can join hands with
+his murderer's son? Remember that day! Think of your father lying
+across that chamber floor, stricken dead in a single moment by Martin
+de Vaux--by his father! It is not seemly that you two should stand
+there, hand in hand! It is not seemly for you to be under the same
+roof! It is horrible!"
+
+There was a moment's silence. Then Adrea threw open the door, and
+pointed to it.
+
+"Go!" she ordered coldly. "You have had your say, and that is my
+answer! You were my father's friend; I believe that he loved you! It
+was for his sake that I offered you shelter! It was for his sake that
+I brought you here! But, remember this: if you wish to stay with me,
+let me never hear another word from you on this subject!"
+
+She went out silently. Adrea closed the door, and turned round with
+all the hardness fading swiftly out of her features. A moment before
+there had been a look of the tigress in her eyes; and Paul, watching
+her, had shuddered. It was gone now. She came close up to Paul, and
+led him to a chair.
+
+"Was I very undignified?" she said, laughing. "I am afraid I was. I
+was very angry!"
+
+He shook his head. "You were not undignified," he said, "but you were
+very severe. I think that she will go away."
+
+Adrea's face hardened again. "I do not care! I would hate the dearest
+friend I had on earth who tried to come between us. Oh! Paul, Paul!
+don't you feel as I do; as though the world were empty, and my mind
+swept bare of memories,--as though there were no background to it all,
+nothing save you and I, and our love?"
+
+Paul drew her to him. For him, at that moment, there was no past nor
+any future. The dreamy _abandon_ of her manner seemed to have raised
+an echo within him.
+
+"Listen! What is that?" Adrea exclaimed suddenly.
+
+There was the ring of a horse's hoofs in the avenue, and immediately
+afterwards a loud peal at the bell. Paul and Adrea looked at one
+another breathlessly. Who could it be?
+
+The outer door was opened and closed, and then quick steps passed
+across the hall. The drawing-room door was thrown open, and Arthur
+de Vaux, pale and splashed with mud from head to foot, stood upon the
+threshold.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+"THE NEW, STRONG WINE OF LOVE"
+
+
+The situation, although it was only a brief one, was for a moment
+possessed of a singularly dramatic force. The grouping and the
+colouring in that dimly lit drawing-room were all that an artist could
+desire, and the facial expressions bordered upon the tragic. Of all
+men in the world, his brother was the last whom of his own choosing
+Paul would have wished to see.
+
+There was a brief silence. Arthur, breathless through his hasty
+entrance, could only stand there upon the threshold, his face white to
+the lips, and his eyes flashing with passionate anger and dismay.
+To him the situation was more than painful; it was horrible. To have
+believed ill of Paul from hearsay would have been impossible; his
+confidence in his elder brother had been unbounded. He had always
+looked up to him as the mirror of everything that was honorable and
+chivalrous. Even now, perhaps there might be some explanation--some
+partial explanation, at any rate. Paul was standing back amongst the
+shadows, and his face was only barely visible. Doubtless it was
+only surprise which held him silent. In a moment he would speak,
+and explain everything. It was this thought which loosened Arthur's
+tongue.
+
+"Paul," he cried, and stepping forward into the room, "and Adrea! You
+here, and together! Tell me what it means! I have a right to know. I
+will know."
+
+He had determined to be cool, to bear himself like a man, but their
+silence maddened him. Adrea, it is true, showed no signs of guilt or
+confusion in her cold, questioning face. But the deceit, if deceit
+there had been, was not hers. It was Paul who was responsible to him,
+and it was Paul who should have spoken--Paul, who stood there with a
+hidden face, a silent, immovable figure.
+
+"Are you stricken dumb?" he cried angrily. "You can see who I am,
+can't you, Paul? Speak to me! Tell me whether there is any truth
+in these stories which are flying about the county, with no one to
+contradict them."
+
+What might have been the tragedy of the situation vanished for Paul at
+the sound of his brother's words. After all, it was not the just anger
+of a deceived man with which he was confronted, but the empty scream
+of a boy's passion. Arthur's infatuation had but skimmed the surface
+of his light nature. He was pricked, not wounded. Yet, though in a
+sense this realization brought its relief, Paul felt humbled into the
+dust. He was actually conscious of his own humiliation. So far as
+a nature such as his could be conventional, he had become so in
+deference to the opinion of those who looked up to him as the head of
+a great house, and of whom much was to be expected, both socially and
+politically. What must become of that opinion now, Arthur's words too
+plainly foreshadowed.
+
+He moved forward into the centre of the room, and faced his brother.
+There was only a small table between them.
+
+"I do not know who sent you here, Arthur," he said, "or what reports
+you have heard, but it seems to me, that any explanation you may wish
+had better be deferred until our return home."
+
+Arthur struck the table violently with his riding-whip, "I will not
+wait!" he cried. "Here is the proper place! I have been deceived and
+cajoled by--by--you, Adrea, and by my own brother! It is shameful! You
+hypocrite, Paul! You, to come up to London, and solemnly lecture me
+about a dancing girl. You d----d hypocrite!"
+
+Before his passion, Paul's grave and steadfast silence gained an added
+dignity. Adrea, with a red spot burning on her cheeks, sailed between
+the two.
+
+"Arthur, you are mad," she said, turning suddenly upon him, with her
+eyes afire. "Have I ever deceived you? Have I ever pretended to care
+for you? Bah, no! You are only an unformed, hysterical boy. Before,
+you were indifferent to me. Now, I am very quickly growing to hate
+you! Begone! Leave this house!"
+
+He stood quite still, white and trembling. The scorn of her words had
+fallen like ice upon his heart. Then he turned, and groped for the
+door, as though there were a mist before his eyes.
+
+"I suppose you are quite right," he faltered out. "I didn't see it
+quite the same way, that's all. I understand now."
+
+The door opened and shut. In a moment or two the sound of his horse's
+hoofs were heard in the avenue, growing rapidly less distinct as he
+galloped away into the darkness. To Paul it sounded like the knell of
+his self-respect, but Adrea felt only the relief. Her eyes, full of
+soft invitation, sought his; but he did not move. He stood there,
+silent and motionless, with his face turned towards the window. Those
+dying sounds meant so much to him,--so much that she could never
+understand.
+
+The consciousness of her near presence suddenly disturbed him. He
+turned round. Her warm breath was upon his cheek, and her white arms
+were twined about his neck.
+
+"Paul," she whispered, "do not look so miserable, please! Come and
+talk to me."
+
+Her arms tightened around him. He looked down at her with a peculiar
+helplessness. Their light weight seemed to him like a chain of iron
+weighing him down! down! down!
+
+He had told himself that he had come to bid her farewell; that Father
+Adrian's words, vague though they were, yet had a definite meaning,
+and were worthy of his regard. But at that moment their memory was
+like a dying echo in his ears. This first passion of his life was
+strong upon him, and everything else was weak. The future was suddenly
+bounded for him by a pair of white, clinging arms, and a dark,
+beautiful face pressed close to his. He saw no more; he could see no
+further.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+"ADREA'S DIARY"
+
+ "By love stalks hate, his brother and his mate."
+
+
+I am scarcely calm enough to write! Yet I must write! My heart is
+full; my very pulses are throbbing with excitement! What is it that
+has happened? It is all confused in my mind. Let me try and set it
+down clearly; then perhaps I shall be able to see my way.
+
+Yesterday it seemed to me that my being was all too small for one
+passion. Now it holds two! The one, perhaps, intensifies the other.
+That is possible, for they are opposites, and one has grown out of the
+other. Now I cannot tell which is the stronger, the love or the hate.
+
+I love one man, and I hate another. Perhaps I should say I love one
+man because I hate another. You, my dumb confidant, may be trusted
+with names, so I will be clearer still. I love Paul de Vaux, and I
+hate Father Adrian!
+
+Oh! that he should have dared! that he should have dared to speak so
+to me! If only Paul had been there, he should have beaten him. If I
+had had the strength and the means, I would have killed him where
+he stood, and silenced those thin, cruel lips for ever. I could have
+stabbed him to the heart, and my hand would never have faltered.
+
+Let me try to recall that scene. It is not difficult. His words are
+ringing still in my ears, and his white, passionate face seems to
+follow and mock me wherever I look. I see it out there in the white
+moonlight, and it rises up from the dark corners of the room. It
+haunts me, and I hate it! I hate him as a woman hates any one who
+comes between her and the man she loves!
+
+We were alone, Paul and I; at least, we thought so. I had heard no one
+enter, nor had he. But suddenly a voice rang out and filled the room;
+a fierce, cruel voice, so changed and hardened with passion that I
+scarcely recognised it. But when we sprang up, and peered through the
+twilight of the chamber we saw him standing close to us,--so close
+that he might even have heard our whispered words to one another.
+
+There had been some ceremony at the monastery amongst the hills where
+most of his time here is spent, and he had evidently come straight
+from there. His flowing black robes were splashed with mud and torn by
+brambles, and his white face was livid with exhaustion and anger. His
+dark eyes burned like fire in their hollow depths, and his right
+hand was raised above his head, as though he had been on the point of
+striking or denouncing us. I shall not forget his appearance while I
+live. It will haunt me to my dying day.
+
+I think that it is the mystery of it all which tortures me so. What
+has Paul to fear from him? Whence comes his power? What evil is it
+which he holds suspended over his head? There is only one that I can
+imagine. Father Adrian must hold the key to that awful deathbed scene
+at the monastery of Cruta. As I write the words, my hand shakes, my
+heart sickens with the horror of that memory. Well have I cause to
+shrink from all thought of that hideous night;--I, to whom the son of
+Martin de Vaux has become the dearest amongst men! What was it Paul
+said to me? "He knows something which my father told him whilst he lay
+dying." Is it that knowledge which gives him this strange power? I
+did not believe in it! I would not have believed in it! But, in that
+dreadful moment, I turned to Paul, and I saw his face!
+
+A volley of words seemed trembling on Father Adrian's lips; yet he did
+not speak. We waited for the storm to burst; we waited till I could
+bear the silence no longer, and I felt that if it was not broken I
+should go mad. So I drew near to him, and spoke a single word in his
+ear. Then I glided back to Paul's side.
+
+"Spy!"
+
+He treated the insult as one might treat the bite of an insect in
+the face of some imminent danger. He did not reply to it; he did not
+appear to have heard it. His eyes traveled over me, as though they
+had been sightless, and challenged Paul's. In the excitement of the
+moment, his words sounded tame, and almost meaningless.
+
+"This is your answer, then, Paul de Vaux! Let it be so! I accept your
+decision!"
+
+There was no defiance in Paul's answer. His manner was quite subdued.
+I think that both his words and his tone surprised me.
+
+"You have seen! I am in your hands!"
+
+I looked from one to the other, troubled. I felt that there was a
+hidden meaning in their words which I could not understand. There
+was something between them from which I was excluded. But this much
+I knew. There was a threat in Father Adrian's words, and it was I who
+was the cause of it. Oh! if this man should bring evil upon Paul! The
+thought of it is like madness to me! See, there goes my pen! I cannot
+write when I think of it!
+
+I have opened my window. The very air is sad with the moaning of
+the sea, and the rustling of the night breeze in the thick, tangled
+shrubbery below. But to me it is sweet and grateful! I am in no mood
+for pleasant sounds or sights. The dreariness of the night finds its
+echo in my heart. The damp breeze cools my forehead! To-night I feel
+conscious of a new strength. It is the strength of hate! My mind is
+full of dim purposes; time will aid them to gather strength! As they
+group themselves together, action will suggest itself. To time I leave
+them!
+
+Let me go back to my recital of what passed between us three. A
+strange lethargic calm seemed to have fallen upon Paul. He turned to
+me without even a single trace of the passion which had lit up his
+face a few moments before.
+
+"I must go!" he said quietly. "Farewell!"
+
+I could scarcely believe that he meant it; that he was going away
+without another word, at what was really this priest's unspoken
+bidding. But it was so. From that moment, the fear of Father Adrian
+which had grown up in my heart leaped into a new strength. I was
+angry, and full of resistance.
+
+"Why should you go?" I cried. "I have much to say to you!"
+
+"I must go now, Adrea," he answered simply. "When I came I had no
+thought of staying. It is late!"
+
+I felt my face grow hot with passion as I turned swiftly round towards
+Father Adrian. "It is you who should go," I cried. "Why have you come
+here? Why are you always creeping across my life like a dark, noisome
+shadow? Go away! Begone! I will not be left with you!"
+
+He turned a shade paler, but he did not sacrifice his dignity, as
+I hoped that he would, by answering me with anger. He did not even
+answer me at all. He looked over my head at my lover.
+
+"To-morrow night!" he said calmly.
+
+"To-morrow night!" Paul answered.
+
+I stood between them, angry but helpless. A log of wood had just
+fallen from the fire on to the hearth, and in its sudden blaze I could
+see their faces distinctly. The utter contrast between the two men
+threw each into strong relief. Paul, in his scarlet coat and riding
+clothes, pale and impassive, but _débonnaire_; and Father Adrian, his
+strange black garb mud-bespattered and disordered, and his dark, angry
+face livid with the passion so hardly suppressed. It was odd to think
+of them as creatures of the same species. Odder still to think that
+there should be this link between them.
+
+I walked with Paul to the door, holding to his arm, and talking,
+half-gaily, half-reproachfully, all the way. We stood on the
+step together while his horse was being brought round, and in the
+half-lights he stooped down and kissed me. But his manner had changed.
+Even his lips were cold, and his eyes were no longer bright. There was
+a far-away look in them, and his face was white and set. There were
+tears in my eyes as I watched him ride away on his great brown horse,
+and listened to the distant thunder of hoofs across the moor. His face
+had told its own story. He was nerving himself to face some expected
+danger. From whose hands? Surely from Father Adrian's.
+
+The thought worked within me. I stood for a moment, trying to quiet
+my passion. As I turned away I heard the stable-yard doors open, and a
+carriage, laden with luggage, drove slowly out, and, without coming
+to the front at all, turned down the avenue. I ran out, heedless of my
+slippers, and called to it to stop. The man obeyed me, and I caught it
+up, breathless. The blinds were closely drawn, but I opened the door.
+As I expected, it was she who sat inside, closely veiled and weeping.
+
+"You were going, then, without a single word of farewell!" I cried
+reproachfully. "Is that kind? Have I deserved it from you?"
+
+She threw up her veil. Her eyes were red and swollen with weeping. She
+looked at me pleadingly.
+
+"Do not blame me more than you can help!" she said. "It was a great
+shock to me to see you--with the son of Martin de Vaux. It was more
+than a shock; it was a horror to me! He is like his father! He is very
+like his father!"
+
+I knew that she had passed through a fiery sea of suffering, and I
+kept back the anger which threatened me. I pointed upwards.
+
+"We cannot keep the dark clouds from gathering in the sky, nor can we
+make love come and go at our bidding. We are but creatures; it is fate
+which ordains!"
+
+She bowed her head. "Fate, or the unknown God! I am not your judge,
+child! I do not leave you in anger!"
+
+"Why do you go, then, and leave me here alone? It is not kind! It is
+not what I should expect from you!"
+
+The tears started again into her eyes, but she shook them away. "I
+cannot explain as yet," she said. "You will think me ungrateful, I
+fear! I cannot help it! I must go. Farewell, Adrea!"
+
+A sudden thought came to me. It was an inspiration. "You are not going
+of your own free will," I cried. "Some one has been influencing you!"
+
+Her face was suddenly full of nervous terror. "Hush! hush!" she cried.
+"He will hear you! Let me go now! Let me go, I beseech you!"
+
+I held her hands. "It is Father Adrian who is sending you away," I
+cried passionately. "He is my enemy. I hate him! Why should you obey
+him? Stay with me! Do, do stay!"
+
+She looked at me as one would look at an ignorant child who
+blasphemes. "You are talking wildly! Father Adrian is far from being
+your enemy. You do not understand!"
+
+Her voice had changed; the note of sympathy had died away. I turned
+away from the carriage door in despair. Father Adrian's power was
+greater than mine.
+
+"You can go!" I said bitterly. "You would have left me here without
+one word, at his bidding. As you say, I do not understand."
+
+She leaned forward, with a strange light in her eyes. "Child," she
+whispered, "I am going to Cruta."
+
+The carriage drove away and I walked back to the house. The air seemed
+full of voices, and the grey rising mists loomed into strange shapes.
+Cruta! She was going to Cruta! What power had this man in his hands to
+send my lover from me with a heart like a stone, and this woman back
+into the living hell from which she had just freed herself. It was my
+turn now! Would he be able to subdue me to his bidding? The thought
+made me shudder.
+
+I ran upstairs into my room, and bathed my forehead, and re-arranged
+my gown. Then I set my teeth together, and went down to him. It was to
+be a battle! Well! I was prepared!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is over now. I know his strength, and I know his weakness. What
+passed between us I shall put down to-morrow. To-night I am weary.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+"OH! HEART OF STONE, YET FLESH TO ALL SAVE ME"
+
+
+This is exactly what happened after I regained the house. I went
+upstairs for a few minutes to arrange my hair and bathe my eyes. Then
+I walked straight down to the drawing-room, and I told myself that I
+was prepared for anything that might take place.
+
+Father Adrian did not hear me enter, so I had the advantage at the
+onset of taking him by surprise. He was standing in the centre of
+the hearthrug, with his arms folded and his eyes cast down upon the
+ground. His eyebrows almost met in a black frown, and a curious grey
+pallor had spread itself over his face. When I entered, noiselessly
+moving the curtains, from the outer chamber, he was muttering to
+himself, and I strained my hearing to catch the meaning of his words.
+
+"To-night must end it!" I heard him say. "She herself shall decide.
+Greater men have travelled the path before me! As for him, my pity
+has grown faint! It is the will of the Church! I myself am but the
+instrument. He stands between the Church and her rights! Between me
+and--her!"
+
+His cheeks flushed, and his expression suddenly changed. He whispered
+a name! It was mine! His eyes were soft, and his lips were parted. The
+priest had vanished. His face was human and manly. I saw it, but my
+heart was as cold as steel.
+
+"Father Adrian," I said quietly, "I am here."
+
+He started, and looked towards me. If my heart could have been
+softened even to pity, it would have been softened by that look. But
+a woman's great selfishness was upon me! The man I loved was in some
+sort of danger at his hands. There was no room in my heart for any
+other thought. I was adamant.
+
+He was silent for a moment, then he faced me steadily, and spoke. "So
+you have learned to love this Englishman, this De Vaux, the son of old
+Martin de Vaux! Answer me simply, Yes or No!"
+
+"I have!"
+
+I did not hesitate. What need was there for hesitation? I answered him
+defiantly, and without faltering.
+
+"You will never marry him! You will not even become his mistress!"
+
+I made no answer at first; I laughed! that was all.
+
+"Who will prevent me?"
+
+"I shall!"
+
+"How?"
+
+"The means are ready to my hand!"
+
+My heart sank, but I forced a smile. "What are they?"
+
+He considered a moment. "I can strip Paul de Vaux of every acre
+and every penny he possesses! I can break his mother's heart! I can
+proclaim his father a murderer!"
+
+"I do not understand! I do not believe!"
+
+The words left me boldly enough, but there was a lump in my throat,
+and my heart was sick.
+
+"Listen!" He drew a small gold crucifix from his breast, and solemnly
+kissed it. Then, holding it in his hand, he repeated,--
+
+"I can beggar Paul de Vaux by my proven word. I can take from him
+everything precious in life! I can take from him his name and his
+honours! I can break his mother's heart! I can proclaim his father a
+murderer! All this I can and will do, save you listen to me!"
+
+He kissed the crucifix, and replaced it in his inner pocket. I had
+begun to tremble. The stamp of truth was upon his words. Still I tried
+to face him boldly.
+
+"Even if this is so, what has it to do with me?" I cried.
+
+"You know!" he answered. "In your heart you know! Yet, if you
+will--listen!" he continued, in a low tone. "You love Paul de Vaux!"
+
+"It is true!"
+
+"And you believe that he loves you?"
+
+"I do!"
+
+"Listen, then! Three nights ago I lifted that curtain, by the side of
+one who has left you for ever, and I saw you in his arms. I followed
+him out of the house; I walked by his side to Vaux Abbey, and I told
+him what I have told you. I wasted no time in idle threats. I told him
+what power was mine, and I said 'Choose!' He was silent!"
+
+"Choose between what?" I interrupted.
+
+"I bade him swear that he would never willingly look upon your face
+again, or prepare himself to face all the evils which it was in my
+power to bring upon him."
+
+"And he?"
+
+"He asked for time--for a week!"
+
+A storm of anger was suddenly stirred up within me. I turned upon him
+with flashing eyes and quivering lips. Discretion and restraint were
+gone; I was like a tigress. I lacked only the power to kill.
+
+"And by what right did you dare to thrust yourself between us?" I
+cried. "What have I to do with you, or you with me?"
+
+He held up his hands for a moment, as though to shut out the sight of
+my face, ablaze with scorn and hatred. There was a short silence. Then
+he spoke in a low tone, vibrating with intensity of feeling.
+
+"You know! In your heart you know!" he said. "Into my life has come
+the greatest humiliation which can befall such as I am! In sorrow and
+bitterness it has eaten itself into my heart. I am accursed in my own
+sight, and in the sight of God!"
+
+I mocked at him. "I am not your confessor!" I laughed. "Go and tell
+your sins to those of your own order! I am a woman and you are a
+priest! Why do you look at me with that light in your eyes? Am I a
+prayer-book? Is there anything saintly in my face, that you should
+keep your eyes fixed upon it so steadily?"
+
+I had hoped that my words would madden him, and he would lose his
+self-control. To my surprise, they had but little effect. He seemed
+scarcely to have heard.
+
+"What have you to do with me, or I with you?" he repeated, in a voice
+which was rapidly gaining strength and passion. "God knows! Yet as
+surely as we both live, our lots are intertwined the one with the
+other."
+
+"A godly priest!" I laughed. "What have you to do with me? What
+of your vows? Oh, how dare you try to play the lover with me! You
+hypocrite!"
+
+He shrank back as though in pain. I laughed outright, glad that I had
+made him feel.
+
+"Adrea!" he said slowly. "I was never a hypocrite to you. In your
+presence I have never breathed a word of my religion. Think for a
+moment of those days at Cruta. Did I not refuse to confess you? Why?
+You know! Because of those long, dreamy days we spent together, not as
+priest and penitent, but as man and woman. Do you remember them--the
+cliffs, with their giant shadows standing out across the blue waters
+of the harbour; the hollows, where we sat amongst the perfumed wild
+flowers, gazing across the sea, and watching the white sails in the
+distance; the nights, with their white moonlight and silent grandeur!
+Ay, Adrea! look me in the face, if you can, and tell me that you have
+forgotten them! You cannot! You dare not! It was you who brought me
+those books of wild, passionate poetry whose music entered into my
+very soul! It was you who tempted me with soft words, with your music,
+with your beauty, into that world of sense which holds me prisoner for
+ever. What I once was, I can never be again! It is you who worked the
+change--you who awoke my man's heart, and set it beating for ever
+at your touch, at your movements, at the sight of you. It is you who
+taught me how to love--who opened to me the rose-covered gates of
+hell! There is no drawing back! You, who have dragged me down, shall
+share my fall with me, for better or for worse! You shall not escape!
+No other man shall have you! I have paid the price, and I will have
+you!"
+
+I wrenched myself free from the arms which were closing around me, and
+stood trembling before him.
+
+"Fool!" I cried. "You have dared to think of me like that because I
+chose to make use of you at Cruta! Make use of you! Yes, that is what
+I did! I wanted to escape! You and she were the only ones who could
+help me! Save for that, I had never wasted a moment upon you. I never
+thought of you as a man; you were only a priest. I never wished to see
+you again! You are in my way now; you stand between me and the man I
+love! I hate you!"
+
+His dark eyes were lit up with a sudden fire and a deep flush stained
+his cheeks. For the first time I seemed to see the man in him as well
+as the priest, and I saw that he was handsome. It did not interest me;
+I noticed it only as an incident.
+
+"I do not believe it!" he exclaimed. "You are not so false as you
+would have me believe, Adrea!"
+
+His hand was on my wrist, and his dark eyes, strangely softened, were
+fixed pleadingly upon mine. Something in his manner, even in his tone,
+seemed to remind me of Paul. I was magnetized! For a moment I could
+not move, and during that moment his hands closed upon mine.
+
+"Adrea, is such a love as I can offer you worth nothing? What did you
+tell me once was your life's ideal? Was it not the love of a strong,
+true man, always faithful, always loving? No one could love you more
+tenderly than I, no one could be more faithful. Until I saw you, no
+woman's face had dwelt in my thoughts for a single instant. In my
+heart you reign alone, Adrea! No one has been there before--no one
+will come after! Such as it is, it is a kingdom of your own!"
+
+"I do not understand you," I said slowly, withdrawing my hands. "You
+talk to me of a man's love, a man's faithfulness! What do you know of
+it? You are a priest!"
+
+He threw up his hands with a sudden cry of agony. His face was white
+and blanched.
+
+"Do I not know it?" he exclaimed in a low, fierce tone. "Do you think
+I yielded easily to the poisoned web you have woven around me? The
+horror of it all has darkened my days, and made hideous my nights. And
+yet you can taunt me with it--you, for whom I yield up conscience and
+future--you, for whom I give my soul! No other man could love as I
+love, Adrea!"
+
+I looked him straight in the face and I did not spare him. What was
+the use? The truth was best!
+
+"It is folly!" I said. "If your religion is worth anything to you, let
+it help you now! Let it teach you to forget me! Go away from here, and
+leave unharmed the man I love. If you do not, I shall hate you!"
+
+He caught hold of my dress. He was on his knees before me--a bent,
+imploring figure.
+
+"Too late! too late!" he cried. "My religion has gone! When love for
+you crept into my heart, I became worse than a heretic. It was sin,
+and the sin has spread. Oh! have mercy upon me, Adrea, have mercy upon
+me! Just a little of your love. It may not be much at first, but it
+will grow. Adrea, you must try--you shall try!"
+
+I shook my gown from his trembling fingers, and looked down upon him
+with contempt in my heart, and contempt in my face. The flickering
+firelight cast a faint glow upon his blanched, wan features, and
+their utter humility filled me with an unreasoning and unreasonable
+loathing. I did not try to soften my words. I spoke out just as I
+felt, and watched him rise slowly to his feet, like a hunted and
+stricken animal, without a pitying word or glance. As he rose upright,
+his head dropped. He did not look at me; he did not speak a single
+word. He walked slowly to the door with steps that faltered a little,
+and walked out of the room, and out of the house.
+
+I watched him down the avenue, wondering at his strange silence. It
+had a curious effect upon me. I would rather have heard threats--even
+a torrent of anger. There was something curiously ominous in that
+slow, wordless exit. I watched him uneasily, full of dim, shapeless
+fears.
+
+Outside the gate he paused in the middle of the road. To the left
+was the monastery where he had stayed; to the right was Vaux Abbey. I
+heard my heart beat while he paused, and my face was pressed against
+the window. For nearly a minute he stood quite still, with downcast
+head, thinking. Then he turned deliberately to the right, and set his
+face towards Vaux Abbey.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That was early in the evening yesterday--twenty-four hours ago. Since
+then not a soul has been near the house. Early this morning I saw
+Father Adrian coming along the road from Vaux. I ran upstairs, and
+locked myself in my room, after forbidding the servants to let him
+enter. From the windows I watched him. To my surprise he never
+even glanced in. He walked past the gates, and took the road to the
+monastery. I saw him slowly ascend the hill and vanish out of sight
+in the darkening twilight. Once, just before he reached the summit, he
+paused and looked steadily down here. I could not see his face, but
+I saw him raise his right hand for a moment toward the sky. Then he
+turned round and pursued his way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If some one does not come to me soon, I shall go mad. Another hour has
+passed. My mind is made up; I shall go to Vaux Abbey.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+"MY LIPS ARE CHARGED WITH TRUTH, AND JUSTICE BIDS ME SPEAK"
+
+
+An early darkness had fallen upon the earth. Black clouds had sailed
+across the young moon, and the evening breeze had changed into a gale.
+There was no rain as yet, but every prospect of it near at hand. A
+mass of lurid, yellowish clouds hung low down over the bending woods,
+and the wind whistled drearily amongst the fir trees. Paul de
+Vaux wrapped his cloak tightly around him, and, standing on the
+turf-covered floor of the ruined chapel, peered forward into the
+darkness, looking for the man whom he had come to meet. Even then he
+heard his voice before he could distinguish the dim outline of Father
+Adrian standing by his side.
+
+"So you have come, Paul de Vaux, and in good time! It is well!"
+
+"I am here!" Paul answered shortly. "If what you have to say to me
+will take long, come up to the house. It is dark and cold, and there
+is a storm rising."
+
+The priest shook his head. "I have no wish to find shelter under the
+roof of Vaux Abbey," he said coldly. "You are well protected against
+the weather, and so am I. Let us stay here!"
+
+Paul strove to look into his face, but the darkness baffled him. He
+could only see its outline, nothing of his expression. "As you will,"
+he answered. "Speak! I am ready."
+
+"I have dealt in no idle threats, Paul de Vaux," was the stern answer.
+"I gave you a chance, and you have thrown it away. Perhaps I did ill
+ever to offer it to you. But, at any rate, remember this: it is no
+idle vengeance which I am dealing out to you this night; it is our
+holy and despoiled Church calling for justice. I speak in her name!"
+
+There was a moment's silence. Paul knew by his companion's bowed
+head and laboured utterance that he was suffering from some sort
+of emotion. But the darkness hid from him the workings of his pale
+features. When he spoke, his voice was low and solemn.
+
+"Paul de Vaux, turn back in your mind to another night such as this,
+when the thunder of sea and wind shook the air, and the anger of God
+seemed fallen upon the earth. On that night your father lay dying in
+the island monastery of Cruta; and while you were risking your life in
+the storm to reach him, I knelt by his side praying for his soul, that
+it might not sink down amongst the damned in hell. He was a brave man,
+but with the icy hand of death closing around him fear touched his
+heart. It was no craven fear! He lay there still and quiet, but his
+heart was troubled. In the midst of my prayers he stopped me, and took
+the crucifix into his own hand.
+
+"'Father,' he said, 'I have no faith in dying repentances. I have
+scouted religion all my life, and on my deathbed I will not cry for
+comfort to a Divinity which is a myth to me. Yet, as man to man,
+listen while I tell you a secret; and when I have finished, do you
+pray for me.'
+
+"Shall I go on, Paul de Vaux? Shall I tell you all that your father's
+dying lips faltered out to me?"
+
+"All! every word! Keep nothing back!" Paul spoke quickly, almost
+feverishly. He knew a little, but something told him that this priest
+knew more. He began dimly to suspect the nature of the revelation
+which was to come.
+
+"You shall know everything," Father Adrian continued, in the same
+hushed tone, so low that Paul had to bend forward to catch the
+words as they fell from his lips. "If Martin de Vaux had been of our
+religion, and had sought me as a priest of the Church a seal would
+have been set upon my mouth. But it was not so! Despite all my
+ministrations, he died as he had lived, in heresy and grievous sin.
+After all, it is only right that you, his son, should know what he
+forebore to tell you. Yet, in my weakness I might have spared you, if
+you yourself had not brought down this blow upon your head."
+
+Paul raised his hand, and Father Adrian paused. "Listen," he said,
+in a low, deep tone. "There are secret pages in the lives of most of
+us--pages blurred and scarred with misery and suffering and sin. But
+there is a difference--a great difference. Some are turned over with
+firm and penitent fingers, and, although their scarlet record may
+never be blotted out, yet, by sacrifice and atonement, the fruits of
+the sin itself may die, and, dying, cast no shadow into the future.
+A sin against humanity can often be righted by human justice. Towards
+the close of my father's days, I knew for the first time that there
+was in his life one of those disfigured pages. He told me nothing. I
+sought to know nothing. Father Adrian," Paul went on, with a sudden
+strain of passion in his tone, and a gesture half unseen in the
+darkness, "if the shadow of his sin rests upon any human being, if it
+still lives upon the earth, then tell me all that is in your heart
+to tell, for there is work to be done. But if that page be locked
+and sealed, if those who suffered through it are dead, and the burden
+which darkened my father's days is his alone, then spare his memory!
+Strike at me, if you will! Deal out your promised vengeance, but let
+it fall on me alone!"
+
+Paul ended his speech with a little burst of passion ringing in those
+last few words. He was conscious of a deep and fervent desire to hear
+nothing, to listen to nothing, which could teach him to hold less dear
+his father's memory. He shrank, with a human and perfectly natural
+feeling, from hearing evil of the dead. That last evil deed, the
+murder in that grim, bare chamber of death, had haunted him with vivid
+and painful intensity. But it was a crime by itself. It was horrible
+to imagine that it might indeed be the culmination of a life of
+license and contempt of all human laws. He had tried to think of it as
+something outside his father's life, something done in a momentary fit
+of madness, and that the man who suffered by it was some monster unfit
+for the companionship of his fellows--unfit to live. There were still
+tales to be heard in the county, and about town even, of the wild
+doings of Martin de Vaux in his younger days; but none of these had
+reached his son's ears. He would have been the last person likely to
+hear of them.
+
+There was a short silence, and before Father Adrian spoke again the
+low-lying clouds were swept over their heads by a gale from seaward,
+and the wind commenced to whistle and shriek in the pine wood,
+and roar amongst the crumbling ruins, which scarcely afforded them
+protection from the blinding rain. Any further conversation was
+impossible. Paul lifted up his voice, and shouted in his companion's
+ear--
+
+"These walls are not safe! We must go into the house. Will you come?"
+
+Father Adrian hesitated, and then assented, wrapping his cloak around
+him. In a few moments they were inside the library, having entered
+through a private door and met no one. Breathless, Paul threw off his
+cloak, which was dripping with rain, and turned round almost fiercely
+upon his companion.
+
+"Now speak!" he said. "I am ready to hear all."
+
+The priest looked at him steadily for a moment, and then, with his
+pale face turned towards the fire, he commenced to speak.
+
+"Sin is everlasting!" he said slowly. "Your father's sin lives, and on
+you the burden must fall! If you had kept the covenant which I placed
+before you, I might have spared you. You yourself have chosen. You
+must hear all! Listen!
+
+"It was by chance that I was spending two months in charge of the
+monastery of St. Jerome, at Cruta, when your father arrived," he
+continued, without any pause. "He sought our hospitality and he at
+once obtained it. For two days he dwelt with us, spending his time for
+the most part in idle fashion, wandering about along the seashore or
+on the cliffs, but always with the look on his face of a man who does
+but dally with some fixed purpose. His doings were nothing to me, but
+by chance, from one of the brethren, I learnt that he was no stranger
+to the island--that once, many years ago, he had been the guest of the
+lord who ruled the little territory, and whose castle overshadows the
+monastery.
+
+"On the third day of his stay, he remained within his guest-chamber
+until sundown, writing. As the vesper-bell rang I met him in the
+corridor, dressed for walking, and from his countenance I judged that
+whatever his mission to the island might be, he was about to bring it
+to an end. He passed me without speech, almost as though he had not
+seen me, and left the monastery. A few minutes afterwards, looking
+down from the windows to watch the brethren come in from their field
+tasks, I saw him take the road up to the castle.
+
+"It was in the middle of the night when he returned. Midnight had come
+and gone, and every one in the monastery was asleep, when the hoarse,
+clanging bell down in the yard rang slightly, as though pulled by
+feeble fingers. I threw my cloak over my shoulders, and descended to
+admit him. When the last of the huge bolts had been withdrawn, and I
+threw the door open, I found him leaning against the wall, with
+his fingers clutched together in agony, and his bloodless features
+convulsed with pain. The moonlight was falling right across his face,
+pale and ghastly with pain, and by its light I seemed to see
+something dark dropping from him on the white flags. I leaned forward,
+horror-stricken, and I saw that it was blood."
+
+"My God!"
+
+Paul was standing very still and rigid, with his eyes fastened upon
+the priest. As yet, he scarcely realized anything more than that
+he was being told a very horrible story. But he was conscious of a
+feverish impatience, quite beyond his control. When Father Adrian
+paused at his exclamation, he beat the ground with his foot
+impatiently. "Go on! Go on!" he said hoarsely.
+
+"I had no time to ask questions," the priest continued quietly.
+"Directly he left the support of the wall, and endeavoured to move
+towards me, your father threw up his arms with a sharp cry of pain,
+and almost fell upon his face. I was just in time to catch him, and
+exerting all my strength--for he was a powerful man--I dragged him up
+the steps and along the corridor to the nearest empty cell. There I
+laid him down upon a bed of ferns, and then hurried out to summon one
+of the brethren who was skilled in medicine.
+
+"In a few moments he returned with me. By his direction, I gave your
+father brandy and other restoratives, while he cut open his coat
+to find out, if he could, the nature of the wound. It was easily
+discovered. He had been stabbed by a long dagger just below the heart.
+Had the dagger entered one-sixteenth of an inch higher, he must have
+bled to death upon the spot.
+
+"We bound up the hurt as well as we could, and with the help of other
+of the monks, we carried him up to the guest-chamber, and put him to
+bed. In about half an hour he recovered consciousness, and called me
+to his side.
+
+"'Pencil, paper,' he whispered.
+
+"I handed him both. After several futile efforts he succeeded in
+writing a few words. Then he folded up the note, and handed it to me.
+
+"'If you will send it without delay,' he whispered, 'I will give one
+hundred pounds to the monastery.'
+
+"I never hesitated, for our funds were in a desperate state; but first
+I glanced at the direction. It was addressed to--
+
+ PAUL DE VAUX, Esq.,
+ c/o The English Consul,
+ Palermo.
+
+"I promised that it should be sent, and, as you know, it was. Then I
+sent the others out of the room, and inquired about his hurt. He set
+his lips firm, and shook his head.
+
+"'It was an accident,' he faltered. 'No one was to blame.'
+
+"I told him briefly that it was impossible. The nature of his wound
+was such that it was clearly the work of an assassin. In a certain
+sense we were the upholders of the law on the island, and I pointed
+this out to him sternly. He only shook his head and closed his eyes.
+Neither then nor at any other time could I gain from him one single
+word as to his doings on that night. He would tell me nothing."
+
+"You saw him going toward the castle," Paul interrupted. "Did you make
+inquiries there?"
+
+The priest shook his head slowly. "No, I made no inquiries," he
+answered. "It was no matter for my interference. The castle, although
+it is a huge place, was deserted save for a few native servants,
+whose _patois_ was unintelligible to me. There were only two who dwelt
+there--the old Count himself, and one other--to whom I could have
+gone. Several nights after your father's illness I left the monastery,
+and tried to see the Count. He would not even have me admitted, and on
+my return, your father, who had guessed the reason of my absence, sent
+for me. He judged of the ill success of my mission, by my face, and
+he instantly appeared relieved. He then called me to the bedside, and
+made me an offer. He would give me, as a further contribution to our
+exhausted funds, a large sum of money on this condition--that I took
+no further steps in any direction towards ascertaining the nature of
+his accident, as he chose to call it, and that I should not mention it
+to you as the cause of his illness, or refer to it in any way if you
+arrived while he was there. I hesitated for some time, but in the end
+I consented. The money in itself was a great temptation--you see, I am
+frank with you--and, apart from that, your father at that time was on
+the verge of his fever, and at such a critical time I feared the ill
+results of not falling in with his wishes. So I promised, and I kept
+my promise; no one--not even you--knew that he died from that dagger
+thrust, and during the remainder of my stay on the island, I asked no
+questions concerning his visit to the castle."
+
+"But did you hear nothing? were there no reports?" Paul asked.
+
+Father Adrian hesitated. "There were no reports about your father,"
+he said, "but the castle itself was always the object of the most
+unbounded superstition on the part of the inhabitants. They told
+strange tales of midnight cries, of lights from blocked-up chambers,
+and of the old Count who still dwelt there, although he had not been
+seen outside the castle walls for many a year. He was reported to have
+sold himself to the Evil One, and at the very mention of his name the
+people crossed themselves in terror, and glanced uneasily over their
+shoulders."
+
+"Idle tales!" cried Paul angrily. "Tell me, Father Adrian, did you
+know this Count of Cruta?"
+
+There was a moment's silence. Father Adrian's face was turned away,
+and he seemed in no hurry to answer. "Yes, I knew him."
+
+"You knew him! What is he like? Tell me!"
+
+The priest shook his head. "I have nothing to tell you," he said in a
+low tone.
+
+"You mean that you will not tell me."
+
+The priest inclined his head. Paul turned upon him fiercely, "He was
+my father's murderer," he cried.
+
+"It may be so. But remember that nothing is known! Remember, too, that
+your father's last wish was to keep secret the manner of his death!"
+
+Paul seemed scarcely to have heard him. He was walking restlessly
+up and down the apartment. Presently he stopped in front of Father
+Adrian's chair.
+
+"You have told me what happened to my father on the island," he said;
+"now tell me the story of his life, which you say that he confided to
+you. I must know what took him there."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+"THE SHATTERED VASE OF LOVE'S MOST HOLY VOWS"
+
+
+Paul had not thought of ringing for lights, and, save around the
+fireplace, the room was wrapped in solemn darkness. Father Adrian's
+chair had been amongst the shadows, and Paul had seen nothing save
+his outline since they had entered the room. But now, his curiosity
+stirred by the sudden silence of the priest, he caught up the poker,
+and broke the burning log in the grate, so that the flames threw a
+quick light on his face.
+
+Its extreme pallor struck him forcibly. It was a perfectly bloodless
+face, and the dark eyes, as black as jet, accentuated its pallor. Yet
+there was no lack of nervous strength or emotion. The thin lips were
+quivering, and the eyes were soft with feeling. Somehow, it seemed to
+Paul that this man's interest in the story which he had come to tell
+was no casual one; that he himself was mixed up in it, in a manner
+which as yet he had chosen to conceal. His colourless face was alight
+with human interest and sympathies. Who was this priest, and why had
+he come so far to tell his story? Paul felt that a mystery lay behind
+it all.
+
+"You must not think," Father Adrian commenced slowly, "that your
+father told me the whole history of his life. It was one episode only,
+the memory of which weighed heavily upon him as death drew near. He
+did not tell me all concerning it; what he did tell me I will try and
+repeat to you.
+
+"It was late in the afternoon of the day before your arrival that he
+called me to his bedside. Only a few hours ago we had told him that
+he must die, and since then he had been very silent. I came and knelt
+before him, and was commencing a prayer, when he stopped me.
+
+"'I want you to listen while I tell you one of the worst actions of my
+life,' he said in a low tone, weakened by the suffering through which
+he had passed. 'The memory of it has haunted me always; it is the
+memory of it which has brought me here. I am not confessing to you,
+mind! only after I have told you this story, I want you to pray for
+me.
+
+"'Thirty years ago I was in Palermo, and was introduced there to the
+Count of Cruta. We met several times, and on his departure he invited
+me to come over here for a week's shooting. I was wandering about on
+pleasure, with no fixed plans, and I did not hesitate for a moment. I
+should like nothing better than to come, I told him, and accordingly
+we returned here together.
+
+"'The Count was a widower with one daughter, Irene. For a young man
+I was not particularly impressionable, and up till then I had thought
+very little about women. Nevertheless,--perhaps, I should say, all the
+more for that reason,--I fell in love with Irene. In a week's time I
+had all but told her so; and finding myself alone with her father one
+night after dinner, I boldly asked him for her hand. Somewhat to my
+surprise,--for considering the difference in our years, we had become
+very friendly,--he refused me point-blank. The first reason which he
+gave staggered me: Irene was already engaged to a Roumanian nobleman,
+who would be coming soon to claim her. But apart from that, he went
+on, he would never have consented to the match on the score of our
+different religions. I tried to argue with him, but it was useless; he
+would not even discuss the matter. His daughter's hand was promised,
+and his word was passed.
+
+"'On the morrow I appealed to Irene, and here I met with more success.
+She confessed that she loved me, and, to my surprise, she consented
+at once when I proposed that she should run away with me. Our
+arrangements were made in haste and secrecy. My yacht lay in the
+harbour, and at midnight Irene stole down to the shore, where I met
+her, and rowed her on board. A few minutes later we weighed anchor and
+steamed away, with the rusty old guns from the castle firing useless
+shots high over our heads.
+
+"'I want to make my story as short as I can, so I will not attempt
+to offer any excuses for my conduct, or to seek to palliate it in any
+way. Irene had trusted herself to me, and I betrayed her trust. I did
+not marry her. She did not leave me; she did not even openly upbraid
+me; but nevertheless it hung like a dark cloud over her life.
+By degrees, she became altered. She tried to drown her memory by
+frivolity, by all manner of gaiety and excitement, and our life in
+Paris afforded her many opportunities.
+
+"'The old Count of Cruta made two efforts to rescue his daughter from
+me. The first time he came alone; and before his righteous fury I was
+for a moment abashed. "Give me back my daughter!" he thundered, with
+his back to my closed door, and a pistol pointed to my head. I rang
+the bell, and Irene came, dressed for the evening, and humming a light
+opera tune. Then I saw to what depths of callousness I had dragged
+her, and I shuddered. She listened to the old man's stormy eloquence,
+and when he had finished his passionate appeal, she shrugged her
+shoulders slightly. She was perfectly happy, she declared, and she
+would die sooner than go back to that _triste_ Cruta. Had he had a
+pleasant journey? she asked, and would he stay and dine? I saw her
+father shudder, and the words seemed frozen upon his lips. He looked
+at her in perfect silence for a full minute--looked at her from head
+to foot, at her soft white dress, with its floating sea of dainty
+draperies, and at the diamonds on her neck and bosom. Then his eye
+seemed to blaze with anger.
+
+"'"Girl!" he cried sternly, "you have dragged down into the mire one
+of the proudest names in Europe! Curse you for it! As for you, sir,"
+he added, turning to me, "you are a dishonoured scoundrel! a cur!"
+
+"'He was right! I was a blackguard. But had it not been for those last
+words of his, I should straight-way have offered to have married Irene
+on the morrow. The words were on my lips, but the contempt of that
+monosyllable maddened me. The better impulse passed away.
+
+"'"You should have given her to me when I asked for her hand," I
+answered. "You cur!" he repeated. I looked at him steadily. "You are
+an old man," I said, "or I should throw you down my stairs. Now go!
+Irene has nothing to say to you, nor have I."
+
+"'He lingered on the threshold for a moment, surveying us both with a
+calm dignity, before which I felt ashamed.
+
+"'"As you remind me, I am an old man," he said quietly, "and I have,
+alas, no son to chastise you as you deserve. But the season of old age
+is the season of prophecy! Listen, Martin de Vaux," pointing towards
+me, "you shall taste the bitterest dregs of sorrow and remorse in
+the days to come, for this your evil deed. You may scoff, both of
+you,--you may say to yourselves that an old man's words are words of
+folly,--but the day will come! It is writ in the book of fate, and my
+eyes have seen it! Pile sin upon sin, and pleasure upon pleasure; say
+to yourselves, 'let us eat and be merry, for to-morrow we shall die!'
+For so it is written, and my eyes have seen it!"
+
+"'He was gone almost before the echo of his words had died away. I
+called after him, but there was no answer but the sound of a shutting
+door. I looked at Irene; she was calmly buttoning her glove.
+
+"'"The carriage is waiting," she reminded me coolly.
+
+"'I gave her my arm, and laughed. We drove to the opera.'"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+"A BECKONING VOICE FROM OUT A SHADOWY LAND"
+
+
+Midnight rang solemnly out from the Abbey clock. The priest paused in
+his story to count the strokes, and Paul drew out his watch with an
+incredulous gesture.
+
+"You must stay here to-night," he said; "it will be too late for you
+to leave."
+
+He rang the bell, and ordered a room to be prepared. Father Adrian,
+who had been lost in a fit of deep abstraction, looked up and shook
+his head as the servant quitted the room. "I shall not stay here," he
+said quietly. "It is impossible."
+
+Paul pointed to the clock. "You have more to tell me," he said,
+"and it is already late. If you are staying at the monastery of
+St. Bernard, it is nearly eight miles away, and you cannot possibly
+return."
+
+"I have not so far to go," Father Adrian answered, "and this is the
+hour I always choose for walking. Do you wish to hear the rest of your
+father's confession?"
+
+Paul stood on the hearthrug with bowed head and folded arms. "I am
+ready!" he said; "go on!"
+
+Father Adrian remained silent for nearly a quarter of an hour; then he
+recommenced his story.
+
+"'From the time of the old Count's visit,' your father went on, 'I
+noticed a gradual change in Irene. She grew thin and pale and nervous,
+disliking more and more, every day, to go out, and becoming suddenly
+averse to all our previous pursuits and pleasures. We mixed amongst
+a Bohemian set in Paris, and we had a good many acquaintances of a
+certain sort. Amongst them was a man whom I always disliked, yet who
+managed somehow to establish himself upon terms of intimacy with us.
+His name was Count Victor Ferdinand Hirsfeld, and his nationality was
+rather a puzzle to me, for he chose to maintain, without any apparent
+reason, a sort of mystery about it. With Irene he was ever more
+intimate than with me, and more than once I noticed references in
+their conversation which seemed to point to some previous acquaintance
+between them. I asked Irene no questions, for I trusted her but I
+watched Count Hirsfeld closely. I felt convinced that, under the mask
+of friendship, he was trying to win Irene from me, and though I never
+for one moment believed that he would succeed, I was anxious to obtain
+some proof of his intentions, that I might punish him. Often after his
+visits, which seemed to be carefully chosen for a time at which I was
+nearly certain to be out, I found Irene in tears; but when I sought to
+make her explain, she had always some excuse.
+
+"'We had lived together for three years when, without any warning,
+Irene left me. I came home one night from a dinner at the English
+Embassy, and found her gone. There was no message, not a single line
+of adieu, not a ghost of a clew by which I could trace her. It was a
+shock to me; but when the first wrench was over, I knew that it was
+something of a relief. In my heart I was tired of the irregular life
+we had been leading, and longing to return to England and my old
+home. Irene herself was no longer dear to me. While she had remained
+faithful to me, I had considered myself, in a certain sense, bound to
+her, although the bonds had commenced to gall. Now that she had left
+me of her own accord, I was free. I troubled little as to what had
+become of her; youth is always selfish. She had either gone home to
+her father, or had run away with Count Hirsfeld, I determined at once.
+Of the two, I was inclined to believe the latter, from the fact of
+her having left no message for me, and also as I found that he too had
+quitted Paris suddenly. I purposely did not attempt to find out, for
+had I discovered the latter to be true, I should have felt bound to
+call Count Hirsfeld out the next time I met him, and I hated duelling.
+So, with a light heart, I disposed of my Paris establishment, selling
+even the house, and everything likely to remind me of a page of my
+history which I desired to blot out.
+
+"'I returned to England, and settled down at Vaux Abbey. In a few
+months my life with Irene lay back in the past, like a troubled dream,
+and I did my best to forget it. It was all hateful and tiresome to
+me. My mind was full now of healthier and more wholesome thoughts and
+purposes. I felt like a man commencing life anew. Even my conscience
+had almost ceased to trouble me. Irene had left me of her own will,
+nor had she been driven to it by any unkindness on my part. I would
+forget her. I had the right to forget her.
+
+"'About six months had passed, and I was in the full enjoyment of my
+altered life. One night, when the Abbey was full of guests, a servant
+whispered in my ear, as we sat at dinner, that a gentleman,--a
+foreigner, the man believed--had just been driven over from the
+nearest railway station, and was in the library waiting to see me. I
+knew in a moment that some sort of a resurrection of that buried past
+was at hand; and though I nodded carelessly and kept my countenance,
+my heart sank like lead. As soon as I could make an excuse, I left
+the table, with a brief apology to my guests, and made my way to the
+library.
+
+"'I had expected to find there Irene's father. Judge of my
+surprise when I found Count Hirsfeld advancing to meet me, pale and
+travel-stained, from the shadows of the room. I stopped short, and
+stood with my hands behind me.
+
+"'"Mr. de Vaux, I bring you a letter," he said simply; "I am here as a
+messenger, and as a messenger only. Nothing but the prayers of a dying
+woman would have induced me to stand beneath your roof!"
+
+"'"Your presence certainly needs some explanation," I answered coldly.
+"Give me the letter!"
+
+"'He handed it over, and I took it to the lamplight. The handwriting
+seemed unfamiliar to me; but when I glanced at the last page, I saw
+that it was signed "Irene." I read it through hastily.
+
+ "CRUTA.
+
+ "MARTIN:--
+
+ "I left you meaning never to speak or write your name
+ again, but fate has been too strong for me. When you see my
+ handwriting, you may fear that I want to burden you once more
+ with my presence, which has grown so wearisome to you! You
+ need not! Soon there will be nothing left of me but a memory;
+ even that I know will not survive long. For I am dying. Life
+ is only a matter of days and hours with me now. For me, only
+ a few more suns will rise and set. I am dying, else I had not
+ taken up my pen to write to you.
+
+ "Martin, one's last hours are a time for plain speaking. I
+ have never suffered one word of reproach to pass my lips, but
+ you have wronged me deeply! You have turned what should have
+ been the sweetness of my life into bitterness and gall. I do
+ not remind you of this to heap idle reproaches on your head;
+ I remind you of it simply because on my deathbed I am going
+ to ask you what in the past I scorned to do. I am going to ask
+ you to marry me.
+
+ "I could not hope to make you understand all that I have
+ suffered during these last few months of my illness. I would
+ not if I could. It is not worth while! My father, although
+ he knows that I am dying, will scarcely speak to me. He has
+ forgotten that I am his daughter, save when he laments it.
+ He sits alone day by day, brooding upon the dishonour of his
+ race. The priest, who prays for me, speaks words of doubtful
+ comfort, as though, after all, he doubted whether salvation
+ were possible for me. The horror of it all has entered into my
+ soul! The sin of the past is ever before my eyes,--black and
+ threatening,--and a great desolation reigns in my heart.
+
+ "And from it all I turn to you, Martin, to save me! You can do
+ it! You only! You lose nothing! You risk nothing! and you will
+ throw some faint light of consolation upon this, my dreary
+ passage through the shadow-land of death. Once you loved me,
+ far off and dim though that time may seem to you. You would be
+ faithful always, you swore, as side by side we stood on board
+ your yacht on the night of our flight, and watched the shores
+ of Cruta grow dimmer and dimmer, and the white-faced dawn
+ break quivering upon the waters. You would be faithful always!
+ The words come back to me as I lie here in this great, dreary
+ bedchamber, with a cold-faced priest muttering comfortless
+ prayers by my side; dying alone, without a single kindly face
+ to lighten my passage to the grave. Yet, do not read this as
+ a reproach! Read it only as the prelude to this my last appeal
+ to you! Marry me, Martin! It would cost you so little: just
+ a hurried journey here, a few sentences over my bedside, a
+ week's waiting at the most, and you could see me in my grave,
+ and feel yourself free again. Is it too great a thing to do,
+ to make light the heart of a dying woman? I pray God that you
+ may not think so! You have generosity! I appeal to it! Come,
+ I beseech you! It is the prayer of a dying woman! I summon you
+ to Cruta!
+
+ "IRENE."
+
+"'Back again in the meshes of my old sin. The letter fluttered down
+from between my fingers on to the floor, and I stood with folded arms
+and bowed head, arraigned at the bar of my own judgment. I had marred
+a girl's fair young life! The memory of those old days--my passionate
+persuasions and prayers--swept in upon me. Yes! she had trusted me,
+and I had deceived her! Her sin and her death lay at my door! The
+hideous rascality of the thing oppressed me. I had been false to my
+name and traditions.
+
+"'A cold, low voice from the other end of the room broke in upon my
+surging thoughts. It was Count Hirsfeld who spoke.
+
+"'"Forgive me for disturbing your doubtless pleasant reflections, but
+time flies, and time is very precious to me just now. I await your
+answer."
+
+"'"It is not necessary," I replied; "I shall be at Cruta before you!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+"LATE THOU COMEST, CRUEL THOU HAST BEEN"
+
+
+"'I sped through England and across the Continent southwards as fast
+as express train and steamer could carry me. Count Hirsfeld shared the
+special which carried me from our nearest country station to the Great
+Northern junction, from whence the Scotch mail bore us to London. Here
+we parted company, travelling the remainder of the way separately.
+On the evening of the second day, the steamer which I had hired at
+Palermo dropped anchor in the bay of Cruta, under the shadow of the
+grim, black castle; and a small rowing-boat landed me beneath the
+cliffs before night fell.
+
+"'I made my way up the narrow, winding path alone, and passing across
+the paved courtyard, rang the hoarse, brazen bell at the principal
+entrance. A servant, bearing a torch, had opened the door, and was
+beckoning me to follow him long before its echoes had died away.
+
+"'"Mademoiselle Irene!" I asked him, in a hushed, anxious tone. "She
+lives?"
+
+"'"She lives!" he repeated sombrely.
+
+"'I followed him along the wide stone corridors, and up countless
+steps. At last he paused before a door, and after listening for a
+moment, knocked softly at it.
+
+"'It was opened by a monk, whose face was hidden by the folds of his
+deep cowl. He motioned me to enter, and immediately closed the door.
+
+"'I found myself in a spacious, lofty bedchamber, bare and dimly lit.
+Facing me two pale, solemn-visaged monks stood on either side of a
+drawn curtain, as though guarding the plain iron bed which lay beyond,
+and towards which I had taken one impulsive step forward. Their
+presence, and an indefinable gloom,--beyond even the gloom of a
+chamber of death,--which in the dim twilight seemed to hang about the
+very air of the place, chilled me. There was little furniture, and no
+pictures hung upon the walls, save a wooden cross near the foot of the
+bed, before which two candles were burning. I looked around for some
+one to whom I could address myself, but there was no one beyond these
+dark-coated, silent monks, who seemed more like shadows from another
+world.
+
+"'While I stood in the middle of the room, hesitating, the priest who
+had admitted me passed by and took up his station at the foot of the
+bed. He motioned me to stand a little nearer, and suddenly the
+drear silence of the room was broken by the low, monotonous chant of
+prayers. I bowed my head, and kneeling by the bedside I took up the
+responses, and once for a moment clasped the white, cold hand which
+lay upon the coverlet, and which was all that I could see of the woman
+whom I was making my wife.
+
+"'The ceremony seems to me now like some far-distant dream, of which I
+retain only the vaguest recollection. When it was all over, I laid my
+hand upon the curtain to draw it back, but the monk nearest to me held
+my hand in a vise-like grip, and before I could move, a voice from the
+other end of the room, where the shadows were deepest, arrested me.
+
+"'"Touch that curtain, or dare to look upon my daughter's face, Martin
+de Vaux, and you die! For her soul's sake I have permitted this! Now
+go!"
+
+"'I peered through the darkness, and I saw the tall, gaunt frame
+of the Count of Cruta standing near the entrance. I hesitated for a
+moment.
+
+"'"Irene is my wife," I answered. "I offer no excuse to you for
+my conduct, but at least I have the right to try and win her
+forgiveness."
+
+"'He moved a step forward, and his voice shook with passion. "You have
+no rights! You are dishonoured! You are a villain! What! you to reason
+with me under my own roof! Away! Out of my sight, lest I forget my
+word and deal you out your deserts!"
+
+"'My heart was hot with shame and anger, but I lingered. "Let her
+speak," I answered, pointing to the bed. "It is she against whom I
+have sinned, and her word I will obey. Irene! may I not stay by your
+side? Tell me that you forgive!"
+
+"'I clutched passionately at the curtain, resolved to tear it aside,
+and plead with Irene upon my knees. But I was held from behind in a
+strong, vise-like grasp, and one of the monks who stood there on guard
+sternly wrested the curtain from my hands.
+
+"'"Away with him!" cried the Count, his voice shaking with passion.
+"Rudolph, do you hear!"
+
+"'I nerved myself for a struggle, but in that moment's pause a thin,
+white hand stole from behind the curtain and held mine for a moment.
+
+"'"Martin, go quickly!" said a faint, weak voice, so altered that
+I scarcely recognised it as the voice of Irene. "It is my wish--my
+command."
+
+"'"One word, Irene!" I cried, struggling to free myself. "Just one
+word!"
+
+"'"Farewell!"
+
+"'"Irene, you are my wife. Have you nothing else to say to me?"
+
+"'"Farewell!"
+
+"'There was no sweetness, no regret in that single word. I bowed my
+head in despair and went.'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was a long pause. Father Adrian was leaning back in his chair
+with half-closed eyes, as though exhausted. Paul, standing opposite
+to him, motionless and silent as a figure of stone, was listening to
+every word with grave, anxious face.
+
+"Will you hear the rest of the story now?" the priest asked after a
+prolonged silence.
+
+Paul bowed his head. "I am waiting," he said simply.
+
+"I will continue, then, in your father's own words as near as
+possible. This is what he told me."
+
+"'I lingered in the island for several days, staying at the monastery,
+unwilling to go away, and yet frustrated in every attempt I made
+to enter the castle. On the fourth day, at sunrise, I was awakened
+suddenly by the deep tolling of the castle bell. I dressed hastily,
+and hurried up there; but I was thrust from the door, and forbidden to
+enter. I learned the truth, however, from one of the servants. Irene
+was dead. On the next day I saw the little funeral procession
+start from the castle, and directly they entered the grounds of the
+monastery I joined them. The old Count, bowed and aged with grief,
+stayed the ceremony, and bade them, with a sudden flash of his old
+anger, thrust me from the place. But the priest by whose side I had
+taken my stand raised his hand, and forbade them to touch me. I was
+in sanctuary,--my feet were on holy ground--and though the Count of
+Cruta, and Count Hirsfeld who knelt by his side, trembled with anger
+at my presence, I remained, and on my knees by my wife's grave I
+uttered the first prayer my lips had framed since childhood. Through
+the pine trees which fringed the cliffs, I could see the path where
+she and I had met in the days when I was her father's guest, and when
+I had knelt at her feet a passionate lover. The sunlight flashed upon
+the blue waters below, and the seabirds flew screaming around our
+heads. It was all just as it had been in the old days; the same for
+me, but never more for her. The long black coffin was lowered into the
+grave, and reverently Count Hirsfeld stepped forward and covered it
+with armfuls of exquisite white flowers, whose perfume made faint the
+odorous air. And I had no flowers to throw, nothing but the tribute
+of a passionate grief, and a heart well-nigh broken with sorrow and
+remorse.
+
+"'The ceremony was over, and the black-robed monks and priest had
+passed away in a long, solemn procession. Her father, Count Hirsfeld,
+and I remained there alone; and over Irene's grave I leaned
+forward, speaking gently and humbly to him, praying for one word of
+forgiveness. His only answer was a look of scorn, and he turned away
+from me with loathing. He would not hear me speak. To him, I was his
+daughter's murderer.
+
+"'I left the island that night, and returned to England. For several
+years I lived a very retired life, attending to my duties upon the
+estate and seldom travelling beyond it. The memory of Irene seemed to
+haunt me. But as time went on, a change came over my spirits. I was
+young; and although I still bitterly regretted the past, its influence
+became weaker and weaker. What was done could not be undone; such
+reparation as was possible I had made. Brooding over my sin would
+never make it the less. I reasoned thus with myself, and the final
+result was inevitable. I commenced to mix more with my fellows, to
+look up my old friends in town,--in fact, to take up again the threads
+of my life, which I had once regarded as broken for ever.
+
+"'After a while I married; and then, more than ever, Irene and that
+portion of my past which was bound up with her seemed like some
+vague, far-distant nightmare, fast assuming a very remote place in my
+thoughts. I loved my wife as I had never loved Irene, and for a time
+I was intensely happy. A son was born to me, and in my joy I feasted
+half the county at Vaux Abbey. I had desired nothing so much as
+this, for the De Vaux estates and mines, immense as they are, are all
+strictly entailed. A son was wanted to complete my happiness, and a
+son I had. But already, although I knew it not, a storm was gathering
+for me.
+
+"'It was about a fortnight after the festivities, and I had just come
+in with some friends from an afternoon's shooting, when I was told
+that a gentleman from abroad--the servant believed--was waiting to see
+me in the library. Even as he spoke the words I seemed to know who
+it was. My heart sank, and the presentiment of some coming evil was
+strong upon me. I hesitated, and then, feverishly anxious to know
+the worst, I turned away with some careless excuse to my guests and
+entered the library.
+
+"'It was Count Hirsfeld who stood there waiting for my arrival, with
+a calm, evil smile upon his lips, which instinctively I felt to be
+the herald of some coming trouble for me. Yet my courage did not
+altogether desert me.
+
+"'"Count Hirsfeld, your presence here demands an immediate
+explanation," I said sternly. "Had I been at home, you would not have
+been admitted."
+
+"'"I come," he answered slowly, with his eyes fixed steadily upon my
+face, "as an ambassador from your wife."
+
+"'"From my wife!" I repeated. "You do not know her! What do you mean?"
+
+"'He shrugged his shoulders. "I regret that my meaning is not clear,"
+he said. "I repeat that I come as an ambassador from your wife, Irene
+de Vaux. I have brought you a message from her."
+
+"'"A message from the dead!" I gasped.
+
+"'"Dead! By no means!" he answered, with a slow, cruel smile. "Irene
+is living! Is it possible that you did not know it?"'"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+"GRIM FIGURES TRACED BY SORROW'S FIERY HAND"
+
+
+The lamp which stood on Paul's writing-table had gone out, and only
+a few dull red embers remained in the grate. By moving a single yard
+backwards, Paul was almost lost in the deep shadows which hung about
+the room, whilst such light as there was fell directly upon the
+priest's pale face. During those last few moments his voice had grown
+a shade more solemn--more intense. Paul, who stood looking out at
+him from the darkness with dazed senses, like a man in a dream, never
+doubted for an instant, although perhaps he scarcely realized the full
+meaning of the story to which he was listening.
+
+"It must have been in this very room," Father Adrian continued,
+looking around him, "that your father and Count Hirsfeld stood face to
+face. But you are naturally impatient. I will take up the story again
+in your father's own words to me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"'It was several moments before I could collect myself sufficiently
+to answer Count Hirsfeld. Everything seemed dim and unreal around me.
+Only that calm, mocking face remained steadfast, and his words rang in
+my ears.
+
+"'"It is a lie!" I gasped. "We stood together by her grave! She is
+dead!"
+
+"'The calmness suddenly vanished from my tormentor's face and manner.
+His eyes were ablaze with mingled triumph and hate. "You thought so,
+you poor fool!" he hissed out at me across the table. "Bah! you were a
+fool! You were easily deceived! Listen!
+
+"'"You thought it a light thing to carry off the only daughter of the
+last Count of Cruta. 'Twas easily done, no doubt; but you made for
+yourself enemies of men from whose vengeance you were bound to suffer.
+One was the Count whose daughter you had dishonoured, and whose proud
+name you disgraced; the other was myself, the man whom she was to have
+married--myself, who loved her! Do you think that because I did not
+seek you out and shoot you as you deserved, that I forgot? There were
+men on the island who loved their lord, and who at the word from him
+would have hunted you down and murdered you. If he restrained them,
+do you imagine he was willing to bear this great dishonour without
+striking a blow? Bah! it was my word that said 'wait,' my counsel
+which saved you from death as too light a punishment. There is another
+way, I said. So we waited.
+
+"'"It was my persuasions which induced Irene to leave you and return
+to her father. It was I who pointed out to her your great selfishness,
+and raised in her the longing for revenge! It was I who laid the plot
+into which you fell.
+
+"'"A few words more! It is all so simple! Irene was about to become a
+mother; and you, believing her to be on her deathbed, married her. The
+child was born on the next day--your son and heir! Meanwhile, Irene's
+waiting maid, who had been for long in a consumption, died. It was
+her funeral which you attended with such interesting penitence. Irene
+herself was fast recovering; she was never in any real danger. She
+lives with her old father, and the boy lives with her. We waited! We
+read of your marriage, and the Count cried, 'Let us strike!' But I
+said, 'No, let us wait!' Time went on. We read again of the birth of a
+son and heir to you, and of the great rejoicings. Irene held your boy
+in her arms, and she frowned. 'Go now,' she commanded, 'tell Martin
+de Vaux that his son and heir is here, and his wife is here! Tell him
+that they are weary of his absence.' So I came!"
+
+"'There was a dead silence. My throat and lips were dry; I could
+not speak. Count Hirsfeld watched me with folded arms. It was his
+vengeance!
+
+"'"It is not true!" I stammered out at last. "I will not believe it.
+Irene is dead!"
+
+"'I tried to speak confidently, but I failed. In my heart I believed
+the Count.
+
+"'He shrugged his shoulders. "You have reason," he remarked. "Why
+should you believe me? Come to Cruta, and you will see for yourself.
+You can see the headstone at the foot of the grave: 'Sacred to the
+memory of Marie, faithful servant of Irene of Cruta.' You can see the
+doctor who attended her and your wife at the same time! Better still,
+you can see your wife and your infant son! What do you say?"
+
+"'"I will not go!" I cried passionately. "I will not see them! It was
+base treachery!"
+
+"'"One must use the weapons of craft against villains," he said.
+"There is no baseness to equal yours. You are repaid in your own coin;
+that is all."
+
+"'I sank into a chair. The insult moved me to no fit of anger. I was
+numbed.
+
+"'"If this be true," I asked, "what does Irene ask for? I will not go
+back to her, or see her, or acknowledge her in any way. She can have
+money, that is all!"
+
+"'"Naturally, she requires an allowance," Count Hirsfeld answered,
+"and a large one, to enable her to bring up her son in accordance with
+his position!"
+
+"'"She shall have the allowance; she shall have what she asks for," I
+declared; "but I will never acknowledge the boy, or her. If he takes
+the name of De Vaux, or forces himself upon me in any way, it shall be
+open war. The English courts will annul that marriage."
+
+"'"I think not," he answered coolly. "Besides, you married into
+a noble family, did you not--a duke's daughter? How pleasant her
+position would be while such a case was being tried! And your son----"
+
+"'I stopped him angrily. "I repeat that I will not acknowledge them.
+Money they can have, and the boy's future shall be my care! But not if
+he ever dares to call himself De Vaux."
+
+"'The Count shrugged his shoulders. "I am but an ambassador," he said.
+"I will convey what you have said to your wife. You shall hear her
+decision."
+
+"'He went away, and for a fortnight I was left in misery. At the end
+of that time I had a letter signed "Irene." It was cold and short. It
+told me that, so far as she herself was concerned, she had no desire
+or intention of claiming her position as my wife. All she demanded was
+an allowance to be paid to her order at a certain bank in Palermo
+at regular intervals for the support of herself and for the proper
+education and bringing up of her son. As to his future, she could not
+pledge herself to anything; for when the time came, he should
+decide for himself. She would bring him up in ignorance; but on his
+twenty-fifth birthday she should tell him the whole story, and place
+all the necessary papers in his hands. If he chose to use them and
+claim the De Vaux estates, he would easily be able to do so. If, on
+the other hand, he decided to remain as he was, she should not attempt
+in any way to alter his decision!
+
+"'The letter was a great relief to me. Five-and-twenty years was a
+long respite. The boy might die--a thousand things might happen before
+then. At any rate, I was enough of a philosopher to seal down that
+secret page in my history, and to live as though it had never existed.
+
+"'Five-and-twenty years is a long time, but it passed away. It is the
+portion of my life which I look back upon with the most pleasure.
+I did my utmost to atone for a wasted youth, and in some measure I
+succeeded. My fears had grown fainter and fainter, and when the blow
+came it was like a thunderbolt falling from a clear sky. One morning
+I received a letter in Irene's writing, a little fainter and less firm
+than of old, but still familiar to me. It contained only a few lines.
+She had told her son all, and he elected to assert his rightful name
+and position. In future he intended to call himself "De Vaux" and on
+my death he would claim the estates.
+
+"'I read the letter, and determined on instant action. In a week my
+son Paul and I were on board my yacht, starting for the Mediterranean.
+We made for Palermo, and here we separated,--Paul, at all hazard, to
+find Count Hirsfeld, to whom I made a splendid offer if he would
+aid me in inducing Irene to change her purpose; I for Cruta, to see
+Irene.'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"This is almost the end of your father's confession to me," Father
+Adrian continued. "At Cruta he sought the hospitality of the
+monastery, where he was taken ill. He wrote an urgent letter to you,
+and immediately he was able to walk he went up to the castle. I have
+already told you of the manner of return. Of that visit he told me
+scarcely anything, and he told me nothing at all concerning the wound
+which he received there. Only I gathered that he was more than ever
+anxious to see Count Hirsfeld. It was while waiting for your return
+that he made this confession to me. I have finished."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The white morning light was stealing into the room through the
+uncurtained windows. The fire had burnt out, and there was only a
+handful of ashes in the grate. Outside in the park a grey mist was
+hanging about in the hollows and over the tree-tops, and something of
+its damp chilliness seemed to have found its way into the apartment.
+Paul, who had been leaning heavily upon the mantelpiece, with his head
+buried in his hands, looked up and shivered. Then he glanced quickly
+across towards the opposite easy-chair. Father Adrian was still there,
+and at Paul's movement he rose to his feet.
+
+"This has been a terrible night for you, I fear," he said quietly.
+"I am sorry to have given you so much pain. If I could I would have
+spared you."
+
+"I thank you," Paul answered wearily. "It was right that I should
+know. Why did you not tell me at Cruta?"
+
+"It seemed to me that your father's death was enough for you to bear!
+Perhaps I was wrong!"
+
+Paul made no answer. His thoughts seemed suddenly to have travelled
+far away. Father Adrian watched his pale, stricken face with cold,
+pitiless eyes.
+
+"You are weary," he said softly. "I shall leave you now, but I have
+something more to say to you on this matter. It is no part of your
+father's confession. It is from myself. Can I come to-morrow or the
+next day?"
+
+"Come in a week," Paul answered. "I shall be able to talk calmly then
+about this."
+
+Father Adrian hesitated. "A week! Well, let it be so, then. Farewell!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+"ADREA'S DIARY"
+
+ "Spring blossoms on the land, and anguish in the heart."
+
+
+To-night I shall close my diary for a long while, very likely for
+ever. I am heartily thankful for it. These last few days have been so
+wretched, full of so much miserable uncertainty, that their record has
+grown to be a wearisome task. It has ceased to give me any relief; it
+has become nothing but a burden. How could it be otherwise, when
+the days themselves have been so grey, so full of shadows and
+disappointments? You have been a relief to me sometimes, my silent
+friend; but what lies before me is not to be recorded in your pages.
+
+Twenty-four hours have passed since I made my last entry. It was night
+then, and it is night now. All that lies between seems phantasmagoric
+and unreal. I ask myself whether it has really happened; and when
+the day's events rise slowly up before my memory, I almost fail to
+recognise them. Yet I have but to close my eyes and lean back, and it
+all crowds in upon me. In the future I know that this day will stand
+out clear and distinct from all the rest of my life.
+
+It was early in the morning when I started for Vaux Abbey across the
+moorland road. So long have I seen this bleak county wrapped in mists
+and sea fogs that to-day I scarcely recognised it. There was a clear
+blue sky, streaked with little patches of white, wind-swept clouds,
+and the sun--actually the sun--was shining brilliantly. How it changed
+everything! The grey, hungry sea, which I had never been able to look
+upon without a shudder, seemed to have caught the colouring of the
+sky, and a million little scintillations of glistening light rose and
+fell at every moment on the bosom of the tiny, white-crested waves.
+And the moorland, too, was transformed. Its bare, rock-strewn
+undulations lost all their harshness of outline and colouring in the
+sweet, glancing sunlight; and afar off the line of rugged hills, which
+I had never seen save with their heads wreathed in a cloud of white
+mist, stood out clear and distinct against the distant horizon, tinged
+with a dim, purple light.
+
+Why did it all make such an impression upon me, I wonder? I cannot
+say; but nothing in all my life ever struck so deep a note of sadness.
+I feel it now; I shall feel it always. There was madness in my blood
+when I started, I think; but before my walk was half over, it had
+increased a thousand-fold. Every little sound and sight seemed to
+aggravate it. I missed the dull sighing and moaning of the wind in the
+black copses--a sound which had somehow endeared itself to me during
+these last few days--and in its place the soft murmur of what seemed
+almost a summer breeze amongst the tall pine-tops stirred in me an
+unreasonable anger. The face of the whole country seemed smiling at
+me. What mockery! What right had the earth to rejoice when grief and
+anxiety were driving me mad? For it was indeed a sort of madness which
+laid hold of me. I clenched my hands, and muttered to myself as I
+walked swiftly along. The road was deserted, and I met no one. Once
+a dark bush away off seemed to me to take a man's shape. I stopped
+short. Could it be Father Adrian returning to the Abbey? I felt my
+breath come quickly as I stood there waiting. The idea excited me.
+I found myself trembling with a passion that was not of fear, and,
+suddenly stooping down, I picked up a sharp flint, and grasped it
+tightly between my fingers. Then I moved stealthily on, and the thing
+defined itself. After all, it was only a bush, not a man at all. I
+tossed my weapon on one side with a strained little laugh. The sense
+of excitement passed away, but it left an odd flavour behind it. I
+found myself deliberating as to what I had meant to do with that
+stone if it had really been Father Adrian, and if I had succeeded in
+stealing silently up behind him. Perhaps I scarcely realized my
+full intention, but a dim sense of it remained with me. It was the
+development of a new instinct born of this swiftly-built-up hatred.
+I have my reasons for writing of this. I wish to distinctly mark the
+period of the event which I have just recorded.
+
+There was no fear of my mistaking the way to Vaux Abbey, for it stood
+upon a hill, and had been within sight ever since I had taken the
+moorland road. I was unused to walking, and the road was rough; but I
+do not remember once feeling in any way fatigued or footsore, although
+one of my shoes had a great hole in it, and was almost in strips. My
+mind was too full of the end of my journey to be conscious of such
+things. I had only one fear: that I should be too late; that somehow
+the threatened blow would have been struck, and Paul in some way
+removed from me. It was fear more than hope which buoyed me up. But
+anyhow, it answered its purpose, for in less than three hours after I
+had started I found myself before the great hall-door of Vaux Abbey.
+
+A deep, hollow peal followed my nerveless little pull at the chain
+bell-rope, and almost immediately the door opened. A grey-haired
+manservant, in black livery, looked down at me in surprise.
+
+"I wish to see Mr. Paul de Vaux!" I announced. "Is he in?"
+
+The man hesitated. "I believe so, miss," he said doubtfully; "but he
+is engaged on some important business, and has given orders that no
+one is to disturb him. Lady de Vaux is at home."
+
+"My business is with Mr. Paul de Vaux," I said. "Will you tell him
+that it is some one from the Hermitage, and I think that he will see
+me."
+
+The man did not answer me in words, but motioned me to follow him. My
+courage was failing me a little, and I was certainly inclined not to
+look around, but nevertheless the place made an impression on me. The
+great hall which we were crossing was like the interior of some richly
+decorated church. The ceiling was dome-shaped, and the base of the
+cupola was surrounded by stained glass windows, which cast a dim light
+down upon the interior. The white stone flags were here and there
+covered by Eastern rugs, thrown carelessly down, but for the most part
+were bare, and as slippery as marble; so slippery that once I nearly
+fell, and only saved myself by catching at an oak bench. Just as I
+recovered myself, I saw the figure of a woman descending the huge
+double oak staircase which terminated opposite to us. My guide paused
+when he saw her, and I was also compelled to.
+
+"Here is her ladyship!" he said.
+
+I watched her slowly advance toward us, a fine, stately old lady,
+carrying herself with unmistakable dignity, although she was forced
+to lean a good deal on a gold-mounted, black ebony stick. And, as I
+looked at her, I thought of Father Adrian's words: "I can break his
+mother's heart;" and I leant eagerly forward in the chastened twilight
+with my eyes anxiously fixed upon her. She came slowly on towards me,
+and when she was a few yards away she spoke to the servant.
+
+"Does this young lady wish to see me, Richards?"
+
+She spoke to the man, but she looked towards me, and evidently
+expected me to address her. For a moment I could not. A little gasp
+of relief had quivered upon my lips, and my eyes were suddenly dim. To
+look into Lady de Vaux's face, stately, calm, and kind, seemed like
+a strong antidote to my fears of Father Adrian. It was quite evident
+that nothing unexpected had happened during the last twenty-four
+hours. Father Adrian's threat had been an empty one. In the presence
+of Lady de Vaux, the fears which had been consuming me departed. She
+was so unmoved, so indifferent. How could a little Jesuit priest hurt
+such a one as she?
+
+The thoughts chased one another quickly through my mind; but still my
+hesitation was apparent. After waiting in vain for me to speak, the
+servant who was conducting me answered Lady de Vaux's question.
+
+"The young lady asked for Mr. Paul, your ladyship. It was doubtful
+whether I might disturb him."
+
+"For Mr. Paul?" Lady de Vaux looked at me, leaning forward on
+her stick, and with her eyebrows a little uplifted. "My son is
+particularly engaged, and has left word that he does not wish to be
+disturbed for several hours," she said. "If you have anything to say
+to him, you can say it to me. I am Lady de Vaux!"
+
+"Thank you! I must wait and see your son," I answered.
+
+She moved away with a slight and distinctly haughty inclination of her
+head. "You can show this young lady into the waiting-room, Richards,"
+she directed. "Take her name in to Mr. Paul when he rings. By the
+bye," she added, pausing in her slow progress over the hall, and
+looking me once more steadily in the face, "what is your name?"
+
+"You would not know it," I answered. "I have come from the
+Hermitage--near here."
+
+She did not speak to me for a moment, but I saw the colour rising into
+her cheeks, and her fingers were trembling. It was foolish of me to
+have told her. A glance into her face showed me that she had heard
+something, she knew something of me. She was looking at me as at some
+object almost beneath her contempt. Yet she spoke quite calmly.
+
+"You are Adrea Kiros, the dancing girl!"
+
+I answered her quite coolly--I believe respectfully. She was Paul's
+mother. Yet I could see that she was going to be very rude to me.
+
+"You can have nothing to say to my son," she declared. "It is infamous
+that you should have followed him here--to his own house. Be so good
+as to quit it at once. Mr. de Vaux shall be informed later of the
+honour of your visit, and if he has anything to say to you, he can
+find other means save an interview under this roof. Richards!"
+
+She pointed across the hall towards the entrance. I stood quite still,
+struggling with my passion. If she had been any other woman, I should
+have struck her across the lips.
+
+"I shall remain!" I answered. "I am here to see Mr. de Vaux; I shall
+see him! Don't dare to touch me, man!" I added fiercely, as Richards
+laid his hand upon my shoulder.
+
+He shrank back hastily. I even believe that he muttered an apology.
+Perhaps they saw that I was not to be trifled with, for Lady de Vaux
+suddenly changed her tactics.
+
+"Follow me!" she said, sweeping round, with an imperious gesture. "You
+shall see my son! You shall hear from his own lips what he thinks of
+this--intrusion. Perhaps you will leave the Abbey at his bidding, if
+not at mine."
+
+I followed her in silence, carrying myself proudly, but with
+fast-beating heart. What would he think of my coming? Would he call
+it an intrusion? At any rate he could not be pleased; for even if he
+received me kindly, he would have his mother's anger to face. Yet, how
+could I have kept away?
+
+We halted, all three of us, before a closed door at the back of the
+hall. There was no answer to the man's somewhat ostentatious knock,
+and Lady de Vaux, after a moment's waiting, turned the handle of the
+door and swept into the room. I kept close behind her.
+
+I can remember it now; I shall always remember it--the dim, peculiar
+light which tired our eyes the moment we had stepped inside. It was
+easy to discover the reason. The heavy velvet curtains were still
+drawn in front of the high windows, and on a distant table a lamp
+was only just flickering out. At first it seemed as though the great
+chamber was empty. There was no one to be seen, and it was not until
+we reached a deep recess at the further end that we discovered Paul.
+
+At the sight of him we both stood still--Lady de Vaux moved in spite
+of her stately composure, and I spellbound. He was sitting before an
+oak writing desk covered with papers, and in the midst of them his
+head was resting upon his bowed arms. He neither spoke nor moved,
+nor seemed indeed in any way conscious of our approach. The window
+fronting him was, unlike all the others, uncurtained and wide open,
+and a flood of sunshine was streaming in upon his bowed head, and
+mingling with the sicklier light of the rest of the apartment. It was
+a strange and ghastly combination; not only in itself, but in the sort
+of halo it seemed to cast around his dark, bowed head. Ah! Paul, my
+love, my love! how my heart ached for you!
+
+"He is asleep," Lady de Vaux said fearfully. "Paul!"
+
+I held out my hand to check her. "Let him alone!" I whispered
+hoarsely. "I will go away. Don't you see that he is resting."
+
+She took no notice of me, nor of my backward movement, but leaned over
+towards him as though to touch his arm. A sort of fury came upon me.
+I knew that the Paul whom she was trying to recall from the land of
+unconsciousness would never again be the Paul of the past. Father
+Adrian had kept his word. The blow which he had threatened had fallen.
+Paul! I looked at your dear bowed head until the tears dimmed my eyes,
+and the great room swam around me. For in my heart I felt that it was
+I who had brought this thing upon you; I who could have saved you by a
+single word.
+
+"Paul, wake up! It is I, your mother."
+
+I snatched hold of her hand, and drew it away. "Let him rest," I
+cried, fiercely. "He will waken soon enough."
+
+She looked at me in dignified astonishment. "How dare you presume to
+dictate to me in this fashion?" she exclaimed. "And why should he not
+be awakened? It is past mid-day. Paul!"
+
+The crouching figure moved. He had heard, then! I held my breath,
+longing to escape, yet compelled to watch with fascinated eyes the
+rising of that bowed head. There was no start, or hurried awakening,
+if indeed he had been asleep at all. He simply turned his head, and
+looked at us with surprise, without any emotion of any sort.
+
+I hid my face in my hands, and sobbed. Lady de Vaux was silent with
+horror. For there was something inexpressibly, awfully moving in the
+silent, passionless sorrow which seemed written with an unsparing
+hand onto that white face. All combativeness had passed away, but
+resignation had not come to take its place. And, apart from the
+outward evidence of the agony through which he had passed, its
+physical traces were very apparent. Deep, black lines seemed furrowed
+into the flesh under his dull eyes, and the firm, handsome mouth was
+drawn and quivering. It was such a change as might have been worked by
+some deadly Eastern poison, eating away the corporal frame. To think
+that it had worked from within--that burning and terrible sorrow had
+caused it--was horrible.
+
+Lady de Vaux was the first to speak. The icy composure of her manner
+was gone. Her voice was strained and anxious.
+
+"Why, Paul, what have you been doing here all night? Do you know that
+it is past mid-day? Has anything happened? Are you ill?"
+
+"Ill? No; I think not." He seemed to be speaking from a great way
+off. Nothing about him was natural. He was on his feet, but I expected
+every moment to see him reel and fall.
+
+"But, Paul, what have you been doing--writing?" Lady de Vaux asked
+anxiously. Then, as though warned by his strange appearance, she
+checked his mechanical answer. "Never mind, never mind! You are tired,
+I can see. Won't you go and lie down for awhile? Come, I will go with
+you."
+
+She had forgotten me, until she found that he paid no heed to her
+words; that his eyes travelled past her, and remained fixed upon me.
+Then she turned swiftly upon me.
+
+"You had better go," she said in a low, imperative whisper. "Ask them
+to show you into my room, and wait there for me."
+
+I took no notice of her. My eyes were fixed upon Paul. I felt that he
+was going to speak to me; and he did.
+
+"Adrea! Adrea!" he said slowly. "How is it that you are here? You did
+not come with him, did you? No! no! of course not. And yet, how is it
+that you are here?"
+
+"I feared Father Adrian and his threats, and I was alone, quite alone,
+and--and I could bear it no longer. I was obliged to come."
+
+His face grew a trifle more animated; I could see that he was
+recovering. The dumb stupor which had held his features rigid was
+passing away.
+
+"Yes, I am glad you are here. I want to talk to you. I had some
+important business which kept me writing here all night, and must have
+fallen asleep. I will go and change my things and come back to you."
+
+He looked down at his crumpled shirt-front and disordered tie, and
+then moved slowly towards the door. Lady de Vaux hesitated for a
+moment, with a dark frown upon her face, and then laid her hand upon
+his arm.
+
+"Your explanation should surely have been addressed to me, Paul," she
+said coldly. "Who is this young lady?"
+
+"She is a friend of mine," Paul answered, "and----"
+
+"I heard you call her 'Adrea,'" Lady de Vaux continued. "May I ask
+whether it is indeed Miss Adrea Kiros?"
+
+"I have told you that is my name, Lady de Vaux," I answered promptly.
+"You have possibly heard of me."
+
+Lady de Vaux turned her back upon both of us, and left the room
+without a word.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+"ADREA'S DIARY"
+
+ "Love, blossoming in the roses, holds a dagger in her hands."
+
+
+We were alone, Paul and I, in that great, solemn room, full of pale,
+phantom-like lights and quivering shadows. He was standing a few
+yards away from me, with his head half averted, and his eyes full of
+a great, hopeless despair. In silence I approached him, and took his
+death-cold hand in mine.
+
+"It is no matter," I whispered; "I do not care for your mother!
+Her words are nothing! I will not leave you--not till you tell me
+everything."
+
+"Everything!" He echoed the word, and looked at me helplessly.
+"Everything! Tell you everything!"
+
+Suddenly there was a change. The numbed, helpless look left his face,
+and his features were relaxed. He was himself again; a strong, brave
+man, only shaken by the storm.
+
+"Adrea, forgive me! Did you think that I was going mad? I have had
+a terrible shock, and I have been up all night listening to a story
+which brings great suffering and misery upon me!"
+
+His eyes had suddenly a far-away look in them, so sad that I felt
+the tears rush into mine. I pressed his hand to let him know that I
+understood; but I kept my face turned from him. Ah! love is a strange
+thing, indeed! If I had not cared, Paul, I could have sympathised with
+you so nicely, and made so many pretty speeches. But I love you, and
+it made me feel very strange and solemn. I had nothing to say; my
+heart was too full. Did you understand, I wonder? Will you ever
+understand? Paul, my love! my love! It is so sweet to say that over
+and over to myself in this dark chamber, where there is no one to hear
+me, or to see me looking so foolish. You make me feel so different,
+Paul! That is because you yourself are so different from all the men I
+know; from all the men I have ever seen.
+
+We stood there, quite silent, for some moments. Then he drew a quick,
+stifled breath, and caught hold of my hands. "I cannot breathe in this
+place," he said, looking half fearfully around; "the very air seems
+tainted with that horrible story, and its ghosts are lurking in every
+corner!"
+
+"Let me draw the curtains," I whispered. "The sunlight will banish
+them. You are dazed."
+
+He held my hand tightly, and drew me towards the window. "Never mind
+the curtains! We will go out; out over the moor."
+
+He was feverishly impatient to be gone, but I held him back. "Your
+clothes!" I reminded him. "And you have no hat!"
+
+He looked down doubtfully at his disordered evening dress, and then
+released my hands. "Wait for me, here," he begged. "Promise that you
+will not go away; that nothing shall make you go."
+
+I promised.
+
+"See! I shall lock the door," he continued, as he reached the
+threshold. "No one can come in and disturb you!"
+
+"Please to have some tea and a bath!" I begged. "I do not mind
+waiting. You will be ill, if you do not mind."
+
+He was gone about half an hour. Once, some one came and tried the
+door, but I took no notice. At last I heard the key turn in the lock,
+and he entered. "Did you think that I was long?" he asked, coming up
+to me with a smile.
+
+I shook my head; my eyes were full of tears, and there was a lump in
+my throat. I could not speak. He had changed all his clothes, and was
+carefully dressed in a brown tweed shooting suit and gaiters, but
+the correctness and order of his external appearance seemed only to
+emphasize the ravages which one single night's suffering had wrought
+upon his strong, handsome face. Hard, cruel lines had furrowed their
+way across his forehead, and under his eyes were deep black marks. His
+bronze cheeks were white and sunken, and a bright red spot burned on
+one of them. But it was a change of which the details could give no
+idea. His face had caught the inflection of his inward agony, and
+retained it. It was there, if not for the world to see, at any rate
+terribly evident to me, to those who loved him.
+
+He was quite calm now, however. It was as though the fires of
+suffering had burnt themselves out, leaving behind them a silent,
+charred desolation. He took my arm, and together we left the room,
+passing through the high French windows and along an open terrace
+until we reached the gardens. We turned down a broad walk bordered by
+high yew hedges, at the bottom of which was a little gate leading into
+the park. The air was fragrant with the perfume of violets, and early
+stocks and hyacinths, mingled every now and then with a more delicate
+perfume from the greenhouses on the other side of the red-brick wall.
+How beautiful it all seemed, in that sweet, dancing sunlight!--the
+songs of the birds, the blossoming fruit-trees, and pink-budded
+chestnuts, the scents which floated about on the soft west breeze, and
+the constant humming of bees and other winged insects. Only in England
+could there have been so sudden a change from the grey mists and
+leaden skies of yesterday. Even in that moment of extreme tension I
+could not help an exclamation of admiration as we came to an end of
+the gravelled walk, and Paul held open for me a little iron gate.
+
+"How beautiful your home is!" I cried. "How you must love it!"
+
+A look almost of agony passed across his face. It came and went in
+a moment. "Yes! I love it!" he answered, "but it is not my home.
+Henceforth I have no home. I may well be thankful that I have even a
+name!"
+
+I looked at him, waiting for an explanation, but he walked on in
+silence. It was not until we were half-way across the park that I
+spoke. "I do not understand!" I said softly. "Will you not tell me
+something of your trouble?"
+
+"I would that I could, Adrea!" he answered. His voice was so gentle,
+and yet his face was so stern. "But no, I cannot. It is a secret. It
+is only a blotted page of our family history made clear to me. But it
+alters everything!"
+
+"Does it make you poorer?" I asked falteringly.
+
+He looked down in my eyes bravely; but his voice shook as he answered:
+"If it be true--as I scarcely doubt--it takes from me everything: my
+money, my home, my future. It brings everything but disgrace upon us,
+Adrea, and even that must touch our name. Even though the living are
+spared, the memory of the dead must suffer!"
+
+I felt the tears flowing down my cheeks, but I dashed them away. "I do
+not understand. I----"
+
+"Of course not! and I cannot explain. Yet it is simple! I have an
+elder brother, of whom I never heard, to whom everything belongs. I am
+going to find him!"
+
+"Where is he?" I cried. He shook his head. "That I cannot tell. Father
+Adrian knows, but he will not speak. I am going in search of him
+myself. I am going to Cruta!"
+
+To Cruta! The name rang in my ears, and earth and trees and sky seemed
+reeling before me. Then I clutched him by the arm, and cried out
+hysterically,--
+
+"You shall not go there! The place is horrible! You shall not go!"
+
+He stood still, and looked at me in wonderment. We had crossed the
+park now, and were on the edge of the bare moorland. His figure alone
+stood out in solitary relief against the sky. I was half mad with fear
+and dismay. He did not understand. How could he?
+
+"It is at Cruta that I can learn all that there still is for me to
+learn," he said. "I shall start for there to-night."
+
+Oh! it was horrible! What could I say? How was I to stop him? How much
+dare I tell? I caught hold of his hands, and held them tightly.
+
+"Paul, I want to ask you something! When you heard from the convent
+that relations had claimed me and taken me away, and then, a year
+afterwards, you found me there--in London--a dancing girl, what did
+you think?"
+
+He answered me at once and without hesitation. "I thought that you had
+misled the Lady Superior,--that you were weary of your life there, and
+had run away."
+
+I shook my head. "I knew that you thought so and I never denied it.
+But it was not so! I was not unhappy at the convent, but one day I was
+sent for and bidden prepare for a journey. Some relatives had sent for
+me, and I was to go. And to where? It was to Cruta! Paul, it was old
+Count of Cruta who claimed me. I cannot tell you anything of the time
+I spent there, shut up in the gloomy castle; it was horrible beyond
+all words. Even the memory of it makes me shudder. If only I could
+tell you! But I must not! I can tell you this, though. In less than
+six months I felt myself going mad; and one night I stole down to the
+beach and unfastened a small boat and rowed away, scarcely caring what
+happened to me so that I could but escape from that awful place.
+It was a desperate chance. I was out all day without food or water,
+rowing and drifting until Cruta lay like a speck in the distance. Then
+by chance I was picked up by an English yacht, and they brought me to
+London. I arrived there helpless and miserable, and, ah! how lonely!
+I dared not go back to the convent for fear I should be sent back to
+Cruta. There was only you. I went to your bankers, and they told me
+that you were abroad--on the Continent. By chance they asked me there
+my name, and by chance again I told them it truthfully. They told me
+that they had money for me there. I had only to sign a receipt, and
+they gave me more than I asked for--ten times more. Then I remembered
+the address of an English girl who had been at the convent with me,
+and she gave me a home for a time. It was through her dancing mistress
+that I became--a dancing girl. I have told you this, Paul, because I
+want you to promise me not to go to Cruta. It is an evil place. They
+are mad there. Promise me!"
+
+He looked at me gravely and very tenderly; but his tone was firm.
+"Adrea, it is necessary that I go there," he said. "I cannot rest for
+a moment until I know for certain whether a story which I have just
+been told is a true one. The proof lies in Cruta! It is no whim which
+is taking me there! I must go!"
+
+My heart was sick with dread. Yet what could I do? I said nothing;
+only I covered my face with my hands and wept.
+
+"Adrea, you are a foolish child!" he said, bending over me. "What is
+there for me to fear at Cruta? Look up and tell me!"
+
+I shook my head. "You would not heed me," I answered sadly. "I dare
+not tell you. But there is one thing," I added hastily. "Will you do
+it for me simply because I ask you?"
+
+"If it be possible, yes!"
+
+I stood still on a little hillock, and faced him eagerly. "Then do not
+go to Cruta until to-morrow!" I begged. "It will make no difference to
+you."
+
+"And what difference will it make to you, he asked, perplexed.
+
+"Never mind! promise!" He hesitated for a moment, with a frown on his
+forehead, and his face turned seaward.
+
+"Well! I will promise then!"
+
+I caught hold of his hand, and held it tightly. "You are very good to
+me!" I said. "_Allons!_ let us move onward!"
+
+We had reached the Hermitage, and I had spoken scarcely a single word
+of comfort. An icy coldness seemed to have stolen into my heart. I
+had ceased to think of Paul, or of my love. There was something else;
+another passion which made me blind. Yet I let him come in with me,
+and yielded myself up for a while to the dream of loving and being
+loved by him. While I lay in his arms, with my head upon his shoulder,
+and every now and then felt his light, caressing touch upon my
+face,--why then, the world for me was bounded by that little room, and
+I had no thoughts which travelled outside it. But it lasted only while
+he was with me. When he stood up, and said that he must go, I did not
+seek to keep him.
+
+"Shall I come again?" he asked, as we stood hand in hand before the
+door.
+
+I shook my head. "Not to-night love! I shall be better alone. I am
+weary, and I have my things to collect."
+
+I knew he would be surprised. He withdrew his hand, and manlike, was
+almost angry. "I forgot. You will leave here, I suppose!"
+
+I shrugged my shoulders. "What should keep me, Paul? I could not live
+here alone. Every stone and tree would be full of barren memories. No!
+to-morrow I go to London. I have sent all the servants away to-day,
+except Gomez. You will be with me early!"
+
+"I will be outside your window before you are up!" he promised with a
+touch of gaiety in his tone. "See that Gomez has breakfast for two!"
+
+He passed down the avenue, and out of sight. I closed the door with
+a little shudder and turned round. Gomez was by my side. Through the
+gloom I could see that his dark eyes were full of fire, and his olive
+features were set and grim.
+
+"What do you want Gomez?" I asked quickly.
+
+He drew close to my side. "The priest," he muttered, "has he--has he
+dared----"
+
+His breath was coming quickly. He spoke English but slightly, and in
+the excitement the words seemed to stick in his throat.
+
+I interrupted him. "He has told Mr. de Vaux some strange, horrible
+story. What do you know of it?"
+
+"All! All! All! I was there--in the chamber! My master's words to
+him--I heard them all. He has told, then! He has threatened! Oh! if
+only I had known when he was here!"
+
+The man's fierce face and gesture told their own tale. I beckoned
+him to follow me into the room where Paul and I had been sitting, and
+closed the door.
+
+"You were Martin de Vaux's faithful servant," I said. "Do you want to
+see his son driven from his home and robbed of his lands?"
+
+The man moved his lips, making a curious sound, and drew a long,
+gurgling breath. He was shaking with excitement.
+
+"Who should do it?"
+
+"The priest!" I answered softly.
+
+"Because of the words, the story of which my master spoke to him at
+his death in the monastery?"
+
+"Yes! because of that."
+
+"Ah!" He stole up to my side with a noiseless, animal movement, and
+whispered in my ear. His eyes were burning; his face was full of evil
+meaning. Yet I did not shrink from him. I welcomed him with a smile.
+He whispered into my ear. It was like the hiss of a snake; but I
+smiled. I whispered back again. He nodded. Ah! the way before me was
+growing clear at last. Was it not fate that had brought Gomez ready to
+my hand? Ay! fate! A good fate! A kind fate! We stood close together
+in that dimly lit room; and though we were alone in the house, we
+spoke in whispers to one another. When I moved to the door, Gomez
+followed me.
+
+I came down in ten minutes, clad in a long, dark cloak, with a small
+hat and a thick veil. I took a stick from the rack, and there was
+something else in my deep pocket.
+
+"Alone!" he whispered, as I moved towards the door.
+
+"Alone!" I answered. "Make a good fire in the drawing-room, and let
+there be food and wine there."
+
+"For two?" he asked with an evil smile.
+
+"For two!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+"ADREA'S DIARY"
+
+ "A land that is lonelier than a ruin."
+
+
+A cold twilight followed close upon the day. The sky was strewn with
+dark clouds, and a wild wind blew in my face. I was on an unknown
+road, and in all my life I had seen nothing so dreary.
+
+On one side, about a hundred yards away, was the sea; on the other
+was a broken stretch of bare moorland covered with only the scantiest
+herbage and piles of barren grey rocks. Some were lying together in
+quaint, grotesque shapes; others stood out alone against the sky,
+and broken fragments of all sizes covered the ground, choking and
+destroying all vegetation. There was no background of woods or trees;
+there was nothing between that barren, stony surface and the leaden
+sky. What turf there had been had lost its colour, and never a
+fragment of moss had grown upon one of those weather-beaten boulders.
+The sea air had stained them, and the grey evening mists had rotted
+them, until their surface was honeycombed with indentations, but
+neither had softened or toned down their fierce ugliness. Even in the
+bright sunlight such a country as this must still have been a country
+of desolation, and a light heart must sometimes have lost its gaiety
+and felt oppressed. To me, as I hurried along, with the cold evening
+settling down around me, that walk was horrible. Strange shadows
+seemed to dog my path and stalk solemnly along by my side. Footsteps
+seemed to follow behind me, and every stone I dislodged made me start.
+Sometimes I fancied that I heard strange whisperings in my ears, and
+I started round, shivering and trembling, to find myself alone. Once I
+stopped short. Was that a dead man in the way? How my heart beat! No!
+it was only a long boulder of rock! Listen! was not that the scream
+of a dying man? My own voice, raised in helpless terror, drowned the
+sound, and while I stood there ready to sink to the ground, a great
+sea-gull came circling round my head, and the blood flowed warm in my
+veins once more. How sad and mournful was that solitary cry and slow,
+hopeless flapping of the wings! Who was it said that the evil spirits
+of dead men dwell imprisoned in those sad-crying birds? It was
+very, very human, that cry. Bah! was I getting superstitious and
+faint-hearted before my task was begun? I set my teeth and stepped
+boldly onwards. For a while I had no more fancies.
+
+Throughout that hideous walk my whole imagination seemed coloured
+with a reflection of the purpose towards which I was tending. I do
+not write this in any morbid fit. Few women have passed through what
+I have passed through; fewer still have stopped to record their
+sensations. It is strange that it should afford me any satisfaction to
+record them here, but it is so. I have begun, and I must go on. This
+part of my life is drawing rapidly to a close, and with its close I
+shall seal this little book up and put it away for ever.
+
+The night grew darker, and the road was fast becoming little more than
+a rude cattle-track. A little distance ahead of me, from some building
+as yet unseen, a strong, clear light was steadily burning. Save for
+it, I might have feared that I had lost my way, for as yet I had
+passed no sign of human habitation. But that light was sufficient.
+Gomez had told me of it. It was the light which burned always, from
+dusk to morning, from the tower of the monastery of St. Bernard.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Two things seemed strange to me, or rather seem strange to me now,
+when I look back upon that walk. The first was my utter indifference
+to all physical pain. There was a hole in my boot, and I found
+afterwards that my foot must have been bleeding most of the time. I
+never felt it. I was conscious of neither pain nor fatigue. The second
+thing which surprises me is that, as I drew near to my journey's end,
+I grew calmer. I had no desire to draw back. I had no fear. The thing
+which was before me never assumed any definite shape! It was there--in
+the background--a dim, floating purpose, never once oppressing
+me, never forcing its way forward in my mind for more definite
+consideration, and only showing itself at all in a vague, lurid
+glow which seemed to change even the shapes of all the gruesome
+surroundings of my dismal walk. Towards the end of my expedition this
+became even more marked. My thoughts had recoiled from the present to
+the past. Vague pictures of the days that had gone by seemed floating
+before my eyes. I saw myself in the convent garden, with all my little
+world enclosed in those four walls, and I heard the shrill laughter
+of the girls with whom I was walking, and I even fancied that I could
+catch the perfume of the lilac trees which drooped over the smoothly
+kept lawn. And then the picture faded away, and from the vessel's side
+I saw Cruta, a purple-topped island rising like some precious jewel
+from the sea! I shuddered at the memory of that face, which soon
+became a living dread to me, and I heard again the passionate voice
+of a dark-robed man reading poetry, and crushing with white, nervous
+fingers the hyacinths whose odour was making the air faint. I saw his
+white, sad face, in which the struggle of the man against himself was
+already born--born, alas! in those long mornings by the sea, at my
+unconscious bidding! And soon Cruta, too, faded away, and you, Paul,
+my love, my dear, dear love, your face came to me. Almost my eyes
+closed, almost I stayed here to dream. Ah! how the magic of this love,
+this wonderful love, lightens my little world! My heart is stirred to
+music, my blood is dancing. I am chilled no longer. Ah! Paul, it is
+for you that I strike this blow, for you that I tread this stony way.
+It is sweet to think of it. I go on as blithely as ever a village
+maiden stepped forward to her wedding. The way is as sweet to me as
+a garden of roses. Your face, too, is dying out of my thoughts, Paul.
+Farewell! Farewell!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The valley of the shadow of death! Did any one speak those words? What
+an evil fancy! Yet the air seemed full of whisperings. The valley
+of the shadow of death! Yes! it might be that, and these cold, grey
+boulders the spirits of the evil ones risen up out of Hades. Is there
+a hell, I wonder? How chill and dark the air seems! There is death
+about!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The sound of a single bell broke in upon my thoughts. I raised
+my eyes. My journey was accomplished. Before me was a grim, stern
+building, and attached to it a chapel. It was the monastery of St.
+Bernard.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+"ADREA'S DIARY"
+
+ "Farewell to the dead ashes of life."
+
+
+The path which I had been following led straight up to the bare,
+arched door of the building. I had reached it unmolested, and rang the
+bell.
+
+What a hoarse, clanging sound! I shivered as I stood there listening
+to its gloomy echoes until they died away. No one came. The place
+seemed wrapped in an austere silence. I listened, but I could hear no
+sound within; only the dull, melancholy sighing of the wind amongst a
+sickly avenue of firs behind.
+
+I stretched out my hand, and rang again. Almost before the echoes had
+died away I heard footsteps within. A heavy bolt was withdrawn, and
+a dark-robed monk stood on the threshold before me. He recoiled for a
+moment at seeing a woman, and I thought that he would have closed the
+door, but he did not.
+
+"What would you have at this hour, sister?" he asked sternly. "The
+chapel is closed, and morning is the time for dispensing charity."
+
+"I have come in search of a priest who is only a visitor here," I
+said. "Father Adrian he is called!"
+
+He seemed still indisposed to admit me. "Is your business urgent?" he
+asked doubtfully. "Father Adrian is at his devotions, and must not be
+lightly disturbed."
+
+"It is urgent," I answered.
+
+He beckoned me to follow him, and in silence led me a few yards down a
+bare stone corridor. Then he threw open the door of a small room, and
+bade me enter.
+
+"This is the guest-chamber," he said. "Wait here, and I will summon
+Father Adrian!"
+
+He closed the door and disappeared. The interior of the room in which
+he had left me was bare and chilling. I turned from it to the window.
+Almost opposite was a small eminence, and at its summit a rude cross
+of Calvary. A dark figure, with clasped hands and bent head, was
+slowly descending the path.
+
+Even at that distance I thought I recognised the walk, and as he came
+nearer I saw that he was wearing the ordinary garb of a Roman Catholic
+priest instead of the monk's robes. I stood close to the window
+watching him, and as he crossed the open space before the door he
+raised his eyes and saw me. How he started, and how his eyes seemed
+to burn in their sockets! Doubtless he would have turned paler, but he
+was already deathly white. He stood there, swaying from side to side,
+with his eyes fastened wildly upon me, as though an apparition had
+appeared before him. Then he took a quick step forward; I heard the
+great front door creak and groan upon its hinges, and almost as soon
+as I could turn round he was on the threshold before me.
+
+"Adrea! Adrea!" he cried, in a low, suppressed whisper which shook
+with passion. "You here! What has happened? Stand in the light! Let me
+see your face!"
+
+I moved a step towards him, and raised my veil. "I am lonely," I said
+softly. "Was it very wrong of me to come here?"
+
+He stood before me, with hungry, incredulous eyes fastened upon my
+face, as though he would see through it into my false heart. Yet I
+did not flinch; I was actress enough for my part. I watched him
+tremble--watched the colour flush into his face and die away. It was
+a very storm of passion which shook him before he could find the words
+to answer me.
+
+"Adrea! Adrea! have you come here to mock me? As you are a woman, I
+implore you to spare me! Speak the truth!"
+
+I answered him softly, with my eyes fixed upon the ground. "I came
+because I was lonely. Let us go away from here! Come home with me!"
+
+"Home with you! Home with you!" He repeated my invitation. He scarcely
+seemed to understand.
+
+"Yes! I was very silly the other day! I did not understand you! I did
+not understand myself! And you see I have humbled myself very much! I
+have come to tell you so! Am I forgiven?"
+
+I raised my eyes to his, and added in a half whisper: "Won't you come
+home with me, and read aloud, as we used to on the rocks at Cruta?"
+
+He stood there as though fascinated. I began to feel impatient, but I
+dared not show any signs of it.
+
+Suddenly he took a quick step towards me, and before I could prevent
+it he had thrown himself at my feet on the cold stone floor, and was
+holding my hands tightly in his.
+
+"Adrea!" he cried, his voice choked with passion, "is this thing true?
+My brain reels with the delight of it; but, oh, forgive me if I seem
+to doubt! I know nothing of women, but surely your lips could never
+lie! You are not mocking me? Oh, Adrea, my love, lift up your eyes and
+swear that this is no dream. I am dizzy with joy! Speak to me! Let me
+look into your face! I am not doubting you, yet say it once more! Tell
+me it is not a dream!"
+
+I lied to him with my face, and with my eyes, and with my lips. "It is
+no dream," I said softly. "I have come to you, Adrian, because I want
+you. No one else would do."
+
+He stood up, pale and shaken. His voice was still full of deep,
+throbbing earnestness. "Adrea!" he cried, "to-day I have been fighting
+a grim fight. Look into my face and mark its traces. I am desperate!
+For hours I have knelt on what was once a hallowed spot. In vain! In
+vain! On my knees before the cross of Calvary I have striven to pray,
+as a man wrestles for his life with the waves of a great ocean. Alas!
+alas! In the twilight I fancied always that your face was moving
+amongst the shadows, and even the breeze which rustled in the shrubs
+around seemed ever to be murmuring your name. Oh, my love, my love,
+sometimes I wonder that I have lived through the anguish of these
+days. But it is over! You have come to me, and the evil days are past.
+I renounce my priesthood! It has become only a barren farce to me!
+Heaven or hell, what matters it? I leave here with you to-night never
+to return! Never! never! never!"
+
+He pressed hot kisses upon my hands; they stung me like molten lead,
+but I did not withdraw them. Then he rose up and held out his arms to
+me with a great yearning stealing into his dark eyes. But I kept him
+away.
+
+"Not here! not here!" I cried. "I heard footsteps outside. Let us go!"
+
+"You are right," he answered. "Wait for me; I have but few
+preparations to make."
+
+He left me, and I breathed freely again. I had no fears, no
+hesitation. I never dreamt of turning back; but I began to find my
+task more difficult even than I had imagined. It was his touch, his
+passionate looks and words which were so hard to endure. My lips could
+lie, but it was hard to govern my looks; and oh, how I hated him!
+
+Soon he was back--too soon for me; and then we left the place. He had
+changed his clothes, and, to my surprise, he wore an ordinary
+dark walking suit and a long ulster. He had discarded the priest
+altogether.
+
+At the bend he looked back. There was a rift in the clouds just behind
+the hill of Calvary, and the rude cross stood out vividly against the
+sky. "At last!" he murmured; "at last! Farewell to the dead ashes of
+life! It is rest to have ended the struggle, even to have fallen. My
+new life is here!"
+
+He touched my hand fondly, and held it within his own. "How deathly
+cold your hand is, Adrea!" he said. "It is the night air. You are
+well, are you not?" he added anxiously.
+
+"Quite well; only tired."
+
+He took my arm. I could not resist him, only I walked the more
+swiftly. He tried to check me, but I shook my head. "I am cold and
+tired," I told him. "This desolate walk frightened me, and even with
+you I think I am a little nervous. Let us hurry. Hark! What was that?"
+
+"A bittern in the marshes! Why, Adrea, how frightened you are! It is
+not like you!"
+
+"I know it," I answered; "but to-night--to-night the air seems full of
+whisperings and strange sounds. Yes, I am frightened."
+
+I shivered as I spoke. He would have drawn me closer to him, but I
+waved him away. How could he know anything of the horrors of that walk
+for me! Strange phantoms seemed ever rising from the sea, stalking
+across the path, and away over the moor, and passing and repassing,
+grinning and whispering in my ear. Sometimes it seemed as though I
+could have touched them by stretching out my hand; but when I tried,
+my fingers closed upon thin air. What were they? Why had they come to
+torment me? Was it because they scented an evil deed? Would they haunt
+me for ever like this? What folly! If I gave way so I should soon be
+altogether unnerved, and my task was still before me. I closed my eyes
+and opened them again. They had gone! It was good! I had conquered!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was late, and we had eaten and drunk together. He was lying back in
+an easy-chair, flushed, and strange to say, wonderfully handsome. The
+hollows in his cheeks seemed suddenly filled up, and his eyes were
+soft and bright. I sat at his feet looking into the firelight.
+
+"Will you answer me some questions, Adrian?" I asked. "There has been
+so much mystery around us lately, and, like a woman, I am curious."
+
+"Yes, I will tell you anything," he answered. "Am I not your slave,
+dearest? Only ask me them quickly. There are many things I have to
+talk about. What was that?" he added quickly. "Is there any one else
+in this room?"
+
+I shook my head. "No one; it was fancy. Tell me, who was Madame de
+Merteuill?"
+
+"My mother!"
+
+"Your mother?"
+
+"Yes; and the old Count of Cruta is my grandfather. Madame de
+Merteuill is his daughter. But that is not her real name!"
+
+There was a high screen just behind his chair,--a japanned one, which
+seemed to have been badly used, for there was a great hole in it.
+While we had been talking a strange thing had happened. A man's hand
+had slowly been thrust through, and a crumpled piece of paper was
+dropped upon the carpet. I moved to his side, and raised the cushion
+in his chair. Before I could help it he had caught my face, and
+pressed a hot, burning kiss upon my cheek. I dared not struggle. I
+had to yield, and endure for a moment his passionate embrace. Then I
+dropped my handkerchief upon the piece of paper, and picked up both
+hastily.
+
+"Will you tell me something else, please?"
+
+"Anything you ask! You know that I will!"
+
+"The De Vaux estates----"
+
+"Are mine. I am the son of Martin de Vaux. Paul de Vaux has no claim
+at all. If I had remained in the Church, it was my intention to found
+a great monastery here. But now----"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Everything is yours!"
+
+There was a moment's silence. I drew the piece of paper from my
+pocket, as though by accident, and read it to myself. There were only
+a few hastily scrawled lines:--
+
+"I dare not do it. I am afraid. I will put the knife on the floor."
+
+I glanced towards the hole. The hand was there, holding a long,
+gleaming dagger. It laid it noiselessly upon the carpet, and was
+withdrawn. I went over to his side, and knelt down there.
+
+"And what will become of Paul de Vaux?" I asked.
+
+He laughed grimly. "He must take his chance. He knows the whole story.
+He has known since last night. Adrea, tell me once more," he pleaded:
+"you never loved him really,--say that you never did!"
+
+"Are you jealous, sir?" I asked lightly. My left hand was wandering
+down his side! Ah! there was his heart! How it was beating! My right
+hand was on the floor, cautiously feeling its way towards the screen.
+It reached the dagger! I clutched it by the hilt! Now was the time.
+There was his heart. I knew the exact spot.
+
+"Adrea, are you ill?" he asked. "How white and strange you look! Ah!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was done! Lucrezia Borgia could not have bungled less! He lay
+doubled up in the chair, with a long Genoese dagger buried in his
+heart, and it was I who had done it!
+
+Gomez crawled from behind the screen, and looked first at him and
+then at me with protruding eyes. He tried to speak, but his teeth
+chattered.
+
+"It is done!" I said calmly, "and you are saved, Paul, my love," I
+whispered to myself. "Be a man, Gomez. We must carry it into the wood.
+Lift him gently; there must be no blood here."
+
+It took all our strength to move him, and we had to drag him, yard by
+yard, down the avenue and across the road into the little wood.
+
+My pen is weary of horrors. The memory of that hour is not to be
+written about. But when he turned away I took the flowers which he had
+begged for from my corsage and threw them down amongst the wet leaves.
+It was my sole moment of relenting.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+"THE LORD OF CRUTA"
+
+
+A strange figure stood on the edge of the castle cliff, looking across
+the bay of Cruta to the sea. He was tall, loose jointed, and gaunt,
+and the long grey beard and unkempt locks of flowing hair which
+streamed behind in the breeze showed that he was an old man; but his
+eyes, set back in deep hollows, and fringed with long, bushy grey
+lashes, were still dark and piercing. Great passions had branded
+his face with deep-set lines, but had failed to belittle him. On the
+contrary, his presence, though forbidding and awesome, was full of
+latent strength and dignity. To the islanders, who never mentioned
+their lord's name save with bated breath and after having zealously
+crossed themselves, he was the object of the most unbounded
+superstition. His personality and the strangeness of his habits
+appalled them. They scarcely believed him a being of the same world as
+their own. The most ignorant amongst them firmly believed that the sea
+obeyed his uplifted hand, and that when he spoke the thunder rolled
+amongst the hills. When stories were told of the mystery and strange
+isolation in which he lived, they nodded their heads and were willing
+to believe everything. No one ever met him or had speech with him, for
+twenty years had passed since he had issued from the castle gates. But
+sometimes, most often when a storm was brewing, they could see a
+tall, dark figure standing on the giddy edge of the castle wall which
+overhung the sea, or walking, with slow, stately movements, up and
+down the narrow foot-path at the summit of the cliff. If the moon had
+risen, or the sky were clear beyond, they could see the huge, gaunt
+figure outlined with grim distinctness against the empty background,
+always with his face to the sea, and with a long black cloak flowing
+behind. It was not often that they saw him, but when they did they
+told one another in whispers; and though the sky were cloudless and
+the sea calm, the women whose husbands were out in their fishing boats
+beyond the bay told their beads and prayed for their safe return, and
+those who had remained behind prepared for rough weather. Once, at
+a marriage feast, when all the little village was making merry, the
+whisper had gone about that "the Count was walking;" and immediately
+they had all departed for their homes in fear and silence, and the
+luckless bride and bridegroom had hastened to the priest and besought
+him to unloose the knot, that they might celebrate their wedding on
+some less ill-omened day.
+
+To-night the storm was already breaking when the Count appeared on the
+castle wall and turned his face seaward. One by one the fishing smacks
+were crossing the gathering line of surf, and gaining the deep, still
+waters of the bay. As they passed underneath the towering mass of
+granite rock, against the base of which the waters were boiling and
+seething, the men in the boats gazed fearfully up at that black speck
+far away above their heads, and crossed themselves. The Count had
+stood there for an hour, they whispered, ever since that piled-up mass
+of angry, lurid clouds had first gathered, and a warning breath of
+wind had swept across the smooth, glass-like surface of the water, now
+troubled and restless. Not one of them doubted but that his coming had
+brought the storm; but there was not one of them who dared to utter
+a word of complaint. Only they stood up in their boats, and shielding
+their eyes with an uplifted hand from the fierce rays of the sinking
+sun, gazed out seaward, searching for the boats not yet in safety.
+
+Suddenly a little murmur arose from amongst them, and a word was
+passed from one to another of their little crafts. The blinding glare
+of the sun and its reflection, stretched far away across the surface
+of the sea, had dazzled their eyes, and for the last quarter of an
+hour they had seen nothing on the westward horizon. But now the bright
+silver light was fading into a dull, glorious purple; and full upon
+its bosom a strange sail was seen, making direct for the harbour. The
+sunlight was still flashing upon its white sails,--little specks of
+gold upon a background of richer colouring--and they saw that she
+was a handsome, shapely-looking vessel, very different to the dirty
+Italian lugger which put in at their harbour for a few hours week by
+week.
+
+"Will she need a pilot?" cried Francesco, rising in his boat, and
+watching the stranger. "Let us wait here, and see if she signals for
+one!"
+
+"Let us all go! There will be something for each!" cried another.
+
+"We will race," Antonio answered, whose boat was the fastest. "The
+first to reach her shall have the stranger's money!"
+
+"No, no! that is not fair," chorused the others. "We will draw lots!"
+
+Then up rose old Guiseppe, the father of them all. He shook his head,
+and turned a sorrowing face seawards. "Peace! children. You are like
+chattering seabirds squabbling over a bait which will never be yours.
+Yonder ship will need no pilot! She is no stranger to Cruta!"
+
+They looked at her, and shook their heads. "We have never seen her
+before," they said.
+
+"Some of you are too young to remember her," the old man continued,
+"and you were all away when she was here within a twelvemonth ago! But
+I know her! Three times has she entered this harbour, and each time
+has she left sorrow and grief behind her. It is the ship of the
+English lord who stole away the daughter of our Count many years ago!"
+
+There was a little murmur of suppressed wonder. Then, as though moved
+by a common instinct, every face was turned upward to the castle wall.
+
+The Count had gone. But, even as they looked, he reappeared, leading
+another figure by the hand. They held their breath with wonder. No one
+had ever seen him there save alone, and now a woman stood by his
+side. They could see nothing of her, save her long hair flowing in
+the breeze, and the bare outline of her figure. "Who was she? Guiseppe
+must know! Who was she?" they asked him eagerly.
+
+He shook his head. "Better not ask," he answered. "Better not know!
+Strange things have happened up there! It is not for us to chatter of
+them!"
+
+"One night as I sailed homeward," Antonio said, in a low tone, "I
+heard strange cries from the castle. The night was still, and the
+breeze brought the sound to my ears. They came from up above, and
+when I strained my eyes I fancied that I could see a white figure--the
+figure of a woman--standing on the castle walls. She was crying for
+help, but suddenly, as though a hand were placed over her mouth, her
+cries ceased, and the figure vanished. It was three nights before the
+English lord died at the monastery!"
+
+Ferdinand stood up. "On that same night," he said, in a low, hoarse
+whisper, "I saw a figure steal up the path to the castle. It was the
+English lord! On the morrow I traced him back again with drops
+of blood. They led right into the monastery courtyard. Two days
+afterwards he died."
+
+"Silence! all of you!" commanded Guiseppe, with shaking voice. "Are
+these things to be spoken of thus openly? Know you not, you children,
+that the winds have ears, and he listens there above us."
+
+"It is a thousand feet!" muttered Antonio. "To him our boats can seem
+only as specks upon the water."
+
+"You fool!" answered Guiseppe. "Do you think that the man whose
+presence brings storm and wind upon us is like ordinary men? Do you
+think he cannot hear what he chooses!"
+
+"Ave Maria!" cried Antonio, crossing himself. "I would as soon face
+the devil himself as the Count! I shall ask Father Bernard to say a
+prayer for me to-night!"
+
+"Do! and I hope his penance will be a stiff one," answered Guiseppe
+grimly. "Come, let us trim our sails, and get homeward. The English
+ship will not want us, and we can watch who lands from the beach."
+
+"'Twould be no such bad thing if she struck on the rocks, if she
+brings such ill luck to the castle," muttered Antonio, as he unfurled
+the sail and grasped the tiller. "There would be some pickings for us,
+beyond doubt--some pretty pickings!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+"THE DAWN OF A SHORT, SWEET LIFE"
+
+
+The little group of fishing smacks, homely-looking and uncleanly, on
+close examination, presented a very different appearance from the deck
+of the English yacht fast nearing the harbour. Their brown sails had
+gleamed purple in the dying sunlight, and their rude outline seemed
+graceful and shapely as they rose and fell on the long waves. Paul,
+who stood on the captain's bridge of his yacht, uttered a little cry
+of admiration as they sailed out from the shadows of the huge rock,
+and fell into a rude semicircle across the bay.
+
+"What colouring one sees in these southern waters!" he remarked. "Did
+you notice the glinting light on those sails?"
+
+His companion, who was holding firmly the rail by his side, looked
+up and smiled. "Yes," she said softly; "it is beautiful! We have seen
+more beautiful things on this voyage, I think, than I ever saw before
+in my life. I have never been so happy! You are not angry with me now
+for coming, are you?"
+
+He looked down into her wistful, upturned face, and then away to the
+distant line where sea and sky met. "No! I am not angry," he said
+softly.
+
+Adrea was very beautiful. The fresh sea air and the southern sun had
+been as kind to her as to one of their own daughters. Only a very
+faint, delicate shade of pink had stained her clear, transparent skin,
+harmonising exquisitely with the slight olive hue of her complexion.
+The strong breeze had loosened the coils of her dark hair, and it was
+waving and flowing in picturesque freedom about her face. There was a
+change, too, in her appearance, greater than any the wind or sun
+could effect. Her dark eyes were glowing with a new life, and a soft,
+wistful joy shone in her face. Those few days had been like heaven for
+her. She had been alone, for the first time, with the man she loved;
+sailing upon a sunlit sea hour after hour, with his voice ever in her
+ears, and his tall figure by her side. The sense of his presence was
+ever upon her, bringing with it a calm, sweet restfulness, a happiness
+beyond anything which she had ever imagined.
+
+And it was heaven, too, after hell! Thrust away in a dark corner of
+her memory was the recollection of a day and a night full of grim,
+phantasmal horrors, which were fast becoming little more than a dream
+to her. The time was not yet come for remorse. In that deep glow of
+passionate and self-forgetful devotion, quickened now into fullest
+and sweetest life by his constant proximity, even sin itself, for his
+sake, seemed justified to her. Everything, too, which lay behind her
+brief stay in that bare, wind-swept country was fast assuming a far
+distant place in her thoughts. It was such a change from her little
+rooms in Grey Street, dainty and home-like though they had been, from
+the brilliantly lit drawing-rooms where she had performed, and the
+same wearisome compliments ever in her ears. The bonds of town life
+had always galled her. She was an artist, although she had denied
+it. She had become subject to her environment but it had been an
+imprisonment. Nature was her mother, and Nature had claimed her now.
+She knew it all; she knew that she could never be a dancer again. She
+had stolen out on to the deck each morning in her slippers, and had
+seen the dawn break through the clouds and descend upon the quivering
+waters. She had seen the eastern sky streaked with faint but
+marvellous colouring, growing deeper and deeper, until the sun's rim
+had risen from out of the water. Grey had become mauve, and white
+amber. It was wonderful! And by night she had leaned over the side
+of the yacht, and looked up into a sky ablaze with trembling stars,
+casting their golden reflections down upon the boundless waves which
+rose and fell beneath--waves which were sometimes green, and sometimes
+golden in the wonderful phosphoric light which touched them with a
+weird splendour. It was like the opening of a new world to Adrea. All
+that had gone before seemed harsh and artificial! It was the dawn of a
+new life.
+
+Paul had noticed the change. To him it had appeared chiefly as an
+increased womanliness, a gentle softness of speech and mannerism very
+charming and attractive. Those few days at sea together had been like
+a dream to him. He had come on board as nearly broken-hearted as a
+strong man could be, and fiercely anxious to reach his destination and
+know the whole, cruel truth. In a few hours all had been changed. His
+sorrows seemed numbed. He was no longer battling alone with his grief.
+Adrea knew all, and as they sailed southwards together, the sense
+of the present was strong enough to drive past and future from
+his thoughts. The clouds cleared from his face, and his heart was
+lightened. It was Adrea who had saved him from despair.
+
+He thought of this as she stood by his side, and he answered her
+question. Before their eyes, Cruta was rising up from the sea. The
+grim castle was there, looking as old as the rocks on which it was
+perched, the wide, open harbour, and the little fleet of fishing
+smacks. The seabirds circled about their heads; every moment brought
+the rocky little island more distinctly into view. Paul looked down
+into Adrea's face gravely.
+
+"It is our destination, Adrea," he said. "You must go now. There will
+be a lot of surf crossing the bar, and I shall have enough to do
+to run her in. Look behind! It is just as well we are going into
+harbour!"
+
+He pointed to the fast-gathering clouds coming up from the westward,
+and she paused with her foot on the ladder. "We leave the storm behind
+us," she said. "There is fair weather ahead!"
+
+She went down into her cabin, and left Paul upon the bridge, with his
+eyes fixed upon the castle. Fair weather ahead! How dared he hope
+for it! The sun had finally disappeared now, but some part of the
+afterglow still lingered in curious contrast to the lurid yellow and
+black clouds hurrying on behind him. The old castle was bathed for a
+moment in a sea of purple light,--every line of it, and the huge rock
+which it crowned, standing out with peculiar vividness against the
+empty background. But it was a brief glory. Even while Paul was
+gazing, the colouring faded away, and it resumed its former aspect.
+Fair weather ahead! Every moment, as memories of his former visit to
+the place thronged in upon him, Paul doubted it the more.
+
+He was close to the entrance of the harbour now, and all his thoughts
+and energies were required to pilot his yacht safely. In a few moments
+the brief line was passed, and the islanders waiting about upon the
+beach saw the English vessel ride smoothly into harbourage under
+shadow of the huge castle rock. Presently she dropped an anchor, and
+swung gracefully round. A boat was lowered, and made for the shore.
+
+There were plenty of hands willing to help pull her in. Paul stepped
+out on to the beach, and looked around for some one to whom he could
+make himself understood.
+
+They were all islanders of the rudest class; but seeing no one else,
+Paul lifted his hand to the castle, and asked them the way in Italian.
+They understood him, and pointed along the beach to a point where a
+rude road curved inland, and reappeared a little higher up in zigzag
+fashion behind the rocks. But no one offered to go a step with him. On
+the contrary, directly the question had left his lips, they all shrunk
+away, whispering and exclaiming amongst themselves.
+
+"It is the son of the Englishman!" cried Antonio. "He is going into
+the lion's mouth! Do not let us be seen with him. The Count may be
+watching."
+
+"I wonder if he knows his danger?" Guiseppe said thoughtfully. "He is
+young and brave looking. It would be a good action to warn him."
+
+"I would not risk it!" cried Antonio.
+
+"Nor I!" echoed Ferdinand.
+
+"Nor I!" chorused the others.
+
+Guiseppe glanced at them in contempt. Then he stepped forward and laid
+his hand upon Paul's shoulder--a strange, picturesque-looking object,
+in his bright scarlet shirt, and trousers turned up to his knees. He
+had been in Italy once, and he tried to speak the language of that
+country as well as he could.
+
+"Illustrious Englishman!" he said, "go not to that castle, the home of
+the Count of Cruta. Danger lurks there for you--danger and death. It
+is our lord who lives there; we are his vassals, and we are dumb. But
+he is wild and fierce, and your countrymen are like devils to him.
+Strange things have happened up there. Be wise. Put back your boat,
+weigh your anchor and sail away. The stormy seas are dangerous, but
+not so dangerous as the Castle of Cruta to an Englishman of your
+features. Take the word of Guiseppe, and depart!"
+
+Paul shook his head. He understood most of what Guiseppe had said,
+and he knew that it was kindly meant. "You are very good," he said.
+"I thank you for your warning; but I have important business with the
+Count, and I have come from England on purpose to see him. Here, spend
+this for me," he added, throwing a handful of silver money amongst the
+little group of men. "Yonder path will take me straight to the castle,
+I suppose. Good evening."
+
+He strode away along the beach alone. Meanwhile a strange thing was
+happening. The islanders were all gathered eagerly around the little
+shower of money, but not one had offered to touch a piece.
+
+"Holy Mother! there are fifty pieces!" cried Antonio. "If only I
+was sure that the Count would not see me! I would keep holiday for a
+month, and start again with a fresh set of fishing nets."
+
+"Touch not the money!" advised Guiseppe, shaking his head. "The
+Count's eyes are everywhere!"
+
+"It is very hard!" groaned Ferdinand. "It has been such a bad season,
+too!"
+
+"I know! I know!" cried Antonio excitedly. "We will go to the
+monastery, and get Father Bernard to come and bless it. He will claim
+half for the Church, but we can divide the other half, and we shall,
+each man, have given six pieces in charity. What say you? shall we
+go?"
+
+"Bravo! Antonio is right! Antonio is a sensible fellow!" they all
+cried. Then there was the sound of bare feet scampering over the hard
+sands as they hastened up to the monastery. Guiseppe was left alone.
+
+He waited until they were out of sight. Then he stooped down,
+and carefully collecting all the coins, placed them in his pouch.
+"Ignorant fools!" he muttered. "The Count can see no further than
+other men, and at any rate he will not see these in my pocket."
+
+He stood up, and gazed steadily along the path which Paul had taken.
+"What am I to do now?" he continued. "It is to the Englishman's father
+that I owe my boat and my little hoard of sayings. He behaved to me as
+a prince, did Signor de Vaux. Can I see his son hasten yonder to his
+doom without one effort to save him? No. The Count is terrible, but I
+need run no risk. At any rate, I will follow a little way."
+
+He walked swiftly along the beach, and commenced the ascent to the
+castle. In a few minutes the little band of fishermen returned,
+carrying lanterns in their hands, and with a priest walking amongst
+them. They reached the spot, and paused, while the priest commenced
+to mumble a prayer. He was scarcely half-way through when he was
+interrupted.
+
+"The money is gone!" cried Antonio.
+
+"Every piece!" echoed Ferdinand.
+
+There was a moment's blank silence. Then they all crossed themselves.
+"Let us go home," whispered Antonio hoarsely. "The Count knows. He has
+been here."
+
+The priest turned away disgusted, and the others followed him, talking
+with bated breath amongst themselves. And, in the darkness, no one
+noticed Guiseppe's absence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+"A VOICE AND FIGURE FROM THE DISTANT PAST"
+
+
+It was a long, steep ascent, hewn out of the solid rock; but at last
+Paul stood before the great gates of the castle, and paused to take
+breath. Hundreds of feet below him his yacht was riding at anchor,
+looking like a toy vessel upon a painted sea, and a little group of
+scattered lights showed him where the hamlet lay. Before him was the
+stern, massive front of the castle, wrapped in profound gloom, but
+standing out in clear, ponderous outline against the starlit sky.
+There seemed to be no light from any part of it, and the great iron
+gates leading into the courtyard were closed. Nor was there any sound
+at all, not even the barking of a dog. It was like a dwelling of the
+dead.
+
+A great, rusty bell-chain hung by the side of the gate, and as there
+seemed to be no other means of communication with the interior, Paul
+pulled it vigorously. Its hoarse echoes had scarcely died away before
+several rough-looking islanders, carrying flaring oil lamps, trooped
+into the courtyard from the rear of the building, and one of them,
+drawing the bolts, threw open the gates.
+
+"I have come to see the Count," Paul said, addressing the nearest of
+them. "Will you conduct me to him?"
+
+The man replied energetically, but in a _patois_ utterly
+unintelligible. He led the way across the courtyard towards the
+castle, however, and Paul followed close behind. They did not enter
+by the front, but by a low, nail-studded door at the extreme corner of
+the tower, which the man immediately closed and locked behind him.
+
+Paul looked around him curiously, but in the semi-darkness there was
+little to see. He was in a corridor, of which the walls were simply
+whitewashed, and the floor bare stone; but as they passed onward,
+down several passages, and up more than one flight of steps, the
+proportions of the place expanded. The ceilings grew loftier, and the
+corridors wider. Yet there was no attempt anywhere at decoration or
+furniture of any sort. The place was like an early-day prison--huge,
+bare, and damp. Once, crossing a balustraded corridor, there was a
+view of a huge hall down below, bare save for a few huge skins thrown
+carelessly around, and a great stack of firearms and other weapons
+which lined the walls on either side. It was the only sign of
+habitation that Paul had seen.
+
+Suddenly his guide paused, and held up his finger. Paul, too,
+listened; and close at hand he heard, to his surprise, the muffled
+sound of voices chanting some sad hymn in a deep minor key. The rise
+and fall of those mournful voices was wonderfully impressive. What
+could it mean? It was a dirge, a funeral hymn! Its every note seemed
+to breathe of death.
+
+"What is that?" Paul asked. "Is any one ill--dying?"
+
+The man shook his head. He could not understand. He only motioned to
+Paul to move silently, and hurried on. They were in a wide corridor,
+with disused doors on either side, but their feet fell no longer upon
+the bare stone. A rough sort of drugget had been hastily thrown down
+in the centre of the passage, and their movements roused no more
+strange echoes between the bare walls and the vaulted roof. At every
+step forward they took the chanting grew more distinct, and at last
+the man stopped at the end of the passage before a door, softly tapped
+at it. It was opened at once, and Paul found himself ushered into a
+great, dimly lit bedchamber.
+
+He glanced around him with keen interest. If the interior of the
+room was a little dilapidated, it was full of the remains of past
+magnificence. The walls were still covered with fine tapestry, of
+which the design was almost obliterated, although the texture and
+colouring still remained. The furniture was huge, and of the
+fashion of days gone by, and the bedstead was elaborately carved and
+surmounted by a coat of arms. Further Paul had but little opportunity
+to discover, for as soon as his presence became known in the room, a
+black-cowled monk left the bedside and approached him.
+
+"We have been expecting you," he said in Italian, "and we fear now
+that you come too late. Our poor lady is beyond human skill!"
+
+Paul looked at him in astonishment. "I do not quite understand you! It
+is the Count of Cruta whom I came to see!"
+
+The priest started back, and commenced fumbling with a lamp which
+stood on a table at the foot of the bed. "Are you not the German
+doctor from Palermo?" he asked, bending over towards Paul, with his
+keen, dark face alight with suspicion and distrust.
+
+Paul shook his head. "I am no doctor at all!" he answered. "I am an
+Englishman, and my name is Paul de Vaux!"
+
+"Ah!" There was a faint, incoherent cry from the bed--a cry, which,
+faint though it was, shook with stifled emotion. Both men turned
+round, and Paul could see that the other's face was dark and stern.
+
+The woman, who had been lying on the bed still and motionless as a
+corpse, had raised herself with a sudden, spasmodic movement. Her
+cheeks were sunken to the bone, and her eyes were large and staring.
+
+The seal of death was upon her face, but Paul recognised her. It
+was the woman whom he had seen last in the drawing-room of Major
+Harcourt's house, the woman whom Adrea had called her stepmother.
+
+He took a sudden step forward, and she held out her hands in a gesture
+half of welcome, half of fear. "Paul de Vaux! Holy Mother of God! What
+has brought you here--here into the tiger's den? Come close to me!
+Hasten!"
+
+Paul stepped forward, but the priest stood between them, holding
+out his hands in a threatening gesture. "Sister, forbear!" he cried
+sternly. "You have made your peace with God; you have done with the
+world and all its follies. Close your eyes and pray. Fix your thoughts
+upon things above!"
+
+She did not heed him. She did not even look towards him. Her eyes were
+fixed upon Paul, and he read their message aright.
+
+"This woman wishes to speak to me. Stand aside, and let me go to her!"
+he exclaimed. "If she be indeed dying, surely you should respect her
+wishes."
+
+He spoke imperatively, for the priest stood in the way, and prevented
+his approach; pointing towards the door with a stern, commanding
+gesture.
+
+"There must be no converse between you and this woman!" he said. "I am
+no lover of violent deeds; but if you insist upon forcing your way
+to her bedside, I shall summon the Count, and you will pay for your
+rashness with your life. Your name and features are a certain death
+warrant in this house. Escape while you may, and _pax vobiscum_.
+Remain and I cannot save you!"
+
+Paul glanced round the room. Two monks were standing with lighted
+tapers on the further side of the bed, one of whom was mumbling a
+Latin prayer. The man who had brought him here was gone. There was no
+one else in the room, except the priest and himself.
+
+"You are inhuman!" he said shortly. "The prayers of a dying woman are
+more to me than your threats. Stand on one side!"
+
+Paul laid his hand heavily upon the priest's shoulder. He was prepared
+even to have used force had it been necessary, but it was not. The
+latter moved away at once, shaking his robes free from Paul's touch
+with contemptuous gesture, and calling one of the monks to him, Paul
+sank on one knee by the side of the dying woman, and bent low down
+over her.
+
+"Madame de Merteuill, you have something to say to me!" he whispered.
+"What is it?"
+
+Her voice was very low and very faint. She was even then upon the
+threshold of death. Each word came out with a painful effort, but with
+a curious distinctness. "I am not Madame de Merteuill at all! I am the
+daughter of the Count of Cruta!"
+
+She paused to gather fresh strength, and Paul caught hold of some of
+the bedclothes, and clutched them in his fingers convulsively. This
+woman, the daughter of the Count of Cruta! this wan, faded creature,
+the girl whom his father had borne away in triumph! His brain reeled
+with the wonder of it! If only he had known a few weeks ago!
+She should never have left the Hermitage until she had told him
+everything! Was it too late now? She was trying to speak to him. Was
+he upon the brink of a tremendous revelation? Was the whole past about
+to be made clear? Oh! if the old Count would keep away for awhile.
+
+Her lips commenced to move. He bent close over her, determined not to
+lose a syllable. "You know the story about your father, Martin de Vaux
+and me. I----"
+
+"Yes, yes! I know!" he assured her softly. "I have only heard it
+lately!"
+
+"From whom?"
+
+"From the priest who was always with you at De Vaux,--from your son!"
+he added, as the truth suddenly swept in upon him. Yes; Father Adrian
+was this woman's son!
+
+Her corpse-like face was fixed steadily upon him. Her words were
+monotonous and slow, yet they preserved their distinctness. "You have
+come here to know the truth of the story he told you?"
+
+"Yes; I have come to discover it, if I can!"
+
+"The holy Saints must have brought you to me. The story----"
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"The story is false!"
+
+Paul bent lower still, with strained hearing. There had been a plot,
+then, after all. Oh, if she should die without finishing her story! He
+looked into her bloodless face, and his pulses throbbed at fever-heat.
+
+"You know my story," she murmured. "I commence at the time when I left
+your father in Paris. I had thought myself hardened in my sin; I was
+mistaken. Repentance crept slowly but surely in upon me immediately
+after my father's visit to us. His words haunted me. I began to steal
+away in the evening to vespers at the Church of St. Cecilia. One night
+a grave, sweet-faced priest stood up in the pulpit; and as his words
+sank into my heart my sin rose up before me black and grim, and the
+burden of it grew intolerable. After the service I sought him, and
+I confessed. On the morrow I left Martin secretly and without adieu.
+Count Hirsfeld aided my escape. I came here!
+
+"I came, hoping for forgiveness; but he, my father, could not forget
+the past. I found him living in grim and fierce solitude, shunned and
+dreaded by every one, ever brooding over my sin and his dishonour. He
+made me stay, yet he cursed me.
+
+"Six months after my arrival Adrian was born. It was while I lay
+between life and death that I wrote that letter to your father.
+Afterwards I told my father what I had done. The letter lay there;
+I dared not send it without my father's sanction. I sent for him and
+told him all. To my surprise, he consented. He did more than that; he
+spoke of it to Count Hirsfeld, and the Count volunteered to take the
+letter to England. Their readiness made me worried and anxious. I
+knew how they hated Martin de Vaux, and I was suspicious. I called the
+doctor to my side, and questioned him closely. He declared solemnly
+that I could not live a fortnight; it was impossible. I put my
+suspicions away. It was for the honour of his name that my father had
+consented to receive Martin beneath his roof; there could be no other
+reason. And I myself felt that the end was near. My body was cold, and
+there was a deadly faintness, against which I was always struggling. I
+dreaded only lest he should come too late!
+
+"It was only the night before his arrival that I learnt the truth. I
+was lying with my eyes closed, and they thought that I was asleep. The
+doctor and my father were talking together in whispers. The crisis
+was over, I heard them say. In a few days Adrian would be born, and I
+should speedily recover, if all went well. I nerved myself, and called
+my father to me. I had overheard, I said; if Martin came, I would
+not marry him. His anger was terrible. Both Count Hirsfeld and he had
+known from the commencement that I was likely to recover, but they
+wished to see Martin tricked into marrying me. I was firm; I would not
+consent! I had written that letter believing myself to be dying.
+If Martin came, I would not see him now. If he was forced into my
+presence, I should tell him the truth.
+
+"My father left me, speechless with rage. For the next week my door
+was kept carefully locked, and no one but the doctor and the nurse
+were permitted to enter. Yet I learnt afterwards all that happened.
+Marie, my maid, who was slowly dying of consumption, was moved into
+the principal bedchamber; and when Martin arrived, she was made to
+personate me. It was the priest who gained her consent; the priest who
+confessed her and gave her absolution. His share of the spoil was to
+be the De Vaux estates, handed over to the Church if ever they carried
+out their plot successfully. Martin came, and, as he thought, granted
+that fervent prayer of mine. They stood around him with drawn swords;
+they would not allow him to approach the bed. As soon as the ceremony
+was over, he was thrust from the castle.
+
+"It happened that in less than a week Marie died. From my bed, which
+faced the window, I saw the little funeral procession leave the
+castle--my father and Count Hirsfeld the chief mourners. I saw Martin
+following away off, with sorrowing face, and I was glad then that
+I had not deceived him. I saw him weeping over the grave which he
+believed to be mine. The day afterwards my son was born.
+
+"As soon as Adrian could crawl about, he was taken from me by the
+priests. They sent him to Italy, where he grew up a stranger to me.
+When he returned, I did not know him. I spoke to him of that false
+marriage; I wept for his lack of parentage. He knew everything; he
+spoke to me of it coldly, but without unkindness. He was a son of the
+Church, he said; he needed no other mother.
+
+"He dwelt for awhile at the monastery, and it was while he was there
+that I became suspicious. My father, and he, and the Superior of the
+monastery were always together. They seemed to be urging something
+upon him, which he was loath to undertake. By degrees I found it all
+out. Adrian was to go to England as my lawful son and claim the De
+Vaux estates for the Church. At first he was unwilling; but by degrees
+they won upon him. Warning was sent to Martin de Vaux, and he came
+here swiftly--to his death! I was kept a close prisoner, but I found
+out everything that was happening. For years afterwards, Adrian was
+undecided whether to go to England and claim the estates. At last he
+decided, unknown to me, to go. I escaped and followed him. I tried
+my best to persuade him, but failed. I came back here ill--to die--to
+die!"
+
+"And Adrea?"
+
+"Adrea? She knew nothing! How could she?"
+
+"Do you know who Adrea was?"
+
+She seemed surprised that anything else could, for a moment, occupy
+his mind after the story to which he had listened; but she struggled
+to answer him. "She was Count Hirsfeld's daughter! He never spoke to
+me of her mother! It was in Constantinople. I am afraid----"
+
+He bowed his head. "I understand," he said simply. The colour had
+suddenly flooded into his cheeks, and there was a mist before his
+eyes. Even in that supreme moment, when her senses were failing and
+her eyes were growing dim, she saw and understood.
+
+"I wanted to be kind to her always," she faltered. "We would have
+adopted her, but she would not stay here. She was unhappy, and I
+helped her to escape. I had my reasons!"
+
+He had already guessed at them, and he held out his hand. He did not
+wish to hear any more. There was a moment's silence. She was looking
+at him with dim, wistful eyes.
+
+"You--you are very like your father!" she said, painfully. "Will you
+kiss me?"
+
+He stooped down and kissed the pale, trembling lips, and held
+her hands tightly. Her breath was coming fast, and she spoke with
+difficulty.
+
+"Thank God they brought you here instead of the doctor! I can die--at
+peace now! But you--you are in danger! You must escape from here!
+You must not lose a minute! Oh, you do not know! you do not know! The
+Count is cruel--bitterly cruel! He will not come to me although I die.
+He will not forgive, although I have suffered agonies! He is my father
+but he will not forgive me. And you--you are in danger if he finds
+you! They have gone for him! Ah! I remember! Father Andrew went for
+him! He is afraid that I shall tell you the truth, and that the Church
+will not gain your property. Quick! you must go! Kiss me once more,
+Paul, and go! Go quickly! These monks are wolves, but they are
+cowards! Strike them down if they try to stop you! Don't hurt my
+father! Farewell! farewell!"
+
+"I will stay with you till the end," Paul whispered.
+
+"No, no! away! I cannot die in peace and think of you--in danger. I
+want to pray. Leave me, now, Paul. Dear Martin! Martin, my love--is it
+you?"
+
+Her mind was wandering, and she saw her lover of old days in the man
+whose hand she clasped so frantically; and Paul, although out in
+the passage he could hear the sound of hurrying feet, could not
+tear himself away from her dying embrace. A faint, curious smile was
+parting her pallid lips, and her dim eyes seemed suddenly to have
+caught a dim reflection of the light to come.
+
+"Martin! Martin! there is a mist everywhere--but I see you, dear love!
+Wait for me! Let us go hand in hand--hand in hand through the Valley
+of the Shadow of Death. Oh, my love! it has been a weary, weary while.
+Hold me tighter, Martin! I cannot feel your hand! Ah! at last, at
+last! Farewell sorrow, and grief, and suffering! We are together once
+more--a new world--behind the clouds! I am happy."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+"FROM OUT LIFE'S THUNDERS TO A STRANGE, SWEET WORLD"
+
+
+She was dead, and, after all, her end had been crowned with peace.
+She did not hear the door thrown roughly open, the swelling of angry
+voices, or the fast-approaching tramp of many feet. Nor did Paul heed
+any of these signs of coming danger; he had folded his strong arms
+around her, and his lips, pressed close to her, seemed to draw the
+last quivering breath from her frail body. It was only when her head
+sunk back, and he knew that she was dead, that he laid her reverently
+down and turned around.
+
+The room was full of strange flashes of light and grotesque shadows
+falling upon the white faces of half a dozen monks. Standing in front
+of them was Father Andrew, and by his side was an old man, tall and
+straight, with snow-white beard and hair. He stood in full glare of
+a torch held by one of the monks behind him, and his face seemed like
+the face of a corpse, save for the steady, malignant light in his
+jet-black eyes. As Paul turned round, with his features suddenly
+visible in a stream of lurid light, he raised his arm and pointed a
+long, skinny finger steadily towards him.
+
+"The son of the devil!" he cried, his deep, tremulous voice awakening
+strange echoes in the high vaulted chamber. "Welcome! Welcome! Thrice
+welcome!"
+
+Paul straightened himself, and reverently laid the little white hand
+which he had been clasping across the coverlet. "She is dead!" he said
+solemnly. "What I came here to learn from you, I have learnt from her.
+Let me go!"
+
+He moved a step forward, but the old man remained there in the way,
+motionless, and around the door were gathered a solid phalanx of
+monks. Paul halted, conscious at once of his danger. The white faces
+of the monks were all bent upon him, full of savage, animal ferocity,
+and a gleam of something still worse lit up the dark eyes of that old
+man. Their very silence was unnatural and oppressive. Paul bore it,
+looking round amongst them with questioning eyes, until he could bear
+it no longer.
+
+"Am I a prisoner?" he cried. "What do you want with me? Speak! some of
+you! Count of Cruta, answer me!"
+
+A dull, hollow laugh echoed through the chamber. Paul turned away,
+sick with horror. It was like being in the power of a hoard of madmen.
+The air of the place, too, seemed suddenly to have become stifling.
+The perspiration was standing out upon his forehead in great beads. It
+was a relief when the Count spoke.
+
+"You have done well, Paul de Vaux, to find your way here--here
+into the very presence of a dying woman, and force from her lips a
+confession that has made you glad. You think that you will go back now
+to your country, and cheat me of my well-planned vengeance. You will
+hold up your head once more; you will mock at the Church's rights. You
+will go your way through the world rich and honoured; you will call
+yourself by an old name. You will pluck all the roses of life. Worthy
+son of a worthy father! Look at me! Who was it who blasted my life, my
+happiness, my honour, my name? A name grander and older than his, as
+the oak is older and grander than the currant bush. When he took my
+daughter into his arms, he wrote the funeral of his race! I played
+with him, as a tiger plays with a miserable Hindoo! When life was
+sweetest to him, I struck. He came here for mercy; I laughed, and I
+was merciful. I stabbed him to the heart. The knife hangs side by side
+with the arms of the Crusaders of Cruta. You are his son! You are the
+next to die! You will not leave these walls alive! These monks know
+you! It is you who hold the lands of De Vaux, which by right belong to
+their Holy Church. You would go back to resist their just claims! The
+good of the Church demands that you should not go back! You shall not
+go back! The Count of Cruta demands that you shall not go back. You
+shall not go back! You shall be slain, even where your father was
+slain, but you shall not creep back to your hole to die! Your bones
+shall whiten and shrivel upon the rocks. Your blood shall be an
+honoured stain upon my floor. Monks of Cruta! there he stands! He who
+alone can resist your just possession of the broad lands and abbey
+of De Vaux. The despoiled Church cries to you to strike. The end is
+great! Haul him away!"
+
+They were around him like a pack of wolves, their lean faces hungry
+and fierce, and their long, skinny fingers clutching at his throat and
+at his clothing. One silently drew a knife and brandished it over him.
+Paul wrenched himself free with a tremendous effort, but they were
+upon him again. They forced him slowly backwards, backwards even
+across the bed where that dead woman lay with her eyes as yet
+unclosed. The great heat, as much as their numbers, was overpowering
+him. His eyes were bloodshot, and there was a choking in his throat.
+Again the long knife was lifted; other hands held him motionless,
+ready for the blow. He was too weak to struggle now. He saw the blue
+steel quivering in the air. Then he closed his eyes.
+
+What was that? There was a shrill cry from one of the monks, and Paul,
+finding their grasp relaxed, started up. They were cowering down like
+a flock of frightened animals. The room seemed full of red fire. The
+glass in the windows cracked; it flew into pieces, and a column of
+smoke curled in. The door was thrown open; Guiseppe stood for a moment
+on the threshold.
+
+"Fly!" he cried. "Fly! The castle is on fire. The flames are near!"
+
+They rushed for the door like panic-stricken cattle before a great
+prairie fire, biting and trampling upon one another in their haste.
+Paul followed, but the old Count stood in his way, trembling, not with
+fear, but with anger.
+
+"Cowards! beasts!" he cried after the flying monks. "But you shall not
+escape me!"
+
+He wound his long arms around his enemy, but the strength of his
+manhood was gone, and without effort Paul threw him on one side. Then,
+through the smoke, he found himself face to face with Guiseppe.
+
+"This way, Signor!" he said coolly. "Follow me closely!"
+
+The old Count was up again, and seemed about to attack them. Suddenly
+he changed his mind, and with a hoarse cry, ran down an empty
+corridor. Guiseppe and Paul turned in the opposite direction.
+
+"We must fly, Signor!" the man cried. "He goes to the cellars! He is a
+devil! He will blow up the castle! Cover up your nose and your mouth!"
+
+They hurried along wide, deserted corridors, down stone stairs, and
+finally reached what seemed to be a circular underground passage.
+Round and round they went, until Paul's head swam; but the air was
+cooler, and every moment brought relief. Suddenly there was a cold
+breeze. They turned one more corner, and Guiseppe stopped. They were
+in an open aperture facing the sea, barely twenty feet below. A small
+boat with a single man in it was there waiting.
+
+"Dive!" cried Guiseppe. "We must not wait for the rope!"
+
+Over they went almost simultaneously. The shock of the cold water
+sent the blood dancing once more through Paul's veins. He came to the
+surface just after his guide, cool and refreshed. They scrambled into
+the boat, and Paul gave a little cry of wonder. They were drifting on
+a sea of ruddy gold, and the space all around them was brilliant with
+the reflection. High above, the flames were leaping up towards the
+sky, and the dull sing-song of their roar set the very air vibrating.
+Guiseppe, still dripping, seized an oar.
+
+"Pull, for your lives! pull!" he cried anxiously.
+
+His companion shrugged his shoulders. "But why?"
+
+"Ask no questions! You will see!"
+
+They did see. They were barely half-way to the yacht, when there came
+the sound of a low rumbling from the castle. Suddenly it broke into a
+roar. Belching sheets of flame burst out on every side. Huge cracks in
+that brilliant light were suddenly visible in the walls, creeping in a
+jagged line from the foundation to the turret. Fragments of the
+stone work flew outwards and upwards. It seemed as though some mighty
+internal force were splitting the place up. The men in the boat sat
+breathless and transfixed. Only Guiseppe whispered: "It is the old
+Count! He is the devil! He has blown the place up!"
+
+There was another, and then a series of explosions. Fragments of the
+rock and stone fell hissing into the water scarcely a hundred feet
+away. Great waves rolled towards them. It seemed as though the earth
+underneath were shaking. Then it all died away, and there was silence.
+Only the blackened walls of the castle remained, with the dying flames
+still curling fitfully around them. The air grew darker, and the
+colour faded from the sea.
+
+"It is the last of the Count of Cruta, and his castle of horrors!"
+cried Guiseppe. "God be thanked!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+"LOVE THAN DEATH ITSELF MORE STRONG"
+
+
+I had no thought of writing in you again, my silent friend. Only a
+little while ago I said to myself, the time has gone by when solitude
+and heart hunger could drive me to your pages for consolation. Only a
+little while ago, it is true; and yet between the past and future is
+fixed a mighty gulf. As I write these words I stand upon the threshold
+of death! What death may mean, I know not! I have no religion to throw
+bright gleams of hope upon its dark mysteries. I have no hope of any
+other life, save the one I am quitting! If I am resigned and calm, it
+is because the lamp of my life has burnt out, and I am in darkness. I
+wait for death as a maiden waits for the first gleams of dawn on her
+marriage day.
+
+Who said that love was everlasting? They lied! Love is a dream, a
+floating shadow full of golden lights, quenched by the first breath of
+morning! Who should know, if I do not know? Who has done more for love
+than I--I whose hands are red with blood, I who this night must die?
+It was for his sake, I struck--for his sake! and now that the hour of
+my punishment must come, I sit here alone and forsaken, waiting for
+the signal which must end my life! It was for his sake! A death-white
+face rises up before me, and a hoarse, dying cry sobs ever in my ears!
+I pass on my way through the Valley of the Shadow of Death with no
+hope to cheer me, forsaken, friendless, and shaken with dim fears!
+Am I alone! He for whom I struck has turned from me. Oh, the bitter
+cruelty of it! It was he who taught me what love was, and yet of love
+he knows nothing, else I would not be here to meet my doom alone!
+Oh! Paul, Paul! Oh, for one touch of your hand, for one kind look! My
+heart is sick and faint with longing! Am I indeed so low and vile a
+thing that you should turn away with never a single word of farewell?
+O! my love, you are hard indeed! If my hands are stained with
+blood--for whose sake was it? It was only a word I craved for, Paul!
+Only a word--a look, even! Was it too great a boon to grant?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Oh, memory! help me, help me to keep sane just a few more hours--until
+the end comes. It is a last luxury! I will think of those golden days
+we spent together ere the blow fell. Ah! how happy we were! Every
+breath of life was sweet; every moment seemed charged with the
+delicious happiness! The past, with its haunting shadows, and the
+memory of that grim, deathly figure huddled up amongst the ferns
+in the bare pine wood had perished. Background and foreground had
+vanished in the bewildering joys of the present. Oh! Paul, that was
+happiness, indeed. All measures of outside things seemed lost! At
+times I found it hard to recollect in what country we were! Oh! the
+world, such as ours was, is a sweet, sweet world!
+
+At last the blow fell. He came to me one morning, as white as a sheet,
+with an old, soiled copy of the Times in his hand.
+
+"Read, Adrea," he cried, thrusting it into my hand. "A horrible thing
+has happened!"
+
+I let the paper fall through my fingers. An agony of fear was upon me.
+"I know! I know! Do not ask me to read it."
+
+"You knew, and you did not tell me!"
+
+"No! I--no!"
+
+There was a deadly swimming before my eyes, and a throbbing in my
+ears. I sank back, grateful for the unconsciousness which gave me
+respite, however short. When recovered, I was on the verge of a fever;
+and Paul, seeing my condition, did not refer to the news which had
+been such a shock to him. But for an hour the next day he was away
+from me, writing letters home. When he returned there was a restraint
+between us. He was kind as ever, but restless and unsettled. As yet he
+had no suspicion, but I could see that he was longing to get back to
+England.... The thought was like madness to me.
+
+Then came the beginning of the end. We were staying in a villa which
+we had rented for a month near Florence, and one day we drove into the
+city together to do some shopping. Paul was at the post-office, and I
+was crossing the square to go to him, when of a sudden I felt a hand
+upon my dress, and a hoarse whisper in my ear. I started round in
+terror. A man, pale and hollow-eyed, stood by my side. It was Gomez!
+
+"Listen quickly!" he said. "I must not stay by your side! You are in
+danger! The English police are upon your track!"
+
+I caught hold of the railing to prevent myself from falling. Above my
+head, a little flock of pigeons lazily flapped their wings against the
+deep blue sky. All around, the sunlit air was full of laughing voices,
+and gaily dressed crowds of people were passing backwards and forwards
+only a few yards away. Already, one or two were glancing in
+my direction curiously. In a moment Paul would come out of the
+post-office, looking for me. I made a great effort, and steadied
+myself.
+
+"Tell me! What can I do?"
+
+He answered me quickly, keeping his back turned to the stream of
+people. "You must fly! It may be already too late, but in twenty-four
+hours you will certainly be arrested if you are in Florence. I have
+travelled night and day to find you. The holy saints grant that it may
+not be too late. Call yourself by a strange name; and if Paul de Vaux
+be with you, see that he alters his also. There are already two of the
+detectives in Florence searching for you. A third, with a warrant,
+may be here at any time. Get to the furthest corner of the world, for
+everything is known. Farewell!"
+
+He left me abruptly; and although I felt that my doom had been spoken,
+I walked firmly across the square to meet Paul. I would tell him
+everything. He should be my judge. My love should plead for me! It
+would triumph; yes! it would triumph! I was convinced of it! As for
+the danger I was in, I thought less of that.
+
+On the steps of the postoffice I met Paul. He held in his hand a
+bundle of papers, one of which he had opened, and, as he raised his
+head and looked at me, I saw that what I had dreaded had come to pass.
+He looked like a man stricken down by some sudden and terrible blow.
+He was white even to the lips, and a strange light burned in his eyes.
+
+He laid his hand upon my arm. Was it my fancy, or did he really recoil
+a little as he touched me? "Let us go home!" he said hoarsely. "I
+have--something to say to you!"
+
+We entered the carriage, which was waiting near, and drove off. We
+came together into this room. It was barely two hours ago. He closed
+the door and turned towards me. I did not wait for his question. I
+told him everything!
+
+Ah me! I had thought that love was a different thing. I had sinned,
+it is true, but he was not my judge. So I commenced, humbled and
+sorrowful indeed, but with no fear of what was before me. But
+gradually, as I watched his face, a cold, ghastly dread crept in upon
+me. What did it mean--that blank look of horror, his quiet withdrawal
+from the only caress I attempted? I finished--abruptly--and called out
+to him piteously,--
+
+"Paul! Paul! Why do you turn away? Oh! kiss me, Paul! It was horrible,
+but it was to save you!"
+
+He did not answer; he did not hold out his arms, or make any movement
+towards me. I touched his arm; and oh! horrible! he shuddered. I crept
+away into a corner of the room, with a strange, burning pain in my
+heart.
+
+"How long is it, since you saw Gomez?" he asked, and his voice,
+strained, yet low, seemed to come from a far distance.
+
+"An hour!--perhaps more--I cannot tell!"
+
+He stood before the door like a ghost. "I must go and try to find him!
+Forgive me, Adrea! I cannot talk now! I will come back!"
+
+So he left me. I have not seen him since! God only knows whether I
+shall see him again! My heart is torn with the agony of it! I cannot
+bear it any longer! If he is not here in half an hour I shall end it!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He has not come! Ten minutes more!
+
+Five minutes!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is done; I have taken poison! In half an hour I shall be dead! Oh!
+Paul, my love, my love, come to me! If I could only die in your
+arms, if I could only feel once more your kisses upon my lips! It is
+horrible to die alone! Already I feel weaker! Oh! if there be a God
+in heaven, send me Paul just for one last moment! I do not ask for
+forgiveness or pardon, only send me Paul! I am afraid to die alone!
+Never to see him again! Oh! I shall cry out! Paul! Paul! come to me! I
+do not ask for heaven, only to die in his arms, to----
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There were sounds upon the stairs, and in the hall; the sounds of a
+man's quick entrance and approach. Adrea, with that passionate
+prayer still quivering upon her lips, dragged herself to the door and
+listened. A moment's agonised apprehension, and then she staggered
+back, faint with joy. The door was opened, and quickly closed; Paul
+stood before her.
+
+"Oh! my love! my love," she murmured. "Take me in your arms! It is for
+the last time!"
+
+He moved to her side, and supported her. "Adrea," he said quietly, "I
+want you to change your things quickly, and come with me. There is
+a carriage at the door, and I have chartered a steamer to take us to
+Genoa. From there we can sail to-morrow for New York. Gomez was right;
+you are in danger here! Be brave, little woman, and all will be well!"
+
+She clung to him passionately, with her arms locked around his neck,
+and her wet face close to his. Only a confused sense of his words
+reached her. His tone and his embrace were sufficient.
+
+"And you?"
+
+"I go with you, of course! We shall begin a new life in a new world!
+Come! We have no time to lose!"
+
+"A new life in a new world." She repeated the words dreamily, still
+holding him to her. Then a sudden dizziness came. It passed away, but
+it reminded her that the end could not be far off.
+
+"Adrea, do you not understand? How cold your lips are! Try and bear
+up, love! We have a long journey before us!"
+
+She shook her head slowly. He began to notice that she was like a dead
+weight in his arms.
+
+"It is a long journey, love, but I go alone. You cannot come, Paul!
+Yet I am not afraid, now that you are here!"
+
+"Adrea! what do you mean? I will not leave you! Have courage! Adrea!
+Soon we shall leave all dangers behind us!"
+
+"Paul! do you not understand? I am dying!"
+
+Dying! He looked at her face, calm and even smiling, but terribly
+blanched and white, and he saw the empty phial upon the table. The
+whole truth swept in upon him. He staggered and almost fell with her.
+
+"It is best so," she whispered. "I only minded when--I thought that
+you might not be back in time. I am quite--content now!"
+
+"A doctor!" he cried hoarsely. "I must fetch a doctor! Adrea----"
+
+"Please don't!" she interrupted. "Long before he could come--I should
+be dead. It is so much better! Did you think, Paul, that I could have
+you--tied for life--to a poor, hunted woman--forced to live always
+in a foreign country? Oh! no, no! I have had this poison by me ever
+since--in case--anything happened. Paul, carry me--to the sofa! There
+is--no pain--but I am getting weaker--very weak. My eyes are a little
+dim, too--but I can see you--Paul!"
+
+He obeyed her, and sank on his knees, with his arms still around her.
+It seemed to him that she had never been so lovely as in those last
+few minutes of her life. It was wonderful to see her resigned as she
+was.
+
+There was a brief silence, broken only by a sharp, convulsed sob from
+the kneeling man. Adrea, who heard it, stretched out her hand, and
+passed it caressingly along the side of his face. He caught it and
+covered it with kisses.
+
+"Paul, we have been happy together, have we not?"
+
+"My darling, you know it!"
+
+She raised herself a little, and spoke earnestly. "For me--it has been
+like heaven--and yet I am not sure--that it would have lasted.
+You would have wearied soon! My nature is too light a one to have
+satisfied you always. I have felt it! I--I know it!"
+
+She paused, struggling for breath. He did not answer her. He only
+held her tighter, and whispered her name lovingly. In a moment she
+re-opened her eyes.
+
+"So--it is best--" she continued, with a little more effort. "Paul,
+things seem all so clear--to me now! I think of you in the future--it
+must be a happy future, Paul--I know it will! I see you the master of
+that grand old home of yours, up amongst the moors you love so much.
+I can see you there in the future, living your quiet, country
+life--always the same, honourable and just. I like to think of you
+there--it is so natural. I want you--to forget--these days then!
+Remember that it was--I--who--came to you, Paul! You had no--choice.
+I would come. If there has been--any sin--it has been--mine only. You
+were far above--poor me! I have dragged you down--a little way--but
+you will go back again! You will marry--some one good and worthy of
+you. It is my--last wish! God bless you, Paul, dear--dear, Paul. I
+think that I am--going now--kiss me!"
+
+"My love! My love! Oh! that you could live to be happy with me once
+more!"
+
+"There are steps upon the stairs--I think--but they come--too late!
+The book on the table--take it! It will--tell you--what you do not
+know--of my life! Farewell! Sister Elise! Is that you? Ah! back
+once more--in the old convent garden! How sweet--and gentle--the air
+is--and what perfumes! You here, Paul! You too! How dim your face
+seems--and yet--how happy it makes me--to see it. Dear Paul! we have
+been--so happy! Farewell!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There were strangers in the room, but they came too late. They found
+only the corpse of a woman, whose dead lips were parted in a strangely
+sweet smile, and a strong man who had swooned by her side in the utter
+abandonment of his grief. The hand of human justice had been stayed by
+God's mercy!
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+DO YOU LIKE MENTAL SURPRISES?
+
+Things that make your eyes open wider, and cause you to assume a
+changed position, so that you can continue your reading without
+tiring? Sustained excitement and strange scenes that compel you to
+read on page after page with unflagging interest? Something that lifts
+you out of your world of care and business, and transports you to
+another land, clime, and scenes? Yes? Then don't fail to read
+
+THE
+
+MYSTERY OF THE RAVENSPURS
+
+BY FRED M. WHITE
+
+the best book written by this popular author, since his "Crimson
+Blind" and "Corner House," which met with such tremendous success.
+
+It is a romantic tale of adventure, mystery and amateur detective
+work, with scenes laid in England, India, and the distant and
+comparatively unknown Thibet. A band of mystics from the latter
+country are the prime movers in the various conspiracies, and their
+new, unique, weird, strange methods form one of the features of the
+story.
+
+The book contains 320 pages, with four full-page illustrations and
+wrapper design in colors by DE TAKACS, handsomely bound in cloth.
+
+PRICE, $1.25, NET. BY MAIL, POSTPAID, $1.35.
+
+WE HEARTILY RECOMMEND THIS BOOK.
+
+FOR SALE WHEREVER BOOKS ARE SOLD.
+
+J. S. OGILVIE PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+57 Rose Street, New York
+
+
+
+
+OGILVIE'S POPULAR COPYRIGHT LINE
+
+
+THE PEER AND THE WOMAN
+
+BY E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM
+
+AUTHOR OF "A MONK OF CRUTA," "THE MISSIONER," ETC.
+
+_One of the Most Popular Authors of the present day._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A story of romance, mystery, and adventure, in which, as in many
+mystery stories, there is the adventuress, with whom, for some reason,
+the peer, notwithstanding his breeding and social position, becomes
+entangled, until he is mysteriously put out of the way. From this
+point on complication and adventure succeed each other in rapid
+succession, holding the reader in rapt fascination until the end
+of the story is reached, where the plots of love and mysterious
+disappearances are surprisingly unfolded.
+
+This story has been written in Mr. Oppenheim's most entertaining and
+interesting style, and will be appreciated by all lovers of the class
+of fiction which has made him famous.
+
+_A Wonderful Story of Mystery._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bound in cloth, handsomely stamped in colors.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SENT BY MAIL, POSTAGE PAID, FOR 75 CENTS.
+
+You can buy this at any bookstore or direct from us.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+J. S. OGILVIE PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+57 Rose Street, New York
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's A Monk of Cruta, by E. Phillips Oppenheim
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MONK OF CRUTA ***
+
+***** This file should be named 31535-8.txt or 31535-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/1/5/3/31535/
+
+Produced by Alcina Hadwin, Suzanne Shell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/31535-8.zip b/31535-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b8905e8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/31535-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/31535-h.zip b/31535-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4bcfdec
--- /dev/null
+++ b/31535-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/31535-h/31535-h.htm b/31535-h/31535-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..65441b6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/31535-h/31535-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,10753 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+<head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" />
+
+ <title>A Monk of Cruta by E. Phillips Oppenheim.</title>
+
+ <style type="text/css">
+ <!--
+ body {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ p {text-align: justify;}
+ blockquote {text-align: justify;}
+ h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 {text-align: center;}
+ pre {font-size: 0.7em;}
+
+ hr {text-align: center; width: 50%;}
+ html>body hr {margin-right: 25%; margin-left: 25%; width: 50%;}
+ hr.full {width: 100%;}
+ html>body hr.full {margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 0%; width: 100%;}
+ hr.short {text-align: center; width: 20%;}
+ html>body hr.short {margin-right: 40%; margin-left: 40%; width: 20%;}
+
+
+
+ span.pagenum
+ {position: absolute; left: 1%; right: 91%; font-size: 8pt;}
+
+ .poem
+ {margin-left:10%; margin-right:10%; margin-bottom: 1em; text-align: left;}
+ .poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;}
+ .poem p {margin: 0; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem p.i2 {margin-left: 1em;}
+ .poem p.i4 {margin-left: 2em;}
+ .poem p.i6 {margin-left: 3em;}
+ .poem p.i8 {margin-left: 4em;}
+ .poem p.i10 {margin-left: 5em;}
+
+ .figure, .figcenter, .figright, .figleft
+ {padding: 1em; margin: 0; text-align: center; font-size: 0.8em;}
+ .figure img, .figcenter img, .figright img, .figleft img
+ {border: none;}
+ .figure p, .figcenter p, .figright p, .figleft p
+ {margin: 0; text-indent: 1em;}
+ .figcenter {margin: auto;}
+
+
+
+ div.trans-note {border-style: solid; border-width: 1px;
+ margin: 2em 15%; padding: 1em; text-align: center;}
+
+ .author {text-align: right; margin-right: 20%;}
+ .author2 {text-align: right; margin-right: 30%;}
+ -->
+ </style>
+</head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Monk of Cruta, by E. Phillips Oppenheim
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Monk of Cruta
+
+Author: E. Phillips Oppenheim
+
+Release Date: March 7, 2010 [EBook #31535]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MONK OF CRUTA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Alcina Hadwin, Suzanne Shell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <div class="trans-note">
+ Transcriber's Note: All typographical errors have been
+corrected. All other inconsistencies in the text, including an
+unfinished sentence on page <a href="#page117">117</a>, have been left as is.
+ </div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width:60%;"><a href="images/cover.jpg"><img width="60%" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Book cover" /></a> </div>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+<h1>A Monk of Cruta</h1>
+
+<h2>BY</h2>
+
+<h2>E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM,</h2>
+
+<p><i>Author of "The Peer and the Woman," "A Millionaire
+of Yesterday," Etc., Etc.</i></p>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>NEW YORK:</p>
+<p>J. S. OGILVIE PUBLISHING COMPANY,</p>
+<p>57 ROSE STREET.</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>COPYRIGHT, 1894, BY</p>
+<p>F. TENNYSON NEELY.</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+
+
+
+<h1>A Monk of Cruta.</h1>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>CHAP. </p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2"> I. "THE BLACK-ROBED PHANTOM, DEATH" <a href="#page11">11</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">II. "THE NEW ART" <a href="#page32">32</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2"> III. "THE DANCING GIRL" <a href="#page39">39</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">IV. "ADREA'S DIARY" <a href="#page47">47</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2"> V. "THE FAR-OFF MUTTERING OF THE STORM TO COME" <a href="#page50">50</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">VI. "AN ASHEN GREY DELIGHT" <a href="#page61">61</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2"> VII. "WHO ARE YOU, AND WHAT YOUR MISSION" <a href="#page73">73</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">VIII. "I AM WEARY OF A HOPELESS LOVE" <a href="#page80">80</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">IX. "AH! HOW FAIR MY WEAKNESS FINDS THEE" <a href="#page91">91</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2"> X. "I AM BUT A SLAVE, AND YET I BID THEE COME" <a href="#page104">104</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XI. "ADREA'S DIARY" <a href="#page114">114</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2"> XII. "WE ARE LIKE SHOOTING STARS, WHOSE MEETING IS THEIR RUIN" <a href="#page122">122</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XIII. "THE PATH THAT LEADS TO MADMEN'S KINGDOMS" <a href="#page129">129</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2"> XIV. "THE POISON OF HONEY FLOWERS" <a href="#page136">136</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XV. "AND MOST OF ALL WOULD I FLY FROM THE CRUEL MADNESS OF LOVE" <a href="#page144">144</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2"> XVI. "'TWIXT YOU AND ME A NOISOME SHADOW CAST" <a href="#page154">154</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XVII. "IF LOVE YOU CHOOSE, THEN LOVE SHALL BE YOUR RUIN" <a href="#page159">159</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XVIII. "SOFTLY GLIMMERING THROUGH THE LAURELS AT THE QUIET EVENFALL" <a href="#page166">166</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2"> XIX. "BLOOD CALLS ALOUD FOR BLOOD AND NOT FOR HANDS ENTWINED" <a href="#page174">174</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XX. "THE NEW, STRONG WINE OF LOVE" <a href="#page180">180</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2"> XXI. "ADREA'S DIARY" <a href="#page185">185</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XXII. "OH! HEART OF STONE, YET FLESH TO ALL SAVE ME" <a href="#page195">195</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XXIII. "MY LIPS ARE CHARGED WITH TRUTH, AND JUSTICE BIDS ME SPEAK" <a href="#page206">206</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XXIV. "THE SHATTERED VASE OF LOVE'S MOST HOLY VOWS" <a href="#page218">218</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2"> XXV. "A BECKONING VOICE FROM OUT A SHADOWY LAND" <a href="#page224">224</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XXVI. "LATE THOU COMEST, CRUEL THOU HAST BEEN" <a href="#page232">232</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XXVII. "GRIM FIGURES TRACED BY SORROW'S FIERY HAND" <a href="#page241">241</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XXVIII. "ADREA'S DIARY" <a href="#page249">249</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XXIX. "ADREA'S DIARY" <a href="#page263">263</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2"> XXX. "ADREA'S DIARY" <a href="#page275">275</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XXXI. "ADREA'S DIARY" <a href="#page280">280</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XXXII. "THE LORD OF CRUTA" <a href="#page291">291</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XXXIII. "THE DAWN OF A SHORT, SWEET LIFE" <a href="#page298">298</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XXXIV. "A VOICE AND FIGURE FROM THE DISTANT PAST" <a href="#page308">308</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XXXV. "FROM OUT LIFE'S THUNDERS TO A STRANGE, SWEET WORLD" <a href="#page322">322</a></p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">XXXVI. "LOVE THAN DEATH ITSELF MORE STRONG" <a href="#page329">329</a></p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page11" id="page11"></a>[pg 11]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h1>A MONK OF CRUTA.</h1>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<h3>"THE BLACK-ROBED PHANTOM 'DEATH'"</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Father Adrian!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am here!"</p>
+
+<p>"I saw the doctor talking with you aside! How
+long have I to live? He told you the truth! Repeat
+his words to me!"</p>
+
+<p>The tall, gaunt young priest drew nearer to the bedside,
+and shook his head with a slow, pitying gesture.</p>
+
+<p>"The time was short&mdash;short indeed. Yet, why
+should you fear? Your confession has been made! I
+myself have pronounced your absolution; the holy
+Church has granted to you her most holy sacrament."</p>
+
+<p>"Fear! Bah! I have no fear! It is a matter of
+calculation. Shall I see morning break?"</p>
+
+<p>"You may; but you will never see the mid-day
+sun."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page12" id="page12"></a>[pg 12]</span>
+
+<p>The dying man raised himself with a slow, painful
+movement, and pointed to the window.</p>
+
+<p>"Throw up the window."</p>
+
+<p>He was obeyed. A servant who had been sitting
+quietly in the shadows of the vast apartment, with his
+head buried in his hands, rose and did his master's
+bidding.</p>
+
+<p>"What hour is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Three o'clock."</p>
+
+<p>"Gomez, strain your eyes seaward. Is there no
+light on the horizon?"</p>
+
+<p>"None! The storm has wrapped the earth in darkness.
+Listen!"</p>
+
+<p>A torrent of rain was swept against the streaming
+window pane, and a gust of wind shook the frame in
+its sockets. The watcher turned away from the window
+with a mute gesture of despair. No eye could
+pierce that black chaos. He sank again into his seat,
+and looked around shuddering. The high, vaulted
+chamber was lit by a pair of candles only, leaving the
+greater part of it in gloom. Grim, fantastic shadows
+lurked in the corners, and lay across the bare floor.
+Even the tall figure of the priest, on his knees before
+a rude wooden crucifix, seemed weird and ghostly.
+The heavy, mildewed bed-hangings shook and trembled
+in the draughts which filled the room, and the candles
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page13" id="page13"></a>[pg 13]</span>
+flickered and burnt low in their sockets. Gomez
+watched them with a sort of anxious fascination. His
+master's life was burning out, minute for minute, with
+those candles. Twenty-five years of constant companionship
+would be ended in a few brief hours. Gomez
+was not disposed to trouble much at this; but he bethought
+himself of a snug little abode in Piccadilly,
+where the discomforts now surrounding them were
+quite unknown. Surely, to die there would be a luxury
+compared with this. He began to feel personally
+aggrieved that his master should have chosen such an
+out-of-the-way hole to end his days in. Then came a
+rush of thought, and he was grave. He knew why!
+Yes! he knew why!</p>
+
+<p>The dying man lay quite still, almost as though his
+time were already come. Once he raised himself, and
+the feeble light flashed across a grey, haggard face
+and a pair of burning eyes. But his effort was only
+momentary. He sank back again, and lay there with
+his eyes half closed, and breathing softly. He was
+nursing his strength.</p>
+
+<p>One, two, three, four, five! The harsh clanging of
+a brazen clock somewhere in the building had penetrated
+to the chamber, followed by a deep, resonant
+bell. The man on the bed lifted his head.</p>
+
+<p>"How goes the storm?" he asked softly.</p>
+
+<p>Gomez stood up and faced the window.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page14" id="page14"></a>[pg 14]</span>
+
+<p>"The storm dies with the night, sir," he answered.
+"The wind has fallen."</p>
+
+<p>"When does day break?"</p>
+
+<p>Gomez looked at his watch.</p>
+
+<p>"In one hour, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Stay by the window, Gomez, and let your eyes
+watch for the dawn."</p>
+
+<p>The priest frowned. "Surely the time has come
+when you should quit your hold on earthly things," he
+said quietly. "What matters the dawn! soon you will
+lose yourself in an everlasting sleep, and the dawn for
+you will be eternity. Take this crucifix, and pray with
+me."</p>
+
+<p>The dying man pushed it away with a gesture
+almost contemptuous.</p>
+
+<p>"Is there no light on the sea yet, Gomez?" he asked
+anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>Gomez leant forward till his face touched the window
+pane. He strained his eyes till they ached; but
+the darkness was impenetrable. Yet stay,&mdash;what was
+that? A feeble yellow light was glimmering far away
+in the heart of that great gulf of darkness. He held
+his breath, and watched it steadily. Then he turned
+round.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a light in the far distance, sir," he said.
+"I cannot tell what it may be, but there is a light."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page15" id="page15"></a>[pg 15]</span>
+
+<p>A wave of excitement passed over the strong, wasted
+features of the man upon the bed. He half raised himself,
+and his voice was almost firm.</p>
+
+<p>"Push my bed to the window," he ordered.</p>
+
+<p>The two men, priest and servant, bent all their
+strength to the task, and inch by inch they moved the
+great, creaking structure. When at last they had succeeded,
+and paused to take breath, the light in the distance
+had become stronger and more apparent. Together
+the three men watched it grow; master and
+servant, with breathless eagerness, the priest with a
+show of displeasure in his severe face. Suddenly
+Gomez gave a little cry.</p>
+
+<p>"The dawn!" he exclaimed, pointing to the north
+of the light. "Morning is breaking."</p>
+
+<p>Sure enough, a grey, pallid light was stealing down
+upon the water. The darkness was becoming a chaos
+of grey and black; of towering seas and low-lying
+clouds, with cold white streaks of light falling through
+them, and piercing the curtains of night. There was
+no vestige of colouring&mdash;nothing but cold grey and
+slate white. Yet the dawn moved on, and through
+it the yellow light in the distance gleamed larger and
+larger.</p>
+
+<p>"Hold me up," ordered the man on the bed.
+"Prop me up with pillows!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page16" id="page16"></a>[pg 16]</span>
+
+<p>They did as he bade them, and for the first time his
+face was fully revealed in the straggling twilight. A
+flowing grey beard, still plentifully streaked with
+black, rested upon his chest; and the eyes, steadily
+fixed upon the window pane, were dark and undimmed.
+A long illness had wasted his fine features, but had detracted
+nothing from their strength and regularity of
+outline. His lips were closely set, and his expression,
+though painfully eager, was not otherwise displeasing.
+There was none of the fear of death there; nor was
+there anything of the passionless resignation of the man
+who has bidden farewell to life, and made his peace
+with God and man; nor, in those moments of watching,
+had his face any of the physical signs of approaching
+death.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!"</p>
+
+<p>They started at the sharp, almost triumphant exclamation
+which had escaped from his white lips, and
+followed his long, quivering finger. Above that glimmering
+light was a faint, dim line of smoke, fading on
+the horizon.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a steamer, indeed," the priest said, with
+some interest. "She is making for the island."</p>
+
+<p>"When is the supply boat due?" Gomez asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Not for a fortnight," the priest answered; "it is
+not she, it is a stranger."</p>
+
+<p>There was no other word spoken. Soon the dawn,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page17" id="page17"></a>[pg 17]</span>
+moving across the great waste of waters, pierced the
+dark background behind the steamer's light. The
+long trail of white, curdling foam in her track gleamed
+like a silver cleft in a dark gulf. The dim shape of
+her sails stole slowly into sight, and they could see that
+she was carrying a great weight of canvas. Then into
+the grey air, a rocket shot up like a brilliant meteor,
+and the sound of a gun came booming over the
+waters.</p>
+
+<p>"Can she make the bay?" Gomez asked suddenly.
+"Look at the surf."</p>
+
+<p>They all removed their eyes from the steamer, and
+fixed them nearer home. The darkness had rolled
+away, and the outlook, though a little uncertain in the
+misty morning light, was still visible. Right before
+the window, a little to the left, a great rocky hill, many
+hundreds of feet high, ran sheer down into the sea, and
+facing it on the right, was a lower range of rocks
+running out from the mainland. Inside the natural
+harbour thus formed, the sea was quiet enough; but at
+the entrance, a line of white breakers and huge ocean
+waves were leaping up against the base of the promontory,
+and dashing over the lower range of rocks. Beyond,
+the sea was wild and rough, and the steamer
+was often almost lost to sight in the hollow of the
+Waves.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page18" id="page18"></a>[pg 18]</span>
+
+<p>The faces of all three men underwent a sudden
+change. Three rockets, one after another, shot up into
+the sky from the top of the rocky hill, leaving a faint,
+violet glow overhead. The dying man set his teeth
+hard, and his eyes glistened.</p>
+
+<p>"Three rockets," he muttered. "What is the
+meaning of that signal, Father?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>The priest looked downward, pityingly. "It is a
+warning that the entrance to the bay is unsafe," he
+answered. "Take comfort; it is the hand of God
+keeping from you those who would distract your dying
+thoughts from Heaven. Take comfort, and pray
+with me."</p>
+
+<p>He seemed strangely deaf to the priest's words, and
+made no movement or sign in response. Only he kept
+his eyes the more steadfastly fixed upon the steamer,
+now plainly visible. His face showed no disappointment.
+It seemed almost as though he might have
+seen across the grey sea, and heard the stern orders
+thundered out from a slim, motionless figure on the
+captain's bridge. "Right ahead, helmsman! Never
+mind the signal. There's fifty pounds for every man
+of you if we make the bay. It's not so bad as it
+looks! Back me up like brave lads, and I'll remember
+it all your lives!"</p>
+
+<p>Almost, too, he might have heard the answering
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page19" id="page19"></a>[pg 19]</span>
+cheer, for a faint smile parted his white lips as he saw
+the steamer ploughing her way heavily straight ahead,
+paying no heed to the warning signal.</p>
+
+<p>On she came. The priest and the servant started as
+they saw her intention, and a sharp ejaculation of surprise
+escaped from the former. Side by side, they
+watched the labouring vessel with strained eyes. Her
+hull and shape were now visible in the dim morning
+twilight, as she rose and fell upon the waves. It was
+evident that she was a large, handsome pleasure yacht,
+daintily but strongly built.</p>
+
+<p>Close up against the high, bare window the three
+watchers, unconsciously enough, formed a striking-looking
+group. The priest, tall, pale, and severe, stood
+in the shadow of the bed-curtains, an impressive and
+solemn figure in his dark, flowing robes, but with the
+impassibility of his features curiously disturbed. He,
+who had been preaching calm, was himself agitated.
+He had drawn a little on one side, so that the cold
+grey light should not fall upon his face and betray its
+twitching lips and quivering pallor; but if either of
+the men who shared his watch had thought to glance
+at him, the sickly candlelight would have shown at
+once what he was so anxious to conceal. It was little
+more than chance which had brought this man to die
+in his island monastery, and under his care; little
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page20" id="page20"></a>[pg 20]</span>
+more than chance which had revealed to him this
+wonderful secret. But the agony of those last few
+hours, and the gloomy words of the priest who leant
+over his bedside, had found their way in between the
+joints of the dying man's armour of secrecy. Word
+by word, the story had been wrested from him. In
+the cold and comfortless hour of death, the strong,
+worldly man felt his physical weakness loosen the iron
+bands of his will, and he became for a time almost
+like a child in the hands of the keen, swiftly-questioning
+priest. He had not found much comfort in the
+mumbled prayers and absolution, which were all he
+got in exchange for his life's secret,&mdash;and such a
+secret! He had not, indeed, noticed the fixed, faraway
+gaze in the priest's dark eyes as he knelt by the
+bedside; but his prayers, his faint words of comfort,
+had fallen like drops of ice upon his quickened desire
+to be brought a little nearer to that mysterious, shadowy
+essence of goodness which was all his mind could
+conceive of a God. It had seemed like a dead form
+of words, lifeless, hopeless, monotonous; and all that
+faint striving to attain to some knowledge of the truth&mdash;if
+indeed truth there was&mdash;had been crushed into
+ashes by it. As he had lived, so must he die, he told
+himself with some return of that philosophic quietude
+which had led him, stout-hearted and brave, through
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page21" id="page21"></a>[pg 21]</span>
+many dangers. And, at that moment when he had
+been striving to detach his thoughts from their vain
+task of conjuring up useless regrets, there had come
+what even now seemed to be the granting of his last
+passionate prayer. The man whom he had longed to
+see once more before his eyes were closed forever
+upon the world, with such a longing that his heart
+had grown sick and weary with the burden of it, had
+been brought as though by a miracle almost to his
+side. He knew as though by some strange instinct
+the measure of his strength. He had no fear of dying
+before his heart's dearest wish could be gratified. If
+only that fiercely labouring vessel succeeded in her
+brave struggle, he knew that there would be strength
+left to him to bear the shock of meeting, to bear even
+the shock of the tidings which could either sweeten
+his last few moments, or deepen the gloom of his passage
+into the unknown world. And so he lay there,
+with fixed, glazed eyes and shortened breath, watching
+and waiting.</p>
+
+<p>The supreme moment came; the steamer had reached
+the dangerous point, and the waves were breaking over
+her with such fury that more than once she vanished
+altogether from sight, only to reappear in a moment
+or two, quivering and trembling from stern to hull
+like a living creature. After all, the struggle was a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page22" id="page22"></a>[pg 22]</span>
+brief one, though it seemed long to the watchers at
+the window. In less than ten minutes it was over;
+she had passed the line of breakers, and was in the
+comparatively smooth water of the bay, heading fast
+for the shore under leeway of the great wall of towering
+rocks, at the foot of which she seemed dwarfed
+almost into the semblance of a boy's toy vessel.
+Within a quarter of a mile from the shore, she
+anchored, and a boat was let down from her side.</p>
+
+<p>A new lease of life seemed to have come to the man
+on the bed. The morning sun had half emerged from
+a bank of angry purple-coloured clouds, and its faint
+slanting beams lay across the white coverlet of the
+bed, and upon his face. His eyes were bright and
+eager, and the death-like pallor seemed to have passed
+from his features. His voice, too, was firm and distinct.</p>
+
+<p>"Place my despatch-box upon the table here,
+Gomez," he ordered.</p>
+
+<p>Gomez left his seat by the window, and, opening
+a portmanteau, brought a small black box to the
+bedside. His master passed his hand over it, and
+drew it underneath the coverlet.</p>
+
+<p>"I am prepared," he murmured, half to himself.
+"Father, according to the physician's reckoning, how
+long have I to live?"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page23" id="page23"></a>[pg 23]</span>
+
+<p>"Barely an hour," answered the priest, without removing
+his eyes from the boat, whose progress he
+seemed to be scanning steadfastly. "Is your eternal
+future of so little moment to you," he went on in a
+tone of harsh severity, "that you can give your last
+thoughts, your last few moments, to affairs of this
+world? 'Tis an unholy death! Take this cross in
+your hands, and listen not to those whose coming will
+surely estrange you from heaven. Let the world take
+its own course, but lift your eyes and heart in prayer!
+Everlasting salvation, or everlasting doom, awaits you
+before yonder sun be set!"</p>
+
+<p>"I have no fear, Father," was the quiet reply.
+"What is, is; a few frantic prayers now could alter
+nothing, and, besides, my work on earth is not yet over.
+Speak to me no more of the end! Nothing that you
+or I could do now would bring me one step nearer
+heaven. Gomez, your eyes are good! Whom do you
+see in the boat?"</p>
+
+<p>Gomez answered without turning round from the
+window, "Mr. Paul is there, sir, steering!"</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God!"</p>
+
+<p>"There are others with him, sir!"</p>
+
+<p>"Others! Who?"</p>
+
+<p>"Strangers to me, sir. There is a man, a gentleman
+by his dress and appearance, and a child&mdash;a girl,
+I think. Two sailors from the yacht are rowing."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page24" id="page24"></a>[pg 24]</span>
+
+<p>The dying man knitted his brows, and his fingers
+convulsively clutched at the bed-clothes. He had lost
+something of that calm and effortless serenity which
+seemed to have fallen upon him since the safety of the
+steamer had been assured.</p>
+
+<p>"The boat is quite close, Gomez! Can you not describe
+the stranger?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can only see that he is thin, rather tall, and, I
+think, elderly, sir. He is very much wrapped up, as
+though he were an invalid."</p>
+
+<p>"Lift me up so that I can see them. Father Adrian
+will help you."</p>
+
+<p>The priest shook his head. "The effort would
+probably cost you your life," he said, "and it would
+be useless. Before you could see them the boat would
+be round the corner."</p>
+
+<p>"So near! God grant me strength! Gomez, give
+me a tablespoonful of the brandy!"</p>
+
+<p>Gomez moved silently to his side, and poured out
+the brandy. Afterwards his master closed his eyes,
+and there was an intense silence in the chamber&mdash;the
+deep, breathless silence of expectancy.</p>
+
+<p>The monastery itself, a small and deserted one, tenanted
+only by a few half-starved monks of one of the
+lower orders of the Church, was wrapped in a profound
+gloom. There was no sound from the half-ruined
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page25" id="page25"></a>[pg 25]</span>
+chapel or the long, empty corridors. The storm had
+ceased, and the casements no longer rattled in the
+wind. To the man who lay there, nursing his fast-ebbing
+strength, it seemed indeed like the silence before
+the one last tragedy of death, looming so black
+and so grim before him.</p>
+
+<p>It was broken at last. Away at the end of the corridor
+the faint sound of hurrying footsteps and subdued
+voices reached the ears of the three watchers.
+They came nearer and nearer, halting at last just outside
+the door. There was a knock, a quick, impetuous
+answer, and the visitors entered, ushered in by the
+priest, who had met them on the threshold.</p>
+
+<p>Of the two men, one advanced hastily with outstretched
+hand and pitying face to the bedside; the
+other moved only a step or two further into the room,
+and stood looking intently, yet without any salutation
+or form of recognition, at the dying man. The former,
+when he reached the bed, sank on his knees and took
+the white hand which lay upon the coverlet between
+his.</p>
+
+<p>"Father! My father! I would have given the world
+to have found you better. Tell me that it is not true
+what they say. You will pull round now that I have
+come!"</p>
+
+<p>There was no answer. The dying man did not even
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page26" id="page26"></a>[pg 26]</span>
+look into the handsome young face so close to his.
+His eyes, bright and unnaturally large, were rivetted
+upon the figure at the foot of the bed. His breath
+came quickly, and he was shivering; an inarticulate
+sort of moan came from his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Father! you are agitated, and no wonder, to see
+him here. You had my letter preparing you; nothing
+that I could do would stop his coming."</p>
+
+<p>It was Gomez who answered, advancing out of the
+gloom: "There has been no letter."</p>
+
+<p>There was an instant's silence. Then the younger
+man rose up, pale as death. "God! what a fool I was
+to trust to mails in this out-of-the-way hole! Father!
+I shall never forgive myself. Blind idiot that I was,
+to bring him in like this."</p>
+
+<p>It seemed as if no one save he possessed the power
+of speech. There was a dead silence. He looked
+from one to another of the figures in that silent drama
+in fast-growing despair. The face of the man whom
+he had brought there revealed little, although in a
+certain way its expression was remarkable. The lips
+were parted in a slow, quiet smile, not in itself sardonic
+or cruel, although under the circumstances it seemed
+so, for it was difficult to associate any idea of mirth
+with the scene which was passing in that grim, gloomy
+chamber. Something of the awe inseparable from
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page27" id="page27"></a>[pg 27]</span>
+this close approach of death was visible in the
+faces of all the other watchers. Not so in his! It
+was the contrast which seemed so strange. He stood
+there, with his hands thrust deep into the pockets of
+his long travelling coat, returning the fixed, glazed
+stare of the dying man with a sort of indifferent good
+humour. Perhaps a very close observer might have
+detected a shade of mockery in those soft black eyes
+and faintly twitching lips, but the light in the room
+was too obscure for any one there to penetrate beneath
+the apparent indifference. It was he who broke that
+deep, tragic silence, and his voice, light and even gay,
+struck a strange note in that solemn chamber of
+death.</p>
+
+<p>"So you are dying, Martin, <i>mon ami</i>? How odd!
+If any one had told me one short month ago that I
+should have been here to watch your last moments,
+and start you on your journey to hell, bah! how mad I
+should have thought them. 'Tis a pleasure I never
+anticipated."</p>
+
+<p>His words seemed to dissolve the lethargy which his
+presence had cast over the dying man. He turned
+away towards the younger figure by his side.</p>
+
+<p>"How came he here?" he asked feebly.</p>
+
+<p>"Listen, and I will tell you," was the low reply.
+"I sought him first at Monaco, but he had not been
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page28" id="page28"></a>[pg 28]</span>
+heard of there for two years. Then I found traces of
+him at Algiers; and followed up the clue to Cairo,
+Athens, Syracuse, and Belgrade. It was at Constantinople
+I found him at last&mdash;an officer&mdash;actually an
+officer in the Turkish army; 'Monsieur le Captaine,'
+my interpreter called him," the young man added,
+with a fine scorn in his raised voice. "Imagine it!
+Well, I gave him your letter, delivered the messages,
+and awaited his pleasure. He kept me waiting for two
+days before he vouchsafed one word of answer. On
+the third day he announced his intention of accompanying
+me here. Nothing that I could say made any
+difference. 'His answer should be given to you in
+person, or not at all.' I wrote to you three days before
+we started; that letter you never had. Forgive me,
+father, for the shock! As for you," he continued,
+turning abruptly towards the motionless figure at the
+foot of the bed, "I have kept my word, and brought
+you here in safety, though no one in the world will
+ever know how near I came to breaking it, and throwing
+you into the Dardanelles. Ah! I was sorely
+tempted, I can tell you. Speak your answer, and go!
+This is no place for you to linger in."</p>
+
+<p>"Upon my word, you are courteous, very! But, my
+dear friend Martin, as this is to be our farewell, I
+must really see you a little more distinctly."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page29" id="page29"></a>[pg 29]</span>
+
+<p>For the first time, the man in the long overcoat
+changed his position, and came a little nearer to the
+bed. The movement showed him the priest, kneeling
+with closed eyes and uplifted hands before an iron
+crucifix.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! we are not quite alone then, Martin, <i>cher ami</i>!
+the gentleman in the long robe appears to be listening."</p>
+
+<p>"He is as dead," answered the man on the bed slowly.
+"He is a monk; you can speak."</p>
+
+<p>He raised himself slightly on the bed. One hand
+remained grasping his despatch-box under the bedclothes;
+the other was held by the young man who
+knelt by his side. His face was curiously changed; all
+the effect of his unlooked-for visitor's arrival seemed
+to have passed away. His eyes were bright and eager.
+His white lips were closely set and firm.</p>
+
+<p>"You can speak," he repeated.</p>
+
+<p>His visitor was leaning over the foot of the bed now,
+and the smile had quite gone, leaving his face cold
+and white. He spoke a little quicker than before.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is your answer, Martin de Vaux! You offer
+me a fortune, on condition that I give up to you on
+your deathbed the power by which I hold those whom
+you love, my slaves. Money is dear to me, as it is to
+most men, but I would die sooner than touch yours.
+Curse you, and your money, and your family! Not for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page30" id="page30"></a>[pg 30]</span>
+all the gold that was ever coined would I yield up my
+power! My day will come, and may the evil spirit
+bring you tidings of it down into hell! Curse you,
+Martin de Vaux! Now you know my mind."</p>
+
+<p>The dying man was strangely calm. From under
+the bed-clothes came the faint sound of the opening
+and shutting of the despatch-box.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I know your mind," he repeated quietly.
+"You mean me to die with the torturing thought
+that I have left a poisonous reptile to suck the life
+and blood from those I love, and the honour from a
+grand old name. But I will not! We will take our
+next journey together, Victor."</p>
+
+<p>A sudden change had crept into his tone before the
+last sentence; and before it had died away, the priest
+and the man by the bedside had leaped to their feet in
+horror. He whom they had thought too weak to stir
+was sitting bolt upright in bed, his eyes blazing and
+his hand extended. There was a line of fire, a loud
+report, and then a single cry of agony. The man who
+had leaned over the foot of the bed lay on the ground
+just as he had fallen, shot dead through the heart, and
+a child, dark-skinned and thin, who had rushed in at
+the sound of the report, was sobbing passionately
+with her arms wound around him. Across the bed,
+still grasping the pistol, but with his hands hanging
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page31" id="page31"></a>[pg 31]</span>
+helplessly down, lay the man who had fired the shot.
+The effort had killed him.</p>
+
+<p>The priest was the first in the room to move. He
+slowly bent over both bodies, and then turned round
+to the other man.</p>
+
+<p>"Dead?" he asked, with a dry, choking gasp.</p>
+
+<p>"Both dead."</p>
+
+<p>The priest and his companion, shocked and unnerved,
+looked at one another in silence. The child's sobs
+grew louder, and the morning sunlight stole across the
+bare floor, and fell upon the white, still faces.</p>
+
+<p>The tragedy was over, and the seeds of another
+sown.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page32" id="page32"></a>[pg 32]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h3>"THE NEW ART"</h3>
+
+
+<p>A tall, fair young man stood in the small alcove of
+Lady Swindon's drawing-room, with his eyes fixed upon
+the door. He was accurately dressed in the afternoon
+garb of a London man about town, and carried in his
+hand, or rather in his hands, for they were crossed
+behind him, that hall-mark of Western civilization&mdash;a
+well-brushed, immaculate silk hat. Neither in his
+clothes nor personal appearance was there any striking
+difference between him and the crowd of other young
+men who thronged the rooms, except perhaps that he
+was a trifle better made, and pleasanter to look at than
+most of them, and that the air of boredom, so apparent
+on most of their faces and in their manners, was
+in his case perfectly natural. As a matter of fact, he
+hated afternoon receptions, and was only waiting for a
+favourable opportunity to make his exit unnoticed.</p>
+
+<p>"Paul, my boy, you don't look happy," exclaimed a
+voice in his ear.</p>
+
+<p>Paul de Vaux turned upon the new-comer sharply.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page33" id="page33"></a>[pg 33]</span>
+"Not likely to, Arthur. You know I hate all this sort
+of thing, and, as far as I can see, it's just a repetition
+of the usual performance&mdash;stale speeches, lionizing,
+gossip, and weak tea. I consider you've brought me
+here under false pretences. Where's the startling novelty
+you promised me?"</p>
+
+<p>"All in good time," was the cool reply. "You'll
+thank your stars you're here in a minute or two."</p>
+
+<p>Paul de Vaux looked at his brother incredulously.
+"Some sell of yours, I suppose," he remarked. "At
+any rate, no one here whom I have spoken to seems to
+be expecting anything unusual."</p>
+
+<p>Arthur&mdash;no one ever called him anything else&mdash;laughed,
+and beat an impatient tattoo upon the floor
+with his foot. He was several inches shorter than his
+brother, and altogether unlike him. Yet he, too, was
+good-looking, in a certain way.</p>
+
+<p>"That's just the beauty of it," he said. "Lady
+Swindon has prepared a little surprise for her guests.
+She's just that sort of woman, you know. Denison
+told me about it at the club, a few minutes before you
+came in for lunch. I shouldn't have bothered you to
+come if I hadn't known there was something good on."</p>
+
+<p>"I dislike surprises," his brother answered wearily.
+"Half the pleasure of a thing lies in anticipation, and
+surprises rob one of that. Let us go, Arthur; there
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page34" id="page34"></a>[pg 34]</span>
+are plenty here to enjoy this novelty, whatever it is.
+Come and have a weed at my rooms, and we'll talk
+over something for to-night."</p>
+
+<p>Arthur shook his head and laid his hand upon Paul's
+coat-sleeve. "You don't know what's coming off, old
+fellow; I wouldn't miss it for anything. Great Scott!
+there's the bishop. Wonder how he'll like it? and
+there's Lady May over there, Paul. You're booked,
+old man, if she looks this way."</p>
+
+<p>Paul leant forward with a faint show of interest, and
+looked in the direction indicated. "I thought that the
+Westovers went North yesterday," he remarked.
+"Lady May said that they expected it."</p>
+
+<p>"Likely enough. 'Gad! the performance is going
+to commence," Arthur exclaimed, quickly. "Paul,
+you are going to have a new sensation. You are going
+to see the most beautiful woman in the world."</p>
+
+<p>There was a little hush, and every one had turned
+towards the upper end of the room. Some heavy curtains
+had been rolled aside, disclosing a space, only a
+few yards square, which had been covered by a tightly
+stretched drugget. There was a little curious anticipation
+amongst the uninitiated. Then the comparative
+silence was broken by the strains of a waltz from a
+violin, somewhere in the background. No one had
+ever heard it before. There was a wilder, dreamier
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page35" id="page35"></a>[pg 35]</span>
+air with it, than anything Waldteufel had ever written.
+And, while every one was wondering whose music it
+could be, a woman glided out from behind a screen, and
+stood for a second swaying herself slightly in the centre
+of the drugget. Even that slight rhythmical motion
+of her body seemed to bring her into perfect sympathy
+with the curious melody which was filling the hushed
+room. And while the people watched her, already, in
+varying degrees, under the spell of that curious fascination
+which her personality and the exercise of her art
+seldom failed to excite, she commenced to dance.</p>
+
+<p>Long afterwards Paul de Vaux tried to describe in
+words, that dance, and found that he could not, for
+there was indeed a charm beyond expression or portrayal
+in the slow, almost languid movements, full of
+infinite and inexpressible witchery. Every limb of
+her body and every feature of her face followed, with
+a sort of effortless grace, the movements of her feet.
+Yet the general effect of the whole was suggestive of a
+sweet and dainty repose, voluptuous yet refined, glowing
+with life, yet dreamily restful. In a certain sense
+her physical movements, even her body itself, seemed
+merged and lost in the artistic ideal created and born
+of her performance. And so it was that he carried
+away that day no vivid thought-portrait of her features,
+only a confused dream of a beautiful dusky face,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page36" id="page36"></a>[pg 36]</span>
+rising above a cloud of amber draperies, the lips
+slightly parted in a wonderful smile, and a pair of
+heavily-lidded eyes, which, more than once, had rested
+upon him, soft, dark, and lustrous. After all, it was
+but a tangled web of memories, yet, such as it was, it
+became woven into the pattern of his life, wonderfully
+soft and brilliant beside some of those dark, gloomy
+threads which fate had spun for him.</p>
+
+<p>The performance ended, as such performance should
+end, suddenly, and without repetition. Her disappearance
+was so swift and yet so graceful, that for a moment
+or two people scarcely realized that she was gone.
+It was wonderful what a difference her absence made
+to the room. The little stretch of drugget looked
+mean and bare. To Paul de Vaux it seemed as though
+some warm, beautiful light, omniscient and richly coloured,
+had suddenly burnt out, and left a damp chilliness
+in the air. The silence was gloomy enough after
+that wonderful music, but the babble of tongues which
+presently arose was a hundred times worse. He found
+himself chafing and angry at the commonplacisms
+which everywhere greeted his ear. Lady Swindon's
+afternoon entertainment had been a great success, and
+every one was telling her so, more or less volubly.
+There were some there, a handful of artists and a few
+thoughtful men, who were silent, or who spoke of it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page37" id="page37"></a>[pg 37]</span>
+only amongst themselves in subdued voices. They
+recognised, in what had happened that afternoon, the
+dawn of a new art, or rather the regeneration of an
+old one, and they discussed in whispers its possible
+significance and influence. She was an artist, that
+woman. No one doubted it. But the woman was there
+as well as the artist. Who was she? Would she
+realize the sanctity of her mission, and keep herself
+fit and pure for its accomplishment? Had she
+character to sustain her, and imagination to idealize
+her calling? She was on a pinnacle now, but it was
+a pinnacle as dangerous as the feet of woman could
+press. If only she could keep herself unspotted
+from the world, which would do its best to drag
+her down, they all felt, painter, poet, and musician,
+that her influence with the age might rank with
+their own. But was it possible? A certain Diana-like
+coldness had been apparent to those who had
+the eyes to see it, even in her most voluptuous
+movements. They knew that it was not assumed for
+the sake of adding piquancy to her performance&mdash;it
+was there indeed. But side by side with it
+there were unprobed depths of passion in her soft,
+deep eyes; a slumbering passion even in the sinuous,
+graceful movements of every limb. Some
+day the struggle would come, even if it had not
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page38" id="page38"></a>[pg 38]</span>
+already commenced. The woman against the artist&mdash;the
+woman tempted and flattered by a thousand
+tongues, and dazzled with visions of all those things
+so naturally sweet to her, her own nature even, so
+keenly susceptible to love and sympathy, siding with
+the enemy. This, all against what? Only that inward
+worshipping of all things sweet and pure and
+lofty, which is the artist's second life. The odds were
+heavy indeed. No wonder that the select few who
+spoke of her that afternoon should shake their heads
+and look grave.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page39" id="page39"></a>[pg 39]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h3>"THE DANCING GIRL"</h3>
+
+
+<p>"What do you think of it?"</p>
+
+<p>Paul started. He had been standing, like a man in
+a dream, with folded arms, looking across the room
+with idle eyes, and unconsciously ignoring many salutations.
+His brother's tone sounded oddly in his ears,
+and he looked flushed and a little nervous.</p>
+
+<p>"What did I think of it!" It was a difficult question
+to answer. He repeated it, and was glad when
+Arthur spared him the necessity of replying, by adding
+his own opinion.</p>
+
+<p>"It was glorious, magnificent! I'm going to find
+out more about her!"</p>
+
+<p>He strolled away, and joined one of the little groups
+of men who were discussing the performance. Paul, at
+first, had made a gesture as though to detain him, but
+on second thoughts he had changed his mind. Better
+let him go and find out what he could.</p>
+
+<p>He himself watched carefully for his opportunity,
+and then left the room. He felt like a man who has
+received a silent shock. Something fresh had come
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page40" id="page40"></a>[pg 40]</span>
+into his life, noiselessly, insidiously, without effort. He
+pressed on his hat, and passed down the steps out into
+the street, scarcely conscious of what he was doing.</p>
+
+<p>The rush of fresh air somewhat revived him, and he
+stood still for a moment to collect his thoughts. He
+felt the need of absolute solitude for a while, to help
+him to realize&mdash;or at any rate to understand&mdash;this
+thing which had happened, and with almost feverish
+haste he called a hansom from the other side of the
+road. The man whipped up the horse, but hesitated
+as he reached the pavement. Looking around, Paul
+saw the cause of his indecision. A woman, standing
+only a few yards behind, had called him at the same
+time, and was waiting also for his approach.</p>
+
+<p>There was a gas-lamp between them, and as their
+eyes met, he recognised her. Even in that flickering
+light, and through her veil, there was no mistaking
+those wonderful eyes. As a rule, he was possessed of
+as much <i>savoir faire</i> as most men of his class, but at
+that moment it had deserted him. He stood there on
+the edge of the pavement, without moving or saying
+anything, simply looking at her, startled at her sudden
+appearance, and magnetised by her close presence.
+He had heard no footfall behind him, and the fact of
+her being alone seemed so strange to him, that he
+simply could not realize for a moment that it was indeed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page41" id="page41"></a>[pg 41]</span>
+she who stood so close to him. The cabman,
+leaving them to decide who had the prior claim upon
+him, sat motionless, with his eyes discreetly fixed
+upon his horse's ears. It was an odd little tableau,
+insignificant enough to a spectator, save, perhaps, for
+the curious look in the woman's face and softly flashing
+eyes. Yet it left its mark for ever in the lives of
+the two principal figures.</p>
+
+<p>The curious sensation which had kept Paul standing
+there dazed and tongue-tied, passed away. Yet
+it did not immediately occur to him to raise his hat
+and walk on, as in any ordinary case he would have
+done. He was conscious of the exact nature of the
+situation, but he felt a strong disinclination to leave
+the spot; nor, strangely enough, did she seem to
+expect it. Yet something had to be done.</p>
+
+<p>He moved a step nearer her. He was no schoolboy,
+this tall, grave-looking young Englishman. The
+lines across his fair, smooth forehead, and by his
+close-set mouth spoke for themselves. He had seen
+life in many aspects, and in a certain Indian jungle
+village, there were natives and coolies who still spoke
+admiringly of the wonderful nerve and pluck of the
+English sahib during a terrible and unexpected tiger
+rush. But at that moment his nerve seemed to have
+deserted him. He could almost hear his heart beat as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page42" id="page42"></a>[pg 42]</span>
+he took that step forward. He had intended to have
+made some trifling apology, and to have handed her
+into the cab, but the words would not come. Some
+instinct seemed to revolt at the thought of uttering
+any such commonplacism. She was standing
+on the edge of the pavement, close to the step, with
+her skirts in one hand, slightly raised. He held out
+his hand to her in silence.</p>
+
+<p>She gave him hers; and yet she did not at once step
+into the cab. She seemed to be expecting that little
+speech from him which he found impossible to frame,
+and, seeing that it did not come, recognising, perhaps,
+his suppressed agitation behind that calm, almost
+cold, gravity of demeanour, she spoke to him.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a shame to take your cab, and leave you
+in the rain! I am sorry."</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards her admirers spoke of her voice as being
+one of her chief charms; to Paul it sounded like a soft
+strain of very sweet, throbbing music, reaching him
+from some far distant world. Yet, curiously enough, it
+went far to dissolve the spell which her presence
+seemed to have laid upon him. He was able to
+look at her steadily, and standing upon the wet
+pavement in the cold, grey light of that November
+afternoon, their eyes met in a long, searching gaze. He
+was able even to notice trifles. He saw the rich fur
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page43" id="page43"></a>[pg 43]</span>
+which lined her plain, black cloak, and he could even
+admire the absolute perfection with which it followed
+the lines of her slim, supple, figure. He saw
+the glowing eyes shining out from her dusky face, and
+the coils of brown hair, not very securely fastened under
+her turban hat. As she put out her foot to enter the
+cab, he could even catch a glimpse of the amber draperies
+concealed by her cloak. A dancer! A public
+dancer! His eyes swept over her again, taking in
+every detail of her simple but rich toilette, and he
+shivered slightly. Then he answered her, "It is of no
+consequence, thank you. I can walk."</p>
+
+<p>"But you will get very wet! Let us make a compromise!
+You may come with me. I am going only a
+very little distance, and then you can take the cab on
+to your home, or wherever you want to go to."</p>
+
+<p>She stepped in, taking it for granted that he would
+accept her offer, and he followed her at once. He was
+not in the least surprised. From the first he had not
+expected to leave her, and her invitation seemed perfectly
+natural to him. She gave the cabman her address
+through the trap-door, and they drove off together.</p>
+
+<p>At the corner of the square, two men were standing together
+talking, and as the hansom passed within a yard
+or two of them both glanced idly in, and then started.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page44" id="page44"></a>[pg 44]</span>
+Paul, who had been looking straight ahead of him, and
+seeing nothing, turned round, startled by a familiar
+exclamation, just in time to see his brother Arthur,
+and Leslie Horton, gazing after the cab. The incident
+troubled him, as much for her sake as his own. But,
+looking into her face, he could not see that she was in
+any way disturbed, although she must have seen the
+two men, and would probably have recognised them as
+having been present at Lady Swindon's reception. Her
+face was quite unmoved, but in a moment or two she
+asked a question.</p>
+
+<p>"Who was the younger and better looking of those
+two men; the one with violets in his coat, like
+yours?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was my brother," he answered simply. "I am
+afraid, too, that he recognised you."</p>
+
+<p>"So far as I am concerned, that is of no consequence
+at all," she answered lightly.</p>
+
+<p>He turned away with a sudden sinking of the heart.
+He knew, too well, that her carelessness was not assumed.
+How was he to interpret it?</p>
+
+<p>Their drive was finished in silence, and they pulled
+up before a handsome, though somewhat sombre-looking
+house in a back street.</p>
+
+<p>"My rooms are here," she remarked.</p>
+
+<p>He stepped on to the pavement, and assisted her
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page45" id="page45"></a>[pg 45]</span>
+to alight. The thought of leaving her so abruptly
+was painful to him, and yet he dreaded to hear her
+invite him to go in with her; nevertheless, she did so.</p>
+
+<p>"If you are not in a hurry, perhaps you will come
+in, and let me give you a cup of tea," she said, looking
+him full in the face.</p>
+
+<p>His heart sank. What was he to think now? And
+yet he was absurdly glad that he was not to leave her.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean it?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course! I should not have asked you else. Are
+you very much shocked?" she added, with a mocking
+gleam in her eyes. "It is not proper, is it! I confess
+I did not think of that. But do come," she added,
+with a sudden bewitching smile.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be delighted," he answered, gravely enough,
+but truthfully. He turned to pay the cabman, and followed
+her into the house.</p>
+
+<p>"My rooms are upstairs," she remarked, leading the
+way. "The luxury of a first floor is at present beyond me."</p>
+
+<p>Her words pleased him, but their effect died away
+when she opened a door on the first landing, and ushered
+him in. Such of the interior of the house as he
+had seen was handsomely furnished, but the room in
+which he stood was almost like a fairy chamber. Curtains
+divided it in the centre, and beyond he could see
+a table laid for dinner.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page46" id="page46"></a>[pg 46]</span>
+
+<p>"That half I use for a dining-room," she remarked,
+pointing towards it with one of her gloves, which she
+had just taken off. "It makes this room small, but it
+is a convenient arrangement. Do sit down!"</p>
+
+<p>He bowed, but remained standing, with his elbow
+resting upon the draped mantel-board. She took off
+her hat and coat, hanging them over the back of a
+chair, and advanced towards him.</p>
+
+<p>She was in her dancing dress, a floating mass of
+yellow draperies, and the firelight gleamed strangely
+upon her dusky, perfect face, with its olive colouring,
+and soft, glowing eyes. She came so close to him
+that a faint odour from the handkerchief in her hand
+stole up to him.</p>
+
+<p>He was playing with an ornament on the shelf,
+and his fingers tightened convulsively around it. It
+snapped in two in his hand; he did not notice it. He
+leaned forward towards her, and his strong voice
+vibrated with feeling.</p>
+
+<p>"And it was for this then, Adrea Kiros, that you
+ran away from the convent St. Lucile! My God!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page47" id="page47"></a>[pg 47]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<h3>"ADREA'S DIARY"</h3>
+
+
+<p>To-day I have made my entrance in the first scene
+of the drama of life. To-day, therefore, I commence
+my memoirs. Everything before goes for nothing!</p>
+
+<p>As I have removed myself altogether from all association
+with the humdrum existence which might have
+been mine, I am naturally friendless for the present.
+So far as the other sex is concerned, I fancy that that
+could be easily remedied. But no women are likely
+to care about making my acquaintance, and I am glad
+of it. I hate women&mdash;men, too, I think! At any rate,
+there will be no one of whom I shall make a confidant,
+so I have chosen you, my silent friend. I gave a
+guinea for you in Bond Street, and with your dainty
+morocco case and binding, I think you are well worth
+it. At any rate, you will be faithful so far as silence
+is concerned.</p>
+
+<p>To-day has been an eventful one. I have made my
+<i>debut</i> as a dancer, and Paul de Vaux has been here, in
+this house, alone with me! That is hard to realize,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page48" id="page48"></a>[pg 48]</span>
+but it is so! He has altered since he used to pay me
+periodical visits at the convent&mdash;and so have I, I imagine!
+Yet he recognised me! How pale and stern he
+looked when he stood up on the hearthrug and called
+me by my name! He is very handsome&mdash;handsomer
+now even than on that day when he stood by, in that
+chamber of death, and saw my father murdered, without
+lifting his hand. Ah! Paul de Vaux, Paul de
+Vaux! that was an evil day for you! Did you never
+think that that little brown girl, as you called her,
+would grow up some day; or did you think that she
+would forget! Bah! What fools men are!</p>
+
+<p>He remembered me! How grave he looked, and yet
+how tender his voice sounded! He did not forget that
+he was my guardian, and I his ward. How bewildered
+and anxious he was! Was I living quite alone, had I
+no friends, did I think it wise to lay myself open to so
+much notice?</p>
+
+<p>He had come close to my chair, and was leaning
+down, so that his head nearly touched mine. Really,
+when I looked up, I thought that he was going to take
+me into his arms. I looked up and laughed softly into
+his face.</p>
+
+<p>He said no more. I invited him to dine with me,
+and promised to dance to him afterwards. I even let
+my hand rest for a moment upon his shoulder, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page49" id="page49"></a>[pg 49]</span>
+whispered&mdash;but <i>n'importe</i>! He behaved just as I
+would have had him behave! He took up his hat and
+walked straight out of the room! It was rude, but it
+was magnificent. Ah! Paul de Vaux! you may struggle
+as long as you like, but in the end you will be
+mine!</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page50" id="page50"></a>[pg 50]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<h3>"THE FAR-OFF MUTTERING OF THE STORM TO COME"</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Paul!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul had walked unannounced into his mother's
+favourite little sitting-room at Vaux Court, tired and
+travel-stained. She rose to her feet and looked at him
+anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be alarmed, mother," he said, stooping
+down and kissing her. "There's nothing at all the
+matter."</p>
+
+<p>"Arthur is well?"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite well; I was with him yesterday afternoon.
+There's nothing the matter. London was boring me,
+that's all, and I thought I'd run down here and have a
+look at the old place, and perhaps a day's hunting."</p>
+
+<p>Relieved of her anxiety, Mrs. de Vaux was unaffectedly
+pleased to see her eldest son. She was a fine,
+white-haired old lady, dignified and handsome, but
+with very few soft lines about her comely face.</p>
+
+<p>"I am delighted to see you, of course, Paul! The
+meet is at Dytchley woods to-morrow! I hope you'll
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page51" id="page51"></a>[pg 51]</span>
+have a good day. Take your coat off. I have rung
+for some tea."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks! How bright and cheerful the fire seems.
+I walked from the station, and it was miserably cold."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course it was. I wish I had known you were
+coming. We have so little work for the carriage
+horses."</p>
+
+<p>"I did not make up my mind until half an hour
+before the train started," Paul answered. "Dick Carruthers
+wanted me to run over to Paris with him for a
+couple of days, and I was undecided which to do. I
+heard that it was cold and wet there, though; and there
+is always a charm about this old place which makes
+me glad to come back to it."</p>
+
+<p>"There is not such another place in England," his
+mother remarked, pouring out the tea. "Although
+this is such an outlandish county, there have been a
+dozen people here this week, asking to be allowed to
+see over the Abbey. I always give permission when
+you are away, and there is no one stopping here."</p>
+
+<p>Paul drank his tea, and stretched himself out in his
+low chair with an air of comfort.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad you let them see the place, mother," he
+said. "It is only right. What class of people do
+you have, as a rule? Clergymen and ecclesiastical
+architects, I suppose?"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page52" id="page52"></a>[pg 52]</span>
+
+<p>"Chiefly. There are a good many Americans,
+though; and yesterday, or the day before, a Roman
+Catholic priest. He spent the day in the cloisters and
+wandering about the Abbey, I believe."</p>
+
+<p>Paul looked up suddenly, and drew his chair back
+out of the firelight. For the first time, his mother
+noticed how pale and ghastly his face was.</p>
+
+<p>"Paul, are you ill?" she asked anxiously. "What
+is the matter with you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing. I am only tired. It is a long journey,
+you know,&mdash;and the walk from the station. Indeed, it
+is nothing else. I am quite well."</p>
+
+<p>His mother resumed her seat. She had risen in
+sudden alarm. Her son's face had frightened her.</p>
+
+<p>"You look just as your poor father used to look
+sometimes," she said softly. "It always frightened
+me. It was as though you had a pain somewhere, or
+had suddenly seen a ghost. You are sure you are
+well?"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite, mother! You need have no fear. Arthur
+and I have your constitution, I think."</p>
+
+<p>His tone was deeper, almost hollow. He still kept
+his chair back amongst the shadows. Mrs. de Vaux
+was only partially satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid you have been keeping too late hours,
+Paul, or reading too much. Lord Westover was saying
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page53" id="page53"></a>[pg 53]</span>
+the other day that you were in a very Bohemian
+set&mdash;journalists and artists, and those sort of people.
+I am afraid they keep awful hours."</p>
+
+<p>"Lord Westover knows nothing about it," Paul
+answered wearily. "Ordinary London society would
+tire me to death in a fortnight. There is another class
+of people, though, whose headquarters are in London,
+far more cultured, and quite as exclusive, with whom
+association is a far greater distinction. I can go anywhere
+in the first set, because I am Paul de Vaux, of
+Vaux Abbey, and have forty thousand a year. I am
+permitted to enter the other only as the author of an
+unfashionable novel, which a few of them have thought
+leniently of. Which seem the worthier conditions?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am answered, Paul. Of course, in a sense, you
+are right. I am an old woman, and the twaddle of a
+London drawing-room would fall strangely upon my
+ears now, but I had my share of it before Arthur was
+born. If I were a man, I should want variety,&mdash;a
+little sauce,&mdash;and you are right to seek for it. And
+now, won't you go and have a bath, and change your
+things. You still look pale, and I think it would
+refresh you. Shall I ring for Reynolds? I suppose
+you have not brought your own man?"</p>
+
+<p>He stretched out his hand, and arrested her fingers
+upon the bell. "In a moment, mother. It is so
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page54" id="page54"></a>[pg 54]</span>
+comfortable here, and I really think it is my favourite
+room."</p>
+
+<p>He looked round approvingly. It was a curious,
+hexagonal chamber, with an oak-beamed ceiling, curving
+into a dome. The walls were hung with a wonderful
+tapestry of a soft, rich colour, and every piece
+of furniture in the room was of the Louis Quinze
+period. There was scarcely a single anachronism.
+The Martin de Vaux of forty years ago had been an
+artist, and a man of taste; and when he had brought
+home his bride, a duke's daughter, he had spent a
+small fortune on this apartment. Since then it had
+always been her favourite, and she was always glad to
+hear any one praise it.</p>
+
+<p>"I seldom sit in any other," she remarked complacently.
+"The blue drawing-room is open to-night, but
+that is because Lord and Lady Westover are dining
+here. I am afraid May will not be able to come; she
+has a cold or something of the sort. I wonder whether
+it is true, what they say, that she is delicate."</p>
+
+<p>Paul did not appear much interested. He had a
+purpose in lingering here, and it had nothing to do
+with May Westover's health. There was a little information
+he wished to obtain without exciting his
+mother's curiosity. But it was not exactly an easy
+matter.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page55" id="page55"></a>[pg 55]</span>
+
+<p>"I was interested in what you said about the visitors
+here," he remarked. "I daresay to Americans
+this place must be very interesting."</p>
+
+<p>"You would think so if you saw some of them.
+They are a great deal too inquisitive and familiar
+for Reynolds. He detests them. It is far more interesting
+to think of that Catholic priest who was here
+the other day. He lingered about the place as though
+he had known it all his life, and loved it; and, Reynolds
+says, he prayed for two hours in the chapel."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you see him yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, in the distance. I did not notice him particularly.
+I wished afterwards that I had. Reynolds'
+report of him pleased me so much. I daresay he was
+conjuring up pictures of the days when the old Abbey
+was full of grey-hooded monks, and the chapel was
+echoing day and night to their solemn chants and
+prayers. Sometimes, in the gloaming, I can almost
+fancy myself that I see them kneeling in long rows in
+those rich stalls, and hear the rustle of their gowns as
+they pass slowly down the aisles. I think he must
+have found it sad to linger about in that beautiful
+chapel, so cold, and empty, and bare. That is why I
+like Roman Catholics. They have such a strong reverential
+affection for their places of worship, and take
+such a delight in adorning them. It is almost like a
+personal love."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page56" id="page56"></a>[pg 56]</span>
+
+<p>Paul moved uneasily in his chair and looked steadily
+into the fire. "Then you did not notice him particularly?"</p>
+
+<p>"Notice him! Notice whom?"</p>
+
+<p>"This priest, or whoever he was."</p>
+
+<p>"I did not see his face, Paul, if that is what you
+mean. I only remember that he was tall. You seem
+very much interested in him. No doubt Reynolds
+could tell you anything you wish to know. Here he
+is; you had better ask him."</p>
+
+<p>A grey-headed man-servant had entered, bearing a
+lamp. Mrs. de Vaux turned to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Reynolds, Mr. Paul is interested in hearing about
+the priest who spent so much time looking over the
+Abbey yesterday. Can you describe him?"</p>
+
+<p>Reynolds set down the lamp and turned respectfully
+around. "Not very well, I'm afraid, sir," he said
+doubtfully. "They all seem so much alike, you know,
+sir, in those long gowns. He was tall, rather thin,
+and no hair on his face at all. I can't say that I
+noticed anything else, except that he spoke in rather a
+foreign accent."</p>
+
+<p>"You are sure he was a priest, I suppose," Paul
+asked carelessly. "We hear so much now of impostors,
+and of things being stolen from places of interest,
+that it makes one feel suspicious."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page57" id="page57"></a>[pg 57]</span>
+
+<p>"I am quite sure he was no impostor, sir." Reynolds
+answered confidently. "He was too interested in the
+place for that. He knew its history better than any
+one who has ever been here in my day. If he had
+been one of those sneaking sort of fellows, looking
+about for what he could get, he would have offered me
+money, and tried to get rid of me for a time, I think,
+sir."</p>
+
+<p>"That's true," Paul remarked. "Were you with
+him all the time, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very nearly, sir. He did not like my leaving
+him at all. He was afraid of missing something worth
+seeing. Besides, he did not ask to come into the
+house at all, not even to see the pictures. He spent
+all his time in the ruins.</p>
+
+<p>"That ends the matter, of course," Paul answered
+shortly. "There is nothing out there to attract pilferers.
+Sorry I said anything about it."</p>
+
+<p>"He asked whether you spent much of your time
+here, and when you would be down again, sir,"
+Reynolds remarked, as he turned to quit the room.</p>
+
+<p>Paul looked up, and then stood quite still for a moment
+without speaking. A great fear had fallen upon
+him. Out of the shadows of the past, he seemed to
+see again that deathbed scene, and the tragedy which
+had brought down the curtain upon two lives. Almost
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page58" id="page58"></a>[pg 58]</span>
+he could fancy himself again upon his yacht, with the
+salt sea spray beating against his face, and the white
+breakers hissing and seething around him, as they
+made the dangerous passage towards that faint light,
+which flickered and gleamed in the distant monastery
+tower. They are safe! They reach the land; they are
+hurried into that great, gloomy bedchamber, where
+chill draughts rustled ghost-like amongst the heavy,
+faded hangings, and the feeble candlelight left weird
+shadows moving across the floor and upon the walls.
+Again he heard the rattling of the window-panes, bare
+and exposed to every gust of wind; the far-off thunder
+of the sea, like a deep, continuous undernote; and,
+from an almost unseen corner of the chamber, the
+monotonous, broken rhythm of sad prayers for the dying,
+mumbled by that dark, curious-looking priest.
+And then, when the background of the picture had
+formed itself in his memory, he saw the deed itself.
+He saw the white, stricken face suddenly ablaze with
+that last effort of passionate life; he saw the outstretched
+arm, the line of fire, and the sudden change
+in the countenance of the man who stood at the foot of
+the bed. He saw the cool cynicism replaced by a
+spasm of ghastly fear, and he heard the low, gurgling
+cry dying away into a faint moan of terror, as the murdered
+man sank on to the floor, a crumpled heap. And,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page59" id="page59"></a>[pg 59]</span>
+last of all, he saw that little brown girl, with her tumbled
+hair and tear-stained face, clasping the dead body
+and glaring at every one in the room, with a storm of
+hatred and impotent fury in her flashing eyes. And
+that last recollection brought him, like a flash, back to
+the present,&mdash;brought him swift, bewildering memories
+of Adrea, shaking his heart, and bringing the hot
+colour streaming into his face. He remembered where
+he was, and why he had left London. He remembered,
+too, that he was not alone, and with a little start he
+awoke to the present.</p>
+
+<p>Reynolds had left the room, and his mother was
+watching him curiously. He found it hard to meet
+her steady, questioning gaze without flinching.</p>
+
+<p>"Paul," she said slowly, "you are in trouble."</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head. "It is nothing, mother&mdash;nothing
+at all. I ought to beg your pardon for letting my
+thoughts run away with me so."</p>
+
+<p>She was too proud to ask him for his confidence,
+and at that moment the rumbling of a gong reached
+them from the distant hall. Mrs. de Vaux rose:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"There are a few people dining here, Paul, so you
+will not be late."</p>
+
+<p>"I will be down, mother. The usual time, I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, eight o'clock."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page60" id="page60"></a>[pg 60]</span>
+
+<p>They left the room together, but parted in the hall.
+Mrs. de Vaux stayed to speak to the housekeeper for a
+moment, and Paul ascended the broad staircase alone.
+On the first corridor he paused, standing before the
+deep-cushioned sill of a high-arched window, and gazing
+at the ruined portion of the abbey. The air outside
+was frosty and clear, and though the moon as yet
+was only faintly yellow, every arch and cloister was
+clearly visible. Paul gazed down at them, as he had
+done all his life, with reverent eyes. There was something
+almost awesome in the graceful yet bold outline,
+and in the great age of those rugged, moss-grown pillars
+and arches, so ecclesiastical in their shape and
+suggestiveness,&mdash;as indeed they might well be, for they
+were practically the ruins of the old monastery chapel.
+But, as he looked, the expression in his eyes suddenly
+changed. A dark figure had passed slowly out from
+the shadow of the arches, and stood looking up towards
+the house, rigid, solemn, and motionless. Paul covered
+his face with his hands, and sank down upon the
+cushioned window-sill.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page61" id="page61"></a>[pg 61]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<h3>"AN ASHEN GREY DELIGHT"</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Mr. de Vaux!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul turned quickly around in his saddle towards
+the young lady who had addressed him. He looked
+into a fair, thoughtful face, whose general amiability
+was discounted, just then, by a decided frown.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, Lady May! Didn't you say
+something just now?"</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't I say something just now!" she repeated,
+with fine scorn. "Upon my word, Mr. de Vaux, I
+think that you must have left your wits in London!
+What is the matter with you?"</p>
+
+<p>"The matter! Why, nothing! I'm sorry&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! pray don't apologise!" she interrupted hastily.
+"I think I'll ride on and catch papa up."</p>
+
+<p>He laid his hand upon her rein. "Please don't,
+Lady May," he begged. "I know I've been inattentive!
+I'm very sorry&mdash;really I am. Let me try and
+make up for it!"</p>
+
+<p>She looked into his face, and she was mollified. He
+was evidently in earnest.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page62" id="page62"></a>[pg 62]</span>
+
+<p>"Oh! very well," she said. "You mustn't think
+that I complained without due cause, though, for I
+spoke to you three times before you answered me. Oh,
+it's all right," she went on, as he commenced to frame
+another apology. "I don't mind now, but I really
+should like to know what is the matter with you. You
+have ridden all day like a man who valued neither his
+own life nor his horse's. Some of your jumps were
+simply reckless! I have heard other people say so,
+too! I like bold riding, but there is a limit; and
+though I've ridden two hounds since papa gave me my
+first pony, I've never seen any one try to jump Annisforth
+brook below the bridge, before,&mdash;and don't want
+to again," she added, with a little shudder. "I know
+you ride fine horses, but you are not generally foolhardy.
+I saw your dark bay mare being taken home
+at Colbourne Spinneys, and I don't think she'll be fit
+to ride again this season. Old Harrison had tears in
+his eyes when he saw her!"</p>
+
+<p>"Harrison is an old woman about horses! I never
+touched Meg with the spurs. She was as fresh as paint,
+and there was no holding her."</p>
+
+<p>"You can't deceive me or yourself," Lady May continued
+calmly. "You have been riding for a fall, all
+day, and you may think yourself pretty fortunate that
+you haven't a broken neck. It seemed as though you
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page63" id="page63"></a>[pg 63]</span>
+were trying for one. And now that you haven't succeeded,
+you have nearly ridden ten miles alone with
+me, and scarcely opened your mouth. You are very
+provoking, Mr. de Vaux. I wish I had ridden home
+with Captain Fellowes."</p>
+
+<p>He was on the point of reminding her that the arrangement
+had not been of his making, but he checked
+himself. After all, Lady May had some grounds for
+her irritation. They had been friends since they had
+been children, and Paul knew that every one expected
+him, someday, to ask Lady May to become the mistress
+of Vaux Abbey. There had been a little more than
+intimacy even in their friendship up till twelve months
+ago; and Paul had certain recollections of their last
+interview, which had made him more than once a trifle
+uneasy. As a matter of fact, Lady May had quite
+made up her mind that Paul de Vaux would certainly
+ask her to marry him some time; and she had, on his
+account, refused two very eligible offers. Their people
+desired it, and, in her heart, Lady May was conscious
+that Paul was a little more to her than any other man
+could be. So she felt herself at first, aggrieved by his
+long silence during their ride home, which, to tell the
+truth, she had carefully planned for, and afterwards
+was just on the verge of being seriously offended.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be angry with me, please," he said quietly.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page64" id="page64"></a>[pg 64]</span>
+"You are right; something is the matter. I am worried."</p>
+
+<p>She was sympathetic and kindly at once. "I'm so
+sorry. Please forgive me for bothering you. You
+used to tell me your troubles once! Are we too old
+now?"</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head. "I hope we never shall be," he
+said. "I can't tell you all, but one thing is this. I
+had a letter from a man in town to-day&mdash;a man whom
+I can trust&mdash;about Arthur. You know what an impressionable,
+sensitive boy he is. Anyone who once
+obtains an influence over him can do nearly what they
+like with him. He seems&mdash;so my correspondent tells
+me&mdash;to have become completely fascinated with a&mdash;a&mdash;dancer&mdash;Adrea
+Kiros I think she calls herself."</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard of her," Lady May murmured. "She
+dances only at private houses, I think. Everyone says
+she is wonderful."</p>
+
+<p>"She is&mdash;wonderful," Paul said slowly. He was
+about to say more, but he checked himself. Lady
+May was watching him, and he knew that he could not
+speak of Adrea Kiros unmoved. So he went on:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I am not complaining, for after all it is perfectly
+natural, but Arthur is certainly his mother's favorite
+son. You know how strict she is in some of her notions;
+so you can understand what a shock it would be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page65" id="page65"></a>[pg 65]</span>
+to her if any rumors were to reach her ears. It would
+be a terrible blow to her. But, apart from that, the
+thing is serious in itself. Arthur was always delicate,
+and Cis&mdash;my friend&mdash;speaks of him as looking ghastly
+ill. The girl is probably only amusing herself, although
+she seems to have given him plenty of encouragement.
+But I know Ad&mdash;Adrea Kiros. She is no
+ordinary girl of her class. In the whole world I doubt
+if there breathes a more dangerous woman," he wound
+up, in a low tone.</p>
+
+<p>Lady May was quite sympathetic now, but a little
+mystified. "I am so sorry," she said softly. "Ought
+you not to go to London, and try what your influence
+can do with him? That is disinterested advice, at any
+rate," she added, with a little laugh, "for I don't
+want you to go. But Arthur always seemed to look
+up to you so! You might be able to get him away.
+Don't you think it would be a good thing if you could
+get him down here? We would make it as lively as
+possible for him up at the Castle; and, I don't know
+how your preserves are, but ours have been scarcely
+touched yet. Between the two of us, at any rate, he
+could have as much shooting as he liked. And I
+would ask the Fergusson girls to come and stay," she
+went on, getting more and more in love with her plan.
+"He was so much taken with Amy, you know, when
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page66" id="page66"></a>[pg 66]</span>
+they were down here before. We could get up some
+theatricals, or something, and have quite a good time.
+What do you think of my plan?"</p>
+
+<p>He was thankful for her long speech, for it had enabled
+him to get over the slight agitation which the
+thought of that unavoidable journey to London had
+called up in him. From the first he had felt that it
+was his duty to go. He had received this disquieting
+letter two days ago, and since then he had telegraphed
+twice and written to Arthur without getting any reply.
+Yes, he must go. And mingled with that reluctance
+and nameless apprehension which he felt at the
+thought of returning into her neighbourhood, he was
+acutely conscious, all the time, of a certain vague but
+sweet pleasure at the thought that fate had so ordained
+it. Perhaps it would be necessary for him to
+see her! A thrill of pleasure passed through him at
+the thought, followed almost immediately by a reaction
+of keen and bitter disgust with himself. He set
+his teeth, and quite unconsciously dug his spurs into
+his horse's sides, with the natural result that she
+reared up, almost unseating him, and then plunged
+forward. He had to gallop her along the road for a
+few hundred yards, and then turned round and rejoined
+Lady May. Fortunately she had not seen the
+commencement of the little episode.</p>
+
+<p>"Whatever was the matter?" she asked.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page67" id="page67"></a>[pg 67]</span>
+
+<p>"I fancy my spurs must have pricked her," he said
+apologetically. "I was riding quite carelessly."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, please don't let it happen again," she
+begged, eyeing his mare's flanks suspiciously. "Dandy
+is very tired now, and is generally good tempered;
+but I don't think he would stand much of that sort of
+thing."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm really very sorry," he said.</p>
+
+<p>She nodded. "All right. And now, what do you
+think of my plan? Are you going to London?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think your plan is a very good one indeed, and
+I shall run up to town to-morrow," he said. "It is
+very good of you to be so interested."</p>
+
+<p>He looked down into her face, a fair, sweet face it
+was, and then glanced away over the bare moorland
+which stretched on one side of them. It was a late
+November afternoon, and a faint yellow light was lingering
+in the west, where the sun had just set, colouring
+the clouds which stretched across the sky in long,
+level streaks. A fresh, healthy breeze, strong with the
+perfume of the sea, blew in their teeth, and afar off
+they could hear the waves dashing against the iron-bound
+line of northern cliffs. Inland, the country was
+more cultivated, but hilly and broken up with masses
+of lichen-covered rock, and little clumps of thin fir
+trees. He knew the scenery so well. The rugged,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page68" id="page68"></a>[pg 68]</span>
+barren country, with its great stretches of moorland
+and little patches of cultivated land, with its silent
+tarns, its desolation, and the ever-varying music of the
+sea, they all meant home to him, and he loved them.
+It had always been so, and yet he felt it at that moment
+as he had never felt it before. The prospect of
+that journey to London was suddenly loathsome to
+him. The clear, physical healthfulness of his North-country
+home was triumphant, for the moment, over
+that other passion, which seemed to him then weak and
+artificial. It seemed to him also, looking down into
+Lady May's fresh, thoughtful face, that she was somehow
+in accord with these surroundings,&mdash;that she was,
+indeed, the link, the safeguard which should bind him
+to them, the good influence which should keep him fit
+to breathe God's pure air, and to keep himself, as he
+had ever striven to, <i>sans peur et sans reproche</i>. Paul
+was no sentimentalist, in the idle and common sense
+of the word. In his attitude to every-day life, he was
+essentially practical, sometimes perhaps a little too
+practical. But he was capable of strong feeling, and
+it came then with a rush. He leant over towards Lady
+May, and laid his hand upon her saddle.</p>
+
+<p>"You are very kind and sympathetic," he said softly.
+"You are always kind."</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him, pleased, and with a soft look
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page69" id="page69"></a>[pg 69]</span>
+in her deep grey eyes. "You do not give me very
+much opportunity," she said quietly. "At one time
+you used to tell me all your troubles; do you remember?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! I remember," he answered, almost in a whisper,
+for they were riding up a grass-grown avenue,&mdash;a
+back way to the Abbey,&mdash;and their horses' hoofs sank
+noiselessly into the soft turf. "Sometimes I have
+dared to hope that those days may come again."</p>
+
+<p>She was silent, and her head was turned away lest
+he might see the tears trembling in her eyes. So they
+rode on for a moment or two, walking their horses in
+the dim twilight; she in the shadow of the grey wall
+and the overhanging trees, and he very close to her,
+with his hand still upon her saddle and his reins loose
+in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"If ever they did, if ever I was so fortunate," he
+went on in a low tone, "you would find your office no
+sinecure. I have troubles, or rather, one trouble, and
+a great one, May."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him for a moment, her eyes full of
+sympathy. She dimly remembered the time when
+strange stories were current in the county of Martin
+de Vaux, and their echo had remained for years. It
+was not for her to inquire about them, and she never
+had done so. But that their burden should have fallen
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page70" id="page70"></a>[pg 70]</span>
+upon Paul; it was hard! Her heart was sore with the
+injustice of it. A woman is a swift and censorious
+judge of any one who brings trouble upon the man she
+loves.</p>
+
+<p>He was a little closer to her still; and suddenly the
+hand which carried her small whip felt itself grasped
+in strong fingers and held tightly.</p>
+
+<p>"May&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>It was not his fault this time that his mare stood
+still, and then ran backwards, dislodging the topmost
+stones from the grey stone wall with her hind quarters,
+and then plunging violently. This time there
+was cause for her alarm. A tall, forbidding-looking
+figure stood in the middle of the avenue, grasping the
+rein of Lady May's terrified horse. He had come out
+of the twilight so suddenly, and his attire was so unusual,
+that Paul and Lady May were almost as surprised
+as the animals. Paul's first instinct was one of
+anger.</p>
+
+<p>"What the&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He stopped short. The man who had startled them
+so had quieted Lady May's horse with a few soothing
+words, and now stood out of the deep shade of the over-hanging
+trees into the centre of the avenue. Even
+here his face was scarcely visible, but his figure and
+attire were sufficient. He wore the long robes and
+shovel hat of a Roman Catholic priest.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page71" id="page71"></a>[pg 71]</span>
+
+<p>Paul broke off in the middle of his exclamation, and
+the arm which had been grasping his whip tightly sank
+nervelessly to his side. He was thankful for the twilight,
+which concealed the grey shade which had stolen
+into his face. Yet now that the blow had fallen, he
+was calmer than he had been in some of his anticipations
+of it. For it had indeed fallen! In the dusky
+twilight he had recognised the face of the priest,
+changed though it was. He rode up, and addressed
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you lost your way?" he asked quietly.
+"This is a private road, and the gate at the other end
+is locked."</p>
+
+<p>The priest looked at him steadily for a moment, and
+then drew on one side, as though to let them pass.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry that I startled your horses," he said, in
+a soft, pleasant voice, marked with a strong foreign accent;
+"I was standing with my back to you, waiting
+for the moon to rise behind the ruins there, and the
+soft ground made your approach noiseless. And, if I
+am trespassing, I am sorry. The steward at the Abbey
+yonder gave me permission to wander anywhere
+around the ruins. I have perhaps exceeded a little his
+bounds."</p>
+
+<p>"It is of no consequence," Paul said. "You find
+the ruins interesting, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page72" id="page72"></a>[pg 72]</span>
+
+<p>"There are some pictures in the Abbey you might
+care to see&mdash;mostly modern, but there is a Rubens and
+two Giorgiones."</p>
+
+<p>The priest removed his hat. "I thank you, but I
+am only interested in ecclesiastical art. These ruins
+are more to me than any pictures&mdash;save those which
+Rome alone possesses," he added. "I spend all my
+evenings here, and hope to be allowed to, for the short
+time that I remain in the neighbourhood."</p>
+
+<p>"You have my permission to come and go as you
+please. I am Mr. de Vaux," Paul said, touching his
+horse with the whip. "Good-evening!"</p>
+
+<p>"Good-evening, sir! Good-evening, madam! I thank
+you!"</p>
+
+<p>They rode on down the avenue, Paul silent and absorbed,
+and making no attempt to pursue the conversation.
+At the bend of the lane he turned round in his
+saddle. The priest was standing with his back to
+them, motionless and silent as a figure of stone.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page73" id="page73"></a>[pg 73]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<h3>"WHO ARE YOU, AND WHAT YOUR MISSION?"</h3>
+
+
+<p>The winter moon, soft and bright and full, looked
+down upon the ruins of Vaux Abbey. A strange beauty
+lay upon the bare, rock-strewn hillside and desolate
+moor. Afar off a grey, brawling stream was touched
+by its light, and in its place a band of gold seemed
+coiled around the grey, sleeping hill. A black, reed-grown
+tarn at the foot of the Abbey gleamed and quivered
+like a fair silver shield. The dark pines which
+crowned their sandy slopes lost their forbidding frown
+in an unaccustomed softness, and every harsh line and
+broken pillar of the ruined chapel was toned down
+into a rich, sad softness. A human face, too, uplifted
+to the sky, so silent and motionless that it seemed
+almost set into the side of one of those groined arches,
+had lost all its harshness and worldliness in the glow
+of that falling light. It might have been the face of
+a saint, save for the vague unhappiness which shone in
+the clear, dark eyes; for at that moment, spirituality,
+wistfulness, and reverence seemed carved into the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page74" id="page74"></a>[pg 74]</span>
+white, still features. But there was disquiet, too; and,
+after a while, as though some cloud had passed across
+the moon, a dark shade stole into the white face. The
+brows were contracted into a frown, and the eyes filled
+with restless doubt. Father Adrian moved away from
+the shadow of the pillar, and stood, tall and motionless,
+on the ruined chapel floor, with his eyes fixed
+upon the distant landscape. After a moment or two,
+his lips began to move and he commenced to speak
+aloud in a low, deep tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Six nights has my voice gone up to God from
+amongst these silent ruins, six nights I have prayed in
+rain. These fair, still evenings mock me! Whose is
+their beauty, if it be not God's; and, if there be a
+God, and if the Blessed Virgin, our Holy Mother, indeed
+dwells amongst the stars, why are their faces
+turned from me? Oh! that man knew a little more or
+a little less&mdash;enough to pierce the mystery of yon star-crowned
+heavens, or so little as to gaze on them unmoved
+and unfeeling! What is our little knowledge?
+A mockery, a dreary, hopeless mockery! I had better
+have rotted in that miserable monastery, a soulless, lifeless
+being, than have stepped out to struggle with a
+world which is only a terrible riddle to me. I cannot
+reason with it; I cannot laugh or weep with it; I am
+in it, but not of it! Why was I sent? Oh I why was
+I sent?"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page75" id="page75"></a>[pg 75]</span>
+
+<p>The snapping of a twig caused him to turn suddenly
+round. Paul de Vaux was advancing through the
+ruins, with a loose cloak thrown over his evening
+clothes.</p>
+
+<p>Father Adrian turned round to meet him. The two
+men stood for a moment face to face without speaking.
+Both recognised that this interview was to be no ordinary
+one; and in a certain sense, each seemed to be
+measuring the other's strength. It was Paul who
+spoke first.</p>
+
+<p>"We have met before, Father Adrian."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"You will scarcely wonder that I am surprised to see
+you here in England. Have you left the monastery
+at Cruta?"</p>
+
+<p>"I left it a month after you did."</p>
+
+<p>"But your vows,&mdash;were they not for life?" Paul
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>Father Adrian smiled scornfully. "I was not bound
+to Cruta," he answered. "There had been complaints,
+and I was there to investigate them. The monastery
+was poverty and disease-stricken. It is closed now
+forever."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you are no monk?"</p>
+
+<p>Father Adrian shook his head. "I am, and I am
+not. In my youth I served my novitiate, but I never
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page76" id="page76"></a>[pg 76]</span>
+took the oaths. The cloisters are for holier men than I."</p>
+
+<p>"Then who are you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am&mdash;Father Adrian, priest of the Roman Catholic
+Church, I can tell you no more."</p>
+
+<p>The moonlight was falling full upon his dark, striking
+face. Paul, with bent brows, scanned every feature
+of it intently. Father Adrian bore the scrutiny
+without flinching and without discomposure. Only
+once the colour mounted a little into his cheeks as the
+eyes of the two men met.</p>
+
+<p>"What brings you to Vaux Abbey, Father Adrian?"
+Paul asked at length.</p>
+
+<p>"To see your home," was the quiet reply.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you want with me? It must be something
+more than curiosity which has brought you all
+this way. What is it?"</p>
+
+<p>Father Adrian was silent. Yet his silence was not
+one of confusion. He was looking down through the
+gaps in the ruined chapel walls at the dark Gothic
+front of the old Abbey. Paul waited for an answer,
+and it came at last.</p>
+
+<p>"I wished to see the home of Martin de Vaux, the
+Englishman who died in my arms at the monastery of
+Cruta. For six nights I have prayed for his soul in
+Purgatory, amongst the ruins here. He died in grievous
+sin!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page77" id="page77"></a>[pg 77]</span>
+
+<p>"Have you come to remind me of it?" Paul
+asked bitterly. "Perhaps you have repented of your
+silence, and have come to break the widow's heart by
+telling her the story of his last moments. Perhaps&mdash;perhaps
+in those dark hours he told you his secret&mdash;told
+you why he had come to Cruta!"</p>
+
+<p>"He did," said the priest gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"My God!"</p>
+
+<p>It was a great shock to Paul. Hitherto he had
+feared only one thing: that the story of his father's
+tragical death might come to light, and break his
+mother's heart. Now there was more to fear,&mdash;far
+more. He looked into Father Adrian's face with a
+new and keener interest. He recognised at once that
+everything dear to him in life might be at this man's
+mercy.</p>
+
+<p>"You were intrusted with this secret by a dying
+man," Paul said, with a little hoarseness in his tone.
+"It is to you as the secrets of the confessional!"</p>
+
+<p>The priest shook his head gently. "He refused to
+confess. He told me distinctly that it was as man to
+man he spoke to me."</p>
+
+<p>Paul looked away into the night with white, stricken
+face, and cursed his father's weakness. Supposing
+that this priest had discovered that his conscience
+would not allow him to keep the secret! What more
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page78" id="page78"></a>[pg 78]</span>
+likely! Why else was he here,&mdash;why else did he disclaim
+the confessional? There was only one other
+alternative! Perhaps he desired to trade upon his
+secret. Yet how was that possible? Of what use
+could money be to him? What could he gain by it?
+Besides, his was not the face of an adventurer.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not understand," Paul said at last. "Once
+more let me ask you, Father Adrian, why are you
+here?"</p>
+
+<p>Father Adrian looked thoughtfully away. "You ask
+more than I can tell you," he said gravely. "The time
+has not yet come. We shall meet again. Farewell!"</p>
+
+<p>The priest turned away, but Paul laid his hand on
+his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"If there is anything which you ought or mean to
+tell me, tell me now," he demanded hoarsely. "I can
+bear everything but suspense. I know only&mdash;that
+there was a secret. No more. Proceed! Tell me
+more!"</p>
+
+<p>The priest shook his robe free from Paul's restraining
+hand, and turned away.</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet! Not yet! My mind is not yet clear. We
+shall meet again. Farewell!"</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Farewell!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page79" id="page79"></a>[pg 79]</span>
+
+<p>The priest had passed from the ruins, and was
+already out of sight in the gathering darkness.</p>
+
+<p>"Come back, Father Adrian! One word more!"</p>
+
+<p>"Farewell!"</p>
+
+<p>The priest did not turn his head. Paul was left
+alone, gazing after him with stern, troubled face and
+anxious heart. It was a danger which he had always
+foreseen, always dreaded. Henceforth he must live
+like a man who paces, day by day, the brink of a
+volcano. At any moment the blow might fall.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page80" id="page80"></a>[pg 80]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<h3>"I AM WEARY OF A HOPELESS LOVE"</h3>
+
+
+<p>Paul and Arthur shared a bachelor residence in
+Mayfair; shared it, that is to say, insomuch as Paul
+had purchased it, and was the sole proprietor, and
+Arthur used it whenever he could get leave from his
+regiment. It was here Paul found his brother on the
+morning of his arrival in London.</p>
+
+<p>They shook hands in silence; Paul did not wish to
+say anything for a moment. His brother's appearance
+had choked him. It was one o'clock, but he was still
+in his dressing-gown; with sunken, pale cheeks, save
+for one bright spot, and with faint, dark rims underneath
+his eyes. There were a pile of blue papers and
+some ominous-looking envelopes on the table before
+him, and Paul could not help noticing the intense
+pallor of the hand which rested upon them.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you would let a fellow know what time you
+were coming," Arthur said, rather peevishly, but with
+an attempt at a smile. "I didn't expect you till evening,
+so I was having a shack before dressing. I was
+late last night!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page81" id="page81"></a>[pg 81]</span>
+
+<p>Paul banished his gravity, as far as possible, and
+stood with his hands in his pockets, leaning against
+the mantel-piece. He heartily disliked the part of
+mentor, and he did not wish to play it, unless he were
+obliged.</p>
+
+<p>"It was beastly early to get up," he said, "but the
+connection at Normanton is so much better. One has
+to wait two hours by the late train, and Normanton is
+such a hole. I don't know that I should have come up
+to town at all, just yet," he continued after a slight
+pause, "only that I'm on the committee at the club
+this term, you know, and I haven't attended a single
+meeting yet. Besides, I promised Westover to put him
+up this time, and the half-yearly meeting's to-morrow,
+you know. Got any engagement? If not, you might
+dine with me there. Always a full night election time,
+you know!"</p>
+
+<p>"Beastly sorry! but my leave's up to night," Arthur
+answered ruefully. "I shall have to go down to
+Aldershot by the four o'clock train, and do a week's
+close grind."</p>
+
+<p>Paul nodded. "I'm sorry; I'd have liked you to
+run down home with me for a few days, and see the
+mater. The Westovers have some very nice people
+coming to the Castle, and are going to get up some
+theatricals. Lady May says they must have you! Will
+you come in a week, if I work the Colonel?"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page82" id="page82"></a>[pg 82]</span>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I can't," Arthur answered, with a slight
+flush in his cheeks. "I have some engagements for
+next week, and&mdash;and&mdash;I'm sure I can't manage it."</p>
+
+<p>"The mater'll be disappointed," Paul said quietly.
+"She is counting on seeing you, and it's some time
+since you were down, isn't it? Tell you what, old man!
+I'd try and manage it, if I were you!"</p>
+
+<p>"I can't promise! I will, if I can manage it! I'll
+write you from Aldershot!"</p>
+
+<p>"You don't look quite the thing," Paul said kindly.
+"Nothing the matter, is there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing at all," Arthur assured him hastily. "I'm
+quite well. A bit of a head, that's all."</p>
+
+<p>"Not too many of those bits of paper about, eh?"
+Paul asked, pointing to an oblong strip of blue paper
+which lay, face uppermost, on the table.</p>
+
+<p>Arthur coloured, and threw a book over it.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry I saw it," Paul went on; "but it
+was
+there to be seen, wasn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes! that's all right! I oughtn't to have left
+it about, that's all. I'm not exactly a Cr&oelig;sus, like you,
+you know, Paul, and now and then I'm obliged to raise
+the wind somehow. Yes! I know what you're going
+to say. My allowance is a good one, and I ought to
+make it do. But, you see, sometimes I can't."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope you won't mind my asking, Arthur, but is
+that an acceptance of your own?"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page83" id="page83"></a>[pg 83]</span>
+
+<p>Arthur nodded. "There are a few accounts which
+I must pay," he said. "So I'm going to ask Plimsoll
+to do it for me. He's a decent fellow of his sort, you
+know! Lots of fellows go to him!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul stretched out his hand. "Give it to me," he
+said, "and I will discount it for you. Thanks!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul took it, and, just glancing at the amount, threw
+it into the fire. "I haven't my cheque book here," he
+said, "but we will call at the bank on our way to
+the club, and I can get the money. I'm glad I saw
+it!"</p>
+
+<p>"It's awfully good of you," Arthur said hesitatingly.
+"I shouldn't have thought of asking you. I must
+owe you an awful lot already."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind what you owe me! I'll write it all
+off, Arthur, and this last amount too, if you'll do me a
+favour. Come down home with me next week, as soon
+as you can get leave."</p>
+
+<p>Arthur rose to his feet, and then, leaning against
+the mantel-board, buried his face in his hands. "I
+can't leave London, Paul!&mdash;or, if I did, it could only
+be for a day," he said in a low tone. "I wish I could
+tell you why, but I can't; you wouldn't understand!"</p>
+
+<p>"I think I know," Paul said quietly. "There is
+some one whom you do not care to leave! Is that not
+it?"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page84" id="page84"></a>[pg 84]</span>
+
+<p>Arthur looked up quickly. His face was very white,
+and his lip was quivering.</p>
+
+<p>"Who told you that? What do you know?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know nothing! I want you to tell me. Perhaps
+I could help you. There is a&mdash;lady in the case, isn't
+there?"</p>
+
+<p>Arthur stood up on the hearthrug, and spoke, with
+a subdued passion trembling in his tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! it's Adrea Kiros, the dancer! I daresay
+you've heard all about it! I don't see why you shouldn't!
+I can't leave her! I know all that you would say! It
+doesn't make any difference. She isn't good! Well!
+I know it! She doesn't care for me! I don't believe
+she does. She's as cruel as a woman can be. Sometimes,
+when I am away from her, the thought of going
+back makes me shudder; and yet, I could no more
+keep away than lift the roof from this house. Of
+course, this sounds like rigmarole to you. You think
+I'm raving! I don't blame you. Only it is so, and I
+can't help it! I am as much a prisoner as any poor
+devil in Newgate."</p>
+
+<p>Paul laid his hand upon his brother's shoulder, and
+looked kindly into his face. "Arthur, I'm very sorry!
+And don't think I don't understand! I do! I do not
+know much of A&mdash;of Adrea Kiros, but I know enough
+to tell me that she is a very dangerous woman. Can't
+I help you, somehow?"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page85" id="page85"></a>[pg 85]</span>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I don't think you can! I don't think any one
+can," Arthur exclaimed unsteadily. He had been prepared
+for a lecture, for good advice, for a little contempt
+even; but his brother's attitude was unexpected,
+and it almost unnerved him. "It is the uncertainty of
+it all that is so tormenting," he went on. "Sometimes
+she is so kind, and sweet, and thoughtful, that I could
+almost worship her. And then, without any cause, she
+will suddenly become cold, and hard, and cruel, till I
+hate myself for bearing quietly all that she says. But
+I do! I can't help it! I am never quite happy even
+when she is in one of her sweetest moods, for I never
+know how long it will last. The moment I leave her
+I begin to get anxious, and wonder how she will be the
+next day."</p>
+
+<p>"Try what a change will do, Arthur!" his brother
+begged.</p>
+
+<p>Arthur shook his head. "It's no use; I've tried!
+If I went away I should only be miserable, and hurry
+back by the first train. Oh, if only I could make you
+understand!" he cried, with a little passionate gesture,
+which gained pathos and almost dignity from the
+expression on his white, sorrowing face. "Adrea is
+as necessary to me as the air we breathe! The sun
+has no light, and the day no ending, till I have seen
+her! She is the measure of all things to me: joy,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page86" id="page86"></a>[pg 86]</span>
+grief, happiness, misery, it is her hand that deals them
+out to me! She can play upon the chords of my being
+as she chooses. A look or word from her can pull me
+down into hell, or transport me into a seventh heaven!
+Who gave her this power, I cannot tell! But she has
+it! she has it!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul said no more. Perhaps he recognised that, for
+the present at any rate, it was useless. He walked up and
+down the room for a few minutes, in sympathetic
+silence. When he spoke again he made no reference
+to the subject, but Arthur understood. "Get your
+things on, and come out to lunch with me," he said
+pleasantly. "I am too hungry to be sympathetic, and
+we can call at Coutts' on the way."</p>
+
+<p>Arthur nodded and disappeared. Paul took his
+chair for a while, and, as he sat there gazing into the
+fire, his face grew grey and haggard. Was Adrea
+Kiros seeking vengeance on the son of her father's
+murderer? he wondered. If so, it seemed as though
+she were indeed succeeding. How could he save
+Arthur? and what would happen if those rumours
+should reach his mother's ears, as some day they certainly
+would? At any rate, he would see Adrea himself
+before he left London. He had made up his mind
+that, if Arthur refused to listen to him, that should be
+his course.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page87" id="page87"></a>[pg 87]</span>
+
+<p>Things somehow seemed brighter when they walked
+down to the club together. Dress makes so much difference
+to a man, and Arthur, spruce and <i>debonair</i>,
+with a gardenia in his button-hole, and every part of
+his attire almost "faultily faultless," according to the
+canons of London fashion, presented a very different
+appearance to the tragical-looking personage of half an
+hour ago. There was a slight air of subdued feverishness
+about him, though, not altogether healthy, and
+the dark rims had not quite vanished from underneath
+his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Paul, I wonder whether you will do something for
+me?" he asked, as they were crossing Pickadilly. "I
+hate asking you!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll try," Paul answered. "What is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't believe you'll like it, but&mdash;the fact is, Adrea
+wants you to go and see her. I promised that I
+would do my best to get you to call with me this afternoon.
+If you don't mind, I wish you would," he
+added wistfully.</p>
+
+<p>"I will go with you certainly, if you wish it," Paul
+answered, not too cordially, for he did not wish his
+brother to know that it was what he had already
+planned to do. "Did she tell you that we had already
+a slight acquaintance?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! You rode home in a cab together from Lady
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page88" id="page88"></a>[pg 88]</span>
+Swindon's, didn't you? There was only one, and it
+was raining, so you shared it. Adrea told me that."</p>
+
+<p>Paul nodded. He meant, after he had seen Adrea,
+to consider whether it would not be best to tell his
+brother everything. But, for the present, her story
+was enough. They turned into Pall Mall, and, almost
+immediately, Arthur's hat was in his hand, and he was
+on the edge of the pavement, colouring with pleasure.
+A small victoria had pulled up by the side, and Paul
+found himself face to face with Adrea.</p>
+
+<p>She was muffled up in rich brown furs, and almost
+invisible, but her dark eyes flashed into his from underneath
+her thick veil. After the first greeting she
+scarcely noticed Arthur; it was Paul upon whom her
+eyes were bent.</p>
+
+<p>"You are in London again, then, Mr. de Vaux," she
+remarked. "Have you discovered that, after all, the
+country is a little <i>triste</i> in this land of damp and fogs&mdash;the
+country in November, I mean&mdash;or is it only important
+business which has brought you up!"</p>
+
+<p>"The latter," he answered, "as it happens. I am
+glad to see that the damp and fogs which you complain
+of have not affected your health."</p>
+
+<p>"I am quite well, thanks," she answered. "How
+long are you staying in town?"</p>
+
+<p>"For less than a week, I think."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page89" id="page89"></a>[pg 89]</span>
+
+<p>"Well, it is too cold to talk here. Will you come
+and let me give you some tea this afternoon, after the
+fashion of you strange islanders? I want you to,
+please."</p>
+
+<p>Paul looked her straight in the face. "You are very
+kind; I shall be glad to," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>She nodded. "About five o'clock. I go to sleep
+till then. Shall you come, Arthur?" she added carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot, so late as that," he answered despondently.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, I forgot. You are going down to Aldershot,
+aren't you? Don't overwork yourself."</p>
+
+<p>She nodded, and the carriage drove on. Arthur
+watched it until it was out of sight. "She might have
+said a little earlier," he remarked despondently. "She
+knew I couldn't come so late as that."</p>
+
+<p>Paul passed his arm through his brother's and was
+silent. He knew very well that Adrea had thought of
+this when she had made the arrangement.</p>
+
+<p>They lunched together, and Paul did his utmost to
+make the time pass pleasantly for his brother. When
+they parted, too, late in the afternoon, he referred once
+more to Mrs. de Vaux's desire that he should come
+down to the Abbey for a few days.</p>
+
+<p>"I want you to think of it seriously, Arthur," he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page90" id="page90"></a>[pg 90]</span>
+said, as they shook hands through the carriage window.
+"The mother is very anxious to have you, and
+I am sure we can make things pleasant for you. I
+shall speak to Drummond about leave if I see him to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>Arthur assented dubiously, and without any enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>"Awfully good of you to want me," he remarked. "I
+daresay I'll be able to come. I'll try, anyhow&mdash;just
+for a day or two."</p>
+
+<p>The train steamed off, and Paul walked slowly back
+to his carriage.</p>
+
+<p>"Where to, sir?" the man asked.</p>
+
+<p>Paul hesitated for a moment. Then he gave Adrea's
+address, and was driven away.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page91" id="page91"></a>[pg 91]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<h3>"AH! HOW FAIR MY WEAKNESS FINDS THEE"</h3>
+
+
+<p>Paul found no one in the hall of the house where
+Adrea lived to take him to her, so after waiting a few
+minutes for her maid, whom the porter had twice
+fruitlessly summoned, he ascended the stairs alone,
+and knocked at the door of her rooms.</p>
+
+<p>At first there was no reply. He tried again a little
+louder, and this time there was a sound of some one
+stirring within.</p>
+
+<p>"Come in, Celeste," was the drowsy answer.</p>
+
+<p>He turned the handle and walked in, carefully closing
+the door behind him. At first the room appeared
+to be in semi-darkness, for a clear spring day's sunshine
+was brightening the streets which he had just
+left, and here the heavy curtains were closely drawn,
+as though to keep out every vestige of daylight. But
+gradually his eyes grew accustomed to the shaded twilight
+and he could make out the familiar objects of
+the room; for although it was only his second visit,
+they were familiar already in his thoughts.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page92" id="page92"></a>[pg 92]</span>
+
+<p>Strangely enough it seemed to him, after his first
+hasty glance around, that the room was empty; but
+just then a sudden gleam from the bright fire fell
+upon Adrea's hair, and he saw her. He stood for a
+moment silent and motionless. She was curled up on
+a huge divan drawn close to the fireplace, with her
+limbs doubled under her like a panther's, and her
+arms, from which the loose sleeves had fallen back,
+clasped half-bare underneath her head. The peculiar
+grace of movement and carriage, which had made her
+dancing so famous, was even more striking in repose,
+for there was a faint, insidious suggestion of voluptuous
+movement in those motionless, crouching limbs,
+and the <i>abandon</i> of the shapely, dusky head, with its
+crown of dark, wavy hair thrown back amongst the
+cushions. It was beauty of a strange sort, the beauty
+almost of some wild animal; but Paul felt a most unwilling
+admiration steal through his senses as he gazed
+down upon her. Her tea-gown, a wonderful shade of
+shimmering green, tumbled and disarranged out of all
+similitude to its original shape, followed the soft perfections
+of her outline with such peculiar faithfulness
+that it seemed to suggest even more than it concealed,
+leaving the gentle tracery of her figure outlined there
+like a piece of living Greek statuary. She turned
+slightly upon the couch, and a slipperless little foot
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page93" id="page93"></a>[pg 93]</span>
+stole out from a sea of lace and white draperies which
+her uneasy movement had left exposed, and swayed
+slowly backwards and forwards, trying to reach the
+ground. Her eyes were still closed, but she was not
+sleeping, for in a moment or two she spoke in a low,
+drowsy tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Celeste, I told you not to disturb me for an hour.
+It isn't five o'clock yet, is it?"</p>
+
+<p>He roused himself, and moved a step further into
+the room. "It is still a quarter to five, I think," he
+said. "I have come before my time."</p>
+
+<p>She opened her eyes, and then, seeing him, sprang
+into a sitting posture. Her hair, which had escaped
+all bounds, was down to her shoulders, and her gown,
+still further disarranged by her hasty movement,
+floated around her in wonderful curves and angles.
+Had she been a past mistress in the art of picturesque
+effects she could have conceived nothing more striking.
+Paul felt all the old fear upon him as he
+watched the firelight gleaming upon her startled,
+dusky face, and the faint pink colouring, wonderfully
+suggestive of a blush, steal into her cheeks. It seemed
+to him that she was as beautiful as a woman could be,
+and yet so different from Lady May.</p>
+
+<p>She rose, and, with a shrug of the shoulders and a
+quick, graceful movement, shook out her skirts, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page94" id="page94"></a>[pg 94]</span>
+pushed the hair back from her face. Then she held
+out her hand, and Paul found himself compelled,
+against his will, to stand by her side.</p>
+
+<p>"How strange that I should have overslept like this,
+and have taken you for Celeste!" she said. "Yet
+perhaps it was natural; for, Monsieur Paul, save
+Celeste, no one yet has permission to enter my chamber
+unannounced. How comes it that I find you here to
+laugh at my <i>deshabille</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>He was silent for a moment, while she looked at him
+questioningly. Her soft, delicate voice, with its very
+slight but piquant foreign intonation, had often
+sounded in his reluctant yet charmed ears since their
+last meeting; but now that he heard it again he felt
+how weak were his imaginings, and what sweet music
+it indeed was.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry," he answered; and the constraint
+which he was placing upon his voice made it sound
+hard and cold. "The porter rang for your maid twice
+whilst I waited in the hall; but as she did not come, I
+thought I had better try and find the way myself."</p>
+
+<p>"And I mistook your knock for Celeste's, and let
+you discover me <i>comme cela</i>. Well, you were not to
+blame. See, I will just arrange my hair here, and you
+need not look at me unless you like."</p>
+
+<p>She stood up in front of a mirror, over which she
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page95" id="page95"></a>[pg 95]</span>
+lighted a shaded candle, and for a moment or two her
+white hands flashed deftly in and out amongst the dark,
+silky coils of disordered hair. Paul sat down, and
+taking up a magazine which he found lying on the
+divan, tried to concentrate his thoughts upon its contents.
+But he could not. Every moment he found his
+eyes and his thoughts straying to that slim, lithe figure,
+watching the play of her arms and the grace of
+her backward pose. When she looked suddenly round,
+on the completion of her task, their eyes met.</p>
+
+<p>"Monsieur Paul, you are like all your sex&mdash;curious,"
+she said lightly. "Tell me, then, do you admire my
+coiffure?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very much," he answered, glancing at the loose
+Grecian knot into which she had gathered her disordered
+hair, and confined it with a band of dull gold.
+"It is quite oriental, and it seems to suit you. Not
+that I am any judge of such matters," he added
+quickly.</p>
+
+<p>She moved away with a little, low laugh, and lit two
+or three more of the shaded candles or fairy lamps
+which were placed here and there on brackets round
+the room. Then she rang the bell, and gave some
+orders to the maid.</p>
+
+<p>"So you think my hair looks oriental," she said,
+sinking down upon a huge cushion in front of the fire.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page96" id="page96"></a>[pg 96]</span>
+"That is what the papers call me sometimes&mdash;oriental.
+My early associations asserting themselves, you see. I
+think I remember more of Constantinople than any
+place," she went on dreamily, with her eyes fixed on
+the fire. "I was only a child in those days, but it
+seemed to me then that nothing could be more beautiful
+than the City of Mosques and the Golden Horn on
+a clear summer evening. Why do I think of those
+days?" she added, shaking her head impatiently.
+"Such folly! And yet I always think of them when I
+am lonely."</p>
+
+<p>He was suddenly and deeply moved with altogether
+a new feeling towards her&mdash;one of responsibility. She
+was alone in the world, and it was his father's hand
+which had rendered her so. How empty and barren
+had been his conception of the burden which that deed
+had laid upon him! Like a flash he seemed to see the
+whole situation in a new light. If, indeed, she had
+drifted into ruin, the sin lay at his door. He should
+have found her a mother; it should have been his care
+to have watched her continually, and to have assured
+himself that she was contented and happy. In those
+few moments the whole situation seemed to change,
+and he even felt a hot flush of shame at his own coldness
+towards her. He forgot the dancer, the woman of
+strange fascinations, the idol of the <i>jeunesse dor&#233;e</i> of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page97" id="page97"></a>[pg 97]</span>
+West London clubdom, and he remembered only the
+fact that she was a lonely orphan with a most womanly
+light in her soft, dark eyes, and that he had failed in
+his duty towards her. Paul was essentially a "manly"
+man, self-contained, and with all his feelings very
+much at his control; but at that moment he felt something
+like a rush of tenderness towards this strange,
+dark-eyed girl who lay coiled up at his feet. Involuntarily
+he stretched out his hand and laid it, with an almost
+caressing gesture, upon her hair.</p>
+
+<p>She started around, as though electrified, and looking
+up saw the change in his face. It was the first
+kindly look or speech she had had from him since
+they had met in London, and it had come so suddenly
+that it seemed to have a strange effect upon her. A
+deep flush stole into her face, and her eyes gleamed
+brilliantly. She drew a long breath, and underneath
+her loose gown he could see her bosom rising and falling
+quickly. Yet it all seemed so softened and womanly
+that the thoughts which he had once had of her
+seemed like a distant nightmare to him. The ethical
+and physical horror of her being&mdash;of her ever becoming&mdash;what
+he feared, rose up strong within him, and
+deepened at once his sense of responsibility towards
+her, and his new-born tenderness. He took her hand
+gently, and was startled to find how cold it was.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page98" id="page98"></a>[pg 98]</span>
+
+<p>"So you do feel lonely, Adrea, sometimes," he said
+softly, "although you have so many acquaintances."</p>
+
+<p>The colour burned deeper for a moment in her
+cheeks. She looked at him half reproachfully, half
+indignantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Acquaintances! You mean the people who come
+to see me! I hate them all! Sometimes they amuse
+me a little, but that is all. They are nothing!"</p>
+
+<p>"And you have no women friends?"</p>
+
+<p>"None! How should I! But I do not care. I do
+not like English-women!"</p>
+
+<p>"But, Adrea, it is not good for you,&mdash;this isolation
+from your sex."</p>
+
+<p>At the sound of her Christian name, coming from his
+lips so gently, almost affectionately, she looked up
+quickly. It seemed to him almost as though some
+softening change had crept over her. Was it the firelight,
+he wondered, or was it fancy?</p>
+
+<p>"Good for me!" she said softly. "Have you
+just thought of that, Monsieur Paul?"</p>
+
+<p>Again he felt that pang of conscience; and yet, was
+she not a little unjust to him?</p>
+
+<p>"You took your life into your own hands," he
+reminded her. "You chose for yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes!" she answered, drawing a little nearer
+to him, till her head almost rested upon his knees. "I
+do not blame you."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page99" id="page99"></a>[pg 99]</span>
+
+<p>"It would have been so easy before to have found a
+home for you," he went on, "and now you have made it
+so difficult."</p>
+
+<p>"There is no need," she interrupted proudly; "I
+could keep myself now. I do not want anything from
+you, Monsieur Paul,&mdash;save one thing!"</p>
+
+<p>She raised her face to his, and it seemed to him to
+be all aglow with a wonderful, new light. There was
+no mistaking the soft entreaty of those strange, dark
+eyes so close to his, or the tremor in his tones. And
+then, before he could answer her, before he could summon
+up resolution enough to draw away, she had stolen
+softly into his arms, and, with a little murmur of content,
+had rested her small, dusky head, with its coronet
+of dark, braided hair, upon his shoulder, and twined
+her hands around his neck.</p>
+
+<p>"Paul! Monsieur Paul! I am lonely and miserable.
+Love me just a little, only a little!" she pleaded.</p>
+
+<p>It was the supreme moment for both of them. To
+her, coveting this love with all the passionate force of
+her fiery oriental nature, time seemed to stand still
+while she rested passively in his arms, neither altogether
+accepted nor altogether repulsed. And to him,
+as he sat there pale and shaken, fighting fiercely against
+this great temptation which threatened his self-respect,
+his liberty of body and soul, life seemed to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page100" id="page100"></a>[pg 100]</span>
+have turned into a grim farce, full of grotesque lights
+and shadows, mocking and gibing at all which had
+seemed to him sweet and pure and strong. Her warm
+breath fell upon his cheek, and her eyes maddened
+him. A curiously faint perfume from her clothes
+floated upon the air, and oppressed him with its peculiar
+richness. He was a strong man but at that
+moment he faltered. It seemed as though some unseen
+hand were weaving a spell upon him, as though his
+whole environment was being drawn in around him,
+and he himself were powerless. Yet, even in that
+moment of intoxication, his reason did not altogether
+desert him. He knew that if he opened his arms to
+receive that clinging figure, and drew the delicate,
+tear-stained face, full of mute invitation, down to his,
+to be covered with passionate kisses,&mdash;he knew that at
+that moment he would sign the death-warrant to all
+that had seemed fair and sweet and comely in his life.
+Forever he must live without self-respect, a dishonoured
+man in his own eyes, perhaps some day in hers,&mdash;for he
+had no more faith in her love than in his.</p>
+
+<p>He held her hands tightly in his,&mdash;he had unwound
+them gently from his neck,&mdash;and stood up face to face
+with her upon the hearthrug. The soft fire-light threw
+up strange, ruddy gleams, which glowed around her
+and shown in her dark eyes, fixed so earnestly and so
+passionately upon his.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page101" id="page101"></a>[pg 101]</span>
+
+<p>"Adrea," he said, and his low, hoarse tone sounded
+harsh and unfamiliar to his ears, "you do not know&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She interrupted him, she threw her arms again
+around his neck, and her upturned face almost met his.</p>
+
+<p>"I do know! I do know! I understand&mdash;everything!
+Only I&mdash;cannot live without you, Paul!"</p>
+
+<p>Her head sank upon his shoulder; he could not
+thrust her away. Very gently he passed his arms
+around her, and drew her to him. He knew that he
+could trust himself. For him the battle was over.
+Even as she had crept into his arms, there had come to
+him a flash of memory&mdash;a sudden, swift vision. The
+walls of the dimly lit, dainty little chamber, with all
+its charm of faint perfume, soft lights, and luxurious
+drapings, had opened before him, and he looked out
+upon another world. A bare Northumbrian moor,
+with its tumbled masses of grey rock, its low-hanging,
+misty clouds and silent tarns, stretched away before
+his eyes. A strong, fresh breeze, salt-smelling and
+bracing, cooled his hot face. The roar of a great ocean
+thundered in his ears, and an angry sunset burned
+strange colours into the western sky. And with these
+actual memories came a healthier tone of feeling&mdash;something,
+indeed, of the old North-country puritanism
+which was in his blood. The sea spoke to him of the
+vastness of life, and dared him to cast his away, soiled
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page102" id="page102"></a>[pg 102]</span>
+and tarnished, for the sake of a brief, passionate delight.
+The breeze, nature's very voice, whispered to him to
+stand true to himself, and taste once more and for ever
+the deep joy of pure and perfect communion with her.
+The voices of his past life spoke to him in one long,
+sweet chorus, and held up to him those ideals to which
+he had been ever true. And blended with all were
+memories, faint but sweet, of a fair womanly face, into
+whose clear grey eyes he could never dare to look again
+if he yielded now to this fierce temptation. A new
+strength came upon him, and brought with it a great
+tenderness.</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea, my child," he said softly, "you make me
+almost forget that I am your guardian and you are
+my ward. Sit down here! I want to talk to you."</p>
+
+<p>He led her, dumb and unresisting, to a chair, and
+stood by her side.</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She interrupted him, throwing his arms roughly
+from her shoulder, and springing to her feet.</p>
+
+<p>"How dare you touch me! How dare you stand
+there and mock me! Oh! how I hate you! hate
+you! hate you!"</p>
+
+<p>Her voice and every limb trembled with passion, and
+her face was as pale as death. Before her anger he
+bowed his head and was silent. Against the sombre
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page103" id="page103"></a>[pg 103]</span>
+background of dark curtains, her slim form seemed to
+gain an added strength and dignity.</p>
+
+<p>"You have insulted me, Paul de Vaux! Do I
+not owe you enough already, without putting this to
+the score! Dare you think that it was indeed my
+love I offered you&mdash;you who stood by and saw my
+father murdered that you might be spared from shame
+and disgrace! Bah! Listen to me and go! You
+have a brother? Good! I shall ruin him, shall break
+his heart; and, when the task is over, I shall cast him
+away like an old glove! Oh, it will be easy, never
+fear! I shall do it. Arthur is no cold hypocrite, like
+you. He is my slave. And when I have ruined him,
+have set my foot upon him, it will be your turn, Monsieur
+Paul de Vaux. Listen! I will know my father's
+secret! I will know why he was murdered! I
+will discover everything! Some day the whole world
+shall know&mdash;from me. Now go! Out of my sight, I
+say! Go! go! go!"</p>
+
+<p>With bowed head and face as white as death Paul
+walked out of the room, with her words ringing in his
+ears like the mocking echoes of some hideous nightmare.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page104" id="page104"></a>[pg 104]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<h3>"I AM BUT A SLAVE, AND YET I BID THEE COME"</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Were there any letters for me this morning,
+mother?" Paul asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Only one for you, I think," Mrs. de Vaux answered
+from across the tea-tray. "I believe you will find it in
+the library. Shall I send for it?"</p>
+
+<p>Paul shook his head. "It will keep," he answered
+lightly. "I can get it on my way upstairs.
+Have we anything left to tell, Lady May?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think not," Lady May replied, from the depths
+of an easy chair drawn up to the fire. "Altogether it
+has been a glorious day, and such a scent! I don't
+know when I have enjoyed anything so much."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor I!" Paul answered heartily. "The going
+was superb, and that second fox took us over a grand
+stretch of country. Really, if it hadn't been for the
+walls here and there, we might have been in Leicestershire!
+May I have some more tea, mother?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. de Vaux stretched out her hand for his cup, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page105" id="page105"></a>[pg 105]</span>
+smiled gently at their enthusiasm. She had been a
+hunting woman all her life; and, though she seldom
+even drove to a meet now, she liked to have her son
+come in to afternoon tea with her, and talk over the
+run. Of late, too, he had seemed so pale and listless
+that she had been getting a little anxious. She had begun
+to fear that he must be out of health, or that the
+monotony of Vaux Abbey was wearying him, and that
+he would be leaving her again soon. But to-day she
+had watched him ride up the avenue, with Lady May,
+and it seemed to her that there was a change in
+his bearing&mdash;a change for the better; and, looking at
+him now, she was sure of it. A faint glow was in his
+cheeks, and his eyes were brighter. His manner, too,
+to Lady May pleased her more. He had ridden home
+with her; from their conversation, they seemed to have
+been together almost all day; and there seemed to be a
+spirit of <i>bon comeradie</i> between the two, as they talked
+over their doings, which certainly pointed to a good
+understanding. Altogether Mrs. de Vaux was pleased
+and hopeful.</p>
+
+<p>And, indeed, she had reason to be, for his long day
+in the open country with Lady May had been like
+a strong, sweet tonic to Paul. For the first time since
+his return to Vaux Abbey he had felt that a time
+might come when he would be able to escape altogether
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page106" id="page106"></a>[pg 106]</span>
+from those lingering, bitter-sweet memories which
+were all that remained to him now of Adrea. On the
+bare, windy moor, with the glow of physical exercise
+and excitement coursing through his veins, and Lady
+May's pleasant voice in his ears, that little scene in the
+rose-lit chamber seemed for a moment very far away.
+Adrea, with her soft, passion-lit eyes, and dusky, oriental
+face, her lithe, voluptuous figure and the faint
+perfumes of her rustling draperies, seemed less to him
+then than a short while ago he could have believed
+possible. He could not think of that scene without a
+shudder,&mdash;it had left its mark in a certain way for
+ever,&mdash;but it was not so constantly present to him. He
+knew that, for the first time, a woman had tempted him
+sorely. He knew, too, and he alone, how nearly he
+had yielded. His sudden passion, her strange Eastern
+beauty, and the fascination which it had exercised over
+him, together with the soft sensuousness of her surroundings,
+had formed a strong coalition, and to-day
+he recognised, for the first time, how much he owed
+his victory to the girl who was riding by his side.
+Even in those breathless moments of hesitation he had
+found time to consider that if he yielded to Adrea's
+pleading, he could never again take Lady May's hand,
+or meet her frank, open gaze. The pure healthfulness
+of life which had been so dear to him would be tainted
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page107" id="page107"></a>[pg 107]</span>
+for ever. The moorland breezes of his northern home
+would never strike the same chords in his nature again.
+All these recollections had flashed across his mind at
+that critical moment, lending strength to resist and
+crush his passion. And to-day he had commenced to
+reap his reward. To-day he had tasted once more the
+sweets of these things, and found how dear they still
+were to him. He could still look into Lady May's fair,
+pure face unshamed, and find all the old pleasure
+in listening to her frank, girlish talk; and he could
+still bare his head to the sweeping winds, and lift his
+face to the sun and gaze with silent admiration at the
+faint, deepening colours in the western sky, as Lady
+May and he rode homeward across the moor in the late
+afternoon. All these joys would have been lost to him
+for ever,&mdash;these and many others. Adrea could never
+have repaid him for their loss.</p>
+
+<p>So Paul, who had come home from London pale and
+silent, with the marks of a great struggle upon him,
+lay back in an arm chair and watched the firelight
+play upon Lady May's fair face with more than a passive
+interest. Mrs. de Vaux's cherished scheme had
+never been so near its accomplishment; for if she
+could have read Paul's thoughts she would have
+known that he was thinking of Lady May more tenderly
+than he had ever done before. Meeting his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page108" id="page108"></a>[pg 108]</span>
+steadfast, almost wistful, gaze, she became almost confused,
+and suddenly rising, she shook out the skirts of
+her riding habit, and took up her hat and whip.</p>
+
+<p>"It has been such a delightful rest," she said, looking
+away from Paul and speaking to his mother. "I
+shall never forget how good that tea tasted! But I
+really must go, Mrs. de Vaux! My poor animal is
+quite done up, and I shall have to walk all the way
+home."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know whether I did right," Paul said, rising,
+"but I sent your groom straight on home with
+the mare, and ordered a brougham for you. She has
+had a long day, and I thought it would be more comfortable
+for you."</p>
+
+<p>She flashed a grateful glance at him. "How
+thoughtful and how kind you are! Of course it will
+be nicer! I was beginning to feel a little selfish, too,
+for keeping Betty out of her stable so long."</p>
+
+<p>"As a reward we will keep you a little longer," he
+remarked. "It is only six o'clock!"</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head. "No I won't stop, thanks!
+There are some tiresome people coming to dine to-night,
+and I must go home. Good-bye, Lady de
+Vaux!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul strolled down the hall with her and handed
+her into the carriage. For the first time in his life he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page109" id="page109"></a>[pg 109]</span>
+held her hand a little tighter and a little longer than
+was necessary.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall you be at home to-morrow afternoon, Lady
+May?" he asked quietly.</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him for a moment, and then her
+eyes drooped, and her heart beat a little faster. She
+understood him.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes!" she answered softly.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall ride over then! Good-bye!"</p>
+
+<p>"Good-bye!"</p>
+
+<p>He lingered on the doorstep for a minute, watching
+the carriage roll down the avenue. When it had
+disappeared, he turned back into the hall, and after
+a moment's hesitation, entered the library.</p>
+
+<p>It was a large, sombre-looking apartment, scarcely
+ever entered by anyone save Paul. The bookcases
+reached only half-way up the walls, the upper portion
+of which was hung with oil portraits, selected
+from the picture gallery. At the lower end of the
+room the shelves had been built out at right angles
+to the wall, lined with books, and in one of the recesses
+so-formed&mdash;almost as large as an ordinary-sized
+chamber&mdash;Paul had his writing-table surrounded
+by his favourite volumes. It was a delightful
+little miniature library. Facing him, six rows of
+black oak shelves held a fine collection of classical
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page110" id="page110"></a>[pg 110]</span>
+literature; on his left, the lower shelves contained
+rare editions of the early English dramatists, and the
+upper ones were given up to poetry, from Chaucer
+to Swinburne. The right-hand shelves were wholly
+French, from quaint volumes of troubadours' poetry
+to Alfred de Musset and De Maupassant. It was here
+Paul spent most of his time when at the Abbey.</p>
+
+<p>The meet had been rather a long way off that
+morning, and he had left before the arrival of the
+post-bag from the neighbouring town. Mrs. de Vaux
+had distributed the letters, and the one she had spoken
+of lay at the edge of the table. He stretched out
+his hand to take it up&mdash;without any presentiments,
+without any thought as to whom it might be from.
+An invitation, doubtless, or a begging letter he imagined,
+as he caught sight of the large square envelope.
+But suddenly, before his fingers had closed
+upon it, he started and stood quite still, leaning over
+the back of his chair. His heart was beating fast,
+and there was a mist before his eyes&mdash;a mist through
+which he saw, as though in a dream, the walls of
+his library melt away, to be replaced by the dainty
+interior of that little room in Grey Street, with all
+the dim luxury of its soft colouring and adornment.
+He saw her too, the centre of the picture&mdash;saw her as
+she seemed to him before that final scene&mdash;saw her
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page111" id="page111"></a>[pg 111]</span>
+half-kneeling, half-crouching, before him, with her
+beautiful dark eyes, yearning and passionate, fixed
+upon his in mute, but wonderfully eloquent, pleading.
+Oh! it was folly, but it was sweet, marvellously
+sweet. Every nerve seemed thrilled with the exquisite
+pleasure of the memory so suddenly called up
+to him, and his lips quivered with the thought of
+what he might have said to her. The strange, voluptuous
+perfume which crept upwards from that letter
+seemed in a measure to have paralysed him. He
+stood there like a man entranced, with the dim firelight
+on one side and the low horned moon through
+the high window on his left, casting a strange, vivid
+light on his pale face&mdash;paler even than usual against
+the scarlet of his hunting-coat. That letter! What
+could it contain? Was it a recall, or a fresh torrent
+of anger? He stood there quite still, leaning over
+the back of the high-backed oak chair emblazoned
+with the De Vaux arms, and making no motion towards
+taking it up.</p>
+
+<p>A sound from outside&mdash;the low rumbling of a gong&mdash;roused
+him at last, and he pushed the chair hastily
+away from him. His first impulse was one of
+anger, of shame, that he, a strong man, as he had
+deemed himself, should have been so moved by a
+simple flood of memories. It seemed ignoble to him
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page112" id="page112"></a>[pg 112]</span>
+and a frown gathered on his forehead as he reached
+forward and picked up the letter. Yet his fingers
+trembled as they tore it open, and his eyes ran over
+the contents rapidly.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="author">"18 GREY STREET, LONDON, W., <i>Thursday</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Monsieur Paul, my hand trembles a little when I sit
+down to write to you, and think of our last parting. But
+write to you I must! I am very humble now, and very,
+very much ashamed! Shall I go on and say that I am
+very sad and lonely,&mdash;for it is so! I am miserable! I
+have been miserable every moment since that day!
+Forgive me, Monsieur Paul, forgive me! my guardian.
+I behaved quite dreadfully, and I deserved to be punished.
+Believe me! I am punished. I have had scarcely
+any sleep, and my eyes are swollen with weeping. I
+have cancelled all my engagements this week, and I
+have closed my doors to everybody. Oh! be generous,
+Monsieur Paul! be generous and forgive me! I have
+suffered so much,&mdash;it is right that I should, for I was
+much to blame. Will you not let fall some kindly veil
+of memory over that afternoon. I was mad. Let what
+I said be unsaid! Let me be again just what you called
+me,&mdash;your ward. I ask for nothing more! Be cold,
+if you will, and stern! Scold me! and I will but say
+that I have deserved it! Only come to me! Come and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page113" id="page113"></a>[pg 113]</span>
+let me hear your own lips tell me that I am forgiven.
+I will do everything that you ask! I will not see Arthur
+if he calls,&mdash;you shall tell me yourself how to
+answer his letters,&mdash;I have a little pile of them here.
+Monsieur Paul, you must come! You must come, or I
+shall be driven to&mdash;but no! I will not threaten. You
+would not care whatever happened to me, would you?
+I am very, very lonely. I wish that I could have telegraphed
+all this, and had you here to-night! But you
+would not have come! Yet, perhaps you would, out of
+kindness to a solitary girl. I like to think that you
+would have!</p>
+
+<p>"Monsieur Paul, you have been good to the 'little
+brown girl,' as you used to call her, all your life! Do
+not forsake her now. She has been very mad and
+wicked, but she is very, very penitent. Celeste tells
+me that I am looking thin and ill, and my looking-glass
+says the same. It is because I am unhappy;
+it is because my guardian is angry with me, and he is
+so far away. Oh! Monsieur Paul, come, come, come
+to me! It shall be all as you wish! I will obey you in
+everything. Only forgive!</p>
+
+<p class="author2">"Yours,</p>
+
+<p class="author">"ADREA."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page114" id="page114"></a>[pg 114]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<h3>"ADREA'S DIARY"</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"A figure from the past I see once more as in a dream."
+</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p>This evening I have had an adventure! I am thankful,
+for it has occupied my thoughts for awhile; and
+for anything that does that I am grateful. I had been
+in the house all day, restless and nervous, and towards
+dusk I put on my cloak and a thick veil, and went out
+into the street. I scarcely noticed which way I went.
+It was all the same to me. A dull purple bank of
+clouds hung low down in the west, and the air was
+close and still. By-and-by I heard thunder, and big
+raindrops fell upon the pavement. A storm was threatening,
+and I longed for it to come and clear the air.</p>
+
+<p>I must have been walking for nearly an hour, when
+it came at last, and the rain fell in great sheets. I
+looked around for a cab, but there was none in sight.
+I had no idea where I was,&mdash;London is so vast and
+large,&mdash;and though, by the distant roar of wheels, I
+could tell that I was not far from a great thoroughfare,
+the street in which I was seemed to be deserted. Just
+by my side was a dark tunnel, gloomy and vault-like
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page115" id="page115"></a>[pg 115]</span>
+in appearance; but in that downpour any refuge was
+welcome, and I stepped back underneath it. It was
+like going into the bowels of the earth; and, every
+now and then, there was a roar over my head which
+made me almost dizzy. But, from round the corner, I
+could see that it was only the sound of trains passing
+and repassing, so I decided to stay until I could see a
+cab.</p>
+
+<p>Opposite to me was a man with a truck-load of
+oranges, and by his side a boy seated before a red-hot
+swinging can, containing chestnuts. There was no one
+else in the street, although at the bottom of it crowds
+of people and a constant stream of vehicles were hurrying
+along. On the other side of the way was a tall
+and grim-looking building, discoloured with smoke and
+age. It was evidently a hospital or institution of some
+sort. The windows were long and narrow, and one or
+two of them, I could see, were of stained glass. There
+was no brass plate by the front door, nor any sign. In
+the absence of anything else to do, I began to frame
+surmises as to what the place might be. The spotlessly
+white doorsteps and polished bell interested me;
+they seemed out of tone with the character of the place
+and its surroundings, so utterly bare and dreary. I
+began to wish that a caller would come and ring the
+bell, so that I could get a peep at the interior. But no
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page116" id="page116"></a>[pg 116]</span>
+one did, although I noticed that more than one hurrying
+passer-by glanced up at it curiously.</p>
+
+<p>The thunder died away, but the rain still came down
+heavily. If it had not been for my curious interest in
+that great ugly building opposite, I should have risked
+a wetting, and made my way down to the busy thoroughfare
+in the distance. But I was anxious to see
+some one enter or leave the place, or for something to
+happen which would give me an idea as to its character;
+so I waited. Half an hour passed, and my curiosity
+remained unsatisfied. There was no sign of life
+about the place; not even a tradesman had called, nor
+had that forbidding-looking portal once been opened.
+It was still raining fast, but there were signs of finer
+weather, and right overhead was a break in the clouds.
+I should certainly be able to leave now in a few minutes;
+but, strangely enough, all my impatience seemed
+gone. The grim-looking building opposite had fascinated
+me. I had no desire to leave the place until I
+had found out all about it.</p>
+
+<p>It was odd, that curiosity of mine; all my days I
+shall wonder at it. On the face of it, it seemed so unreasonable,
+and yet it led to so much. I have no creed,
+and I know nothing about philosophies, or perhaps to-night's
+adventure might have meant even more to me.
+But, indeed, it seems as though some unseen hand led
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page117" id="page117"></a>[pg 117]</span>
+me out and brought me into that deserted street. From
+to-night there must be changes in my life; I cannot
+escape from them. As yet I am too much in a whirl
+to ask myself whether I wish to.</p>
+
+<p>To return to that house. When I saw that the
+storm was clearing, and that I should be able to leave
+in a few minutes, I determined to make an effort to
+satisfy my curiosity. I crossed the road, and addressed
+the man who was sitting on the handles of
+his barrow of oranges.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know what place that is opposite?" I
+asked, pointing across the road.</p>
+
+<p>He took out a filthy pipe from his mouth, and spat
+upon the pavement. I think that he must have noticed
+my look of disgust, for he answered me surlily, "No,
+I don't!"</p>
+
+<p>I turned to the boy. "Do you?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head. "Not for certain, ma'am. I
+believe it's some sort of a Roman Catholic place,
+though. Them gents in long clothes and shovel hats
+is allus going in and hout. 'Ullo, Bill! Here she be
+again! She's a-trying it on, ain't she?"</p>
+
+<p>The man looked up and grunted. I followed the
+boy's glance, and saw a tall, dark woman walking
+swiftly along on the other side of the road. From the
+very first her figure was somehow familiar to me, and</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page118" id="page118"></a>[pg 118]</span>
+
+<p>She stopped outside the closed door, and hesitated
+for a moment, as though doubtful whether to ring or
+not. During her moment of hesitation she glanced
+round, and I recognised her. She could not see me,
+for I was in the shadow of the underground tunnel.</p>
+
+<p>"Blarmed if she ain't come again," the man growled.
+"She's as regular as clockwork! Wonder what she
+wants!"</p>
+
+<p>I felt my knees trembling; I could not have crossed
+the road at that moment if it had been to save my life.
+The boy looked up at me curiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Happen you know her, lady," he remarked. "She's
+been here at this time, or thereabouts, pretty near
+every day for a fortnight."</p>
+
+<p>Happen I know her! Yes, that was the boy's odd
+phrase. It rang in my ears, and I found myself gasping
+for breath. My eyes were fixed upon that tall,
+slender figure, clothed in sober black, waiting upon
+the doorstep with bowed head, and standing very still
+and motionless. It was like an effigy of patience.
+There were not two women in the world like that; it
+was impossible. She was in England, and alone&mdash;free!
+What did it mean? Should I run to her, or
+hide away? I glanced over my shoulder where the
+black shadows of the tunnel were only dimly lit by
+the feeble gaslight. I could steal away, and she would
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page119" id="page119"></a>[pg 119]</span>
+never see me. Yet as I thought of it, the grimy, barren
+street and the solemn-looking building faded away
+before my eyes. The sun and wind burned my face;
+the wind, salt with ocean spray, and echoing with the
+hoarse screaming of the sea-birds that rode upon it.
+I was at Cruta again, panting to be free, stealing away
+in the twilight down the narrow path amongst the rocks
+to where that tiny boat lay waiting, like a speck upon
+the waters. And it was she who had helped me&mdash;the
+sad-faced woman who had braved the terrible anger of
+the man whom we had both dreaded. Again I heard
+her gentle words of counsel, and the answering lies
+which should have blistered my lips. For I lied to
+her, not hastily or on impulse, but deliberately in cold
+blood. Anything, I cried to myself, to escape from
+this rock, this living death! So I lied to her, and she
+helped me. No wonder that I trembled. No wonder
+that I half made up my mind to flee away into the
+sheltering darkness of that noisome-looking tunnel.</p>
+
+<p>It takes long to set down in writing the thoughts
+which flashed through me at that moment. Yet when
+I had made up my mind the woman was still there,
+waiting meekly before the closed door.</p>
+
+<p>"You were speaking of her," I said to the boy, who
+was half-sitting, half-crouching against the side of the
+tunnel. "What was it you said? I did not hear."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page120" id="page120"></a>[pg 120]</span>
+
+<p>Man and boy commenced to tell me together. Their
+strange London talk puzzled me, and I could only extract
+a confused sense of what they said. The woman,
+to whom they rudely pointed, had called at the building
+opposite every day for a fortnight at about this
+hour to make some inquiry. Day by day she had
+turned away, after one brief question asked and answered,
+with bowed head and dejected manner. Yet,
+day by day, she returned and repeated it. Ever
+the same disappointment, the same despair!</p>
+
+<p>They knew nothing more. Her regular visits had
+awakened a certain curiosity in them, and they had
+commenced to look for them, and indulge in a little
+mild speculation as to her one day meeting with a
+different reception. Nothing more! There was a
+shade of pity in the boy's tone, and I gave him a
+shilling; then I crossed the road.</p>
+
+<p>As I left the kerbstone, the door opened and I heard
+her question:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Has Father Adrian called or written, or sent any
+address yet, please?"</p>
+
+<p>The man, who had opened the door only a few
+inches, kept in the background, and I could see nothing
+of him, but I heard his grim, monosyllable reply:</p>
+
+<p>"No! Father Adrian has not visited or communicated
+with us."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page121" id="page121"></a>[pg 121]</span>
+
+<p>She turned away with a meek "Thank you," and
+found herself face to face with me. My heart smote
+me when I saw how poor were her clothes, and how
+thin her features.</p>
+
+<p>At first she did not know me; but I raised my veil,
+and whispered her name softly in her ear.</p>
+
+<p>She threw up her hands, and swayed backwards and
+forwards upon the pavement.</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea! Adrea!" she cried wildly. "My God!"</p>
+
+<p>A cab drove up, and I called it. She had just
+strength enough to enter it, leaning heavily upon my
+arm; then she fainted.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page122" id="page122"></a>[pg 122]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<h3>"WE ARE LIKE SHOOTING STARS, WHOSE MEETING IS
+THEIR RUIN"</h3>
+
+
+<p>To-night I have had another shock! I was sitting
+alone in my room down-stairs, dreaming over the fire,
+when a footstep sounded upon the stairs. At first I
+thought that it might be Paul, and I sprang up, and
+stood listening intently. What a little fool I was! I
+felt the colour burning in my cheeks, and my heart
+was beating. I listened to the tread, and the madness
+passed away. It was a man's footsteps, but not
+Paul's.</p>
+
+<p>They halted at my door, and there was a firm, deliberate
+knock. Before I could reply, the handle was
+turned, and a figure stood upon the threshold.</p>
+
+<p>My little chamber was in darkness, but the clear,
+cold voice struck a vague note of familiarity.</p>
+
+<p>"I seek Adrea Kiros! Are these her rooms? Are
+you she?"</p>
+
+<p>I struck a match with trembling fingers, and looked
+eagerly towards the doorway. A man stood there,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page123" id="page123"></a>[pg 123]</span>
+dark, stern, and forbidding, looking steadfastly towards
+me. My memory had not deceived me! It was Father
+Adrian!</p>
+
+<p>"You have found me out," I said slowly. "Come
+inside and close the door."</p>
+
+<p>He moved slowly forward, and stood in the middle
+of the room. His face was as white as marble and as
+steadfast; but his dark eyes, which seemed to be challenging
+mine to meet them, were full of smouldering
+fire. I summoned up all my courage, and threw myself
+into a low chair, with a little laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"You are not exactly cordial," I said. "If you have
+anything to say to me, won't you sit down?"</p>
+
+<p>"If I have anything to say to you!" he repeated,
+and his whole tone seemed vibrating with hardly subdued
+passion. "If I have anything to say to you! Is
+this your greeting?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, no, not if you come as a friend! But when
+you stand and glare at me <i>comme cela</i>, what do you expect?
+Nothing very cordial, surely!"</p>
+
+<p>He advanced a step further towards me. I watched
+him steadfastly, and I knew that the old madness was
+not dead. I was glad. It made the struggle between
+us more even.</p>
+
+<p>"Have I no cause to look at you sternly, Adrea?"
+he demanded,&mdash;"you who deceived us! you who lied
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page124" id="page124"></a>[pg 124]</span>
+to us, to win our aid! Where would you have been
+now had it not been for me? At Cruta! Would to
+God my hand had withered before it had set you free!"</p>
+
+<p>"You are very kind!"</p>
+
+<p>"Girl, are you mad? At Cruta you were thoughtless
+and gay, but God knows your heart was pure. Now
+you are a paid dancing girl!"</p>
+
+<p>I turned upon him suddenly, rising to my full height,
+and looking him straight in the face. He did not
+flinch, but a faint colour rose to his forehead as he continued.</p>
+
+<p>"Stop!" I said. "You are talking of those things
+which you do not understand. You could not possibly
+understand. You and I are different; we belong to
+different worlds. The things of your world are not the
+things of mine. Leave me now, and for ever, and let
+us go our own ways. We measure things by different
+quantities. You are a priest, and very much a priest,
+and I am a woman, and very much a woman! For the
+past I am grateful; for its sake I forget the insults of
+the present. Now go!"</p>
+
+<p>I knew quite well that he would not take me at my
+word, nor did he.</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea, I cannot go and lose all knowledge of you
+for ever," he said sadly. "For my own sake I would
+say, Would to God that I could! but it is impossible.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page125" id="page125"></a>[pg 125]</span>
+Within me there is a voice which whispers 'Fly,' but I
+cannot; your future is still as dear to me as in the old
+days. Oh! Adrea! I have sorrowed and mourned lest
+our last parting had been for ever, and now, alas! I
+would that it had been; I would to God that I had
+never found you out!"</p>
+
+<p>"You can forget it," I said coldly.</p>
+
+<p>"I can never forget it," he answered fiercely. "Girl!
+you seem to me sometimes like a scourge! Your memory
+is a very nightmare of sin! You have brought me
+nothing but pain and remorse and anguish of heart.
+For all my suffering there is no brighter side; yet I
+cannot forget it!"</p>
+
+<p>Despite his fierce words, which for a moment had
+burned in my ears, I pitied him. In the old days he
+had been my champion, and it was his hand, together
+with hers, which had aided my escape from Cruta. So
+I spoke to him softly.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry! As I said, we are of different moulds,
+and we belong to a different branch of humanity. We
+are neither of us inclined to change! Let us go our
+own ways, and apart!"</p>
+
+<p>He was close by my side now, and his hand was
+resting on the back of my chair. I laid mine upon it
+for a moment; it was cold as ice, and shaking. The
+old madness was upon him indeed.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page126" id="page126"></a>[pg 126]</span>
+
+<p>"You were kind to me at Cruta," I continued. "I
+do not forget it, and I thank you for it! But we are
+as far apart as the poles, and we must continue so."</p>
+
+<p>The position between us seemed reversed. He stood
+by my side, pale and passionate, with his clear eyes
+full of a strange wistfulness.</p>
+
+<p>"All that you say is, in a measure, true," he said in
+a low tone; "yet do not send me away from you! Some
+day you may see things differently; some day trouble
+may come to you, and I may be your helper! There is
+only one thing: I would have you look upon me as a
+brother, and I would have you give me a brother's confidence."</p>
+
+<p>"I would gladly be friends with you," I answered,
+"only do not seek more than I choose to tell you. As
+for the things you charge me with, there is truth and
+falsehood in them. It is true that I have earned my
+living by dancing, but it has been in private only. Of
+course, you know nothing about it; how should you?
+But I am not a ballet dancer, as I believe you think."</p>
+
+<p>"You are not upon the stage, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"No! nor do I dance in short skirts! Some day I
+will give you an exhibition in this room! Now don't
+look like that," I added quickly; "I was only joking.
+I would not defile the air around your saintliness for
+the world! But I want to tell you this: my dancing is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page127" id="page127"></a>[pg 127]</span>
+recognised as an art. I rank everywhere with the men
+and women who are called artists, the men and women
+who are ever striving to realize in some manner a particular
+ideal of beauty through different channels.
+The highest development of physical beauty in the
+human form is in grace of motion. I aim at the beautiful
+in illustrating this. I didn't know it myself until
+a great painter told me so, but I am beginning to
+understand. I don't expect you to; you must take it
+on trust."</p>
+
+<p>"It sounds strange to me, but I do not doubt that
+there is truth, some truth in it," he admitted gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"You and I look upon life, and all its connections,
+with different eyes," I continued. "What may seem
+sin to you, may be justified to me. Yet I will stoop to
+answer your unspoken question. As I was at Cruta,
+so I am now! It may be that I am better, for I have
+done a good action!"</p>
+
+<p>He held up his hand, but I took no notice.</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell it you. A few days ago, chance brought
+in my way a most unhappy woman. She had escaped
+from an odious captivity, only to find herself alone,
+friendless and penniless in a strange city. The man
+on whom she had counted for help she could not find.
+He had given her an address where she might always
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page128" id="page128"></a>[pg 128]</span>
+hear of him. Day by day she inquired there in vain.
+It may have been through no fault of his, but she was
+in sore straits."</p>
+
+<p>"Her name?"</p>
+
+<p>"I found her, and brought her home. She lives
+with me; she is here!"</p>
+
+<p>The door was opening as I spoke, and she entered.
+They stood face to face, silent with the shock of so
+sudden a meeting. Then he stepped quickly forward,
+and, taking her hands, drew her to him. I slipped
+away, and left them alone together.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page129" id="page129"></a>[pg 129]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+<h3>"THE PATH THAT LEADS TO MADMEN'S KINGDOMS"</h3>
+
+
+<p>A north-country storm of rain and wind had suddenly
+blown up from the sea, and the few remaining
+followers of the De Vaux hounds were dispersed right
+and left, making for home with all possible speed.
+The sky had looked dull and threatening all day long,
+and with the first shades of twilight the rain had commenced
+to fall in a sudden torrent. There had been
+some little hesitation on the part of the master about
+drawing this last cover, for the hounds had had a rough
+day, and the field was small; and directly the storm
+broke, the horn was blown without hesitation, the
+pack was re-called, and the huntsman, cracking his
+whip, started for home at a long, swinging trot. The
+day's sport was over.</p>
+
+<p>There were only a handful of horsemen waiting outside
+when the signal was given, and with collars turned
+up to their ears, and cigars alight, they were very soon
+riding down the hill to the village whose lights were
+beginning to twinkle out from the darkness in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page130" id="page130"></a>[pg 130]</span>
+valley below. At the cross-roads, Paul, who had been
+riding in the midst of them, wheeled his horse round
+and took the road to Vaux Abbey amidst a chorus of
+farewells.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you going for the Abbey, De Vaux?" Captain
+Westover asked, reining in his horse. "Better come
+home with me, and dine! I'll send you back to-night,
+and they'll look after your mare all right in the stables.
+Come along!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul shook his head. "I'll get home, thanks!" he
+answered. "A wetting won't hurt me, and there's
+only a mile or two of it."</p>
+
+<p>Captain Westover shrugged his shoulders. "Just
+as you like. My people would be very glad to see
+you! By the bye, you were to have called last week,
+weren't you? Lady May was asking where you were
+this morning! Come and dine to-morrow night!"</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks! Unless I send word over to the contrary,
+I will, then! Good-night!"</p>
+
+<p>"Good-night!"</p>
+
+<p>Captain Westover cantered on after the others, and
+Paul turned off in the opposite direction, riding slowly,
+with bent head and loose bridle. In his pocket was
+Adrea's letter, scarcely a week old; and now that the
+physical excitement of the day was over, his thoughts,
+as usual, were full of it again. It was an uphill battle
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page131" id="page131"></a>[pg 131]</span>
+that he was fighting! All day long he had been striving
+to forget it! He had spared neither himself nor
+his horses in the desperate attempt to reach such a
+stage of physical exhaustion as should make his mind
+a blank&mdash;as should free it, at any rate, from those torturing
+memories, and the fierce restlessness which they
+begat. He had tried his utmost, and he had failed.
+His pink hunting-coat and tops, immaculate at the
+start, were covered with thick mud, and his horse (his
+second mount) was scarcely able to put one foot before
+the other. Yet he had failed utterly. Hunger and
+fatigue seemed things far away to him. Wherever he
+looked&mdash;out into the grey mists, which came rolling
+across the moor, soaking him with moisture, or down
+into the road, fast becoming a bog, or up into the dim
+sky&mdash;he seemed to see the pages of Adrea's letter
+standing out before him, word for word, phrase for
+phrase. Every sentence of it seemed to him as vivid
+and real as though it had been spoken in his ears; nay,
+he could almost fancy that he saw the great tears welling
+slowly out of those soft, dark eyes, and could hear
+the passionate quiver in her faltering tones. Day by
+day it had been a desperate struggle with him to resist
+the mad desire which prompted him to order a dogcart,
+drive to the nearest town, and catch the mail train
+to London. Beyond that&mdash;how she would receive him,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page132" id="page132"></a>[pg 132]</span>
+what he would say to her&mdash;everything was chaos; he
+dared not trust himself to think about it.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, whenever he suffered his thoughts to dwell upon
+this matter at all, the reverse side of it all sooner or
+later presented itself. Clear and insistent above the
+emotion which swayed him came ever that uncompromising
+question&mdash;where lay his duty in this matter?
+It was the true and manly side of his nature, developed
+by instinct and long training, and refusing now to be
+overborne and swept away by this surging tide of passion.
+It rang in his ears, and it demanded an answer.
+Away in the distance, on the opposite side of the valley,
+his vacant eyes rested idly upon the many lights and
+dim outline of Westover Castle. What place had Lady
+May in his heart? Was there room for her&mdash;and
+Adrea? Could he see Adrea day by day, and never
+pass the barrier which he himself had set up between
+them? What did he wish? What was right? Just
+then everything was to him so vague and chaotic.</p>
+
+<p>He had been riding for nearly an hour, with his
+reins quite loose upon his horse's neck, and trusting
+entirely to her to take the homeward route. Suddenly
+his mare came to an abrupt halt, and Paul looked
+around him in surprise. At first he had not the faintest
+idea as to his whereabouts; then a dull roar, coming
+from across a narrow strip of moorland on his left,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page133" id="page133"></a>[pg 133]</span>
+gave him a clue, and he saw what had happened. Instead
+of turning inland to Vaux Abbey, his horse had
+kept straight on, and had brought him almost to the
+sea&mdash;a good five miles out of his way.</p>
+
+<p>The situation was not a cheerful one. They were
+ten miles from home, and Ironsides, completely done
+up, was trembling ominously at the knees, and looking
+around at him pitifully. Paul himself was wet to the
+skin; and as he dismounted for a moment to ease his
+stiff limbs, he was conscious of a distinct inclination
+to shiver. The grey mists were rolling up all round
+them; and directly Paul's feet touched the ground, he
+felt himself sink ankle-deep in the wet, soft sand. It
+was all horribly uncomfortable, and more than that, it
+was serious; for immediately he had passed his hand
+over his horse's flanks and felt her knees, Paul knew
+that she was not in a condition for him to mount her
+again. There was no hope of reaching Vaux Abbey
+without rest and refreshments, for Ironsides at any
+rate.</p>
+
+<p>He looked steadily around him, and began to get
+some faint idea as to his whereabouts. His mare must
+have been deceived by following a private road which
+led to a cottage belonging to an old half-pay officer,
+Major Harcourt. They had evidently passed the cottage,
+and pursued the road almost to its termination,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page134" id="page134"></a>[pg 134]</span>
+for where they now were it was little better than a
+sheep-track, leading through a closed gate a few yards
+in front of them into a scattered pine plantation and
+down to the sea. The only thing to do was to retrace
+their steps until they came to the cottage, and there beg
+shelter for a while.</p>
+
+<p>"We've made a mess of it, old girl!" Paul said
+soothingly, patting his mare's neck, and passing his
+arm through the bridle. "Come on, then! We'll see
+whether we can't find an empty stall for you at Major
+Harcourt's."</p>
+
+<p>They retraced their steps, the mare limping wearily
+along by Paul's side, and every now and then stopping
+to look at him in despair. Paul found a grim humour
+in the situation. It was the quagmire into which
+thoughts of Adrea had led him; a parable sent to show
+him the folly of such thoughts, and whither they
+tended. He laughed a little bitterly at the thought.
+Once, when a very young man, he had thought himself
+a fatalist. After all, perhaps it was the best thing to
+be! Conscience and duty were wearisome guides; a
+course of voluntary drifting would be rather a relief.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the mare pricked up her ears, and neighed.
+Paul looked steadily through the mist, and quickened
+his pace. Scarcely a hundred yards ahead was the dim
+outline of the cottage, nestled up against a pine grove
+and facing the sea.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page135" id="page135"></a>[pg 135]</span>
+
+<p>Paul was fairly well acquainted with Major Harcourt;
+and although he had seen nothing of him for some
+time, he had not the slightest compunction in claiming
+shelter for himself and his horse. He led her up the
+trim, winding drive to the front door, and rang the
+bell.</p>
+
+<p>"Is Major Har&mdash;&mdash;" Paul began, as the door was
+opened; then he broke off abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>The man-servant who had opened the door, and was
+standing on the step, peering out into the darkness,
+was a familiar figure to him. It was Gomez!</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page136" id="page136"></a>[pg 136]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+<h3>"THE POISON OF HONEY FLOWERS"</h3>
+
+
+<p>The recognition was not immediately simultaneous.
+Gomez, standing on the step, was in the full light of
+the hall lamp, but Paul was still amongst the shadows.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you know me, Gomez?" Paul asked, stepping
+forward. "I am Paul de Vaux."</p>
+
+<p>A shade passed across the man's face, and he laid
+his hand quickly upon his heart, as though to cease
+some sudden pain. Then he stood on one side, holding
+the door open.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, Mr. Paul; I could not see your
+face out there. Won't you walk in, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>Paul dropped his mare's bridle and stepped inside.
+The polished white stone hall, with its huge fire in the
+centre, looked warm and comfortable, and away in the
+distance there was a cheerful rattle of teacups.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing here, Gomez?" Paul asked,
+shaking the wet from his hat. "I understood that you
+were going to take the under-bailiff's place."</p>
+
+<p>"Higgs has not left yet, sir," Gomez answered. "I
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page137" id="page137"></a>[pg 137]</span>
+have been living here as caretaker for Major Harcourt."</p>
+
+<p>"Caretaker! Isn't he at home then?"</p>
+
+<p>Gomez shook his head, looking keenly at Paul all
+the time. "Major Harcourt does not winter here now,
+sir. He has let the place, furnished."</p>
+
+<p>"What a confounded nuisance! To whom has he
+let it?" Paul asked quickly. "You see my plight,
+and my horse is worse off still. We lost our way
+going home from Dunston Spinnies."</p>
+
+<p>"Major Harcourt's tenant is a lady," Gomez
+answered, after a moment's hesitation. "She only
+arrived yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>Paul shrugged his shoulders. He was annoyed, but
+there was no help for it.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, will you see her at once and represent matters?
+I want a loose box for the night for my horse,
+and a rest for myself, and afterwards a conveyance for
+the Abbey, if possible. Tell her my name. I daresay
+she won't mind. Who is she?"</p>
+
+<p>Gomez said nothing for a moment. Then he drew
+Paul back to the door, and pointed out into the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Paul," he said, in a quick, hoarse whisper, "at
+the back of that hedge there is a road which leads
+straight up to the Abbey. It is a matter of six miles
+or so, I know, and you are tired; but that is nothing.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page138" id="page138"></a>[pg 138]</span>
+Take my advice, sir, and believe me it is for your good.
+Get out of this house as soon as you can, and go home,
+though you have to walk every step. I'll look after
+your horse, and you can send for it in the morning."</p>
+
+<p>Paul looked into the man's face astonished. "What
+nonsense, Gomez!" he exclaimed. "Do you know
+what you are talking about! Why, I'm tired out, and
+almost starved. Here I am and here I shall stop, unless
+your mistress is as inhospitable as you are."</p>
+
+<p>Gomez bowed, and closed the door. "Very good,
+sir; you will have your own way, of course. But remember
+in the future that I was faithful, I warned
+you. Come this way, sir. I will send your horse
+round to the stables. The name of the lady of the
+house is Madame de Merteuill."</p>
+
+<p>A little uneasy and very much mystified, Paul followed
+him across the hall, and was silently ushered into
+a long, low drawing-room, a room of nooks and corners,
+furnished in old-fashioned style, but with perfect
+taste, and dimly lit with soft, shaded lamps. There
+was a bright fire blazing on the hearth, and a pleasant
+sense of warmth in the air.</p>
+
+<p>At first it seemed as though the room was empty,
+but in a moment a tall, pale-faced lady, with wonderfully
+dark eyes and grey hair, rose from an easy chair
+behind the piano, and looked at him, at first questioningly.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page139" id="page139"></a>[pg 139]</span>
+
+<p>"I am afraid that you will consider this an unwarrantable
+intrusion," Paul said, bowing; "but the fact
+is, I lost my way riding home from the hunt, and my
+horse cannot go a yard further. As for myself, you
+can see what state I am in. I saw your lights, and
+have some acquaintance with Major Harcourt, and not
+knowing that he had left, I ventured here to throw myself
+upon his hospitality. My name is De Vaux&mdash;Paul
+de Vaux; and although it is some distance to the Abbey,
+I believe that we are next-door neighbours."</p>
+
+<p>It was beginning to dawn upon Paul that he
+had somehow stumbled upon a very strange household.
+During the whole of his speech, the lady whom
+he was addressing had stood silent and transfixed, with
+wide-open eyes and a terrible shrinking look of fear
+upon her face. She must be mad, Paul concluded
+swiftly. What an ass Gomez was not to have told
+him! While he was wondering how to get away, she
+spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Your name de Vaux, Paul de Vaux, near Vaux
+Abbey?"</p>
+
+<p>He bowed, looking at her with fresh interest. His
+name seemed familiar to her. In a moment or two
+the unnatural lethargy left her, and she spoke to him,
+though still in a curiously suppressed tone.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page140" id="page140"></a>[pg 140]</span>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon. You are welcome. I was a
+little startled at first."</p>
+
+<p>She rang the bell. Gomez answered it.</p>
+
+<p>"Bring some fresh tea, and some sandwiches and
+wine," she ordered. "Tell them in the stables to see
+that this gentleman's horse has every attention."</p>
+
+<p>Gomez received his orders in silence, and withdrew
+with darkening face. Paul looked after him with surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Gomez does not seem particularly pleased to see
+me again," he remarked. "What is the matter with
+the man, I wonder?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is only his manner, I think," she said softly.
+"He was your father's servant, was he not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. How did you know that?" he asked quickly.
+"Ah, I beg your pardon; he told you, of course. You
+will find him a faithful servant."</p>
+
+<p>She bowed her head, but made no reply. Indeed,
+Paul found it very difficult to start a conversation of
+any sort with his new neighbour. To all his remarks
+she returned only monosyllabic answers, looking at
+him steadily all the while out of her full, dark eyes in
+a far-away, wistful manner, as though she saw in his
+face something which carried her thoughts into another
+world. It was a little uncomfortable for Paul, and he
+was not sorry when Gomez reappeared, bearing a tray
+with refreshments.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page141" id="page141"></a>[pg 141]</span>
+
+<p>She handed him his tea in silence; and Paul, who
+would have been ashamed to have called himself curious,
+but who was by this time not a little puzzled at
+her manner, made one more effort at conversation.</p>
+
+<p>"I think you said that you were quite strange to
+this part of the country," he remarked. "We, who
+have lived here all our lives, are fond of it; but I'm
+afraid you'll find it rather dull at first. There is very
+little society."</p>
+
+<p>"We do not desire any," she said hastily. "We
+came here&mdash;at least I came here&mdash;for the sake of
+indulging in absolute seclusion. It is the same with
+my step-daughter. In London she had been forced
+to keep late hours, and her health has suffered. The
+doctor prescribed complete rest; I, too, desired rest,
+so we came here. A London house agent arranged it
+for us."</p>
+
+<p>So there was a step-daughter who lived in London,
+and who went out a great deal. The mention of her
+gave Paul an opportunity.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder if I have ever met your daughter in
+town," he said pleasantly. "I am there a good deal,
+and I have rather a large circle of acquaintances."</p>
+
+<p>The implied question seemed to disconcert her.
+She coloured, and then grew suddenly pale. Her eyes
+no longer looked into his; they were fixed steadfastly
+upon the fire.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page142" id="page142"></a>[pg 142]</span>
+
+<p>"It is not at all probable," she said, nervously lacing
+and interlacing her slim white fingers. "No, it is
+scarcely possible. You would not be likely to meet
+her. Your friends would not be her friends. She
+knows so few people. Ah!"</p>
+
+<p>She started quickly. The door had opened, but it was
+only Gomez, who had come in with a tray for the
+empty tea-things. There was a dead silence whilst
+he removed them. Paul scarcely knew what to say.
+His hostess puzzled him completely. Perhaps this
+step-daughter, whose name, together with her own, she
+seemed so anxious to conceal, was mad, and she had
+brought her down here instead of sending her to an
+asylum; or perhaps she herself was mad. He glanced
+at her furtively, and at once dismissed the latter idea.
+Her face, careworn and curiously pallid though it was,
+was the face of no madwoman. It was the face of a
+woman who had passed through a fiery sea of this
+world's trouble and suffering&mdash;suffering which had
+left its marks stamped upon her features; but, of his
+own accord, he would never have put it down as the
+face of a weak or erring woman.</p>
+
+<p>There was a mystery&mdash;of that he felt sure; but it
+was no part of his business to seek to unravel it. The
+best thing he could do, he felt, was to get up and go.
+He could scarcely maintain a conversation without
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page143" id="page143"></a>[pg 143]</span>
+asking or implying questions which seemed to painfully
+embarrass his hostess.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm very much obliged to you," he said, rising and
+holding out his hand. "I feel quite a new man! If
+you don't mind I'd like to leave my mare here until
+to-morrow. She really isn't fit to travel. My man
+shall come for her early."</p>
+
+<p>"Pray do!" she answered quickly. "Ah!"</p>
+
+<p>She had started, and clutched at the back of her
+chair with trembling fingers. Her eyes, wide open
+and startled, were fixed upon the door.</p>
+
+<p>Paul, too, turned round, and uttered a little cry.
+His heart beat fast, and the room swam before him.
+He stood for a moment perfectly still, with his eyes
+fastened upon the figure in the doorway.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page144" id="page144"></a>[pg 144]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+<h3>"AND MOST OF ALL WOULD I FLY FROM THE CRUEL
+MADNESS OF LOVE"</h3>
+
+
+<p>It was Adrea&mdash;Adrea herself! She stood there in
+the shadow of the doorway, with her lips slightly
+parted, and her great eyes, soft and brilliant, flashing
+in the ruddy firelight. It was no vision; it was she
+beyond a doubt!</p>
+
+<p>Even when the first shock had passed away, he found
+himself without words; the wonder of it had dazed
+him. He had thought of her so often in that quaint,
+dainty little chamber in Grey Street that to see her
+here so unexpectedly, without the least warning or
+anticipation, was like being suddenly confronted with
+a picture which had stepped out of its frame. And
+that she should be here, too, of all places, here in this
+bleak corner of the kingdom, where blustering winds
+swept bare the sullen moorland, and the sea was always
+grey and stormy. What strange fate could have
+brought her here, away from all the warmth and luxury
+of London, to this half-deserted old manor house
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page145" id="page145"></a>[pg 145]</span>
+on the verge of the heath? His mind was too confused
+in those first few moments to follow out any definite
+train of thought. The most natural conclusion,
+that she had come to him, did not enter his imagination.</p>
+
+<p>His first impulse, as his senses became clearer, was
+to glance around for the woman who had called Adrea
+her step-daughter. She was gone. She must have
+stepped out of the room by the opposite doorway; and
+with the knowledge that they were alone, he breathed
+freer.</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea!" he said, "it is really you, then!"</p>
+
+<p>His words, necessarily commonplace, dissolved the
+situation. She laughed softly, and came further into
+the room.</p>
+
+<p>"It is I," she said. "Did you think that I was an
+elf from spirit-land?"</p>
+
+<p>He had never shaken hands with her,&mdash;it was a
+thing which had never occurred to either of them; but
+a sudden impulse came to him then. He took a hasty
+step forward, and clasped both her little white hands
+in his. So they stood for another minute in silence,
+and a strange, soft light flashed in her upturned eyes.
+She was very near to him, and there was an indefinable
+sense of yielding in her manner, amounting almost
+to a mute invitation. He felt that he had only to open
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page146" id="page146"></a>[pg 146]</span>
+his arms, and that strange, beautiful face, with its
+mocking, quivering mouth, would be very close to his.
+The old battle was forced upon him to fight all over
+again; and, alas! he was no stronger.</p>
+
+<p>It was almost as though she had seen the hesitation&mdash;the
+conflict in him&mdash;for with a sudden, imperious
+gesture she withdrew her hands and turned away from
+him. There was a scarlet flush creeping through the
+deep olive of her cheeks, and her eyes were dry and
+brilliant. Paul, who had never studied women or their
+ways, looked at her, surprised and a little hurt.</p>
+
+<p>"You are surprised to see me here, of course?" she
+said, sinking into a low easy-chair, and taking up a
+fire-screen of peacocks' feathers, as though to shield
+her face from the fire. "Well, it is quite an accident.
+I wrote you rather a silly letter the other day; but you
+must not think that I have followed you down here!"</p>
+
+<p>"I did not think so," he answered hastily. "The
+idea never occurred, never could have occurred to me!"</p>
+
+<p>She continued, without heeding his interruption:
+"I will explain how we came to take this cottage. A
+relative of mine came to me suddenly from abroad.
+She was in great trouble, and was in search of a very
+secluded dwelling-place, where she might live for a
+time unknown. I also was in bad health, and the doctor
+had ordered me complete rest and quiet. We went
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page147" id="page147"></a>[pg 147]</span>
+to a house agent, and told him what we wanted&mdash;to get
+as far away from every one as possible. We did not
+care how lonely the place was, or how far from London;
+the further the better. This house was to let,
+furnished, and at a low figure. I did not know that
+Vaux Abbey was in the same county even. It suited
+us, and we took it."</p>
+
+<p>"I understand," Paul answered. "And now that
+you are here, are you not afraid of finding it dull?"</p>
+
+<p>She turned away from him, biting her lip. "You
+do not understand me! You never will. No! I shall
+not be dull."</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, Adrea. I&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Be quiet!" she interrupted impetuously. "You
+think that I am too frivolous to live away from the
+glare and excitement of the city. Of course! To you
+I am just the dancing girl, nothing more. Do not contradict
+me. I hate your serious manner. I hate
+your patronage. Don't contradict me, I say. Tell me
+this. How did you find me out? Why are you here?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have been out hunting, and I lost my way,"
+Paul answered quietly. "I know Major Harcourt,
+and, thinking he was still living here, I called for a
+rest, and to put my horse up. Your step-mother has
+been very kind and hospitable."</p>
+
+<p>Adrea looked at him curiously. "Indeed! She has
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page148" id="page148"></a>[pg 148]</span>
+been kind to you, has she? Who told you that she
+was my step-mother?"</p>
+
+<p>"I thought I understood you to say so."</p>
+
+<p>"Did I? Perhaps so; I don't remember. So she
+was kind to you, was she? She has no cause to be."</p>
+
+<p>"No cause to be! Why not?"</p>
+
+<p>She shrugged her shoulders, "Oh, I don't know.
+I'm talking a little at random, I think. You angered
+me, Monsieur Paul. I am a silly girl, am I not? Do
+you know that I have thrown up all my engagements
+until next season? I do not think that I shall dance
+again at all."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to hear it."</p>
+
+<p>"But I shall go on the stage."</p>
+
+<p>"There is no necessity for that, is there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Necessity! You mean that I have not to earn my
+bread. That may be true, but what would you have
+me to do? I am not content to be one of your English
+young ladies&mdash;to sit down, and learn to cook and darn,
+and read silly books, until fate is kind enough to send
+me a husband. Not so. I have ambition; I have an
+artist's instincts, although I may not yet be an artist.
+I must live; I must have light and colour in my life."</p>
+
+<p>Paul was very grave. He did not understand this
+new phase in Adrea's development. There was a
+curious hardness in her tone and a recklessness in her
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page149" id="page149"></a>[pg 149]</span>
+speech which were strange to him. And with it all he
+felt very helpless. He could not play the part of guardian
+and reprove her; he scarcely knew how to argue
+with her. Women and their ways were strange to him;
+and, besides, Adrea was so different.</p>
+
+<p>He stood up on the hearthrug, toying with his long
+riding-whip, puzzled and unhappy. Adrea was angry
+with him, he knew; and though he was very anxious
+to set himself right with her, he felt that he was treading
+on dangerous ground. He was neither sure of himself
+nor of her.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid I am a very poor counsellor, Adrea,"
+he said slowly; "but it seems to me that you want
+women friends. Your life has been too lonely, too devoid
+of feminine interests."</p>
+
+<p>She laughed&mdash;a mirthless, unpleasant little laugh.
+"Women friends! Good! You say that I have none.
+It is true. There have been no women who have
+offered me their friendship in this country. You call
+yourself my guardian. Why do you not find me some?"</p>
+
+<p>"You have made it very difficult," he reminded her.</p>
+
+<p>She threw a scornful glance at him. "Good! That
+is generous. You mean to say that I have made myself
+unfit for the friendship of the women of your
+family. I thank you, Monsieur Paul. I think that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page150" id="page150"></a>[pg 150]</span>
+our conversation has lasted long enough. Let me pass;
+I am going to leave you."</p>
+
+<p>He moved quickly towards the door, and barred her
+passage. There was a dark flush in his cheeks and a
+gleam in his eyes. Up till then his manner had been
+a little deprecating, but at her last words it had suddenly
+changed. He felt that she was unjust, and he
+was indignant.</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea, you talk like a child," he said sternly. "I
+made no such insinuation as you suggest! You know
+that I did not! Sit down!"</p>
+
+<p>She obeyed him; the quick change in his manner
+had startled her, and taken her at a disadvantage. She
+felt the force of his superior will, and she yielded to it.</p>
+
+<p>He leaned over her chair, and his voice grew softer.
+"Adrea, you are very, very unjust to me," he said.
+"Do you wish to make me so unhappy, I wonder? For
+a week I have been thinking of scarcely anything else
+save our last parting, and now if I had not stopped
+you, almost by force, you would have left me again in
+anger."</p>
+
+<p>His tone had grown almost tender, and, as though
+unconsciously, his hand had rested upon her gleaming
+coils of dark, braided hair. She looked up at him, and
+in the firelight he could see that her eyes were soft and
+dim.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page151" id="page151"></a>[pg 151]</span>
+
+<p>"You have really thought of me?" she said in a low
+tone. "You have really been unhappy on my account?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have!" he admitted. "Very unhappy!"</p>
+
+<p>Something in his tone&mdash;in the reluctance with which
+he made the admission, angered her. She moved a
+little further away, and her voice grew harder.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; you have been unhappy!" she said. "And
+why? It was because you were ashamed to find yourself
+thinking of me; you, Paul de Vaux, a citizen of
+the world and a man of culture, thinking of a poor
+dancing girl with only her looks to recommend her!
+That was where the sting lay! That was what reddened
+your cheek! You men! You are as selfish as
+devils!"</p>
+
+<p>She stamped her foot; her voice was shaking with
+passion. Paul stood before her with a deep flush on
+his pale cheeks, silent, like a man suddenly accused.
+Her words were not altogether true, but they were
+winged with, at any rate, the semblance of truth.</p>
+
+<p>She continued&mdash;a little more quietly, but with her
+tone and form still vibrating.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you fear? What is that you struggle
+against? I have seen you when it has been your will
+to take me&mdash;into your arms, to hold my hands. Then
+I have seen you conquer the desire, and you run away,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page152" id="page152"></a>[pg 152]</span>
+as though afraid of it. Why? Do you fear that I
+shall seek to compromise you?&mdash;is not that the
+English word? Do you think that I want you to
+marry me? Is it because you dare not, that you&mdash;you
+do not offer to take my hand, even? Tell me now!
+Why is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"For your own sake, Adrea!"</p>
+
+<p>"For my own sake!" she repeated scornfully. "Do
+you believe it yourself? Do you really think that it
+is true? I will tell you why it is! It is because you
+have no thought, no imagination. You say to yourself,
+she is not of my world. I cannot marry her."</p>
+
+<p>There was a silence. A burning coal fell upon the
+hearth, and flamed up; the glow reached Paul's face.
+He was very pale, and his eyes were dry and brilliant.
+Suddenly he moved forward, and clasped Adrea's
+hands tightly in his.</p>
+
+<p>"But, Adrea! are you sure that you love me?"</p>
+
+<p>A sudden change swept into her face. Her dark
+eyes grew wonderfully soft.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes!" she answered, looking up to him with a
+swift, brilliant smile. "I am sure!"</p>
+
+<p>He held out his arms; his resistance was at an end.
+It had grown weaker and weaker during those last few
+moments; now it was all over, swept away by a sudden,
+tumultuous passion, so strange and little akin to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page153" id="page153"></a>[pg 153]</span>
+the man that it startled even himself. Afar off in his
+mind he was conscious of a dim sense of shame as he
+held her close in his arms and felt her warm, trembling
+lips pressed against his. But it was like an
+echo from a distant land. It seemed to him that a
+deep, widening gulf lay now between him and all that
+had gone before. His old self was dead! A new man
+had sprung up, with a new personality, and the time
+had not yet come for regrets.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page154" id="page154"></a>[pg 154]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+<h3>"'TWIXT YOU AND ME A NOISOME SHADOW CAST"</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Adrea!"</p>
+
+<p>It was a cry which seemed to ring through the
+room, an interruption so sudden and strange that they
+started apart like guilty children, gazing towards the
+lifted curtain which divided the apartment with wondering,
+half-fearful faces. The woman whom Adrea
+had called her step-mother stood there, pale and
+bloodless, with her great black eyes flashing, and
+behind her a tall, dark figure was gazing sternly at
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Adrea was the first to recover her composure. She
+was a little further away, and she could see only her
+step-mother.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you want?" she exclaimed quickly. "I
+desire to be alone! Why do you stand there?"</p>
+
+<p>There was no answer. Then the momentary silence
+was broken by a quick, startled cry from Paul, which
+seemed to cleave the semi-darkness of the room.</p>
+
+<p>"My God!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page155" id="page155"></a>[pg 155]</span>
+
+<p>The dark figure had moved forward, and was standing,
+pale and austere, before them. It was Father
+Adrian.</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's intense silence. Then Paul
+turned swiftly round to where Adrea stood, a little
+behind him. But the suspicions which had commenced
+to crowd in upon him vanished before even
+they had taken to themselves definite shape. Her surprise
+was as great as his; and, as their eyes met, she
+shuddered with the memory which his presence had
+recalled.</p>
+
+<p>"Paul de Vaux, I had no thought of meeting you
+here," Father Adrian said sternly.</p>
+
+<p>Paul met his gaze haughtily. There was a rebuke,
+almost a threat, in the priest's tone which angered
+him. Whatever his presence here might betide, he
+was in no way responsible for it to Father Adrian.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor I you," he answered. "I imagined that you
+were staying at the monastery."</p>
+
+<p>"I am staying there."</p>
+
+<p>Madame de Merteuill stepped slowly into the room.
+She was still trembling, and had all the appearance of
+a woman sore stricken by some unexpected calamity.
+Even her voice was faint and broken.</p>
+
+<p>"Father Adrian is a visitor here only&mdash;an unexpected
+one&mdash;like yourself."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page156" id="page156"></a>[pg 156]</span>
+
+<p>"Why is he here?" Adrea asked slowly. "Has he
+come to see us again? What does he want?"</p>
+
+<p>Father Adrian turned towards her, grave and severe.
+"I have come to see Madame de Merteuill. I bring her
+a message from an old man whom, by her absence, she
+is wronging. You I did not expect to find here,&mdash;and
+thus."</p>
+
+<p>She made no answer. The priest drew a little
+nearer to her, and his thin, ascetic face seemed suddenly
+ablaze with scorn and anger.</p>
+
+<p>"Child! your destiny is surely to bring sorrow upon
+all those who would watch over you, and shape your
+life aright. Where you have been living, and how,
+since your flight, I do not know. You have hidden
+yourself well! You have shown more than the ordinary
+selfishness of childhood! You have thought nothing
+of those who may have troubled for you! I do not
+ask for your confidence. This is enough for me: I
+find you here in his arms&mdash;his of all men in the
+world! False to your Church; false to your sex;
+false to your father's memory! Shameless!"</p>
+
+<p>She did not flinch from before him. She looked him
+in the face, coldly and without fear.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a priest, and you do not understand. Be
+so good as to remember that I am no longer now in
+your power or under your authority. You cannot
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page157" id="page157"></a>[pg 157]</span>
+threaten to make me a nun any longer. Remember
+that I am outside your life now, and outside your
+religion."</p>
+
+<p>"You can be brought back," he said calmly. "I
+have powers."</p>
+
+<p>"Powers which I defy. Your religion is a cold, dry
+farce, and I hate it. You cannot frighten me; you cannot
+alarm me in the least. You can do ugly things, I
+know, in the name of your Church; and if you had
+me back at the convent, or on that awful island, I
+should be frightened at you. Here, I am not."</p>
+
+<p>Instinctively she glanced toward Paul. Already in
+her thoughts, he was assuming the protector. He
+would not suffer harm to come to her. He was strong
+and rich and powerful. The horror of days gone by
+had already grown faint with her; it was little more
+than memory. It was gone, and could not come again.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not come here to talk with you, child," he
+answered quietly. "My errand has been with Madame
+de Merteuill, and it is accomplished, I go now. Paul
+de Vaux, our ways lie together for a mile or more, and
+I have a word to say to you. Let us go."</p>
+
+<p>Paul was slowly recovering from a state of mental
+stupor, and, with his discovery, something of the glamour
+of his late intoxication was passing away. He had
+no regret, there was nothing which he would have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page158" id="page158"></a>[pg 158]</span>
+recalled; but his eyes were stronger to pierce the
+mists, and he was able to bring the weight of impersonal
+thought to bear upon all that had passed between
+Adrea and himself. Wheresoever it might lead, there
+was a tie between them now which could not be lightly
+severed.</p>
+
+<p>"It is time I went," Paul answered. "Adrea, I
+will come and see you to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at the priest, suspicious and troubled.
+"What does he want with you, Paul?" she whispered.
+"Don't go with him!"</p>
+
+<p>"I must!" he answered sadly. "He has something
+to say to me which I wish to hear. I will come and
+see you to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"If you must, then, until to-morrow. But, Paul!"</p>
+
+<p>She drew him on one side. "Beware of him! Oh!
+beware of him!" she said quickly, her eyes full of fear.
+"He is a fanatic, a Jesuit. Don't trust him! Have
+little to say to him. Hush! don't answer me! He is
+watching. Good-night, beloved! my beloved!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page159" id="page159"></a>[pg 159]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+<h3>"IF LOVE YOU CHOOSE, THEN LOVE SHALL BE YOUR RUIN"</h3>
+
+
+<p>Paul and his companion walked down the avenue in
+silence, and turned into the narrow, stony road which
+wound across the moor. The storm was over, and the
+rain had ceased. Above them, only faintly visible, as
+though seen through a canopy of delicate lace, the
+stars were shining in a cloudless sky through the
+wreaths of faint grey mist. Far off, the sound of the
+sea came rolling across the moor to their ears, now
+loud and threatening as it beat against the iron cliffs
+and thundered up the coombs, now striking a shriller
+note as the huge waves, ever beaten off, retreated,
+dragging beach and shingle with them. It had been
+an ocean gale, and the very air was salt and brackish
+with flavours of the sea. Here and there great piles
+of seaweed had been carried in a heterogeneous mass
+to their feet, and the ground beneath them was soft
+and sandy. But the storm had died away as suddenly
+as it had come. The tall, stark pine trees, which a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page160" id="page160"></a>[pg 160]</span>
+few hours ago had been bending like whips before the
+rushing wind, stood now stiff and stark against the
+wan sky. There was not even motion enough in the
+air to clear away the white mists which hung around.
+Only the troubled sea remained to mark the passage of
+the storm.</p>
+
+<p>Paul was in no mood for talking. He recognised
+the fact that what had happened to him that evening
+must, to a certain extent, colour his whole life. He
+wanted to think it over quietly, now that he was away
+from the influence of Adrea's passionately beautiful
+face and pleading eyes. He had an inward sense of
+great disappointment in himself, and he was anxious
+to see how far this was justified. He was prepared
+for a rigid self-examination, and he was impatient to
+begin upon it. But, while he was still upon the threshold
+of his meditations, his companion's voice sounded
+in his ear.</p>
+
+<p>"Paul de Vaux, I have a word or two to say to you."</p>
+
+<p>Paul awoke with a start. "Certainly!" he said
+gravely. "I am ready."</p>
+
+<p>Father Adrian continued, speaking slowly and keeping
+his eyes fixed steadily upon Paul; "Only a few
+nights ago we met amongst the ruins of your old
+Abbey. You will remember that I spoke to you of
+your father's last hours, of a strange story confided to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page161" id="page161"></a>[pg 161]</span>
+my keeping&mdash;a story of sin and of sorrow&mdash;a story
+casting its shadow far into the future. You remember
+this?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perfectly!"</p>
+
+<p>"At first you seemed to consider that this story,
+told to me on his deathbed by a man who was at least
+repentant, should be held sacred&mdash;sacred to me as a
+priest of the Holy Church, and sacred to you as his
+son. Yet, as you saw afterwards, it was not so. The
+confession was made to me as a man; and withal it was
+made by one outside the pale of any religion whatever.
+It was mine to do as I chose with! It is mine now!"</p>
+
+<p>"If it is anything which concerns me, or the honour
+of my family, you should tell me. If it involves
+wrongs which should be righted, or in any way concerns
+the future, you should tell me. You must have
+come for that purpose! You must mean to eventually,
+or why should you have found your way to this out-of-the-way
+corner of the world. Let me hear it now,
+Father Adrian!"</p>
+
+<p>"It will darken your life!"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not believe it! At any rate I will judge for
+myself. Let me hear it!"</p>
+
+<p>The priest looked away into the darkness, and his
+voice was low and hoarse. "You do not know what
+you ask!" he said. "No, I shall not tell you yet. It
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page162" id="page162"></a>[pg 162]</span>
+is for your own sake! Sometimes I think that I will
+go away and never tell you."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not? You came here for no other reason."</p>
+
+<p>Father Adrian shook his head. "I did not come to
+tell you. It was your home I came to see. Many hundreds
+of years ago Vaux Abbey was a monastery, sacred
+to the saint whose name I unworthily bear. My visit
+here was half a pilgrimage! But," he went on, his
+brows contracting, and his eyes gleaming fire, "since
+I came, I have been perilously near striking the blow
+which I have power to strike. You bear a name which
+for centuries was foremost in the history of our sacred
+Church. For generation after generation the De Vauxs
+were good Catholics and the benefactors of their
+Church. Your chapel was richly adorned, and five
+priests dwelt here always with old Sir Roland de Vaux.
+And now, where is your chapel, once the most beautiful
+in England; it is a pile of ruins, like your faith!
+I wander round in your villages. Your tenants have
+gone the way of their lord. Roman Catholicism is a
+dying power. Hideous chapels have sprung up in all
+your districts! The true faith is neglected! And who
+is to blame for it all? Your recreant family. You,
+who should have been the most zealous upholders of
+religion, have drifted down the stream of fashion, nerveless
+and indifferent. Oh! it is heresy, rank heresy, to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page163" id="page163"></a>[pg 163]</span>
+think of a De Vaux, such as you, dwelling indifferent
+amongst the mighty associations of your name and
+home! I wander about amongst those magnificent
+ruins of yours, &#230;sthetically beautiful, but nevertheless
+a living, burning reproach, and I ask myself whether
+I do well in holding my peace. I cannot tell! I cannot
+tell!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul was moved in spite of himself by the vehemence
+of his companion's words. The horrors of that
+deathbed scene at Cruta had never grown dim to him.
+He had always felt that his father had only decided to
+keep something back from him in those last moments,
+after a bitter struggle; and he was now quite sure that
+whatever it might have been, the secret had been confided
+to this priest.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to ask you a question," he said. "Whatever
+this mystery may be to which you are constantly
+alluding, I am of course ignorant. But you seem to
+have some understanding with the two women whom
+we have left this evening. I want to know whether
+Adrea is concerned in it."</p>
+
+<p>"She is not!"</p>
+
+<p>"Nor Madame de Merteuill?"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell you!"</p>
+
+<p>They were in the Abbey grounds, close to the ruins,
+and the moorland lay behind them, with its floating
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page164" id="page164"></a>[pg 164]</span>
+mists and vague obscurity. Here the sky was soft and
+clear, and every pillar amongst the ruins stood out
+against the empty background of sea and sky. Father
+Adrian paused.</p>
+
+<p>"I will come no further," he said. "I am a saner
+man away from your despoiled home. There is just a
+last word which I have to say to you."</p>
+
+<p>Paul stood still, and listened.</p>
+
+<p>"I have borne much," Father Adrian said, "much
+tempting and many impulses; but I have zealously put
+a watch upon my tongue, and I have spared you. For
+the future, your happiness&mdash;nay, your future itself&mdash;is
+in your own hands. I saw your father kill the only
+relative Adrea had in this world. We saw the deed
+done, though we have both held our peace concerning
+it. Paul de Vaux, I am inclined to spare you a great
+blow which it is in my power to strike. I am inclined
+to spare you, but I make one hard and fast condition.
+Adrea is not for you! She must be neither your wife,
+nor your friend, nor your ward! There must be no
+dealings, no knowledge between you the one of the
+other! There is blood between you; it can never be
+wiped out! The stain is forever. Lift up your hand
+to heaven, and swear that you will never willingly look
+upon her face again, or, as God is my master, I will
+bring upon your name, and your family, and you, swift
+and everlasting shame!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page165" id="page165"></a>[pg 165]</span>
+
+<p>His hand fell to his side, and his voice, which had
+been vibrating with passion, died away in a little, suppressed
+sob. Paul looked at him steadily. The perspiration
+was standing out upon his forehead in great
+beads, and his eyes were dry and brilliant. The man
+was shaken to the very core, and in the strange upheaval
+of passion he had altogether lost his sacerdotality.
+It was the man who had spoken, the man,
+passionate and sensuous, deeply moved through every
+chord of his being. The "priest" had fallen away
+from him, the remembrance of it seemed almost grotesque.
+Paul, too, had caught much of the passionate
+excitement of the moment.</p>
+
+<p>"Time!" he said hoarsely. "I must have time. A
+few days only. I ask no questions! Only how long?"</p>
+
+<p>"A week!" the priest answered. "A week to-night
+we meet here!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page166" id="page166"></a>[pg 166]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+
+<h3>"SOFTLY GLIMMERING THROUGH THE LAURELS AT
+THE QUIET EVENFALL"</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Do you know who has taken Major Harcourt's cottage,
+Mr. de Vaux?" Lady May asked.</p>
+
+<p>Paul was silent for a moment. He sat quite still in
+his saddle, and gazed across the moor, with his hand
+shading his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, Lady May," he said. "I
+thought that I heard the dogs. You asked me&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"About Major Harcourt's cottage. Do you know
+who has taken it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am not sure about the name. It is a foreign lady,
+and her step-daughter, I believe. There is a clergy-man&mdash;or
+a Roman Catholic priest, rather&mdash;too; but he
+may be only a visitor."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed!"</p>
+
+<p>The monosyllable was expressive. Paul glanced at
+his companion with slightly arched eyebrows. What
+had she heard? Something, evidently, for there had
+been a coolness in her manner all the morning, and her
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page167" id="page167"></a>[pg 167]</span>
+clear grey eyes were resting now upon the many gables
+of the cottage just below them, with distinct disapproval.
+Now that he thought of it, Paul remembered
+that a dogcart from the Castle had whirled past him as
+he had turned out of the drive last night. Doubtless
+he had been seen and recognised. Well! after all,
+what did it matter? The time when he had meant to
+ask Lady May to be his wife seemed very far back in
+the past now. Between that part of his life and now,
+there was a great gulf fixed. Last night had altered
+everything!</p>
+
+<p>He had certainly not meant to hunt that morning,
+but it had been forced upon him. Quite early, Reynolds
+had come to his room to inquire whether he
+should provide breakfast for thirty or fifty, and had
+reminded him that the meet was in front of the Abbey.
+So, against his will, Paul had been compelled to entertain
+the hunt and join in it himself. Lady May had
+been specially invited to breakfast, but she had not
+come, and Paul had only just seen her for the first time
+at the cover side. She had greeted him coldly; and
+though they had somehow taken up a position a little
+apart from the others, very few words had passed between
+them. Her frank, delicate face was clouded, and
+her manner was reserved.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe my brother knows who they are," she
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page168" id="page168"></a>[pg 168]</span>
+continued, after a short silence. "He saw them at the
+station."</p>
+
+<p>Paul bit his lip, and turned away. The mystery of
+Lady May's manner was explained now.</p>
+
+<p>"Did he tell you, then?"</p>
+
+<p>Lady May toyed with her whip, and then looked
+Paul straight in the face. "Yes! he told me the name
+of the younger one. It is Adrea Kiros, the dancing
+girl. Mr. de Vaux, may I ask you a question?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly!"</p>
+
+<p>Lady May looked straight between her horse's ears,
+and a slight flush stole into her cheeks. "You must
+not think that I was listening; it was not so at all.
+But last night, as I was passing the billiard-room, I
+heard my brother and Captain Mortimer talking. They
+were coupling your name with this&mdash;Miss Adrea Kiros.
+They spoke of her coming down here as though you
+must have known something of it. They were blaming
+you, as though you were responsible for her coming.
+We have been friends, Mr. de Vaux; and so far as I
+am concerned, our friendship has been very pleasant.
+But if there is any truth in what they said&mdash;well, you
+can guess the rest. I want you to tell me yourself; I
+am never content to accept hearsay evidence against
+my friends. I prefer to be unconventional, as you see.
+Please tell me!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page169" id="page169"></a>[pg 169]</span>
+
+<p>"Will you put your question a little more definitely,
+Lady May?" Paul asked slowly.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly! Has that young person come here at
+your instigation? Did you arrange for her to come
+here?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did not! No one could have been more surprised
+to see her than I was."</p>
+
+<p>Lady May was growing very stiff. She sat up in her
+saddle, and drew the reins through her fingers. "You
+know her?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do!"</p>
+
+<p>"You visited her in London?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did!"</p>
+
+<p>"You were at the cottage last evening?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was! I lost my way, and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Lady May touched her horse with her spur. "Thank
+you, Mr. de Vaux!" she said haughtily. "I will not
+trouble you any more. Please don't follow me!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul watched her ride down the hillside and join
+one of the little groups dotted about outside the cover-side,
+with a curious sense of unreality. After a while
+he broke into a little laugh, and, shaking his reins, lit
+a cigar. This was a new character for him altogether.
+He knew himself that no man had kept his life more
+blameless than he! If anything, he felt sometimes
+that he had erred upon the other side in thinking and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page170" id="page170"></a>[pg 170]</span>
+speaking too hastily of those who had been less circumspect.
+And now, it had come to this. The woman
+whose good opinion he had always valued next to his
+mother's had deliberately accused him of what must
+have seemed to her a flagrant outrage on decency. Her
+words were still ringing in his ears: "Please don't
+follow me." Lady May had said that to him; it was a
+little hard to realize.</p>
+
+<p>A commotion around the cover below was a welcome
+diversion to him just then. A fox had got clear away,
+and hounds were in full cry. Paul pressed his hat
+down, and settled into his saddle with a grim smile.
+The physical excitement was just what he wanted, and
+in a few minutes he was leading the field, with only
+the master by his side, and Captain Westover a few
+yards behind.</p>
+
+<p>At the first check, Captain Westover rode up to him.
+"I want just a word or two with you, De Vaux!" he
+said, drawing him on one side.</p>
+
+<p>Paul drew himself up in his saddle, and sat there
+glum and unbending. "I am at your service," he
+answered. "I have had the pleasure already of a short
+conversation with your sister this morning."</p>
+
+<p>Captain Westover nodded. "I suppose so. I want
+to beg your pardon first for what I am going to say,
+De Vaux. If I make an ass of myself, don't scruple
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page171" id="page171"></a>[pg 171]</span>
+to say so! But I want to ask you this! Why, in
+thunder, did you let Adrea what's-her-name, the dancing
+girl, come down here?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was no business of mine! I did not know that
+she was coming!"</p>
+
+<p>Captain Westover stroked his moustache and looked
+puzzled. "Look here, old man," he said slowly, "you
+go to see her in London, don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have been!"</p>
+
+<p>"Just so! And you were down at the cottage last
+night, weren't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well! hang it all, then you must have known
+something about her coming, you know! It can't be
+just a coincidence. Bevan &amp; Bevan are my solicitors,
+and by the purest accident, one day I learned that Miss
+Adrea enjoys a settlement of a thousand a year from
+you. They didn't tell me, of course. I happened to
+catch sight of your check on the table one day, and
+overheard old Sam Bevan give some instructions to a
+clerk. Sorry, but I couldn't help it! You're the first
+person I've breathed it to."</p>
+
+<p>"I am her guardian!" Paul exclaimed angrily.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Westover whistled. "You may call it what
+you like, old fellow! I don't mind, I can assure you!
+You don't seem inclined to listen to any advice, so I
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page172" id="page172"></a>[pg 172]</span>
+won't offer any more. But if you'll forgive my saying
+so, you're doing a d&mdash;&mdash;d silly thing. Good-morning."</p>
+
+<p>On the whole, Paul did not enjoy his day's hunting;
+and before it was all over, he found himself once more
+in an embarrassing situation. For as he rode past the
+gates of the cottage, on his way home, Adrea was
+there, breathless and laughing, with her dusky hair
+waving loosely around her shapely head.</p>
+
+<p>"I saw you coming," she said, a little shyly, "and
+I was afraid that you would not stop, so I ran out as
+fast as I could. It was silly of me! You were coming
+in, weren't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think not!" Paul answered gravely. "Look
+how thick in mud I am, and how tired my horse
+looks!"</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him with pleading eyes and parted
+lips. "Do come!" she said. "I have been expecting
+you all day!"</p>
+
+<p>She held the gate open, and stood looking up at him,
+a curiously picturesque-looking figure in the grey twilight.
+Her gown was like no other woman's; it was
+something between a Greek robe and a tea-gown, of a
+dull orange hue, and her dusky hair was tied up with
+a bow of ribbon of the same colour. Everything about
+her was strange; even the faint perfume which hung
+about her clothes, and which brought him sudden,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page173" id="page173"></a>[pg 173]</span>
+swift memories of that moment when she had lain in
+his arms, and his lips had met hers. Paul felt the
+colour steal into his pale cheeks as he leaped to the
+ground, and passed his arm through his horse's bridle.</p>
+
+<p>"I will come, <i>cara mia</i>!" he said softly.</p>
+
+<p>She clasped her hands through his other arm, and
+whispered something in his ear, as they turned up the
+avenue together. Just then the sound of horses' hoofs
+in the road made them both turn round. Captain
+Westover and Lady May were riding by together, with
+their eyes fixed upon Paul and his companion.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page174" id="page174"></a>[pg 174]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
+
+<h3>"BLOOD CALLS ALOUD FOR BLOOD AND NOT FOR HANDS
+ENTWINED"</h3>
+
+
+<p>It was with a strange conflict of feelings that Paul,
+with Adrea by his side, passed across the square, low
+hall of the cottage, plentifully decorated with stags'
+heads and other sporting trophies, and into the drawing-room.
+It was a room which had been built, too, of
+quaint shape, made up of nooks and corners and recesses,
+and with dark oak beams stretching right across
+the ceiling. The furniture was all old-fashioned, and
+of different periods; but the general effect was harmonious,
+though a trifle shabby. Paul knew it well!
+Many an evening he had come in to tea there, after a
+cigar and a chat with the old Major, and lounged in
+that low chair by Mrs. Harcourt's side. But it scarcely
+seemed like the same room to him now. The Major
+and his wife had been old-fashioned people, and their
+personality, and talk, and surroundings, had created a
+sort of atmosphere which Paul had grown almost to
+associate with the place. He missed it directly he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page175" id="page175"></a>[pg 175]</span>
+entered the room. What it was that had worked the
+change it was hard to tell. Adrea had been far too
+charmed with its quaintness to seriously alter anything.
+A little stiffness in the arrangement of the furniture
+had been corrected, and the few antimacassars carefully
+removed; otherwise nothing had been changed.
+The great bowls of yellow roses and chrysanthemums,
+and the piles of modern books and music lying about,
+might have been partly responsible for it; and the
+faint perfume which he had grown to associate altogether
+with Adrea, and which seemed wafted into the
+air as she gathered up her skirts on her way into the
+room, had a foreign flavour in it. But, after all, it was
+Adrea herself who changed the atmosphere so completely.
+She was so different from other women in her
+strange Eastern beauty and the leopard-like grace of
+her movements that she could not fail to create an
+atmosphere around her. Yes! it was she herself who
+had worked the change; just as she had worked so
+wonderful a change in him, Paul told himself.</p>
+
+<p>At first they had thought that the room was empty;
+and Adrea, who had entered a little in advance, turned
+round to Paul and held out her hands with a sudden
+sweeping gesture of invitation. Even in that moment,
+as he moved towards her, Paul had time to feel a quick
+glow of admiration at the artistic elegance of her pose
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page176" id="page176"></a>[pg 176]</span>
+and colouring. Her proud, dusky face and brilliant
+eyes found a perfect background in the deep orange of
+her loose gown, and the velvet twined amongst her
+dark hair. Her arms, stretched out towards him, were
+half bare, where the lace had fallen back, and a world
+of passionate love and invitation was glowing in her
+face as she leaned slightly towards him, as if impatient
+of his slow advance. But before his hands had
+touched hers, a voice from the further end of the room
+had broken in upon that eloquent silence.</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea! you did not see me!"</p>
+
+<p>They stood for a moment as though paralysed; then
+Adrea turned slowly round with darkening face. "I
+did not! I thought that you were upstairs!"</p>
+
+<p>She glided out of the shadows, a slim, tall figure
+dressed with curious simplicity, and with white, bloodless
+face. "I am going away," she said, coming quite
+close to them, and fixing her full, deep eyes upon
+Adrea; "I am going away at once. But, Adrea, there
+is one word&mdash;just one word&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Say it!" Adrea interrupted impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>She glanced at Paul. He made a movement as though
+to quit the room, but Adrea prevented him. "You
+need not go!" she said. "Anything that is to be said
+can be said to you as well as to me. I prefer to have
+no secrets! You were going to say something to me,"
+she added, turning to her companion.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page177" id="page177"></a>[pg 177]</span>
+
+<p>"Yes! I have no objection to say it before Mr. de
+Vaux. I simply want to ask you whether you consider
+him a proper visitor in this house?"</p>
+
+<p>"I choose it! I am mistress here!"</p>
+
+<p>For a moment an angry reply seemed to quiver upon
+the woman's lips, but it died away.</p>
+
+<p>"You are right! I thank you for reminding me of
+it," she said quietly. "And yet, Adrea, hear me! You
+are doing an evil thing! Was your father's murder so
+light a thing to you that you can join hands with his
+murderer's son? Remember that day! Think of your
+father lying across that chamber floor, stricken dead in
+a single moment by Martin de Vaux&mdash;by his father! It
+is not seemly that you two should stand there, hand in
+hand! It is not seemly for you to be under the same
+roof! It is horrible!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence. Then Adrea threw
+open the door, and pointed to it.</p>
+
+<p>"Go!" she ordered coldly. "You have had your
+say, and that is my answer! You were my father's
+friend; I believe that he loved you! It was for his
+sake that I offered you shelter! It was for his sake
+that I brought you here! But, remember this: if you
+wish to stay with me, let me never hear another word
+from you on this subject!"</p>
+
+<p>She went out silently. Adrea closed the door, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page178" id="page178"></a>[pg 178]</span>
+turned round with all the hardness fading swiftly out
+of her features. A moment before there had been a
+look of the tigress in her eyes; and Paul, watching
+her, had shuddered. It was gone now. She came
+close up to Paul, and led him to a chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Was I very undignified?" she said, laughing. "I
+am afraid I was. I was very angry!"</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head. "You were not undignified,"
+he said, "but you were very severe. I think that she
+will go away."</p>
+
+<p>Adrea's face hardened again. "I do not care! I
+would hate the dearest friend I had on earth who tried
+to come between us. Oh! Paul, Paul! don't you feel
+as I do; as though the world were empty, and my mind
+swept bare of memories,&mdash;as though there were no
+background to it all, nothing save you and I, and our
+love?"</p>
+
+<p>Paul drew her to him. For him, at that moment,
+there was no past nor any future. The dreamy <i>abandon</i>
+of her manner seemed to have raised an echo within
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Listen! What is that?" Adrea exclaimed suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>There was the ring of a horse's hoofs in the avenue,
+and immediately afterwards a loud peal at the bell.
+Paul and Adrea looked at one another breathlessly.
+Who could it be?</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page179" id="page179"></a>[pg 179]</span>
+
+<p>The outer door was opened and closed, and then
+quick steps passed across the hall. The drawing-room
+door was thrown open, and Arthur de Vaux, pale and
+splashed with mud from head to foot, stood upon the
+threshold.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page180" id="page180"></a>[pg 180]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+
+<h3>"THE NEW, STRONG WINE OF LOVE"</h3>
+
+
+<p>The situation, although it was only a brief one, was
+for a moment possessed of a singularly dramatic force.
+The grouping and the colouring in that dimly lit
+drawing-room were all that an artist could desire, and
+the facial expressions bordered upon the tragic. Of all
+men in the world, his brother was the last whom of
+his own choosing Paul would have wished to see.</p>
+
+<p>There was a brief silence. Arthur, breathless through
+his hasty entrance, could only stand there upon the
+threshold, his face white to the lips, and his eyes flashing
+with passionate anger and dismay. To him the
+situation was more than painful; it was horrible. To
+have believed ill of Paul from hearsay would have
+been impossible; his confidence in his elder brother
+had been unbounded. He had always looked up to
+him as the mirror of everything that was honorable
+and chivalrous. Even now, perhaps there might be
+some explanation&mdash;some partial explanation, at any
+rate. Paul was standing back amongst the shadows,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page181" id="page181"></a>[pg 181]</span>
+and his face was only barely visible. Doubtless it was
+only surprise which held him silent. In a moment he
+would speak, and explain everything. It was this
+thought which loosened Arthur's tongue.</p>
+
+<p>"Paul," he cried, and stepping forward into the
+room, "and Adrea! You here, and together! Tell
+me what it means! I have a right to know. I will
+know."</p>
+
+<p>He had determined to be cool, to bear himself like a
+man, but their silence maddened him. Adrea, it is
+true, showed no signs of guilt or confusion in her cold,
+questioning face. But the deceit, if deceit there had
+been, was not hers. It was Paul who was responsible
+to him, and it was Paul who should have spoken&mdash;Paul,
+who stood there with a hidden face, a silent, immovable
+figure.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you stricken dumb?" he cried angrily. "You
+can see who I am, can't you, Paul? Speak to me!
+Tell me whether there is any truth in these stories
+which are flying about the county, with no one to contradict
+them."</p>
+
+<p>What might have been the tragedy of the situation
+vanished for Paul at the sound of his brother's words.
+After all, it was not the just anger of a deceived man
+with which he was confronted, but the empty scream of
+a boy's passion. Arthur's infatuation had but skimmed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page182" id="page182"></a>[pg 182]</span>
+the surface of his light nature. He was pricked, not
+wounded. Yet, though in a sense this realization
+brought its relief, Paul felt humbled into the dust. He
+was actually conscious of his own humiliation. So far
+as a nature such as his could be conventional, he had
+become so in deference to the opinion of those who
+looked up to him as the head of a great house, and of
+whom much was to be expected, both socially and politically.
+What must become of that opinion now, Arthur's
+words too plainly foreshadowed.</p>
+
+<p>He moved forward into the centre of the room,
+and faced his brother. There was only a small table
+between them.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know who sent you here, Arthur," he said,
+"or what reports you have heard, but it seems to me,
+that any explanation you may wish had better be deferred
+until our return home."</p>
+
+<p>Arthur struck the table violently with his riding-whip,
+"I will not wait!" he cried. "Here is the proper
+place!
+I have been deceived and cajoled by&mdash;by&mdash;you, Adrea,
+and by my own brother! It is shameful! You hypocrite,
+Paul! You, to come up to London, and solemnly
+lecture me about a dancing girl. You d&mdash;&mdash;d
+hypocrite!"</p>
+
+<p>Before his passion, Paul's grave and steadfast silence
+gained an added dignity. Adrea, with a red spot burning
+on her cheeks, sailed between the two.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page183" id="page183"></a>[pg 183]</span>
+
+<p>"Arthur, you are mad," she said, turning suddenly
+upon him, with her eyes afire. "Have I ever deceived
+you? Have I ever pretended to care for you? Bah,
+no! You are only an unformed, hysterical boy. Before,
+you were indifferent to me. Now, I am very
+quickly growing to hate you! Begone! Leave this
+house!"</p>
+
+<p>He stood quite still, white and trembling. The scorn
+of her words had fallen like ice upon his heart. Then
+he turned, and groped for the door, as though there
+were a mist before his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose you are quite right," he faltered out.
+"I didn't see it quite the same way, that's all. I understand
+now."</p>
+
+<p>The door opened and shut. In a moment or two
+the sound of his horse's hoofs were heard in the avenue,
+growing rapidly less distinct as he galloped away into
+the darkness. To Paul it sounded like the knell of his
+self-respect, but Adrea felt only the relief. Her eyes,
+full of soft invitation, sought his; but he did not move.
+He stood there, silent and motionless, with his face
+turned towards the window. Those dying sounds
+meant so much to him,&mdash;so much that she could never
+understand.</p>
+
+<p>The consciousness of her near presence suddenly
+disturbed him. He turned round. Her warm breath
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page184" id="page184"></a>[pg 184]</span>
+was upon his cheek, and her white arms were twined
+about his neck.</p>
+
+<p>"Paul," she whispered, "do not look so miserable,
+please! Come and talk to me."</p>
+
+<p>Her arms tightened around him. He looked down
+at her with a peculiar helplessness. Their light weight
+seemed to him like a chain of iron weighing him down!
+down! down!</p>
+
+<p>He had told himself that he had come to bid her
+farewell; that Father Adrian's words, vague though
+they were, yet had a definite meaning, and were worthy
+of his regard. But at that moment their memory was
+like a dying echo in his ears. This first passion of his
+life was strong upon him, and everything else was
+weak. The future was suddenly bounded for him by
+a pair of white, clinging arms, and a dark, beautiful
+face pressed close to his. He saw no more; he could
+see no further.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page185" id="page185"></a>[pg 185]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+
+<h3>"ADREA'S DIARY"</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"By love stalks hate, his brother and his mate."
+</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p>I am scarcely calm enough to write! Yet I must
+write! My heart is full; my very pulses are throbbing
+with excitement! What is it that has happened? It
+is all confused in my mind. Let me try and set it
+down clearly; then perhaps I shall be able to see my
+way.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday it seemed to me that my being was all too
+small for one passion. Now it holds two! The one,
+perhaps, intensifies the other. That is possible, for
+they are opposites, and one has grown out of the other.
+Now I cannot tell which is the stronger, the love or the
+hate.</p>
+
+<p>I love one man, and I hate another. Perhaps I
+should say I love one man because I hate another.
+You, my dumb confidant, may be trusted with names,
+so I will be clearer still. I love Paul de Vaux, and I
+hate Father Adrian!</p>
+
+<p>Oh! that he should have dared! that he should have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page186" id="page186"></a>[pg 186]</span>
+dared to speak so to me! If only Paul had been there,
+he should have beaten him. If I had had the strength
+and the means, I would have killed him where he stood,
+and silenced those thin, cruel lips for ever. I could
+have stabbed him to the heart, and my hand would
+never have faltered.</p>
+
+<p>Let me try to recall that scene. It is not difficult.
+His words are ringing still in my ears, and his white,
+passionate face seems to follow and mock me wherever
+I look. I see it out there in the white moonlight, and
+it rises up from the dark corners of the room. It
+haunts me, and I hate it! I hate him as a woman hates
+any one who comes between her and the man she loves!</p>
+
+<p>We were alone, Paul and I; at least, we thought so.
+I had heard no one enter, nor had he. But suddenly a
+voice rang out and filled the room; a fierce, cruel voice,
+so changed and hardened with passion that I scarcely
+recognised it. But when we sprang up, and peered
+through the twilight of the chamber we saw him
+standing close to us,&mdash;so close that he might even
+have heard our whispered words to one another.</p>
+
+<p>There had been some ceremony at the monastery
+amongst the hills where most of his time here is spent,
+and he had evidently come straight from there. His
+flowing black robes were splashed with mud and torn
+by brambles, and his white face was livid with exhaustion
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page187" id="page187"></a>[pg 187]</span>
+and anger. His dark eyes burned like fire in their
+hollow depths, and his right hand was raised above his
+head, as though he had been on the point of striking
+or denouncing us. I shall not forget his appearance
+while I live. It will haunt me to my dying day.</p>
+
+<p>I think that it is the mystery of it all which tortures
+me so. What has Paul to fear from him? Whence
+comes his power? What evil is it which he holds suspended
+over his head? There is only one that I can
+imagine. Father Adrian must hold the key to that
+awful deathbed scene at the monastery of Cruta. As I
+write the words, my hand shakes, my heart sickens
+with the horror of that memory. Well have I cause to
+shrink from all thought of that hideous night;&mdash;I, to
+whom the son of Martin de Vaux has become the dearest
+amongst men! What was it Paul said to me? "He
+knows something which my father told him whilst he
+lay dying." Is it that knowledge which gives him
+this strange power? I did not believe in it! I would
+not have believed in it! But, in that dreadful moment,
+I turned to Paul, and I saw his face!</p>
+
+<p>A volley of words seemed trembling on Father
+Adrian's lips; yet he did not speak. We waited for
+the storm to burst; we waited till I could bear the
+silence no longer, and I felt that if it was not broken I
+should go mad. So I drew near to him, and spoke a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page188" id="page188"></a>[pg 188]</span>
+single word in his ear. Then I glided back to Paul's
+side.</p>
+
+<p>"Spy!"</p>
+
+<p>He treated the insult as one might treat the bite of
+an insect in the face of some imminent danger. He
+did not reply to it; he did not appear to have heard it.
+His eyes traveled over me, as though they had been
+sightless, and challenged Paul's. In the excitement
+of the moment, his words sounded tame, and almost
+meaningless.</p>
+
+<p>"This is your answer, then, Paul de Vaux! Let it
+be so! I accept your decision!"</p>
+
+<p>There was no defiance in Paul's answer. His manner
+was quite subdued. I think that both his words
+and his tone surprised me.</p>
+
+<p>"You have seen! I am in your hands!"</p>
+
+<p>I looked from one to the other, troubled. I felt that
+there was a hidden meaning in their words which I
+could not understand. There was something between
+them from which I was excluded. But this much I
+knew. There was a threat in Father Adrian's words,
+and it was I who was the cause of it. Oh! if this man
+should bring evil upon Paul! The thought of it is
+like madness to me! See, there goes my pen! I cannot
+write when I think of it!</p>
+
+<p>I have opened my window. The very air is sad with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page189" id="page189"></a>[pg 189]</span>
+the moaning of the sea, and the rustling of the night
+breeze in the thick, tangled shrubbery below. But to
+me it is sweet and grateful! I am in no mood for
+pleasant sounds or sights. The dreariness of the night
+finds its echo in my heart. The damp breeze cools my
+forehead! To-night I feel conscious of a new strength.
+It is the strength of hate! My mind is full of dim
+purposes; time will aid them to gather strength! As
+they group themselves together, action will suggest
+itself. To time I leave them!</p>
+
+<p>Let me go back to my recital of what passed between
+us three. A strange lethargic calm seemed to have
+fallen upon Paul. He turned to me without even a
+single trace of the passion which had lit up his face a
+few moments before.</p>
+
+<p>"I must go!" he said quietly. "Farewell!"</p>
+
+<p>I could scarcely believe that he meant it; that he
+was going away without another word, at what was
+really this priest's unspoken bidding. But it was so.
+From that moment, the fear of Father Adrian which
+had grown up in my heart leaped into a new strength.
+I was angry, and full of resistance.</p>
+
+<p>"Why should you go?" I cried. "I have much to
+say to you!"</p>
+
+<p>"I must go now, Adrea," he answered simply. "When
+I came I had no thought of staying. It is late!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page190" id="page190"></a>[pg 190]</span>
+
+<p>I felt my face grow hot with passion as I turned
+swiftly round towards Father Adrian. "It is you who
+should go," I cried. "Why have you come here?
+Why are you always creeping across my life like a
+dark, noisome shadow? Go away! Begone! I will not
+be left with you!"</p>
+
+<p>He turned a shade paler, but he did not sacrifice his
+dignity, as I hoped that he would, by answering me
+with anger. He did not even answer me at all. He
+looked over my head at my lover.</p>
+
+<p>"To-morrow night!" he said calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"To-morrow night!" Paul answered.</p>
+
+<p>I stood between them, angry but helpless. A log of
+wood had just fallen from the fire on to the hearth, and
+in its sudden blaze I could see their faces distinctly.
+The utter contrast between the two men threw each
+into strong relief. Paul, in his scarlet coat and riding
+clothes, pale and impassive, but <i>d&#233;bonnaire</i>; and
+Father Adrian, his strange black garb mud-bespattered
+and disordered, and his dark, angry face livid with the
+passion so hardly suppressed. It was odd to think of
+them as creatures of the same species. Odder still to
+think that there should be this link between them.</p>
+
+<p>I walked with Paul to the door, holding to his arm,
+and talking, half-gaily, half-reproachfully, all the way.
+We stood on the step together while his horse was being
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page191" id="page191"></a>[pg 191]</span>
+brought round, and in the half-lights he stooped
+down and kissed me. But his manner had changed.
+Even his lips were cold, and his eyes were no longer
+bright. There was a far-away look in them, and his
+face was white and set. There were tears in my eyes
+as I watched him ride away on his great brown horse,
+and listened to the distant thunder of hoofs across the
+moor. His face had told its own story. He was nerving
+himself to face some expected danger. From whose
+hands? Surely from Father Adrian's.</p>
+
+<p>The thought worked within me. I stood for a moment,
+trying to quiet my passion. As I turned away
+I heard the stable-yard doors open, and a carriage,
+laden with luggage, drove slowly out, and, without
+coming to the front at all, turned down the avenue. I
+ran out, heedless of my slippers, and called to it to
+stop. The man obeyed me, and I caught it up, breathless.
+The blinds were closely drawn, but I opened the
+door. As I expected, it was she who sat inside, closely
+veiled and weeping.</p>
+
+<p>"You were going, then, without a single word of
+farewell!" I cried reproachfully. "Is that kind?
+Have I deserved it from you?"</p>
+
+<p>She threw up her veil. Her eyes were red and
+swollen with weeping. She looked at me pleadingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not blame me more than you can help!" she
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page192" id="page192"></a>[pg 192]</span>
+said. "It was a great shock to me to see you&mdash;with
+the son of Martin de Vaux. It was more than a shock;
+it was a horror to me! He is like his father! He is
+very like his father!"</p>
+
+<p>I knew that she had passed through a fiery sea of
+suffering, and I kept back the anger which threatened
+me. I pointed upwards.</p>
+
+<p>"We cannot keep the dark clouds from gathering
+in the sky, nor can we make love come and go at our
+bidding. We are but creatures; it is fate which ordains!"</p>
+
+<p>She bowed her head. "Fate, or the unknown God!
+I am not your judge, child! I do not leave you in
+anger!"</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you go, then, and leave me here alone? It
+is not kind! It is not what I should expect from you!"</p>
+
+<p>The tears started again into her eyes, but she shook
+them away. "I cannot explain as yet," she said. "You
+will think me ungrateful, I fear! I cannot help it! I
+must go. Farewell, Adrea!"</p>
+
+<p>A sudden thought came to me. It was an inspiration.
+"You are not going of your own free will," I
+cried. "Some one has been influencing you!"</p>
+
+<p>Her face was suddenly full of nervous terror. "Hush!
+hush!" she cried. "He will hear you! Let me go
+now! Let me go, I beseech you!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page193" id="page193"></a>[pg 193]</span>
+
+<p>I held her hands. "It is Father Adrian who is
+sending you away," I cried passionately. "He is my
+enemy. I hate him! Why should you obey him?
+Stay with me! Do, do stay!"</p>
+
+<p>She looked at me as one would look at an ignorant
+child who blasphemes. "You are talking wildly!
+Father Adrian is far from being your enemy. You do
+not understand!"</p>
+
+<p>Her voice had changed; the note of sympathy had
+died away. I turned away from the carriage door in
+despair. Father Adrian's power was greater than mine.</p>
+
+<p>"You can go!" I said bitterly. "You would have
+left me here without one word, at his bidding. As you
+say, I do not understand."</p>
+
+<p>She leaned forward, with a strange light in her eyes.
+"Child," she whispered, "I am going to Cruta."</p>
+
+<p>The carriage drove away and I walked back to the
+house. The air seemed full of voices, and the grey
+rising mists loomed into strange shapes. Cruta! She
+was going to Cruta! What power had this man in his
+hands to send my lover from me with a heart like a
+stone, and this woman back into the living hell from
+which she had just freed herself. It was my turn now!
+Would he be able to subdue me to his bidding? The
+thought made me shudder.</p>
+
+<p>I ran upstairs into my room, and bathed my forehead,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page194" id="page194"></a>[pg 194]</span>
+and re-arranged my gown. Then I set my teeth
+together, and went down to him. It was to be a battle!
+Well! I was prepared!</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>It is over now. I know his strength, and I know
+his weakness. What passed between us I shall put
+down to-morrow. To-night I am weary.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page195" id="page195"></a>[pg 195]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+
+<h3>"OH! HEART OF STONE, YET FLESH TO ALL SAVE ME"</h3>
+
+
+<p>This is exactly what happened after I regained the
+house. I went upstairs for a few minutes to arrange
+my hair and bathe my eyes. Then I walked straight
+down to the drawing-room, and I told myself that I
+was prepared for anything that might take place.</p>
+
+<p>Father Adrian did not hear me enter, so I had the
+advantage at the onset of taking him by surprise.
+He was standing in the centre of the hearthrug, with
+his arms folded and his eyes cast down upon the
+ground. His eyebrows almost met in a black frown,
+and a curious grey pallor had spread itself over his
+face. When I entered, noiselessly moving the curtains,
+from the outer chamber, he was muttering to himself,
+and I strained my hearing to catch the meaning of his
+words.</p>
+
+<p>"To-night must end it!" I heard him say. "She
+herself shall decide. Greater men have travelled the
+path before me! As for him, my pity has grown faint!
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page196" id="page196"></a>[pg 196]</span>
+It is the will of the Church! I myself am but the
+instrument. He stands between the Church and her
+rights! Between me and&mdash;her!"</p>
+
+<p>His cheeks flushed, and his expression suddenly
+changed. He whispered a name! It was mine! His
+eyes were soft, and his lips were parted. The priest
+had vanished. His face was human and manly. I
+saw it, but my heart was as cold as steel.</p>
+
+<p>"Father Adrian," I said quietly, "I am here."</p>
+
+<p>He started, and looked towards me. If my heart
+could have been softened even to pity, it would have
+been softened by that look. But a woman's great selfishness
+was upon me! The man I loved was in some
+sort of danger at his hands. There was no room in
+my heart for any other thought. I was adamant.</p>
+
+<p>He was silent for a moment, then he faced me
+steadily, and spoke. "So you have learned to love
+this Englishman, this De Vaux, the son of old Martin
+de Vaux! Answer me simply, Yes or No!"</p>
+
+<p>"I have!"</p>
+
+<p>I did not hesitate. What need was there for hesitation?
+I answered him defiantly, and without faltering.</p>
+
+<p>"You will never marry him! You will not even
+become his mistress!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page197" id="page197"></a>[pg 197]</span>
+
+<p>I made no answer at first; I laughed! that was all.</p>
+
+<p>"Who will prevent me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall!"</p>
+
+<p>"How?"</p>
+
+<p>"The means are ready to my hand!"</p>
+
+<p>My heart sank, but I forced a smile. "What are
+they?"</p>
+
+<p>He considered a moment. "I can strip Paul de
+Vaux of every acre and every penny he possesses! I
+can break his mother's heart! I can proclaim his
+father a murderer!"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not understand! I do not believe!"</p>
+
+<p>The words left me boldly enough, but there was a
+lump in my throat, and my heart was sick.</p>
+
+<p>"Listen!" He drew a small gold crucifix from his
+breast, and solemnly kissed it. Then, holding it in his
+hand, he repeated,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I can beggar Paul de Vaux by my proven word. I
+can take from him everything precious in life! I can
+take from him his name and his honours! I can break
+his mother's heart! I can proclaim his father a murderer!
+All this I can and will do, save you listen to
+me!"</p>
+
+<p>He kissed the crucifix, and replaced it in his inner
+pocket. I had begun to tremble. The stamp of truth
+was upon his words. Still I tried to face him boldly.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page198" id="page198"></a>[pg 198]</span>
+
+<p>"Even if this is so, what has it to do with me?" I
+cried.</p>
+
+<p>"You know!" he answered. "In your heart you
+know! Yet, if you will&mdash;listen!" he continued, in a
+low tone. "You love Paul de Vaux!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is true!"</p>
+
+<p>"And you believe that he loves you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do!"</p>
+
+<p>"Listen, then! Three nights ago I lifted that curtain,
+by the side of one who has left you for ever, and
+I saw you in his arms. I followed him out of the
+house; I walked by his side to Vaux Abbey, and I
+told him what I have told you. I wasted no time in
+idle threats. I told him what power was mine, and I
+said 'Choose!' He was silent!"</p>
+
+<p>"Choose between what?" I interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>"I bade him swear that he would never willingly
+look upon your face again, or prepare himself to face
+all the evils which it was in my power to bring upon
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"And he?"</p>
+
+<p>"He asked for time&mdash;for a week!"</p>
+
+<p>A storm of anger was suddenly stirred up within me.
+I turned upon him with flashing eyes and quivering
+lips. Discretion and restraint were gone; I was like a
+tigress. I lacked only the power to kill.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page199" id="page199"></a>[pg 199]</span>
+
+<p>"And by what right did you dare to thrust yourself
+between us?" I cried. "What have I to do with you,
+or you with me?"</p>
+
+<p>He held up his hands for a moment, as though to
+shut out the sight of my face, ablaze with scorn and
+hatred. There was a short silence. Then he spoke in
+a low tone, vibrating with intensity of feeling.</p>
+
+<p>"You know! In your heart you know!" he said.
+"Into my life has come the greatest humiliation which
+can befall such as I am! In sorrow and bitterness it
+has eaten itself into my heart. I am accursed in my
+own sight, and in the sight of God!"</p>
+
+<p>I mocked at him. "I am not your confessor!" I
+laughed. "Go and tell your sins to those of your own
+order! I am a woman and you are a priest! Why do
+you look at me with that light in your eyes? Am I a
+prayer-book? Is there anything saintly in my face,
+that you should keep your eyes fixed upon it so
+steadily?"</p>
+
+<p>I had hoped that my words would madden him, and
+he would lose his self-control. To my surprise, they
+had but little effect. He seemed scarcely to have
+heard.</p>
+
+<p>"What have you to do with me, or I with you?" he
+repeated, in a voice which was rapidly gaining strength
+and passion. "God knows! Yet as surely as we both
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page200" id="page200"></a>[pg 200]</span>
+live, our lots are intertwined the one with the other."</p>
+
+<p>"A godly priest!" I laughed. "What have you to
+do with me? What of your vows? Oh, how dare you
+try to play the lover with me! You hypocrite!"</p>
+
+<p>He shrank back as though in pain. I laughed outright,
+glad that I had made him feel.</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea!" he said slowly. "I was never a hypocrite
+to you. In your presence I have never breathed a word
+of my religion. Think for a moment of those days at
+Cruta. Did I not refuse to confess you? Why? You
+know! Because of those long, dreamy days we spent
+together, not as priest and penitent, but as man and
+woman. Do you remember them&mdash;the cliffs, with their
+giant shadows standing out across the blue waters of
+the harbour; the hollows, where we sat amongst the
+perfumed wild flowers, gazing across the sea, and
+watching the white sails in the distance; the nights,
+with their white moonlight and silent grandeur! Ay,
+Adrea! look me in the face, if you can, and tell me that
+you have forgotten them! You cannot! You dare not! It
+was you who brought me those books of wild, passionate
+poetry whose music entered into my very soul! It was you
+who tempted me with soft words, with your music, with
+your beauty, into that world of sense which holds me
+prisoner for ever. What I once was, I can never be
+again! It is you who worked the change&mdash;you who
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page201" id="page201"></a>[pg 201]</span>
+awoke my man's heart, and set it beating for ever at
+your touch, at your movements, at the sight of you. It
+is you who taught me how to love&mdash;who opened to me
+the rose-covered gates of hell! There is no drawing
+back! You, who have dragged me down, shall share
+my fall with me, for better or for worse! You shall
+not escape! No other man shall have you! I have
+paid the price, and I will have you!"</p>
+
+<p>I wrenched myself free from the arms which were
+closing around me, and stood trembling before him.</p>
+
+<p>"Fool!" I cried. "You have dared to think of me
+like that because I chose to make use of you at Cruta!
+Make use of you! Yes, that is what I did! I wanted
+to escape! You and she were the only ones who could
+help me! Save for that, I had never wasted a moment
+upon you. I never thought of you as a man; you were
+only a priest. I never wished to see you again! You are
+in my way now; you stand between me and the man I
+love! I hate you!"</p>
+
+<p>His dark eyes were lit up with a sudden fire and a
+deep flush stained his cheeks. For the first time I
+seemed to see the man in him as well as the priest,
+and I saw that he was handsome. It did not interest
+me; I noticed it only as an incident.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not believe it!" he exclaimed. "You are not
+so false as you would have me believe, Adrea!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page202" id="page202"></a>[pg 202]</span>
+
+<p>His hand was on my wrist, and his dark eyes,
+strangely softened, were fixed pleadingly upon mine.
+Something in his manner, even in his tone, seemed to
+remind me of Paul. I was magnetized! For a moment
+I could not move, and during that moment his hands
+closed upon mine.</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea, is such a love as I can offer you worth nothing?
+What did you tell me once was your life's ideal?
+Was it not the love of a strong, true man, always faithful,
+always loving? No one could love you more tenderly
+than I, no one could be more faithful. Until I saw
+you, no woman's face had dwelt in my thoughts for a
+single instant. In my heart you reign alone, Adrea!
+No one has been there before&mdash;no one will come after!
+Such as it is, it is a kingdom of your own!"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not understand you," I said slowly, withdrawing
+my hands. "You talk to me of a man's love, a
+man's faithfulness! What do you know of it? You
+are a priest!"</p>
+
+<p>He threw up his hands with a sudden cry of agony.
+His face was white and blanched.</p>
+
+<p>"Do I not know it?" he exclaimed in a low, fierce
+tone. "Do you think I yielded easily to the poisoned
+web you have woven around me? The horror of it all
+has darkened my days, and made hideous my nights.
+And yet you can taunt me with it&mdash;you, for whom I
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page203" id="page203"></a>[pg 203]</span>
+yield up conscience and future&mdash;you, for whom I give
+my soul! No other man could love as I love, Adrea!"</p>
+
+<p>I looked him straight in the face and I did not spare
+him. What was the use? The truth was best!</p>
+
+<p>"It is folly!" I said. "If your religion is worth
+anything to you, let it help you now! Let it teach
+you to forget me! Go away from here, and leave unharmed
+the man I love. If you do not, I shall hate
+you!"</p>
+
+<p>He caught hold of my dress. He was on his knees
+before me&mdash;a bent, imploring figure.</p>
+
+<p>"Too late! too late!" he cried. "My religion has
+gone! When love for you crept into my heart, I became
+worse than a heretic. It was sin, and the sin
+has spread. Oh! have mercy upon me, Adrea, have
+mercy upon me! Just a little of your love. It may
+not be much at first, but it will grow. Adrea, you
+must try&mdash;you shall try!"</p>
+
+<p>I shook my gown from his trembling fingers, and
+looked down upon him with contempt in my heart, and
+contempt in my face. The flickering firelight cast a
+faint glow upon his blanched, wan features, and their
+utter humility filled me with an unreasoning and unreasonable
+loathing. I did not try to soften my words.
+I spoke out just as I felt, and watched him rise slowly
+to his feet, like a hunted and stricken animal, without
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page204" id="page204"></a>[pg 204]</span>
+a pitying word or glance. As he rose upright, his
+head dropped. He did not look at me; he did not
+speak a single word. He walked slowly to the door
+with steps that faltered a little, and walked out of the
+room, and out of the house.</p>
+
+<p>I watched him down the avenue, wondering at his
+strange silence. It had a curious effect upon me. I
+would rather have heard threats&mdash;even a torrent of
+anger. There was something curiously ominous in
+that slow, wordless exit. I watched him uneasily, full
+of dim, shapeless fears.</p>
+
+<p>Outside the gate he paused in the middle of the
+road. To the left was the monastery where he had
+stayed; to the right was Vaux Abbey. I heard my
+heart beat while he paused, and my face was pressed
+against the window. For nearly a minute he stood
+quite still, with downcast head, thinking. Then he
+turned deliberately to the right, and set his face
+towards Vaux Abbey.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>That was early in the evening yesterday&mdash;twenty-four
+hours ago. Since then not a soul has been near
+the house. Early this morning I saw Father Adrian
+coming along the road from Vaux. I ran upstairs,
+and locked myself in my room, after forbidding the
+servants to let him enter. From the windows I
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page205" id="page205"></a>[pg 205]</span>
+watched him. To my surprise he never even glanced
+in. He walked past the gates, and took the road to
+the monastery. I saw him slowly ascend the hill and
+vanish out of sight in the darkening twilight. Once,
+just before he reached the summit, he paused and
+looked steadily down here. I could not see his face,
+but I saw him raise his right hand for a moment
+toward the sky. Then he turned round and pursued
+his way.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>If some one does not come to me soon, I shall go
+mad. Another hour has passed. My mind is made
+up; I shall go to Vaux Abbey.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page206" id="page206"></a>[pg 206]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
+
+<h3>"MY LIPS ARE CHARGED WITH TRUTH, AND JUSTICE BIDS
+ME SPEAK"</h3>
+
+
+<p>An early darkness had fallen upon the earth. Black
+clouds had sailed across the young moon, and the evening
+breeze had changed into a gale. There was no
+rain as yet, but every prospect of it near at hand. A
+mass of lurid, yellowish clouds hung low down over
+the bending woods, and the wind whistled drearily
+amongst the fir trees. Paul de Vaux wrapped his
+cloak tightly around him, and, standing on the turf-covered
+floor of the ruined chapel, peered forward into
+the darkness, looking for the man whom he had come
+to meet. Even then he heard his voice before he
+could distinguish the dim outline of Father Adrian
+standing by his side.</p>
+
+<p>"So you have come, Paul de Vaux, and in good
+time! It is well!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am here!" Paul answered shortly. "If what
+you have to say to me will take long, come up to the
+house. It is dark and cold, and there is a storm rising."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page207" id="page207"></a>[pg 207]</span>
+
+<p>The priest shook his head. "I have no wish to find
+shelter under the roof of Vaux Abbey," he said coldly.
+"You are well protected against the weather, and so
+am I. Let us stay here!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul strove to look into his face, but the darkness
+baffled him. He could only see its outline, nothing of
+his expression. "As you will," he answered. "Speak!
+I am ready."</p>
+
+<p>"I have dealt in no idle threats, Paul de Vaux," was
+the stern answer. "I gave you a chance, and you
+have thrown it away. Perhaps I did ill ever to offer
+it to you. But, at any rate, remember this: it is no
+idle vengeance which I am dealing out to you this
+night; it is our holy and despoiled Church calling for
+justice. I speak in her name!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence. Paul knew by his
+companion's bowed head and laboured utterance that
+he was suffering from some sort of emotion. But the
+darkness hid from him the workings of his pale features.
+When he spoke, his voice was low and solemn.</p>
+
+<p>"Paul de Vaux, turn back in your mind to another
+night such as this, when the thunder of sea and wind
+shook the air, and the anger of God seemed fallen upon
+the earth. On that night your father lay dying in the
+island monastery of Cruta; and while you were risking
+your life in the storm to reach him, I knelt by his side
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page208" id="page208"></a>[pg 208]</span>
+praying for his soul, that it might not sink down
+amongst the damned in hell. He was a brave man,
+but with the icy hand of death closing around him fear
+touched his heart. It was no craven fear! He lay
+there still and quiet, but his heart was troubled. In
+the midst of my prayers he stopped me, and took the
+crucifix into his own hand.</p>
+
+<p>"'Father,' he said, 'I have no faith in dying repentances.
+I have scouted religion all my life, and on
+my deathbed I will not cry for comfort to a Divinity
+which is a myth to me. Yet, as man to man, listen
+while I tell you a secret; and when I have finished,
+do you pray for me.'</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I go on, Paul de Vaux? Shall I tell you all
+that your father's dying lips faltered out to me?"</p>
+
+<p>"All! every word! Keep nothing back!" Paul
+spoke quickly, almost feverishly. He knew a little,
+but something told him that this priest knew more.
+He began dimly to suspect the nature of the revelation
+which was to come.</p>
+
+<p>"You shall know everything," Father Adrian continued,
+in the same hushed tone, so low that Paul
+had to bend forward to catch the words as they fell
+from his lips. "If Martin de Vaux had been of our
+religion, and had sought me as a priest of the Church
+a seal would have been set upon my mouth. But it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page209" id="page209"></a>[pg 209]</span>
+was not so! Despite all my ministrations, he died
+as he had lived, in heresy and grievous sin. After
+all, it is only right that you, his son, should know
+what he forebore to tell you. Yet, in my weakness
+I might have spared you, if you yourself had not
+brought down this blow upon your head."</p>
+
+<p>Paul raised his hand, and Father Adrian paused.
+"Listen," he said, in a low, deep tone. "There are
+secret pages in the lives of most of us&mdash;pages blurred
+and scarred with misery and suffering and sin. But
+there is a difference&mdash;a great difference. Some are
+turned over with firm and penitent fingers, and,
+although their scarlet record may never be blotted out,
+yet, by sacrifice and atonement, the fruits of the sin
+itself may die, and, dying, cast no shadow into the
+future. A sin against humanity can often be righted
+by human justice. Towards the close of my father's
+days, I knew for the first time that there was in
+his life one of those disfigured pages. He told me
+nothing. I sought to know nothing. Father
+Adrian," Paul went on, with a sudden strain of passion
+in his tone, and a gesture half unseen in the
+darkness, "if the shadow of his sin rests upon any
+human being, if it still lives upon the earth, then
+tell me all that is in your heart to tell, for there
+is work to be done. But if that page be locked and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page210" id="page210"></a>[pg 210]</span>
+sealed, if those who suffered through it are dead,
+and the burden which darkened my father's days is
+his alone, then spare his memory! Strike at me, if
+you will! Deal out your promised vengeance, but
+let it fall on me alone!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul ended his speech with a little burst of passion
+ringing in those last few words. He was conscious
+of a deep and fervent desire to hear nothing,
+to listen to nothing, which could teach him to hold
+less dear his father's memory. He shrank, with a
+human and perfectly natural feeling, from hearing
+evil of the dead. That last evil deed, the murder
+in that grim, bare chamber of death, had haunted him
+with vivid and painful intensity. But it was a crime
+by itself. It was horrible to imagine that it might
+indeed be the culmination of a life of license and contempt
+of all human laws. He had tried to think of it
+as something outside his father's life, something done
+in a momentary fit of madness, and that the man who
+suffered by it was some monster unfit for the companionship
+of his fellows&mdash;unfit to live. There were still
+tales to be heard in the county, and about town even,
+of the wild doings of Martin de Vaux in his younger
+days; but none of these had reached his son's ears.
+He would have been the last person likely to hear of
+them.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page211" id="page211"></a>[pg 211]</span>
+
+<p>There was a short silence, and before Father Adrian
+spoke again the low-lying clouds were swept over their
+heads by a gale from seaward, and the wind commenced
+to whistle and shriek in the pine wood, and
+roar amongst the crumbling ruins, which scarcely afforded
+them protection from the blinding rain. Any
+further conversation was impossible. Paul lifted up
+his voice, and shouted in his companion's ear&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"These walls are not safe! We must go into the
+house. Will you come?"</p>
+
+<p>Father Adrian hesitated, and then assented, wrapping
+his cloak around him. In a few moments they
+were inside the library, having entered through a private
+door and met no one. Breathless, Paul threw off
+his cloak, which was dripping with rain, and turned
+round almost fiercely upon his companion.</p>
+
+<p>"Now speak!" he said. "I am ready to hear all."</p>
+
+<p>The priest looked at him steadily for a moment, and
+then, with his pale face turned towards the fire, he
+commenced to speak.</p>
+
+<p>"Sin is everlasting!" he said slowly. "Your
+father's sin lives, and on you the burden must fall! If
+you had kept the covenant which I placed before you,
+I might have spared you. You yourself have chosen.
+You must hear all! Listen!</p>
+
+<p>"It was by chance that I was spending two months
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page212" id="page212"></a>[pg 212]</span>
+in charge of the monastery of St. Jerome, at Cruta,
+when your father arrived," he continued, without any
+pause. "He sought our hospitality and he at once
+obtained it. For two days he dwelt with us, spending
+his time for the most part in idle fashion, wandering
+about along the seashore or on the cliffs, but always
+with the look on his face of a man who does but dally
+with some fixed purpose. His doings were nothing to
+me, but by chance, from one of the brethren, I learnt
+that he was no stranger to the island&mdash;that once, many
+years ago, he had been the guest of the lord who ruled
+the little territory, and whose castle overshadows the
+monastery.</p>
+
+<p>"On the third day of his stay, he remained within
+his guest-chamber until sundown, writing. As the
+vesper-bell rang I met him in the corridor, dressed for
+walking, and from his countenance I judged that whatever
+his mission to the island might be, he was about
+to bring it to an end. He passed me without speech,
+almost as though he had not seen me, and left the monastery.
+A few minutes afterwards, looking down from
+the windows to watch the brethren come in from their
+field tasks, I saw him take the road up to the castle.</p>
+
+<p>"It was in the middle of the night when he returned.
+Midnight had come and gone, and every one
+in the monastery was asleep, when the hoarse, clanging
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page213" id="page213"></a>[pg 213]</span>
+bell down in the yard rang slightly, as though pulled
+by feeble fingers. I threw my cloak over my shoulders,
+and descended to admit him. When the last of
+the huge bolts had been withdrawn, and I threw the
+door open, I found him leaning against the wall, with
+his fingers clutched together in agony, and his bloodless
+features convulsed with pain. The moonlight was
+falling right across his face, pale and ghastly with
+pain, and by its light I seemed to see something dark
+dropping from him on the white flags. I leaned forward,
+horror-stricken, and I saw that it was blood."</p>
+
+<p>"My God!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul was standing very still and rigid, with his eyes
+fastened upon the priest. As yet, he scarcely realized
+anything more than that he was being told a very horrible
+story. But he was conscious of a feverish impatience,
+quite beyond his control. When Father Adrian
+paused at his exclamation, he beat the ground with his
+foot impatiently. "Go on! Go on!" he said hoarsely.</p>
+
+<p>"I had no time to ask questions," the priest continued
+quietly. "Directly he left the support of the
+wall, and endeavoured to move towards me, your father
+threw up his arms with a sharp cry of pain, and almost
+fell upon his face. I was just in time to catch him,
+and exerting all my strength&mdash;for he was a powerful
+man&mdash;I dragged him up the steps and along the corridor
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page214" id="page214"></a>[pg 214]</span>
+to the nearest empty cell. There I laid him down
+upon a bed of ferns, and then hurried out to summon
+one of the brethren who was skilled in medicine.</p>
+
+<p>"In a few moments he returned with me. By his
+direction, I gave your father brandy and other restoratives,
+while he cut open his coat to find out, if he could,
+the nature of the wound. It was easily discovered.
+He had been stabbed by a long dagger just below the
+heart. Had the dagger entered one-sixteenth of an
+inch higher, he must have bled to death upon the spot.</p>
+
+<p>"We bound up the hurt as well as we could, and
+with the help of other of the monks, we carried him
+up to the guest-chamber, and put him to bed. In about
+half an hour he recovered consciousness, and called me
+to his side.</p>
+
+<p>"'Pencil, paper,' he whispered.</p>
+
+<p>"I handed him both. After several futile efforts he
+succeeded in writing a few words. Then he folded up
+the note, and handed it to me.</p>
+
+<p>"'If you will send it without delay,' he whispered,
+'I will give one hundred pounds to the monastery.'</p>
+
+<p>"I never hesitated, for our funds were in a desperate
+state; but first I glanced at the direction. It was
+addressed to&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="author">PAUL DE VAUX, Esq.,<br />
+c/o The English Consul,<br />
+Palermo.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page215" id="page215"></a>[pg 215]</span>
+
+<p>"I promised that it should be sent, and, as you
+know, it was. Then I sent the others out of the room,
+and inquired about his hurt. He set his lips firm, and
+shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"'It was an accident,' he faltered. 'No one was to
+blame.'</p>
+
+<p>"I told him briefly that it was impossible. The nature
+of his wound was such that it was clearly the
+work of an assassin. In a certain sense we were the upholders
+of the law on the island, and I pointed this out
+to him sternly. He only shook his head and closed
+his eyes. Neither then nor at any other time could I
+gain from him one single word as to his doings on that
+night. He would tell me nothing."</p>
+
+<p>"You saw him going toward the castle," Paul interrupted.
+"Did you make inquiries there?"</p>
+
+<p>The priest shook his head slowly. "No, I made no
+inquiries," he answered. "It was no matter for my
+interference. The castle, although it is a huge place,
+was deserted save for a few native servants, whose
+<i>patois</i> was unintelligible to me. There were only two
+who dwelt there&mdash;the old Count himself, and one other&mdash;to
+whom I could have gone. Several nights after your
+father's illness I left the monastery, and tried to see
+the Count. He would not even have me admitted, and
+on my return, your father, who had guessed the reason
+of my absence, sent for me. He judged of the ill
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page216" id="page216"></a>[pg 216]</span>
+success of my mission, by my face, and he instantly appeared
+relieved. He then called me to the bedside,
+and made me an offer. He would give me, as a further
+contribution to our exhausted funds, a large sum of
+money on this condition&mdash;that I took no further steps
+in any direction towards ascertaining the nature of his
+accident, as he chose to call it, and that I should not
+mention it to you as the cause of his illness, or refer
+to it in any way if you arrived while he was there. I
+hesitated for some time, but in the end I consented.
+The money in itself was a great temptation&mdash;you see,
+I am frank with you&mdash;and, apart from that, your father
+at that time was on the verge of his fever, and at such
+a critical time I feared the ill results of not falling in
+with his wishes. So I promised, and I kept my promise;
+no one&mdash;not even you&mdash;knew that he died from
+that dagger thrust, and during the remainder of my
+stay on the island, I asked no questions concerning
+his visit to the castle."</p>
+
+<p>"But did you hear nothing? were there no reports?"
+Paul asked.</p>
+
+<p>Father Adrian hesitated. "There were no reports
+about your father," he said, "but the castle itself was
+always the object of the most unbounded superstition
+on the part of the inhabitants. They told strange tales
+of midnight cries, of lights from blocked-up chambers,
+and of the old Count who still dwelt there, although he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page217" id="page217"></a>[pg 217]</span>
+had not been seen outside the castle walls for many a
+year. He was reported to have sold himself to the
+Evil One, and at the very mention of his name the
+people crossed themselves in terror, and glanced
+uneasily over their shoulders."</p>
+
+<p>"Idle tales!" cried Paul angrily. "Tell me, Father
+Adrian, did you know this Count of Cruta?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence. Father Adrian's face
+was turned away, and he seemed in no hurry to answer.
+"Yes, I knew him."</p>
+
+<p>"You knew him! What is he like? Tell me!"</p>
+
+<p>The priest shook his head. "I have nothing to tell
+you," he said in a low tone.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean that you will not tell me."</p>
+
+<p>The priest inclined his head. Paul turned upon
+him fiercely, "He was my father's murderer," he
+cried.</p>
+
+<p>"It may be so. But remember that nothing is
+known! Remember, too, that your father's last wish
+was to keep secret the manner of his death!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul seemed scarcely to have heard him. He was
+walking restlessly up and down the apartment. Presently
+he stopped in front of Father Adrian's chair.</p>
+
+<p>"You have told me what happened to my father on
+the island," he said; "now tell me the story of his life,
+which you say that he confided to you. I must know
+what took him there."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page218" id="page218"></a>[pg 218]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
+
+<h3>"THE SHATTERED VASE OF LOVE'S MOST HOLY VOWS"</h3>
+
+
+<p>Paul had not thought of ringing for lights, and,
+save around the fireplace, the room was wrapped in
+solemn darkness. Father Adrian's chair had been
+amongst the shadows, and Paul had seen nothing save
+his outline since they had entered the room. But now,
+his curiosity stirred by the sudden silence of the priest,
+he caught up the poker, and broke the burning log in
+the grate, so that the flames threw a quick light on his
+face.</p>
+
+<p>Its extreme pallor struck him forcibly. It was a
+perfectly bloodless face, and the dark eyes, as black as
+jet, accentuated its pallor. Yet there was no lack of
+nervous strength or emotion. The thin lips were quivering,
+and the eyes were soft with feeling. Somehow,
+it seemed to Paul that this man's interest in the story
+which he had come to tell was no casual one; that he
+himself was mixed up in it, in a manner which as yet
+he had chosen to conceal. His colourless face was
+alight with human interest and sympathies. Who was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page219" id="page219"></a>[pg 219]</span>
+this priest, and why had he come so far to tell his story?
+Paul felt that a mystery lay behind it all.</p>
+
+<p>"You must not think," Father Adrian commenced
+slowly, "that your father told me the whole history of
+his life. It was one episode only, the memory of
+which weighed heavily upon him as death drew near.
+He did not tell me all concerning it; what he did tell
+me I will try and repeat to you.</p>
+
+<p>"It was late in the afternoon of the day before your
+arrival that he called me to his bedside. Only a few
+hours ago we had told him that he must die, and since
+then he had been very silent. I came and knelt before
+him, and was commencing a prayer, when he stopped
+me.</p>
+
+<p>"'I want you to listen while I tell you one of the
+worst actions of my life,' he said in a low tone, weakened
+by the suffering through which he had passed.
+'The memory of it has haunted me always; it is the
+memory of it which has brought me here. I am not
+confessing to you, mind! only after I have told you this
+story, I want you to pray for me.</p>
+
+<p>"'Thirty years ago I was in Palermo, and was introduced
+there to the Count of Cruta. We met several
+times, and on his departure he invited me to come over
+here for a week's shooting. I was wandering about on
+pleasure, with no fixed plans, and I did not hesitate for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page220" id="page220"></a>[pg 220]</span>
+a moment. I should like nothing better than to come,
+I told him, and accordingly we returned here together.</p>
+
+<p>"'The Count was a widower with one daughter,
+Irene. For a young man I was not particularly impressionable,
+and up till then I had thought very little
+about women. Nevertheless,&mdash;perhaps, I should say,
+all the more for that reason,&mdash;I fell in love with Irene.
+In a week's time I had all but told her so; and finding
+myself alone with her father one night after dinner, I
+boldly asked him for her hand. Somewhat to my surprise,&mdash;for
+considering the difference in our years, we
+had become very friendly,&mdash;he refused me point-blank.
+The first reason which he gave staggered me: Irene
+was already engaged to a Roumanian nobleman, who
+would be coming soon to claim her. But apart from
+that, he went on, he would never have consented to the
+match on the score of our different religions. I tried
+to argue with him, but it was useless; he would not
+even discuss the matter. His daughter's hand was
+promised, and his word was passed.</p>
+
+<p>"'On the morrow I appealed to Irene, and here I
+met with more success. She confessed that she loved
+me, and, to my surprise, she consented at once when I
+proposed that she should run away with me. Our
+arrangements were made in haste and secrecy. My
+yacht lay in the harbour, and at midnight Irene stole
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page221" id="page221"></a>[pg 221]</span>
+down to the shore, where I met her, and rowed her on
+board. A few minutes later we weighed anchor and
+steamed away, with the rusty old guns from the castle
+firing useless shots high over our heads.</p>
+
+<p>"'I want to make my story as short as I can, so I
+will not attempt to offer any excuses for my conduct, or
+to seek to palliate it in any way. Irene had trusted
+herself to me, and I betrayed her trust. I did not
+marry her. She did not leave me; she did not even
+openly upbraid me; but nevertheless it hung like a
+dark cloud over her life. By degrees, she became
+altered. She tried to drown her memory by frivolity,
+by all manner of gaiety and excitement, and our life
+in Paris afforded her many opportunities.</p>
+
+<p>"'The old Count of Cruta made two efforts to rescue
+his daughter from me. The first time he came alone;
+and before his righteous fury I was for a moment
+abashed. "Give me back my daughter!" he thundered,
+with his back to my closed door, and a pistol pointed
+to my head. I rang the bell, and Irene came, dressed
+for the evening, and humming a light opera tune.
+Then I saw to what depths of callousness I had dragged
+her, and I shuddered. She listened to the old man's
+stormy eloquence, and when he had finished his passionate
+appeal, she shrugged her shoulders slightly. She
+was perfectly happy, she declared, and she would die
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page222" id="page222"></a>[pg 222]</span>
+sooner than go back to that <i>triste</i> Cruta. Had he had
+a pleasant journey? she asked, and would he stay and
+dine? I saw her father shudder, and the words seemed
+frozen upon his lips. He looked at her in perfect
+silence for a full minute&mdash;looked at her from head to
+foot, at her soft white dress, with its floating sea of
+dainty draperies, and at the diamonds on her neck and
+bosom. Then his eye seemed to blaze with anger.</p>
+
+<p>"'"Girl!" he cried sternly, "you have dragged
+down into the mire one of the proudest names in
+Europe! Curse you for it! As for you, sir," he added,
+turning to me, "you are a dishonoured scoundrel! a
+cur!"</p>
+
+<p>"'He was right! I was a blackguard. But had it
+not been for those last words of his, I should straight-way
+have offered to have married Irene on the morrow.
+The words were on my lips, but the contempt of that
+monosyllable maddened me. The better impulse
+passed away.</p>
+
+<p>"'"You should have given her to me when I asked
+for her hand," I answered. "You cur!" he repeated.
+I looked at him steadily. "You are an old man," I
+said, "or I should throw you down my stairs. Now
+go! Irene has nothing to say to you, nor have I."</p>
+
+<p>"'He lingered on the threshold for a moment, surveying
+us both with a calm dignity, before which I
+felt ashamed.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page223" id="page223"></a>[pg 223]</span>
+
+<p>"'"As you remind me, I am an old man," he said
+quietly, "and I have, alas, no son to chastise you as
+you deserve. But the season of old age is the season
+of prophecy! Listen, Martin de Vaux," pointing towards
+me, "you shall taste the bitterest dregs of sorrow
+and remorse in the days to come, for this your evil
+deed. You may scoff, both of you,&mdash;you may say to
+yourselves that an old man's words are words of folly,&mdash;but
+the day will come! It is writ in the book of
+fate, and my eyes have seen it! Pile sin upon sin,
+and pleasure upon pleasure; say to yourselves, 'let us
+eat and be merry, for to-morrow we shall die!' For
+so it is written, and my eyes have seen it!"</p>
+
+<p>"'He was gone almost before the echo of his words
+had died away. I called after him, but there was no
+answer but the sound of a shutting door. I looked at
+Irene; she was calmly buttoning her glove.</p>
+
+<p>"'"The carriage is waiting," she reminded me
+coolly.</p>
+
+<p>"'I gave her my arm, and laughed. We drove to
+the opera.'"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page224" id="page224"></a>[pg 224]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+
+<h3>"A BECKONING VOICE FROM OUT A SHADOWY LAND"</h3>
+
+
+<p>Midnight rang solemnly out from the Abbey clock.
+The priest paused in his story to count the strokes,
+and Paul drew out his watch with an incredulous
+gesture.</p>
+
+<p>"You must stay here to-night," he said; "it will be
+too late for you to leave."</p>
+
+<p>He rang the bell, and ordered a room to be prepared.
+Father Adrian, who had been lost in a fit of
+deep abstraction, looked up and shook his head as the
+servant quitted the room. "I shall not stay here," he
+said quietly. "It is impossible."</p>
+
+<p>Paul pointed to the clock. "You have more to tell
+me," he said, "and it is already late. If you are staying
+at the monastery of St. Bernard, it is nearly eight
+miles away, and you cannot possibly return."</p>
+
+<p>"I have not so far to go," Father Adrian answered,
+"and this is the hour I always choose for walking.
+Do you wish to hear the rest of your father's confession?"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page225" id="page225"></a>[pg 225]</span>
+
+<p>Paul stood on the hearthrug with bowed head and
+folded arms. "I am ready!" he said; "go on!"</p>
+
+<p>Father Adrian remained silent for nearly a quarter
+of an hour; then he recommenced his story.</p>
+
+<p>"'From the time of the old Count's visit,' your
+father went on, 'I noticed a gradual change in Irene.
+She grew thin and pale and nervous, disliking more
+and more, every day, to go out, and becoming suddenly
+averse to all our previous pursuits and pleasures. We
+mixed amongst a Bohemian set in Paris, and we had a
+good many acquaintances of a certain sort. Amongst
+them was a man whom I always disliked, yet who managed
+somehow to establish himself upon terms of intimacy
+with us. His name was Count Victor Ferdinand
+Hirsfeld, and his nationality was rather a puzzle to me,
+for he chose to maintain, without any apparent reason,
+a sort of mystery about it. With Irene he was ever
+more intimate than with me, and more than once
+I noticed references in their conversation which
+seemed to point to some previous acquaintance between
+them. I asked Irene no questions, for I trusted her
+but I watched Count Hirsfeld closely. I felt convinced
+that, under the mask of friendship, he was trying to win
+Irene from me, and though I never for one moment believed
+that he would succeed, I was anxious to obtain
+some proof of his intentions, that I might punish him.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page226" id="page226"></a>[pg 226]</span>
+Often after his visits, which seemed to be carefully
+chosen for a time at which I was nearly certain to be
+out, I found Irene in tears; but when I sought to make
+her explain, she had always some excuse.</p>
+
+<p>"'We had lived together for three years when, without
+any warning, Irene left me. I came home one
+night from a dinner at the English Embassy, and
+found her gone. There was no message, not a single
+line of adieu, not a ghost of a clew by which I could
+trace her. It was a shock to me; but when the first
+wrench was over, I knew that it was something of a relief.
+In my heart I was tired of the irregular life we
+had been leading, and longing to return to England
+and my old home. Irene herself was no longer dear
+to me. While she had remained faithful to me, I had
+considered myself, in a certain sense, bound to her, although
+the bonds had commenced to gall. Now that
+she had left me of her own accord, I was free. I troubled
+little as to what had become of her; youth is always
+selfish. She had either gone home to her father, or
+had run away with Count Hirsfeld, I determined at
+once. Of the two, I was inclined to believe the latter,
+from the fact of her having left no message for me,
+and also as I found that he too had quitted Paris suddenly.
+I purposely did not attempt to find out, for had
+I discovered the latter to be true, I should have felt
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page227" id="page227"></a>[pg 227]</span>
+bound to call Count Hirsfeld out the next time I met
+him, and I hated duelling. So, with a light heart, I
+disposed of my Paris establishment, selling even the
+house, and everything likely to remind me of a page of
+my history which I desired to blot out.</p>
+
+<p>"'I returned to England, and settled down at Vaux
+Abbey. In a few months my life with Irene lay back
+in the past, like a troubled dream, and I did my best
+to forget it. It was all hateful and tiresome to me.
+My mind was full now of healthier and more wholesome
+thoughts and purposes. I felt like a man commencing
+life anew. Even my conscience had almost
+ceased to trouble me. Irene had left me of her own
+will, nor had she been driven to it by any unkindness
+on my part. I would forget her. I had the right to
+forget her.</p>
+
+<p>"'About six months had passed, and I was in the
+full enjoyment of my altered life. One night, when
+the Abbey was full of guests, a servant whispered in
+my ear, as we sat at dinner, that a gentleman,&mdash;a
+foreigner, the man believed&mdash;had just been driven over
+from the nearest railway station, and was in the library
+waiting to see me. I knew in a moment that some
+sort of a resurrection of that buried past was at hand;
+and though I nodded carelessly and kept my countenance,
+my heart sank like lead. As soon as I could
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page228" id="page228"></a>[pg 228]</span>
+make an excuse, I left the table, with a brief apology to
+my guests, and made my way to the library.</p>
+
+<p>"'I had expected to find there Irene's father. Judge
+of my surprise when I found Count Hirsfeld advancing
+to meet me, pale and travel-stained, from the shadows
+of the room. I stopped short, and stood with my hands
+behind me.</p>
+
+<p>"'"Mr. de Vaux, I bring you a letter," he said
+simply; "I am here as a messenger, and as a messenger
+only. Nothing but the prayers of a dying woman
+would have induced me to stand beneath your roof!"</p>
+
+<p>"'"Your presence certainly needs some explanation,"
+I answered coldly. "Give me the letter!"</p>
+
+<p>"'He handed it over, and I took it to the lamplight.
+The handwriting seemed unfamiliar to me; but when I
+glanced at the last page, I saw that it was signed
+"Irene." I read it through hastily.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="author">"CRUTA.</p>
+
+<p>"MARTIN:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I left you meaning never to speak or write your
+name again, but fate has been too strong for me. When
+you see my handwriting, you may fear that I want to
+burden you once more with my presence, which has
+grown so wearisome to you! You need not! Soon
+there will be nothing left of me but a memory; even
+that I know will not survive long. For I am dying.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page229" id="page229"></a>[pg 229]</span>
+Life is only a matter of days and hours with me now.
+For me, only a few more suns will rise and set. I am
+dying, else I had not taken up my pen to write to you.</p>
+
+<p>"Martin, one's last hours are a time for plain speaking.
+I have never suffered one word of reproach to
+pass my lips, but you have wronged me deeply! You
+have turned what should have been the sweetness of
+my life into bitterness and gall. I do not remind you
+of this to heap idle reproaches on your head; I remind
+you of it simply because on my deathbed I am going
+to ask you what in the past I scorned to do. I am
+going to ask you to marry me.</p>
+
+<p>"I could not hope to make you understand all that
+I have suffered during these last few months of my illness.
+I would not if I could. It is not worth while!
+My father, although he knows that I am dying, will
+scarcely speak to me. He has forgotten that I am his
+daughter, save when he laments it. He sits alone day
+by day, brooding upon the dishonour of his race. The
+priest, who prays for me, speaks words of doubtful
+comfort, as though, after all, he doubted whether salvation
+were possible for me. The horror of it all has
+entered into my soul! The sin of the past is ever before
+my eyes,&mdash;black and threatening,&mdash;and a great
+desolation reigns in my heart.</p>
+
+<p>"And from it all I turn to you, Martin, to save me!
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page230" id="page230"></a>[pg 230]</span>
+You can do it! You only! You lose nothing! You
+risk nothing! and you will throw some faint light of
+consolation upon this, my dreary passage through the
+shadow-land of death. Once you loved me, far off and
+dim though that time may seem to you. You would be
+faithful always, you swore, as side by side we stood on
+board your yacht on the night of our flight, and
+watched the shores of Cruta grow dimmer and dimmer,
+and the white-faced dawn break quivering upon the
+waters. You would be faithful always! The words
+come back to me as I lie here in this great, dreary bedchamber,
+with a cold-faced priest muttering comfortless
+prayers by my side; dying alone, without a single
+kindly face to lighten my passage to the grave. Yet,
+do not read this as a reproach! Read it only as the
+prelude to this my last appeal to you! Marry me,
+Martin! It would cost you so little: just a hurried
+journey here, a few sentences over my bedside, a week's
+waiting at the most, and you could see me in my grave,
+and feel yourself free again. Is it too great a thing
+to do, to make light the heart of a dying woman? I
+pray God that you may not think so! You have generosity!
+I appeal to it! Come, I beseech you! It is
+the prayer of a dying woman! I summon you to
+Cruta!</p>
+
+<p class="author">"IRENE."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page231" id="page231"></a>[pg 231]</span>
+
+<p>"'Back again in the meshes of my old sin. The
+letter fluttered down from between my fingers on to the
+floor, and I stood with folded arms and bowed head,
+arraigned at the bar of my own judgment. I had marred
+a girl's fair young life! The memory of those old
+days&mdash;my passionate persuasions and prayers&mdash;swept
+in upon me. Yes! she had trusted me, and I had deceived
+her! Her sin and her death lay at my door!
+The hideous rascality of the thing oppressed me. I had
+been false to my name and traditions.</p>
+
+<p>"'A cold, low voice from the other end of the room
+broke in upon my surging thoughts. It was Count
+Hirsfeld who spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"'"Forgive me for disturbing your doubtless pleasant
+reflections, but time flies, and time is very precious
+to me just now. I await your answer."</p>
+
+<p>"'"It is not necessary," I replied; "I shall be at
+Cruta before you!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page232" id="page232"></a>[pg 232]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
+
+<h3>"LATE THOU COMEST, CRUEL THOU HAST BEEN"</h3>
+
+
+<p>"'I sped through England and across the Continent
+southwards as fast as express train and steamer could
+carry me. Count Hirsfeld shared the special which
+carried me from our nearest country station to the
+Great Northern junction, from whence the Scotch mail
+bore us to London. Here we parted company, travelling
+the remainder of the way separately. On the
+evening of the second day, the steamer which I had
+hired at Palermo dropped anchor in the bay of Cruta,
+under the shadow of the grim, black castle; and a
+small rowing-boat landed me beneath the cliffs before
+night fell.</p>
+
+<p>"'I made my way up the narrow, winding path
+alone, and passing across the paved courtyard, rang the
+hoarse, brazen bell at the principal entrance. A servant,
+bearing a torch, had opened the door, and was
+beckoning me to follow him long before its echoes had
+died away.</p>
+
+<p>"'"Mademoiselle Irene!" I asked him, in a hushed,
+anxious tone. "She lives?"</p>
+
+<p>"'"She lives!" he repeated sombrely.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page233" id="page233"></a>[pg 233]</span>
+
+<p>"'I followed him along the wide stone corridors, and
+up countless steps. At last he paused before a door,
+and after listening for a moment, knocked softly at it.</p>
+
+<p>"'It was opened by a monk, whose face was hidden
+by the folds of his deep cowl. He motioned me to enter,
+and immediately closed the door.</p>
+
+<p>"'I found myself in a spacious, lofty bedchamber,
+bare and dimly lit. Facing me two pale, solemn-visaged
+monks stood on either side of a drawn curtain, as
+though guarding the plain iron bed which lay beyond,
+and towards which I had taken one impulsive step forward.
+Their presence, and an indefinable gloom,&mdash;beyond
+even the gloom of a chamber of death,&mdash;which in
+the dim twilight seemed to hang about the very air of
+the place, chilled me. There was little furniture, and
+no pictures hung upon the walls, save a wooden cross
+near the foot of the bed, before which two candles were
+burning. I looked around for some one to whom I
+could address myself, but there was no one beyond
+these dark-coated, silent monks, who seemed more like
+shadows from another world.</p>
+
+<p>"'While I stood in the middle of the room, hesitating,
+the priest who had admitted me passed by and
+took up his station at the foot of the bed. He motioned
+me to stand a little nearer, and suddenly the
+drear silence of the room was broken by the low, monotonous
+chant of prayers. I bowed my head, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page234" id="page234"></a>[pg 234]</span>
+kneeling by the bedside I took up the responses, and
+once for a moment clasped the white, cold hand which
+lay upon the coverlet, and which was all that I could
+see of the woman whom I was making my wife.</p>
+
+<p>"'The ceremony seems to me now like some far-distant
+dream, of which I retain only the vaguest recollection.
+When it was all over, I laid my hand upon
+the curtain to draw it back, but the monk nearest to
+me held my hand in a vise-like grip, and before I could
+move, a voice from the other end of the room, where
+the shadows were deepest, arrested me.</p>
+
+<p>"'"Touch that curtain, or dare to look upon my
+daughter's face, Martin de Vaux, and you die! For
+her soul's sake I have permitted this! Now go!"</p>
+
+<p>"'I peered through the darkness, and I saw the tall,
+gaunt frame of the Count of Cruta standing near the
+entrance. I hesitated for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"'"Irene is my wife," I answered. "I offer no excuse
+to you for my conduct, but at least I have the
+right to try and win her forgiveness."</p>
+
+<p>"'He moved a step forward, and his voice shook with
+passion. "You have no rights! You are dishonoured!
+You are a villain! What! you to reason with me under
+my own roof! Away! Out of my sight, lest I forget
+my word and deal you out your deserts!"</p>
+
+<p>"'My heart was hot with shame and anger, but I
+lingered. "Let her speak," I answered, pointing to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page235" id="page235"></a>[pg 235]</span>
+the bed. "It is she against whom I have sinned, and
+her word I will obey. Irene! may I not stay by your
+side? Tell me that you forgive!"</p>
+
+<p>"'I clutched passionately at the curtain, resolved to
+tear it aside, and plead with Irene upon my knees.
+But I was held from behind in a strong, vise-like grasp,
+and one of the monks who stood there on guard sternly
+wrested the curtain from my hands.</p>
+
+<p>"'"Away with him!" cried the Count, his voice
+shaking with passion. "Rudolph, do you hear!"</p>
+
+<p>"'I nerved myself for a struggle, but in that moment's
+pause a thin, white hand stole from behind the
+curtain and held mine for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"'"Martin, go quickly!" said a faint, weak voice,
+so altered that I scarcely recognised it as the voice of
+Irene. "It is my wish&mdash;my command."</p>
+
+<p>"'"One word, Irene!" I cried, struggling to free
+myself. "Just one word!"</p>
+
+<p>"'"Farewell!"</p>
+
+<p>"'"Irene, you are my wife. Have you nothing else
+to say to me?"</p>
+
+<p>"'"Farewell!"</p>
+
+<p>"'There was no sweetness, no regret in that single
+word. I bowed my head in despair and went.'"</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>There was a long pause. Father Adrian was leaning
+back in his chair with half-closed eyes, as though
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page236" id="page236"></a>[pg 236]</span>
+exhausted. Paul, standing opposite to him, motionless
+and silent as a figure of stone, was listening to every
+word with grave, anxious face.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you hear the rest of the story now?" the
+priest asked after a prolonged silence.</p>
+
+<p>Paul bowed his head. "I am waiting," he said
+simply.</p>
+
+<p>"I will continue, then, in your father's own words as
+near as possible. This is what he told me."</p>
+
+<p>"'I lingered in the island for several days, staying
+at the monastery, unwilling to go away, and yet frustrated
+in every attempt I made to enter the castle. On
+the fourth day, at sunrise, I was awakened suddenly
+by the deep tolling of the castle bell. I dressed
+hastily, and hurried up there; but I was thrust from
+the door, and forbidden to enter. I learned the truth,
+however, from one of the servants. Irene was dead.
+On the next day I saw the little funeral procession
+start from the castle, and directly they entered the
+grounds of the monastery I joined them. The old
+Count, bowed and aged with grief, stayed the ceremony,
+and bade them, with a sudden flash of his old
+anger, thrust me from the place. But the priest by
+whose side I had taken my stand raised his hand, and
+forbade them to touch me. I was in sanctuary,&mdash;my
+feet were on holy ground&mdash;and though the Count of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page237" id="page237"></a>[pg 237]</span>
+Cruta, and Count Hirsfeld who knelt by his side,
+trembled with anger at my presence, I remained, and
+on my knees by my wife's grave I uttered the first
+prayer my lips had framed since childhood. Through
+the pine trees which fringed the cliffs, I could see the
+path where she and I had met in the days when I was
+her father's guest, and when I had knelt at her feet a
+passionate lover. The sunlight flashed upon the blue
+waters below, and the seabirds flew screaming around
+our heads. It was all just as it had been in the old
+days; the same for me, but never more for her. The
+long black coffin was lowered into the grave, and reverently
+Count Hirsfeld stepped forward and covered it
+with armfuls of exquisite white flowers, whose perfume
+made faint the odorous air. And I had no flowers to
+throw, nothing but the tribute of a passionate grief,
+and a heart well-nigh broken with sorrow and remorse.</p>
+
+<p>"'The ceremony was over, and the black-robed
+monks and priest had passed away in a long, solemn
+procession. Her father, Count Hirsfeld, and I remained
+there alone; and over Irene's grave I leaned
+forward, speaking gently and humbly to him, praying
+for one word of forgiveness. His only answer was a
+look of scorn, and he turned away from me with loathing.
+He would not hear me speak. To him, I was
+his daughter's murderer.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page238" id="page238"></a>[pg 238]</span>
+
+<p>"'I left the island that night, and returned to
+England. For several years I lived a very retired life,
+attending to my duties upon the estate and seldom
+travelling beyond it. The memory of Irene seemed to
+haunt me. But as time went on, a change came over
+my spirits. I was young; and although I still bitterly
+regretted the past, its influence became weaker and
+weaker. What was done could not be undone; such
+reparation as was possible I had made. Brooding
+over my sin would never make it the less. I reasoned
+thus with myself, and the final result was inevitable.
+I commenced to mix more with my fellows, to look up
+my old friends in town,&mdash;in fact, to take up again the
+threads of my life, which I had once regarded as
+broken for ever.</p>
+
+<p>"'After a while I married; and then, more than
+ever, Irene and that portion of my past which was
+bound up with her seemed like some vague, far-distant
+nightmare, fast assuming a very remote place in my
+thoughts. I loved my wife as I had never loved
+Irene, and for a time I was intensely happy. A son
+was born to me, and in my joy I feasted half the
+county at Vaux Abbey. I had desired nothing so
+much as this, for the De Vaux estates and mines, immense
+as they are, are all strictly entailed. A son
+was wanted to complete my happiness, and a son I had.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page239" id="page239"></a>[pg 239]</span>
+But already, although I knew it not, a storm was gathering
+for me.</p>
+
+<p>"'It was about a fortnight after the festivities, and
+I had just come in with some friends from an afternoon's
+shooting, when I was told that a gentleman
+from abroad&mdash;the servant believed&mdash;was waiting to
+see me in the library. Even as he spoke the words I
+seemed to know who it was. My heart sank, and the
+presentiment of some coming evil was strong upon
+me. I hesitated, and then, feverishly anxious to know
+the worst, I turned away with some careless excuse to
+my guests and entered the library.</p>
+
+<p>"'It was Count Hirsfeld who stood there waiting for
+my arrival, with a calm, evil smile upon his lips,
+which instinctively I felt to be the herald of some coming
+trouble for me. Yet my courage did not altogether
+desert me.</p>
+
+<p>"'"Count Hirsfeld, your presence here demands
+an immediate explanation," I said sternly. "Had I
+been at home, you would not have been admitted."</p>
+
+<p>"'"I come," he answered slowly, with his eyes fixed
+steadily upon my face, "as an ambassador from your
+wife."</p>
+
+<p>"'"From my wife!" I repeated. "You do not know
+her! What do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"'He shrugged his shoulders. "I regret that my
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page240" id="page240"></a>[pg 240]</span>
+meaning is not clear," he said. "I repeat that I come
+as an ambassador from your wife, Irene de Vaux. I
+have brought you a message from her."</p>
+
+<p>"'"A message from the dead!" I gasped.</p>
+
+<p>"'"Dead! By no means!" he answered, with a
+slow, cruel smile. "Irene is living! Is it possible that
+you did not know it?"'"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page241" id="page241"></a>[pg 241]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
+
+<h3>"GRIM FIGURES TRACED BY SORROW'S FIERY HAND"</h3>
+
+
+<p>The lamp which stood on Paul's writing-table had
+gone out, and only a few dull red embers remained in
+the grate. By moving a single yard backwards, Paul
+was almost lost in the deep shadows which hung about
+the room, whilst such light as there was fell directly
+upon the priest's pale face. During those last
+few moments his voice had grown a shade more
+solemn&mdash;more intense. Paul, who stood looking out
+at him from the darkness with dazed senses, like a man
+in a dream, never doubted for an instant, although perhaps
+he scarcely realized the full meaning of the story
+to which he was listening.</p>
+
+<p>"It must have been in this very room," Father
+Adrian continued, looking around him, "that your father
+and Count Hirsfeld stood face to face. But you are
+naturally impatient. I will take up the story again in
+your father's own words to me.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>"'It was several moments before I could collect
+myself sufficiently to answer Count Hirsfeld.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page242" id="page242"></a>[pg 242]</span>
+Everything seemed dim and unreal around me. Only that
+calm, mocking face remained steadfast, and his words
+rang in my ears.</p>
+
+<p>"'"It is a lie!" I gasped. "We stood together
+by her grave! She is dead!"</p>
+
+<p>"'The calmness suddenly vanished from my tormentor's
+face and manner. His eyes were ablaze with
+mingled triumph and hate. "You thought so, you poor
+fool!" he hissed out at me across the table. "Bah! you
+were a fool! You were easily deceived! Listen!</p>
+
+<p>"'"You thought it a light thing to carry off the
+only daughter of the last Count of Cruta. 'Twas easily
+done, no doubt; but you made for yourself enemies
+of men from whose vengeance you were bound to suffer.
+One was the Count whose daughter you had dishonoured,
+and whose proud name you disgraced; the
+other was myself, the man whom she was to have married&mdash;myself,
+who loved her! Do you think that because
+I did not seek you out and shoot you as you
+deserved, that I forgot? There were men on the island
+who loved their lord, and who at the word from him
+would have hunted you down and murdered you. If
+he restrained them, do you imagine he was willing to
+bear this great dishonour without striking a blow?
+Bah! it was my word that said 'wait,' my counsel which
+saved you from death as too light a punishment. There
+is another way, I said. So we waited.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page243" id="page243"></a>[pg 243]</span>
+
+<p>"'"It was my persuasions which induced Irene to
+leave you and return to her father. It was I who
+pointed out to her your great selfishness, and raised in
+her the longing for revenge! It was I who laid the
+plot into which you fell.</p>
+
+<p>"'"A few words more! It is all so simple! Irene
+was about to become a mother; and you, believing her
+to be on her deathbed, married her. The child was
+born on the next day&mdash;your son and heir! Meanwhile,
+Irene's waiting maid, who had been for long in a consumption,
+died. It was her funeral which you attended
+with such interesting penitence. Irene herself was
+fast recovering; she was never in any real danger.
+She lives with her old father, and the boy lives with
+her. We waited! We read of your marriage, and the
+Count cried, 'Let us strike!' But I said, 'No, let us
+wait!' Time went on. We read again of the birth
+of a son and heir to you, and of the great rejoicings.
+Irene held your boy in her arms, and she frowned.
+'Go now,' she commanded, 'tell Martin de Vaux that
+his son and heir is here, and his wife is here! Tell
+him that they are weary of his absence.' So I came!"</p>
+
+<p>"'There was a dead silence. My throat and lips
+were dry; I could not speak. Count Hirsfeld watched
+me with folded arms. It was his vengeance!</p>
+
+<p>"'"It is not true!" I stammered out at last. "I
+will not believe it. Irene is dead!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page244" id="page244"></a>[pg 244]</span>
+
+<p>"'I tried to speak confidently, but I failed. In my
+heart I believed the Count.</p>
+
+<p>"'He shrugged his shoulders. "You have reason,"
+he remarked. "Why should you believe me?
+Come to Cruta, and you will see for yourself. You
+can see the headstone at the foot of the grave: 'Sacred
+to the memory of Marie, faithful servant of Irene of
+Cruta.' You can see the doctor who attended her and
+your wife at the same time! Better still, you can see
+your wife and your infant son! What do you say?"</p>
+
+<p>"'"I will not go!" I cried passionately. "I will
+not see them! It was base treachery!"</p>
+
+<p>"'"One must use the weapons of craft against villains,"
+he said. "There is no baseness to equal
+yours. You are repaid in your own coin; that is all."</p>
+
+<p>"'I sank into a chair. The insult moved me to no
+fit of anger. I was numbed.</p>
+
+<p>"'"If this be true," I asked, "what does Irene ask
+for? I will not go back to her, or see her, or acknowledge
+her in any way. She can have money, that is
+all!"</p>
+
+<p>"'"Naturally, she requires an allowance," Count
+Hirsfeld answered, "and a large one, to enable her to
+bring up her son in accordance with his position!"</p>
+
+<p>"'"She shall have the allowance; she shall have
+what she asks for," I declared; "but I will never
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page245" id="page245"></a>[pg 245]</span>
+acknowledge the boy, or her. If he takes the name of
+De Vaux, or forces himself upon me in any way, it
+shall be open war. The English courts will annul that
+marriage."</p>
+
+<p>"'"I think not," he answered coolly. "Besides,
+you married into a noble family, did you not&mdash;a duke's
+daughter? How pleasant her position would be while
+such a case was being tried! And your son&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"'I stopped him angrily. "I repeat that I will
+not acknowledge them. Money they can have, and
+the boy's future shall be my care! But not if he ever
+dares to call himself De Vaux."</p>
+
+<p>"'The Count shrugged his shoulders. "I am but
+an ambassador," he said. "I will convey what you
+have said to your wife. You shall hear her decision."</p>
+
+<p>"'He went away, and for a fortnight I was left in
+misery. At the end of that time I had a letter signed
+"Irene." It was cold and short. It told me that, so
+far as she herself was concerned, she had no desire or
+intention of claiming her position as my wife. All she
+demanded was an allowance to be paid to her order at
+a certain bank in Palermo at regular intervals for the
+support of herself and for the proper education and
+bringing up of her son. As to his future, she could
+not pledge herself to anything; for when the time
+came, he should decide for himself. She would bring
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page246" id="page246"></a>[pg 246]</span>
+him up in ignorance; but on his twenty-fifth birthday
+she should tell him the whole story, and place all the
+necessary papers in his hands. If he chose to use
+them and claim the De Vaux estates, he would easily
+be able to do so. If, on the other hand, he decided to
+remain as he was, she should not attempt in any way
+to alter his decision!</p>
+
+<p>"'The letter was a great relief to me. Five-and-twenty
+years was a long respite. The boy might die&mdash;a
+thousand things might happen before then. At
+any rate, I was enough of a philosopher to seal down
+that secret page in my history, and to live as though it
+had never existed.</p>
+
+<p>"'Five-and-twenty years is a long time, but it passed
+away. It is the portion of my life which I look back
+upon with the most pleasure. I did my utmost to atone
+for a wasted youth, and in some measure I succeeded.
+My fears had grown fainter and fainter, and when the
+blow came it was like a thunderbolt falling from a
+clear sky. One morning I received a letter in Irene's
+writing, a little fainter and less firm than of old, but
+still familiar to me. It contained only a few lines. She
+had told her son all, and he elected to assert his rightful
+name and position. In future he intended to call
+himself "De Vaux" and on my death he would claim
+the estates.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page247" id="page247"></a>[pg 247]</span>
+
+<p>"'I read the letter, and determined on instant action.
+In a week my son Paul and I were on board my yacht,
+starting for the Mediterranean. We made for Palermo,
+and here we separated,&mdash;Paul, at all hazard, to find
+Count Hirsfeld, to whom I made a splendid offer if he
+would aid me in inducing Irene to change her purpose;
+I for Cruta, to see Irene.'</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>"This is almost the end of your father's confession
+to me," Father Adrian continued. "At Cruta he sought
+the hospitality of the monastery, where he was taken
+ill. He wrote an urgent letter to you, and immediately
+he was able to walk he went up to the castle. I have
+already told you of the manner of return. Of that
+visit he told me scarcely anything, and he told me
+nothing at all concerning the wound which he received
+there. Only I gathered that he was more than ever
+anxious to see Count Hirsfeld. It was while waiting
+for your return that he made this confession to me. I
+have finished."</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>The white morning light was stealing into the room
+through the uncurtained windows. The fire had burnt
+out, and there was only a handful of ashes in the grate.
+Outside in the park a grey mist was hanging about in
+the hollows and over the tree-tops, and something of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page248" id="page248"></a>[pg 248]</span>
+its damp chilliness seemed to have found its way into
+the apartment. Paul, who had been leaning heavily
+upon the mantelpiece, with his head buried in his
+hands, looked up and shivered. Then he glanced
+quickly across towards the opposite easy-chair. Father
+Adrian was still there, and at Paul's movement he rose
+to his feet.</p>
+
+<p>"This has been a terrible night for you, I fear," he
+said quietly. "I am sorry to have given you so much
+pain. If I could I would have spared you."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you," Paul answered wearily. "It was
+right that I should know. Why did you not tell me
+at Cruta?"</p>
+
+<p>"It seemed to me that your father's death was enough
+for you to bear! Perhaps I was wrong!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul made no answer. His thoughts seemed suddenly
+to have travelled far away. Father Adrian
+watched his pale, stricken face with cold, pitiless eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"You are weary," he said softly. "I shall leave
+you now, but I have something more to say to you on
+this matter. It is no part of your father's confession.
+It is from myself. Can I come to-morrow or the next
+day?"</p>
+
+<p>"Come in a week," Paul answered. "I shall be able
+to talk calmly then about this."</p>
+
+<p>Father Adrian hesitated. "A week! Well, let it be
+so, then. Farewell!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page249" id="page249"></a>[pg 249]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
+
+<h3>"ADREA'S DIARY"</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"Spring blossoms on the land, and anguish in the heart."
+</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p>To-night I shall close my diary for a long while,
+very likely for ever. I am heartily thankful for it.
+These last few days have been so wretched, full of so
+much miserable uncertainty, that their record has
+grown to be a wearisome task. It has ceased to give
+me any relief; it has become nothing but a burden.
+How could it be otherwise, when the days themselves
+have been so grey, so full of shadows and disappointments?
+You have been a relief to me sometimes, my
+silent friend; but what lies before me is not to be recorded
+in your pages.</p>
+
+<p>Twenty-four hours have passed since I made my last
+entry. It was night then, and it is night now. All
+that lies between seems phantasmagoric and unreal.
+I ask myself whether it has really happened; and when
+the day's events rise slowly up before my memory, I
+almost fail to recognise them. Yet I have but to close
+my eyes and lean back, and it all crowds in upon me.
+In the future I know that this day will stand out clear
+and distinct from all the rest of my life.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page250" id="page250"></a>[pg 250]</span>
+
+<p>It was early in the morning when I started for Vaux
+Abbey across the moorland road. So long have I seen
+this bleak county wrapped in mists and sea fogs that
+to-day I scarcely recognised it. There was a clear
+blue sky, streaked with little patches of white, wind-swept
+clouds, and the sun&mdash;actually the sun&mdash;was
+shining brilliantly. How it changed everything! The
+grey, hungry sea, which I had never been able to look
+upon without a shudder, seemed to have caught the
+colouring of the sky, and a million little scintillations
+of glistening light rose and fell at every moment on
+the bosom of the tiny, white-crested waves. And the
+moorland, too, was transformed. Its bare, rock-strewn
+undulations lost all their harshness of outline and colouring
+in the sweet, glancing sunlight; and afar off
+the line of rugged hills, which I had never seen save
+with their heads wreathed in a cloud of white mist,
+stood out clear and distinct against the distant horizon,
+tinged with a dim, purple light.</p>
+
+<p>Why did it all make such an impression upon me,
+I wonder? I cannot say; but nothing in all my life
+ever struck so deep a note of sadness. I feel it now;
+I shall feel it always. There was madness in my blood
+when I started, I think; but before my walk was half
+over, it had increased a thousand-fold. Every little
+sound and sight seemed to aggravate it. I missed the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page251" id="page251"></a>[pg 251]</span>
+dull sighing and moaning of the wind in the black
+copses&mdash;a sound which had somehow endeared itself to
+me during these last few days&mdash;and in its place the
+soft murmur of what seemed almost a summer breeze
+amongst the tall pine-tops stirred in me an unreasonable
+anger. The face of the whole country seemed
+smiling at me. What mockery! What right had the
+earth to rejoice when grief and anxiety were driving
+me mad? For it was indeed a sort of madness which
+laid hold of me. I clenched my hands, and muttered
+to myself as I walked swiftly along. The road was
+deserted, and I met no one. Once a dark bush away
+off seemed to me to take a man's shape. I stopped
+short. Could it be Father Adrian returning to the
+Abbey? I felt my breath come quickly as I stood
+there waiting. The idea excited me. I found myself
+trembling with a passion that was not of fear, and,
+suddenly stooping down, I picked up a sharp flint, and
+grasped it tightly between my fingers. Then I moved
+stealthily on, and the thing defined itself. After all, it
+was only a bush, not a man at all. I tossed my weapon
+on one side with a strained little laugh. The sense of
+excitement passed away, but it left an odd flavour behind
+it. I found myself deliberating as to what I had
+meant to do with that stone if it had really been Father
+Adrian, and if I had succeeded in stealing silently up
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page252" id="page252"></a>[pg 252]</span>
+behind him. Perhaps I scarcely realized my full intention,
+but a dim sense of it remained with me. It
+was the development of a new instinct born of this
+swiftly-built-up hatred. I have my reasons for writing
+of this. I wish to distinctly mark the period of the
+event which I have just recorded.</p>
+
+<p>There was no fear of my mistaking the way to Vaux
+Abbey, for it stood upon a hill, and had been within
+sight ever since I had taken the moorland road. I was
+unused to walking, and the road was rough; but I do
+not remember once feeling in any way fatigued or footsore,
+although one of my shoes had a great hole in it,
+and was almost in strips. My mind was too full of the
+end of my journey to be conscious of such things. I
+had only one fear: that I should be too late; that
+somehow the threatened blow would have been struck,
+and Paul in some way removed from me. It was fear
+more than hope which buoyed me up. But anyhow,
+it answered its purpose, for in less than three hours
+after I had started I found myself before the great
+hall-door of Vaux Abbey.</p>
+
+<p>A deep, hollow peal followed my nerveless little pull
+at the chain bell-rope, and almost immediately the
+door opened. A grey-haired manservant, in black livery,
+looked down at me in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish to see Mr. Paul de Vaux!" I announced.
+"Is he in?"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page253" id="page253"></a>[pg 253]</span>
+
+<p>The man hesitated. "I believe so, miss," he said
+doubtfully; "but he is engaged on some important
+business, and has given orders that no one is to disturb
+him. Lady de Vaux is at home."</p>
+
+<p>"My business is with Mr. Paul de Vaux," I said.
+"Will you tell him that it is some one from the Hermitage,
+and I think that he will see me."</p>
+
+<p>The man did not answer me in words, but motioned
+me to follow him. My courage was failing me a little,
+and I was certainly inclined not to look around, but
+nevertheless the place made an impression on me. The
+great hall which we were crossing was like the interior
+of some richly decorated church. The ceiling was
+dome-shaped, and the base of the cupola was surrounded
+by stained glass windows, which cast a dim
+light down upon the interior. The white stone flags
+were here and there covered by Eastern rugs, thrown
+carelessly down, but for the most part were bare, and
+as slippery as marble; so slippery that once I nearly
+fell, and only saved myself by catching at an oak
+bench. Just as I recovered myself, I saw the figure
+of a woman descending the huge double oak staircase
+which terminated opposite to us. My guide paused
+when he saw her, and I was also compelled to.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is her ladyship!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>I watched her slowly advance toward us, a fine,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page254" id="page254"></a>[pg 254]</span>
+stately old lady, carrying herself with unmistakable
+dignity, although she was forced to lean a good deal
+on a gold-mounted, black ebony stick. And, as I looked
+at her, I thought of Father Adrian's words: "I can
+break his mother's heart;" and I leant eagerly forward
+in the chastened twilight with my eyes anxiously fixed
+upon her. She came slowly on towards me, and when
+she was a few yards away she spoke to the servant.</p>
+
+<p>"Does this young lady wish to see me, Richards?"</p>
+
+<p>She spoke to the man, but she looked towards me,
+and evidently expected me to address her. For a moment
+I could not. A little gasp of relief had quivered
+upon my lips, and my eyes were suddenly dim. To
+look into Lady de Vaux's face, stately, calm, and kind,
+seemed like a strong antidote to my fears of Father
+Adrian. It was quite evident that nothing unexpected
+had happened during the last twenty-four hours. Father
+Adrian's threat had been an empty one. In the presence
+of Lady de Vaux, the fears which had been consuming
+me departed. She was so unmoved, so indifferent.
+How could a little Jesuit priest hurt such a one
+as she?</p>
+
+<p>The thoughts chased one another quickly through
+my mind; but still my hesitation was apparent. After
+waiting in vain for me to speak, the servant who was
+conducting me answered Lady de Vaux's question.</p>
+
+<p>"The young lady asked for Mr. Paul, your ladyship.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page255" id="page255"></a>[pg 255]</span>
+It was doubtful whether I might disturb him."</p>
+
+<p>"For Mr. Paul?" Lady de Vaux looked at me,
+leaning forward on her stick, and with her eyebrows a
+little uplifted. "My son is particularly engaged, and
+has left word that he does not wish to be disturbed
+for several hours," she said. "If you have anything
+to say to him, you can say it to me. I am Lady de
+Vaux!"</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you! I must wait and see your son," I
+answered.</p>
+
+<p>She moved away with a slight and distinctly haughty
+inclination of her head. "You can show this young
+lady into the waiting-room, Richards," she directed.
+"Take her name in to Mr. Paul when he rings. By
+the bye," she added, pausing in her slow progress over
+the hall, and looking me once more steadily in the face,
+"what is your name?"</p>
+
+<p>"You would not know it," I answered. "I have
+come from the Hermitage&mdash;near here."</p>
+
+<p>She did not speak to me for a moment, but I saw the
+colour rising into her cheeks, and her fingers were
+trembling. It was foolish of me to have told her. A
+glance into her face showed me that she had heard
+something, she knew something of me. She was looking
+at me as at some object almost beneath her contempt.
+Yet she spoke quite calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"You are Adrea Kiros, the dancing girl!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page256" id="page256"></a>[pg 256]</span>
+
+<p>I answered her quite coolly&mdash;I believe respectfully.
+She was Paul's mother. Yet I could see that she was
+going to be very rude to me.</p>
+
+<p>"You can have nothing to say to my son," she declared.
+"It is infamous that you should have followed
+him here&mdash;to his own house. Be so good as to quit it at
+once. Mr. de Vaux shall be informed later of the
+honour of your visit, and if he has anything to say to
+you, he can find other means save an interview under
+this roof. Richards!"</p>
+
+<p>She pointed across the hall towards the entrance. I
+stood quite still, struggling with my passion. If she
+had been any other woman, I should have struck her
+across the lips.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall remain!" I answered. "I am here to see
+Mr. de Vaux; I shall see him! Don't dare to touch
+me, man!" I added fiercely, as Richards laid his hand
+upon my shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>He shrank back hastily. I even believe that he
+muttered an apology. Perhaps they saw that I was
+not to be trifled with, for Lady de Vaux suddenly
+changed her tactics.</p>
+
+<p>"Follow me!" she said, sweeping round, with an
+imperious gesture. "You shall see my son! You
+shall hear from his own lips what he thinks of this&mdash;intrusion.
+Perhaps you will leave the Abbey at
+his bidding, if not at mine."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page257" id="page257"></a>[pg 257]</span>
+
+<p>I followed her in silence, carrying myself proudly,
+but with fast-beating heart. What would he think
+of my coming? Would he call it an intrusion? At
+any rate he could not be pleased; for even if he received
+me kindly, he would have his mother's anger
+to face. Yet, how could I have kept away?</p>
+
+<p>We halted, all three of us, before a closed door
+at the back of the hall. There was no answer to
+the man's somewhat ostentatious knock, and Lady
+de Vaux, after a moment's waiting, turned the handle
+of the door and swept into the room. I kept close
+behind her.</p>
+
+<p>I can remember it now; I shall always remember
+it&mdash;the dim, peculiar light which tired our eyes the
+moment we had stepped inside. It was easy to discover
+the reason. The heavy velvet curtains were
+still drawn in front of the high windows, and on a
+distant table a lamp was only just flickering out. At
+first it seemed as though the great chamber was
+empty. There was no one to be seen, and it was
+not until we reached a deep recess at the further
+end that we discovered Paul.</p>
+
+<p>At the sight of him we both stood still&mdash;Lady de
+Vaux moved in spite of her stately composure, and I
+spellbound. He was sitting before an oak writing
+desk covered with papers, and in the midst of them
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page258" id="page258"></a>[pg 258]</span>
+his head was resting upon his bowed arms. He neither
+spoke nor moved, nor seemed indeed in any way conscious
+of our approach. The window fronting him
+was, unlike all the others, uncurtained and wide open,
+and a flood of sunshine was streaming in upon his
+bowed head, and mingling with the sicklier light of
+the rest of the apartment. It was a strange and
+ghastly combination; not only in itself, but in the sort
+of halo it seemed to cast around his dark, bowed head.
+Ah! Paul, my love, my love! how my heart ached for
+you!</p>
+
+<p>"He is asleep," Lady de Vaux said fearfully.
+"Paul!"</p>
+
+<p>I held out my hand to check her. "Let him alone!"
+I whispered hoarsely. "I will go away. Don't you
+see that he is resting."</p>
+
+<p>She took no notice of me, nor of my backward
+movement, but leaned over towards him as though to
+touch his arm. A sort of fury came upon me. I knew
+that the Paul whom she was trying to recall from the
+land of unconsciousness would never again be the Paul
+of the past. Father Adrian had kept his word. The
+blow which he had threatened had fallen. Paul!
+I looked at your dear bowed head until the tears
+dimmed my eyes, and the great room swam around
+me. For in my heart I felt that it was I who had
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page259" id="page259"></a>[pg 259]</span>
+brought this thing upon you; I who could have saved
+you by a single word.</p>
+
+<p>"Paul, wake up! It is I, your mother."</p>
+
+<p>I snatched hold of her hand, and drew it away.
+"Let him rest," I cried, fiercely. "He will waken
+soon enough."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at me in dignified astonishment. "How
+dare you presume to dictate to me in this fashion?"
+she exclaimed. "And why should he not be awakened?
+It is past mid-day. Paul!"</p>
+
+<p>The crouching figure moved. He had heard, then!
+I held my breath, longing to escape, yet compelled to
+watch with fascinated eyes the rising of that bowed
+head. There was no start, or hurried awakening, if
+indeed he had been asleep at all. He simply turned
+his head, and looked at us with surprise, without any
+emotion of any sort.</p>
+
+<p>I hid my face in my hands, and sobbed. Lady de
+Vaux was silent with horror. For there was something
+inexpressibly, awfully moving in the silent, passionless
+sorrow which seemed written with an unsparing
+hand onto that white face. All combativeness had
+passed away, but resignation had not come to take its
+place. And, apart from the outward evidence of the
+agony through which he had passed, its physical
+traces were very apparent. Deep, black lines seemed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page260" id="page260"></a>[pg 260]</span>
+furrowed into the flesh under his dull eyes, and the
+firm, handsome mouth was drawn and quivering. It was
+such a change as might have been worked by some
+deadly Eastern poison, eating away the corporal frame.
+To think that it had worked from within&mdash;that burning
+and terrible sorrow had caused it&mdash;was horrible.</p>
+
+<p>Lady de Vaux was the first to speak. The icy composure
+of her manner was gone. Her voice was
+strained and anxious.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Paul, what have you been doing here all
+night? Do you know that it is past mid-day? Has
+anything happened? Are you ill?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ill? No; I think not." He seemed to be speaking
+from a great way off. Nothing about him was natural.
+He was on his feet, but I expected every moment
+to see him reel and fall.</p>
+
+<p>"But, Paul, what have you been doing&mdash;writing?"
+Lady de Vaux asked anxiously. Then, as though
+warned by his strange appearance, she checked his
+mechanical answer. "Never mind, never mind! You
+are tired, I can see. Won't you go and lie down for
+awhile? Come, I will go with you."</p>
+
+<p>She had forgotten me, until she found that he paid
+no heed to her words; that his eyes travelled past her,
+and remained fixed upon me. Then she turned swiftly
+upon me.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page261" id="page261"></a>[pg 261]</span>
+
+<p>"You had better go," she said in a low, imperative
+whisper. "Ask them to show you into my room, and
+wait there for me."</p>
+
+<p>I took no notice of her. My eyes were fixed upon
+Paul. I felt that he was going to speak to me; and
+he did.</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea! Adrea!" he said slowly. "How is it that
+you are here? You did not come with him, did you?
+No! no! of course not. And yet, how is it that you
+are here?"</p>
+
+<p>"I feared Father Adrian and his threats, and I was
+alone, quite alone, and&mdash;and I could bear it no longer.
+I was obliged to come."</p>
+
+<p>His face grew a trifle more animated; I could see
+that he was recovering. The dumb stupor which had
+held his features rigid was passing away.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I am glad you are here. I want to talk to
+you. I had some important business which kept me
+writing here all night, and must have fallen asleep. I
+will go and change my things and come back to you."</p>
+
+<p>He looked down at his crumpled shirt-front and
+disordered tie, and then moved slowly towards the
+door. Lady de Vaux hesitated for a moment, with a
+dark frown upon her face, and then laid her hand upon
+his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Your explanation should surely have been
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page262" id="page262"></a>[pg 262]</span>
+addressed to me, Paul," she said coldly. "Who is this
+young lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"She is a friend of mine," Paul answered, "and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I heard you call her 'Adrea,'" Lady de Vaux
+continued. "May I ask whether it is indeed Miss
+Adrea Kiros?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have told you that is my name, Lady de Vaux,"
+I answered promptly. "You have possibly heard of
+me."</p>
+
+<p>Lady de Vaux turned her back upon both of us,
+and left the room without a word.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page263" id="page263"></a>[pg 263]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
+
+<h3>"ADREA'S DIARY"</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"Love, blossoming in the roses, holds a dagger in her hands."
+</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p>We were alone, Paul and I, in that great, solemn
+room, full of pale, phantom-like lights and quivering
+shadows. He was standing a few yards away from
+me, with his head half averted, and his eyes full of a
+great, hopeless despair. In silence I approached him,
+and took his death-cold hand in mine.</p>
+
+<p>"It is no matter," I whispered; "I do not care for
+your mother! Her words are nothing! I will not leave
+you&mdash;not till you tell me everything."</p>
+
+<p>"Everything!" He echoed the word, and looked at
+me helplessly. "Everything! Tell you everything!"</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly there was a change. The numbed, helpless
+look left his face, and his features were relaxed.
+He was himself again; a strong, brave man, only
+shaken by the storm.</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea, forgive me! Did you think that I was going
+mad? I have had a terrible shock, and I have
+been up all night listening to a story which brings
+great suffering and misery upon me!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page264" id="page264"></a>[pg 264]</span>
+
+<p>His eyes had suddenly a far-away look in them, so
+sad that I felt the tears rush into mine. I pressed his
+hand to let him know that I understood; but I kept
+my face turned from him. Ah! love is a strange thing,
+indeed! If I had not cared, Paul, I could have sympathised
+with you so nicely, and made so many pretty
+speeches. But I love you, and it made me feel very
+strange and solemn. I had nothing to say; my heart
+was too full. Did you understand, I wonder? Will
+you ever understand? Paul, my love! my love! It is
+so sweet to say that over and over to myself in this
+dark chamber, where there is no one to hear me, or to
+see me looking so foolish. You make me feel so different,
+Paul! That is because you yourself are so different
+from all the men I know; from all the men I
+have ever seen.</p>
+
+<p>We stood there, quite silent, for some moments.
+Then he drew a quick, stifled breath, and caught hold
+of my hands. "I cannot breathe in this place," he
+said, looking half fearfully around; "the very air
+seems tainted with that horrible story, and its ghosts
+are lurking in every corner!"</p>
+
+<p>"Let me draw the curtains," I whispered. "The
+sunlight will banish them. You are dazed."</p>
+
+<p>He held my hand tightly, and drew me towards the
+window. "Never mind the curtains! We will go out;
+out over the moor."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page265" id="page265"></a>[pg 265]</span>
+
+<p>He was feverishly impatient to be gone, but I held
+him back. "Your clothes!" I reminded him. "And
+you have no hat!"</p>
+
+<p>He looked down doubtfully at his disordered evening
+dress, and then released my hands. "Wait for me,
+here," he begged. "Promise that you will not go
+away; that nothing shall make you go."</p>
+
+<p>I promised.</p>
+
+<p>"See! I shall lock the door," he continued, as he
+reached the threshold. "No one can come in and disturb
+you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Please to have some tea and a bath!" I begged.
+"I do not mind waiting. You will be ill, if you do
+not mind."</p>
+
+<p>He was gone about half an hour. Once, some one
+came and tried the door, but I took no notice. At last
+I heard the key turn in the lock, and he entered. "Did
+you think that I was long?" he asked, coming up to
+me with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>I shook my head; my eyes were full of tears, and
+there was a lump in my throat. I could not speak. He
+had changed all his clothes, and was carefully dressed
+in a brown tweed shooting suit and gaiters, but the
+correctness and order of his external appearance seemed
+only to emphasize the ravages which one single night's
+suffering had wrought upon his strong, handsome face.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page266" id="page266"></a>[pg 266]</span>
+Hard, cruel lines had furrowed their way across his
+forehead, and under his eyes were deep black marks.
+His bronze cheeks were white and sunken, and a bright
+red spot burned on one of them. But it was a change
+of which the details could give no idea. His face had
+caught the inflection of his inward agony, and retained
+it. It was there, if not for the world to see, at any
+rate terribly evident to me, to those who loved him.</p>
+
+<p>He was quite calm now, however. It was as though
+the fires of suffering had burnt themselves out, leaving
+behind them a silent, charred desolation. He took my
+arm, and together we left the room, passing through
+the high French windows and along an open terrace
+until we reached the gardens. We turned down a
+broad walk bordered by high yew hedges, at the bottom
+of which was a little gate leading into the park.
+The air was fragrant with the perfume of violets, and
+early stocks and hyacinths, mingled every now and
+then with a more delicate perfume from the greenhouses
+on the other side of the red-brick wall. How
+beautiful it all seemed, in that sweet, dancing sunlight!&mdash;the
+songs of the birds, the blossoming fruit-trees,
+and pink-budded chestnuts, the scents which floated
+about on the soft west breeze, and the constant humming
+of bees and other winged insects. Only in
+England could there have been so sudden a change
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page267" id="page267"></a>[pg 267]</span>
+from the grey mists and leaden skies of yesterday.
+Even in that moment of extreme tension I could not
+help an exclamation of admiration as we came to an
+end of the gravelled walk, and Paul held open for me
+a little iron gate.</p>
+
+<p>"How beautiful your home is!" I cried. "How you
+must love it!"</p>
+
+<p>A look almost of agony passed across his face. It
+came and went in a moment. "Yes! I love it!" he
+answered, "but it is not my home. Henceforth I have
+no home. I may well be thankful that I have even a
+name!"</p>
+
+<p>I looked at him, waiting for an explanation, but he
+walked on in silence. It was not until we were half-way
+across the park that I spoke. "I do not understand!"
+I said softly. "Will you not tell me something
+of your trouble?"</p>
+
+<p>"I would that I could, Adrea!" he answered. His
+voice was so gentle, and yet his face was so stern.
+"But no, I cannot. It is a secret. It is only a blotted
+page of our family history made clear to me. But it
+alters everything!"</p>
+
+<p>"Does it make you poorer?" I asked falteringly.</p>
+
+<p>He looked down in my eyes bravely; but his voice
+shook as he answered: "If it be true&mdash;as I scarcely
+doubt&mdash;it takes from me everything: my money, my
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page268" id="page268"></a>[pg 268]</span>
+home, my future. It brings everything but disgrace
+upon us, Adrea, and even that must touch our name.
+Even though the living are spared, the memory of the
+dead must suffer!"</p>
+
+<p>I felt the tears flowing down my cheeks, but I dashed
+them away. "I do not understand. I&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course not! and I cannot explain. Yet it is
+simple! I have an elder brother, of whom I never
+heard, to whom everything belongs. I am going to
+find him!"</p>
+
+<p>"Where is he?" I cried. He shook his head. "That
+I cannot tell. Father Adrian knows, but he will not
+speak. I am going in search of him myself. I am
+going to Cruta!"</p>
+
+<p>To Cruta! The name rang in my ears, and earth
+and trees and sky seemed reeling before me. Then I
+clutched him by the arm, and cried out hysterically,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You shall not go there! The place is horrible!
+You shall not go!"</p>
+
+<p>He stood still, and looked at me in wonderment.
+We had crossed the park now, and were on the edge of
+the bare moorland. His figure alone stood out in solitary
+relief against the sky. I was half mad with fear
+and dismay. He did not understand. How could he?</p>
+
+<p>"It is at Cruta that I can learn all that there still is
+for me to learn," he said. "I shall start for there to-night."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page269" id="page269"></a>[pg 269]</span>
+
+<p>Oh! it was horrible! What could I say? How was
+I to stop him? How much dare I tell? I caught hold
+of his hands, and held them tightly.</p>
+
+<p>"Paul, I want to ask you something! When you
+heard from the convent that relations had claimed me
+and taken me away, and then, a year afterwards, you
+found me there&mdash;in London&mdash;a dancing girl, what did
+you think?"</p>
+
+<p>He answered me at once and without hesitation. "I
+thought that you had misled the Lady Superior,&mdash;that
+you were weary of your life there, and had run away."</p>
+
+<p>I shook my head. "I knew that you thought so
+and I never denied it. But it was not so! I was not
+unhappy at the convent, but one day I was sent for
+and bidden prepare for a journey. Some relatives had
+sent for me, and I was to go. And to where? It was
+to Cruta! Paul, it was old Count of Cruta who claimed
+me. I cannot tell you anything of the time I spent
+there, shut up in the gloomy castle; it was horrible
+beyond all words. Even the memory of it makes me
+shudder. If only I could tell you! But I must not!
+I can tell you this, though. In less than six months I
+felt myself going mad; and one night I stole down to
+the beach and unfastened a small boat and rowed away,
+scarcely caring what happened to me so that I could
+but escape from that awful place. It was a desperate
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page270" id="page270"></a>[pg 270]</span>
+chance. I was out all day without food or water, rowing
+and drifting until Cruta lay like a speck in the distance.
+Then by chance I was picked up by an English
+yacht, and they brought me to London. I arrived
+there helpless and miserable, and, ah! how lonely! I
+dared not go back to the convent for fear I should be
+sent back to Cruta. There was only you. I went to
+your bankers, and they told me that you were abroad&mdash;on
+the Continent. By chance they asked me there
+my name, and by chance again I told them it truthfully.
+They told me that they had money for me
+there. I had only to sign a receipt, and they gave me
+more than I asked for&mdash;ten times more. Then I remembered
+the address of an English girl who had
+been at the convent with me, and she gave me a home
+for a time. It was through her dancing mistress that
+I became&mdash;a dancing girl. I have told you this, Paul,
+because I want you to promise me not to go to Cruta. It
+is an evil place. They are mad there. Promise me!"</p>
+
+<p>He looked at me gravely and very tenderly; but his
+tone was firm. "Adrea, it is necessary that I go
+there," he said. "I cannot rest for a moment until I
+know for certain whether a story which I have just
+been told is a true one. The proof lies in Cruta! It
+is no whim which is taking me there! I must go!"</p>
+
+<p>My heart was sick with dread. Yet what could I
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page271" id="page271"></a>[pg 271]</span>
+do? I said nothing; only I covered my face with my
+hands and wept.</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea, you are a foolish child!" he said, bending
+over me. "What is there for me to fear at Cruta?
+Look up and tell me!"</p>
+
+<p>I shook my head. "You would not heed me," I
+answered sadly. "I dare not tell you. But there is
+one thing," I added hastily. "Will you do it for me
+simply because I ask you?"</p>
+
+<p>"If it be possible, yes!"</p>
+
+<p>I stood still on a little hillock, and faced him eagerly.
+"Then do not go to Cruta until to-morrow!" I begged.
+"It will make no difference to you."</p>
+
+<p>"And what difference will it make to you, he asked,
+perplexed.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind! promise!" He hesitated for a moment,
+with a frown on his forehead, and his face
+turned seaward.</p>
+
+<p>"Well! I will promise then!"</p>
+
+<p>I caught hold of his hand, and held it tightly.
+"You are very good to me!" I said. "<i>Allons!</i> let us
+move onward!"</p>
+
+<p>We had reached the Hermitage, and I had spoken
+scarcely a single word of comfort. An icy coldness
+seemed to have stolen into my heart. I had ceased to
+think of Paul, or of my love. There was something
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page272" id="page272"></a>[pg 272]</span>
+else; another passion which made me blind. Yet I let
+him come in with me, and yielded myself up for a
+while to the dream of loving and being loved by him.
+While I lay in his arms, with my head upon his shoulder,
+and every now and then felt his light, caressing
+touch upon my face,&mdash;why then, the world for me was
+bounded by that little room, and I had no thoughts
+which travelled outside it. But it lasted only while he
+was with me. When he stood up, and said that he
+must go, I did not seek to keep him.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I come again?" he asked, as we stood hand
+in hand before the door.</p>
+
+<p>I shook my head. "Not to-night love! I shall be
+better alone. I am weary, and I have my things to
+collect."</p>
+
+<p>I knew he would be surprised. He withdrew his
+hand, and manlike, was almost angry. "I forgot.
+You will leave here, I suppose!"</p>
+
+<p>I shrugged my shoulders. "What should keep me,
+Paul? I could not live here alone. Every stone and
+tree would be full of barren memories. No! to-morrow
+I go to London. I have sent all the servants
+away to-day, except Gomez. You will be with me
+early!"</p>
+
+<p>"I will be outside your window before you are up!"
+he promised with a touch of gaiety in his tone. "See
+that Gomez has breakfast for two!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page273" id="page273"></a>[pg 273]</span>
+
+<p>He passed down the avenue, and out of sight. I
+closed the door with a little shudder and turned round.
+Gomez was by my side. Through the gloom I could
+see that his dark eyes were full of fire, and his olive
+features were set and grim.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you want Gomez?" I asked quickly.</p>
+
+<p>He drew close to my side. "The priest," he muttered,
+"has he&mdash;has he dared&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>His breath was coming quickly. He spoke English
+but slightly, and in the excitement the words seemed
+to stick in his throat.</p>
+
+<p>I interrupted him. "He has told Mr. de Vaux some
+strange, horrible story. What do you know of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"All! All! All! I was there&mdash;in the chamber!
+My master's words to him&mdash;I heard them all. He has
+told, then! He has threatened! Oh! if only I had
+known when he was here!"</p>
+
+<p>The man's fierce face and gesture told their own
+tale. I beckoned him to follow me into the room where
+Paul and I had been sitting, and closed the door.</p>
+
+<p>"You were Martin de Vaux's faithful servant," I
+said. "Do you want to see his son driven from his
+home and robbed of his lands?"</p>
+
+<p>The man moved his lips, making a curious sound,
+and drew a long, gurgling breath. He was shaking
+with excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"Who should do it?"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page274" id="page274"></a>[pg 274]</span>
+
+<p>"The priest!" I answered softly.</p>
+
+<p>"Because of the words, the story of which my master
+spoke to him at his death in the monastery?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! because of that."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" He stole up to my side with a noiseless,
+animal movement, and whispered in my ear. His eyes
+were burning; his face was full of evil meaning. Yet I
+did not shrink from him. I welcomed him with a
+smile. He whispered into my ear. It was like the
+hiss of a snake; but I smiled. I whispered back again.
+He nodded. Ah! the way before me was growing clear
+at last. Was it not fate that had brought Gomez ready
+to my hand? Ay! fate! A good fate! A kind fate!
+We stood close together in that dimly lit room; and
+though we were alone in the house, we spoke in whispers
+to one another. When I moved to the door, Gomez
+followed me.</p>
+
+<p>I came down in ten minutes, clad in a long, dark
+cloak, with a small hat and a thick veil. I took a
+stick from the rack, and there was something else in
+my deep pocket.</p>
+
+<p>"Alone!" he whispered, as I moved towards the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>"Alone!" I answered. "Make a good fire in the
+drawing-room, and let there be food and wine there."</p>
+
+<p>"For two?" he asked with an evil smile.</p>
+
+<p>"For two!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page275" id="page275"></a>[pg 275]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
+
+<h3>"ADREA'S DIARY"</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"A land that is lonelier than a ruin."
+</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p>A cold twilight followed close upon the day. The
+sky was strewn with dark clouds, and a wild wind blew
+in my face. I was on an unknown road, and in all my
+life I had seen nothing so dreary.</p>
+
+<p>On one side, about a hundred yards away, was the
+sea; on the other was a broken stretch of bare moorland
+covered with only the scantiest herbage and piles
+of barren grey rocks. Some were lying together in
+quaint, grotesque shapes; others stood out alone against
+the sky, and broken fragments of all sizes covered the
+ground, choking and destroying all vegetation. There
+was no background of woods or trees; there was nothing
+between that barren, stony surface and the leaden
+sky. What turf there had been had lost its colour, and
+never a fragment of moss had grown upon one of those
+weather-beaten boulders. The sea air had stained
+them, and the grey evening mists had rotted them, until
+their surface was honeycombed with indentations,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page276" id="page276"></a>[pg 276]</span>
+but neither had softened or toned down their fierce ugliness.
+Even in the bright sunlight such a country as
+this must still have been a country of desolation, and a
+light heart must sometimes have lost its gaiety and felt
+oppressed. To me, as I hurried along, with the cold
+evening settling down around me, that walk was horrible.
+Strange shadows seemed to dog my path and
+stalk solemnly along by my side. Footsteps seemed to
+follow behind me, and every stone I dislodged made me
+start. Sometimes I fancied that I heard strange whisperings
+in my ears, and I started round, shivering and
+trembling, to find myself alone. Once I stopped short.
+Was that a dead man in the way? How my heart beat!
+No! it was only a long boulder of rock! Listen! was
+not that the scream of a dying man? My own voice,
+raised in helpless terror, drowned the sound, and while
+I stood there ready to sink to the ground, a great sea-gull
+came circling round my head, and the blood flowed
+warm in my veins once more. How sad and mournful
+was that solitary cry and slow, hopeless flapping of the
+wings! Who was it said that the evil spirits of dead
+men dwell imprisoned in those sad-crying birds? It
+was very, very human, that cry. Bah! was I getting
+superstitious and faint-hearted before my task was
+begun? I set my teeth and stepped boldly onwards.
+For a while I had no more fancies.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page277" id="page277"></a>[pg 277]</span>
+
+<p>Throughout that hideous walk my whole imagination
+seemed coloured with a reflection of the purpose towards
+which I was tending. I do not write this in any
+morbid fit. Few women have passed through what I
+have passed through; fewer still have stopped to record
+their sensations. It is strange that it should afford me
+any satisfaction to record them here, but it is so. I
+have begun, and I must go on. This part of my life
+is drawing rapidly to a close, and with its close I shall
+seal this little book up and put it away for ever.</p>
+
+<p>The night grew darker, and the road was fast becoming
+little more than a rude cattle-track. A little
+distance ahead of me, from some building as yet unseen,
+a strong, clear light was steadily burning. Save
+for it, I might have feared that I had lost my way, for
+as yet I had passed no sign of human habitation. But
+that light was sufficient. Gomez had told me of it. It
+was the light which burned always, from dusk to morning,
+from the tower of the monastery of St. Bernard.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Two things seemed strange to me, or rather seem
+strange to me now, when I look back upon that walk.
+The first was my utter indifference to all physical pain.
+There was a hole in my boot, and I found afterwards
+that my foot must have been bleeding most of the time.
+I never felt it. I was conscious of neither pain nor
+fatigue. The second thing which surprises me is that,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page278" id="page278"></a>[pg 278]</span>
+as I drew near to my journey's end, I grew calmer. I
+had no desire to draw back. I had no fear. The thing
+which was before me never assumed any definite shape!
+It was there&mdash;in the background&mdash;a dim, floating purpose,
+never once oppressing me, never forcing its way
+forward in my mind for more definite consideration,
+and only showing itself at all in a vague, lurid glow
+which seemed to change even the shapes of all the
+gruesome surroundings of my dismal walk. Towards
+the end of my expedition this became even more
+marked. My thoughts had recoiled from the present
+to the past. Vague pictures of the days that had gone
+by seemed floating before my eyes. I saw myself in
+the convent garden, with all my little world enclosed
+in those four walls, and I heard the shrill laughter of
+the girls with whom I was walking, and I even fancied
+that I could catch the perfume of the lilac trees which
+drooped over the smoothly kept lawn. And then the
+picture faded away, and from the vessel's side I saw
+Cruta, a purple-topped island rising like some precious
+jewel from the sea! I shuddered at the memory of
+that face, which soon became a living dread to me, and
+I heard again the passionate voice of a dark-robed man
+reading poetry, and crushing with white, nervous fingers
+the hyacinths whose odour was making the air
+faint. I saw his white, sad face, in which the struggle
+of the man against himself was already born&mdash;born,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page279" id="page279"></a>[pg 279]</span>
+alas! in those long mornings by the sea, at my unconscious
+bidding! And soon Cruta, too, faded away, and
+you, Paul, my love, my dear, dear love, your face came
+to me. Almost my eyes closed, almost I stayed here
+to dream. Ah! how the magic of this love, this wonderful
+love, lightens my little world! My heart is
+stirred to music, my blood is dancing. I am chilled
+no longer. Ah! Paul, it is for you that I strike this
+blow, for you that I tread this stony way. It is sweet
+to think of it. I go on as blithely as ever a village
+maiden stepped forward to her wedding. The way is
+as sweet to me as a garden of roses. Your face, too,
+is dying out of my thoughts, Paul. Farewell! Farewell!</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>The valley of the shadow of death! Did any one
+speak those words? What an evil fancy! Yet the air
+seemed full of whisperings. The valley of the shadow
+of death! Yes! it might be that, and these cold, grey
+boulders the spirits of the evil ones risen up out of
+Hades. Is there a hell, I wonder? How chill and
+dark the air seems! There is death about!</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>The sound of a single bell broke in upon my thoughts.
+I raised my eyes. My journey was accomplished.
+Before me was a grim, stern building, and attached to
+it a chapel. It was the monastery of St. Bernard.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page280" id="page280"></a>[pg 280]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXI</h2>
+
+<h3>"ADREA'S DIARY"</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"Farewell to the dead ashes of life."
+</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p>The path which I had been following led straight up
+to the bare, arched door of the building. I had reached
+it unmolested, and rang the bell.</p>
+
+<p>What a hoarse, clanging sound! I shivered as I
+stood there listening to its gloomy echoes until they
+died away. No one came. The place seemed wrapped
+in an austere silence. I listened, but I could hear no
+sound within; only the dull, melancholy sighing of the
+wind amongst a sickly avenue of firs behind.</p>
+
+<p>I stretched out my hand, and rang again. Almost
+before the echoes had died away I heard footsteps
+within. A heavy bolt was withdrawn, and a dark-robed
+monk stood on the threshold before me. He
+recoiled for a moment at seeing a woman, and I thought
+that he would have closed the door, but he did not.</p>
+
+<p>"What would you have at this hour, sister?" he
+asked sternly. "The chapel is closed, and morning is
+the time for dispensing charity."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page281" id="page281"></a>[pg 281]</span>
+
+<p>"I have come in search of a priest who is only a
+visitor here," I said. "Father Adrian he is called!"</p>
+
+<p>He seemed still indisposed to admit me. "Is your business urgent?"
+he asked doubtfully. "Father Adrian
+is at his devotions, and must not be lightly disturbed."</p>
+
+<p>"It is urgent," I answered.</p>
+
+<p>He beckoned me to follow him, and in silence led
+me a few yards down a bare stone corridor. Then he
+threw open the door of a small room, and bade me
+enter.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the guest-chamber," he said. "Wait here,
+and I will summon Father Adrian!"</p>
+
+<p>He closed the door and disappeared. The interior
+of the room in which he had left me was bare and
+chilling. I turned from it to the window. Almost
+opposite was a small eminence, and at its summit a
+rude cross of Calvary. A dark figure, with clasped
+hands and bent head, was slowly descending the path.</p>
+
+<p>Even at that distance I thought I recognised the walk,
+and as he came nearer I saw that he was wearing the
+ordinary garb of a Roman Catholic priest instead of the
+monk's robes. I stood close to the window watching him,
+and as he crossed the open space before the door he raised
+his eyes and saw me. How he started, and how his
+eyes seemed to burn in their sockets! Doubtless he
+would have turned paler, but he was already deathly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page282" id="page282"></a>[pg 282]</span>
+white. He stood there, swaying from side to side, with
+his eyes fastened wildly upon me, as though an apparition
+had appeared before him. Then he took a quick step
+forward; I heard the great front door creak and groan
+upon its hinges, and almost as soon as I could turn
+round he was on the threshold before me.</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea! Adrea!" he cried, in a low, suppressed
+whisper which shook with passion. "You here! What
+has happened? Stand in the light! Let me see your
+face!"</p>
+
+<p>I moved a step towards him, and raised my veil. "I
+am lonely," I said softly. "Was it very wrong of me
+to come here?"</p>
+
+<p>He stood before me, with hungry, incredulous eyes
+fastened upon my face, as though he would see through
+it into my false heart. Yet I did not flinch; I was
+actress enough for my part. I watched him tremble&mdash;watched
+the colour flush into his face and die away. It
+was a very storm of passion which shook him before he
+could find the words to answer me.</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea! Adrea! have you come here to mock me?
+As you are a woman, I implore you to spare me! Speak
+the truth!"</p>
+
+<p>I answered him softly, with my eyes fixed upon the
+ground. "I came because I was lonely. Let us go
+away from here! Come home with me!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page283" id="page283"></a>[pg 283]</span>
+
+<p>"Home with you! Home with you!" He repeated
+my invitation. He scarcely seemed to understand.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! I was very silly the other day! I did not
+understand you! I did not understand myself! And
+you see I have humbled myself very much! I have
+come to tell you so! Am I forgiven?"</p>
+
+<p>I raised my eyes to his, and added in a half whisper:
+"Won't you come home with me, and read aloud, as we
+used to on the rocks at Cruta?"</p>
+
+<p>He stood there as though fascinated. I began to
+feel impatient, but I dared not show any signs of it.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he took a quick step towards me, and
+before I could prevent it he had thrown himself at my
+feet on the cold stone floor, and was holding my hands
+tightly in his.</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea!" he cried, his voice choked with passion,
+"is this thing true? My brain reels with the delight
+of it; but, oh, forgive me if I seem to doubt! I know
+nothing of women, but surely your lips could never
+lie! You are not mocking me? Oh, Adrea, my love,
+lift up your eyes and swear that this is no dream. I
+am dizzy with joy! Speak to me! Let me look into
+your face! I am not doubting you, yet say it once
+more! Tell me it is not a dream!"</p>
+
+<p>I lied to him with my face, and with my eyes, and
+with my lips. "It is no dream," I said softly. "I
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page284" id="page284"></a>[pg 284]</span>
+have come to you, Adrian, because I want you. No
+one else would do."</p>
+
+<p>He stood up, pale and shaken. His voice was still
+full of deep, throbbing earnestness. "Adrea!" he
+cried, "to-day I have been fighting a grim fight.
+Look into my face and mark its traces. I am desperate!
+For hours I have knelt on what was once a hallowed
+spot. In vain! In vain! On my knees before
+the cross of Calvary I have striven to pray, as a man
+wrestles for his life with the waves of a great ocean.
+Alas! alas! In the twilight I fancied always that your
+face was moving amongst the shadows, and even the
+breeze which rustled in the shrubs around seemed ever
+to be murmuring your name. Oh, my love, my love,
+sometimes I wonder that I have lived through the
+anguish of these days. But it is over! You have come
+to me, and the evil days are past. I renounce my
+priesthood! It has become only a barren farce to me!
+Heaven or hell, what matters it? I leave here with
+you to-night never to return! Never! never! never!"</p>
+
+<p>He pressed hot kisses upon my hands; they stung
+me like molten lead, but I did not withdraw them.
+Then he rose up and held out his arms to me with a
+great yearning stealing into his dark eyes. But I kept
+him away.</p>
+
+<p>"Not here! not here!" I cried. "I heard footsteps
+outside. Let us go!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page285" id="page285"></a>[pg 285]</span>
+
+<p>"You are right," he answered. "Wait for me; I
+have but few preparations to make."</p>
+
+<p>He left me, and I breathed freely again. I had no
+fears, no hesitation. I never dreamt of turning back;
+but I began to find my task more difficult even than I
+had imagined. It was his touch, his passionate looks
+and words which were so hard to endure. My lips
+could lie, but it was hard to govern my looks; and oh,
+how I hated him!</p>
+
+<p>Soon he was back&mdash;too soon for me; and then we
+left the place. He had changed his clothes, and, to
+my surprise, he wore an ordinary dark walking suit
+and a long ulster. He had discarded the priest altogether.</p>
+
+<p>At the bend he looked back. There was a rift in the
+clouds just behind the hill of Calvary, and the rude
+cross stood out vividly against the sky. "At last!"
+he murmured; "at last! Farewell to the dead ashes
+of life! It is rest to have ended the struggle, even to
+have fallen. My new life is here!"</p>
+
+<p>He touched my hand fondly, and held it within his
+own. "How deathly cold your hand is, Adrea!" he
+said. "It is the night air. You are well, are you
+not?" he added anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Quite well; only tired."</p>
+
+<p>He took my arm. I could not resist him, only I
+walked the more swiftly. He tried to check me, but I
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page286" id="page286"></a>[pg 286]</span>
+shook my head. "I am cold and tired," I told him.
+"This desolate walk frightened me, and even with you
+I think I am a little nervous. Let us hurry. Hark!
+What was that?"</p>
+
+<p>"A bittern in the marshes! Why, Adrea, how
+frightened you are! It is not like you!"</p>
+
+<p>"I know it," I answered; "but to-night&mdash;to-night
+the air seems full of whisperings and strange sounds.
+Yes, I am frightened."</p>
+
+<p>I shivered as I spoke. He would have drawn me
+closer to him, but I waved him away. How could he
+know anything of the horrors of that walk for me!
+Strange phantoms seemed ever rising from the sea,
+stalking across the path, and away over the moor, and
+passing and repassing, grinning and whispering in my
+ear. Sometimes it seemed as though I could have
+touched them by stretching out my hand; but when I
+tried, my fingers closed upon thin air. What were
+they? Why had they come to torment me? Was it
+because they scented an evil deed? Would they haunt
+me for ever like this? What folly! If I gave way so
+I should soon be altogether unnerved, and my task was
+still before me. I closed my eyes and opened them
+again. They had gone! It was good! I had conquered!</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>It was late, and we had eaten and drunk together.
+He was lying back in an easy-chair, flushed, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page287" id="page287"></a>[pg 287]</span>
+strange to say, wonderfully handsome. The hollows
+in his cheeks seemed suddenly filled up, and his eyes
+were soft and bright. I sat at his feet looking into
+the firelight.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you answer me some questions, Adrian?" I
+asked. "There has been so much mystery around us
+lately, and, like a woman, I am curious."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I will tell you anything," he answered. "Am
+I not your slave, dearest? Only ask me them quickly.
+There are many things I have to talk about. What was
+that?" he added quickly. "Is there any one else in
+this room?"</p>
+
+<p>I shook my head. "No one; it was fancy. Tell
+me, who was Madame de Merteuill?"</p>
+
+<p>"My mother!"</p>
+
+<p>"Your mother?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; and the old Count of Cruta is my grandfather.
+Madame de Merteuill is his daughter. But that is not
+her real name!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a high screen just behind his chair,&mdash;a
+japanned one, which seemed to have been badly used,
+for there was a great hole in it. While we had been
+talking a strange thing had happened. A man's hand
+had slowly been thrust through, and a crumpled piece
+of paper was dropped upon the carpet. I moved to his
+side, and raised the cushion in his chair. Before I
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page288" id="page288"></a>[pg 288]</span>
+could help it he had caught my face, and pressed a hot,
+burning kiss upon my cheek. I dared not struggle. I
+had to yield, and endure for a moment his passionate
+embrace. Then I dropped my handkerchief upon the
+piece of paper, and picked up both hastily.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you tell me something else, please?"</p>
+
+<p>"Anything you ask! You know that I will!"</p>
+
+<p>"The De Vaux estates&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Are mine. I am the son of Martin de Vaux. Paul
+de Vaux has no claim at all. If I had remained in the
+Church, it was my intention to found a great monastery
+here. But now&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well?"</p>
+
+<p>"Everything is yours!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence. I drew the piece
+of paper from my pocket, as though by accident, and
+read it to myself. There were only a few hastily
+scrawled lines:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I dare not do it. I am afraid. I will put the knife
+on the floor."</p>
+
+<p>I glanced towards the hole. The hand was there,
+holding a long, gleaming dagger. It laid it noiselessly
+upon the carpet, and was withdrawn. I went
+over to his side, and knelt down there.</p>
+
+<p>"And what will become of Paul de Vaux?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>He laughed grimly. "He must take his chance.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page289" id="page289"></a>[pg 289]</span>
+He knows the whole story. He has known since last
+night. Adrea, tell me once more," he pleaded: "you
+never loved him really,&mdash;say that you never did!"</p>
+
+<p>"Are you jealous, sir?" I asked lightly. My left
+hand was wandering down his side! Ah! there was
+his heart! How it was beating! My right hand was
+on the floor, cautiously feeling its way towards the
+screen. It reached the dagger! I clutched it by the
+hilt! Now was the time. There was his heart. I knew
+the exact spot.</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea, are you ill?" he asked. "How white and
+strange you look! Ah!"</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>It was done! Lucrezia Borgia could not have bungled
+less! He lay doubled up in the chair, with a long
+Genoese dagger buried in his heart, and it was I who
+had done it!</p>
+
+<p>Gomez crawled from behind the screen, and looked
+first at him and then at me with protruding eyes. He
+tried to speak, but his teeth chattered.</p>
+
+<p>"It is done!" I said calmly, "and you are saved,
+Paul, my love," I whispered to myself. "Be a man,
+Gomez. We must carry it into the wood. Lift him
+gently; there must be no blood here."</p>
+
+<p>It took all our strength to move him, and we had to
+drag him, yard by yard, down the avenue and across
+the road into the little wood.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page290" id="page290"></a>[pg 290]</span>
+
+<p>My pen is weary of horrors. The memory of that
+hour is not to be written about. But when he turned
+away I took the flowers which he had begged for from
+my corsage and threw them down amongst the wet
+leaves. It was my sole moment of relenting.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page291" id="page291"></a>[pg 291]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXII</h2>
+
+<h3>"THE LORD OF CRUTA"</h3>
+
+
+<p>A strange figure stood on the edge of the castle
+cliff, looking across the bay of Cruta to the sea. He
+was tall, loose jointed, and gaunt, and the long grey
+beard and unkempt locks of flowing hair which streamed
+behind in the breeze showed that he was an old
+man; but his eyes, set back in deep hollows, and fringed
+with long, bushy grey lashes, were still dark and
+piercing. Great passions had branded his face with
+deep-set lines, but had failed to belittle him. On the
+contrary, his presence, though forbidding and awesome,
+was full of latent strength and dignity. To the
+islanders, who never mentioned their lord's name save
+with bated breath and after having zealously crossed
+themselves, he was the object of the most unbounded
+superstition. His personality and the strangeness of
+his habits appalled them. They scarcely believed him
+a being of the same world as their own. The most
+ignorant amongst them firmly believed that the sea
+obeyed his uplifted hand, and that when he spoke the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page292" id="page292"></a>[pg 292]</span>
+thunder rolled amongst the hills. When stories were
+told of the mystery and strange isolation in which he
+lived, they nodded their heads and were willing to believe
+everything. No one ever met him or had speech
+with him, for twenty years had passed since he had
+issued from the castle gates. But sometimes, most
+often when a storm was brewing, they could see
+a tall, dark figure standing on the giddy edge of the
+castle wall which overhung the sea, or walking, with
+slow, stately movements, up and down the narrow foot-path
+at the summit of the cliff. If the moon had risen,
+or the sky were clear beyond, they could see the huge,
+gaunt figure outlined with grim distinctness against
+the empty background, always with his face to the sea,
+and with a long black cloak flowing behind. It was
+not often that they saw him, but when they did they
+told one another in whispers; and though the sky were
+cloudless and the sea calm, the women whose husbands
+were out in their fishing boats beyond the bay told
+their beads and prayed for their safe return, and those
+who had remained behind prepared for rough weather.
+Once, at a marriage feast, when all the little village
+was making merry, the whisper had gone about that
+"the Count was walking;" and immediately they had
+all departed for their homes in fear and silence, and
+the luckless bride and bridegroom had hastened to the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page293" id="page293"></a>[pg 293]</span>
+priest and besought him to unloose the knot, that they
+might celebrate their wedding on some less ill-omened
+day.</p>
+
+<p>To-night the storm was already breaking when the
+Count appeared on the castle wall and turned his face
+seaward. One by one the fishing smacks were crossing
+the gathering line of surf, and gaining the deep,
+still waters of the bay. As they passed underneath
+the towering mass of granite rock, against the base of
+which the waters were boiling and seething, the men
+in the boats gazed fearfully up at that black speck far
+away above their heads, and crossed themselves. The
+Count had stood there for an hour, they whispered,
+ever since that piled-up mass of angry, lurid clouds
+had first gathered, and a warning breath of wind had
+swept across the smooth, glass-like surface of the
+water, now troubled and restless. Not one of them
+doubted but that his coming had brought the storm;
+but there was not one of them who dared to utter a
+word of complaint. Only they stood up in their boats,
+and shielding their eyes with an uplifted hand from
+the fierce rays of the sinking sun, gazed out seaward,
+searching for the boats not yet in safety.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly a little murmur arose from amongst them,
+and a word was passed from one to another of their
+little crafts. The blinding glare of the sun and its
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page294" id="page294"></a>[pg 294]</span>
+reflection, stretched far away across the surface of the sea,
+had dazzled their eyes, and for the last quarter of an
+hour they had seen nothing on the westward horizon.
+But now the bright silver light was fading into a dull,
+glorious purple; and full upon its bosom a strange sail
+was seen, making direct for the harbour. The sunlight
+was still flashing upon its white sails,&mdash;little specks of
+gold upon a background of richer colouring&mdash;and they
+saw that she was a handsome, shapely-looking vessel,
+very different to the dirty Italian lugger which put in
+at their harbour for a few hours week by week.</p>
+
+<p>"Will she need a pilot?" cried Francesco, rising
+in his boat, and watching the stranger. "Let us wait
+here, and see if she signals for one!"</p>
+
+<p>"Let us all go! There will be something for each!"
+cried another.</p>
+
+<p>"We will race," Antonio answered, whose boat was
+the fastest. "The first to reach her shall have the
+stranger's money!"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no! that is not fair," chorused the others.
+"We will draw lots!"</p>
+
+<p>Then up rose old Guiseppe, the father of them all.
+He shook his head, and turned a sorrowing face seawards.
+"Peace! children. You are like chattering
+seabirds squabbling over a bait which will never be
+yours. Yonder ship will need no pilot! She is no
+stranger to Cruta!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page295" id="page295"></a>[pg 295]</span>
+
+<p>They looked at her, and shook their heads. "We
+have never seen her before," they said.</p>
+
+<p>"Some of you are too young to remember her," the
+old man continued, "and you were all away when she
+was here within a twelvemonth ago! But I know her!
+Three times has she entered this harbour, and each
+time has she left sorrow and grief behind her. It is
+the ship of the English lord who stole away the
+daughter of our Count many years ago!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a little murmur of suppressed wonder.
+Then, as though moved by a common instinct, every
+face was turned upward to the castle wall.</p>
+
+<p>The Count had gone. But, even as they looked, he
+reappeared, leading another figure by the hand. They
+held their breath with wonder. No one had ever seen
+him there save alone, and now a woman stood by his
+side. They could see nothing of her, save her long
+hair flowing in the breeze, and the bare outline of her
+figure. "Who was she? Guiseppe must know! Who
+was she?" they asked him eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head. "Better not ask," he answered.
+"Better not know! Strange things have happened up
+there! It is not for us to chatter of them!"</p>
+
+<p>"One night as I sailed homeward," Antonio said, in
+a low tone, "I heard strange cries from the castle.
+The night was still, and the breeze brought the sound
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page296" id="page296"></a>[pg 296]</span>
+to my ears. They came from up above, and when I
+strained my eyes I fancied that I could see a white
+figure&mdash;the figure of a woman&mdash;standing on the castle
+walls. She was crying for help, but suddenly, as
+though a hand were placed over her mouth, her cries
+ceased, and the figure vanished. It was three nights
+before the English lord died at the monastery!"</p>
+
+<p>Ferdinand stood up. "On that same night," he
+said, in a low, hoarse whisper, "I saw a figure steal up
+the path to the castle. It was the English lord! On
+the morrow I traced him back again with drops of
+blood. They led right into the monastery courtyard.
+Two days afterwards he died."</p>
+
+<p>"Silence! all of you!" commanded Guiseppe, with
+shaking voice. "Are these things to be spoken of
+thus openly? Know you not, you children, that the
+winds have ears, and he listens there above us."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a thousand feet!" muttered Antonio. "To
+him our boats can seem only as specks upon the
+water."</p>
+
+<p>"You fool!" answered Guiseppe. "Do you think
+that the man whose presence brings storm and wind
+upon us is like ordinary men? Do you think he cannot
+hear what he chooses!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ave Maria!" cried Antonio, crossing himself. "I
+would as soon face the devil himself as the Count! I
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page297" id="page297"></a>[pg 297]</span>
+shall ask Father Bernard to say a prayer for me to-night!"</p>
+
+<p>"Do! and I hope his penance will be a stiff one,"
+answered Guiseppe grimly. "Come, let us trim our
+sails, and get homeward. The English ship will not
+want us, and we can watch who lands from the
+beach."</p>
+
+<p>"'Twould be no such bad thing if she struck on the
+rocks, if she brings such ill luck to the castle," muttered
+Antonio, as he unfurled the sail and grasped the
+tiller. "There would be some pickings for us, beyond
+doubt&mdash;some pretty pickings!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page298" id="page298"></a>[pg 298]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIII</h2>
+
+<h3>"THE DAWN OF A SHORT, SWEET LIFE"</h3>
+
+
+<p>The little group of fishing smacks, homely-looking
+and uncleanly, on close examination, presented a very
+different appearance from the deck of the English
+yacht fast nearing the harbour. Their brown sails
+had gleamed purple in the dying sunlight, and their
+rude outline seemed graceful and shapely as they rose
+and fell on the long waves. Paul, who stood on the
+captain's bridge of his yacht, uttered a little cry of admiration
+as they sailed out from the shadows of the
+huge rock, and fell into a rude semicircle across the
+bay.</p>
+
+<p>"What colouring one sees in these southern waters!"
+he remarked. "Did you notice the glinting light on
+those sails?"</p>
+
+<p>His companion, who was holding firmly the rail by
+his side, looked up and smiled. "Yes," she said softly;
+"it is beautiful! We have seen more beautiful things
+on this voyage, I think, than I ever saw before in
+my life. I have never been so happy! You are not
+angry with me now for coming, are you?"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page299" id="page299"></a>[pg 299]</span>
+
+<p>He looked down into her wistful, upturned face, and
+then away to the distant line where sea and sky met.
+"No! I am not angry," he said softly.</p>
+
+<p>Adrea was very beautiful. The fresh sea air and
+the southern sun had been as kind to her as to one of
+their own daughters. Only a very faint, delicate
+shade of pink had stained her clear, transparent skin,
+harmonising exquisitely with the slight olive hue of
+her complexion. The strong breeze had loosened the
+coils of her dark hair, and it was waving and flowing
+in picturesque freedom about her face. There was a
+change, too, in her appearance, greater than any the
+wind or sun could effect. Her dark eyes were glowing
+with a new life, and a soft, wistful joy shone in her
+face. Those few days had been like heaven for her.
+She had been alone, for the first time, with the man
+she loved; sailing upon a sunlit sea hour after hour,
+with his voice ever in her ears, and his tall figure by
+her side. The sense of his presence was ever upon
+her, bringing with it a calm, sweet restfulness, a happiness
+beyond anything which she had ever imagined.</p>
+
+<p>And it was heaven, too, after hell! Thrust away in
+a dark corner of her memory was the recollection of a
+day and a night full of grim, phantasmal horrors, which
+were fast becoming little more than a dream to her.
+The time was not yet come for remorse. In that deep
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page300" id="page300"></a>[pg 300]</span>
+glow of passionate and self-forgetful devotion, quickened
+now into fullest and sweetest life by his constant
+proximity, even sin itself, for his sake, seemed justified
+to her. Everything, too, which lay behind her brief
+stay in that bare, wind-swept country was fast assuming
+a far distant place in her thoughts. It was such a
+change from her little rooms in Grey Street, dainty
+and home-like though they had been, from the brilliantly
+lit drawing-rooms where she had performed,
+and the same wearisome compliments ever in her ears.
+The bonds of town life had always galled her. She
+was an artist, although she had denied it. She had
+become subject to her environment but it had been an
+imprisonment. Nature was her mother, and Nature
+had claimed her now. She knew it all; she knew that
+she could never be a dancer again. She had stolen out
+on to the deck each morning in her slippers, and had
+seen the dawn break through the clouds and descend
+upon the quivering waters. She had seen the eastern
+sky streaked with faint but marvellous colouring,
+growing deeper and deeper, until the sun's rim had
+risen from out of the water. Grey had become mauve,
+and white amber. It was wonderful! And by night
+she had leaned over the side of the yacht, and looked
+up into a sky ablaze with trembling stars, casting their
+golden reflections down upon the boundless waves
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page301" id="page301"></a>[pg 301]</span>
+which rose and fell beneath&mdash;waves which were sometimes
+green, and sometimes golden in the wonderful
+phosphoric light which touched them with a weird
+splendour. It was like the opening of a new world to
+Adrea. All that had gone before seemed harsh and
+artificial! It was the dawn of a new life.</p>
+
+<p>Paul had noticed the change. To him it had appeared
+chiefly as an increased womanliness, a gentle softness
+of speech and mannerism very charming and attractive.
+Those few days at sea together had been like a dream
+to him. He had come on board as nearly broken-hearted
+as a strong man could be, and fiercely anxious
+to reach his destination and know the whole, cruel
+truth. In a few hours all had been changed. His
+sorrows seemed numbed. He was no longer battling
+alone with his grief. Adrea knew all, and as they
+sailed southwards together, the sense of the present
+was strong enough to drive past and future from his
+thoughts. The clouds cleared from his face, and his
+heart was lightened. It was Adrea who had saved
+him from despair.</p>
+
+<p>He thought of this as she stood by his side, and
+he answered her question. Before their eyes, Cruta
+was rising up from the sea. The grim castle was
+there, looking as old as the rocks on which it was
+perched, the wide, open harbour, and the little fleet
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page302" id="page302"></a>[pg 302]</span>
+of fishing smacks. The seabirds circled about their
+heads; every moment brought the rocky little island
+more distinctly into view. Paul looked down into
+Adrea's face gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"It is our destination, Adrea," he said. "You
+must go now. There will be a lot of surf crossing
+the bar, and I shall have enough to do to run her
+in. Look behind! It is just as well we are going
+into harbour!"</p>
+
+<p>He pointed to the fast-gathering clouds coming up
+from the westward, and she paused with her foot on
+the ladder. "We leave the storm behind us," she
+said. "There is fair weather ahead!"</p>
+
+<p>She went down into her cabin, and left Paul upon
+the bridge, with his eyes fixed upon the castle. Fair
+weather ahead! How dared he hope for it! The sun
+had finally disappeared now, but some part of the
+afterglow still lingered in curious contrast to the
+lurid yellow and black clouds hurrying on behind
+him. The old castle was bathed for a moment in a
+sea of purple light,&mdash;every line of it, and the huge
+rock which it crowned, standing out with peculiar
+vividness against the empty background. But it was
+a brief glory. Even while Paul was gazing, the
+colouring faded away, and it resumed its former aspect.
+Fair weather ahead! Every moment, as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page303" id="page303"></a>[pg 303]</span>
+memories of his former visit to the place thronged in upon
+him, Paul doubted it the more.</p>
+
+<p>He was close to the entrance of the harbour now,
+and all his thoughts and energies were required to pilot
+his yacht safely. In a few moments the brief line was
+passed, and the islanders waiting about upon the beach
+saw the English vessel ride smoothly into harbourage
+under shadow of the huge castle rock. Presently she
+dropped an anchor, and swung gracefully round. A
+boat was lowered, and made for the shore.</p>
+
+<p>There were plenty of hands willing to help pull her
+in. Paul stepped out on to the beach, and looked
+around for some one to whom he could make himself
+understood.</p>
+
+<p>They were all islanders of the rudest class; but seeing
+no one else, Paul lifted his hand to the castle, and
+asked them the way in Italian. They understood him,
+and pointed along the beach to a point where a rude
+road curved inland, and reappeared a little higher up
+in zigzag fashion behind the rocks. But no one offered
+to go a step with him. On the contrary, directly the
+question had left his lips, they all shrunk away, whispering
+and exclaiming amongst themselves.</p>
+
+<p>"It is the son of the Englishman!" cried Antonio.
+"He is going into the lion's mouth! Do not let us be
+seen with him. The Count may be watching."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page304" id="page304"></a>[pg 304]</span>
+
+<p>"I wonder if he knows his danger?" Guiseppe said
+thoughtfully. "He is young and brave looking. It
+would be a good action to warn him."</p>
+
+<p>"I would not risk it!" cried Antonio.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor I!" echoed Ferdinand.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor I!" chorused the others.</p>
+
+<p>Guiseppe glanced at them in contempt. Then he
+stepped forward and laid his hand upon Paul's shoulder&mdash;a
+strange, picturesque-looking object, in his bright
+scarlet shirt, and trousers turned up to his knees. He
+had been in Italy once, and he tried to speak the
+language of that country as well as he could.</p>
+
+<p>"Illustrious Englishman!" he said, "go not to that
+castle, the home of the Count of Cruta. Danger lurks
+there for you&mdash;danger and death. It is our lord who
+lives there; we are his vassals, and we are dumb. But
+he is wild and fierce, and your countrymen are like devils
+to him. Strange things have happened up there.
+Be wise. Put back your boat, weigh your anchor and
+sail away. The stormy seas are dangerous, but not so
+dangerous as the Castle of Cruta to an Englishman of
+your features. Take the word of Guiseppe, and depart!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul shook his head. He understood most of what
+Guiseppe had said, and he knew that it was kindly
+meant. "You are very good," he said. "I thank you
+for your warning; but I have important business with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page305" id="page305"></a>[pg 305]</span>
+the Count, and I have come from England on purpose
+to see him. Here, spend this for me," he added, throwing
+a handful of silver money amongst the little group
+of men. "Yonder path will take me straight to the
+castle, I suppose. Good evening."</p>
+
+<p>He strode away along the beach alone. Meanwhile
+a strange thing was happening. The islanders were
+all gathered eagerly around the little shower of money,
+but not one had offered to touch a piece.</p>
+
+<p>"Holy Mother! there are fifty pieces!" cried
+Antonio. "If only I was sure that the Count would
+not see me! I would keep holiday for a month, and
+start again with a fresh set of fishing nets."</p>
+
+<p>"Touch not the money!" advised Guiseppe, shaking
+his head. "The Count's eyes are everywhere!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is very hard!" groaned Ferdinand. "It has been
+such a bad season, too!"</p>
+
+<p>"I know! I know!" cried Antonio excitedly. "We
+will go to the monastery, and get Father Bernard to
+come and bless it. He will claim half for the Church,
+but we can divide the other half, and we shall, each
+man, have given six pieces in charity. What say you?
+shall we go?"</p>
+
+<p>"Bravo! Antonio is right! Antonio is a sensible fellow!"
+they all cried. Then there was the sound of
+bare feet scampering over the hard sands as they
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page306" id="page306"></a>[pg 306]</span>
+hastened up to the monastery. Guiseppe was left alone.</p>
+
+<p>He waited until they were out of sight. Then he
+stooped down, and carefully collecting all the coins,
+placed them in his pouch. "Ignorant fools!" he muttered.
+"The Count can see no further than other men,
+and at any rate he will not see these in my pocket."</p>
+
+<p>He stood up, and gazed steadily along the path
+which Paul had taken. "What am I to do now?" he
+continued. "It is to the Englishman's father that I
+owe my boat and my little hoard of sayings. He behaved
+to me as a prince, did Signor de Vaux. Can I
+see his son hasten yonder to his doom without one
+effort to save him? No. The Count is terrible, but I
+need run no risk. At any rate, I will follow a little
+way."</p>
+
+<p>He walked swiftly along the beach, and commenced
+the ascent to the castle. In a few minutes the little
+band of fishermen returned, carrying lanterns in their
+hands, and with a priest walking amongst them. They
+reached the spot, and paused, while the priest commenced
+to mumble a prayer. He was scarcely halfway
+through when he was interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>"The money is gone!" cried Antonio.</p>
+
+<p>"Every piece!" echoed Ferdinand.</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's blank silence. Then they all
+crossed themselves. "Let us go home," whispered
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page307" id="page307"></a>[pg 307]</span>
+Antonio hoarsely. "The Count knows. He has been
+here."</p>
+
+<p>The priest turned away disgusted, and the others
+followed him, talking with bated breath amongst themselves.
+And, in the darkness, no one noticed Guiseppe's
+absence.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page308" id="page308"></a>[pg 308]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIV</h2>
+
+<h3>"A VOICE AND FIGURE FROM THE DISTANT PAST"</h3>
+
+
+<p>It was a long, steep ascent, hewn out of the solid
+rock; but at last Paul stood before the great gates of
+the castle, and paused to take breath. Hundreds of
+feet below him his yacht was riding at anchor, looking
+like a toy vessel upon a painted sea, and a little group
+of scattered lights showed him where the hamlet lay.
+Before him was the stern, massive front of the castle,
+wrapped in profound gloom, but standing out in clear,
+ponderous outline against the starlit sky. There
+seemed to be no light from any part of it, and the great
+iron gates leading into the courtyard were closed. Nor
+was there any sound at all, not even the barking of a
+dog. It was like a dwelling of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>A great, rusty bell-chain hung by the side of the
+gate, and as there seemed to be no other means of
+communication with the interior, Paul pulled it vigorously.
+Its hoarse echoes had scarcely died away before
+several rough-looking islanders, carrying flaring
+oil lamps, trooped into the courtyard from the rear of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page309" id="page309"></a>[pg 309]</span>
+the building, and one of them, drawing the bolts, threw
+open the gates.</p>
+
+<p>"I have come to see the Count," Paul said, addressing
+the nearest of them. "Will you conduct me to
+him?"</p>
+
+<p>The man replied energetically, but in a <i>patois</i> utterly
+unintelligible. He led the way across the courtyard
+towards the castle, however, and Paul followed close
+behind. They did not enter by the front, but by a
+low, nail-studded door at the extreme corner of the
+tower, which the man immediately closed and locked
+behind him.</p>
+
+<p>Paul looked around him curiously, but in the semi-darkness
+there was little to see. He was in a corridor,
+of which the walls were simply whitewashed, and the
+floor bare stone; but as they passed onward, down several
+passages, and up more than one flight of steps, the
+proportions of the place expanded. The ceilings grew
+loftier, and the corridors wider. Yet there was no attempt
+anywhere at decoration or furniture of any sort.
+The place was like an early-day prison&mdash;huge, bare,
+and damp. Once, crossing a balustraded corridor,
+there was a view of a huge hall down below, bare save
+for a few huge skins thrown carelessly around, and a
+great stack of firearms and other weapons which lined
+the walls on either side. It was the only sign of habitation
+that Paul had seen.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page310" id="page310"></a>[pg 310]</span>
+
+<p>Suddenly his guide paused, and held up his finger.
+Paul, too, listened; and close at hand he heard, to his
+surprise, the muffled sound of voices chanting some
+sad hymn in a deep minor key. The rise and fall of
+those mournful voices was wonderfully impressive.
+What could it mean? It was a dirge, a funeral hymn!
+Its every note seemed to breathe of death.</p>
+
+<p>"What is that?" Paul asked. "Is any one ill&mdash;dying?"</p>
+
+<p>The man shook his head. He could not understand.
+He only motioned to Paul to move silently, and hurried
+on. They were in a wide corridor, with disused
+doors on either side, but their feet fell no longer upon
+the bare stone. A rough sort of drugget had been
+hastily thrown down in the centre of the passage, and
+their movements roused no more strange echoes between
+the bare walls and the vaulted roof. At every
+step forward they took the chanting grew more distinct,
+and at last the man stopped at the end of the
+passage before a door, softly tapped at it. It was
+opened at once, and Paul found himself ushered into a
+great, dimly lit bedchamber.</p>
+
+<p>He glanced around him with keen interest. If the
+interior of the room was a little dilapidated, it was full
+of the remains of past magnificence. The walls were
+still covered with fine tapestry, of which the design
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page311" id="page311"></a>[pg 311]</span>
+was almost obliterated, although the texture and colouring
+still remained. The furniture was huge, and
+of the fashion of days gone by, and the bedstead was
+elaborately carved and surmounted by a coat of arms.
+Further Paul had but little opportunity to discover,
+for as soon as his presence became known in the room,
+a black-cowled monk left the bedside and approached
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"We have been expecting you," he said in Italian,
+"and we fear now that you come too late. Our poor
+lady is beyond human skill!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul looked at him in astonishment. "I do not
+quite understand you! It is the Count of Cruta whom
+I came to see!"</p>
+
+<p>The priest started back, and commenced fumbling
+with a lamp which stood on a table at the foot of the
+bed. "Are you not the German doctor from Palermo?"
+he asked, bending over towards Paul, with his keen,
+dark face alight with suspicion and distrust.</p>
+
+<p>Paul shook his head. "I am no doctor at all!" he
+answered. "I am an Englishman, and my name is
+Paul de Vaux!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" There was a faint, incoherent cry from the
+bed&mdash;a cry, which, faint though it was, shook with
+stifled emotion. Both men turned round, and Paul
+could see that the other's face was dark and stern.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page312" id="page312"></a>[pg 312]</span>
+
+<p>The woman, who had been lying on the bed still
+and motionless as a corpse, had raised herself with a
+sudden, spasmodic movement. Her cheeks were sunken
+to the bone, and her eyes were large and staring.</p>
+
+<p>The seal of death was upon her face, but Paul recognised
+her. It was the woman whom he had seen
+last in the drawing-room of Major Harcourt's house,
+the woman whom Adrea had called her stepmother.</p>
+
+<p>He took a sudden step forward, and she held out her
+hands in a gesture half of welcome, half of fear. "Paul
+de Vaux! Holy Mother of God! What has brought
+you here&mdash;here into the tiger's den? Come close to
+me! Hasten!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul stepped forward, but the priest stood between
+them, holding out his hands in a threatening gesture.
+"Sister, forbear!" he cried sternly. "You have made
+your peace with God; you have done with the world
+and all its follies. Close your eyes and pray. Fix
+your thoughts upon things above!"</p>
+
+<p>She did not heed him. She did not even look towards
+him. Her eyes were fixed upon Paul, and he
+read their message aright.</p>
+
+<p>"This woman wishes to speak to me. Stand aside,
+and let me go to her!" he exclaimed. "If she be indeed
+dying, surely you should respect her wishes."</p>
+
+<p>He spoke imperatively, for the priest stood in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page313" id="page313"></a>[pg 313]</span>
+way, and prevented his approach; pointing towards the
+door with a stern, commanding gesture.</p>
+
+<p>"There must be no converse between you and this
+woman!" he said. "I am no lover of violent deeds;
+but if you insist upon forcing your way to her bedside,
+I shall summon the Count, and you will pay for
+your rashness with your life. Your name and features
+are a certain death warrant in this house. Escape
+while you may, and <i>pax vobiscum</i>. Remain and I cannot
+save you!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul glanced round the room. Two monks were
+standing with lighted tapers on the further side of the
+bed, one of whom was mumbling a Latin prayer. The
+man who had brought him here was gone. There was
+no one else in the room, except the priest and himself.</p>
+
+<p>"You are inhuman!" he said shortly. "The prayers
+of a dying woman are more to me than your threats.
+Stand on one side!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul laid his hand heavily upon the priest's shoulder.
+He was prepared even to have used force had it
+been necessary, but it was not. The latter moved
+away at once, shaking his robes free from Paul's touch
+with contemptuous gesture, and calling one of the
+monks to him, Paul sank on one knee by the side of
+the dying woman, and bent low down over her.</p>
+
+<p>"Madame de Merteuill, you have something to say to
+me!" he whispered. "What is it?"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page314" id="page314"></a>[pg 314]</span>
+
+<p>Her voice was very low and very faint. She was
+even then upon the threshold of death. Each word
+came out with a painful effort, but with a curious distinctness.
+"I am not Madame de Merteuill at all! I am
+the daughter of the Count of Cruta!"</p>
+
+<p>She paused to gather fresh strength, and Paul caught
+hold of some of the bedclothes, and clutched them in
+his fingers convulsively. This woman, the daughter
+of the Count of Cruta! this wan, faded creature, the
+girl whom his father had borne away in triumph! His
+brain reeled with the wonder of it! If only he had
+known a few weeks ago! She should never have left
+the Hermitage until she had told him everything!
+Was it too late now? She was trying to speak to him.
+Was he upon the brink of a tremendous revelation?
+Was the whole past about to be made clear? Oh! if
+the old Count would keep away for awhile.</p>
+
+<p>Her lips commenced to move. He bent close over
+her, determined not to lose a syllable. "You know
+the story about your father, Martin de Vaux and me.
+I&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes! I know!" he assured her softly. "I have
+only heard it lately!"</p>
+
+<p>"From whom?"</p>
+
+<p>"From the priest who was always with you at De
+Vaux,&mdash;from your son!" he added, as the truth
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page315" id="page315"></a>[pg 315]</span>
+suddenly swept in upon him. Yes; Father Adrian was
+this woman's son!</p>
+
+<p>Her corpse-like face was fixed steadily upon him.
+Her words were monotonous and slow, yet they preserved
+their distinctness. "You have come here to
+know the truth of the story he told you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; I have come to discover it, if I can!"</p>
+
+<p>"The holy Saints must have brought you to me. The
+story&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes?"</p>
+
+<p>"The story is false!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul bent lower still, with strained hearing. There
+had been a plot, then, after all. Oh, if she should die
+without finishing her story! He looked into her bloodless
+face, and his pulses throbbed at fever-heat.</p>
+
+<p>"You know my story," she murmured. "I commence
+at the time when I left your father in Paris. I
+had thought myself hardened in my sin; I was mistaken.
+Repentance crept slowly but surely in upon
+me immediately after my father's visit to us. His
+words haunted me. I began to steal away in the evening
+to vespers at the Church of St. Cecilia. One night
+a grave, sweet-faced priest stood up in the pulpit; and
+as his words sank into my heart my sin rose up before
+me black and grim, and the burden of it grew intolerable.
+After the service I sought him, and I confessed.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page316" id="page316"></a>[pg 316]</span>
+On the morrow I left Martin secretly and without
+adieu. Count Hirsfeld aided my escape. I came
+here!</p>
+
+<p>"I came, hoping for forgiveness; but he, my father,
+could not forget the past. I found him living in grim
+and fierce solitude, shunned and dreaded by every one,
+ever brooding over my sin and his dishonour. He
+made me stay, yet he cursed me.</p>
+
+<p>"Six months after my arrival Adrian was born. It
+was while I lay between life and death that I wrote
+that letter to your father. Afterwards I told my father
+what I had done. The letter lay there; I dared not
+send it without my father's sanction. I sent for him
+and told him all. To my surprise, he consented. He
+did more than that; he spoke of it to Count Hirsfeld,
+and the Count volunteered to take the letter to England.
+Their readiness made me worried and anxious.
+I knew how they hated Martin de Vaux, and I was suspicious.
+I called the doctor to my side, and questioned
+him closely. He declared solemnly that I could not
+live a fortnight; it was impossible. I put my suspicions
+away. It was for the honour of his name that
+my father had consented to receive Martin beneath his
+roof; there could be no other reason. And I myself
+felt that the end was near. My body was cold, and
+there was a deadly faintness, against which I was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page317" id="page317"></a>[pg 317]</span>
+always struggling. I dreaded only lest he should come
+too late!</p>
+
+<p>"It was only the night before his arrival that I
+learnt the truth. I was lying with my eyes closed, and
+they thought that I was asleep. The doctor and my
+father were talking together in whispers. The crisis
+was over, I heard them say. In a few days Adrian
+would be born, and I should speedily recover, if all
+went well. I nerved myself, and called my father to
+me. I had overheard, I said; if Martin came, I would
+not marry him. His anger was terrible. Both Count
+Hirsfeld and he had known from the commencement
+that I was likely to recover, but they wished to see
+Martin tricked into marrying me. I was firm; I would
+not consent! I had written that letter believing myself
+to be dying. If Martin came, I would not see him
+now. If he was forced into my presence, I should tell
+him the truth.</p>
+
+<p>"My father left me, speechless with rage. For the
+next week my door was kept carefully locked, and no
+one but the doctor and the nurse were permitted to enter.
+Yet I learnt afterwards all that happened. Marie,
+my maid, who was slowly dying of consumption, was
+moved into the principal bedchamber; and when Martin
+arrived, she was made to personate me. It was the
+priest who gained her consent; the priest who confessed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page318" id="page318"></a>[pg 318]</span>
+her and gave her absolution. His share of the spoil
+was to be the De Vaux estates, handed over to the
+Church if ever they carried out their plot successfully.
+Martin came, and, as he thought, granted that fervent
+prayer of mine. They stood around him with drawn
+swords; they would not allow him to approach the bed.
+As soon as the ceremony was over, he was thrust from
+the castle.</p>
+
+<p>"It happened that in less than a week Marie died.
+From my bed, which faced the window, I saw the little
+funeral procession leave the castle&mdash;my father and
+Count Hirsfeld the chief mourners. I saw Martin following
+away off, with sorrowing face, and I was glad
+then that I had not deceived him. I saw him weeping
+over the grave which he believed to be mine. The
+day afterwards my son was born.</p>
+
+<p>"As soon as Adrian could crawl about, he was taken
+from me by the priests. They sent him to Italy, where
+he grew up a stranger to me. When he returned, I
+did not know him. I spoke to him of that false marriage;
+I wept for his lack of parentage. He knew
+everything; he spoke to me of it coldly, but without
+unkindness. He was a son of the Church, he said; he
+needed no other mother.</p>
+
+<p>"He dwelt for awhile at the monastery, and it was
+while he was there that I became suspicious. My
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page319" id="page319"></a>[pg 319]</span>
+father, and he, and the Superior of the monastery
+were always together. They seemed to be urging
+something upon him, which he was loath to undertake.
+By degrees I found it all out. Adrian was
+to go to England as my lawful son and claim the
+De Vaux estates for the Church. At first he was
+unwilling; but by degrees they won upon him.
+Warning was sent to Martin de Vaux, and he came
+here swiftly&mdash;to his death! I was kept a close prisoner,
+but I found out everything that was happening.
+For years afterwards, Adrian was undecided
+whether to go to England and claim the estates. At
+last he decided, unknown to me, to go. I escaped
+and followed him. I tried my best to persuade him,
+but failed. I came back here ill&mdash;to die&mdash;to die!"</p>
+
+<p>"And Adrea?"</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea? She knew nothing! How could she?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know who Adrea was?"</p>
+
+<p>She seemed surprised that anything else could,
+for a moment, occupy his mind after the story to
+which he had listened; but she struggled to answer
+him. "She was Count Hirsfeld's daughter! He
+never spoke to me of her mother! It was in Constantinople.
+I am afraid&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He bowed his head. "I understand," he said
+simply. The colour had suddenly flooded into his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page320" id="page320"></a>[pg 320]</span>
+cheeks, and there was a mist before his eyes. Even
+in that supreme moment, when her senses were failing
+and her eyes were growing dim, she saw and
+understood.</p>
+
+<p>"I wanted to be kind to her always," she faltered.
+"We would have adopted her, but she would
+not stay here. She was unhappy, and I helped her to
+escape. I had my reasons!"</p>
+
+<p>He had already guessed at them, and he held out
+his hand. He did not wish to hear any more. There
+was a moment's silence. She was looking at him with
+dim, wistful eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"You&mdash;you are very like your father!" she said,
+painfully. "Will you kiss me?"</p>
+
+<p>He stooped down and kissed the pale, trembling
+lips, and held her hands tightly. Her breath was
+coming fast, and she spoke with difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God they brought you here instead of the
+doctor! I can die&mdash;at peace now! But you&mdash;you are
+in danger! You must escape from here! You must
+not lose a minute! Oh, you do not know! you do not
+know! The Count is cruel&mdash;bitterly cruel! He will
+not come to me although I die. He will not forgive,
+although I have suffered agonies! He is my father but
+he will not forgive me. And you&mdash;you are in danger
+if he finds you! They have gone for him! Ah! I
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page321" id="page321"></a>[pg 321]</span>
+remember! Father Andrew went for him! He is afraid
+that I shall tell you the truth, and that the Church
+will not gain your property. Quick! you must go!
+Kiss me once more, Paul, and go! Go quickly! These
+monks are wolves, but they are cowards! Strike them
+down if they try to stop you! Don't hurt my father!
+Farewell! farewell!"</p>
+
+<p>"I will stay with you till the end," Paul whispered.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no! away! I cannot die in peace and think of
+you&mdash;in danger. I want to pray. Leave me, now,
+Paul. Dear Martin! Martin, my love&mdash;is it you?"</p>
+
+<p>Her mind was wandering, and she saw her lover of
+old days in the man whose hand she clasped so frantically;
+and Paul, although out in the passage he could
+hear the sound of hurrying feet, could not tear himself
+away from her dying embrace. A faint, curious
+smile was parting her pallid lips, and her dim eyes
+seemed suddenly to have caught a dim reflection of
+the light to come.</p>
+
+<p>"Martin! Martin! there is a mist everywhere&mdash;but
+I see you, dear love! Wait for me! Let us go hand
+in hand&mdash;hand in hand through the Valley of the
+Shadow of Death. Oh, my love! it has been a weary,
+weary while. Hold me tighter, Martin! I cannot feel
+your hand! Ah! at last, at last! Farewell sorrow,
+and grief, and suffering! We are together once more&mdash;a
+new world&mdash;behind the clouds! I am happy."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page322" id="page322"></a>[pg 322]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXV</h2>
+
+<h3>"FROM OUT LIFE'S THUNDERS TO A STRANGE, SWEET
+WORLD"</h3>
+
+
+<p>She was dead, and, after all, her end had been
+crowned with peace. She did not hear the door
+thrown roughly open, the swelling of angry voices, or
+the fast-approaching tramp of many feet. Nor did
+Paul heed any of these signs of coming danger; he
+had folded his strong arms around her, and his lips,
+pressed close to her, seemed to draw the last quivering
+breath from her frail body. It was only when her
+head sunk back, and he knew that she was dead, that
+he laid her reverently down and turned around.</p>
+
+<p>The room was full of strange flashes of light and
+grotesque shadows falling upon the white faces of half
+a dozen monks. Standing in front of them was Father
+Andrew, and by his side was an old man, tall and
+straight, with snow-white beard and hair. He stood
+in full glare of a torch held by one of the monks behind
+him, and his face seemed like the face of a
+corpse, save for the steady, malignant light in his jet-black
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page323" id="page323"></a>[pg 323]</span>
+eyes. As Paul turned round, with his features
+suddenly visible in a stream of lurid light, he raised
+his arm and pointed a long, skinny finger steadily
+towards him.</p>
+
+<p>"The son of the devil!" he cried, his deep, tremulous
+voice awakening strange echoes in the high
+vaulted chamber. "Welcome! Welcome! Thrice welcome!"</p>
+
+<p>Paul straightened himself, and reverently laid the
+little white hand which he had been clasping across
+the coverlet. "She is dead!" he said solemnly. "What
+I came here to learn from you, I have learnt from her.
+Let me go!"</p>
+
+<p>He moved a step forward, but the old man remained
+there in the way, motionless, and around the door were
+gathered a solid phalanx of monks. Paul halted, conscious
+at once of his danger. The white faces of the
+monks were all bent upon him, full of savage, animal
+ferocity, and a gleam of something still worse lit up
+the dark eyes of that old man. Their very silence
+was unnatural and oppressive. Paul bore it, looking
+round amongst them with questioning eyes, until he
+could bear it no longer.</p>
+
+<p>"Am I a prisoner?" he cried. "What do you want
+with me? Speak! some of you! Count of Cruta, answer
+me!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page324" id="page324"></a>[pg 324]</span>
+
+<p>A dull, hollow laugh echoed through the chamber.
+Paul turned away, sick with horror. It was like being
+in the power of a hoard of madmen. The air of the
+place, too, seemed suddenly to have become stifling.
+The perspiration was standing out upon his forehead
+in great beads. It was a relief when the Count
+spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"You have done well, Paul de Vaux, to find your
+way here&mdash;here into the very presence of a dying
+woman, and force from her lips a confession that has
+made you glad. You think that you will go back
+now to your country, and cheat me of my well-planned
+vengeance. You will hold up your head once more;
+you will mock at the Church's rights. You will go
+your way through the world rich and honoured; you
+will call yourself by an old name. You will pluck all
+the roses of life. Worthy son of a worthy father!
+Look at me! Who was it who blasted my life, my
+happiness, my honour, my name? A name grander
+and older than his, as the oak is older and grander
+than the currant bush. When he took my daughter
+into his arms, he wrote the funeral of his race! I
+played with him, as a tiger plays with a miserable
+Hindoo! When life was sweetest to him, I struck.
+He came here for mercy; I laughed, and I was merciful.
+I stabbed him to the heart. The knife hangs
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page325" id="page325"></a>[pg 325]</span>
+side by side with the arms of the Crusaders of Cruta.
+You are his son! You are the next to die! You will
+not leave these walls alive! These monks know you!
+It is you who hold the lands of De Vaux, which by
+right belong to their Holy Church. You would go
+back to resist their just claims! The good of the
+Church demands that you should not go back! You
+shall not go back! The Count of Cruta demands that
+you shall not go back. You shall not go back! You
+shall be slain, even where your father was slain, but
+you shall not creep back to your hole to die! Your
+bones shall whiten and shrivel upon the rocks. Your
+blood shall be an honoured stain upon my floor.
+Monks of Cruta! there he stands! He who alone can
+resist your just possession of the broad lands and
+abbey of De Vaux. The despoiled Church cries to
+you to strike. The end is great! Haul him away!"</p>
+
+<p>They were around him like a pack of wolves, their lean
+faces hungry and fierce, and their long, skinny fingers
+clutching at his throat and at his clothing. One silently
+drew a knife and brandished it over him. Paul
+wrenched himself free with a tremendous effort, but they
+were upon him again. They forced him slowly backwards,
+backwards even across the bed where that dead
+woman lay with her eyes as yet unclosed. The great
+heat, as much as their numbers, was overpowering him.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page326" id="page326"></a>[pg 326]</span>
+His eyes were bloodshot, and there was a choking in his
+throat. Again the long knife was lifted; other hands held
+him motionless, ready for the blow. He was too weak to
+struggle now. He saw the blue steel quivering in the
+air. Then he closed his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>What was that? There was a shrill cry from one of
+the monks, and Paul, finding their grasp relaxed,
+started up. They were cowering down like a flock of
+frightened animals. The room seemed full of red fire.
+The glass in the windows cracked; it flew into pieces,
+and a column of smoke curled in. The door was thrown
+open; Guiseppe stood for a moment on the threshold.</p>
+
+<p>"Fly!" he cried. "Fly! The castle is on fire. The
+flames are near!"</p>
+
+<p>They rushed for the door like panic-stricken cattle
+before a great prairie fire, biting and trampling upon
+one another in their haste. Paul followed, but the old
+Count stood in his way, trembling, not with fear, but
+with anger.</p>
+
+<p>"Cowards! beasts!" he cried after the flying
+monks. "But you shall not escape me!"</p>
+
+<p>He wound his long arms around his enemy, but the
+strength of his manhood was gone, and without effort
+Paul threw him on one side. Then, through the
+smoke, he found himself face to face with Guiseppe.</p>
+
+<p>"This way, Signor!" he said coolly. "Follow me
+closely!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page327" id="page327"></a>[pg 327]</span>
+
+<p>The old Count was up again, and seemed about to
+attack them. Suddenly he changed his mind, and
+with a hoarse cry, ran down an empty corridor. Guiseppe
+and Paul turned in the opposite direction.</p>
+
+<p>"We must fly, Signor!" the man cried. "He goes
+to the cellars! He is a devil! He will blow up the
+castle! Cover up your nose and your mouth!"</p>
+
+<p>They hurried along wide, deserted corridors, down
+stone stairs, and finally reached what seemed to be a
+circular underground passage. Round and round they
+went, until Paul's head swam; but the air was cooler,
+and every moment brought relief. Suddenly there was
+a cold breeze. They turned one more corner, and Guiseppe
+stopped. They were in an open aperture facing
+the sea, barely twenty feet below. A small boat with
+a single man in it was there waiting.</p>
+
+<p>"Dive!" cried Guiseppe. "We must not wait for
+the rope!"</p>
+
+<p>Over they went almost simultaneously. The shock
+of the cold water sent the blood dancing once more
+through Paul's veins. He came to the surface just
+after his guide, cool and refreshed. They scrambled
+into the boat, and Paul gave a little cry of wonder.
+They were drifting on a sea of ruddy gold, and the
+space all around them was brilliant with the reflection.
+High above, the flames were leaping up towards the
+sky, and the dull sing-song of their roar set the very
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page328" id="page328"></a>[pg 328]</span>
+air vibrating. Guiseppe, still dripping, seized an oar.</p>
+
+<p>"Pull, for your lives! pull!" he cried anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>His companion shrugged his shoulders. "But why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ask no questions! You will see!"</p>
+
+<p>They did see. They were barely half-way to the
+yacht, when there came the sound of a low rumbling
+from the castle. Suddenly it broke into a roar. Belching
+sheets of flame burst out on every side. Huge
+cracks in that brilliant light were suddenly visible in
+the walls, creeping in a jagged line from the foundation
+to the turret. Fragments of the stone work flew
+outwards and upwards. It seemed as though some
+mighty internal force were splitting the place up. The
+men in the boat sat breathless and transfixed. Only
+Guiseppe whispered: "It is the old Count! He is the
+devil! He has blown the place up!"</p>
+
+<p>There was another, and then a series of explosions.
+Fragments of the rock and stone fell hissing into the
+water scarcely a hundred feet away. Great waves
+rolled towards them. It seemed as though the earth
+underneath were shaking. Then it all died away, and
+there was silence. Only the blackened walls of the
+castle remained, with the dying flames still curling fitfully
+around them. The air grew darker, and the
+colour faded from the sea.</p>
+
+<p>"It is the last of the Count of Cruta, and his castle
+of horrors!" cried Guiseppe. "God be thanked!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page329" id="page329"></a>[pg 329]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXVI</h2>
+
+<h3>"LOVE THAN DEATH ITSELF MORE STRONG"</h3>
+
+
+<p>I had no thought of writing in you again, my silent
+friend. Only a little while ago I said to myself, the
+time has gone by when solitude and heart hunger could
+drive me to your pages for consolation. Only a little while
+ago, it is true; and yet between the past and future is
+fixed a mighty gulf. As I write these words I stand upon
+the threshold of death! What death may mean, I know
+not! I have no religion to throw bright gleams of hope
+upon its dark mysteries. I have no hope of any other
+life, save the one I am quitting! If I am resigned and
+calm, it is because the lamp of my life has burnt out, and
+I am in darkness. I wait for death as a maiden waits
+for the first gleams of dawn on her marriage day.</p>
+
+<p>Who said that love was everlasting? They lied! Love
+is a dream, a floating shadow full of golden lights,
+quenched by the first breath of morning! Who should
+know, if I do not know? Who has done more for love
+than I&mdash;I whose hands are red with blood, I who this
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page330" id="page330"></a>[pg 330]</span>
+night must die? It was for his sake, I struck&mdash;for his
+sake! and now that the hour of my punishment must
+come, I sit here alone and forsaken, waiting for the signal
+which must end my life! It was for his sake! A death-white
+face rises up before me, and a hoarse, dying cry
+sobs ever in my ears! I pass on my way through the
+Valley of the Shadow of Death with no hope to cheer me,
+forsaken, friendless, and shaken with dim fears! Am I
+alone! He for whom I struck has turned from me. Oh,
+the bitter cruelty of it! It was he who taught me what
+love was, and yet of love he knows nothing, else I would
+not be here to meet my doom alone! Oh! Paul, Paul!
+Oh, for one touch of your hand, for one kind look! My
+heart is sick and faint with longing! Am I indeed so
+low and vile a thing that you should turn away with never
+a single word of farewell? O! my love, you are hard
+indeed! If my hands are stained with blood&mdash;for whose
+sake was it? It was only a word I craved for, Paul!
+Only a word&mdash;a look, even! Was it too great a boon to
+grant?</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Oh, memory! help me, help me to keep sane just a
+few more hours&mdash;until the end comes. It is a last luxury!
+I will think of those golden days we spent together
+ere the blow fell. Ah! how happy we were! Every breath
+of life was sweet; every moment seemed charged with the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page331" id="page331"></a>[pg 331]</span>
+delicious happiness! The past, with its haunting
+shadows, and the memory of that grim, deathly figure huddled
+up amongst the ferns in the bare pine wood had
+perished. Background and foreground had vanished in
+the bewildering joys of the present. Oh! Paul, that was
+happiness, indeed. All measures of outside things seemed
+lost! At times I found it hard to recollect in what country
+we were! Oh! the world, such as ours was, is a sweet,
+sweet world!</p>
+
+<p>At last the blow fell. He came to me one morning,
+as white as a sheet, with an old, soiled copy of the Times
+in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Read, Adrea," he cried, thrusting it into my hand. "A
+horrible thing has happened!"</p>
+
+<p>I let the paper fall through my fingers. An agony of
+fear was upon me. "I know! I know! Do not ask me
+to read it."</p>
+
+<p>"You knew, and you did not tell me!"</p>
+
+<p>"No! I&mdash;no!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a deadly swimming before my eyes, and a
+throbbing in my ears. I sank back, grateful for the unconsciousness
+which gave me respite, however short. When
+recovered, I was on the verge of a fever; and Paul, seeing
+my condition, did not refer to the news which had
+been such a shock to him. But for an hour the next day
+he was away from me, writing letters home. When he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page332" id="page332"></a>[pg 332]</span>
+returned there was a restraint between us. He was kind
+as ever, but restless and unsettled. As yet he had no suspicion,
+but I could see that he was longing to get back
+to England.... The thought was like madness to
+me.</p>
+
+<p>Then came the beginning of the end. We were staying
+in a villa which we had rented for a month near
+Florence, and one day we drove into the city together to
+do some shopping. Paul was at the post-office, and I was
+crossing the square to go to him, when of a sudden I felt
+a hand upon my dress, and a hoarse whisper in my ear.
+I started round in terror. A man, pale and hollow-eyed,
+stood by my side. It was Gomez!</p>
+
+<p>"Listen quickly!" he said. "I must not stay by your
+side! You are in danger! The English police are upon
+your track!"</p>
+
+<p>I caught hold of the railing to prevent myself from
+falling. Above my head, a little flock of pigeons lazily
+flapped their wings against the deep blue sky. All around,
+the sunlit air was full of laughing voices, and gaily dressed
+crowds of people were passing backwards and forwards
+only a few yards away. Already, one or two were glancing
+in my direction curiously. In a moment Paul would
+come out of the post-office, looking for me. I made a
+great effort, and steadied myself.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page333" id="page333"></a>[pg 333]</span>
+
+<p>"Tell me! What can I do?"</p>
+
+<p>He answered me quickly, keeping his back turned
+to the stream of people. "You must fly! It may be
+already too late, but in twenty-four hours you will certainly
+be arrested if you are in Florence. I have
+travelled night and day to find you. The holy saints
+grant that it may not be too late. Call yourself by a
+strange name; and if Paul de Vaux be with you, see
+that he alters his also. There are already two of the
+detectives in Florence searching for you. A third,
+with a warrant, may be here at any time. Get to the
+furthest corner of the world, for everything is known.
+Farewell!"</p>
+
+<p>He left me abruptly; and although I felt that my
+doom had been spoken, I walked firmly across the
+square to meet Paul. I would tell him everything.
+He should be my judge. My love should plead for
+me! It would triumph; yes! it would triumph! I
+was convinced of it! As for the danger I was in, I
+thought less of that.</p>
+
+<p>On the steps of the postoffice I met Paul. He held
+in his hand a bundle of papers, one of which he had
+opened, and, as he raised his head and looked at me, I
+saw that what I had dreaded had come to pass. He
+looked like a man stricken down by some sudden and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page334" id="page334"></a>[pg 334]</span>
+terrible blow. He was white even to the lips, and a
+strange light burned in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>He laid his hand upon my arm. Was it my fancy,
+or did he really recoil a little as he touched me?
+"Let us go home!" he said hoarsely. "I have&mdash;something
+to say to you!"</p>
+
+<p>We entered the carriage, which was waiting near,
+and drove off. We came together into this room. It
+was barely two hours ago. He closed the door and
+turned towards me. I did not wait for his question.
+I told him everything!</p>
+
+<p>Ah me! I had thought that love was a different
+thing. I had sinned, it is true, but he was not my
+judge. So I commenced, humbled and sorrowful indeed,
+but with no fear of what was before me. But
+gradually, as I watched his face, a cold, ghastly dread
+crept in upon me. What did it mean&mdash;that blank look
+of horror, his quiet withdrawal from the only caress I
+attempted? I finished&mdash;abruptly&mdash;and called out to
+him piteously,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Paul! Paul! Why do you turn away? Oh! kiss me,
+Paul! It was horrible, but it was to save you!"</p>
+
+<p>He did not answer; he did not hold out his arms, or
+make any movement towards me. I touched his arm;
+and oh! horrible! he shuddered. I crept away into a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page335" id="page335"></a>[pg 335]</span>
+corner of the room, with a strange, burning pain in my
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>"How long is it, since you saw Gomez?" he asked,
+and his voice, strained, yet low, seemed to come from a
+far distance.</p>
+
+<p>"An hour!&mdash;perhaps more&mdash;I cannot tell!"</p>
+
+<p>He stood before the door like a ghost. "I must go
+and try to find him! Forgive me, Adrea! I cannot
+talk now! I will come back!"</p>
+
+<p>So he left me. I have not seen him since! God
+only knows whether I shall see him again! My heart
+is torn with the agony of it! I cannot bear it any
+longer! If he is not here in half an hour I shall
+end it!</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>He has not come! Ten minutes more!</p>
+
+<p>Five minutes!</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>It is done; I have taken poison! In half an hour I
+shall be dead! Oh! Paul, my love, my love, come to
+me! If I could only die in your arms, if I could only
+feel once more your kisses upon my lips! It is horrible
+to die alone! Already I feel weaker! Oh! if
+there be a God in heaven, send me Paul just for one
+last moment! I do not ask for forgiveness or pardon,
+only send me Paul! I am afraid to die alone! Never
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page336" id="page336"></a>[pg 336]</span>
+to see him again! Oh! I shall cry out! Paul! Paul!
+come to me! I do not ask for heaven, only to die in
+his arms, to&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>There were sounds upon the stairs, and in the hall;
+the sounds of a man's quick entrance and approach.
+Adrea, with that passionate prayer still quivering upon
+her lips, dragged herself to the door and listened. A
+moment's agonised apprehension, and then she staggered
+back, faint with joy. The door was opened, and
+quickly closed; Paul stood before her.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! my love! my love," she murmured. "Take
+me in your arms! It is for the last time!"</p>
+
+<p>He moved to her side, and supported her. "Adrea,"
+he said quietly, "I want you to change your things
+quickly, and come with me. There is a carriage at
+the door, and I have chartered a steamer to take us to
+Genoa. From there we can sail to-morrow for New
+York. Gomez was right; you are in danger here! Be
+brave, little woman, and all will be well!"</p>
+
+<p>She clung to him passionately, with her arms locked
+around his neck, and her wet face close to his. Only
+a confused sense of his words reached her. His tone
+and his embrace were sufficient.</p>
+
+<p>"And you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I go with you, of course! We shall begin a new
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page337" id="page337"></a>[pg 337]</span>
+life in a new world! Come! We have no time to
+lose!"</p>
+
+<p>"A new life in a new world." She repeated the
+words dreamily, still holding him to her. Then a sudden
+dizziness came. It passed away, but it reminded
+her that the end could not be far off.</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea, do you not understand? How cold your lips
+are! Try and bear up, love! We have a long journey
+before us!"</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head slowly. He began to notice
+that she was like a dead weight in his arms.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a long journey, love, but I go alone. You
+cannot come, Paul! Yet I am not afraid, now that you
+are here!"</p>
+
+<p>"Adrea! what do you mean? I will not leave you!
+Have courage! Adrea! Soon we shall leave all dangers
+behind us!"</p>
+
+<p>"Paul! do you not understand? I am dying!"</p>
+
+<p>Dying! He looked at her face, calm and even smiling,
+but terribly blanched and white, and he saw the
+empty phial upon the table. The whole truth swept
+in upon him. He staggered and almost fell with her.</p>
+
+<p>"It is best so," she whispered. "I only minded
+when&mdash;I thought that you might not be back in time.
+I am quite&mdash;content now!"</p>
+
+<p>"A doctor!" he cried hoarsely. "I must fetch a
+doctor! Adrea&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page338" id="page338"></a>[pg 338]</span>
+
+<p>"Please don't!" she interrupted. "Long before he
+could come&mdash;I should be dead. It is so much better!
+Did you think, Paul, that I could have you&mdash;tied for
+life&mdash;to a poor, hunted woman&mdash;forced to live always
+in a foreign country? Oh! no, no! I have had this
+poison by me ever since&mdash;in case&mdash;anything happened.
+Paul, carry me&mdash;to the sofa! There is&mdash;no pain&mdash;but
+I am getting weaker&mdash;very weak. My eyes are a little
+dim, too&mdash;but I can see you&mdash;Paul!"</p>
+
+<p>He obeyed her, and sank on his knees, with his
+arms still around her. It seemed to him that she had
+never been so lovely as in those last few minutes of
+her life. It was wonderful to see her resigned as she
+was.</p>
+
+<p>There was a brief silence, broken only by a sharp,
+convulsed sob from the kneeling man. Adrea, who
+heard it, stretched out her hand, and passed it caressingly
+along the side of his face. He caught it and
+covered it with kisses.</p>
+
+<p>"Paul, we have been happy together, have we not?"</p>
+
+<p>"My darling, you know it!"</p>
+
+<p>She raised herself a little, and spoke earnestly.
+"For me&mdash;it has been like heaven&mdash;and yet I am not
+sure&mdash;that it would have lasted. You would have
+wearied soon! My nature is too light a one to have
+satisfied you always. I have felt it! I&mdash;I know it!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page339" id="page339"></a>[pg 339]</span>
+
+<p>She paused, struggling for breath. He did not
+answer her. He only held her tighter, and whispered
+her name lovingly. In a moment she re-opened her
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"So&mdash;it is best&mdash;" she continued, with a little more
+effort. "Paul, things seem all so clear&mdash;to me now!
+I think of you in the future&mdash;it must be a happy future,
+Paul&mdash;I know it will! I see you the master of
+that grand old home of yours, up amongst the moors
+you love so much. I can see you there in the future,
+living your quiet, country life&mdash;always the same, honourable
+and just. I like to think of you there&mdash;it is
+so natural. I want you&mdash;to forget&mdash;these days then!
+Remember that it was&mdash;I&mdash;who&mdash;came to you, Paul!
+You had no&mdash;choice. I would come. If there has
+been&mdash;any sin&mdash;it has been&mdash;mine only. You were
+far above&mdash;poor me! I have dragged you down&mdash;a
+little way&mdash;but you will go back again! You will
+marry&mdash;some one good and worthy of you. It is my&mdash;last
+wish! God bless you, Paul, dear&mdash;dear, Paul.
+I think that I am&mdash;going now&mdash;kiss me!"</p>
+
+<p>"My love! My love! Oh! that you could live to
+be happy with me once more!"</p>
+
+<p>"There are steps upon the stairs&mdash;I think&mdash;but
+they come&mdash;too late! The book on the table&mdash;take it!
+It will&mdash;tell you&mdash;what you do not know&mdash;of my life!
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page340" id="page340"></a>[pg 340]</span>
+Farewell! Sister Elise! Is that you? Ah! back once
+more&mdash;in the old convent garden! How sweet&mdash;and
+gentle&mdash;the air is&mdash;and what perfumes! You here,
+Paul! You too! How dim your face seems&mdash;and yet&mdash;how
+happy it makes me&mdash;to see it. Dear Paul! we
+have been&mdash;so happy! Farewell!"</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>There were strangers in the room, but they came
+too late. They found only the corpse of a woman,
+whose dead lips were parted in a strangely sweet smile,
+and a strong man who had swooned by her side in the
+utter abandonment of his grief. The hand of human
+justice had been stayed by God's mercy!</p>
+
+<p>THE END.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h1>Do You Like Mental Surprises?</h1>
+
+<p>Things that make your eyes open wider, and cause
+you to assume a changed position, so that you can
+continue your reading without tiring? Sustained excitement
+and strange scenes that compel you to read
+on page after page with unflagging interest? Something
+that lifts you out of your world of care and
+business, and transports you to another land, clime,
+and scenes? Yes? Then don't fail to read</p>
+
+<h2>THE</h2>
+
+<h2>MYSTERY OF THE RAVENSPURS</h2>
+
+<h3>By FRED M. WHITE</h3>
+
+<p>the best book written by this popular author, since
+his "Crimson Blind" and "Corner House," which
+met with such tremendous success.</p>
+
+<p>It is a romantic tale of adventure, mystery and
+amateur detective work, with scenes laid in England,
+India, and the distant and comparatively unknown
+Thibet. A band of mystics from the latter country
+are the prime movers in the various conspiracies, and
+their new, unique, weird, strange methods form one
+of the features of the story.</p>
+
+<p>The book contains 320 pages, with four full-page
+illustrations and wrapper design in colors by
+DE TAKACS, handsomely bound in cloth.</p>
+
+<p><b>PRICE, $1.25, net. BY MAIL, POSTPAID, $1.35.</b></p>
+
+<p><b>We Heartily Recommend This Book.</b></p>
+
+<p><b>FOR SALE WHEREVER BOOKS ARE SOLD.</b></p>
+
+<p>J. S. OGILVIE PUBLISHING COMPANY</p>
+
+<p>57 Rose Street, New York</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h1>OGILVIE'S POPULAR COPYRIGHT LINE</h1>
+
+
+<h2>The Peer and the Woman</h2>
+
+<h3>By E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM</h3>
+
+<p><b>Author of "A Monk of Cruta," "The Missioner," etc.</b></p>
+
+<p><i>One of the Most Popular Authors of the present day.</i></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>A story of romance, mystery, and adventure, in
+which, as in many mystery stories, there is the adventuress,
+with whom, for some reason, the peer, notwithstanding
+his breeding and social position, becomes entangled,
+until he is mysteriously put out of the way.
+From this point on complication and adventure succeed
+each other in rapid succession, holding the reader in
+rapt fascination until the end of the story is reached,
+where the plots of love and mysterious disappearances
+are surprisingly unfolded.</p>
+
+<p>This story has been written in Mr. Oppenheim's most
+entertaining and interesting style, and will be appreciated
+by all lovers of the class of fiction which has made
+him famous.</p>
+
+<p><i>A Wonderful Story of Mystery.</i></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Bound in cloth, handsomely stamped in colors.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>SENT BY MAIL, POSTAGE PAID, FOR 75 CENTS.</p>
+
+<p>You can buy this at any bookstore or direct from us.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>J. S. OGILVIE PUBLISHING COMPANY</p>
+
+<p>57 Rose Street, New York
+
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's A Monk of Cruta, by E. Phillips Oppenheim
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MONK OF CRUTA ***
+
+***** This file should be named 31535-h.htm or 31535-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/1/5/3/31535/
+
+Produced by Alcina Hadwin, Suzanne Shell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/31535-h/images/cover.jpg b/31535-h/images/cover.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c865c43
--- /dev/null
+++ b/31535-h/images/cover.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/31535.txt b/31535.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4de7515
--- /dev/null
+++ b/31535.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,8583 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Monk of Cruta, by E. Phillips Oppenheim
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Monk of Cruta
+
+Author: E. Phillips Oppenheim
+
+Release Date: March 7, 2010 [EBook #31535]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MONK OF CRUTA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Alcina Hadwin, Suzanne Shell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+[Transcriber's note: All typographical errors have been corrected. All
+other inconsistencies in the text, including an unfinished sentence,
+have been left as is.]
+
+
+
+
+A MONK OF CRUTA
+
+BY
+
+E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM,
+
+_Author of "The Peer and the Woman," "A Millionaire of Yesterday,"
+Etc., Etc._
+
+ NEW YORK:
+ J. S. OGILVIE PUBLISHING COMPANY,
+ 57 ROSE STREET.
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1894, BY
+ F. TENNYSON NEELY.
+
+
+
+
+A MONK OF CRUTA.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAP. PAGE
+
+ I. "THE BLACK-ROBED PHANTOM, 'DEATH'" 11
+
+ II. "THE NEW ART" 32
+
+ III. "THE DANCING GIRL" 39
+
+ IV. "ADREA'S DIARY" 47
+
+ V. "THE FAR-OFF MUTTERING OF THE STORM TO COME" 50
+
+ VI. "AN ASHEN GREY DELIGHT" 61
+
+ VII. "WHO ARE YOU, AND WHAT YOUR MISSION" 73
+
+ VIII. "I AM WEARY OF A HOPELESS LOVE" 80
+
+ IX. "AH! HOW FAIR MY WEAKNESS FINDS THEE" 91
+
+ X. "I AM BUT A SLAVE, AND YET I BID THEE COME" 104
+
+ XI. "ADREA'S DIARY" 114
+
+ XII. "WE ARE LIKE SHOOTING STARS, WHOSE MEETING IS THEIR RUIN" 122
+
+ XIII. "THE PATH THAT LEADS TO MADMEN'S KINGDOMS" 129
+
+ XIV. "THE POISON OF HONEY FLOWERS" 136
+
+ XV. "AND MOST OF ALL WOULD I FLY FROM THE CRUEL MADNESS OF LOVE" 144
+
+ XVI. "'TWIXT YOU AND ME A NOISOME SHADOW CAST" 154
+
+ XVII. "IF LOVE YOU CHOOSE, THEN LOVE SHALL BE YOUR RUIN" 159
+
+ XVIII. "SOFTLY GLIMMERING THROUGH THE LAURELS AT THE QUIET
+ EVENFALL" 166
+
+ XIX. "BLOOD CALLS ALOUD FOR BLOOD AND NOT FOR HANDS ENTWINED" 174
+
+ XX. "THE NEW, STRONG WINE OF LOVE" 180
+
+ XXI. "ADREA'S DIARY" 185
+
+ XXII. "OH! HEART OF STONE, YET FLESH TO ALL SAVE ME" 195
+
+ XXIII. "MY LIPS ARE CHARGED WITH TRUTH, AND JUSTICE BIDS ME SPEAK" 206
+
+ XXIV. "THE SHATTERED VASE OF LOVE'S MOST HOLY VOWS" 218
+
+ XXV. "A BECKONING VOICE FROM OUT A SHADOWY LAND" 224
+
+ XXVI. "LATE THOU COMEST, CRUEL THOU HAST BEEN" 232
+
+ XXVII. "GRIM FIGURES TRACED BY SORROW'S FIERY HAND" 241
+
+ XXVIII. "ADREA'S DIARY" 249
+
+ XXIX. "ADREA'S DIARY" 263
+
+ XXX. "ADREA'S DIARY" 275
+
+ XXXI. "ADREA'S DIARY" 280
+
+ XXXII. "THE LORD OF CRUTA" 291
+
+ XXXIII. "THE DAWN OF A SHORT, SWEET LIFE" 298
+
+ XXXIV. "A VOICE AND FIGURE FROM THE DISTANT PAST" 308
+
+ XXXV. "FROM OUT LIFE'S THUNDERS TO A STRANGE, SWEET WORLD" 322
+
+ XXXVI. "LOVE THAN DEATH ITSELF MORE STRONG" 329
+
+
+
+
+A MONK OF CRUTA.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+"THE BLACK-ROBED PHANTOM 'DEATH'"
+
+
+"Father Adrian!"
+
+"I am here!"
+
+"I saw the doctor talking with you aside! How long have I to live? He
+told you the truth! Repeat his words to me!"
+
+The tall, gaunt young priest drew nearer to the bedside, and shook his
+head with a slow, pitying gesture.
+
+"The time was short--short indeed. Yet, why should you fear? Your
+confession has been made! I myself have pronounced your absolution;
+the holy Church has granted to you her most holy sacrament."
+
+"Fear! Bah! I have no fear! It is a matter of calculation. Shall I see
+morning break?"
+
+"You may; but you will never see the mid-day sun."
+
+The dying man raised himself with a slow, painful movement, and
+pointed to the window.
+
+"Throw up the window."
+
+He was obeyed. A servant who had been sitting quietly in the shadows
+of the vast apartment, with his head buried in his hands, rose and did
+his master's bidding.
+
+"What hour is it?"
+
+"Three o'clock."
+
+"Gomez, strain your eyes seaward. Is there no light on the horizon?"
+
+"None! The storm has wrapped the earth in darkness. Listen!"
+
+A torrent of rain was swept against the streaming window pane, and a
+gust of wind shook the frame in its sockets. The watcher turned away
+from the window with a mute gesture of despair. No eye could pierce
+that black chaos. He sank again into his seat, and looked around
+shuddering. The high, vaulted chamber was lit by a pair of candles
+only, leaving the greater part of it in gloom. Grim, fantastic shadows
+lurked in the corners, and lay across the bare floor. Even the tall
+figure of the priest, on his knees before a rude wooden crucifix,
+seemed weird and ghostly. The heavy, mildewed bed-hangings shook
+and trembled in the draughts which filled the room, and the candles
+flickered and burnt low in their sockets. Gomez watched them with a
+sort of anxious fascination. His master's life was burning out,
+minute for minute, with those candles. Twenty-five years of constant
+companionship would be ended in a few brief hours. Gomez was not
+disposed to trouble much at this; but he bethought himself of a snug
+little abode in Piccadilly, where the discomforts now surrounding them
+were quite unknown. Surely, to die there would be a luxury compared
+with this. He began to feel personally aggrieved that his master
+should have chosen such an out-of-the-way hole to end his days in.
+Then came a rush of thought, and he was grave. He knew why! Yes! he
+knew why!
+
+The dying man lay quite still, almost as though his time were already
+come. Once he raised himself, and the feeble light flashed across a
+grey, haggard face and a pair of burning eyes. But his effort was
+only momentary. He sank back again, and lay there with his eyes half
+closed, and breathing softly. He was nursing his strength.
+
+One, two, three, four, five! The harsh clanging of a brazen clock
+somewhere in the building had penetrated to the chamber, followed by a
+deep, resonant bell. The man on the bed lifted his head.
+
+"How goes the storm?" he asked softly.
+
+Gomez stood up and faced the window.
+
+"The storm dies with the night, sir," he answered. "The wind has
+fallen."
+
+"When does day break?"
+
+Gomez looked at his watch.
+
+"In one hour, sir."
+
+"Stay by the window, Gomez, and let your eyes watch for the dawn."
+
+The priest frowned. "Surely the time has come when you should quit
+your hold on earthly things," he said quietly. "What matters the dawn!
+soon you will lose yourself in an everlasting sleep, and the dawn for
+you will be eternity. Take this crucifix, and pray with me."
+
+The dying man pushed it away with a gesture almost contemptuous.
+
+"Is there no light on the sea yet, Gomez?" he asked anxiously.
+
+Gomez leant forward till his face touched the window pane. He strained
+his eyes till they ached; but the darkness was impenetrable. Yet
+stay,--what was that? A feeble yellow light was glimmering far away
+in the heart of that great gulf of darkness. He held his breath, and
+watched it steadily. Then he turned round.
+
+"There is a light in the far distance, sir," he said. "I cannot tell
+what it may be, but there is a light."
+
+A wave of excitement passed over the strong, wasted features of the
+man upon the bed. He half raised himself, and his voice was almost
+firm.
+
+"Push my bed to the window," he ordered.
+
+The two men, priest and servant, bent all their strength to the task,
+and inch by inch they moved the great, creaking structure. When at
+last they had succeeded, and paused to take breath, the light in the
+distance had become stronger and more apparent. Together the three men
+watched it grow; master and servant, with breathless eagerness, the
+priest with a show of displeasure in his severe face. Suddenly Gomez
+gave a little cry.
+
+"The dawn!" he exclaimed, pointing to the north of the light. "Morning
+is breaking."
+
+Sure enough, a grey, pallid light was stealing down upon the water.
+The darkness was becoming a chaos of grey and black; of towering seas
+and low-lying clouds, with cold white streaks of light falling through
+them, and piercing the curtains of night. There was no vestige of
+colouring--nothing but cold grey and slate white. Yet the dawn moved
+on, and through it the yellow light in the distance gleamed larger and
+larger.
+
+"Hold me up," ordered the man on the bed. "Prop me up with pillows!"
+
+They did as he bade them, and for the first time his face was fully
+revealed in the straggling twilight. A flowing grey beard, still
+plentifully streaked with black, rested upon his chest; and the eyes,
+steadily fixed upon the window pane, were dark and undimmed. A long
+illness had wasted his fine features, but had detracted nothing from
+their strength and regularity of outline. His lips were closely
+set, and his expression, though painfully eager, was not otherwise
+displeasing. There was none of the fear of death there; nor was there
+anything of the passionless resignation of the man who has bidden
+farewell to life, and made his peace with God and man; nor, in
+those moments of watching, had his face any of the physical signs of
+approaching death.
+
+"Ah!"
+
+They started at the sharp, almost triumphant exclamation which had
+escaped from his white lips, and followed his long, quivering finger.
+Above that glimmering light was a faint, dim line of smoke, fading on
+the horizon.
+
+"It is a steamer, indeed," the priest said, with some interest. "She
+is making for the island."
+
+"When is the supply boat due?" Gomez asked.
+
+"Not for a fortnight," the priest answered; "it is not she, it is a
+stranger."
+
+There was no other word spoken. Soon the dawn, moving across the great
+waste of waters, pierced the dark background behind the steamer's
+light. The long trail of white, curdling foam in her track gleamed
+like a silver cleft in a dark gulf. The dim shape of her sails stole
+slowly into sight, and they could see that she was carrying a great
+weight of canvas. Then into the grey air, a rocket shot up like a
+brilliant meteor, and the sound of a gun came booming over the waters.
+
+"Can she make the bay?" Gomez asked suddenly. "Look at the surf."
+
+They all removed their eyes from the steamer, and fixed them nearer
+home. The darkness had rolled away, and the outlook, though a little
+uncertain in the misty morning light, was still visible. Right before
+the window, a little to the left, a great rocky hill, many hundreds
+of feet high, ran sheer down into the sea, and facing it on the right,
+was a lower range of rocks running out from the mainland. Inside the
+natural harbour thus formed, the sea was quiet enough; but at the
+entrance, a line of white breakers and huge ocean waves were leaping
+up against the base of the promontory, and dashing over the lower
+range of rocks. Beyond, the sea was wild and rough, and the steamer
+was often almost lost to sight in the hollow of the Waves.
+
+"Ah!"
+
+The faces of all three men underwent a sudden change. Three rockets,
+one after another, shot up into the sky from the top of the rocky
+hill, leaving a faint, violet glow overhead. The dying man set his
+teeth hard, and his eyes glistened.
+
+"Three rockets," he muttered. "What is the meaning of that signal,
+Father?" he asked.
+
+The priest looked downward, pityingly. "It is a warning that the
+entrance to the bay is unsafe," he answered. "Take comfort; it is
+the hand of God keeping from you those who would distract your dying
+thoughts from Heaven. Take comfort, and pray with me."
+
+He seemed strangely deaf to the priest's words, and made no movement
+or sign in response. Only he kept his eyes the more steadfastly
+fixed upon the steamer, now plainly visible. His face showed no
+disappointment. It seemed almost as though he might have seen across
+the grey sea, and heard the stern orders thundered out from a slim,
+motionless figure on the captain's bridge. "Right ahead, helmsman!
+Never mind the signal. There's fifty pounds for every man of you if we
+make the bay. It's not so bad as it looks! Back me up like brave lads,
+and I'll remember it all your lives!"
+
+Almost, too, he might have heard the answering cheer, for a faint
+smile parted his white lips as he saw the steamer ploughing her way
+heavily straight ahead, paying no heed to the warning signal.
+
+On she came. The priest and the servant started as they saw her
+intention, and a sharp ejaculation of surprise escaped from the
+former. Side by side, they watched the labouring vessel with strained
+eyes. Her hull and shape were now visible in the dim morning twilight,
+as she rose and fell upon the waves. It was evident that she was a
+large, handsome pleasure yacht, daintily but strongly built.
+
+Close up against the high, bare window the three watchers,
+unconsciously enough, formed a striking-looking group. The priest,
+tall, pale, and severe, stood in the shadow of the bed-curtains, an
+impressive and solemn figure in his dark, flowing robes, but with the
+impassibility of his features curiously disturbed. He, who had been
+preaching calm, was himself agitated. He had drawn a little on one
+side, so that the cold grey light should not fall upon his face and
+betray its twitching lips and quivering pallor; but if either of the
+men who shared his watch had thought to glance at him, the sickly
+candlelight would have shown at once what he was so anxious to
+conceal. It was little more than chance which had brought this man
+to die in his island monastery, and under his care; little more than
+chance which had revealed to him this wonderful secret. But the agony
+of those last few hours, and the gloomy words of the priest who leant
+over his bedside, had found their way in between the joints of the
+dying man's armour of secrecy. Word by word, the story had been
+wrested from him. In the cold and comfortless hour of death, the
+strong, worldly man felt his physical weakness loosen the iron bands
+of his will, and he became for a time almost like a child in the hands
+of the keen, swiftly-questioning priest. He had not found much comfort
+in the mumbled prayers and absolution, which were all he got in
+exchange for his life's secret,--and such a secret! He had not,
+indeed, noticed the fixed, far-away gaze in the priest's dark eyes as
+he knelt by the bedside; but his prayers, his faint words of comfort,
+had fallen like drops of ice upon his quickened desire to be brought
+a little nearer to that mysterious, shadowy essence of goodness which
+was all his mind could conceive of a God. It had seemed like a dead
+form of words, lifeless, hopeless, monotonous; and all that faint
+striving to attain to some knowledge of the truth--if indeed truth
+there was--had been crushed into ashes by it. As he had lived, so must
+he die, he told himself with some return of that philosophic quietude
+which had led him, stout-hearted and brave, through many dangers. And,
+at that moment when he had been striving to detach his thoughts from
+their vain task of conjuring up useless regrets, there had come what
+even now seemed to be the granting of his last passionate prayer. The
+man whom he had longed to see once more before his eyes were closed
+forever upon the world, with such a longing that his heart had grown
+sick and weary with the burden of it, had been brought as though by a
+miracle almost to his side. He knew as though by some strange instinct
+the measure of his strength. He had no fear of dying before his
+heart's dearest wish could be gratified. If only that fiercely
+labouring vessel succeeded in her brave struggle, he knew that there
+would be strength left to him to bear the shock of meeting, to bear
+even the shock of the tidings which could either sweeten his last few
+moments, or deepen the gloom of his passage into the unknown world.
+And so he lay there, with fixed, glazed eyes and shortened breath,
+watching and waiting.
+
+The supreme moment came; the steamer had reached the dangerous point,
+and the waves were breaking over her with such fury that more than
+once she vanished altogether from sight, only to reappear in a moment
+or two, quivering and trembling from stern to hull like a living
+creature. After all, the struggle was a brief one, though it seemed
+long to the watchers at the window. In less than ten minutes it
+was over; she had passed the line of breakers, and was in the
+comparatively smooth water of the bay, heading fast for the shore
+under leeway of the great wall of towering rocks, at the foot of which
+she seemed dwarfed almost into the semblance of a boy's toy vessel.
+Within a quarter of a mile from the shore, she anchored, and a boat
+was let down from her side.
+
+A new lease of life seemed to have come to the man on the bed. The
+morning sun had half emerged from a bank of angry purple-coloured
+clouds, and its faint slanting beams lay across the white coverlet of
+the bed, and upon his face. His eyes were bright and eager, and the
+death-like pallor seemed to have passed from his features. His voice,
+too, was firm and distinct.
+
+"Place my despatch-box upon the table here, Gomez," he ordered.
+
+Gomez left his seat by the window, and, opening a portmanteau, brought
+a small black box to the bedside. His master passed his hand over it,
+and drew it underneath the coverlet.
+
+"I am prepared," he murmured, half to himself. "Father, according to
+the physician's reckoning, how long have I to live?"
+
+"Barely an hour," answered the priest, without removing his eyes from
+the boat, whose progress he seemed to be scanning steadfastly. "Is
+your eternal future of so little moment to you," he went on in a tone
+of harsh severity, "that you can give your last thoughts, your last
+few moments, to affairs of this world? 'Tis an unholy death! Take this
+cross in your hands, and listen not to those whose coming will surely
+estrange you from heaven. Let the world take its own course, but lift
+your eyes and heart in prayer! Everlasting salvation, or everlasting
+doom, awaits you before yonder sun be set!"
+
+"I have no fear, Father," was the quiet reply. "What is, is; a few
+frantic prayers now could alter nothing, and, besides, my work on
+earth is not yet over. Speak to me no more of the end! Nothing that
+you or I could do now would bring me one step nearer heaven. Gomez,
+your eyes are good! Whom do you see in the boat?"
+
+Gomez answered without turning round from the window, "Mr. Paul is
+there, sir, steering!"
+
+"Thank God!"
+
+"There are others with him, sir!"
+
+"Others! Who?"
+
+"Strangers to me, sir. There is a man, a gentleman by his dress and
+appearance, and a child--a girl, I think. Two sailors from the yacht
+are rowing."
+
+The dying man knitted his brows, and his fingers convulsively clutched
+at the bed-clothes. He had lost something of that calm and effortless
+serenity which seemed to have fallen upon him since the safety of the
+steamer had been assured.
+
+"The boat is quite close, Gomez! Can you not describe the stranger?"
+
+"I can only see that he is thin, rather tall, and, I think, elderly,
+sir. He is very much wrapped up, as though he were an invalid."
+
+"Lift me up so that I can see them. Father Adrian will help you."
+
+The priest shook his head. "The effort would probably cost you your
+life," he said, "and it would be useless. Before you could see them
+the boat would be round the corner."
+
+"So near! God grant me strength! Gomez, give me a tablespoonful of the
+brandy!"
+
+Gomez moved silently to his side, and poured out the brandy.
+Afterwards his master closed his eyes, and there was an intense
+silence in the chamber--the deep, breathless silence of expectancy.
+
+The monastery itself, a small and deserted one, tenanted only by a
+few half-starved monks of one of the lower orders of the Church, was
+wrapped in a profound gloom. There was no sound from the half-ruined
+chapel or the long, empty corridors. The storm had ceased, and the
+casements no longer rattled in the wind. To the man who lay there,
+nursing his fast-ebbing strength, it seemed indeed like the silence
+before the one last tragedy of death, looming so black and so grim
+before him.
+
+It was broken at last. Away at the end of the corridor the faint sound
+of hurrying footsteps and subdued voices reached the ears of the three
+watchers. They came nearer and nearer, halting at last just outside
+the door. There was a knock, a quick, impetuous answer, and the
+visitors entered, ushered in by the priest, who had met them on the
+threshold.
+
+Of the two men, one advanced hastily with outstretched hand and
+pitying face to the bedside; the other moved only a step or two
+further into the room, and stood looking intently, yet without any
+salutation or form of recognition, at the dying man. The former, when
+he reached the bed, sank on his knees and took the white hand which
+lay upon the coverlet between his.
+
+"Father! My father! I would have given the world to have found you
+better. Tell me that it is not true what they say. You will pull round
+now that I have come!"
+
+There was no answer. The dying man did not even look into the handsome
+young face so close to his. His eyes, bright and unnaturally large,
+were rivetted upon the figure at the foot of the bed. His breath came
+quickly, and he was shivering; an inarticulate sort of moan came from
+his lips.
+
+"Father! you are agitated, and no wonder, to see him here. You had my
+letter preparing you; nothing that I could do would stop his coming."
+
+It was Gomez who answered, advancing out of the gloom: "There has been
+no letter."
+
+There was an instant's silence. Then the younger man rose up, pale
+as death. "God! what a fool I was to trust to mails in this
+out-of-the-way hole! Father! I shall never forgive myself. Blind idiot
+that I was, to bring him in like this."
+
+It seemed as if no one save he possessed the power of speech. There
+was a dead silence. He looked from one to another of the figures in
+that silent drama in fast-growing despair. The face of the man whom
+he had brought there revealed little, although in a certain way its
+expression was remarkable. The lips were parted in a slow,
+quiet smile, not in itself sardonic or cruel, although under the
+circumstances it seemed so, for it was difficult to associate any
+idea of mirth with the scene which was passing in that grim, gloomy
+chamber. Something of the awe inseparable from this close approach of
+death was visible in the faces of all the other watchers. Not so in
+his! It was the contrast which seemed so strange. He stood there, with
+his hands thrust deep into the pockets of his long travelling coat,
+returning the fixed, glazed stare of the dying man with a sort of
+indifferent good humour. Perhaps a very close observer might have
+detected a shade of mockery in those soft black eyes and faintly
+twitching lips, but the light in the room was too obscure for any one
+there to penetrate beneath the apparent indifference. It was he who
+broke that deep, tragic silence, and his voice, light and even gay,
+struck a strange note in that solemn chamber of death.
+
+"So you are dying, Martin, _mon ami_? How odd! If any one had told me
+one short month ago that I should have been here to watch your last
+moments, and start you on your journey to hell, bah! how mad I should
+have thought them. 'Tis a pleasure I never anticipated."
+
+His words seemed to dissolve the lethargy which his presence had cast
+over the dying man. He turned away towards the younger figure by his
+side.
+
+"How came he here?" he asked feebly.
+
+"Listen, and I will tell you," was the low reply. "I sought him first
+at Monaco, but he had not been heard of there for two years. Then I
+found traces of him at Algiers; and followed up the clue to Cairo,
+Athens, Syracuse, and Belgrade. It was at Constantinople I found
+him at last--an officer--actually an officer in the Turkish army;
+'Monsieur le Captaine,' my interpreter called him," the young man
+added, with a fine scorn in his raised voice. "Imagine it! Well,
+I gave him your letter, delivered the messages, and awaited his
+pleasure. He kept me waiting for two days before he vouchsafed
+one word of answer. On the third day he announced his intention of
+accompanying me here. Nothing that I could say made any difference.
+'His answer should be given to you in person, or not at all.' I
+wrote to you three days before we started; that letter you never had.
+Forgive me, father, for the shock! As for you," he continued, turning
+abruptly towards the motionless figure at the foot of the bed, "I have
+kept my word, and brought you here in safety, though no one in the
+world will ever know how near I came to breaking it, and throwing you
+into the Dardanelles. Ah! I was sorely tempted, I can tell you. Speak
+your answer, and go! This is no place for you to linger in."
+
+"Upon my word, you are courteous, very! But, my dear friend Martin,
+as this is to be our farewell, I must really see you a little more
+distinctly."
+
+For the first time, the man in the long overcoat changed his position,
+and came a little nearer to the bed. The movement showed him the
+priest, kneeling with closed eyes and uplifted hands before an iron
+crucifix.
+
+"Ah! we are not quite alone then, Martin, _cher ami_! the gentleman in
+the long robe appears to be listening."
+
+"He is as dead," answered the man on the bed slowly. "He is a monk;
+you can speak."
+
+He raised himself slightly on the bed. One hand remained grasping his
+despatch-box under the bed-clothes; the other was held by the young man
+who knelt by his side. His face was curiously changed; all the effect
+of his unlooked-for visitor's arrival seemed to have passed away. His
+eyes were bright and eager. His white lips were closely set and firm.
+
+"You can speak," he repeated.
+
+His visitor was leaning over the foot of the bed now, and the smile
+had quite gone, leaving his face cold and white. He spoke a little
+quicker than before.
+
+"Here is your answer, Martin de Vaux! You offer me a fortune, on
+condition that I give up to you on your deathbed the power by which I
+hold those whom you love, my slaves. Money is dear to me, as it is to
+most men, but I would die sooner than touch yours. Curse you, and
+your money, and your family! Not for all the gold that was ever coined
+would I yield up my power! My day will come, and may the evil spirit
+bring you tidings of it down into hell! Curse you, Martin de Vaux! Now
+you know my mind."
+
+The dying man was strangely calm. From under the bed-clothes came the
+faint sound of the opening and shutting of the despatch-box.
+
+"Yes, I know your mind," he repeated quietly. "You mean me to die with
+the torturing thought that I have left a poisonous reptile to suck
+the life and blood from those I love, and the honour from a grand old
+name. But I will not! We will take our next journey together, Victor."
+
+A sudden change had crept into his tone before the last sentence; and
+before it had died away, the priest and the man by the bedside had
+leaped to their feet in horror. He whom they had thought too weak to
+stir was sitting bolt upright in bed, his eyes blazing and his hand
+extended. There was a line of fire, a loud report, and then a single
+cry of agony. The man who had leaned over the foot of the bed lay on
+the ground just as he had fallen, shot dead through the heart, and a
+child, dark-skinned and thin, who had rushed in at the sound of the
+report, was sobbing passionately with her arms wound around him.
+Across the bed, still grasping the pistol, but with his hands hanging
+helplessly down, lay the man who had fired the shot. The effort had
+killed him.
+
+The priest was the first in the room to move. He slowly bent over both
+bodies, and then turned round to the other man.
+
+"Dead?" he asked, with a dry, choking gasp.
+
+"Both dead."
+
+The priest and his companion, shocked and unnerved, looked at one
+another in silence. The child's sobs grew louder, and the morning
+sunlight stole across the bare floor, and fell upon the white, still
+faces.
+
+The tragedy was over, and the seeds of another sown.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+"THE NEW ART"
+
+
+A tall, fair young man stood in the small alcove of Lady Swindon's
+drawing-room, with his eyes fixed upon the door. He was accurately
+dressed in the afternoon garb of a London man about town, and carried
+in his hand, or rather in his hands, for they were crossed behind him,
+that hall-mark of Western civilization--a well-brushed, immaculate
+silk hat. Neither in his clothes nor personal appearance was there any
+striking difference between him and the crowd of other young men who
+thronged the rooms, except perhaps that he was a trifle better made,
+and pleasanter to look at than most of them, and that the air of
+boredom, so apparent on most of their faces and in their manners, was
+in his case perfectly natural. As a matter of fact, he hated afternoon
+receptions, and was only waiting for a favourable opportunity to make
+his exit unnoticed.
+
+"Paul, my boy, you don't look happy," exclaimed a voice in his ear.
+
+Paul de Vaux turned upon the new-comer sharply. "Not likely to,
+Arthur. You know I hate all this sort of thing, and, as far as I can
+see, it's just a repetition of the usual performance--stale speeches,
+lionizing, gossip, and weak tea. I consider you've brought me here
+under false pretences. Where's the startling novelty you promised me?"
+
+"All in good time," was the cool reply. "You'll thank your stars
+you're here in a minute or two."
+
+Paul de Vaux looked at his brother incredulously. "Some sell of yours,
+I suppose," he remarked. "At any rate, no one here whom I have spoken
+to seems to be expecting anything unusual."
+
+Arthur--no one ever called him anything else--laughed, and beat an
+impatient tattoo upon the floor with his foot. He was several inches
+shorter than his brother, and altogether unlike him. Yet he, too, was
+good-looking, in a certain way.
+
+"That's just the beauty of it," he said. "Lady Swindon has prepared
+a little surprise for her guests. She's just that sort of woman, you
+know. Denison told me about it at the club, a few minutes before you
+came in for lunch. I shouldn't have bothered you to come if I hadn't
+known there was something good on."
+
+"I dislike surprises," his brother answered wearily. "Half the
+pleasure of a thing lies in anticipation, and surprises rob one of
+that. Let us go, Arthur; there are plenty here to enjoy this novelty,
+whatever it is. Come and have a weed at my rooms, and we'll talk over
+something for to-night."
+
+Arthur shook his head and laid his hand upon Paul's coat-sleeve.
+"You don't know what's coming off, old fellow; I wouldn't miss it for
+anything. Great Scott! there's the bishop. Wonder how he'll like it?
+and there's Lady May over there, Paul. You're booked, old man, if she
+looks this way."
+
+Paul leant forward with a faint show of interest, and looked in
+the direction indicated. "I thought that the Westovers went North
+yesterday," he remarked. "Lady May said that they expected it."
+
+"Likely enough. 'Gad! the performance is going to commence," Arthur
+exclaimed, quickly. "Paul, you are going to have a new sensation. You
+are going to see the most beautiful woman in the world."
+
+There was a little hush, and every one had turned towards the upper
+end of the room. Some heavy curtains had been rolled aside, disclosing
+a space, only a few yards square, which had been covered by a tightly
+stretched drugget. There was a little curious anticipation amongst the
+uninitiated. Then the comparative silence was broken by the strains
+of a waltz from a violin, somewhere in the background. No one had
+ever heard it before. There was a wilder, dreamier air with it,
+than anything Waldteufel had ever written. And, while every one was
+wondering whose music it could be, a woman glided out from behind a
+screen, and stood for a second swaying herself slightly in the centre
+of the drugget. Even that slight rhythmical motion of her body seemed
+to bring her into perfect sympathy with the curious melody which was
+filling the hushed room. And while the people watched her, already, in
+varying degrees, under the spell of that curious fascination which her
+personality and the exercise of her art seldom failed to excite, she
+commenced to dance.
+
+Long afterwards Paul de Vaux tried to describe in words, that dance,
+and found that he could not, for there was indeed a charm beyond
+expression or portrayal in the slow, almost languid movements, full of
+infinite and inexpressible witchery. Every limb of her body and every
+feature of her face followed, with a sort of effortless grace,
+the movements of her feet. Yet the general effect of the whole was
+suggestive of a sweet and dainty repose, voluptuous yet refined,
+glowing with life, yet dreamily restful. In a certain sense her
+physical movements, even her body itself, seemed merged and lost in
+the artistic ideal created and born of her performance. And so it
+was that he carried away that day no vivid thought-portrait of her
+features, only a confused dream of a beautiful dusky face, rising
+above a cloud of amber draperies, the lips slightly parted in a
+wonderful smile, and a pair of heavily-lidded eyes, which, more than
+once, had rested upon him, soft, dark, and lustrous. After all, it was
+but a tangled web of memories, yet, such as it was, it became woven
+into the pattern of his life, wonderfully soft and brilliant beside
+some of those dark, gloomy threads which fate had spun for him.
+
+The performance ended, as such performance should end, suddenly,
+and without repetition. Her disappearance was so swift and yet so
+graceful, that for a moment or two people scarcely realized that she
+was gone. It was wonderful what a difference her absence made to the
+room. The little stretch of drugget looked mean and bare. To Paul de
+Vaux it seemed as though some warm, beautiful light, omniscient and
+richly coloured, had suddenly burnt out, and left a damp chilliness in
+the air. The silence was gloomy enough after that wonderful music, but
+the babble of tongues which presently arose was a hundred times
+worse. He found himself chafing and angry at the commonplacisms which
+everywhere greeted his ear. Lady Swindon's afternoon entertainment had
+been a great success, and every one was telling her so, more or
+less volubly. There were some there, a handful of artists and a few
+thoughtful men, who were silent, or who spoke of it only amongst
+themselves in subdued voices. They recognised, in what had happened
+that afternoon, the dawn of a new art, or rather the regeneration of
+an old one, and they discussed in whispers its possible significance
+and influence. She was an artist, that woman. No one doubted it. But
+the woman was there as well as the artist. Who was she? Would she
+realize the sanctity of her mission, and keep herself fit and pure for
+its accomplishment? Had she character to sustain her, and imagination
+to idealize her calling? She was on a pinnacle now, but it was a
+pinnacle as dangerous as the feet of woman could press. If only she
+could keep herself unspotted from the world, which would do its best
+to drag her down, they all felt, painter, poet, and musician, that her
+influence with the age might rank with their own. But was it possible?
+A certain Diana-like coldness had been apparent to those who had the
+eyes to see it, even in her most voluptuous movements. They knew
+that it was not assumed for the sake of adding piquancy to her
+performance--it was there indeed. But side by side with it there
+were unprobed depths of passion in her soft, deep eyes; a slumbering
+passion even in the sinuous, graceful movements of every limb. Some
+day the struggle would come, even if it had not already commenced.
+The woman against the artist--the woman tempted and flattered by a
+thousand tongues, and dazzled with visions of all those things so
+naturally sweet to her, her own nature even, so keenly susceptible to
+love and sympathy, siding with the enemy. This, all against what? Only
+that inward worshipping of all things sweet and pure and lofty, which
+is the artist's second life. The odds were heavy indeed. No wonder
+that the select few who spoke of her that afternoon should shake their
+heads and look grave.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+"THE DANCING GIRL"
+
+
+"What do you think of it?"
+
+Paul started. He had been standing, like a man in a dream, with
+folded arms, looking across the room with idle eyes, and unconsciously
+ignoring many salutations. His brother's tone sounded oddly in his
+ears, and he looked flushed and a little nervous.
+
+"What did I think of it!" It was a difficult question to answer. He
+repeated it, and was glad when Arthur spared him the necessity of
+replying, by adding his own opinion.
+
+"It was glorious, magnificent! I'm going to find out more about her!"
+
+He strolled away, and joined one of the little groups of men who were
+discussing the performance. Paul, at first, had made a gesture as
+though to detain him, but on second thoughts he had changed his mind.
+Better let him go and find out what he could.
+
+He himself watched carefully for his opportunity, and then left the
+room. He felt like a man who has received a silent shock. Something
+fresh had come into his life, noiselessly, insidiously, without
+effort. He pressed on his hat, and passed down the steps out into the
+street, scarcely conscious of what he was doing.
+
+The rush of fresh air somewhat revived him, and he stood still for a
+moment to collect his thoughts. He felt the need of absolute
+solitude for a while, to help him to realize--or at any rate to
+understand--this thing which had happened, and with almost feverish
+haste he called a hansom from the other side of the road. The man
+whipped up the horse, but hesitated as he reached the pavement.
+Looking around, Paul saw the cause of his indecision. A woman,
+standing only a few yards behind, had called him at the same time, and
+was waiting also for his approach.
+
+There was a gas-lamp between them, and as their eyes met, he
+recognised her. Even in that flickering light, and through her
+veil, there was no mistaking those wonderful eyes. As a rule, he was
+possessed of as much _savoir faire_ as most men of his class, but at
+that moment it had deserted him. He stood there on the edge of the
+pavement, without moving or saying anything, simply looking at
+her, startled at her sudden appearance, and magnetised by her close
+presence. He had heard no footfall behind him, and the fact of her
+being alone seemed so strange to him, that he simply could not realize
+for a moment that it was indeed she who stood so close to him. The
+cabman, leaving them to decide who had the prior claim upon him, sat
+motionless, with his eyes discreetly fixed upon his horse's ears. It
+was an odd little tableau, insignificant enough to a spectator, save,
+perhaps, for the curious look in the woman's face and softly flashing
+eyes. Yet it left its mark for ever in the lives of the two principal
+figures.
+
+The curious sensation which had kept Paul standing there dazed and
+tongue-tied, passed away. Yet it did not immediately occur to him to
+raise his hat and walk on, as in any ordinary case he would have done.
+He was conscious of the exact nature of the situation, but he felt a
+strong disinclination to leave the spot; nor, strangely enough, did
+she seem to expect it. Yet something had to be done.
+
+He moved a step nearer her. He was no schoolboy, this tall,
+grave-looking young Englishman. The lines across his fair, smooth
+forehead, and by his close-set mouth spoke for themselves. He had seen
+life in many aspects, and in a certain Indian jungle village, there
+were natives and coolies who still spoke admiringly of the wonderful
+nerve and pluck of the English sahib during a terrible and unexpected
+tiger rush. But at that moment his nerve seemed to have deserted him.
+He could almost hear his heart beat as he took that step forward. He
+had intended to have made some trifling apology, and to have handed
+her into the cab, but the words would not come. Some instinct seemed
+to revolt at the thought of uttering any such commonplacism. She was
+standing on the edge of the pavement, close to the step, with her
+skirts in one hand, slightly raised. He held out his hand to her in
+silence.
+
+She gave him hers; and yet she did not at once step into the cab.
+She seemed to be expecting that little speech from him which he found
+impossible to frame, and, seeing that it did not come, recognising,
+perhaps, his suppressed agitation behind that calm, almost cold,
+gravity of demeanour, she spoke to him.
+
+"It is a shame to take your cab, and leave you in the rain! I am
+sorry."
+
+Afterwards her admirers spoke of her voice as being one of her chief
+charms; to Paul it sounded like a soft strain of very sweet, throbbing
+music, reaching him from some far distant world. Yet, curiously
+enough, it went far to dissolve the spell which her presence seemed to
+have laid upon him. He was able to look at her steadily, and standing
+upon the wet pavement in the cold, grey light of that November
+afternoon, their eyes met in a long, searching gaze. He was able even
+to notice trifles. He saw the rich fur which lined her plain, black
+cloak, and he could even admire the absolute perfection with which
+it followed the lines of her slim, supple, figure. He saw the glowing
+eyes shining out from her dusky face, and the coils of brown hair, not
+very securely fastened under her turban hat. As she put out her foot
+to enter the cab, he could even catch a glimpse of the amber draperies
+concealed by her cloak. A dancer! A public dancer! His eyes swept over
+her again, taking in every detail of her simple but rich toilette, and
+he shivered slightly. Then he answered her, "It is of no consequence,
+thank you. I can walk."
+
+"But you will get very wet! Let us make a compromise! You may come
+with me. I am going only a very little distance, and then you can take
+the cab on to your home, or wherever you want to go to."
+
+She stepped in, taking it for granted that he would accept her offer,
+and he followed her at once. He was not in the least surprised. From
+the first he had not expected to leave her, and her invitation seemed
+perfectly natural to him. She gave the cabman her address through the
+trap-door, and they drove off together.
+
+At the corner of the square, two men were standing together talking,
+and as the hansom passed within a yard or two of them both glanced
+idly in, and then started. Paul, who had been looking straight ahead
+of him, and seeing nothing, turned round, startled by a familiar
+exclamation, just in time to see his brother Arthur, and Leslie
+Horton, gazing after the cab. The incident troubled him, as much for
+her sake as his own. But, looking into her face, he could not see that
+she was in any way disturbed, although she must have seen the two men,
+and would probably have recognised them as having been present at Lady
+Swindon's reception. Her face was quite unmoved, but in a moment or
+two she asked a question.
+
+"Who was the younger and better looking of those two men; the one with
+violets in his coat, like yours?"
+
+"It was my brother," he answered simply. "I am afraid, too, that he
+recognised you."
+
+"So far as I am concerned, that is of no consequence at all," she
+answered lightly.
+
+He turned away with a sudden sinking of the heart. He knew, too well,
+that her carelessness was not assumed. How was he to interpret it?
+
+Their drive was finished in silence, and they pulled up before a
+handsome, though somewhat sombre-looking house in a back street.
+
+"My rooms are here," she remarked.
+
+He stepped on to the pavement, and assisted her to alight. The thought
+of leaving her so abruptly was painful to him, and yet he dreaded to
+hear her invite him to go in with her; nevertheless, she did so.
+
+"If you are not in a hurry, perhaps you will come in, and let me give
+you a cup of tea," she said, looking him full in the face.
+
+His heart sank. What was he to think now? And yet he was absurdly glad
+that he was not to leave her.
+
+"Do you mean it?" he asked.
+
+"Of course! I should not have asked you else. Are you very much
+shocked?" she added, with a mocking gleam in her eyes. "It is not
+proper, is it! I confess I did not think of that. But do come," she
+added, with a sudden bewitching smile.
+
+"I shall be delighted," he answered, gravely enough, but truthfully.
+He turned to pay the cabman, and followed her into the house.
+
+"My rooms are upstairs," she remarked, leading the way. "The luxury of
+a first floor is at present beyond me."
+
+Her words pleased him, but their effect died away when she opened a
+door on the first landing, and ushered him in. Such of the interior
+of the house as he had seen was handsomely furnished, but the room in
+which he stood was almost like a fairy chamber. Curtains divided it in
+the centre, and beyond he could see a table laid for dinner.
+
+"That half I use for a dining-room," she remarked, pointing towards it
+with one of her gloves, which she had just taken off. "It makes this
+room small, but it is a convenient arrangement. Do sit down!"
+
+He bowed, but remained standing, with his elbow resting upon the
+draped mantel-board. She took off her hat and coat, hanging them over
+the back of a chair, and advanced towards him.
+
+She was in her dancing dress, a floating mass of yellow draperies, and
+the firelight gleamed strangely upon her dusky, perfect face, with its
+olive colouring, and soft, glowing eyes. She came so close to him that
+a faint odour from the handkerchief in her hand stole up to him.
+
+He was playing with an ornament on the shelf, and his fingers
+tightened convulsively around it. It snapped in two in his hand; he
+did not notice it. He leaned forward towards her, and his strong voice
+vibrated with feeling.
+
+"And it was for this then, Adrea Kiros, that you ran away from the
+convent St. Lucile! My God!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+"ADREA'S DIARY"
+
+
+To-day I have made my entrance in the first scene of the drama of
+life. To-day, therefore, I commence my memoirs. Everything before goes
+for nothing!
+
+As I have removed myself altogether from all association with
+the humdrum existence which might have been mine, I am naturally
+friendless for the present. So far as the other sex is concerned, I
+fancy that that could be easily remedied. But no women are likely
+to care about making my acquaintance, and I am glad of it. I hate
+women--men, too, I think! At any rate, there will be no one of whom I
+shall make a confidant, so I have chosen you, my silent friend. I gave
+a guinea for you in Bond Street, and with your dainty morocco case
+and binding, I think you are well worth it. At any rate, you will be
+faithful so far as silence is concerned.
+
+To-day has been an eventful one. I have made my _debut_ as a dancer,
+and Paul de Vaux has been here, in this house, alone with me! That is
+hard to realize, but it is so! He has altered since he used to pay
+me periodical visits at the convent--and so have I, I imagine! Yet he
+recognised me! How pale and stern he looked when he stood up on the
+hearthrug and called me by my name! He is very handsome--handsomer now
+even than on that day when he stood by, in that chamber of death, and
+saw my father murdered, without lifting his hand. Ah! Paul de Vaux,
+Paul de Vaux! that was an evil day for you! Did you never think that
+that little brown girl, as you called her, would grow up some day; or
+did you think that she would forget! Bah! What fools men are!
+
+He remembered me! How grave he looked, and yet how tender his voice
+sounded! He did not forget that he was my guardian, and I his ward.
+How bewildered and anxious he was! Was I living quite alone, had I no
+friends, did I think it wise to lay myself open to so much notice?
+
+He had come close to my chair, and was leaning down, so that his head
+nearly touched mine. Really, when I looked up, I thought that he was
+going to take me into his arms. I looked up and laughed softly into
+his face.
+
+He said no more. I invited him to dine with me, and promised to dance
+to him afterwards. I even let my hand rest for a moment upon his
+shoulder, and whispered--but _n'importe_! He behaved just as I would
+have had him behave! He took up his hat and walked straight out of the
+room! It was rude, but it was magnificent. Ah! Paul de Vaux! you may
+struggle as long as you like, but in the end you will be mine!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+"THE FAR-OFF MUTTERING OF THE STORM TO COME"
+
+
+"Paul!"
+
+Paul had walked unannounced into his mother's favourite little
+sitting-room at Vaux Court, tired and travel-stained. She rose to her
+feet and looked at him anxiously.
+
+"Don't be alarmed, mother," he said, stooping down and kissing her.
+"There's nothing at all the matter."
+
+"Arthur is well?"
+
+"Quite well; I was with him yesterday afternoon. There's nothing the
+matter. London was boring me, that's all, and I thought I'd run down
+here and have a look at the old place, and perhaps a day's hunting."
+
+Relieved of her anxiety, Mrs. de Vaux was unaffectedly pleased to see
+her eldest son. She was a fine, white-haired old lady, dignified and
+handsome, but with very few soft lines about her comely face.
+
+"I am delighted to see you, of course, Paul! The meet is at Dytchley
+woods to-morrow! I hope you'll have a good day. Take your coat off. I
+have rung for some tea."
+
+"Thanks! How bright and cheerful the fire seems. I walked from the
+station, and it was miserably cold."
+
+"Of course it was. I wish I had known you were coming. We have so
+little work for the carriage horses."
+
+"I did not make up my mind until half an hour before the train
+started," Paul answered. "Dick Carruthers wanted me to run over to
+Paris with him for a couple of days, and I was undecided which to do.
+I heard that it was cold and wet there, though; and there is always a
+charm about this old place which makes me glad to come back to it."
+
+"There is not such another place in England," his mother remarked,
+pouring out the tea. "Although this is such an outlandish county,
+there have been a dozen people here this week, asking to be allowed
+to see over the Abbey. I always give permission when you are away, and
+there is no one stopping here."
+
+Paul drank his tea, and stretched himself out in his low chair with an
+air of comfort.
+
+"I am glad you let them see the place, mother," he said. "It is only
+right. What class of people do you have, as a rule? Clergymen and
+ecclesiastical architects, I suppose?"
+
+"Chiefly. There are a good many Americans, though; and yesterday,
+or the day before, a Roman Catholic priest. He spent the day in the
+cloisters and wandering about the Abbey, I believe."
+
+Paul looked up suddenly, and drew his chair back out of the firelight.
+For the first time, his mother noticed how pale and ghastly his face
+was.
+
+"Paul, are you ill?" she asked anxiously. "What is the matter with
+you?"
+
+"Nothing. I am only tired. It is a long journey, you know,--and the
+walk from the station. Indeed, it is nothing else. I am quite well."
+
+His mother resumed her seat. She had risen in sudden alarm. Her son's
+face had frightened her.
+
+"You look just as your poor father used to look sometimes," she said
+softly. "It always frightened me. It was as though you had a pain
+somewhere, or had suddenly seen a ghost. You are sure you are well?"
+
+"Quite, mother! You need have no fear. Arthur and I have your
+constitution, I think."
+
+His tone was deeper, almost hollow. He still kept his chair back
+amongst the shadows. Mrs. de Vaux was only partially satisfied.
+
+"I am afraid you have been keeping too late hours, Paul, or reading
+too much. Lord Westover was saying the other day that you were in a
+very Bohemian set--journalists and artists, and those sort of people.
+I am afraid they keep awful hours."
+
+"Lord Westover knows nothing about it," Paul answered wearily.
+"Ordinary London society would tire me to death in a fortnight. There
+is another class of people, though, whose headquarters are in London,
+far more cultured, and quite as exclusive, with whom association is a
+far greater distinction. I can go anywhere in the first set, because
+I am Paul de Vaux, of Vaux Abbey, and have forty thousand a year. I
+am permitted to enter the other only as the author of an unfashionable
+novel, which a few of them have thought leniently of. Which seem the
+worthier conditions?"
+
+"I am answered, Paul. Of course, in a sense, you are right. I am
+an old woman, and the twaddle of a London drawing-room would fall
+strangely upon my ears now, but I had my share of it before Arthur was
+born. If I were a man, I should want variety,--a little sauce,--and
+you are right to seek for it. And now, won't you go and have a bath,
+and change your things. You still look pale, and I think it would
+refresh you. Shall I ring for Reynolds? I suppose you have not brought
+your own man?"
+
+He stretched out his hand, and arrested her fingers upon the bell. "In
+a moment, mother. It is so comfortable here, and I really think it is
+my favourite room."
+
+He looked round approvingly. It was a curious, hexagonal chamber, with
+an oak-beamed ceiling, curving into a dome. The walls were hung with
+a wonderful tapestry of a soft, rich colour, and every piece of
+furniture in the room was of the Louis Quinze period. There was
+scarcely a single anachronism. The Martin de Vaux of forty years ago
+had been an artist, and a man of taste; and when he had brought home
+his bride, a duke's daughter, he had spent a small fortune on this
+apartment. Since then it had always been her favourite, and she was
+always glad to hear any one praise it.
+
+"I seldom sit in any other," she remarked complacently. "The blue
+drawing-room is open to-night, but that is because Lord and Lady
+Westover are dining here. I am afraid May will not be able to come;
+she has a cold or something of the sort. I wonder whether it is true,
+what they say, that she is delicate."
+
+Paul did not appear much interested. He had a purpose in lingering
+here, and it had nothing to do with May Westover's health. There was
+a little information he wished to obtain without exciting his mother's
+curiosity. But it was not exactly an easy matter.
+
+"I was interested in what you said about the visitors here,"
+he remarked. "I daresay to Americans this place must be very
+interesting."
+
+"You would think so if you saw some of them. They are a great deal too
+inquisitive and familiar for Reynolds. He detests them. It is far more
+interesting to think of that Catholic priest who was here the other
+day. He lingered about the place as though he had known it all his
+life, and loved it; and, Reynolds says, he prayed for two hours in the
+chapel."
+
+"Did you see him yourself?"
+
+"Yes, in the distance. I did not notice him particularly. I wished
+afterwards that I had. Reynolds' report of him pleased me so much. I
+daresay he was conjuring up pictures of the days when the old Abbey
+was full of grey-hooded monks, and the chapel was echoing day and
+night to their solemn chants and prayers. Sometimes, in the gloaming,
+I can almost fancy myself that I see them kneeling in long rows in
+those rich stalls, and hear the rustle of their gowns as they pass
+slowly down the aisles. I think he must have found it sad to linger
+about in that beautiful chapel, so cold, and empty, and bare. That
+is why I like Roman Catholics. They have such a strong reverential
+affection for their places of worship, and take such a delight in
+adorning them. It is almost like a personal love."
+
+Paul moved uneasily in his chair and looked steadily into the fire.
+"Then you did not notice him particularly?"
+
+"Notice him! Notice whom?"
+
+"This priest, or whoever he was."
+
+"I did not see his face, Paul, if that is what you mean. I only
+remember that he was tall. You seem very much interested in him. No
+doubt Reynolds could tell you anything you wish to know. Here he is;
+you had better ask him."
+
+A grey-headed man-servant had entered, bearing a lamp. Mrs. de Vaux
+turned to him.
+
+"Reynolds, Mr. Paul is interested in hearing about the priest who
+spent so much time looking over the Abbey yesterday. Can you describe
+him?"
+
+Reynolds set down the lamp and turned respectfully around. "Not very
+well, I'm afraid, sir," he said doubtfully. "They all seem so much
+alike, you know, sir, in those long gowns. He was tall, rather thin,
+and no hair on his face at all. I can't say that I noticed anything
+else, except that he spoke in rather a foreign accent."
+
+"You are sure he was a priest, I suppose," Paul asked carelessly. "We
+hear so much now of impostors, and of things being stolen from places
+of interest, that it makes one feel suspicious."
+
+"I am quite sure he was no impostor, sir." Reynolds answered
+confidently. "He was too interested in the place for that. He knew its
+history better than any one who has ever been here in my day. If he
+had been one of those sneaking sort of fellows, looking about for what
+he could get, he would have offered me money, and tried to get rid of
+me for a time, I think, sir."
+
+"That's true," Paul remarked. "Were you with him all the time, then?"
+
+"Very nearly, sir. He did not like my leaving him at all. He was
+afraid of missing something worth seeing. Besides, he did not ask to
+come into the house at all, not even to see the pictures. He spent all
+his time in the ruins.
+
+"That ends the matter, of course," Paul answered shortly. "There is
+nothing out there to attract pilferers. Sorry I said anything about
+it."
+
+"He asked whether you spent much of your time here, and when you would
+be down again, sir," Reynolds remarked, as he turned to quit the room.
+
+Paul looked up, and then stood quite still for a moment without
+speaking. A great fear had fallen upon him. Out of the shadows of
+the past, he seemed to see again that deathbed scene, and the tragedy
+which had brought down the curtain upon two lives. Almost he could
+fancy himself again upon his yacht, with the salt sea spray beating
+against his face, and the white breakers hissing and seething around
+him, as they made the dangerous passage towards that faint light,
+which flickered and gleamed in the distant monastery tower. They are
+safe! They reach the land; they are hurried into that great, gloomy
+bed-chamber, where chill draughts rustled ghost-like amongst the
+heavy, faded hangings, and the feeble candlelight left weird shadows
+moving across the floor and upon the walls. Again he heard the
+rattling of the window-panes, bare and exposed to every gust of wind;
+the far-off thunder of the sea, like a deep, continuous undernote;
+and, from an almost unseen corner of the chamber, the monotonous,
+broken rhythm of sad prayers for the dying, mumbled by that dark,
+curious-looking priest. And then, when the background of the picture
+had formed itself in his memory, he saw the deed itself. He saw
+the white, stricken face suddenly ablaze with that last effort of
+passionate life; he saw the outstretched arm, the line of fire, and
+the sudden change in the countenance of the man who stood at the foot
+of the bed. He saw the cool cynicism replaced by a spasm of ghastly
+fear, and he heard the low, gurgling cry dying away into a faint moan
+of terror, as the murdered man sank on to the floor, a crumpled heap.
+And, last of all, he saw that little brown girl, with her tumbled hair
+and tear-stained face, clasping the dead body and glaring at every one
+in the room, with a storm of hatred and impotent fury in her flashing
+eyes. And that last recollection brought him, like a flash, back
+to the present,--brought him swift, bewildering memories of Adrea,
+shaking his heart, and bringing the hot colour streaming into his
+face. He remembered where he was, and why he had left London. He
+remembered, too, that he was not alone, and with a little start he
+awoke to the present.
+
+Reynolds had left the room, and his mother was watching him curiously.
+He found it hard to meet her steady, questioning gaze without
+flinching.
+
+"Paul," she said slowly, "you are in trouble."
+
+He shook his head. "It is nothing, mother--nothing at all. I ought to
+beg your pardon for letting my thoughts run away with me so."
+
+She was too proud to ask him for his confidence, and at that moment
+the rumbling of a gong reached them from the distant hall. Mrs. de
+Vaux rose:--
+
+"There are a few people dining here, Paul, so you will not be late."
+
+"I will be down, mother. The usual time, I suppose."
+
+"Yes, eight o'clock."
+
+They left the room together, but parted in the hall. Mrs. de Vaux
+stayed to speak to the housekeeper for a moment, and Paul ascended
+the broad staircase alone. On the first corridor he paused, standing
+before the deep-cushioned sill of a high-arched window, and gazing at
+the ruined portion of the abbey. The air outside was frosty and clear,
+and though the moon as yet was only faintly yellow, every arch and
+cloister was clearly visible. Paul gazed down at them, as he had done
+all his life, with reverent eyes. There was something almost awesome
+in the graceful yet bold outline, and in the great age of those
+rugged, moss-grown pillars and arches, so ecclesiastical in their
+shape and suggestiveness,--as indeed they might well be, for they were
+practically the ruins of the old monastery chapel. But, as he looked,
+the expression in his eyes suddenly changed. A dark figure had passed
+slowly out from the shadow of the arches, and stood looking up towards
+the house, rigid, solemn, and motionless. Paul covered his face with
+his hands, and sank down upon the cushioned window-sill.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+"AN ASHEN GREY DELIGHT"
+
+
+"Mr. de Vaux!"
+
+Paul turned quickly around in his saddle towards the young lady who
+had addressed him. He looked into a fair, thoughtful face, whose
+general amiability was discounted, just then, by a decided frown.
+
+"I beg your pardon, Lady May! Didn't you say something just now?"
+
+"Didn't I say something just now!" she repeated, with fine scorn.
+"Upon my word, Mr. de Vaux, I think that you must have left your wits
+in London! What is the matter with you?"
+
+"The matter! Why, nothing! I'm sorry----"
+
+"Oh! pray don't apologise!" she interrupted hastily. "I think I'll
+ride on and catch papa up."
+
+He laid his hand upon her rein. "Please don't, Lady May," he begged.
+"I know I've been inattentive! I'm very sorry--really I am. Let me try
+and make up for it!"
+
+She looked into his face, and she was mollified. He was evidently in
+earnest.
+
+"Oh! very well," she said. "You mustn't think that I complained
+without due cause, though, for I spoke to you three times before you
+answered me. Oh, it's all right," she went on, as he commenced to
+frame another apology. "I don't mind now, but I really should like to
+know what is the matter with you. You have ridden all day like a man
+who valued neither his own life nor his horse's. Some of your jumps
+were simply reckless! I have heard other people say so, too! I like
+bold riding, but there is a limit; and though I've ridden two hounds
+since papa gave me my first pony, I've never seen any one try to jump
+Annisforth brook below the bridge, before,--and don't want to again,"
+she added, with a little shudder. "I know you ride fine horses, but
+you are not generally foolhardy. I saw your dark bay mare being taken
+home at Colbourne Spinneys, and I don't think she'll be fit to ride
+again this season. Old Harrison had tears in his eyes when he saw
+her!"
+
+"Harrison is an old woman about horses! I never touched Meg with the
+spurs. She was as fresh as paint, and there was no holding her."
+
+"You can't deceive me or yourself," Lady May continued calmly. "You
+have been riding for a fall, all day, and you may think yourself
+pretty fortunate that you haven't a broken neck. It seemed as though
+you were trying for one. And now that you haven't succeeded, you have
+nearly ridden ten miles alone with me, and scarcely opened your mouth.
+You are very provoking, Mr. de Vaux. I wish I had ridden home with
+Captain Fellowes."
+
+He was on the point of reminding her that the arrangement had not been
+of his making, but he checked himself. After all, Lady May had some
+grounds for her irritation. They had been friends since they had been
+children, and Paul knew that every one expected him, someday, to ask
+Lady May to become the mistress of Vaux Abbey. There had been a little
+more than intimacy even in their friendship up till twelve months ago;
+and Paul had certain recollections of their last interview, which had
+made him more than once a trifle uneasy. As a matter of fact, Lady May
+had quite made up her mind that Paul de Vaux would certainly ask her
+to marry him some time; and she had, on his account, refused two very
+eligible offers. Their people desired it, and, in her heart, Lady May
+was conscious that Paul was a little more to her than any other man
+could be. So she felt herself at first, aggrieved by his long silence
+during their ride home, which, to tell the truth, she had carefully
+planned for, and afterwards was just on the verge of being seriously
+offended.
+
+"Don't be angry with me, please," he said quietly. "You are right;
+something is the matter. I am worried."
+
+She was sympathetic and kindly at once. "I'm so sorry. Please forgive
+me for bothering you. You used to tell me your troubles once! Are we
+too old now?"
+
+He shook his head. "I hope we never shall be," he said. "I can't tell
+you all, but one thing is this. I had a letter from a man in town
+to-day--a man whom I can trust--about Arthur. You know what an
+impressionable, sensitive boy he is. Anyone who once obtains an
+influence over him can do nearly what they like with him. He seems--so
+my correspondent tells me--to have become completely fascinated with
+a--a--dancer--Adrea Kiros I think she calls herself."
+
+"I have heard of her," Lady May murmured. "She dances only at private
+houses, I think. Everyone says she is wonderful."
+
+"She is--wonderful," Paul said slowly. He was about to say more, but
+he checked himself. Lady May was watching him, and he knew that he
+could not speak of Adrea Kiros unmoved. So he went on:--
+
+"I am not complaining, for after all it is perfectly natural, but
+Arthur is certainly his mother's favorite son. You know how strict she
+is in some of her notions; so you can understand what a shock it would
+be to her if any rumors were to reach her ears. It would be a terrible
+blow to her. But, apart from that, the thing is serious in itself.
+Arthur was always delicate, and Cis--my friend--speaks of him as
+looking ghastly ill. The girl is probably only amusing herself,
+although she seems to have given him plenty of encouragement. But I
+know Ad--Adrea Kiros. She is no ordinary girl of her class. In the
+whole world I doubt if there breathes a more dangerous woman," he
+wound up, in a low tone.
+
+Lady May was quite sympathetic now, but a little mystified. "I am so
+sorry," she said softly. "Ought you not to go to London, and try what
+your influence can do with him? That is disinterested advice, at any
+rate," she added, with a little laugh, "for I don't want you to go.
+But Arthur always seemed to look up to you so! You might be able to
+get him away. Don't you think it would be a good thing if you could
+get him down here? We would make it as lively as possible for him up
+at the Castle; and, I don't know how your preserves are, but ours
+have been scarcely touched yet. Between the two of us, at any rate, he
+could have as much shooting as he liked. And I would ask the Fergusson
+girls to come and stay," she went on, getting more and more in love
+with her plan. "He was so much taken with Amy, you know, when they
+were down here before. We could get up some theatricals, or something,
+and have quite a good time. What do you think of my plan?"
+
+He was thankful for her long speech, for it had enabled him to get
+over the slight agitation which the thought of that unavoidable
+journey to London had called up in him. From the first he had felt
+that it was his duty to go. He had received this disquieting letter
+two days ago, and since then he had telegraphed twice and written to
+Arthur without getting any reply. Yes, he must go. And mingled with
+that reluctance and nameless apprehension which he felt at the thought
+of returning into her neighbourhood, he was acutely conscious, all the
+time, of a certain vague but sweet pleasure at the thought that fate
+had so ordained it. Perhaps it would be necessary for him to see
+her! A thrill of pleasure passed through him at the thought, followed
+almost immediately by a reaction of keen and bitter disgust with
+himself. He set his teeth, and quite unconsciously dug his spurs into
+his horse's sides, with the natural result that she reared up, almost
+unseating him, and then plunged forward. He had to gallop her along
+the road for a few hundred yards, and then turned round and rejoined
+Lady May. Fortunately she had not seen the commencement of the little
+episode.
+
+"Whatever was the matter?" she asked.
+
+"I fancy my spurs must have pricked her," he said apologetically. "I
+was riding quite carelessly."
+
+"Well, please don't let it happen again," she begged, eyeing his
+mare's flanks suspiciously. "Dandy is very tired now, and is generally
+good tempered; but I don't think he would stand much of that sort of
+thing."
+
+"I'm really very sorry," he said.
+
+She nodded. "All right. And now, what do you think of my plan? Are you
+going to London?"
+
+"I think your plan is a very good one indeed, and I shall run up
+to town to-morrow," he said. "It is very good of you to be so
+interested."
+
+He looked down into her face, a fair, sweet face it was, and then
+glanced away over the bare moorland which stretched on one side of
+them. It was a late November afternoon, and a faint yellow light
+was lingering in the west, where the sun had just set, colouring the
+clouds which stretched across the sky in long, level streaks. A fresh,
+healthy breeze, strong with the perfume of the sea, blew in their
+teeth, and afar off they could hear the waves dashing against the
+iron-bound line of northern cliffs. Inland, the country was more
+cultivated, but hilly and broken up with masses of lichen-covered
+rock, and little clumps of thin fir trees. He knew the scenery so
+well. The rugged, barren country, with its great stretches of moorland
+and little patches of cultivated land, with its silent tarns, its
+desolation, and the ever-varying music of the sea, they all meant home
+to him, and he loved them. It had always been so, and yet he felt it
+at that moment as he had never felt it before. The prospect of that
+journey to London was suddenly loathsome to him. The clear, physical
+healthfulness of his North-country home was triumphant, for the
+moment, over that other passion, which seemed to him then weak and
+artificial. It seemed to him also, looking down into Lady May's
+fresh, thoughtful face, that she was somehow in accord with these
+surroundings,--that she was, indeed, the link, the safeguard which
+should bind him to them, the good influence which should keep him fit
+to breathe God's pure air, and to keep himself, as he had ever striven
+to, _sans peur et sans reproche_. Paul was no sentimentalist, in the
+idle and common sense of the word. In his attitude to every-day
+life, he was essentially practical, sometimes perhaps a little too
+practical. But he was capable of strong feeling, and it came then with
+a rush. He leant over towards Lady May, and laid his hand upon her
+saddle.
+
+"You are very kind and sympathetic," he said softly. "You are always
+kind."
+
+She looked up at him, pleased, and with a soft look in her deep grey
+eyes. "You do not give me very much opportunity," she said quietly.
+"At one time you used to tell me all your troubles; do you remember?"
+
+"Yes! I remember," he answered, almost in a whisper, for they were
+riding up a grass-grown avenue,--a back way to the Abbey,--and their
+horses' hoofs sank noiselessly into the soft turf. "Sometimes I have
+dared to hope that those days may come again."
+
+She was silent, and her head was turned away lest he might see the
+tears trembling in her eyes. So they rode on for a moment or two,
+walking their horses in the dim twilight; she in the shadow of the
+grey wall and the overhanging trees, and he very close to her, with
+his hand still upon her saddle and his reins loose in his hand.
+
+"If ever they did, if ever I was so fortunate," he went on in a low
+tone, "you would find your office no sinecure. I have troubles, or
+rather, one trouble, and a great one, May."
+
+She looked at him for a moment, her eyes full of sympathy. She dimly
+remembered the time when strange stories were current in the county of
+Martin de Vaux, and their echo had remained for years. It was not for
+her to inquire about them, and she never had done so. But that their
+burden should have fallen upon Paul; it was hard! Her heart was sore
+with the injustice of it. A woman is a swift and censorious judge of
+any one who brings trouble upon the man she loves.
+
+He was a little closer to her still; and suddenly the hand which
+carried her small whip felt itself grasped in strong fingers and held
+tightly.
+
+"May----"
+
+It was not his fault this time that his mare stood still, and then ran
+backwards, dislodging the topmost stones from the grey stone wall with
+her hind quarters, and then plunging violently. This time there was
+cause for her alarm. A tall, forbidding-looking figure stood in the
+middle of the avenue, grasping the rein of Lady May's terrified horse.
+He had come out of the twilight so suddenly, and his attire was
+so unusual, that Paul and Lady May were almost as surprised as the
+animals. Paul's first instinct was one of anger.
+
+"What the----"
+
+He stopped short. The man who had startled them so had quieted Lady
+May's horse with a few soothing words, and now stood out of the deep
+shade of the overhanging trees into the centre of the avenue. Even
+here his face was scarcely visible, but his figure and attire were
+sufficient. He wore the long robes and shovel hat of a Roman Catholic
+priest.
+
+Paul broke off in the middle of his exclamation, and the arm which had
+been grasping his whip tightly sank nervelessly to his side. He was
+thankful for the twilight, which concealed the grey shade which had
+stolen into his face. Yet now that the blow had fallen, he was calmer
+than he had been in some of his anticipations of it. For it had
+indeed fallen! In the dusky twilight he had recognised the face of the
+priest, changed though it was. He rode up, and addressed him.
+
+"Have you lost your way?" he asked quietly. "This is a private road,
+and the gate at the other end is locked."
+
+The priest looked at him steadily for a moment, and then drew on one
+side, as though to let them pass.
+
+"I am sorry that I startled your horses," he said, in a soft, pleasant
+voice, marked with a strong foreign accent; "I was standing with my
+back to you, waiting for the moon to rise behind the ruins there,
+and the soft ground made your approach noiseless. And, if I am
+trespassing, I am sorry. The steward at the Abbey yonder gave me
+permission to wander anywhere around the ruins. I have perhaps
+exceeded a little his bounds."
+
+"It is of no consequence," Paul said. "You find the ruins interesting,
+then?"
+
+"Very."
+
+"There are some pictures in the Abbey you might care to see--mostly
+modern, but there is a Rubens and two Giorgiones."
+
+The priest removed his hat. "I thank you, but I am only interested in
+ecclesiastical art. These ruins are more to me than any pictures--save
+those which Rome alone possesses," he added. "I spend all my evenings
+here, and hope to be allowed to, for the short time that I remain in
+the neighbourhood."
+
+"You have my permission to come and go as you please. I am Mr. de
+Vaux," Paul said, touching his horse with the whip. "Good-evening!"
+
+"Good-evening, sir! Good-evening, madam! I thank you!"
+
+They rode on down the avenue, Paul silent and absorbed, and making no
+attempt to pursue the conversation. At the bend of the lane he turned
+round in his saddle. The priest was standing with his back to them,
+motionless and silent as a figure of stone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+"WHO ARE YOU, AND WHAT YOUR MISSION?"
+
+
+The winter moon, soft and bright and full, looked down upon the
+ruins of Vaux Abbey. A strange beauty lay upon the bare, rock-strewn
+hillside and desolate moor. Afar off a grey, brawling stream was
+touched by its light, and in its place a band of gold seemed coiled
+around the grey, sleeping hill. A black, reed-grown tarn at the foot
+of the Abbey gleamed and quivered like a fair silver shield. The dark
+pines which crowned their sandy slopes lost their forbidding frown in
+an unaccustomed softness, and every harsh line and broken pillar of
+the ruined chapel was toned down into a rich, sad softness. A human
+face, too, uplifted to the sky, so silent and motionless that it
+seemed almost set into the side of one of those groined arches, had
+lost all its harshness and worldliness in the glow of that falling
+light. It might have been the face of a saint, save for the vague
+unhappiness which shone in the clear, dark eyes; for at that moment,
+spirituality, wistfulness, and reverence seemed carved into the white,
+still features. But there was disquiet, too; and, after a while, as
+though some cloud had passed across the moon, a dark shade stole into
+the white face. The brows were contracted into a frown, and the eyes
+filled with restless doubt. Father Adrian moved away from the shadow
+of the pillar, and stood, tall and motionless, on the ruined chapel
+floor, with his eyes fixed upon the distant landscape. After a moment
+or two, his lips began to move and he commenced to speak aloud in a
+low, deep tone.
+
+"Six nights has my voice gone up to God from amongst these silent
+ruins, six nights I have prayed in rain. These fair, still evenings
+mock me! Whose is their beauty, if it be not God's; and, if there be a
+God, and if the Blessed Virgin, our Holy Mother, indeed dwells amongst
+the stars, why are their faces turned from me? Oh! that man knew a
+little more or a little less--enough to pierce the mystery of yon
+star-crowned heavens, or so little as to gaze on them unmoved and
+unfeeling! What is our little knowledge? A mockery, a dreary, hopeless
+mockery! I had better have rotted in that miserable monastery, a
+soulless, lifeless being, than have stepped out to struggle with a
+world which is only a terrible riddle to me. I cannot reason with it;
+I cannot laugh or weep with it; I am in it, but not of it! Why was I
+sent? Oh I why was I sent?"
+
+The snapping of a twig caused him to turn suddenly round. Paul de Vaux
+was advancing through the ruins, with a loose cloak thrown over his
+evening clothes.
+
+Father Adrian turned round to meet him. The two men stood for a moment
+face to face without speaking. Both recognised that this interview
+was to be no ordinary one; and in a certain sense, each seemed to be
+measuring the other's strength. It was Paul who spoke first.
+
+"We have met before, Father Adrian."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You will scarcely wonder that I am surprised to see you here in
+England. Have you left the monastery at Cruta?"
+
+"I left it a month after you did."
+
+"But your vows,--were they not for life?" Paul asked.
+
+Father Adrian smiled scornfully. "I was not bound to Cruta," he
+answered. "There had been complaints, and I was there to investigate
+them. The monastery was poverty and disease-stricken. It is closed now
+forever."
+
+"Then you are no monk?"
+
+Father Adrian shook his head. "I am, and I am not. In my youth I
+served my novitiate, but I never took the oaths. The cloisters are for
+holier men than I."
+
+"Then who are you?"
+
+"I am--Father Adrian, priest of the Roman Catholic Church, I can tell
+you no more."
+
+The moonlight was falling full upon his dark, striking face. Paul,
+with bent brows, scanned every feature of it intently. Father Adrian
+bore the scrutiny without flinching and without discomposure. Only
+once the colour mounted a little into his cheeks as the eyes of the
+two men met.
+
+"What brings you to Vaux Abbey, Father Adrian?" Paul asked at length.
+
+"To see your home," was the quiet reply.
+
+"What do you want with me? It must be something more than curiosity
+which has brought you all this way. What is it?"
+
+Father Adrian was silent. Yet his silence was not one of confusion.
+He was looking down through the gaps in the ruined chapel walls at the
+dark Gothic front of the old Abbey. Paul waited for an answer, and it
+came at last.
+
+"I wished to see the home of Martin de Vaux, the Englishman who died
+in my arms at the monastery of Cruta. For six nights I have prayed
+for his soul in Purgatory, amongst the ruins here. He died in grievous
+sin!"
+
+"Have you come to remind me of it?" Paul asked bitterly. "Perhaps
+you have repented of your silence, and have come to break the widow's
+heart by telling her the story of his last moments. Perhaps--perhaps
+in those dark hours he told you his secret--told you why he had come
+to Cruta!"
+
+"He did," said the priest gravely.
+
+"My God!"
+
+It was a great shock to Paul. Hitherto he had feared only one thing:
+that the story of his father's tragical death might come to light, and
+break his mother's heart. Now there was more to fear,--far more. He
+looked into Father Adrian's face with a new and keener interest. He
+recognised at once that everything dear to him in life might be at
+this man's mercy.
+
+"You were intrusted with this secret by a dying man," Paul said, with
+a little hoarseness in his tone. "It is to you as the secrets of the
+confessional!"
+
+The priest shook his head gently. "He refused to confess. He told me
+distinctly that it was as man to man he spoke to me."
+
+Paul looked away into the night with white, stricken face, and cursed
+his father's weakness. Supposing that this priest had discovered
+that his conscience would not allow him to keep the secret! What
+more likely! Why else was he here,--why else did he disclaim the
+confessional? There was only one other alternative! Perhaps he desired
+to trade upon his secret. Yet how was that possible? Of what use could
+money be to him? What could he gain by it? Besides, his was not the
+face of an adventurer.
+
+"I do not understand," Paul said at last. "Once more let me ask you,
+Father Adrian, why are you here?"
+
+Father Adrian looked thoughtfully away. "You ask more than I can
+tell you," he said gravely. "The time has not yet come. We shall meet
+again. Farewell!"
+
+The priest turned away, but Paul laid his hand on his shoulder.
+
+"If there is anything which you ought or mean to tell me, tell me
+now," he demanded hoarsely. "I can bear everything but suspense. I
+know only--that there was a secret. No more. Proceed! Tell me more!"
+
+The priest shook his robe free from Paul's restraining hand, and
+turned away.
+
+"Not yet! Not yet! My mind is not yet clear. We shall meet again.
+Farewell!"
+
+"But----"
+
+"Farewell!"
+
+The priest had passed from the ruins, and was already out of sight in
+the gathering darkness.
+
+"Come back, Father Adrian! One word more!"
+
+"Farewell!"
+
+The priest did not turn his head. Paul was left alone, gazing after
+him with stern, troubled face and anxious heart. It was a danger which
+he had always foreseen, always dreaded. Henceforth he must live like
+a man who paces, day by day, the brink of a volcano. At any moment the
+blow might fall.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+"I AM WEARY OF A HOPELESS LOVE"
+
+
+Paul and Arthur shared a bachelor residence in Mayfair; shared it,
+that is to say, insomuch as Paul had purchased it, and was the sole
+proprietor, and Arthur used it whenever he could get leave from his
+regiment. It was here Paul found his brother on the morning of his
+arrival in London.
+
+They shook hands in silence; Paul did not wish to say anything for a
+moment. His brother's appearance had choked him. It was one o'clock,
+but he was still in his dressing-gown; with sunken, pale cheeks, save
+for one bright spot, and with faint, dark rims underneath his eyes.
+There were a pile of blue papers and some ominous-looking envelopes
+on the table before him, and Paul could not help noticing the intense
+pallor of the hand which rested upon them.
+
+"I wish you would let a fellow know what time you were coming," Arthur
+said, rather peevishly, but with an attempt at a smile. "I didn't
+expect you till evening, so I was having a shack before dressing. I
+was late last night!"
+
+Paul banished his gravity, as far as possible, and stood with his
+hands in his pockets, leaning against the mantel-piece. He heartily
+disliked the part of mentor, and he did not wish to play it, unless he
+were obliged.
+
+"It was beastly early to get up," he said, "but the connection at
+Normanton is so much better. One has to wait two hours by the late
+train, and Normanton is such a hole. I don't know that I should have
+come up to town at all, just yet," he continued after a slight pause,
+"only that I'm on the committee at the club this term, you know, and I
+haven't attended a single meeting yet. Besides, I promised Westover
+to put him up this time, and the half-yearly meeting's to-morrow, you
+know. Got any engagement? If not, you might dine with me there. Always
+a full night election time, you know!"
+
+"Beastly sorry! but my leave's up to night," Arthur answered ruefully.
+"I shall have to go down to Aldershot by the four o'clock train, and
+do a week's close grind."
+
+Paul nodded. "I'm sorry; I'd have liked you to run down home with me
+for a few days, and see the mater. The Westovers have some very nice
+people coming to the Castle, and are going to get up some theatricals.
+Lady May says they must have you! Will you come in a week, if I work
+the Colonel?"
+
+"I'm afraid I can't," Arthur answered, with a slight flush in his
+cheeks. "I have some engagements for next week, and--and--I'm sure I
+can't manage it."
+
+"The mater'll be disappointed," Paul said quietly. "She is counting on
+seeing you, and it's some time since you were down, isn't it? Tell you
+what, old man! I'd try and manage it, if I were you!"
+
+"I can't promise! I will, if I can manage it! I'll write you from
+Aldershot!"
+
+"You don't look quite the thing," Paul said kindly. "Nothing the
+matter, is there?"
+
+"Nothing at all," Arthur assured him hastily. "I'm quite well. A bit
+of a head, that's all."
+
+"Not too many of those bits of paper about, eh?" Paul asked, pointing
+to an oblong strip of blue paper which lay, face uppermost, on the
+table.
+
+Arthur coloured, and threw a book over it.
+
+"I am sorry I saw it," Paul went on; "but it was there to be seen,
+wasn't it?"
+
+"Oh, yes! that's all right! I oughtn't to have left it about, that's
+all. I'm not exactly a Croesus, like you, you know, Paul, and now
+and then I'm obliged to raise the wind somehow. Yes! I know what
+you're going to say. My allowance is a good one, and I ought to make
+it do. But, you see, sometimes I can't."
+
+"I hope you won't mind my asking, Arthur, but is that an acceptance of
+your own?"
+
+Arthur nodded. "There are a few accounts which I must pay," he said.
+"So I'm going to ask Plimsoll to do it for me. He's a decent fellow of
+his sort, you know! Lots of fellows go to him!"
+
+Paul stretched out his hand. "Give it to me," he said, "and I will
+discount it for you. Thanks!"
+
+Paul took it, and, just glancing at the amount, threw it into the
+fire. "I haven't my cheque book here," he said, "but we will call at
+the bank on our way to the club, and I can get the money. I'm glad I
+saw it!"
+
+"It's awfully good of you," Arthur said hesitatingly. "I shouldn't
+have thought of asking you. I must owe you an awful lot already."
+
+"Never mind what you owe me! I'll write it all off, Arthur, and this
+last amount too, if you'll do me a favour. Come down home with me next
+week, as soon as you can get leave."
+
+Arthur rose to his feet, and then, leaning against the mantel-board,
+buried his face in his hands. "I can't leave London, Paul!--or, if
+I did, it could only be for a day," he said in a low tone. "I wish I
+could tell you why, but I can't; you wouldn't understand!"
+
+"I think I know," Paul said quietly. "There is some one whom you do
+not care to leave! Is that not it?"
+
+Arthur looked up quickly. His face was very white, and his lip was
+quivering.
+
+"Who told you that? What do you know?"
+
+"I know nothing! I want you to tell me. Perhaps I could help you.
+There is a--lady in the case, isn't there?"
+
+Arthur stood up on the hearthrug, and spoke, with a subdued passion
+trembling in his tone.
+
+"Yes! it's Adrea Kiros, the dancer! I daresay you've heard all about
+it! I don't see why you shouldn't! I can't leave her! I know all that
+you would say! It doesn't make any difference. She isn't good! Well!
+I know it! She doesn't care for me! I don't believe she does. She's
+as cruel as a woman can be. Sometimes, when I am away from her, the
+thought of going back makes me shudder; and yet, I could no more keep
+away than lift the roof from this house. Of course, this sounds like
+rigmarole to you. You think I'm raving! I don't blame you. Only it is
+so, and I can't help it! I am as much a prisoner as any poor devil in
+Newgate."
+
+Paul laid his hand upon his brother's shoulder, and looked kindly into
+his face. "Arthur, I'm very sorry! And don't think I don't understand!
+I do! I do not know much of A--of Adrea Kiros, but I know enough
+to tell me that she is a very dangerous woman. Can't I help you,
+somehow?"
+
+"I--I don't think you can! I don't think any one can," Arthur
+exclaimed unsteadily. He had been prepared for a lecture, for good
+advice, for a little contempt even; but his brother's attitude was
+unexpected, and it almost unnerved him. "It is the uncertainty of it
+all that is so tormenting," he went on. "Sometimes she is so kind,
+and sweet, and thoughtful, that I could almost worship her. And then,
+without any cause, she will suddenly become cold, and hard, and cruel,
+till I hate myself for bearing quietly all that she says. But I do! I
+can't help it! I am never quite happy even when she is in one of her
+sweetest moods, for I never know how long it will last. The moment I
+leave her I begin to get anxious, and wonder how she will be the next
+day."
+
+"Try what a change will do, Arthur!" his brother begged.
+
+Arthur shook his head. "It's no use; I've tried! If I went away I
+should only be miserable, and hurry back by the first train. Oh, if
+only I could make you understand!" he cried, with a little passionate
+gesture, which gained pathos and almost dignity from the expression on
+his white, sorrowing face. "Adrea is as necessary to me as the air we
+breathe! The sun has no light, and the day no ending, till I have seen
+her! She is the measure of all things to me: joy, grief, happiness,
+misery, it is her hand that deals them out to me! She can play upon
+the chords of my being as she chooses. A look or word from her can
+pull me down into hell, or transport me into a seventh heaven! Who
+gave her this power, I cannot tell! But she has it! she has it!"
+
+Paul said no more. Perhaps he recognised that, for the present at
+any rate, it was useless. He walked up and down the room for a few
+minutes, in sympathetic silence. When he spoke again he made no
+reference to the subject, but Arthur understood. "Get your things on,
+and come out to lunch with me," he said pleasantly. "I am too hungry
+to be sympathetic, and we can call at Coutts' on the way."
+
+Arthur nodded and disappeared. Paul took his chair for a while, and,
+as he sat there gazing into the fire, his face grew grey and haggard.
+Was Adrea Kiros seeking vengeance on the son of her father's murderer?
+he wondered. If so, it seemed as though she were indeed succeeding.
+How could he save Arthur? and what would happen if those rumours
+should reach his mother's ears, as some day they certainly would? At
+any rate, he would see Adrea himself before he left London. He had
+made up his mind that, if Arthur refused to listen to him, that should
+be his course.
+
+Things somehow seemed brighter when they walked down to the club
+together. Dress makes so much difference to a man, and Arthur, spruce
+and _debonair_, with a gardenia in his button-hole, and every part
+of his attire almost "faultily faultless," according to the canons
+of London fashion, presented a very different appearance to the
+tragical-looking personage of half an hour ago. There was a slight air
+of subdued feverishness about him, though, not altogether healthy, and
+the dark rims had not quite vanished from underneath his eyes.
+
+"Paul, I wonder whether you will do something for me?" he asked, as
+they were crossing Pickadilly. "I hate asking you!"
+
+"I'll try," Paul answered. "What is it?"
+
+"I don't believe you'll like it, but--the fact is, Adrea wants you to
+go and see her. I promised that I would do my best to get you to call
+with me this afternoon. If you don't mind, I wish you would," he added
+wistfully.
+
+"I will go with you certainly, if you wish it," Paul answered, not too
+cordially, for he did not wish his brother to know that it was what
+he had already planned to do. "Did she tell you that we had already a
+slight acquaintance?"
+
+"Yes! You rode home in a cab together from Lady Swindon's, didn't you?
+There was only one, and it was raining, so you shared it. Adrea told
+me that."
+
+Paul nodded. He meant, after he had seen Adrea, to consider whether
+it would not be best to tell his brother everything. But, for the
+present, her story was enough. They turned into Pall Mall, and, almost
+immediately, Arthur's hat was in his hand, and he was on the edge of
+the pavement, colouring with pleasure. A small victoria had pulled up
+by the side, and Paul found himself face to face with Adrea.
+
+She was muffled up in rich brown furs, and almost invisible, but her
+dark eyes flashed into his from underneath her thick veil. After the
+first greeting she scarcely noticed Arthur; it was Paul upon whom her
+eyes were bent.
+
+"You are in London again, then, Mr. de Vaux," she remarked. "Have you
+discovered that, after all, the country is a little _triste_ in this
+land of damp and fogs--the country in November, I mean--or is it only
+important business which has brought you up!"
+
+"The latter," he answered, "as it happens. I am glad to see that the
+damp and fogs which you complain of have not affected your health."
+
+"I am quite well, thanks," she answered. "How long are you staying in
+town?"
+
+"For less than a week, I think."
+
+"Well, it is too cold to talk here. Will you come and let me give you
+some tea this afternoon, after the fashion of you strange islanders? I
+want you to, please."
+
+Paul looked her straight in the face. "You are very kind; I shall be
+glad to," he answered.
+
+She nodded. "About five o'clock. I go to sleep till then. Shall you
+come, Arthur?" she added carelessly.
+
+"I cannot, so late as that," he answered despondently.
+
+"Ah, I forgot. You are going down to Aldershot, aren't you? Don't
+overwork yourself."
+
+She nodded, and the carriage drove on. Arthur watched it until it
+was out of sight. "She might have said a little earlier," he remarked
+despondently. "She knew I couldn't come so late as that."
+
+Paul passed his arm through his brother's and was silent. He knew very
+well that Adrea had thought of this when she had made the arrangement.
+
+They lunched together, and Paul did his utmost to make the time
+pass pleasantly for his brother. When they parted, too, late in the
+afternoon, he referred once more to Mrs. de Vaux's desire that he
+should come down to the Abbey for a few days.
+
+"I want you to think of it seriously, Arthur," he said, as they shook
+hands through the carriage window. "The mother is very anxious to have
+you, and I am sure we can make things pleasant for you. I shall speak
+to Drummond about leave if I see him to-morrow."
+
+Arthur assented dubiously, and without any enthusiasm.
+
+"Awfully good of you to want me," he remarked. "I daresay I'll be able
+to come. I'll try, anyhow--just for a day or two."
+
+The train steamed off, and Paul walked slowly back to his carriage.
+
+"Where to, sir?" the man asked.
+
+Paul hesitated for a moment. Then he gave Adrea's address, and was
+driven away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+"AH! HOW FAIR MY WEAKNESS FINDS THEE"
+
+
+Paul found no one in the hall of the house where Adrea lived to take
+him to her, so after waiting a few minutes for her maid, whom the
+porter had twice fruitlessly summoned, he ascended the stairs alone,
+and knocked at the door of her rooms.
+
+At first there was no reply. He tried again a little louder, and this
+time there was a sound of some one stirring within.
+
+"Come in, Celeste," was the drowsy answer.
+
+He turned the handle and walked in, carefully closing the door behind
+him. At first the room appeared to be in semi-darkness, for a clear
+spring day's sunshine was brightening the streets which he had just
+left, and here the heavy curtains were closely drawn, as though
+to keep out every vestige of daylight. But gradually his eyes grew
+accustomed to the shaded twilight and he could make out the familiar
+objects of the room; for although it was only his second visit, they
+were familiar already in his thoughts.
+
+Strangely enough it seemed to him, after his first hasty glance
+around, that the room was empty; but just then a sudden gleam from
+the bright fire fell upon Adrea's hair, and he saw her. He stood for a
+moment silent and motionless. She was curled up on a huge divan
+drawn close to the fireplace, with her limbs doubled under her like a
+panther's, and her arms, from which the loose sleeves had fallen back,
+clasped half-bare underneath her head. The peculiar grace of movement
+and carriage, which had made her dancing so famous, was even more
+striking in repose, for there was a faint, insidious suggestion of
+voluptuous movement in those motionless, crouching limbs, and the
+_abandon_ of the shapely, dusky head, with its crown of dark, wavy
+hair thrown back amongst the cushions. It was beauty of a strange
+sort, the beauty almost of some wild animal; but Paul felt a most
+unwilling admiration steal through his senses as he gazed down upon
+her. Her tea-gown, a wonderful shade of shimmering green, tumbled and
+disarranged out of all similitude to its original shape, followed the
+soft perfections of her outline with such peculiar faithfulness that
+it seemed to suggest even more than it concealed, leaving the gentle
+tracery of her figure outlined there like a piece of living Greek
+statuary. She turned slightly upon the couch, and a slipperless little
+foot stole out from a sea of lace and white draperies which her uneasy
+movement had left exposed, and swayed slowly backwards and forwards,
+trying to reach the ground. Her eyes were still closed, but she was
+not sleeping, for in a moment or two she spoke in a low, drowsy tone.
+
+"Celeste, I told you not to disturb me for an hour. It isn't five
+o'clock yet, is it?"
+
+He roused himself, and moved a step further into the room. "It is
+still a quarter to five, I think," he said. "I have come before my
+time."
+
+She opened her eyes, and then, seeing him, sprang into a sitting
+posture. Her hair, which had escaped all bounds, was down to her
+shoulders, and her gown, still further disarranged by her hasty
+movement, floated around her in wonderful curves and angles. Had she
+been a past mistress in the art of picturesque effects she could have
+conceived nothing more striking. Paul felt all the old fear upon him
+as he watched the firelight gleaming upon her startled, dusky face,
+and the faint pink colouring, wonderfully suggestive of a blush, steal
+into her cheeks. It seemed to him that she was as beautiful as a woman
+could be, and yet so different from Lady May.
+
+She rose, and, with a shrug of the shoulders and a quick, graceful
+movement, shook out her skirts, and pushed the hair back from her
+face. Then she held out her hand, and Paul found himself compelled,
+against his will, to stand by her side.
+
+"How strange that I should have overslept like this, and have taken
+you for Celeste!" she said. "Yet perhaps it was natural; for, Monsieur
+Paul, save Celeste, no one yet has permission to enter my chamber
+unannounced. How comes it that I find you here to laugh at my
+_deshabille_?"
+
+He was silent for a moment, while she looked at him questioningly.
+Her soft, delicate voice, with its very slight but piquant foreign
+intonation, had often sounded in his reluctant yet charmed ears since
+their last meeting; but now that he heard it again he felt how weak
+were his imaginings, and what sweet music it indeed was.
+
+"I am sorry," he answered; and the constraint which he was placing
+upon his voice made it sound hard and cold. "The porter rang for your
+maid twice whilst I waited in the hall; but as she did not come, I
+thought I had better try and find the way myself."
+
+"And I mistook your knock for Celeste's, and let you discover me
+_comme cela_. Well, you were not to blame. See, I will just arrange my
+hair here, and you need not look at me unless you like."
+
+She stood up in front of a mirror, over which she lighted a shaded
+candle, and for a moment or two her white hands flashed deftly in and
+out amongst the dark, silky coils of disordered hair. Paul sat down,
+and taking up a magazine which he found lying on the divan, tried to
+concentrate his thoughts upon its contents. But he could not. Every
+moment he found his eyes and his thoughts straying to that slim, lithe
+figure, watching the play of her arms and the grace of her backward
+pose. When she looked suddenly round, on the completion of her task,
+their eyes met.
+
+"Monsieur Paul, you are like all your sex--curious," she said lightly.
+"Tell me, then, do you admire my coiffure?"
+
+"Very much," he answered, glancing at the loose Grecian knot into
+which she had gathered her disordered hair, and confined it with a
+band of dull gold. "It is quite oriental, and it seems to suit you.
+Not that I am any judge of such matters," he added quickly.
+
+She moved away with a little, low laugh, and lit two or three more of
+the shaded candles or fairy lamps which were placed here and there on
+brackets round the room. Then she rang the bell, and gave some orders
+to the maid.
+
+"So you think my hair looks oriental," she said, sinking down upon a
+huge cushion in front of the fire. "That is what the papers call me
+sometimes--oriental. My early associations asserting themselves, you
+see. I think I remember more of Constantinople than any place," she
+went on dreamily, with her eyes fixed on the fire. "I was only a child
+in those days, but it seemed to me then that nothing could be more
+beautiful than the City of Mosques and the Golden Horn on a clear
+summer evening. Why do I think of those days?" she added, shaking her
+head impatiently. "Such folly! And yet I always think of them when I
+am lonely."
+
+He was suddenly and deeply moved with altogether a new feeling towards
+her--one of responsibility. She was alone in the world, and it was his
+father's hand which had rendered her so. How empty and barren had been
+his conception of the burden which that deed had laid upon him! Like a
+flash he seemed to see the whole situation in a new light. If, indeed,
+she had drifted into ruin, the sin lay at his door. He should have
+found her a mother; it should have been his care to have watched her
+continually, and to have assured himself that she was contented and
+happy. In those few moments the whole situation seemed to change, and
+he even felt a hot flush of shame at his own coldness towards her. He
+forgot the dancer, the woman of strange fascinations, the idol of the
+_jeunesse doree_ of West London clubdom, and he remembered only the
+fact that she was a lonely orphan with a most womanly light in her
+soft, dark eyes, and that he had failed in his duty towards her.
+Paul was essentially a "manly" man, self-contained, and with all
+his feelings very much at his control; but at that moment he felt
+something like a rush of tenderness towards this strange, dark-eyed
+girl who lay coiled up at his feet. Involuntarily he stretched out his
+hand and laid it, with an almost caressing gesture, upon her hair.
+
+She started around, as though electrified, and looking up saw the
+change in his face. It was the first kindly look or speech she had
+had from him since they had met in London, and it had come so suddenly
+that it seemed to have a strange effect upon her. A deep flush stole
+into her face, and her eyes gleamed brilliantly. She drew a long
+breath, and underneath her loose gown he could see her bosom rising
+and falling quickly. Yet it all seemed so softened and womanly that
+the thoughts which he had once had of her seemed like a distant
+nightmare to him. The ethical and physical horror of her being--of her
+ever becoming--what he feared, rose up strong within him, and deepened
+at once his sense of responsibility towards her, and his new-born
+tenderness. He took her hand gently, and was startled to find how cold
+it was.
+
+"So you do feel lonely, Adrea, sometimes," he said softly, "although
+you have so many acquaintances."
+
+The colour burned deeper for a moment in her cheeks. She looked at him
+half reproachfully, half indignantly.
+
+"Acquaintances! You mean the people who come to see me! I hate them
+all! Sometimes they amuse me a little, but that is all. They are
+nothing!"
+
+"And you have no women friends?"
+
+"None! How should I! But I do not care. I do not like English-women!"
+
+"But, Adrea, it is not good for you,--this isolation from your sex."
+
+At the sound of her Christian name, coming from his lips so gently,
+almost affectionately, she looked up quickly. It seemed to him
+almost as though some softening change had crept over her. Was it the
+firelight, he wondered, or was it fancy?
+
+"Good for me!" she said softly. "Have you just thought of that,
+Monsieur Paul?"
+
+Again he felt that pang of conscience; and yet, was she not a little
+unjust to him?
+
+"You took your life into your own hands," he reminded her. "You chose
+for yourself."
+
+"Yes, yes!" she answered, drawing a little nearer to him, till her
+head almost rested upon his knees. "I do not blame you."
+
+"It would have been so easy before to have found a home for you," he
+went on, "and now you have made it so difficult."
+
+"There is no need," she interrupted proudly; "I could keep myself now.
+I do not want anything from you, Monsieur Paul,--save one thing!"
+
+She raised her face to his, and it seemed to him to be all aglow with
+a wonderful, new light. There was no mistaking the soft entreaty of
+those strange, dark eyes so close to his, or the tremor in his tones.
+And then, before he could answer her, before he could summon up
+resolution enough to draw away, she had stolen softly into his arms,
+and, with a little murmur of content, had rested her small, dusky
+head, with its coronet of dark, braided hair, upon his shoulder, and
+twined her hands around his neck.
+
+"Paul! Monsieur Paul! I am lonely and miserable. Love me just a
+little, only a little!" she pleaded.
+
+It was the supreme moment for both of them. To her, coveting this
+love with all the passionate force of her fiery oriental nature, time
+seemed to stand still while she rested passively in his arms, neither
+altogether accepted nor altogether repulsed. And to him, as he sat
+there pale and shaken, fighting fiercely against this great temptation
+which threatened his self-respect, his liberty of body and soul, life
+seemed to have turned into a grim farce, full of grotesque lights and
+shadows, mocking and gibing at all which had seemed to him sweet and
+pure and strong. Her warm breath fell upon his cheek, and her eyes
+maddened him. A curiously faint perfume from her clothes floated upon
+the air, and oppressed him with its peculiar richness. He was a strong
+man but at that moment he faltered. It seemed as though some unseen
+hand were weaving a spell upon him, as though his whole environment
+was being drawn in around him, and he himself were powerless. Yet,
+even in that moment of intoxication, his reason did not altogether
+desert him. He knew that if he opened his arms to receive that
+clinging figure, and drew the delicate, tear-stained face, full
+of mute invitation, down to his, to be covered with passionate
+kisses,--he knew that at that moment he would sign the death-warrant
+to all that had seemed fair and sweet and comely in his life. Forever
+he must live without self-respect, a dishonoured man in his own eyes,
+perhaps some day in hers,--for he had no more faith in her love than
+in his.
+
+He held her hands tightly in his,--he had unwound them gently from his
+neck,--and stood up face to face with her upon the hearthrug. The soft
+fire-light threw up strange, ruddy gleams, which glowed around her and
+shown in her dark eyes, fixed so earnestly and so passionately upon
+his.
+
+"Adrea," he said, and his low, hoarse tone sounded harsh and
+unfamiliar to his ears, "you do not know----"
+
+She interrupted him, she threw her arms again around his neck, and her
+upturned face almost met his.
+
+"I do know! I do know! I understand--everything! Only I--cannot live
+without you, Paul!"
+
+Her head sank upon his shoulder; he could not thrust her away. Very
+gently he passed his arms around her, and drew her to him. He knew
+that he could trust himself. For him the battle was over. Even as she
+had crept into his arms, there had come to him a flash of memory--a
+sudden, swift vision. The walls of the dimly lit, dainty little
+chamber, with all its charm of faint perfume, soft lights, and
+luxurious drapings, had opened before him, and he looked out upon
+another world. A bare Northumbrian moor, with its tumbled masses of
+grey rock, its low-hanging, misty clouds and silent tarns, stretched
+away before his eyes. A strong, fresh breeze, salt-smelling and
+bracing, cooled his hot face. The roar of a great ocean thundered in
+his ears, and an angry sunset burned strange colours into the
+western sky. And with these actual memories came a healthier tone of
+feeling--something, indeed, of the old North-country puritanism which
+was in his blood. The sea spoke to him of the vastness of life, and
+dared him to cast his away, soiled and tarnished, for the sake of a
+brief, passionate delight. The breeze, nature's very voice, whispered
+to him to stand true to himself, and taste once more and for ever the
+deep joy of pure and perfect communion with her. The voices of his
+past life spoke to him in one long, sweet chorus, and held up to him
+those ideals to which he had been ever true. And blended with all were
+memories, faint but sweet, of a fair womanly face, into whose clear
+grey eyes he could never dare to look again if he yielded now to this
+fierce temptation. A new strength came upon him, and brought with it a
+great tenderness.
+
+"Adrea, my child," he said softly, "you make me almost forget that I
+am your guardian and you are my ward. Sit down here! I want to talk to
+you."
+
+He led her, dumb and unresisting, to a chair, and stood by her side.
+
+"Adrea----"
+
+She interrupted him, throwing his arms roughly from her shoulder, and
+springing to her feet.
+
+"How dare you touch me! How dare you stand there and mock me! Oh! how
+I hate you! hate you! hate you!"
+
+Her voice and every limb trembled with passion, and her face was as
+pale as death. Before her anger he bowed his head and was silent.
+Against the sombre background of dark curtains, her slim form seemed
+to gain an added strength and dignity.
+
+"You have insulted me, Paul de Vaux! Do I not owe you enough already,
+without putting this to the score! Dare you think that it was indeed
+my love I offered you--you who stood by and saw my father murdered
+that you might be spared from shame and disgrace! Bah! Listen to me
+and go! You have a brother? Good! I shall ruin him, shall break his
+heart; and, when the task is over, I shall cast him away like an old
+glove! Oh, it will be easy, never fear! I shall do it. Arthur is no
+cold hypocrite, like you. He is my slave. And when I have ruined him,
+have set my foot upon him, it will be your turn, Monsieur Paul de
+Vaux. Listen! I will know my father's secret! I will know why he was
+murdered! I will discover everything! Some day the whole world shall
+know--from me. Now go! Out of my sight, I say! Go! go! go!"
+
+With bowed head and face as white as death Paul walked out of the
+room, with her words ringing in his ears like the mocking echoes of
+some hideous nightmare.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+"I AM BUT A SLAVE, AND YET I BID THEE COME"
+
+
+"Were there any letters for me this morning, mother?" Paul asked.
+
+"Only one for you, I think," Mrs. de Vaux answered from across the
+tea-tray. "I believe you will find it in the library. Shall I send for
+it?"
+
+Paul shook his head. "It will keep," he answered lightly. "I can get
+it on my way upstairs. Have we anything left to tell, Lady May?"
+
+"I think not," Lady May replied, from the depths of an easy chair
+drawn up to the fire. "Altogether it has been a glorious day, and such
+a scent! I don't know when I have enjoyed anything so much."
+
+"Nor I!" Paul answered heartily. "The going was superb, and that
+second fox took us over a grand stretch of country. Really, if it
+hadn't been for the walls here and there, we might have been in
+Leicestershire! May I have some more tea, mother?"
+
+Mrs. de Vaux stretched out her hand for his cup, and smiled gently
+at their enthusiasm. She had been a hunting woman all her life; and,
+though she seldom even drove to a meet now, she liked to have her son
+come in to afternoon tea with her, and talk over the run. Of late,
+too, he had seemed so pale and listless that she had been getting a
+little anxious. She had begun to fear that he must be out of health,
+or that the monotony of Vaux Abbey was wearying him, and that he would
+be leaving her again soon. But to-day she had watched him ride up the
+avenue, with Lady May, and it seemed to her that there was a change in
+his bearing--a change for the better; and, looking at him now, she
+was sure of it. A faint glow was in his cheeks, and his eyes were
+brighter. His manner, too, to Lady May pleased her more. He had ridden
+home with her; from their conversation, they seemed to have been
+together almost all day; and there seemed to be a spirit of _bon
+comeradie_ between the two, as they talked over their doings, which
+certainly pointed to a good understanding. Altogether Mrs. de Vaux was
+pleased and hopeful.
+
+And, indeed, she had reason to be, for his long day in the open
+country with Lady May had been like a strong, sweet tonic to Paul. For
+the first time since his return to Vaux Abbey he had felt that a
+time might come when he would be able to escape altogether from those
+lingering, bitter-sweet memories which were all that remained to
+him now of Adrea. On the bare, windy moor, with the glow of physical
+exercise and excitement coursing through his veins, and Lady May's
+pleasant voice in his ears, that little scene in the rose-lit chamber
+seemed for a moment very far away. Adrea, with her soft, passion-lit
+eyes, and dusky, oriental face, her lithe, voluptuous figure and the
+faint perfumes of her rustling draperies, seemed less to him then than
+a short while ago he could have believed possible. He could not think
+of that scene without a shudder,--it had left its mark in a certain
+way for ever,--but it was not so constantly present to him. He knew
+that, for the first time, a woman had tempted him sorely. He knew,
+too, and he alone, how nearly he had yielded. His sudden passion, her
+strange Eastern beauty, and the fascination which it had exercised
+over him, together with the soft sensuousness of her surroundings,
+had formed a strong coalition, and to-day he recognised, for the first
+time, how much he owed his victory to the girl who was riding by his
+side. Even in those breathless moments of hesitation he had found time
+to consider that if he yielded to Adrea's pleading, he could never
+again take Lady May's hand, or meet her frank, open gaze. The pure
+healthfulness of life which had been so dear to him would be tainted
+for ever. The moorland breezes of his northern home would never strike
+the same chords in his nature again. All these recollections had
+flashed across his mind at that critical moment, lending strength to
+resist and crush his passion. And to-day he had commenced to reap his
+reward. To-day he had tasted once more the sweets of these things, and
+found how dear they still were to him. He could still look into Lady
+May's fair, pure face unshamed, and find all the old pleasure in
+listening to her frank, girlish talk; and he could still bare his
+head to the sweeping winds, and lift his face to the sun and gaze with
+silent admiration at the faint, deepening colours in the western
+sky, as Lady May and he rode homeward across the moor in the late
+afternoon. All these joys would have been lost to him for ever,--these
+and many others. Adrea could never have repaid him for their loss.
+
+So Paul, who had come home from London pale and silent, with the marks
+of a great struggle upon him, lay back in an arm chair and watched
+the firelight play upon Lady May's fair face with more than a passive
+interest. Mrs. de Vaux's cherished scheme had never been so near its
+accomplishment; for if she could have read Paul's thoughts she would
+have known that he was thinking of Lady May more tenderly than he had
+ever done before. Meeting his steadfast, almost wistful, gaze, she
+became almost confused, and suddenly rising, she shook out the skirts
+of her riding habit, and took up her hat and whip.
+
+"It has been such a delightful rest," she said, looking away from Paul
+and speaking to his mother. "I shall never forget how good that tea
+tasted! But I really must go, Mrs. de Vaux! My poor animal is quite
+done up, and I shall have to walk all the way home."
+
+"I don't know whether I did right," Paul said, rising, "but I sent
+your groom straight on home with the mare, and ordered a brougham
+for you. She has had a long day, and I thought it would be more
+comfortable for you."
+
+She flashed a grateful glance at him. "How thoughtful and how kind
+you are! Of course it will be nicer! I was beginning to feel a little
+selfish, too, for keeping Betty out of her stable so long."
+
+"As a reward we will keep you a little longer," he remarked. "It is
+only six o'clock!"
+
+She shook her head. "No I won't stop, thanks! There are some tiresome
+people coming to dine to-night, and I must go home. Good-bye, Lady de
+Vaux!"
+
+Paul strolled down the hall with her and handed her into the carriage.
+For the first time in his life he held her hand a little tighter and a
+little longer than was necessary.
+
+"Shall you be at home to-morrow afternoon, Lady May?" he asked
+quietly.
+
+She looked up at him for a moment, and then her eyes drooped, and her
+heart beat a little faster. She understood him.
+
+"Yes!" she answered softly.
+
+"I shall ride over then! Good-bye!"
+
+"Good-bye!"
+
+He lingered on the doorstep for a minute, watching the carriage roll
+down the avenue. When it had disappeared, he turned back into the
+hall, and after a moment's hesitation, entered the library.
+
+It was a large, sombre-looking apartment, scarcely ever entered by
+anyone save Paul. The bookcases reached only half-way up the walls,
+the upper portion of which was hung with oil portraits, selected from
+the picture gallery. At the lower end of the room the shelves had been
+built out at right angles to the wall, lined with books, and in one
+of the recesses so-formed--almost as large as an ordinary-sized
+chamber--Paul had his writing-table surrounded by his favourite
+volumes. It was a delightful little miniature library. Facing him,
+six rows of black oak shelves held a fine collection of classical
+literature; on his left, the lower shelves contained rare editions
+of the early English dramatists, and the upper ones were given up to
+poetry, from Chaucer to Swinburne. The right-hand shelves were wholly
+French, from quaint volumes of troubadours' poetry to Alfred de Musset
+and De Maupassant. It was here Paul spent most of his time when at the
+Abbey.
+
+The meet had been rather a long way off that morning, and he had left
+before the arrival of the post-bag from the neighbouring town. Mrs. de
+Vaux had distributed the letters, and the one she had spoken of lay
+at the edge of the table. He stretched out his hand to take it
+up--without any presentiments, without any thought as to whom it might
+be from. An invitation, doubtless, or a begging letter he imagined, as
+he caught sight of the large square envelope. But suddenly, before his
+fingers had closed upon it, he started and stood quite still, leaning
+over the back of his chair. His heart was beating fast, and there was
+a mist before his eyes--a mist through which he saw, as though in
+a dream, the walls of his library melt away, to be replaced by the
+dainty interior of that little room in Grey Street, with all the dim
+luxury of its soft colouring and adornment. He saw her too, the
+centre of the picture--saw her as she seemed to him before that final
+scene--saw her half-kneeling, half-crouching, before him, with her
+beautiful dark eyes, yearning and passionate, fixed upon his in mute,
+but wonderfully eloquent, pleading. Oh! it was folly, but it was
+sweet, marvellously sweet. Every nerve seemed thrilled with the
+exquisite pleasure of the memory so suddenly called up to him, and his
+lips quivered with the thought of what he might have said to her.
+The strange, voluptuous perfume which crept upwards from that letter
+seemed in a measure to have paralysed him. He stood there like a man
+entranced, with the dim firelight on one side and the low horned moon
+through the high window on his left, casting a strange, vivid light
+on his pale face--paler even than usual against the scarlet of his
+hunting-coat. That letter! What could it contain? Was it a recall, or
+a fresh torrent of anger? He stood there quite still, leaning over the
+back of the high-backed oak chair emblazoned with the De Vaux arms,
+and making no motion towards taking it up.
+
+A sound from outside--the low rumbling of a gong--roused him at last,
+and he pushed the chair hastily away from him. His first impulse
+was one of anger, of shame, that he, a strong man, as he had deemed
+himself, should have been so moved by a simple flood of memories.
+It seemed ignoble to him and a frown gathered on his forehead as he
+reached forward and picked up the letter. Yet his fingers trembled as
+they tore it open, and his eyes ran over the contents rapidly.
+
+ "18 GREY STREET, LONDON, W., _Thursday_.
+
+ "Monsieur Paul, my hand trembles a little when I sit down to
+ write to you, and think of our last parting. But write to you
+ I must! I am very humble now, and very, very much ashamed!
+ Shall I go on and say that I am very sad and lonely,--for
+ it is so! I am miserable! I have been miserable every moment
+ since that day! Forgive me, Monsieur Paul, forgive me! my
+ guardian. I behaved quite dreadfully, and I deserved to be
+ punished. Believe me! I am punished. I have had scarcely any
+ sleep, and my eyes are swollen with weeping. I have cancelled
+ all my engagements this week, and I have closed my doors to
+ everybody. Oh! be generous, Monsieur Paul! be generous and
+ forgive me! I have suffered so much,--it is right that I
+ should, for I was much to blame. Will you not let fall some
+ kindly veil of memory over that afternoon. I was mad. Let
+ what I said be unsaid! Let me be again just what you called
+ me,--your ward. I ask for nothing more! Be cold, if you will,
+ and stern! Scold me! and I will but say that I have deserved
+ it! Only come to me! Come and let me hear your own lips tell
+ me that I am forgiven. I will do everything that you ask! I
+ will not see Arthur if he calls,--you shall tell me yourself
+ how to answer his letters,--I have a little pile of them here.
+ Monsieur Paul, you must come! You must come, or I shall be
+ driven to--but no! I will not threaten. You would not care
+ whatever happened to me, would you? I am very, very lonely. I
+ wish that I could have telegraphed all this, and had you here
+ to-night! But you would not have come! Yet, perhaps you would,
+ out of kindness to a solitary girl. I like to think that you
+ would have!
+
+ "Monsieur Paul, you have been good to the 'little brown girl,'
+ as you used to call her, all your life! Do not forsake her
+ now. She has been very mad and wicked, but she is very, very
+ penitent. Celeste tells me that I am looking thin and ill, and
+ my looking-glass says the same. It is because I am unhappy;
+ it is because my guardian is angry with me, and he is so far
+ away. Oh! Monsieur Paul, come, come, come to me! It shall be
+ all as you wish! I will obey you in everything. Only forgive!
+
+ "Yours,
+
+ "ADREA."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+ADREA'S DIARY
+
+ "A figure from the past I see once more as in a dream."
+
+
+This evening I have had an adventure! I am thankful, for it has
+occupied my thoughts for awhile; and for anything that does that I am
+grateful. I had been in the house all day, restless and nervous, and
+towards dusk I put on my cloak and a thick veil, and went out into the
+street. I scarcely noticed which way I went. It was all the same to
+me. A dull purple bank of clouds hung low down in the west, and the
+air was close and still. By-and-by I heard thunder, and big raindrops
+fell upon the pavement. A storm was threatening, and I longed for it
+to come and clear the air.
+
+I must have been walking for nearly an hour, when it came at last, and
+the rain fell in great sheets. I looked around for a cab, but there
+was none in sight. I had no idea where I was,--London is so vast and
+large,--and though, by the distant roar of wheels, I could tell that
+I was not far from a great thoroughfare, the street in which I was
+seemed to be deserted. Just by my side was a dark tunnel, gloomy and
+vault-like in appearance; but in that downpour any refuge was welcome,
+and I stepped back underneath it. It was like going into the bowels
+of the earth; and, every now and then, there was a roar over my head
+which made me almost dizzy. But, from round the corner, I could see
+that it was only the sound of trains passing and repassing, so I
+decided to stay until I could see a cab.
+
+Opposite to me was a man with a truck-load of oranges, and by his
+side a boy seated before a red-hot swinging can, containing chestnuts.
+There was no one else in the street, although at the bottom of it
+crowds of people and a constant stream of vehicles were hurrying
+along. On the other side of the way was a tall and grim-looking
+building, discoloured with smoke and age. It was evidently a hospital
+or institution of some sort. The windows were long and narrow, and one
+or two of them, I could see, were of stained glass. There was no brass
+plate by the front door, nor any sign. In the absence of anything else
+to do, I began to frame surmises as to what the place might be. The
+spotlessly white doorsteps and polished bell interested me;
+they seemed out of tone with the character of the place and its
+surroundings, so utterly bare and dreary. I began to wish that a
+caller would come and ring the bell, so that I could get a peep at
+the interior. But no one did, although I noticed that more than one
+hurrying passer-by glanced up at it curiously.
+
+The thunder died away, but the rain still came down heavily. If it had
+not been for my curious interest in that great ugly building opposite,
+I should have risked a wetting, and made my way down to the busy
+thoroughfare in the distance. But I was anxious to see some one enter
+or leave the place, or for something to happen which would give me
+an idea as to its character; so I waited. Half an hour passed, and my
+curiosity remained unsatisfied. There was no sign of life about
+the place; not even a tradesman had called, nor had that
+forbidding-looking portal once been opened. It was still raining fast,
+but there were signs of finer weather, and right overhead was a
+break in the clouds. I should certainly be able to leave now in a few
+minutes; but, strangely enough, all my impatience seemed gone. The
+grim-looking building opposite had fascinated me. I had no desire to
+leave the place until I had found out all about it.
+
+It was odd, that curiosity of mine; all my days I shall wonder at it.
+On the face of it, it seemed so unreasonable, and yet it led to so
+much. I have no creed, and I know nothing about philosophies, or
+perhaps to-night's adventure might have meant even more to me. But,
+indeed, it seems as though some unseen hand led me out and brought me
+into that deserted street. From to-night there must be changes in my
+life; I cannot escape from them. As yet I am too much in a whirl to
+ask myself whether I wish to.
+
+To return to that house. When I saw that the storm was clearing, and
+that I should be able to leave in a few minutes, I determined to make
+an effort to satisfy my curiosity. I crossed the road, and addressed
+the man who was sitting on the handles of his barrow of oranges.
+
+"Do you know what place that is opposite?" I asked, pointing across
+the road.
+
+He took out a filthy pipe from his mouth, and spat upon the pavement.
+I think that he must have noticed my look of disgust, for he answered
+me surlily, "No, I don't!"
+
+I turned to the boy. "Do you?" I asked.
+
+He shook his head. "Not for certain, ma'am. I believe it's some sort
+of a Roman Catholic place, though. Them gents in long clothes and
+shovel hats is allus going in and hout. 'Ullo, Bill! Here she be
+again! She's a-trying it on, ain't she?"
+
+The man looked up and grunted. I followed the boy's glance, and saw a
+tall, dark woman walking swiftly along on the other side of the road.
+From the very first her figure was somehow familiar to me, and
+
+She stopped outside the closed door, and hesitated for a moment,
+as though doubtful whether to ring or not. During her moment of
+hesitation she glanced round, and I recognised her. She could not see
+me, for I was in the shadow of the underground tunnel.
+
+"Blarmed if she ain't come again," the man growled. "She's as regular
+as clockwork! Wonder what she wants!"
+
+I felt my knees trembling; I could not have crossed the road at
+that moment if it had been to save my life. The boy looked up at me
+curiously.
+
+"Happen you know her, lady," he remarked. "She's been here at this
+time, or thereabouts, pretty near every day for a fortnight."
+
+Happen I know her! Yes, that was the boy's odd phrase. It rang in my
+ears, and I found myself gasping for breath. My eyes were fixed upon
+that tall, slender figure, clothed in sober black, waiting upon the
+doorstep with bowed head, and standing very still and motionless. It
+was like an effigy of patience. There were not two women in the world
+like that; it was impossible. She was in England, and alone--free!
+What did it mean? Should I run to her, or hide away? I glanced over my
+shoulder where the black shadows of the tunnel were only dimly lit by
+the feeble gaslight. I could steal away, and she would never see
+me. Yet as I thought of it, the grimy, barren street and the
+solemn-looking building faded away before my eyes. The sun and wind
+burned my face; the wind, salt with ocean spray, and echoing with the
+hoarse screaming of the sea-birds that rode upon it. I was at Cruta
+again, panting to be free, stealing away in the twilight down the
+narrow path amongst the rocks to where that tiny boat lay waiting,
+like a speck upon the waters. And it was she who had helped me--the
+sad-faced woman who had braved the terrible anger of the man whom we
+had both dreaded. Again I heard her gentle words of counsel, and the
+answering lies which should have blistered my lips. For I lied to her,
+not hastily or on impulse, but deliberately in cold blood. Anything,
+I cried to myself, to escape from this rock, this living death! So I
+lied to her, and she helped me. No wonder that I trembled. No wonder
+that I half made up my mind to flee away into the sheltering darkness
+of that noisome-looking tunnel.
+
+It takes long to set down in writing the thoughts which flashed
+through me at that moment. Yet when I had made up my mind the woman
+was still there, waiting meekly before the closed door.
+
+"You were speaking of her," I said to the boy, who was half-sitting,
+half-crouching against the side of the tunnel. "What was it you said?
+I did not hear."
+
+Man and boy commenced to tell me together. Their strange London talk
+puzzled me, and I could only extract a confused sense of what they
+said. The woman, to whom they rudely pointed, had called at the
+building opposite every day for a fortnight at about this hour to make
+some inquiry. Day by day she had turned away, after one brief question
+asked and answered, with bowed head and dejected manner. Yet, day by
+day, she returned and repeated it. Ever the same disappointment, the
+same despair!
+
+They knew nothing more. Her regular visits had awakened a certain
+curiosity in them, and they had commenced to look for them, and
+indulge in a little mild speculation as to her one day meeting with
+a different reception. Nothing more! There was a shade of pity in the
+boy's tone, and I gave him a shilling; then I crossed the road.
+
+As I left the kerbstone, the door opened and I heard her question:--
+
+"Has Father Adrian called or written, or sent any address yet,
+please?"
+
+The man, who had opened the door only a few inches, kept in the
+background, and I could see nothing of him, but I heard his grim,
+monosyllable reply:
+
+"No! Father Adrian has not visited or communicated with us."
+
+She turned away with a meek "Thank you," and found herself face to
+face with me. My heart smote me when I saw how poor were her clothes,
+and how thin her features.
+
+At first she did not know me; but I raised my veil, and whispered her
+name softly in her ear.
+
+She threw up her hands, and swayed backwards and forwards upon the
+pavement.
+
+"Adrea! Adrea!" she cried wildly. "My God!"
+
+A cab drove up, and I called it. She had just strength enough to enter
+it, leaning heavily upon my arm; then she fainted.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+"WE ARE LIKE SHOOTING STARS, WHOSE MEETING IS THEIR RUIN"
+
+
+To-night I have had another shock! I was sitting alone in my room
+down-stairs, dreaming over the fire, when a footstep sounded upon the
+stairs. At first I thought that it might be Paul, and I sprang up, and
+stood listening intently. What a little fool I was! I felt the colour
+burning in my cheeks, and my heart was beating. I listened to the
+tread, and the madness passed away. It was a man's footsteps, but not
+Paul's.
+
+They halted at my door, and there was a firm, deliberate knock. Before
+I could reply, the handle was turned, and a figure stood upon the
+threshold.
+
+My little chamber was in darkness, but the clear, cold voice struck a
+vague note of familiarity.
+
+"I seek Adrea Kiros! Are these her rooms? Are you she?"
+
+I struck a match with trembling fingers, and looked eagerly towards
+the doorway. A man stood there, dark, stern, and forbidding, looking
+steadfastly towards me. My memory had not deceived me! It was Father
+Adrian!
+
+"You have found me out," I said slowly. "Come inside and close the
+door."
+
+He moved slowly forward, and stood in the middle of the room. His
+face was as white as marble and as steadfast; but his dark eyes, which
+seemed to be challenging mine to meet them, were full of smouldering
+fire. I summoned up all my courage, and threw myself into a low chair,
+with a little laugh.
+
+"You are not exactly cordial," I said. "If you have anything to say to
+me, won't you sit down?"
+
+"If I have anything to say to you!" he repeated, and his whole tone
+seemed vibrating with hardly subdued passion. "If I have anything to
+say to you! Is this your greeting?"
+
+"Why, no, not if you come as a friend! But when you stand and glare at
+me _comme cela_, what do you expect? Nothing very cordial, surely!"
+
+He advanced a step further towards me. I watched him steadfastly,
+and I knew that the old madness was not dead. I was glad. It made the
+struggle between us more even.
+
+"Have I no cause to look at you sternly, Adrea?" he demanded,--"you
+who deceived us! you who lied to us, to win our aid! Where would you
+have been now had it not been for me? At Cruta! Would to God my hand
+had withered before it had set you free!"
+
+"You are very kind!"
+
+"Girl, are you mad? At Cruta you were thoughtless and gay, but God
+knows your heart was pure. Now you are a paid dancing girl!"
+
+I turned upon him suddenly, rising to my full height, and looking him
+straight in the face. He did not flinch, but a faint colour rose to
+his forehead as he continued.
+
+"Stop!" I said. "You are talking of those things which you do
+not understand. You could not possibly understand. You and I are
+different; we belong to different worlds. The things of your world are
+not the things of mine. Leave me now, and for ever, and let us go our
+own ways. We measure things by different quantities. You are a priest,
+and very much a priest, and I am a woman, and very much a woman!
+For the past I am grateful; for its sake I forget the insults of the
+present. Now go!"
+
+I knew quite well that he would not take me at my word, nor did he.
+
+"Adrea, I cannot go and lose all knowledge of you for ever," he said
+sadly. "For my own sake I would say, Would to God that I could! but it
+is impossible. Within me there is a voice which whispers 'Fly,' but
+I cannot; your future is still as dear to me as in the old days. Oh!
+Adrea! I have sorrowed and mourned lest our last parting had been for
+ever, and now, alas! I would that it had been; I would to God that I
+had never found you out!"
+
+"You can forget it," I said coldly.
+
+"I can never forget it," he answered fiercely. "Girl! you seem to me
+sometimes like a scourge! Your memory is a very nightmare of sin! You
+have brought me nothing but pain and remorse and anguish of heart. For
+all my suffering there is no brighter side; yet I cannot forget it!"
+
+Despite his fierce words, which for a moment had burned in my ears,
+I pitied him. In the old days he had been my champion, and it was his
+hand, together with hers, which had aided my escape from Cruta. So I
+spoke to him softly.
+
+"I am sorry! As I said, we are of different moulds, and we belong to a
+different branch of humanity. We are neither of us inclined to change!
+Let us go our own ways, and apart!"
+
+He was close by my side now, and his hand was resting on the back of
+my chair. I laid mine upon it for a moment; it was cold as ice, and
+shaking. The old madness was upon him indeed.
+
+"You were kind to me at Cruta," I continued. "I do not forget it, and
+I thank you for it! But we are as far apart as the poles, and we must
+continue so."
+
+The position between us seemed reversed. He stood by my side, pale and
+passionate, with his clear eyes full of a strange wistfulness.
+
+"All that you say is, in a measure, true," he said in a low tone; "yet
+do not send me away from you! Some day you may see things differently;
+some day trouble may come to you, and I may be your helper! There
+is only one thing: I would have you look upon me as a brother, and I
+would have you give me a brother's confidence."
+
+"I would gladly be friends with you," I answered, "only do not seek
+more than I choose to tell you. As for the things you charge me with,
+there is truth and falsehood in them. It is true that I have earned
+my living by dancing, but it has been in private only. Of course, you
+know nothing about it; how should you? But I am not a ballet dancer,
+as I believe you think."
+
+"You are not upon the stage, then?"
+
+"No! nor do I dance in short skirts! Some day I will give you an
+exhibition in this room! Now don't look like that," I added quickly;
+"I was only joking. I would not defile the air around your saintliness
+for the world! But I want to tell you this: my dancing is recognised
+as an art. I rank everywhere with the men and women who are called
+artists, the men and women who are ever striving to realize in some
+manner a particular ideal of beauty through different channels. The
+highest development of physical beauty in the human form is in grace
+of motion. I aim at the beautiful in illustrating this. I didn't know
+it myself until a great painter told me so, but I am beginning to
+understand. I don't expect you to; you must take it on trust."
+
+"It sounds strange to me, but I do not doubt that there is truth, some
+truth in it," he admitted gravely.
+
+"You and I look upon life, and all its connections, with different
+eyes," I continued. "What may seem sin to you, may be justified to me.
+Yet I will stoop to answer your unspoken question. As I was at Cruta,
+so I am now! It may be that I am better, for I have done a good
+action!"
+
+He held up his hand, but I took no notice.
+
+"I will tell it you. A few days ago, chance brought in my way a most
+unhappy woman. She had escaped from an odious captivity, only to find
+herself alone, friendless and penniless in a strange city. The man on
+whom she had counted for help she could not find. He had given her an
+address where she might always hear of him. Day by day she inquired
+there in vain. It may have been through no fault of his, but she was
+in sore straits."
+
+"Her name?"
+
+"I found her, and brought her home. She lives with me; she is here!"
+
+The door was opening as I spoke, and she entered. They stood face to
+face, silent with the shock of so sudden a meeting. Then he stepped
+quickly forward, and, taking her hands, drew her to him. I slipped
+away, and left them alone together.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+"THE PATH THAT LEADS TO MADMEN'S KINGDOMS"
+
+
+A north-country storm of rain and wind had suddenly blown up from
+the sea, and the few remaining followers of the De Vaux hounds were
+dispersed right and left, making for home with all possible speed. The
+sky had looked dull and threatening all day long, and with the first
+shades of twilight the rain had commenced to fall in a sudden torrent.
+There had been some little hesitation on the part of the master about
+drawing this last cover, for the hounds had had a rough day, and the
+field was small; and directly the storm broke, the horn was blown
+without hesitation, the pack was re-called, and the huntsman, cracking
+his whip, started for home at a long, swinging trot. The day's sport
+was over.
+
+There were only a handful of horsemen waiting outside when the signal
+was given, and with collars turned up to their ears, and cigars
+alight, they were very soon riding down the hill to the village whose
+lights were beginning to twinkle out from the darkness in the valley
+below. At the cross-roads, Paul, who had been riding in the midst of
+them, wheeled his horse round and took the road to Vaux Abbey amidst a
+chorus of farewells.
+
+"Are you going for the Abbey, De Vaux?" Captain Westover asked,
+reining in his horse. "Better come home with me, and dine! I'll send
+you back to-night, and they'll look after your mare all right in the
+stables. Come along!"
+
+Paul shook his head. "I'll get home, thanks!" he answered. "A wetting
+won't hurt me, and there's only a mile or two of it."
+
+Captain Westover shrugged his shoulders. "Just as you like. My people
+would be very glad to see you! By the bye, you were to have called
+last week, weren't you? Lady May was asking where you were this
+morning! Come and dine to-morrow night!"
+
+"Thanks! Unless I send word over to the contrary, I will, then!
+Good-night!"
+
+"Good-night!"
+
+Captain Westover cantered on after the others, and Paul turned off
+in the opposite direction, riding slowly, with bent head and loose
+bridle. In his pocket was Adrea's letter, scarcely a week old; and
+now that the physical excitement of the day was over, his thoughts,
+as usual, were full of it again. It was an uphill battle that he
+was fighting! All day long he had been striving to forget it! He had
+spared neither himself nor his horses in the desperate attempt to
+reach such a stage of physical exhaustion as should make his mind a
+blank--as should free it, at any rate, from those torturing memories,
+and the fierce restlessness which they begat. He had tried his utmost,
+and he had failed. His pink hunting-coat and tops, immaculate at the
+start, were covered with thick mud, and his horse (his second mount)
+was scarcely able to put one foot before the other. Yet he had failed
+utterly. Hunger and fatigue seemed things far away to him. Wherever he
+looked--out into the grey mists, which came rolling across the moor,
+soaking him with moisture, or down into the road, fast becoming a bog,
+or up into the dim sky--he seemed to see the pages of Adrea's letter
+standing out before him, word for word, phrase for phrase. Every
+sentence of it seemed to him as vivid and real as though it had been
+spoken in his ears; nay, he could almost fancy that he saw the great
+tears welling slowly out of those soft, dark eyes, and could hear the
+passionate quiver in her faltering tones. Day by day it had been a
+desperate struggle with him to resist the mad desire which prompted
+him to order a dogcart, drive to the nearest town, and catch the mail
+train to London. Beyond that--how she would receive him, what he would
+say to her--everything was chaos; he dared not trust himself to think
+about it.
+
+Yet, whenever he suffered his thoughts to dwell upon this matter at
+all, the reverse side of it all sooner or later presented itself.
+Clear and insistent above the emotion which swayed him came ever that
+uncompromising question--where lay his duty in this matter? It was
+the true and manly side of his nature, developed by instinct and long
+training, and refusing now to be overborne and swept away by this
+surging tide of passion. It rang in his ears, and it demanded an
+answer. Away in the distance, on the opposite side of the valley,
+his vacant eyes rested idly upon the many lights and dim outline of
+Westover Castle. What place had Lady May in his heart? Was there room
+for her--and Adrea? Could he see Adrea day by day, and never pass the
+barrier which he himself had set up between them? What did he wish?
+What was right? Just then everything was to him so vague and chaotic.
+
+He had been riding for nearly an hour, with his reins quite loose upon
+his horse's neck, and trusting entirely to her to take the homeward
+route. Suddenly his mare came to an abrupt halt, and Paul looked
+around him in surprise. At first he had not the faintest idea as to
+his whereabouts; then a dull roar, coming from across a narrow
+strip of moorland on his left, gave him a clue, and he saw what had
+happened. Instead of turning inland to Vaux Abbey, his horse had kept
+straight on, and had brought him almost to the sea--a good five miles
+out of his way.
+
+The situation was not a cheerful one. They were ten miles from home,
+and Ironsides, completely done up, was trembling ominously at the
+knees, and looking around at him pitifully. Paul himself was wet to
+the skin; and as he dismounted for a moment to ease his stiff limbs,
+he was conscious of a distinct inclination to shiver. The grey mists
+were rolling up all round them; and directly Paul's feet touched the
+ground, he felt himself sink ankle-deep in the wet, soft sand. It was
+all horribly uncomfortable, and more than that, it was serious; for
+immediately he had passed his hand over his horse's flanks and felt
+her knees, Paul knew that she was not in a condition for him to mount
+her again. There was no hope of reaching Vaux Abbey without rest and
+refreshments, for Ironsides at any rate.
+
+He looked steadily around him, and began to get some faint idea as
+to his whereabouts. His mare must have been deceived by following
+a private road which led to a cottage belonging to an old half-pay
+officer, Major Harcourt. They had evidently passed the cottage, and
+pursued the road almost to its termination, for where they now were it
+was little better than a sheep-track, leading through a closed gate a
+few yards in front of them into a scattered pine plantation and down
+to the sea. The only thing to do was to retrace their steps until they
+came to the cottage, and there beg shelter for a while.
+
+"We've made a mess of it, old girl!" Paul said soothingly, patting his
+mare's neck, and passing his arm through the bridle. "Come on, then!
+We'll see whether we can't find an empty stall for you at Major
+Harcourt's."
+
+They retraced their steps, the mare limping wearily along by Paul's
+side, and every now and then stopping to look at him in despair. Paul
+found a grim humour in the situation. It was the quagmire into which
+thoughts of Adrea had led him; a parable sent to show him the folly of
+such thoughts, and whither they tended. He laughed a little bitterly
+at the thought. Once, when a very young man, he had thought himself a
+fatalist. After all, perhaps it was the best thing to be! Conscience
+and duty were wearisome guides; a course of voluntary drifting would
+be rather a relief.
+
+Suddenly the mare pricked up her ears, and neighed. Paul looked
+steadily through the mist, and quickened his pace. Scarcely a hundred
+yards ahead was the dim outline of the cottage, nestled up against a
+pine grove and facing the sea.
+
+Paul was fairly well acquainted with Major Harcourt; and although
+he had seen nothing of him for some time, he had not the slightest
+compunction in claiming shelter for himself and his horse. He led her
+up the trim, winding drive to the front door, and rang the bell.
+
+"Is Major Har----" Paul began, as the door was opened; then he broke
+off abruptly.
+
+The man-servant who had opened the door, and was standing on the step,
+peering out into the darkness, was a familiar figure to him. It was
+Gomez!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+"THE POISON OF HONEY FLOWERS"
+
+
+The recognition was not immediately simultaneous. Gomez, standing on
+the step, was in the full light of the hall lamp, but Paul was still
+amongst the shadows.
+
+"Don't you know me, Gomez?" Paul asked, stepping forward. "I am Paul
+de Vaux."
+
+A shade passed across the man's face, and he laid his hand quickly
+upon his heart, as though to cease some sudden pain. Then he stood on
+one side, holding the door open.
+
+"I beg your pardon, Mr. Paul; I could not see your face out there.
+Won't you walk in, sir?"
+
+Paul dropped his mare's bridle and stepped inside. The polished
+white stone hall, with its huge fire in the centre, looked warm and
+comfortable, and away in the distance there was a cheerful rattle of
+teacups.
+
+"What are you doing here, Gomez?" Paul asked, shaking the wet from
+his hat. "I understood that you were going to take the under-bailiff's
+place."
+
+"Higgs has not left yet, sir," Gomez answered. "I have been living
+here as caretaker for Major Harcourt."
+
+"Caretaker! Isn't he at home then?"
+
+Gomez shook his head, looking keenly at Paul all the time. "Major
+Harcourt does not winter here now, sir. He has let the place,
+furnished."
+
+"What a confounded nuisance! To whom has he let it?" Paul asked
+quickly. "You see my plight, and my horse is worse off still. We lost
+our way going home from Dunston Spinnies."
+
+"Major Harcourt's tenant is a lady," Gomez answered, after a moment's
+hesitation. "She only arrived yesterday."
+
+Paul shrugged his shoulders. He was annoyed, but there was no help for
+it.
+
+"Well, will you see her at once and represent matters? I want a loose
+box for the night for my horse, and a rest for myself, and afterwards
+a conveyance for the Abbey, if possible. Tell her my name. I daresay
+she won't mind. Who is she?"
+
+Gomez said nothing for a moment. Then he drew Paul back to the door,
+and pointed out into the darkness.
+
+"Mr. Paul," he said, in a quick, hoarse whisper, "at the back of that
+hedge there is a road which leads straight up to the Abbey. It is
+a matter of six miles or so, I know, and you are tired; but that is
+nothing. Take my advice, sir, and believe me it is for your good. Get
+out of this house as soon as you can, and go home, though you have to
+walk every step. I'll look after your horse, and you can send for it
+in the morning."
+
+Paul looked into the man's face astonished. "What nonsense, Gomez!"
+he exclaimed. "Do you know what you are talking about! Why, I'm tired
+out, and almost starved. Here I am and here I shall stop, unless your
+mistress is as inhospitable as you are."
+
+Gomez bowed, and closed the door. "Very good, sir; you will have your
+own way, of course. But remember in the future that I was faithful,
+I warned you. Come this way, sir. I will send your horse round to the
+stables. The name of the lady of the house is Madame de Merteuill."
+
+A little uneasy and very much mystified, Paul followed him across the
+hall, and was silently ushered into a long, low drawing-room, a room
+of nooks and corners, furnished in old-fashioned style, but with
+perfect taste, and dimly lit with soft, shaded lamps. There was a
+bright fire blazing on the hearth, and a pleasant sense of warmth in
+the air.
+
+At first it seemed as though the room was empty, but in a moment a
+tall, pale-faced lady, with wonderfully dark eyes and grey hair,
+rose from an easy chair behind the piano, and looked at him, at first
+questioningly.
+
+"I am afraid that you will consider this an unwarrantable intrusion,"
+Paul said, bowing; "but the fact is, I lost my way riding home from
+the hunt, and my horse cannot go a yard further. As for myself,
+you can see what state I am in. I saw your lights, and have some
+acquaintance with Major Harcourt, and not knowing that he had left,
+I ventured here to throw myself upon his hospitality. My name is De
+Vaux--Paul de Vaux; and although it is some distance to the Abbey, I
+believe that we are next-door neighbours."
+
+It was beginning to dawn upon Paul that he had somehow stumbled upon a
+very strange household. During the whole of his speech, the lady whom
+he was addressing had stood silent and transfixed, with wide-open eyes
+and a terrible shrinking look of fear upon her face. She must be mad,
+Paul concluded swiftly. What an ass Gomez was not to have told him!
+While he was wondering how to get away, she spoke.
+
+"Your name de Vaux, Paul de Vaux, near Vaux Abbey?"
+
+He bowed, looking at her with fresh interest. His name seemed familiar
+to her. In a moment or two the unnatural lethargy left her, and she
+spoke to him, though still in a curiously suppressed tone.
+
+"I beg your pardon. You are welcome. I was a little startled at
+first."
+
+She rang the bell. Gomez answered it.
+
+"Bring some fresh tea, and some sandwiches and wine," she ordered.
+"Tell them in the stables to see that this gentleman's horse has every
+attention."
+
+Gomez received his orders in silence, and withdrew with darkening
+face. Paul looked after him with surprise.
+
+"Gomez does not seem particularly pleased to see me again," he
+remarked. "What is the matter with the man, I wonder?"
+
+"It is only his manner, I think," she said softly. "He was your
+father's servant, was he not?"
+
+"Yes. How did you know that?" he asked quickly. "Ah, I beg your
+pardon; he told you, of course. You will find him a faithful servant."
+
+She bowed her head, but made no reply. Indeed, Paul found it very
+difficult to start a conversation of any sort with his new neighbour.
+To all his remarks she returned only monosyllabic answers, looking at
+him steadily all the while out of her full, dark eyes in a far-away,
+wistful manner, as though she saw in his face something which carried
+her thoughts into another world. It was a little uncomfortable for
+Paul, and he was not sorry when Gomez reappeared, bearing a tray with
+refreshments.
+
+She handed him his tea in silence; and Paul, who would have been
+ashamed to have called himself curious, but who was by this time not a
+little puzzled at her manner, made one more effort at conversation.
+
+"I think you said that you were quite strange to this part of the
+country," he remarked. "We, who have lived here all our lives, are
+fond of it; but I'm afraid you'll find it rather dull at first. There
+is very little society."
+
+"We do not desire any," she said hastily. "We came here--at least I
+came here--for the sake of indulging in absolute seclusion. It is the
+same with my step-daughter. In London she had been forced to keep late
+hours, and her health has suffered. The doctor prescribed complete
+rest; I, too, desired rest, so we came here. A London house agent
+arranged it for us."
+
+So there was a step-daughter who lived in London, and who went out a
+great deal. The mention of her gave Paul an opportunity.
+
+"I wonder if I have ever met your daughter in town," he said
+pleasantly. "I am there a good deal, and I have rather a large circle
+of acquaintances."
+
+The implied question seemed to disconcert her. She coloured, and then
+grew suddenly pale. Her eyes no longer looked into his; they were
+fixed steadfastly upon the fire.
+
+"It is not at all probable," she said, nervously lacing and
+interlacing her slim white fingers. "No, it is scarcely possible.
+You would not be likely to meet her. Your friends would not be her
+friends. She knows so few people. Ah!"
+
+She started quickly. The door had opened, but it was only Gomez, who
+had come in with a tray for the empty tea-things. There was a dead
+silence whilst he removed them. Paul scarcely knew what to say. His
+hostess puzzled him completely. Perhaps this step-daughter, whose
+name, together with her own, she seemed so anxious to conceal, was
+mad, and she had brought her down here instead of sending her to an
+asylum; or perhaps she herself was mad. He glanced at her furtively,
+and at once dismissed the latter idea. Her face, careworn and
+curiously pallid though it was, was the face of no madwoman. It was
+the face of a woman who had passed through a fiery sea of this world's
+trouble and suffering--suffering which had left its marks stamped upon
+her features; but, of his own accord, he would never have put it down
+as the face of a weak or erring woman.
+
+There was a mystery--of that he felt sure; but it was no part of his
+business to seek to unravel it. The best thing he could do, he felt,
+was to get up and go. He could scarcely maintain a conversation
+without asking or implying questions which seemed to painfully
+embarrass his hostess.
+
+"I'm very much obliged to you," he said, rising and holding out his
+hand. "I feel quite a new man! If you don't mind I'd like to leave
+my mare here until to-morrow. She really isn't fit to travel. My man
+shall come for her early."
+
+"Pray do!" she answered quickly. "Ah!"
+
+She had started, and clutched at the back of her chair with trembling
+fingers. Her eyes, wide open and startled, were fixed upon the door.
+
+Paul, too, turned round, and uttered a little cry. His heart beat
+fast, and the room swam before him. He stood for a moment perfectly
+still, with his eyes fastened upon the figure in the doorway.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+"AND MOST OF ALL WOULD I FLY FROM THE CRUEL MADNESS OF LOVE"
+
+
+It was Adrea--Adrea herself! She stood there in the shadow of the
+doorway, with her lips slightly parted, and her great eyes, soft and
+brilliant, flashing in the ruddy firelight. It was no vision; it was
+she beyond a doubt!
+
+Even when the first shock had passed away, he found himself without
+words; the wonder of it had dazed him. He had thought of her so often
+in that quaint, dainty little chamber in Grey Street that to see her
+here so unexpectedly, without the least warning or anticipation, was
+like being suddenly confronted with a picture which had stepped out
+of its frame. And that she should be here, too, of all places, here
+in this bleak corner of the kingdom, where blustering winds swept
+bare the sullen moorland, and the sea was always grey and stormy. What
+strange fate could have brought her here, away from all the warmth and
+luxury of London, to this half-deserted old manor house on the verge
+of the heath? His mind was too confused in those first few moments to
+follow out any definite train of thought. The most natural conclusion,
+that she had come to him, did not enter his imagination.
+
+His first impulse, as his senses became clearer, was to glance around
+for the woman who had called Adrea her step-daughter. She was gone.
+She must have stepped out of the room by the opposite doorway; and
+with the knowledge that they were alone, he breathed freer.
+
+"Adrea!" he said, "it is really you, then!"
+
+His words, necessarily commonplace, dissolved the situation. She
+laughed softly, and came further into the room.
+
+"It is I," she said. "Did you think that I was an elf from
+spirit-land?"
+
+He had never shaken hands with her,--it was a thing which had never
+occurred to either of them; but a sudden impulse came to him then. He
+took a hasty step forward, and clasped both her little white hands in
+his. So they stood for another minute in silence, and a strange, soft
+light flashed in her upturned eyes. She was very near to him, and
+there was an indefinable sense of yielding in her manner, amounting
+almost to a mute invitation. He felt that he had only to open his
+arms, and that strange, beautiful face, with its mocking, quivering
+mouth, would be very close to his. The old battle was forced upon him
+to fight all over again; and, alas! he was no stronger.
+
+It was almost as though she had seen the hesitation--the conflict in
+him--for with a sudden, imperious gesture she withdrew her hands and
+turned away from him. There was a scarlet flush creeping through the
+deep olive of her cheeks, and her eyes were dry and brilliant. Paul,
+who had never studied women or their ways, looked at her, surprised
+and a little hurt.
+
+"You are surprised to see me here, of course?" she said, sinking into
+a low easy-chair, and taking up a fire-screen of peacocks' feathers,
+as though to shield her face from the fire. "Well, it is quite an
+accident. I wrote you rather a silly letter the other day; but you
+must not think that I have followed you down here!"
+
+"I did not think so," he answered hastily. "The idea never occurred,
+never could have occurred to me!"
+
+She continued, without heeding his interruption: "I will explain how
+we came to take this cottage. A relative of mine came to me suddenly
+from abroad. She was in great trouble, and was in search of a very
+secluded dwelling-place, where she might live for a time unknown. I
+also was in bad health, and the doctor had ordered me complete rest
+and quiet. We went to a house agent, and told him what we wanted--to
+get as far away from every one as possible. We did not care how lonely
+the place was, or how far from London; the further the better. This
+house was to let, furnished, and at a low figure. I did not know that
+Vaux Abbey was in the same county even. It suited us, and we took it."
+
+"I understand," Paul answered. "And now that you are here, are you not
+afraid of finding it dull?"
+
+She turned away from him, biting her lip. "You do not understand me!
+You never will. No! I shall not be dull."
+
+"I beg your pardon, Adrea. I----"
+
+"Be quiet!" she interrupted impetuously. "You think that I am too
+frivolous to live away from the glare and excitement of the city.
+Of course! To you I am just the dancing girl, nothing more. Do not
+contradict me. I hate your serious manner. I hate your patronage.
+Don't contradict me, I say. Tell me this. How did you find me out? Why
+are you here?"
+
+"I have been out hunting, and I lost my way," Paul answered quietly.
+"I know Major Harcourt, and, thinking he was still living here, I
+called for a rest, and to put my horse up. Your step-mother has been
+very kind and hospitable."
+
+Adrea looked at him curiously. "Indeed! She has been kind to you, has
+she? Who told you that she was my step-mother?"
+
+"I thought I understood you to say so."
+
+"Did I? Perhaps so; I don't remember. So she was kind to you, was she?
+She has no cause to be."
+
+"No cause to be! Why not?"
+
+She shrugged her shoulders, "Oh, I don't know. I'm talking a little at
+random, I think. You angered me, Monsieur Paul. I am a silly girl, am
+I not? Do you know that I have thrown up all my engagements until next
+season? I do not think that I shall dance again at all."
+
+"I am glad to hear it."
+
+"But I shall go on the stage."
+
+"There is no necessity for that, is there?"
+
+"Necessity! You mean that I have not to earn my bread. That may be
+true, but what would you have me to do? I am not content to be one of
+your English young ladies--to sit down, and learn to cook and darn,
+and read silly books, until fate is kind enough to send me a husband.
+Not so. I have ambition; I have an artist's instincts, although I may
+not yet be an artist. I must live; I must have light and colour in my
+life."
+
+Paul was very grave. He did not understand this new phase in
+Adrea's development. There was a curious hardness in her tone and a
+recklessness in her speech which were strange to him. And with it
+all he felt very helpless. He could not play the part of guardian and
+reprove her; he scarcely knew how to argue with her. Women and their
+ways were strange to him; and, besides, Adrea was so different.
+
+He stood up on the hearthrug, toying with his long riding-whip,
+puzzled and unhappy. Adrea was angry with him, he knew; and though he
+was very anxious to set himself right with her, he felt that he was
+treading on dangerous ground. He was neither sure of himself nor of
+her.
+
+"I am afraid I am a very poor counsellor, Adrea," he said slowly; "but
+it seems to me that you want women friends. Your life has been too
+lonely, too devoid of feminine interests."
+
+She laughed--a mirthless, unpleasant little laugh. "Women friends!
+Good! You say that I have none. It is true. There have been no
+women who have offered me their friendship in this country. You call
+yourself my guardian. Why do you not find me some?"
+
+"You have made it very difficult," he reminded her.
+
+She threw a scornful glance at him. "Good! That is generous. You mean
+to say that I have made myself unfit for the friendship of the
+women of your family. I thank you, Monsieur Paul. I think that our
+conversation has lasted long enough. Let me pass; I am going to leave
+you."
+
+He moved quickly towards the door, and barred her passage. There was
+a dark flush in his cheeks and a gleam in his eyes. Up till then his
+manner had been a little deprecating, but at her last words it had
+suddenly changed. He felt that she was unjust, and he was indignant.
+
+"Adrea, you talk like a child," he said sternly. "I made no such
+insinuation as you suggest! You know that I did not! Sit down!"
+
+She obeyed him; the quick change in his manner had startled her, and
+taken her at a disadvantage. She felt the force of his superior will,
+and she yielded to it.
+
+He leaned over her chair, and his voice grew softer. "Adrea, you are
+very, very unjust to me," he said. "Do you wish to make me so unhappy,
+I wonder? For a week I have been thinking of scarcely anything else
+save our last parting, and now if I had not stopped you, almost by
+force, you would have left me again in anger."
+
+His tone had grown almost tender, and, as though unconsciously, his
+hand had rested upon her gleaming coils of dark, braided hair. She
+looked up at him, and in the firelight he could see that her eyes were
+soft and dim.
+
+"You have really thought of me?" she said in a low tone. "You have
+really been unhappy on my account?"
+
+"I have!" he admitted. "Very unhappy!"
+
+Something in his tone--in the reluctance with which he made the
+admission, angered her. She moved a little further away, and her voice
+grew harder.
+
+"Yes; you have been unhappy!" she said. "And why? It was because you
+were ashamed to find yourself thinking of me; you, Paul de Vaux, a
+citizen of the world and a man of culture, thinking of a poor dancing
+girl with only her looks to recommend her! That was where the sting
+lay! That was what reddened your cheek! You men! You are as selfish as
+devils!"
+
+She stamped her foot; her voice was shaking with passion. Paul stood
+before her with a deep flush on his pale cheeks, silent, like a man
+suddenly accused. Her words were not altogether true, but they were
+winged with, at any rate, the semblance of truth.
+
+She continued--a little more quietly, but with her tone and form still
+vibrating.
+
+"What do you fear? What is that you struggle against? I have seen
+you when it has been your will to take me--into your arms, to hold my
+hands. Then I have seen you conquer the desire, and you run away, as
+though afraid of it. Why? Do you fear that I shall seek to compromise
+you?--is not that the English word? Do you think that I want you to
+marry me? Is it because you dare not, that you--you do not offer to
+take my hand, even? Tell me now! Why is it?"
+
+"For your own sake, Adrea!"
+
+"For my own sake!" she repeated scornfully. "Do you believe it
+yourself? Do you really think that it is true? I will tell you why
+it is! It is because you have no thought, no imagination. You say to
+yourself, she is not of my world. I cannot marry her."
+
+There was a silence. A burning coal fell upon the hearth, and flamed
+up; the glow reached Paul's face. He was very pale, and his eyes were
+dry and brilliant. Suddenly he moved forward, and clasped Adrea's
+hands tightly in his.
+
+"But, Adrea! are you sure that you love me?"
+
+A sudden change swept into her face. Her dark eyes grew wonderfully
+soft.
+
+"Yes!" she answered, looking up to him with a swift, brilliant smile.
+"I am sure!"
+
+He held out his arms; his resistance was at an end. It had grown
+weaker and weaker during those last few moments; now it was all over,
+swept away by a sudden, tumultuous passion, so strange and little akin
+to the man that it startled even himself. Afar off in his mind he was
+conscious of a dim sense of shame as he held her close in his arms and
+felt her warm, trembling lips pressed against his. But it was like an
+echo from a distant land. It seemed to him that a deep, widening gulf
+lay now between him and all that had gone before. His old self was
+dead! A new man had sprung up, with a new personality, and the time
+had not yet come for regrets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+"'TWIXT YOU AND ME A NOISOME SHADOW CAST"
+
+
+"Adrea!"
+
+It was a cry which seemed to ring through the room, an interruption
+so sudden and strange that they started apart like guilty children,
+gazing towards the lifted curtain which divided the apartment with
+wondering, half-fearful faces. The woman whom Adrea had called her
+step-mother stood there, pale and bloodless, with her great black eyes
+flashing, and behind her a tall, dark figure was gazing sternly at
+them.
+
+Adrea was the first to recover her composure. She was a little further
+away, and she could see only her step-mother.
+
+"What do you want?" she exclaimed quickly. "I desire to be alone! Why
+do you stand there?"
+
+There was no answer. Then the momentary silence was broken by a quick,
+startled cry from Paul, which seemed to cleave the semi-darkness of
+the room.
+
+"My God!"
+
+The dark figure had moved forward, and was standing, pale and austere,
+before them. It was Father Adrian.
+
+There was a moment's intense silence. Then Paul turned swiftly round
+to where Adrea stood, a little behind him. But the suspicions which
+had commenced to crowd in upon him vanished before even they had taken
+to themselves definite shape. Her surprise was as great as his; and,
+as their eyes met, she shuddered with the memory which his presence
+had recalled.
+
+"Paul de Vaux, I had no thought of meeting you here," Father Adrian
+said sternly.
+
+Paul met his gaze haughtily. There was a rebuke, almost a threat, in
+the priest's tone which angered him. Whatever his presence here might
+betide, he was in no way responsible for it to Father Adrian.
+
+"Nor I you," he answered. "I imagined that you were staying at the
+monastery."
+
+"I am staying there."
+
+Madame de Merteuill stepped slowly into the room. She was still
+trembling, and had all the appearance of a woman sore stricken by some
+unexpected calamity. Even her voice was faint and broken.
+
+"Father Adrian is a visitor here only--an unexpected one--like
+yourself."
+
+"Why is he here?" Adrea asked slowly. "Has he come to see us again?
+What does he want?"
+
+Father Adrian turned towards her, grave and severe. "I have come to
+see Madame de Merteuill. I bring her a message from an old man
+whom, by her absence, she is wronging. You I did not expect to find
+here,--and thus."
+
+She made no answer. The priest drew a little nearer to her, and his
+thin, ascetic face seemed suddenly ablaze with scorn and anger.
+
+"Child! your destiny is surely to bring sorrow upon all those who
+would watch over you, and shape your life aright. Where you have been
+living, and how, since your flight, I do not know. You have hidden
+yourself well! You have shown more than the ordinary selfishness of
+childhood! You have thought nothing of those who may have troubled for
+you! I do not ask for your confidence. This is enough for me: I find
+you here in his arms--his of all men in the world! False to your
+Church; false to your sex; false to your father's memory! Shameless!"
+
+She did not flinch from before him. She looked him in the face, coldly
+and without fear.
+
+"You are a priest, and you do not understand. Be so good as to
+remember that I am no longer now in your power or under your
+authority. You cannot threaten to make me a nun any longer. Remember
+that I am outside your life now, and outside your religion."
+
+"You can be brought back," he said calmly. "I have powers."
+
+"Powers which I defy. Your religion is a cold, dry farce, and I hate
+it. You cannot frighten me; you cannot alarm me in the least. You can
+do ugly things, I know, in the name of your Church; and if you had me
+back at the convent, or on that awful island, I should be frightened
+at you. Here, I am not."
+
+Instinctively she glanced toward Paul. Already in her thoughts, he was
+assuming the protector. He would not suffer harm to come to her.
+He was strong and rich and powerful. The horror of days gone by had
+already grown faint with her; it was little more than memory. It was
+gone, and could not come again.
+
+"I have not come here to talk with you, child," he answered quietly.
+"My errand has been with Madame de Merteuill, and it is accomplished,
+I go now. Paul de Vaux, our ways lie together for a mile or more, and
+I have a word to say to you. Let us go."
+
+Paul was slowly recovering from a state of mental stupor, and, with
+his discovery, something of the glamour of his late intoxication was
+passing away. He had no regret, there was nothing which he would have
+recalled; but his eyes were stronger to pierce the mists, and he was
+able to bring the weight of impersonal thought to bear upon all that
+had passed between Adrea and himself. Wheresoever it might lead, there
+was a tie between them now which could not be lightly severed.
+
+"It is time I went," Paul answered. "Adrea, I will come and see you
+to-morrow."
+
+She looked at the priest, suspicious and troubled. "What does he want
+with you, Paul?" she whispered. "Don't go with him!"
+
+"I must!" he answered sadly. "He has something to say to me which I
+wish to hear. I will come and see you to-morrow."
+
+"If you must, then, until to-morrow. But, Paul!"
+
+She drew him on one side. "Beware of him! Oh! beware of him!" she
+said quickly, her eyes full of fear. "He is a fanatic, a Jesuit. Don't
+trust him! Have little to say to him. Hush! don't answer me! He is
+watching. Good-night, beloved! my beloved!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+"IF LOVE YOU CHOOSE, THEN LOVE SHALL BE YOUR RUIN"
+
+
+Paul and his companion walked down the avenue in silence, and turned
+into the narrow, stony road which wound across the moor. The storm was
+over, and the rain had ceased. Above them, only faintly visible, as
+though seen through a canopy of delicate lace, the stars were shining
+in a cloudless sky through the wreaths of faint grey mist. Far off,
+the sound of the sea came rolling across the moor to their ears, now
+loud and threatening as it beat against the iron cliffs and thundered
+up the coombs, now striking a shriller note as the huge waves, ever
+beaten off, retreated, dragging beach and shingle with them. It
+had been an ocean gale, and the very air was salt and brackish with
+flavours of the sea. Here and there great piles of seaweed had been
+carried in a heterogeneous mass to their feet, and the ground beneath
+them was soft and sandy. But the storm had died away as suddenly as it
+had come. The tall, stark pine trees, which a few hours ago had been
+bending like whips before the rushing wind, stood now stiff and stark
+against the wan sky. There was not even motion enough in the air to
+clear away the white mists which hung around. Only the troubled sea
+remained to mark the passage of the storm.
+
+Paul was in no mood for talking. He recognised the fact that what had
+happened to him that evening must, to a certain extent, colour his
+whole life. He wanted to think it over quietly, now that he was away
+from the influence of Adrea's passionately beautiful face and pleading
+eyes. He had an inward sense of great disappointment in himself, and
+he was anxious to see how far this was justified. He was prepared for
+a rigid self-examination, and he was impatient to begin upon it.
+But, while he was still upon the threshold of his meditations, his
+companion's voice sounded in his ear.
+
+"Paul de Vaux, I have a word or two to say to you."
+
+Paul awoke with a start. "Certainly!" he said gravely. "I am ready."
+
+Father Adrian continued, speaking slowly and keeping his eyes fixed
+steadily upon Paul; "Only a few nights ago we met amongst the ruins of
+your old Abbey. You will remember that I spoke to you of your father's
+last hours, of a strange story confided to my keeping--a story of sin
+and of sorrow--a story casting its shadow far into the future. You
+remember this?"
+
+"Perfectly!"
+
+"At first you seemed to consider that this story, told to me on
+his deathbed by a man who was at least repentant, should be held
+sacred--sacred to me as a priest of the Holy Church, and sacred to you
+as his son. Yet, as you saw afterwards, it was not so. The confession
+was made to me as a man; and withal it was made by one outside the
+pale of any religion whatever. It was mine to do as I chose with! It
+is mine now!"
+
+"If it is anything which concerns me, or the honour of my family, you
+should tell me. If it involves wrongs which should be righted, or in
+any way concerns the future, you should tell me. You must have come
+for that purpose! You must mean to eventually, or why should you have
+found your way to this out-of-the-way corner of the world. Let me hear
+it now, Father Adrian!"
+
+"It will darken your life!"
+
+"I do not believe it! At any rate I will judge for myself. Let me hear
+it!"
+
+The priest looked away into the darkness, and his voice was low and
+hoarse. "You do not know what you ask!" he said. "No, I shall not tell
+you yet. It is for your own sake! Sometimes I think that I will go
+away and never tell you."
+
+"Why not? You came here for no other reason."
+
+Father Adrian shook his head. "I did not come to tell you. It was
+your home I came to see. Many hundreds of years ago Vaux Abbey was a
+monastery, sacred to the saint whose name I unworthily bear. My visit
+here was half a pilgrimage! But," he went on, his brows contracting,
+and his eyes gleaming fire, "since I came, I have been perilously near
+striking the blow which I have power to strike. You bear a name which
+for centuries was foremost in the history of our sacred Church. For
+generation after generation the De Vauxs were good Catholics and the
+benefactors of their Church. Your chapel was richly adorned, and five
+priests dwelt here always with old Sir Roland de Vaux. And now, where
+is your chapel, once the most beautiful in England; it is a pile of
+ruins, like your faith! I wander round in your villages. Your tenants
+have gone the way of their lord. Roman Catholicism is a dying power.
+Hideous chapels have sprung up in all your districts! The true faith
+is neglected! And who is to blame for it all? Your recreant family.
+You, who should have been the most zealous upholders of religion, have
+drifted down the stream of fashion, nerveless and indifferent. Oh! it
+is heresy, rank heresy, to think of a De Vaux, such as you, dwelling
+indifferent amongst the mighty associations of your name and home! I
+wander about amongst those magnificent ruins of yours, aesthetically
+beautiful, but nevertheless a living, burning reproach, and I ask
+myself whether I do well in holding my peace. I cannot tell! I cannot
+tell!"
+
+Paul was moved in spite of himself by the vehemence of his companion's
+words. The horrors of that deathbed scene at Cruta had never grown dim
+to him. He had always felt that his father had only decided to
+keep something back from him in those last moments, after a bitter
+struggle; and he was now quite sure that whatever it might have been,
+the secret had been confided to this priest.
+
+"I want to ask you a question," he said. "Whatever this mystery may be
+to which you are constantly alluding, I am of course ignorant. But you
+seem to have some understanding with the two women whom we have left
+this evening. I want to know whether Adrea is concerned in it."
+
+"She is not!"
+
+"Nor Madame de Merteuill?"
+
+"I cannot tell you!"
+
+They were in the Abbey grounds, close to the ruins, and the moorland
+lay behind them, with its floating mists and vague obscurity. Here the
+sky was soft and clear, and every pillar amongst the ruins stood out
+against the empty background of sea and sky. Father Adrian paused.
+
+"I will come no further," he said. "I am a saner man away from your
+despoiled home. There is just a last word which I have to say to you."
+
+Paul stood still, and listened.
+
+"I have borne much," Father Adrian said, "much tempting and many
+impulses; but I have zealously put a watch upon my tongue, and I
+have spared you. For the future, your happiness--nay, your future
+itself--is in your own hands. I saw your father kill the only relative
+Adrea had in this world. We saw the deed done, though we have both
+held our peace concerning it. Paul de Vaux, I am inclined to spare you
+a great blow which it is in my power to strike. I am inclined to spare
+you, but I make one hard and fast condition. Adrea is not for you! She
+must be neither your wife, nor your friend, nor your ward! There must
+be no dealings, no knowledge between you the one of the other! There
+is blood between you; it can never be wiped out! The stain is forever.
+Lift up your hand to heaven, and swear that you will never willingly
+look upon her face again, or, as God is my master, I will bring upon
+your name, and your family, and you, swift and everlasting shame!"
+
+His hand fell to his side, and his voice, which had been vibrating
+with passion, died away in a little, suppressed sob. Paul looked at
+him steadily. The perspiration was standing out upon his forehead in
+great beads, and his eyes were dry and brilliant. The man was shaken
+to the very core, and in the strange upheaval of passion he had
+altogether lost his sacerdotality. It was the man who had spoken, the
+man, passionate and sensuous, deeply moved through every chord of his
+being. The "priest" had fallen away from him, the remembrance of it
+seemed almost grotesque. Paul, too, had caught much of the passionate
+excitement of the moment.
+
+"Time!" he said hoarsely. "I must have time. A few days only. I ask no
+questions! Only how long?"
+
+"A week!" the priest answered. "A week to-night we meet here!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+"SOFTLY GLIMMERING THROUGH THE LAURELS AT THE QUIET EVENFALL"
+
+
+"Do you know who has taken Major Harcourt's cottage, Mr. de Vaux?"
+Lady May asked.
+
+Paul was silent for a moment. He sat quite still in his saddle, and
+gazed across the moor, with his hand shading his eyes.
+
+"I beg your pardon, Lady May," he said. "I thought that I heard the
+dogs. You asked me----"
+
+"About Major Harcourt's cottage. Do you know who has taken it?"
+
+"I am not sure about the name. It is a foreign lady, and her
+step-daughter, I believe. There is a clergy-man--or a Roman Catholic
+priest, rather--too; but he may be only a visitor."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+The monosyllable was expressive. Paul glanced at his companion with
+slightly arched eyebrows. What had she heard? Something, evidently,
+for there had been a coolness in her manner all the morning, and her
+clear grey eyes were resting now upon the many gables of the cottage
+just below them, with distinct disapproval. Now that he thought of it,
+Paul remembered that a dogcart from the Castle had whirled past him as
+he had turned out of the drive last night. Doubtless he had been seen
+and recognised. Well! after all, what did it matter? The time when he
+had meant to ask Lady May to be his wife seemed very far back in the
+past now. Between that part of his life and now, there was a great
+gulf fixed. Last night had altered everything!
+
+He had certainly not meant to hunt that morning, but it had been
+forced upon him. Quite early, Reynolds had come to his room to inquire
+whether he should provide breakfast for thirty or fifty, and had
+reminded him that the meet was in front of the Abbey. So, against his
+will, Paul had been compelled to entertain the hunt and join in it
+himself. Lady May had been specially invited to breakfast, but she had
+not come, and Paul had only just seen her for the first time at the
+cover side. She had greeted him coldly; and though they had somehow
+taken up a position a little apart from the others, very few words
+had passed between them. Her frank, delicate face was clouded, and her
+manner was reserved.
+
+"I believe my brother knows who they are," she continued, after a
+short silence. "He saw them at the station."
+
+Paul bit his lip, and turned away. The mystery of Lady May's manner
+was explained now.
+
+"Did he tell you, then?"
+
+Lady May toyed with her whip, and then looked Paul straight in the
+face. "Yes! he told me the name of the younger one. It is Adrea Kiros,
+the dancing girl. Mr. de Vaux, may I ask you a question?"
+
+"Certainly!"
+
+Lady May looked straight between her horse's ears, and a slight flush
+stole into her cheeks. "You must not think that I was listening; it
+was not so at all. But last night, as I was passing the billiard-room,
+I heard my brother and Captain Mortimer talking. They were coupling
+your name with this--Miss Adrea Kiros. They spoke of her coming down
+here as though you must have known something of it. They were blaming
+you, as though you were responsible for her coming. We have been
+friends, Mr. de Vaux; and so far as I am concerned, our friendship has
+been very pleasant. But if there is any truth in what they said--well,
+you can guess the rest. I want you to tell me yourself; I am never
+content to accept hearsay evidence against my friends. I prefer to be
+unconventional, as you see. Please tell me!"
+
+"Will you put your question a little more definitely, Lady May?" Paul
+asked slowly.
+
+"Certainly! Has that young person come here at your instigation? Did
+you arrange for her to come here?"
+
+"I did not! No one could have been more surprised to see her than I
+was."
+
+Lady May was growing very stiff. She sat up in her saddle, and drew
+the reins through her fingers. "You know her?"
+
+"I do!"
+
+"You visited her in London?"
+
+"I did!"
+
+"You were at the cottage last evening?"
+
+"I was! I lost my way, and----"
+
+Lady May touched her horse with her spur. "Thank you, Mr. de Vaux!"
+she said haughtily. "I will not trouble you any more. Please don't
+follow me!"
+
+Paul watched her ride down the hillside and join one of the little
+groups dotted about outside the cover-side, with a curious sense of
+unreality. After a while he broke into a little laugh, and, shaking
+his reins, lit a cigar. This was a new character for him altogether.
+He knew himself that no man had kept his life more blameless than he!
+If anything, he felt sometimes that he had erred upon the other
+side in thinking and speaking too hastily of those who had been
+less circumspect. And now, it had come to this. The woman whose good
+opinion he had always valued next to his mother's had deliberately
+accused him of what must have seemed to her a flagrant outrage on
+decency. Her words were still ringing in his ears: "Please don't
+follow me." Lady May had said that to him; it was a little hard to
+realize.
+
+A commotion around the cover below was a welcome diversion to him
+just then. A fox had got clear away, and hounds were in full cry. Paul
+pressed his hat down, and settled into his saddle with a grim smile.
+The physical excitement was just what he wanted, and in a few minutes
+he was leading the field, with only the master by his side, and
+Captain Westover a few yards behind.
+
+At the first check, Captain Westover rode up to him. "I want just a
+word or two with you, De Vaux!" he said, drawing him on one side.
+
+Paul drew himself up in his saddle, and sat there glum and unbending.
+"I am at your service," he answered. "I have had the pleasure already
+of a short conversation with your sister this morning."
+
+Captain Westover nodded. "I suppose so. I want to beg your pardon
+first for what I am going to say, De Vaux. If I make an ass of myself,
+don't scruple to say so! But I want to ask you this! Why, in thunder,
+did you let Adrea what's-her-name, the dancing girl, come down here?"
+
+"It was no business of mine! I did not know that she was coming!"
+
+Captain Westover stroked his moustache and looked puzzled. "Look here,
+old man," he said slowly, "you go to see her in London, don't you?"
+
+"I have been!"
+
+"Just so! And you were down at the cottage last night, weren't you?"
+
+"I was!"
+
+"Well! hang it all, then you must have known something about her
+coming, you know! It can't be just a coincidence. Bevan & Bevan are
+my solicitors, and by the purest accident, one day I learned that Miss
+Adrea enjoys a settlement of a thousand a year from you. They didn't
+tell me, of course. I happened to catch sight of your check on the
+table one day, and overheard old Sam Bevan give some instructions to
+a clerk. Sorry, but I couldn't help it! You're the first person I've
+breathed it to."
+
+"I am her guardian!" Paul exclaimed angrily.
+
+Captain Westover whistled. "You may call it what you like, old fellow!
+I don't mind, I can assure you! You don't seem inclined to listen to
+any advice, so I won't offer any more. But if you'll forgive my saying
+so, you're doing a d----d silly thing. Good-morning."
+
+On the whole, Paul did not enjoy his day's hunting; and before it was
+all over, he found himself once more in an embarrassing situation. For
+as he rode past the gates of the cottage, on his way home, Adrea was
+there, breathless and laughing, with her dusky hair waving loosely
+around her shapely head.
+
+"I saw you coming," she said, a little shyly, "and I was afraid that
+you would not stop, so I ran out as fast as I could. It was silly of
+me! You were coming in, weren't you?"
+
+"I think not!" Paul answered gravely. "Look how thick in mud I am, and
+how tired my horse looks!"
+
+She looked up at him with pleading eyes and parted lips. "Do come!"
+she said. "I have been expecting you all day!"
+
+She held the gate open, and stood looking up at him, a curiously
+picturesque-looking figure in the grey twilight. Her gown was like no
+other woman's; it was something between a Greek robe and a tea-gown,
+of a dull orange hue, and her dusky hair was tied up with a bow of
+ribbon of the same colour. Everything about her was strange; even
+the faint perfume which hung about her clothes, and which brought him
+sudden, swift memories of that moment when she had lain in his arms,
+and his lips had met hers. Paul felt the colour steal into his pale
+cheeks as he leaped to the ground, and passed his arm through his
+horse's bridle.
+
+"I will come, _cara mia_!" he said softly.
+
+She clasped her hands through his other arm, and whispered something
+in his ear, as they turned up the avenue together. Just then the
+sound of horses' hoofs in the road made them both turn round. Captain
+Westover and Lady May were riding by together, with their eyes fixed
+upon Paul and his companion.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+"BLOOD CALLS ALOUD FOR BLOOD AND NOT FOR HANDS ENTWINED"
+
+
+It was with a strange conflict of feelings that Paul, with Adrea
+by his side, passed across the square, low hall of the cottage,
+plentifully decorated with stags' heads and other sporting trophies,
+and into the drawing-room. It was a room which had been built, too, of
+quaint shape, made up of nooks and corners and recesses, and with dark
+oak beams stretching right across the ceiling. The furniture was all
+old-fashioned, and of different periods; but the general effect was
+harmonious, though a trifle shabby. Paul knew it well! Many an evening
+he had come in to tea there, after a cigar and a chat with the old
+Major, and lounged in that low chair by Mrs. Harcourt's side. But it
+scarcely seemed like the same room to him now. The Major and his wife
+had been old-fashioned people, and their personality, and talk, and
+surroundings, had created a sort of atmosphere which Paul had grown
+almost to associate with the place. He missed it directly he entered
+the room. What it was that had worked the change it was hard to tell.
+Adrea had been far too charmed with its quaintness to seriously alter
+anything. A little stiffness in the arrangement of the furniture had
+been corrected, and the few antimacassars carefully removed; otherwise
+nothing had been changed. The great bowls of yellow roses and
+chrysanthemums, and the piles of modern books and music lying about,
+might have been partly responsible for it; and the faint perfume which
+he had grown to associate altogether with Adrea, and which seemed
+wafted into the air as she gathered up her skirts on her way into
+the room, had a foreign flavour in it. But, after all, it was Adrea
+herself who changed the atmosphere so completely. She was so different
+from other women in her strange Eastern beauty and the leopard-like
+grace of her movements that she could not fail to create an atmosphere
+around her. Yes! it was she herself who had worked the change; just as
+she had worked so wonderful a change in him, Paul told himself.
+
+At first they had thought that the room was empty; and Adrea, who had
+entered a little in advance, turned round to Paul and held out her
+hands with a sudden sweeping gesture of invitation. Even in that
+moment, as he moved towards her, Paul had time to feel a quick glow
+of admiration at the artistic elegance of her pose and colouring. Her
+proud, dusky face and brilliant eyes found a perfect background in the
+deep orange of her loose gown, and the velvet twined amongst her dark
+hair. Her arms, stretched out towards him, were half bare, where the
+lace had fallen back, and a world of passionate love and invitation
+was glowing in her face as she leaned slightly towards him, as if
+impatient of his slow advance. But before his hands had touched hers,
+a voice from the further end of the room had broken in upon that
+eloquent silence.
+
+"Adrea! you did not see me!"
+
+They stood for a moment as though paralysed; then Adrea turned
+slowly round with darkening face. "I did not! I thought that you were
+upstairs!"
+
+She glided out of the shadows, a slim, tall figure dressed with
+curious simplicity, and with white, bloodless face. "I am going away,"
+she said, coming quite close to them, and fixing her full, deep
+eyes upon Adrea; "I am going away at once. But, Adrea, there is one
+word--just one word--"
+
+"Say it!" Adrea interrupted impatiently.
+
+She glanced at Paul. He made a movement as though to quit the room,
+but Adrea prevented him. "You need not go!" she said. "Anything that
+is to be said can be said to you as well as to me. I prefer to have no
+secrets! You were going to say something to me," she added, turning to
+her companion.
+
+"Yes! I have no objection to say it before Mr. de Vaux. I simply want
+to ask you whether you consider him a proper visitor in this house?"
+
+"I choose it! I am mistress here!"
+
+For a moment an angry reply seemed to quiver upon the woman's lips,
+but it died away.
+
+"You are right! I thank you for reminding me of it," she said quietly.
+"And yet, Adrea, hear me! You are doing an evil thing! Was your
+father's murder so light a thing to you that you can join hands with
+his murderer's son? Remember that day! Think of your father lying
+across that chamber floor, stricken dead in a single moment by Martin
+de Vaux--by his father! It is not seemly that you two should stand
+there, hand in hand! It is not seemly for you to be under the same
+roof! It is horrible!"
+
+There was a moment's silence. Then Adrea threw open the door, and
+pointed to it.
+
+"Go!" she ordered coldly. "You have had your say, and that is my
+answer! You were my father's friend; I believe that he loved you! It
+was for his sake that I offered you shelter! It was for his sake that
+I brought you here! But, remember this: if you wish to stay with me,
+let me never hear another word from you on this subject!"
+
+She went out silently. Adrea closed the door, and turned round with
+all the hardness fading swiftly out of her features. A moment before
+there had been a look of the tigress in her eyes; and Paul, watching
+her, had shuddered. It was gone now. She came close up to Paul, and
+led him to a chair.
+
+"Was I very undignified?" she said, laughing. "I am afraid I was. I
+was very angry!"
+
+He shook his head. "You were not undignified," he said, "but you were
+very severe. I think that she will go away."
+
+Adrea's face hardened again. "I do not care! I would hate the dearest
+friend I had on earth who tried to come between us. Oh! Paul, Paul!
+don't you feel as I do; as though the world were empty, and my mind
+swept bare of memories,--as though there were no background to it all,
+nothing save you and I, and our love?"
+
+Paul drew her to him. For him, at that moment, there was no past nor
+any future. The dreamy _abandon_ of her manner seemed to have raised
+an echo within him.
+
+"Listen! What is that?" Adrea exclaimed suddenly.
+
+There was the ring of a horse's hoofs in the avenue, and immediately
+afterwards a loud peal at the bell. Paul and Adrea looked at one
+another breathlessly. Who could it be?
+
+The outer door was opened and closed, and then quick steps passed
+across the hall. The drawing-room door was thrown open, and Arthur
+de Vaux, pale and splashed with mud from head to foot, stood upon the
+threshold.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+"THE NEW, STRONG WINE OF LOVE"
+
+
+The situation, although it was only a brief one, was for a moment
+possessed of a singularly dramatic force. The grouping and the
+colouring in that dimly lit drawing-room were all that an artist could
+desire, and the facial expressions bordered upon the tragic. Of all
+men in the world, his brother was the last whom of his own choosing
+Paul would have wished to see.
+
+There was a brief silence. Arthur, breathless through his hasty
+entrance, could only stand there upon the threshold, his face white to
+the lips, and his eyes flashing with passionate anger and dismay.
+To him the situation was more than painful; it was horrible. To have
+believed ill of Paul from hearsay would have been impossible; his
+confidence in his elder brother had been unbounded. He had always
+looked up to him as the mirror of everything that was honorable and
+chivalrous. Even now, perhaps there might be some explanation--some
+partial explanation, at any rate. Paul was standing back amongst the
+shadows, and his face was only barely visible. Doubtless it was
+only surprise which held him silent. In a moment he would speak,
+and explain everything. It was this thought which loosened Arthur's
+tongue.
+
+"Paul," he cried, and stepping forward into the room, "and Adrea! You
+here, and together! Tell me what it means! I have a right to know. I
+will know."
+
+He had determined to be cool, to bear himself like a man, but their
+silence maddened him. Adrea, it is true, showed no signs of guilt or
+confusion in her cold, questioning face. But the deceit, if deceit
+there had been, was not hers. It was Paul who was responsible to him,
+and it was Paul who should have spoken--Paul, who stood there with a
+hidden face, a silent, immovable figure.
+
+"Are you stricken dumb?" he cried angrily. "You can see who I am,
+can't you, Paul? Speak to me! Tell me whether there is any truth
+in these stories which are flying about the county, with no one to
+contradict them."
+
+What might have been the tragedy of the situation vanished for Paul at
+the sound of his brother's words. After all, it was not the just anger
+of a deceived man with which he was confronted, but the empty scream
+of a boy's passion. Arthur's infatuation had but skimmed the surface
+of his light nature. He was pricked, not wounded. Yet, though in a
+sense this realization brought its relief, Paul felt humbled into the
+dust. He was actually conscious of his own humiliation. So far as
+a nature such as his could be conventional, he had become so in
+deference to the opinion of those who looked up to him as the head of
+a great house, and of whom much was to be expected, both socially and
+politically. What must become of that opinion now, Arthur's words too
+plainly foreshadowed.
+
+He moved forward into the centre of the room, and faced his brother.
+There was only a small table between them.
+
+"I do not know who sent you here, Arthur," he said, "or what reports
+you have heard, but it seems to me, that any explanation you may wish
+had better be deferred until our return home."
+
+Arthur struck the table violently with his riding-whip, "I will not
+wait!" he cried. "Here is the proper place! I have been deceived and
+cajoled by--by--you, Adrea, and by my own brother! It is shameful! You
+hypocrite, Paul! You, to come up to London, and solemnly lecture me
+about a dancing girl. You d----d hypocrite!"
+
+Before his passion, Paul's grave and steadfast silence gained an added
+dignity. Adrea, with a red spot burning on her cheeks, sailed between
+the two.
+
+"Arthur, you are mad," she said, turning suddenly upon him, with her
+eyes afire. "Have I ever deceived you? Have I ever pretended to care
+for you? Bah, no! You are only an unformed, hysterical boy. Before,
+you were indifferent to me. Now, I am very quickly growing to hate
+you! Begone! Leave this house!"
+
+He stood quite still, white and trembling. The scorn of her words had
+fallen like ice upon his heart. Then he turned, and groped for the
+door, as though there were a mist before his eyes.
+
+"I suppose you are quite right," he faltered out. "I didn't see it
+quite the same way, that's all. I understand now."
+
+The door opened and shut. In a moment or two the sound of his horse's
+hoofs were heard in the avenue, growing rapidly less distinct as he
+galloped away into the darkness. To Paul it sounded like the knell of
+his self-respect, but Adrea felt only the relief. Her eyes, full of
+soft invitation, sought his; but he did not move. He stood there,
+silent and motionless, with his face turned towards the window. Those
+dying sounds meant so much to him,--so much that she could never
+understand.
+
+The consciousness of her near presence suddenly disturbed him. He
+turned round. Her warm breath was upon his cheek, and her white arms
+were twined about his neck.
+
+"Paul," she whispered, "do not look so miserable, please! Come and
+talk to me."
+
+Her arms tightened around him. He looked down at her with a peculiar
+helplessness. Their light weight seemed to him like a chain of iron
+weighing him down! down! down!
+
+He had told himself that he had come to bid her farewell; that Father
+Adrian's words, vague though they were, yet had a definite meaning,
+and were worthy of his regard. But at that moment their memory was
+like a dying echo in his ears. This first passion of his life was
+strong upon him, and everything else was weak. The future was suddenly
+bounded for him by a pair of white, clinging arms, and a dark,
+beautiful face pressed close to his. He saw no more; he could see no
+further.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+"ADREA'S DIARY"
+
+ "By love stalks hate, his brother and his mate."
+
+
+I am scarcely calm enough to write! Yet I must write! My heart is
+full; my very pulses are throbbing with excitement! What is it that
+has happened? It is all confused in my mind. Let me try and set it
+down clearly; then perhaps I shall be able to see my way.
+
+Yesterday it seemed to me that my being was all too small for one
+passion. Now it holds two! The one, perhaps, intensifies the other.
+That is possible, for they are opposites, and one has grown out of the
+other. Now I cannot tell which is the stronger, the love or the hate.
+
+I love one man, and I hate another. Perhaps I should say I love one
+man because I hate another. You, my dumb confidant, may be trusted
+with names, so I will be clearer still. I love Paul de Vaux, and I
+hate Father Adrian!
+
+Oh! that he should have dared! that he should have dared to speak so
+to me! If only Paul had been there, he should have beaten him. If I
+had had the strength and the means, I would have killed him where
+he stood, and silenced those thin, cruel lips for ever. I could have
+stabbed him to the heart, and my hand would never have faltered.
+
+Let me try to recall that scene. It is not difficult. His words are
+ringing still in my ears, and his white, passionate face seems to
+follow and mock me wherever I look. I see it out there in the white
+moonlight, and it rises up from the dark corners of the room. It
+haunts me, and I hate it! I hate him as a woman hates any one who
+comes between her and the man she loves!
+
+We were alone, Paul and I; at least, we thought so. I had heard no one
+enter, nor had he. But suddenly a voice rang out and filled the room;
+a fierce, cruel voice, so changed and hardened with passion that I
+scarcely recognised it. But when we sprang up, and peered through the
+twilight of the chamber we saw him standing close to us,--so close
+that he might even have heard our whispered words to one another.
+
+There had been some ceremony at the monastery amongst the hills where
+most of his time here is spent, and he had evidently come straight
+from there. His flowing black robes were splashed with mud and torn by
+brambles, and his white face was livid with exhaustion and anger. His
+dark eyes burned like fire in their hollow depths, and his right
+hand was raised above his head, as though he had been on the point of
+striking or denouncing us. I shall not forget his appearance while I
+live. It will haunt me to my dying day.
+
+I think that it is the mystery of it all which tortures me so. What
+has Paul to fear from him? Whence comes his power? What evil is it
+which he holds suspended over his head? There is only one that I can
+imagine. Father Adrian must hold the key to that awful deathbed scene
+at the monastery of Cruta. As I write the words, my hand shakes, my
+heart sickens with the horror of that memory. Well have I cause to
+shrink from all thought of that hideous night;--I, to whom the son of
+Martin de Vaux has become the dearest amongst men! What was it Paul
+said to me? "He knows something which my father told him whilst he lay
+dying." Is it that knowledge which gives him this strange power? I
+did not believe in it! I would not have believed in it! But, in that
+dreadful moment, I turned to Paul, and I saw his face!
+
+A volley of words seemed trembling on Father Adrian's lips; yet he did
+not speak. We waited for the storm to burst; we waited till I could
+bear the silence no longer, and I felt that if it was not broken I
+should go mad. So I drew near to him, and spoke a single word in his
+ear. Then I glided back to Paul's side.
+
+"Spy!"
+
+He treated the insult as one might treat the bite of an insect in
+the face of some imminent danger. He did not reply to it; he did not
+appear to have heard it. His eyes traveled over me, as though they
+had been sightless, and challenged Paul's. In the excitement of the
+moment, his words sounded tame, and almost meaningless.
+
+"This is your answer, then, Paul de Vaux! Let it be so! I accept your
+decision!"
+
+There was no defiance in Paul's answer. His manner was quite subdued.
+I think that both his words and his tone surprised me.
+
+"You have seen! I am in your hands!"
+
+I looked from one to the other, troubled. I felt that there was a
+hidden meaning in their words which I could not understand. There
+was something between them from which I was excluded. But this much
+I knew. There was a threat in Father Adrian's words, and it was I who
+was the cause of it. Oh! if this man should bring evil upon Paul! The
+thought of it is like madness to me! See, there goes my pen! I cannot
+write when I think of it!
+
+I have opened my window. The very air is sad with the moaning of
+the sea, and the rustling of the night breeze in the thick, tangled
+shrubbery below. But to me it is sweet and grateful! I am in no mood
+for pleasant sounds or sights. The dreariness of the night finds its
+echo in my heart. The damp breeze cools my forehead! To-night I feel
+conscious of a new strength. It is the strength of hate! My mind is
+full of dim purposes; time will aid them to gather strength! As they
+group themselves together, action will suggest itself. To time I leave
+them!
+
+Let me go back to my recital of what passed between us three. A
+strange lethargic calm seemed to have fallen upon Paul. He turned to
+me without even a single trace of the passion which had lit up his
+face a few moments before.
+
+"I must go!" he said quietly. "Farewell!"
+
+I could scarcely believe that he meant it; that he was going away
+without another word, at what was really this priest's unspoken
+bidding. But it was so. From that moment, the fear of Father Adrian
+which had grown up in my heart leaped into a new strength. I was
+angry, and full of resistance.
+
+"Why should you go?" I cried. "I have much to say to you!"
+
+"I must go now, Adrea," he answered simply. "When I came I had no
+thought of staying. It is late!"
+
+I felt my face grow hot with passion as I turned swiftly round towards
+Father Adrian. "It is you who should go," I cried. "Why have you come
+here? Why are you always creeping across my life like a dark, noisome
+shadow? Go away! Begone! I will not be left with you!"
+
+He turned a shade paler, but he did not sacrifice his dignity, as
+I hoped that he would, by answering me with anger. He did not even
+answer me at all. He looked over my head at my lover.
+
+"To-morrow night!" he said calmly.
+
+"To-morrow night!" Paul answered.
+
+I stood between them, angry but helpless. A log of wood had just
+fallen from the fire on to the hearth, and in its sudden blaze I could
+see their faces distinctly. The utter contrast between the two men
+threw each into strong relief. Paul, in his scarlet coat and riding
+clothes, pale and impassive, but _debonnaire_; and Father Adrian, his
+strange black garb mud-bespattered and disordered, and his dark, angry
+face livid with the passion so hardly suppressed. It was odd to think
+of them as creatures of the same species. Odder still to think that
+there should be this link between them.
+
+I walked with Paul to the door, holding to his arm, and talking,
+half-gaily, half-reproachfully, all the way. We stood on the
+step together while his horse was being brought round, and in the
+half-lights he stooped down and kissed me. But his manner had changed.
+Even his lips were cold, and his eyes were no longer bright. There was
+a far-away look in them, and his face was white and set. There were
+tears in my eyes as I watched him ride away on his great brown horse,
+and listened to the distant thunder of hoofs across the moor. His face
+had told its own story. He was nerving himself to face some expected
+danger. From whose hands? Surely from Father Adrian's.
+
+The thought worked within me. I stood for a moment, trying to quiet
+my passion. As I turned away I heard the stable-yard doors open, and a
+carriage, laden with luggage, drove slowly out, and, without coming
+to the front at all, turned down the avenue. I ran out, heedless of my
+slippers, and called to it to stop. The man obeyed me, and I caught it
+up, breathless. The blinds were closely drawn, but I opened the door.
+As I expected, it was she who sat inside, closely veiled and weeping.
+
+"You were going, then, without a single word of farewell!" I cried
+reproachfully. "Is that kind? Have I deserved it from you?"
+
+She threw up her veil. Her eyes were red and swollen with weeping. She
+looked at me pleadingly.
+
+"Do not blame me more than you can help!" she said. "It was a great
+shock to me to see you--with the son of Martin de Vaux. It was more
+than a shock; it was a horror to me! He is like his father! He is very
+like his father!"
+
+I knew that she had passed through a fiery sea of suffering, and I
+kept back the anger which threatened me. I pointed upwards.
+
+"We cannot keep the dark clouds from gathering in the sky, nor can we
+make love come and go at our bidding. We are but creatures; it is fate
+which ordains!"
+
+She bowed her head. "Fate, or the unknown God! I am not your judge,
+child! I do not leave you in anger!"
+
+"Why do you go, then, and leave me here alone? It is not kind! It is
+not what I should expect from you!"
+
+The tears started again into her eyes, but she shook them away. "I
+cannot explain as yet," she said. "You will think me ungrateful, I
+fear! I cannot help it! I must go. Farewell, Adrea!"
+
+A sudden thought came to me. It was an inspiration. "You are not going
+of your own free will," I cried. "Some one has been influencing you!"
+
+Her face was suddenly full of nervous terror. "Hush! hush!" she cried.
+"He will hear you! Let me go now! Let me go, I beseech you!"
+
+I held her hands. "It is Father Adrian who is sending you away," I
+cried passionately. "He is my enemy. I hate him! Why should you obey
+him? Stay with me! Do, do stay!"
+
+She looked at me as one would look at an ignorant child who
+blasphemes. "You are talking wildly! Father Adrian is far from being
+your enemy. You do not understand!"
+
+Her voice had changed; the note of sympathy had died away. I turned
+away from the carriage door in despair. Father Adrian's power was
+greater than mine.
+
+"You can go!" I said bitterly. "You would have left me here without
+one word, at his bidding. As you say, I do not understand."
+
+She leaned forward, with a strange light in her eyes. "Child," she
+whispered, "I am going to Cruta."
+
+The carriage drove away and I walked back to the house. The air seemed
+full of voices, and the grey rising mists loomed into strange shapes.
+Cruta! She was going to Cruta! What power had this man in his hands to
+send my lover from me with a heart like a stone, and this woman back
+into the living hell from which she had just freed herself. It was my
+turn now! Would he be able to subdue me to his bidding? The thought
+made me shudder.
+
+I ran upstairs into my room, and bathed my forehead, and re-arranged
+my gown. Then I set my teeth together, and went down to him. It was to
+be a battle! Well! I was prepared!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is over now. I know his strength, and I know his weakness. What
+passed between us I shall put down to-morrow. To-night I am weary.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+"OH! HEART OF STONE, YET FLESH TO ALL SAVE ME"
+
+
+This is exactly what happened after I regained the house. I went
+upstairs for a few minutes to arrange my hair and bathe my eyes. Then
+I walked straight down to the drawing-room, and I told myself that I
+was prepared for anything that might take place.
+
+Father Adrian did not hear me enter, so I had the advantage at the
+onset of taking him by surprise. He was standing in the centre of
+the hearthrug, with his arms folded and his eyes cast down upon the
+ground. His eyebrows almost met in a black frown, and a curious grey
+pallor had spread itself over his face. When I entered, noiselessly
+moving the curtains, from the outer chamber, he was muttering to
+himself, and I strained my hearing to catch the meaning of his words.
+
+"To-night must end it!" I heard him say. "She herself shall decide.
+Greater men have travelled the path before me! As for him, my pity
+has grown faint! It is the will of the Church! I myself am but the
+instrument. He stands between the Church and her rights! Between me
+and--her!"
+
+His cheeks flushed, and his expression suddenly changed. He whispered
+a name! It was mine! His eyes were soft, and his lips were parted. The
+priest had vanished. His face was human and manly. I saw it, but my
+heart was as cold as steel.
+
+"Father Adrian," I said quietly, "I am here."
+
+He started, and looked towards me. If my heart could have been
+softened even to pity, it would have been softened by that look. But
+a woman's great selfishness was upon me! The man I loved was in some
+sort of danger at his hands. There was no room in my heart for any
+other thought. I was adamant.
+
+He was silent for a moment, then he faced me steadily, and spoke. "So
+you have learned to love this Englishman, this De Vaux, the son of old
+Martin de Vaux! Answer me simply, Yes or No!"
+
+"I have!"
+
+I did not hesitate. What need was there for hesitation? I answered him
+defiantly, and without faltering.
+
+"You will never marry him! You will not even become his mistress!"
+
+I made no answer at first; I laughed! that was all.
+
+"Who will prevent me?"
+
+"I shall!"
+
+"How?"
+
+"The means are ready to my hand!"
+
+My heart sank, but I forced a smile. "What are they?"
+
+He considered a moment. "I can strip Paul de Vaux of every acre
+and every penny he possesses! I can break his mother's heart! I can
+proclaim his father a murderer!"
+
+"I do not understand! I do not believe!"
+
+The words left me boldly enough, but there was a lump in my throat,
+and my heart was sick.
+
+"Listen!" He drew a small gold crucifix from his breast, and solemnly
+kissed it. Then, holding it in his hand, he repeated,--
+
+"I can beggar Paul de Vaux by my proven word. I can take from him
+everything precious in life! I can take from him his name and his
+honours! I can break his mother's heart! I can proclaim his father a
+murderer! All this I can and will do, save you listen to me!"
+
+He kissed the crucifix, and replaced it in his inner pocket. I had
+begun to tremble. The stamp of truth was upon his words. Still I tried
+to face him boldly.
+
+"Even if this is so, what has it to do with me?" I cried.
+
+"You know!" he answered. "In your heart you know! Yet, if you
+will--listen!" he continued, in a low tone. "You love Paul de Vaux!"
+
+"It is true!"
+
+"And you believe that he loves you?"
+
+"I do!"
+
+"Listen, then! Three nights ago I lifted that curtain, by the side of
+one who has left you for ever, and I saw you in his arms. I followed
+him out of the house; I walked by his side to Vaux Abbey, and I told
+him what I have told you. I wasted no time in idle threats. I told him
+what power was mine, and I said 'Choose!' He was silent!"
+
+"Choose between what?" I interrupted.
+
+"I bade him swear that he would never willingly look upon your face
+again, or prepare himself to face all the evils which it was in my
+power to bring upon him."
+
+"And he?"
+
+"He asked for time--for a week!"
+
+A storm of anger was suddenly stirred up within me. I turned upon him
+with flashing eyes and quivering lips. Discretion and restraint were
+gone; I was like a tigress. I lacked only the power to kill.
+
+"And by what right did you dare to thrust yourself between us?" I
+cried. "What have I to do with you, or you with me?"
+
+He held up his hands for a moment, as though to shut out the sight of
+my face, ablaze with scorn and hatred. There was a short silence. Then
+he spoke in a low tone, vibrating with intensity of feeling.
+
+"You know! In your heart you know!" he said. "Into my life has come
+the greatest humiliation which can befall such as I am! In sorrow and
+bitterness it has eaten itself into my heart. I am accursed in my own
+sight, and in the sight of God!"
+
+I mocked at him. "I am not your confessor!" I laughed. "Go and tell
+your sins to those of your own order! I am a woman and you are a
+priest! Why do you look at me with that light in your eyes? Am I a
+prayer-book? Is there anything saintly in my face, that you should
+keep your eyes fixed upon it so steadily?"
+
+I had hoped that my words would madden him, and he would lose his
+self-control. To my surprise, they had but little effect. He seemed
+scarcely to have heard.
+
+"What have you to do with me, or I with you?" he repeated, in a voice
+which was rapidly gaining strength and passion. "God knows! Yet as
+surely as we both live, our lots are intertwined the one with the
+other."
+
+"A godly priest!" I laughed. "What have you to do with me? What
+of your vows? Oh, how dare you try to play the lover with me! You
+hypocrite!"
+
+He shrank back as though in pain. I laughed outright, glad that I had
+made him feel.
+
+"Adrea!" he said slowly. "I was never a hypocrite to you. In your
+presence I have never breathed a word of my religion. Think for a
+moment of those days at Cruta. Did I not refuse to confess you? Why?
+You know! Because of those long, dreamy days we spent together, not as
+priest and penitent, but as man and woman. Do you remember them--the
+cliffs, with their giant shadows standing out across the blue waters
+of the harbour; the hollows, where we sat amongst the perfumed wild
+flowers, gazing across the sea, and watching the white sails in the
+distance; the nights, with their white moonlight and silent grandeur!
+Ay, Adrea! look me in the face, if you can, and tell me that you have
+forgotten them! You cannot! You dare not! It was you who brought me
+those books of wild, passionate poetry whose music entered into my
+very soul! It was you who tempted me with soft words, with your music,
+with your beauty, into that world of sense which holds me prisoner for
+ever. What I once was, I can never be again! It is you who worked the
+change--you who awoke my man's heart, and set it beating for ever
+at your touch, at your movements, at the sight of you. It is you who
+taught me how to love--who opened to me the rose-covered gates of
+hell! There is no drawing back! You, who have dragged me down, shall
+share my fall with me, for better or for worse! You shall not escape!
+No other man shall have you! I have paid the price, and I will have
+you!"
+
+I wrenched myself free from the arms which were closing around me, and
+stood trembling before him.
+
+"Fool!" I cried. "You have dared to think of me like that because I
+chose to make use of you at Cruta! Make use of you! Yes, that is what
+I did! I wanted to escape! You and she were the only ones who could
+help me! Save for that, I had never wasted a moment upon you. I never
+thought of you as a man; you were only a priest. I never wished to see
+you again! You are in my way now; you stand between me and the man I
+love! I hate you!"
+
+His dark eyes were lit up with a sudden fire and a deep flush stained
+his cheeks. For the first time I seemed to see the man in him as well
+as the priest, and I saw that he was handsome. It did not interest me;
+I noticed it only as an incident.
+
+"I do not believe it!" he exclaimed. "You are not so false as you
+would have me believe, Adrea!"
+
+His hand was on my wrist, and his dark eyes, strangely softened, were
+fixed pleadingly upon mine. Something in his manner, even in his tone,
+seemed to remind me of Paul. I was magnetized! For a moment I could
+not move, and during that moment his hands closed upon mine.
+
+"Adrea, is such a love as I can offer you worth nothing? What did you
+tell me once was your life's ideal? Was it not the love of a strong,
+true man, always faithful, always loving? No one could love you more
+tenderly than I, no one could be more faithful. Until I saw you, no
+woman's face had dwelt in my thoughts for a single instant. In my
+heart you reign alone, Adrea! No one has been there before--no one
+will come after! Such as it is, it is a kingdom of your own!"
+
+"I do not understand you," I said slowly, withdrawing my hands. "You
+talk to me of a man's love, a man's faithfulness! What do you know of
+it? You are a priest!"
+
+He threw up his hands with a sudden cry of agony. His face was white
+and blanched.
+
+"Do I not know it?" he exclaimed in a low, fierce tone. "Do you think
+I yielded easily to the poisoned web you have woven around me? The
+horror of it all has darkened my days, and made hideous my nights. And
+yet you can taunt me with it--you, for whom I yield up conscience and
+future--you, for whom I give my soul! No other man could love as I
+love, Adrea!"
+
+I looked him straight in the face and I did not spare him. What was
+the use? The truth was best!
+
+"It is folly!" I said. "If your religion is worth anything to you, let
+it help you now! Let it teach you to forget me! Go away from here, and
+leave unharmed the man I love. If you do not, I shall hate you!"
+
+He caught hold of my dress. He was on his knees before me--a bent,
+imploring figure.
+
+"Too late! too late!" he cried. "My religion has gone! When love for
+you crept into my heart, I became worse than a heretic. It was sin,
+and the sin has spread. Oh! have mercy upon me, Adrea, have mercy upon
+me! Just a little of your love. It may not be much at first, but it
+will grow. Adrea, you must try--you shall try!"
+
+I shook my gown from his trembling fingers, and looked down upon him
+with contempt in my heart, and contempt in my face. The flickering
+firelight cast a faint glow upon his blanched, wan features, and
+their utter humility filled me with an unreasoning and unreasonable
+loathing. I did not try to soften my words. I spoke out just as I
+felt, and watched him rise slowly to his feet, like a hunted and
+stricken animal, without a pitying word or glance. As he rose upright,
+his head dropped. He did not look at me; he did not speak a single
+word. He walked slowly to the door with steps that faltered a little,
+and walked out of the room, and out of the house.
+
+I watched him down the avenue, wondering at his strange silence. It
+had a curious effect upon me. I would rather have heard threats--even
+a torrent of anger. There was something curiously ominous in that
+slow, wordless exit. I watched him uneasily, full of dim, shapeless
+fears.
+
+Outside the gate he paused in the middle of the road. To the left
+was the monastery where he had stayed; to the right was Vaux Abbey. I
+heard my heart beat while he paused, and my face was pressed against
+the window. For nearly a minute he stood quite still, with downcast
+head, thinking. Then he turned deliberately to the right, and set his
+face towards Vaux Abbey.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That was early in the evening yesterday--twenty-four hours ago. Since
+then not a soul has been near the house. Early this morning I saw
+Father Adrian coming along the road from Vaux. I ran upstairs, and
+locked myself in my room, after forbidding the servants to let him
+enter. From the windows I watched him. To my surprise he never
+even glanced in. He walked past the gates, and took the road to the
+monastery. I saw him slowly ascend the hill and vanish out of sight
+in the darkening twilight. Once, just before he reached the summit, he
+paused and looked steadily down here. I could not see his face, but
+I saw him raise his right hand for a moment toward the sky. Then he
+turned round and pursued his way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If some one does not come to me soon, I shall go mad. Another hour has
+passed. My mind is made up; I shall go to Vaux Abbey.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+"MY LIPS ARE CHARGED WITH TRUTH, AND JUSTICE BIDS ME SPEAK"
+
+
+An early darkness had fallen upon the earth. Black clouds had sailed
+across the young moon, and the evening breeze had changed into a gale.
+There was no rain as yet, but every prospect of it near at hand. A
+mass of lurid, yellowish clouds hung low down over the bending woods,
+and the wind whistled drearily amongst the fir trees. Paul de
+Vaux wrapped his cloak tightly around him, and, standing on the
+turf-covered floor of the ruined chapel, peered forward into the
+darkness, looking for the man whom he had come to meet. Even then he
+heard his voice before he could distinguish the dim outline of Father
+Adrian standing by his side.
+
+"So you have come, Paul de Vaux, and in good time! It is well!"
+
+"I am here!" Paul answered shortly. "If what you have to say to me
+will take long, come up to the house. It is dark and cold, and there
+is a storm rising."
+
+The priest shook his head. "I have no wish to find shelter under the
+roof of Vaux Abbey," he said coldly. "You are well protected against
+the weather, and so am I. Let us stay here!"
+
+Paul strove to look into his face, but the darkness baffled him. He
+could only see its outline, nothing of his expression. "As you will,"
+he answered. "Speak! I am ready."
+
+"I have dealt in no idle threats, Paul de Vaux," was the stern answer.
+"I gave you a chance, and you have thrown it away. Perhaps I did ill
+ever to offer it to you. But, at any rate, remember this: it is no
+idle vengeance which I am dealing out to you this night; it is our
+holy and despoiled Church calling for justice. I speak in her name!"
+
+There was a moment's silence. Paul knew by his companion's bowed
+head and laboured utterance that he was suffering from some sort
+of emotion. But the darkness hid from him the workings of his pale
+features. When he spoke, his voice was low and solemn.
+
+"Paul de Vaux, turn back in your mind to another night such as this,
+when the thunder of sea and wind shook the air, and the anger of God
+seemed fallen upon the earth. On that night your father lay dying in
+the island monastery of Cruta; and while you were risking your life in
+the storm to reach him, I knelt by his side praying for his soul, that
+it might not sink down amongst the damned in hell. He was a brave man,
+but with the icy hand of death closing around him fear touched his
+heart. It was no craven fear! He lay there still and quiet, but his
+heart was troubled. In the midst of my prayers he stopped me, and took
+the crucifix into his own hand.
+
+"'Father,' he said, 'I have no faith in dying repentances. I have
+scouted religion all my life, and on my deathbed I will not cry for
+comfort to a Divinity which is a myth to me. Yet, as man to man,
+listen while I tell you a secret; and when I have finished, do you
+pray for me.'
+
+"Shall I go on, Paul de Vaux? Shall I tell you all that your father's
+dying lips faltered out to me?"
+
+"All! every word! Keep nothing back!" Paul spoke quickly, almost
+feverishly. He knew a little, but something told him that this priest
+knew more. He began dimly to suspect the nature of the revelation
+which was to come.
+
+"You shall know everything," Father Adrian continued, in the same
+hushed tone, so low that Paul had to bend forward to catch the
+words as they fell from his lips. "If Martin de Vaux had been of our
+religion, and had sought me as a priest of the Church a seal would
+have been set upon my mouth. But it was not so! Despite all my
+ministrations, he died as he had lived, in heresy and grievous sin.
+After all, it is only right that you, his son, should know what he
+forebore to tell you. Yet, in my weakness I might have spared you, if
+you yourself had not brought down this blow upon your head."
+
+Paul raised his hand, and Father Adrian paused. "Listen," he said,
+in a low, deep tone. "There are secret pages in the lives of most of
+us--pages blurred and scarred with misery and suffering and sin. But
+there is a difference--a great difference. Some are turned over with
+firm and penitent fingers, and, although their scarlet record may
+never be blotted out, yet, by sacrifice and atonement, the fruits of
+the sin itself may die, and, dying, cast no shadow into the future.
+A sin against humanity can often be righted by human justice. Towards
+the close of my father's days, I knew for the first time that there
+was in his life one of those disfigured pages. He told me nothing. I
+sought to know nothing. Father Adrian," Paul went on, with a sudden
+strain of passion in his tone, and a gesture half unseen in the
+darkness, "if the shadow of his sin rests upon any human being, if it
+still lives upon the earth, then tell me all that is in your heart
+to tell, for there is work to be done. But if that page be locked
+and sealed, if those who suffered through it are dead, and the burden
+which darkened my father's days is his alone, then spare his memory!
+Strike at me, if you will! Deal out your promised vengeance, but let
+it fall on me alone!"
+
+Paul ended his speech with a little burst of passion ringing in those
+last few words. He was conscious of a deep and fervent desire to hear
+nothing, to listen to nothing, which could teach him to hold less dear
+his father's memory. He shrank, with a human and perfectly natural
+feeling, from hearing evil of the dead. That last evil deed, the
+murder in that grim, bare chamber of death, had haunted him with vivid
+and painful intensity. But it was a crime by itself. It was horrible
+to imagine that it might indeed be the culmination of a life of
+license and contempt of all human laws. He had tried to think of it as
+something outside his father's life, something done in a momentary fit
+of madness, and that the man who suffered by it was some monster unfit
+for the companionship of his fellows--unfit to live. There were still
+tales to be heard in the county, and about town even, of the wild
+doings of Martin de Vaux in his younger days; but none of these had
+reached his son's ears. He would have been the last person likely to
+hear of them.
+
+There was a short silence, and before Father Adrian spoke again the
+low-lying clouds were swept over their heads by a gale from seaward,
+and the wind commenced to whistle and shriek in the pine wood,
+and roar amongst the crumbling ruins, which scarcely afforded them
+protection from the blinding rain. Any further conversation was
+impossible. Paul lifted up his voice, and shouted in his companion's
+ear--
+
+"These walls are not safe! We must go into the house. Will you come?"
+
+Father Adrian hesitated, and then assented, wrapping his cloak around
+him. In a few moments they were inside the library, having entered
+through a private door and met no one. Breathless, Paul threw off his
+cloak, which was dripping with rain, and turned round almost fiercely
+upon his companion.
+
+"Now speak!" he said. "I am ready to hear all."
+
+The priest looked at him steadily for a moment, and then, with his
+pale face turned towards the fire, he commenced to speak.
+
+"Sin is everlasting!" he said slowly. "Your father's sin lives, and on
+you the burden must fall! If you had kept the covenant which I placed
+before you, I might have spared you. You yourself have chosen. You
+must hear all! Listen!
+
+"It was by chance that I was spending two months in charge of the
+monastery of St. Jerome, at Cruta, when your father arrived," he
+continued, without any pause. "He sought our hospitality and he at
+once obtained it. For two days he dwelt with us, spending his time for
+the most part in idle fashion, wandering about along the seashore or
+on the cliffs, but always with the look on his face of a man who does
+but dally with some fixed purpose. His doings were nothing to me, but
+by chance, from one of the brethren, I learnt that he was no stranger
+to the island--that once, many years ago, he had been the guest of the
+lord who ruled the little territory, and whose castle overshadows the
+monastery.
+
+"On the third day of his stay, he remained within his guest-chamber
+until sundown, writing. As the vesper-bell rang I met him in the
+corridor, dressed for walking, and from his countenance I judged that
+whatever his mission to the island might be, he was about to bring it
+to an end. He passed me without speech, almost as though he had not
+seen me, and left the monastery. A few minutes afterwards, looking
+down from the windows to watch the brethren come in from their field
+tasks, I saw him take the road up to the castle.
+
+"It was in the middle of the night when he returned. Midnight had come
+and gone, and every one in the monastery was asleep, when the hoarse,
+clanging bell down in the yard rang slightly, as though pulled by
+feeble fingers. I threw my cloak over my shoulders, and descended to
+admit him. When the last of the huge bolts had been withdrawn, and I
+threw the door open, I found him leaning against the wall, with
+his fingers clutched together in agony, and his bloodless features
+convulsed with pain. The moonlight was falling right across his face,
+pale and ghastly with pain, and by its light I seemed to see
+something dark dropping from him on the white flags. I leaned forward,
+horror-stricken, and I saw that it was blood."
+
+"My God!"
+
+Paul was standing very still and rigid, with his eyes fastened upon
+the priest. As yet, he scarcely realized anything more than that
+he was being told a very horrible story. But he was conscious of a
+feverish impatience, quite beyond his control. When Father Adrian
+paused at his exclamation, he beat the ground with his foot
+impatiently. "Go on! Go on!" he said hoarsely.
+
+"I had no time to ask questions," the priest continued quietly.
+"Directly he left the support of the wall, and endeavoured to move
+towards me, your father threw up his arms with a sharp cry of pain,
+and almost fell upon his face. I was just in time to catch him, and
+exerting all my strength--for he was a powerful man--I dragged him up
+the steps and along the corridor to the nearest empty cell. There I
+laid him down upon a bed of ferns, and then hurried out to summon one
+of the brethren who was skilled in medicine.
+
+"In a few moments he returned with me. By his direction, I gave your
+father brandy and other restoratives, while he cut open his coat
+to find out, if he could, the nature of the wound. It was easily
+discovered. He had been stabbed by a long dagger just below the heart.
+Had the dagger entered one-sixteenth of an inch higher, he must have
+bled to death upon the spot.
+
+"We bound up the hurt as well as we could, and with the help of other
+of the monks, we carried him up to the guest-chamber, and put him to
+bed. In about half an hour he recovered consciousness, and called me
+to his side.
+
+"'Pencil, paper,' he whispered.
+
+"I handed him both. After several futile efforts he succeeded in
+writing a few words. Then he folded up the note, and handed it to me.
+
+"'If you will send it without delay,' he whispered, 'I will give one
+hundred pounds to the monastery.'
+
+"I never hesitated, for our funds were in a desperate state; but first
+I glanced at the direction. It was addressed to--
+
+ PAUL DE VAUX, Esq.,
+ c/o The English Consul,
+ Palermo.
+
+"I promised that it should be sent, and, as you know, it was. Then I
+sent the others out of the room, and inquired about his hurt. He set
+his lips firm, and shook his head.
+
+"'It was an accident,' he faltered. 'No one was to blame.'
+
+"I told him briefly that it was impossible. The nature of his wound
+was such that it was clearly the work of an assassin. In a certain
+sense we were the upholders of the law on the island, and I pointed
+this out to him sternly. He only shook his head and closed his eyes.
+Neither then nor at any other time could I gain from him one single
+word as to his doings on that night. He would tell me nothing."
+
+"You saw him going toward the castle," Paul interrupted. "Did you make
+inquiries there?"
+
+The priest shook his head slowly. "No, I made no inquiries," he
+answered. "It was no matter for my interference. The castle, although
+it is a huge place, was deserted save for a few native servants,
+whose _patois_ was unintelligible to me. There were only two who dwelt
+there--the old Count himself, and one other--to whom I could have
+gone. Several nights after your father's illness I left the monastery,
+and tried to see the Count. He would not even have me admitted, and on
+my return, your father, who had guessed the reason of my absence, sent
+for me. He judged of the ill success of my mission, by my face, and
+he instantly appeared relieved. He then called me to the bedside, and
+made me an offer. He would give me, as a further contribution to our
+exhausted funds, a large sum of money on this condition--that I took
+no further steps in any direction towards ascertaining the nature of
+his accident, as he chose to call it, and that I should not mention it
+to you as the cause of his illness, or refer to it in any way if you
+arrived while he was there. I hesitated for some time, but in the end
+I consented. The money in itself was a great temptation--you see, I am
+frank with you--and, apart from that, your father at that time was on
+the verge of his fever, and at such a critical time I feared the ill
+results of not falling in with his wishes. So I promised, and I kept
+my promise; no one--not even you--knew that he died from that dagger
+thrust, and during the remainder of my stay on the island, I asked no
+questions concerning his visit to the castle."
+
+"But did you hear nothing? were there no reports?" Paul asked.
+
+Father Adrian hesitated. "There were no reports about your father,"
+he said, "but the castle itself was always the object of the most
+unbounded superstition on the part of the inhabitants. They told
+strange tales of midnight cries, of lights from blocked-up chambers,
+and of the old Count who still dwelt there, although he had not been
+seen outside the castle walls for many a year. He was reported to have
+sold himself to the Evil One, and at the very mention of his name the
+people crossed themselves in terror, and glanced uneasily over their
+shoulders."
+
+"Idle tales!" cried Paul angrily. "Tell me, Father Adrian, did you
+know this Count of Cruta?"
+
+There was a moment's silence. Father Adrian's face was turned away,
+and he seemed in no hurry to answer. "Yes, I knew him."
+
+"You knew him! What is he like? Tell me!"
+
+The priest shook his head. "I have nothing to tell you," he said in a
+low tone.
+
+"You mean that you will not tell me."
+
+The priest inclined his head. Paul turned upon him fiercely, "He was
+my father's murderer," he cried.
+
+"It may be so. But remember that nothing is known! Remember, too, that
+your father's last wish was to keep secret the manner of his death!"
+
+Paul seemed scarcely to have heard him. He was walking restlessly
+up and down the apartment. Presently he stopped in front of Father
+Adrian's chair.
+
+"You have told me what happened to my father on the island," he said;
+"now tell me the story of his life, which you say that he confided to
+you. I must know what took him there."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+"THE SHATTERED VASE OF LOVE'S MOST HOLY VOWS"
+
+
+Paul had not thought of ringing for lights, and, save around the
+fireplace, the room was wrapped in solemn darkness. Father Adrian's
+chair had been amongst the shadows, and Paul had seen nothing save
+his outline since they had entered the room. But now, his curiosity
+stirred by the sudden silence of the priest, he caught up the poker,
+and broke the burning log in the grate, so that the flames threw a
+quick light on his face.
+
+Its extreme pallor struck him forcibly. It was a perfectly bloodless
+face, and the dark eyes, as black as jet, accentuated its pallor. Yet
+there was no lack of nervous strength or emotion. The thin lips were
+quivering, and the eyes were soft with feeling. Somehow, it seemed to
+Paul that this man's interest in the story which he had come to tell
+was no casual one; that he himself was mixed up in it, in a manner
+which as yet he had chosen to conceal. His colourless face was alight
+with human interest and sympathies. Who was this priest, and why had
+he come so far to tell his story? Paul felt that a mystery lay behind
+it all.
+
+"You must not think," Father Adrian commenced slowly, "that your
+father told me the whole history of his life. It was one episode only,
+the memory of which weighed heavily upon him as death drew near. He
+did not tell me all concerning it; what he did tell me I will try and
+repeat to you.
+
+"It was late in the afternoon of the day before your arrival that he
+called me to his bedside. Only a few hours ago we had told him that
+he must die, and since then he had been very silent. I came and knelt
+before him, and was commencing a prayer, when he stopped me.
+
+"'I want you to listen while I tell you one of the worst actions of my
+life,' he said in a low tone, weakened by the suffering through which
+he had passed. 'The memory of it has haunted me always; it is the
+memory of it which has brought me here. I am not confessing to you,
+mind! only after I have told you this story, I want you to pray for
+me.
+
+"'Thirty years ago I was in Palermo, and was introduced there to the
+Count of Cruta. We met several times, and on his departure he invited
+me to come over here for a week's shooting. I was wandering about on
+pleasure, with no fixed plans, and I did not hesitate for a moment. I
+should like nothing better than to come, I told him, and accordingly
+we returned here together.
+
+"'The Count was a widower with one daughter, Irene. For a young man
+I was not particularly impressionable, and up till then I had thought
+very little about women. Nevertheless,--perhaps, I should say, all the
+more for that reason,--I fell in love with Irene. In a week's time I
+had all but told her so; and finding myself alone with her father one
+night after dinner, I boldly asked him for her hand. Somewhat to my
+surprise,--for considering the difference in our years, we had become
+very friendly,--he refused me point-blank. The first reason which he
+gave staggered me: Irene was already engaged to a Roumanian nobleman,
+who would be coming soon to claim her. But apart from that, he went
+on, he would never have consented to the match on the score of our
+different religions. I tried to argue with him, but it was useless; he
+would not even discuss the matter. His daughter's hand was promised,
+and his word was passed.
+
+"'On the morrow I appealed to Irene, and here I met with more success.
+She confessed that she loved me, and, to my surprise, she consented
+at once when I proposed that she should run away with me. Our
+arrangements were made in haste and secrecy. My yacht lay in the
+harbour, and at midnight Irene stole down to the shore, where I met
+her, and rowed her on board. A few minutes later we weighed anchor and
+steamed away, with the rusty old guns from the castle firing useless
+shots high over our heads.
+
+"'I want to make my story as short as I can, so I will not attempt
+to offer any excuses for my conduct, or to seek to palliate it in any
+way. Irene had trusted herself to me, and I betrayed her trust. I did
+not marry her. She did not leave me; she did not even openly upbraid
+me; but nevertheless it hung like a dark cloud over her life.
+By degrees, she became altered. She tried to drown her memory by
+frivolity, by all manner of gaiety and excitement, and our life in
+Paris afforded her many opportunities.
+
+"'The old Count of Cruta made two efforts to rescue his daughter from
+me. The first time he came alone; and before his righteous fury I was
+for a moment abashed. "Give me back my daughter!" he thundered, with
+his back to my closed door, and a pistol pointed to my head. I rang
+the bell, and Irene came, dressed for the evening, and humming a light
+opera tune. Then I saw to what depths of callousness I had dragged
+her, and I shuddered. She listened to the old man's stormy eloquence,
+and when he had finished his passionate appeal, she shrugged her
+shoulders slightly. She was perfectly happy, she declared, and she
+would die sooner than go back to that _triste_ Cruta. Had he had a
+pleasant journey? she asked, and would he stay and dine? I saw her
+father shudder, and the words seemed frozen upon his lips. He looked
+at her in perfect silence for a full minute--looked at her from head
+to foot, at her soft white dress, with its floating sea of dainty
+draperies, and at the diamonds on her neck and bosom. Then his eye
+seemed to blaze with anger.
+
+"'"Girl!" he cried sternly, "you have dragged down into the mire one
+of the proudest names in Europe! Curse you for it! As for you, sir,"
+he added, turning to me, "you are a dishonoured scoundrel! a cur!"
+
+"'He was right! I was a blackguard. But had it not been for those last
+words of his, I should straight-way have offered to have married Irene
+on the morrow. The words were on my lips, but the contempt of that
+monosyllable maddened me. The better impulse passed away.
+
+"'"You should have given her to me when I asked for her hand," I
+answered. "You cur!" he repeated. I looked at him steadily. "You are
+an old man," I said, "or I should throw you down my stairs. Now go!
+Irene has nothing to say to you, nor have I."
+
+"'He lingered on the threshold for a moment, surveying us both with a
+calm dignity, before which I felt ashamed.
+
+"'"As you remind me, I am an old man," he said quietly, "and I have,
+alas, no son to chastise you as you deserve. But the season of old age
+is the season of prophecy! Listen, Martin de Vaux," pointing towards
+me, "you shall taste the bitterest dregs of sorrow and remorse in
+the days to come, for this your evil deed. You may scoff, both of
+you,--you may say to yourselves that an old man's words are words of
+folly,--but the day will come! It is writ in the book of fate, and my
+eyes have seen it! Pile sin upon sin, and pleasure upon pleasure; say
+to yourselves, 'let us eat and be merry, for to-morrow we shall die!'
+For so it is written, and my eyes have seen it!"
+
+"'He was gone almost before the echo of his words had died away. I
+called after him, but there was no answer but the sound of a shutting
+door. I looked at Irene; she was calmly buttoning her glove.
+
+"'"The carriage is waiting," she reminded me coolly.
+
+"'I gave her my arm, and laughed. We drove to the opera.'"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+"A BECKONING VOICE FROM OUT A SHADOWY LAND"
+
+
+Midnight rang solemnly out from the Abbey clock. The priest paused in
+his story to count the strokes, and Paul drew out his watch with an
+incredulous gesture.
+
+"You must stay here to-night," he said; "it will be too late for you
+to leave."
+
+He rang the bell, and ordered a room to be prepared. Father Adrian,
+who had been lost in a fit of deep abstraction, looked up and shook
+his head as the servant quitted the room. "I shall not stay here," he
+said quietly. "It is impossible."
+
+Paul pointed to the clock. "You have more to tell me," he said,
+"and it is already late. If you are staying at the monastery of
+St. Bernard, it is nearly eight miles away, and you cannot possibly
+return."
+
+"I have not so far to go," Father Adrian answered, "and this is the
+hour I always choose for walking. Do you wish to hear the rest of your
+father's confession?"
+
+Paul stood on the hearthrug with bowed head and folded arms. "I am
+ready!" he said; "go on!"
+
+Father Adrian remained silent for nearly a quarter of an hour; then he
+recommenced his story.
+
+"'From the time of the old Count's visit,' your father went on, 'I
+noticed a gradual change in Irene. She grew thin and pale and nervous,
+disliking more and more, every day, to go out, and becoming suddenly
+averse to all our previous pursuits and pleasures. We mixed amongst
+a Bohemian set in Paris, and we had a good many acquaintances of a
+certain sort. Amongst them was a man whom I always disliked, yet who
+managed somehow to establish himself upon terms of intimacy with us.
+His name was Count Victor Ferdinand Hirsfeld, and his nationality was
+rather a puzzle to me, for he chose to maintain, without any apparent
+reason, a sort of mystery about it. With Irene he was ever more
+intimate than with me, and more than once I noticed references in
+their conversation which seemed to point to some previous acquaintance
+between them. I asked Irene no questions, for I trusted her but I
+watched Count Hirsfeld closely. I felt convinced that, under the mask
+of friendship, he was trying to win Irene from me, and though I never
+for one moment believed that he would succeed, I was anxious to obtain
+some proof of his intentions, that I might punish him. Often after his
+visits, which seemed to be carefully chosen for a time at which I was
+nearly certain to be out, I found Irene in tears; but when I sought to
+make her explain, she had always some excuse.
+
+"'We had lived together for three years when, without any warning,
+Irene left me. I came home one night from a dinner at the English
+Embassy, and found her gone. There was no message, not a single line
+of adieu, not a ghost of a clew by which I could trace her. It was a
+shock to me; but when the first wrench was over, I knew that it was
+something of a relief. In my heart I was tired of the irregular life
+we had been leading, and longing to return to England and my old
+home. Irene herself was no longer dear to me. While she had remained
+faithful to me, I had considered myself, in a certain sense, bound to
+her, although the bonds had commenced to gall. Now that she had left
+me of her own accord, I was free. I troubled little as to what had
+become of her; youth is always selfish. She had either gone home to
+her father, or had run away with Count Hirsfeld, I determined at once.
+Of the two, I was inclined to believe the latter, from the fact of
+her having left no message for me, and also as I found that he too had
+quitted Paris suddenly. I purposely did not attempt to find out, for
+had I discovered the latter to be true, I should have felt bound to
+call Count Hirsfeld out the next time I met him, and I hated duelling.
+So, with a light heart, I disposed of my Paris establishment, selling
+even the house, and everything likely to remind me of a page of my
+history which I desired to blot out.
+
+"'I returned to England, and settled down at Vaux Abbey. In a few
+months my life with Irene lay back in the past, like a troubled dream,
+and I did my best to forget it. It was all hateful and tiresome to
+me. My mind was full now of healthier and more wholesome thoughts and
+purposes. I felt like a man commencing life anew. Even my conscience
+had almost ceased to trouble me. Irene had left me of her own will,
+nor had she been driven to it by any unkindness on my part. I would
+forget her. I had the right to forget her.
+
+"'About six months had passed, and I was in the full enjoyment of my
+altered life. One night, when the Abbey was full of guests, a servant
+whispered in my ear, as we sat at dinner, that a gentleman,--a
+foreigner, the man believed--had just been driven over from the
+nearest railway station, and was in the library waiting to see me. I
+knew in a moment that some sort of a resurrection of that buried past
+was at hand; and though I nodded carelessly and kept my countenance,
+my heart sank like lead. As soon as I could make an excuse, I left
+the table, with a brief apology to my guests, and made my way to the
+library.
+
+"'I had expected to find there Irene's father. Judge of my
+surprise when I found Count Hirsfeld advancing to meet me, pale and
+travel-stained, from the shadows of the room. I stopped short, and
+stood with my hands behind me.
+
+"'"Mr. de Vaux, I bring you a letter," he said simply; "I am here as a
+messenger, and as a messenger only. Nothing but the prayers of a dying
+woman would have induced me to stand beneath your roof!"
+
+"'"Your presence certainly needs some explanation," I answered coldly.
+"Give me the letter!"
+
+"'He handed it over, and I took it to the lamplight. The handwriting
+seemed unfamiliar to me; but when I glanced at the last page, I saw
+that it was signed "Irene." I read it through hastily.
+
+ "CRUTA.
+
+ "MARTIN:--
+
+ "I left you meaning never to speak or write your name
+ again, but fate has been too strong for me. When you see my
+ handwriting, you may fear that I want to burden you once more
+ with my presence, which has grown so wearisome to you! You
+ need not! Soon there will be nothing left of me but a memory;
+ even that I know will not survive long. For I am dying. Life
+ is only a matter of days and hours with me now. For me, only
+ a few more suns will rise and set. I am dying, else I had not
+ taken up my pen to write to you.
+
+ "Martin, one's last hours are a time for plain speaking. I
+ have never suffered one word of reproach to pass my lips, but
+ you have wronged me deeply! You have turned what should have
+ been the sweetness of my life into bitterness and gall. I do
+ not remind you of this to heap idle reproaches on your head;
+ I remind you of it simply because on my deathbed I am going
+ to ask you what in the past I scorned to do. I am going to ask
+ you to marry me.
+
+ "I could not hope to make you understand all that I have
+ suffered during these last few months of my illness. I would
+ not if I could. It is not worth while! My father, although
+ he knows that I am dying, will scarcely speak to me. He has
+ forgotten that I am his daughter, save when he laments it.
+ He sits alone day by day, brooding upon the dishonour of his
+ race. The priest, who prays for me, speaks words of doubtful
+ comfort, as though, after all, he doubted whether salvation
+ were possible for me. The horror of it all has entered into my
+ soul! The sin of the past is ever before my eyes,--black and
+ threatening,--and a great desolation reigns in my heart.
+
+ "And from it all I turn to you, Martin, to save me! You can do
+ it! You only! You lose nothing! You risk nothing! and you will
+ throw some faint light of consolation upon this, my dreary
+ passage through the shadow-land of death. Once you loved me,
+ far off and dim though that time may seem to you. You would be
+ faithful always, you swore, as side by side we stood on board
+ your yacht on the night of our flight, and watched the shores
+ of Cruta grow dimmer and dimmer, and the white-faced dawn
+ break quivering upon the waters. You would be faithful always!
+ The words come back to me as I lie here in this great, dreary
+ bedchamber, with a cold-faced priest muttering comfortless
+ prayers by my side; dying alone, without a single kindly face
+ to lighten my passage to the grave. Yet, do not read this as
+ a reproach! Read it only as the prelude to this my last appeal
+ to you! Marry me, Martin! It would cost you so little: just
+ a hurried journey here, a few sentences over my bedside, a
+ week's waiting at the most, and you could see me in my grave,
+ and feel yourself free again. Is it too great a thing to do,
+ to make light the heart of a dying woman? I pray God that you
+ may not think so! You have generosity! I appeal to it! Come,
+ I beseech you! It is the prayer of a dying woman! I summon you
+ to Cruta!
+
+ "IRENE."
+
+"'Back again in the meshes of my old sin. The letter fluttered down
+from between my fingers on to the floor, and I stood with folded arms
+and bowed head, arraigned at the bar of my own judgment. I had marred
+a girl's fair young life! The memory of those old days--my passionate
+persuasions and prayers--swept in upon me. Yes! she had trusted me,
+and I had deceived her! Her sin and her death lay at my door! The
+hideous rascality of the thing oppressed me. I had been false to my
+name and traditions.
+
+"'A cold, low voice from the other end of the room broke in upon my
+surging thoughts. It was Count Hirsfeld who spoke.
+
+"'"Forgive me for disturbing your doubtless pleasant reflections, but
+time flies, and time is very precious to me just now. I await your
+answer."
+
+"'"It is not necessary," I replied; "I shall be at Cruta before you!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+"LATE THOU COMEST, CRUEL THOU HAST BEEN"
+
+
+"'I sped through England and across the Continent southwards as fast
+as express train and steamer could carry me. Count Hirsfeld shared the
+special which carried me from our nearest country station to the Great
+Northern junction, from whence the Scotch mail bore us to London. Here
+we parted company, travelling the remainder of the way separately.
+On the evening of the second day, the steamer which I had hired at
+Palermo dropped anchor in the bay of Cruta, under the shadow of the
+grim, black castle; and a small rowing-boat landed me beneath the
+cliffs before night fell.
+
+"'I made my way up the narrow, winding path alone, and passing across
+the paved courtyard, rang the hoarse, brazen bell at the principal
+entrance. A servant, bearing a torch, had opened the door, and was
+beckoning me to follow him long before its echoes had died away.
+
+"'"Mademoiselle Irene!" I asked him, in a hushed, anxious tone. "She
+lives?"
+
+"'"She lives!" he repeated sombrely.
+
+"'I followed him along the wide stone corridors, and up countless
+steps. At last he paused before a door, and after listening for a
+moment, knocked softly at it.
+
+"'It was opened by a monk, whose face was hidden by the folds of his
+deep cowl. He motioned me to enter, and immediately closed the door.
+
+"'I found myself in a spacious, lofty bedchamber, bare and dimly lit.
+Facing me two pale, solemn-visaged monks stood on either side of a
+drawn curtain, as though guarding the plain iron bed which lay beyond,
+and towards which I had taken one impulsive step forward. Their
+presence, and an indefinable gloom,--beyond even the gloom of a
+chamber of death,--which in the dim twilight seemed to hang about the
+very air of the place, chilled me. There was little furniture, and no
+pictures hung upon the walls, save a wooden cross near the foot of the
+bed, before which two candles were burning. I looked around for some
+one to whom I could address myself, but there was no one beyond these
+dark-coated, silent monks, who seemed more like shadows from another
+world.
+
+"'While I stood in the middle of the room, hesitating, the priest who
+had admitted me passed by and took up his station at the foot of the
+bed. He motioned me to stand a little nearer, and suddenly the
+drear silence of the room was broken by the low, monotonous chant of
+prayers. I bowed my head, and kneeling by the bedside I took up the
+responses, and once for a moment clasped the white, cold hand which
+lay upon the coverlet, and which was all that I could see of the woman
+whom I was making my wife.
+
+"'The ceremony seems to me now like some far-distant dream, of which I
+retain only the vaguest recollection. When it was all over, I laid my
+hand upon the curtain to draw it back, but the monk nearest to me held
+my hand in a vise-like grip, and before I could move, a voice from the
+other end of the room, where the shadows were deepest, arrested me.
+
+"'"Touch that curtain, or dare to look upon my daughter's face, Martin
+de Vaux, and you die! For her soul's sake I have permitted this! Now
+go!"
+
+"'I peered through the darkness, and I saw the tall, gaunt frame
+of the Count of Cruta standing near the entrance. I hesitated for a
+moment.
+
+"'"Irene is my wife," I answered. "I offer no excuse to you for
+my conduct, but at least I have the right to try and win her
+forgiveness."
+
+"'He moved a step forward, and his voice shook with passion. "You have
+no rights! You are dishonoured! You are a villain! What! you to reason
+with me under my own roof! Away! Out of my sight, lest I forget my
+word and deal you out your deserts!"
+
+"'My heart was hot with shame and anger, but I lingered. "Let her
+speak," I answered, pointing to the bed. "It is she against whom I
+have sinned, and her word I will obey. Irene! may I not stay by your
+side? Tell me that you forgive!"
+
+"'I clutched passionately at the curtain, resolved to tear it aside,
+and plead with Irene upon my knees. But I was held from behind in a
+strong, vise-like grasp, and one of the monks who stood there on guard
+sternly wrested the curtain from my hands.
+
+"'"Away with him!" cried the Count, his voice shaking with passion.
+"Rudolph, do you hear!"
+
+"'I nerved myself for a struggle, but in that moment's pause a thin,
+white hand stole from behind the curtain and held mine for a moment.
+
+"'"Martin, go quickly!" said a faint, weak voice, so altered that
+I scarcely recognised it as the voice of Irene. "It is my wish--my
+command."
+
+"'"One word, Irene!" I cried, struggling to free myself. "Just one
+word!"
+
+"'"Farewell!"
+
+"'"Irene, you are my wife. Have you nothing else to say to me?"
+
+"'"Farewell!"
+
+"'There was no sweetness, no regret in that single word. I bowed my
+head in despair and went.'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was a long pause. Father Adrian was leaning back in his chair
+with half-closed eyes, as though exhausted. Paul, standing opposite
+to him, motionless and silent as a figure of stone, was listening to
+every word with grave, anxious face.
+
+"Will you hear the rest of the story now?" the priest asked after a
+prolonged silence.
+
+Paul bowed his head. "I am waiting," he said simply.
+
+"I will continue, then, in your father's own words as near as
+possible. This is what he told me."
+
+"'I lingered in the island for several days, staying at the monastery,
+unwilling to go away, and yet frustrated in every attempt I made
+to enter the castle. On the fourth day, at sunrise, I was awakened
+suddenly by the deep tolling of the castle bell. I dressed hastily,
+and hurried up there; but I was thrust from the door, and forbidden to
+enter. I learned the truth, however, from one of the servants. Irene
+was dead. On the next day I saw the little funeral procession
+start from the castle, and directly they entered the grounds of the
+monastery I joined them. The old Count, bowed and aged with grief,
+stayed the ceremony, and bade them, with a sudden flash of his old
+anger, thrust me from the place. But the priest by whose side I had
+taken my stand raised his hand, and forbade them to touch me. I was
+in sanctuary,--my feet were on holy ground--and though the Count of
+Cruta, and Count Hirsfeld who knelt by his side, trembled with anger
+at my presence, I remained, and on my knees by my wife's grave I
+uttered the first prayer my lips had framed since childhood. Through
+the pine trees which fringed the cliffs, I could see the path where
+she and I had met in the days when I was her father's guest, and when
+I had knelt at her feet a passionate lover. The sunlight flashed upon
+the blue waters below, and the seabirds flew screaming around our
+heads. It was all just as it had been in the old days; the same for
+me, but never more for her. The long black coffin was lowered into the
+grave, and reverently Count Hirsfeld stepped forward and covered it
+with armfuls of exquisite white flowers, whose perfume made faint the
+odorous air. And I had no flowers to throw, nothing but the tribute
+of a passionate grief, and a heart well-nigh broken with sorrow and
+remorse.
+
+"'The ceremony was over, and the black-robed monks and priest had
+passed away in a long, solemn procession. Her father, Count Hirsfeld,
+and I remained there alone; and over Irene's grave I leaned
+forward, speaking gently and humbly to him, praying for one word of
+forgiveness. His only answer was a look of scorn, and he turned away
+from me with loathing. He would not hear me speak. To him, I was his
+daughter's murderer.
+
+"'I left the island that night, and returned to England. For several
+years I lived a very retired life, attending to my duties upon the
+estate and seldom travelling beyond it. The memory of Irene seemed to
+haunt me. But as time went on, a change came over my spirits. I was
+young; and although I still bitterly regretted the past, its influence
+became weaker and weaker. What was done could not be undone; such
+reparation as was possible I had made. Brooding over my sin would
+never make it the less. I reasoned thus with myself, and the final
+result was inevitable. I commenced to mix more with my fellows, to
+look up my old friends in town,--in fact, to take up again the threads
+of my life, which I had once regarded as broken for ever.
+
+"'After a while I married; and then, more than ever, Irene and that
+portion of my past which was bound up with her seemed like some
+vague, far-distant nightmare, fast assuming a very remote place in my
+thoughts. I loved my wife as I had never loved Irene, and for a time
+I was intensely happy. A son was born to me, and in my joy I feasted
+half the county at Vaux Abbey. I had desired nothing so much as
+this, for the De Vaux estates and mines, immense as they are, are all
+strictly entailed. A son was wanted to complete my happiness, and a
+son I had. But already, although I knew it not, a storm was gathering
+for me.
+
+"'It was about a fortnight after the festivities, and I had just come
+in with some friends from an afternoon's shooting, when I was told
+that a gentleman from abroad--the servant believed--was waiting to see
+me in the library. Even as he spoke the words I seemed to know who
+it was. My heart sank, and the presentiment of some coming evil was
+strong upon me. I hesitated, and then, feverishly anxious to know
+the worst, I turned away with some careless excuse to my guests and
+entered the library.
+
+"'It was Count Hirsfeld who stood there waiting for my arrival, with
+a calm, evil smile upon his lips, which instinctively I felt to be
+the herald of some coming trouble for me. Yet my courage did not
+altogether desert me.
+
+"'"Count Hirsfeld, your presence here demands an immediate
+explanation," I said sternly. "Had I been at home, you would not have
+been admitted."
+
+"'"I come," he answered slowly, with his eyes fixed steadily upon my
+face, "as an ambassador from your wife."
+
+"'"From my wife!" I repeated. "You do not know her! What do you mean?"
+
+"'He shrugged his shoulders. "I regret that my meaning is not clear,"
+he said. "I repeat that I come as an ambassador from your wife, Irene
+de Vaux. I have brought you a message from her."
+
+"'"A message from the dead!" I gasped.
+
+"'"Dead! By no means!" he answered, with a slow, cruel smile. "Irene
+is living! Is it possible that you did not know it?"'"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+"GRIM FIGURES TRACED BY SORROW'S FIERY HAND"
+
+
+The lamp which stood on Paul's writing-table had gone out, and only
+a few dull red embers remained in the grate. By moving a single yard
+backwards, Paul was almost lost in the deep shadows which hung about
+the room, whilst such light as there was fell directly upon the
+priest's pale face. During those last few moments his voice had grown
+a shade more solemn--more intense. Paul, who stood looking out at
+him from the darkness with dazed senses, like a man in a dream, never
+doubted for an instant, although perhaps he scarcely realized the full
+meaning of the story to which he was listening.
+
+"It must have been in this very room," Father Adrian continued,
+looking around him, "that your father and Count Hirsfeld stood face to
+face. But you are naturally impatient. I will take up the story again
+in your father's own words to me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"'It was several moments before I could collect myself sufficiently
+to answer Count Hirsfeld. Everything seemed dim and unreal around me.
+Only that calm, mocking face remained steadfast, and his words rang in
+my ears.
+
+"'"It is a lie!" I gasped. "We stood together by her grave! She is
+dead!"
+
+"'The calmness suddenly vanished from my tormentor's face and manner.
+His eyes were ablaze with mingled triumph and hate. "You thought so,
+you poor fool!" he hissed out at me across the table. "Bah! you were a
+fool! You were easily deceived! Listen!
+
+"'"You thought it a light thing to carry off the only daughter of the
+last Count of Cruta. 'Twas easily done, no doubt; but you made for
+yourself enemies of men from whose vengeance you were bound to suffer.
+One was the Count whose daughter you had dishonoured, and whose proud
+name you disgraced; the other was myself, the man whom she was to have
+married--myself, who loved her! Do you think that because I did not
+seek you out and shoot you as you deserved, that I forgot? There were
+men on the island who loved their lord, and who at the word from him
+would have hunted you down and murdered you. If he restrained them,
+do you imagine he was willing to bear this great dishonour without
+striking a blow? Bah! it was my word that said 'wait,' my counsel
+which saved you from death as too light a punishment. There is another
+way, I said. So we waited.
+
+"'"It was my persuasions which induced Irene to leave you and return
+to her father. It was I who pointed out to her your great selfishness,
+and raised in her the longing for revenge! It was I who laid the plot
+into which you fell.
+
+"'"A few words more! It is all so simple! Irene was about to become a
+mother; and you, believing her to be on her deathbed, married her. The
+child was born on the next day--your son and heir! Meanwhile, Irene's
+waiting maid, who had been for long in a consumption, died. It was
+her funeral which you attended with such interesting penitence. Irene
+herself was fast recovering; she was never in any real danger. She
+lives with her old father, and the boy lives with her. We waited! We
+read of your marriage, and the Count cried, 'Let us strike!' But I
+said, 'No, let us wait!' Time went on. We read again of the birth of a
+son and heir to you, and of the great rejoicings. Irene held your boy
+in her arms, and she frowned. 'Go now,' she commanded, 'tell Martin
+de Vaux that his son and heir is here, and his wife is here! Tell him
+that they are weary of his absence.' So I came!"
+
+"'There was a dead silence. My throat and lips were dry; I could
+not speak. Count Hirsfeld watched me with folded arms. It was his
+vengeance!
+
+"'"It is not true!" I stammered out at last. "I will not believe it.
+Irene is dead!"
+
+"'I tried to speak confidently, but I failed. In my heart I believed
+the Count.
+
+"'He shrugged his shoulders. "You have reason," he remarked. "Why
+should you believe me? Come to Cruta, and you will see for yourself.
+You can see the headstone at the foot of the grave: 'Sacred to the
+memory of Marie, faithful servant of Irene of Cruta.' You can see the
+doctor who attended her and your wife at the same time! Better still,
+you can see your wife and your infant son! What do you say?"
+
+"'"I will not go!" I cried passionately. "I will not see them! It was
+base treachery!"
+
+"'"One must use the weapons of craft against villains," he said.
+"There is no baseness to equal yours. You are repaid in your own coin;
+that is all."
+
+"'I sank into a chair. The insult moved me to no fit of anger. I was
+numbed.
+
+"'"If this be true," I asked, "what does Irene ask for? I will not go
+back to her, or see her, or acknowledge her in any way. She can have
+money, that is all!"
+
+"'"Naturally, she requires an allowance," Count Hirsfeld answered,
+"and a large one, to enable her to bring up her son in accordance with
+his position!"
+
+"'"She shall have the allowance; she shall have what she asks for," I
+declared; "but I will never acknowledge the boy, or her. If he takes
+the name of De Vaux, or forces himself upon me in any way, it shall be
+open war. The English courts will annul that marriage."
+
+"'"I think not," he answered coolly. "Besides, you married into
+a noble family, did you not--a duke's daughter? How pleasant her
+position would be while such a case was being tried! And your son----"
+
+"'I stopped him angrily. "I repeat that I will not acknowledge them.
+Money they can have, and the boy's future shall be my care! But not if
+he ever dares to call himself De Vaux."
+
+"'The Count shrugged his shoulders. "I am but an ambassador," he said.
+"I will convey what you have said to your wife. You shall hear her
+decision."
+
+"'He went away, and for a fortnight I was left in misery. At the end
+of that time I had a letter signed "Irene." It was cold and short. It
+told me that, so far as she herself was concerned, she had no desire
+or intention of claiming her position as my wife. All she demanded was
+an allowance to be paid to her order at a certain bank in Palermo
+at regular intervals for the support of herself and for the proper
+education and bringing up of her son. As to his future, she could not
+pledge herself to anything; for when the time came, he should
+decide for himself. She would bring him up in ignorance; but on his
+twenty-fifth birthday she should tell him the whole story, and place
+all the necessary papers in his hands. If he chose to use them and
+claim the De Vaux estates, he would easily be able to do so. If, on
+the other hand, he decided to remain as he was, she should not attempt
+in any way to alter his decision!
+
+"'The letter was a great relief to me. Five-and-twenty years was a
+long respite. The boy might die--a thousand things might happen before
+then. At any rate, I was enough of a philosopher to seal down that
+secret page in my history, and to live as though it had never existed.
+
+"'Five-and-twenty years is a long time, but it passed away. It is the
+portion of my life which I look back upon with the most pleasure.
+I did my utmost to atone for a wasted youth, and in some measure I
+succeeded. My fears had grown fainter and fainter, and when the blow
+came it was like a thunderbolt falling from a clear sky. One morning
+I received a letter in Irene's writing, a little fainter and less firm
+than of old, but still familiar to me. It contained only a few lines.
+She had told her son all, and he elected to assert his rightful name
+and position. In future he intended to call himself "De Vaux" and on
+my death he would claim the estates.
+
+"'I read the letter, and determined on instant action. In a week my
+son Paul and I were on board my yacht, starting for the Mediterranean.
+We made for Palermo, and here we separated,--Paul, at all hazard, to
+find Count Hirsfeld, to whom I made a splendid offer if he would
+aid me in inducing Irene to change her purpose; I for Cruta, to see
+Irene.'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"This is almost the end of your father's confession to me," Father
+Adrian continued. "At Cruta he sought the hospitality of the
+monastery, where he was taken ill. He wrote an urgent letter to you,
+and immediately he was able to walk he went up to the castle. I have
+already told you of the manner of return. Of that visit he told me
+scarcely anything, and he told me nothing at all concerning the wound
+which he received there. Only I gathered that he was more than ever
+anxious to see Count Hirsfeld. It was while waiting for your return
+that he made this confession to me. I have finished."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The white morning light was stealing into the room through the
+uncurtained windows. The fire had burnt out, and there was only a
+handful of ashes in the grate. Outside in the park a grey mist was
+hanging about in the hollows and over the tree-tops, and something of
+its damp chilliness seemed to have found its way into the apartment.
+Paul, who had been leaning heavily upon the mantelpiece, with his head
+buried in his hands, looked up and shivered. Then he glanced quickly
+across towards the opposite easy-chair. Father Adrian was still there,
+and at Paul's movement he rose to his feet.
+
+"This has been a terrible night for you, I fear," he said quietly.
+"I am sorry to have given you so much pain. If I could I would have
+spared you."
+
+"I thank you," Paul answered wearily. "It was right that I should
+know. Why did you not tell me at Cruta?"
+
+"It seemed to me that your father's death was enough for you to bear!
+Perhaps I was wrong!"
+
+Paul made no answer. His thoughts seemed suddenly to have travelled
+far away. Father Adrian watched his pale, stricken face with cold,
+pitiless eyes.
+
+"You are weary," he said softly. "I shall leave you now, but I have
+something more to say to you on this matter. It is no part of your
+father's confession. It is from myself. Can I come to-morrow or the
+next day?"
+
+"Come in a week," Paul answered. "I shall be able to talk calmly then
+about this."
+
+Father Adrian hesitated. "A week! Well, let it be so, then. Farewell!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+"ADREA'S DIARY"
+
+ "Spring blossoms on the land, and anguish in the heart."
+
+
+To-night I shall close my diary for a long while, very likely for
+ever. I am heartily thankful for it. These last few days have been so
+wretched, full of so much miserable uncertainty, that their record has
+grown to be a wearisome task. It has ceased to give me any relief; it
+has become nothing but a burden. How could it be otherwise, when
+the days themselves have been so grey, so full of shadows and
+disappointments? You have been a relief to me sometimes, my silent
+friend; but what lies before me is not to be recorded in your pages.
+
+Twenty-four hours have passed since I made my last entry. It was night
+then, and it is night now. All that lies between seems phantasmagoric
+and unreal. I ask myself whether it has really happened; and when
+the day's events rise slowly up before my memory, I almost fail to
+recognise them. Yet I have but to close my eyes and lean back, and it
+all crowds in upon me. In the future I know that this day will stand
+out clear and distinct from all the rest of my life.
+
+It was early in the morning when I started for Vaux Abbey across the
+moorland road. So long have I seen this bleak county wrapped in mists
+and sea fogs that to-day I scarcely recognised it. There was a clear
+blue sky, streaked with little patches of white, wind-swept clouds,
+and the sun--actually the sun--was shining brilliantly. How it changed
+everything! The grey, hungry sea, which I had never been able to look
+upon without a shudder, seemed to have caught the colouring of the
+sky, and a million little scintillations of glistening light rose and
+fell at every moment on the bosom of the tiny, white-crested waves.
+And the moorland, too, was transformed. Its bare, rock-strewn
+undulations lost all their harshness of outline and colouring in the
+sweet, glancing sunlight; and afar off the line of rugged hills, which
+I had never seen save with their heads wreathed in a cloud of white
+mist, stood out clear and distinct against the distant horizon, tinged
+with a dim, purple light.
+
+Why did it all make such an impression upon me, I wonder? I cannot
+say; but nothing in all my life ever struck so deep a note of sadness.
+I feel it now; I shall feel it always. There was madness in my blood
+when I started, I think; but before my walk was half over, it had
+increased a thousand-fold. Every little sound and sight seemed to
+aggravate it. I missed the dull sighing and moaning of the wind in the
+black copses--a sound which had somehow endeared itself to me during
+these last few days--and in its place the soft murmur of what seemed
+almost a summer breeze amongst the tall pine-tops stirred in me an
+unreasonable anger. The face of the whole country seemed smiling at
+me. What mockery! What right had the earth to rejoice when grief and
+anxiety were driving me mad? For it was indeed a sort of madness which
+laid hold of me. I clenched my hands, and muttered to myself as I
+walked swiftly along. The road was deserted, and I met no one. Once
+a dark bush away off seemed to me to take a man's shape. I stopped
+short. Could it be Father Adrian returning to the Abbey? I felt my
+breath come quickly as I stood there waiting. The idea excited me.
+I found myself trembling with a passion that was not of fear, and,
+suddenly stooping down, I picked up a sharp flint, and grasped it
+tightly between my fingers. Then I moved stealthily on, and the thing
+defined itself. After all, it was only a bush, not a man at all. I
+tossed my weapon on one side with a strained little laugh. The sense
+of excitement passed away, but it left an odd flavour behind it. I
+found myself deliberating as to what I had meant to do with that
+stone if it had really been Father Adrian, and if I had succeeded in
+stealing silently up behind him. Perhaps I scarcely realized my
+full intention, but a dim sense of it remained with me. It was the
+development of a new instinct born of this swiftly-built-up hatred.
+I have my reasons for writing of this. I wish to distinctly mark the
+period of the event which I have just recorded.
+
+There was no fear of my mistaking the way to Vaux Abbey, for it stood
+upon a hill, and had been within sight ever since I had taken the
+moorland road. I was unused to walking, and the road was rough; but I
+do not remember once feeling in any way fatigued or footsore, although
+one of my shoes had a great hole in it, and was almost in strips. My
+mind was too full of the end of my journey to be conscious of such
+things. I had only one fear: that I should be too late; that somehow
+the threatened blow would have been struck, and Paul in some way
+removed from me. It was fear more than hope which buoyed me up. But
+anyhow, it answered its purpose, for in less than three hours after I
+had started I found myself before the great hall-door of Vaux Abbey.
+
+A deep, hollow peal followed my nerveless little pull at the chain
+bell-rope, and almost immediately the door opened. A grey-haired
+manservant, in black livery, looked down at me in surprise.
+
+"I wish to see Mr. Paul de Vaux!" I announced. "Is he in?"
+
+The man hesitated. "I believe so, miss," he said doubtfully; "but he
+is engaged on some important business, and has given orders that no
+one is to disturb him. Lady de Vaux is at home."
+
+"My business is with Mr. Paul de Vaux," I said. "Will you tell him
+that it is some one from the Hermitage, and I think that he will see
+me."
+
+The man did not answer me in words, but motioned me to follow him. My
+courage was failing me a little, and I was certainly inclined not to
+look around, but nevertheless the place made an impression on me. The
+great hall which we were crossing was like the interior of some richly
+decorated church. The ceiling was dome-shaped, and the base of the
+cupola was surrounded by stained glass windows, which cast a dim light
+down upon the interior. The white stone flags were here and there
+covered by Eastern rugs, thrown carelessly down, but for the most part
+were bare, and as slippery as marble; so slippery that once I nearly
+fell, and only saved myself by catching at an oak bench. Just as I
+recovered myself, I saw the figure of a woman descending the huge
+double oak staircase which terminated opposite to us. My guide paused
+when he saw her, and I was also compelled to.
+
+"Here is her ladyship!" he said.
+
+I watched her slowly advance toward us, a fine, stately old lady,
+carrying herself with unmistakable dignity, although she was forced
+to lean a good deal on a gold-mounted, black ebony stick. And, as I
+looked at her, I thought of Father Adrian's words: "I can break his
+mother's heart;" and I leant eagerly forward in the chastened twilight
+with my eyes anxiously fixed upon her. She came slowly on towards me,
+and when she was a few yards away she spoke to the servant.
+
+"Does this young lady wish to see me, Richards?"
+
+She spoke to the man, but she looked towards me, and evidently
+expected me to address her. For a moment I could not. A little gasp
+of relief had quivered upon my lips, and my eyes were suddenly dim. To
+look into Lady de Vaux's face, stately, calm, and kind, seemed like
+a strong antidote to my fears of Father Adrian. It was quite evident
+that nothing unexpected had happened during the last twenty-four
+hours. Father Adrian's threat had been an empty one. In the presence
+of Lady de Vaux, the fears which had been consuming me departed. She
+was so unmoved, so indifferent. How could a little Jesuit priest hurt
+such a one as she?
+
+The thoughts chased one another quickly through my mind; but still my
+hesitation was apparent. After waiting in vain for me to speak, the
+servant who was conducting me answered Lady de Vaux's question.
+
+"The young lady asked for Mr. Paul, your ladyship. It was doubtful
+whether I might disturb him."
+
+"For Mr. Paul?" Lady de Vaux looked at me, leaning forward on
+her stick, and with her eyebrows a little uplifted. "My son is
+particularly engaged, and has left word that he does not wish to be
+disturbed for several hours," she said. "If you have anything to say
+to him, you can say it to me. I am Lady de Vaux!"
+
+"Thank you! I must wait and see your son," I answered.
+
+She moved away with a slight and distinctly haughty inclination of her
+head. "You can show this young lady into the waiting-room, Richards,"
+she directed. "Take her name in to Mr. Paul when he rings. By the
+bye," she added, pausing in her slow progress over the hall, and
+looking me once more steadily in the face, "what is your name?"
+
+"You would not know it," I answered. "I have come from the
+Hermitage--near here."
+
+She did not speak to me for a moment, but I saw the colour rising into
+her cheeks, and her fingers were trembling. It was foolish of me to
+have told her. A glance into her face showed me that she had heard
+something, she knew something of me. She was looking at me as at some
+object almost beneath her contempt. Yet she spoke quite calmly.
+
+"You are Adrea Kiros, the dancing girl!"
+
+I answered her quite coolly--I believe respectfully. She was Paul's
+mother. Yet I could see that she was going to be very rude to me.
+
+"You can have nothing to say to my son," she declared. "It is infamous
+that you should have followed him here--to his own house. Be so good
+as to quit it at once. Mr. de Vaux shall be informed later of the
+honour of your visit, and if he has anything to say to you, he can
+find other means save an interview under this roof. Richards!"
+
+She pointed across the hall towards the entrance. I stood quite still,
+struggling with my passion. If she had been any other woman, I should
+have struck her across the lips.
+
+"I shall remain!" I answered. "I am here to see Mr. de Vaux; I shall
+see him! Don't dare to touch me, man!" I added fiercely, as Richards
+laid his hand upon my shoulder.
+
+He shrank back hastily. I even believe that he muttered an apology.
+Perhaps they saw that I was not to be trifled with, for Lady de Vaux
+suddenly changed her tactics.
+
+"Follow me!" she said, sweeping round, with an imperious gesture. "You
+shall see my son! You shall hear from his own lips what he thinks of
+this--intrusion. Perhaps you will leave the Abbey at his bidding, if
+not at mine."
+
+I followed her in silence, carrying myself proudly, but with
+fast-beating heart. What would he think of my coming? Would he call
+it an intrusion? At any rate he could not be pleased; for even if he
+received me kindly, he would have his mother's anger to face. Yet, how
+could I have kept away?
+
+We halted, all three of us, before a closed door at the back of the
+hall. There was no answer to the man's somewhat ostentatious knock,
+and Lady de Vaux, after a moment's waiting, turned the handle of the
+door and swept into the room. I kept close behind her.
+
+I can remember it now; I shall always remember it--the dim, peculiar
+light which tired our eyes the moment we had stepped inside. It was
+easy to discover the reason. The heavy velvet curtains were still
+drawn in front of the high windows, and on a distant table a lamp
+was only just flickering out. At first it seemed as though the great
+chamber was empty. There was no one to be seen, and it was not until
+we reached a deep recess at the further end that we discovered Paul.
+
+At the sight of him we both stood still--Lady de Vaux moved in spite
+of her stately composure, and I spellbound. He was sitting before an
+oak writing desk covered with papers, and in the midst of them his
+head was resting upon his bowed arms. He neither spoke nor moved,
+nor seemed indeed in any way conscious of our approach. The window
+fronting him was, unlike all the others, uncurtained and wide open,
+and a flood of sunshine was streaming in upon his bowed head, and
+mingling with the sicklier light of the rest of the apartment. It was
+a strange and ghastly combination; not only in itself, but in the sort
+of halo it seemed to cast around his dark, bowed head. Ah! Paul, my
+love, my love! how my heart ached for you!
+
+"He is asleep," Lady de Vaux said fearfully. "Paul!"
+
+I held out my hand to check her. "Let him alone!" I whispered
+hoarsely. "I will go away. Don't you see that he is resting."
+
+She took no notice of me, nor of my backward movement, but leaned over
+towards him as though to touch his arm. A sort of fury came upon me.
+I knew that the Paul whom she was trying to recall from the land of
+unconsciousness would never again be the Paul of the past. Father
+Adrian had kept his word. The blow which he had threatened had fallen.
+Paul! I looked at your dear bowed head until the tears dimmed my eyes,
+and the great room swam around me. For in my heart I felt that it was
+I who had brought this thing upon you; I who could have saved you by a
+single word.
+
+"Paul, wake up! It is I, your mother."
+
+I snatched hold of her hand, and drew it away. "Let him rest," I
+cried, fiercely. "He will waken soon enough."
+
+She looked at me in dignified astonishment. "How dare you presume to
+dictate to me in this fashion?" she exclaimed. "And why should he not
+be awakened? It is past mid-day. Paul!"
+
+The crouching figure moved. He had heard, then! I held my breath,
+longing to escape, yet compelled to watch with fascinated eyes the
+rising of that bowed head. There was no start, or hurried awakening,
+if indeed he had been asleep at all. He simply turned his head, and
+looked at us with surprise, without any emotion of any sort.
+
+I hid my face in my hands, and sobbed. Lady de Vaux was silent with
+horror. For there was something inexpressibly, awfully moving in the
+silent, passionless sorrow which seemed written with an unsparing
+hand onto that white face. All combativeness had passed away, but
+resignation had not come to take its place. And, apart from the
+outward evidence of the agony through which he had passed, its
+physical traces were very apparent. Deep, black lines seemed furrowed
+into the flesh under his dull eyes, and the firm, handsome mouth was
+drawn and quivering. It was such a change as might have been worked by
+some deadly Eastern poison, eating away the corporal frame. To think
+that it had worked from within--that burning and terrible sorrow had
+caused it--was horrible.
+
+Lady de Vaux was the first to speak. The icy composure of her manner
+was gone. Her voice was strained and anxious.
+
+"Why, Paul, what have you been doing here all night? Do you know that
+it is past mid-day? Has anything happened? Are you ill?"
+
+"Ill? No; I think not." He seemed to be speaking from a great way
+off. Nothing about him was natural. He was on his feet, but I expected
+every moment to see him reel and fall.
+
+"But, Paul, what have you been doing--writing?" Lady de Vaux asked
+anxiously. Then, as though warned by his strange appearance, she
+checked his mechanical answer. "Never mind, never mind! You are tired,
+I can see. Won't you go and lie down for awhile? Come, I will go with
+you."
+
+She had forgotten me, until she found that he paid no heed to her
+words; that his eyes travelled past her, and remained fixed upon me.
+Then she turned swiftly upon me.
+
+"You had better go," she said in a low, imperative whisper. "Ask them
+to show you into my room, and wait there for me."
+
+I took no notice of her. My eyes were fixed upon Paul. I felt that he
+was going to speak to me; and he did.
+
+"Adrea! Adrea!" he said slowly. "How is it that you are here? You did
+not come with him, did you? No! no! of course not. And yet, how is it
+that you are here?"
+
+"I feared Father Adrian and his threats, and I was alone, quite alone,
+and--and I could bear it no longer. I was obliged to come."
+
+His face grew a trifle more animated; I could see that he was
+recovering. The dumb stupor which had held his features rigid was
+passing away.
+
+"Yes, I am glad you are here. I want to talk to you. I had some
+important business which kept me writing here all night, and must have
+fallen asleep. I will go and change my things and come back to you."
+
+He looked down at his crumpled shirt-front and disordered tie, and
+then moved slowly towards the door. Lady de Vaux hesitated for a
+moment, with a dark frown upon her face, and then laid her hand upon
+his arm.
+
+"Your explanation should surely have been addressed to me, Paul," she
+said coldly. "Who is this young lady?"
+
+"She is a friend of mine," Paul answered, "and----"
+
+"I heard you call her 'Adrea,'" Lady de Vaux continued. "May I ask
+whether it is indeed Miss Adrea Kiros?"
+
+"I have told you that is my name, Lady de Vaux," I answered promptly.
+"You have possibly heard of me."
+
+Lady de Vaux turned her back upon both of us, and left the room
+without a word.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+"ADREA'S DIARY"
+
+ "Love, blossoming in the roses, holds a dagger in her hands."
+
+
+We were alone, Paul and I, in that great, solemn room, full of pale,
+phantom-like lights and quivering shadows. He was standing a few
+yards away from me, with his head half averted, and his eyes full of
+a great, hopeless despair. In silence I approached him, and took his
+death-cold hand in mine.
+
+"It is no matter," I whispered; "I do not care for your mother!
+Her words are nothing! I will not leave you--not till you tell me
+everything."
+
+"Everything!" He echoed the word, and looked at me helplessly.
+"Everything! Tell you everything!"
+
+Suddenly there was a change. The numbed, helpless look left his face,
+and his features were relaxed. He was himself again; a strong, brave
+man, only shaken by the storm.
+
+"Adrea, forgive me! Did you think that I was going mad? I have had
+a terrible shock, and I have been up all night listening to a story
+which brings great suffering and misery upon me!"
+
+His eyes had suddenly a far-away look in them, so sad that I felt
+the tears rush into mine. I pressed his hand to let him know that I
+understood; but I kept my face turned from him. Ah! love is a strange
+thing, indeed! If I had not cared, Paul, I could have sympathised with
+you so nicely, and made so many pretty speeches. But I love you, and
+it made me feel very strange and solemn. I had nothing to say; my
+heart was too full. Did you understand, I wonder? Will you ever
+understand? Paul, my love! my love! It is so sweet to say that over
+and over to myself in this dark chamber, where there is no one to hear
+me, or to see me looking so foolish. You make me feel so different,
+Paul! That is because you yourself are so different from all the men I
+know; from all the men I have ever seen.
+
+We stood there, quite silent, for some moments. Then he drew a quick,
+stifled breath, and caught hold of my hands. "I cannot breathe in this
+place," he said, looking half fearfully around; "the very air seems
+tainted with that horrible story, and its ghosts are lurking in every
+corner!"
+
+"Let me draw the curtains," I whispered. "The sunlight will banish
+them. You are dazed."
+
+He held my hand tightly, and drew me towards the window. "Never mind
+the curtains! We will go out; out over the moor."
+
+He was feverishly impatient to be gone, but I held him back. "Your
+clothes!" I reminded him. "And you have no hat!"
+
+He looked down doubtfully at his disordered evening dress, and then
+released my hands. "Wait for me, here," he begged. "Promise that you
+will not go away; that nothing shall make you go."
+
+I promised.
+
+"See! I shall lock the door," he continued, as he reached the
+threshold. "No one can come in and disturb you!"
+
+"Please to have some tea and a bath!" I begged. "I do not mind
+waiting. You will be ill, if you do not mind."
+
+He was gone about half an hour. Once, some one came and tried the
+door, but I took no notice. At last I heard the key turn in the lock,
+and he entered. "Did you think that I was long?" he asked, coming up
+to me with a smile.
+
+I shook my head; my eyes were full of tears, and there was a lump in
+my throat. I could not speak. He had changed all his clothes, and was
+carefully dressed in a brown tweed shooting suit and gaiters, but
+the correctness and order of his external appearance seemed only to
+emphasize the ravages which one single night's suffering had wrought
+upon his strong, handsome face. Hard, cruel lines had furrowed their
+way across his forehead, and under his eyes were deep black marks. His
+bronze cheeks were white and sunken, and a bright red spot burned on
+one of them. But it was a change of which the details could give no
+idea. His face had caught the inflection of his inward agony, and
+retained it. It was there, if not for the world to see, at any rate
+terribly evident to me, to those who loved him.
+
+He was quite calm now, however. It was as though the fires of
+suffering had burnt themselves out, leaving behind them a silent,
+charred desolation. He took my arm, and together we left the room,
+passing through the high French windows and along an open terrace
+until we reached the gardens. We turned down a broad walk bordered by
+high yew hedges, at the bottom of which was a little gate leading into
+the park. The air was fragrant with the perfume of violets, and early
+stocks and hyacinths, mingled every now and then with a more delicate
+perfume from the greenhouses on the other side of the red-brick wall.
+How beautiful it all seemed, in that sweet, dancing sunlight!--the
+songs of the birds, the blossoming fruit-trees, and pink-budded
+chestnuts, the scents which floated about on the soft west breeze, and
+the constant humming of bees and other winged insects. Only in England
+could there have been so sudden a change from the grey mists and
+leaden skies of yesterday. Even in that moment of extreme tension I
+could not help an exclamation of admiration as we came to an end of
+the gravelled walk, and Paul held open for me a little iron gate.
+
+"How beautiful your home is!" I cried. "How you must love it!"
+
+A look almost of agony passed across his face. It came and went in
+a moment. "Yes! I love it!" he answered, "but it is not my home.
+Henceforth I have no home. I may well be thankful that I have even a
+name!"
+
+I looked at him, waiting for an explanation, but he walked on in
+silence. It was not until we were half-way across the park that I
+spoke. "I do not understand!" I said softly. "Will you not tell me
+something of your trouble?"
+
+"I would that I could, Adrea!" he answered. His voice was so gentle,
+and yet his face was so stern. "But no, I cannot. It is a secret. It
+is only a blotted page of our family history made clear to me. But it
+alters everything!"
+
+"Does it make you poorer?" I asked falteringly.
+
+He looked down in my eyes bravely; but his voice shook as he answered:
+"If it be true--as I scarcely doubt--it takes from me everything: my
+money, my home, my future. It brings everything but disgrace upon us,
+Adrea, and even that must touch our name. Even though the living are
+spared, the memory of the dead must suffer!"
+
+I felt the tears flowing down my cheeks, but I dashed them away. "I do
+not understand. I----"
+
+"Of course not! and I cannot explain. Yet it is simple! I have an
+elder brother, of whom I never heard, to whom everything belongs. I am
+going to find him!"
+
+"Where is he?" I cried. He shook his head. "That I cannot tell. Father
+Adrian knows, but he will not speak. I am going in search of him
+myself. I am going to Cruta!"
+
+To Cruta! The name rang in my ears, and earth and trees and sky seemed
+reeling before me. Then I clutched him by the arm, and cried out
+hysterically,--
+
+"You shall not go there! The place is horrible! You shall not go!"
+
+He stood still, and looked at me in wonderment. We had crossed the
+park now, and were on the edge of the bare moorland. His figure alone
+stood out in solitary relief against the sky. I was half mad with fear
+and dismay. He did not understand. How could he?
+
+"It is at Cruta that I can learn all that there still is for me to
+learn," he said. "I shall start for there to-night."
+
+Oh! it was horrible! What could I say? How was I to stop him? How much
+dare I tell? I caught hold of his hands, and held them tightly.
+
+"Paul, I want to ask you something! When you heard from the convent
+that relations had claimed me and taken me away, and then, a year
+afterwards, you found me there--in London--a dancing girl, what did
+you think?"
+
+He answered me at once and without hesitation. "I thought that you had
+misled the Lady Superior,--that you were weary of your life there, and
+had run away."
+
+I shook my head. "I knew that you thought so and I never denied it.
+But it was not so! I was not unhappy at the convent, but one day I was
+sent for and bidden prepare for a journey. Some relatives had sent for
+me, and I was to go. And to where? It was to Cruta! Paul, it was old
+Count of Cruta who claimed me. I cannot tell you anything of the time
+I spent there, shut up in the gloomy castle; it was horrible beyond
+all words. Even the memory of it makes me shudder. If only I could
+tell you! But I must not! I can tell you this, though. In less than
+six months I felt myself going mad; and one night I stole down to the
+beach and unfastened a small boat and rowed away, scarcely caring what
+happened to me so that I could but escape from that awful place.
+It was a desperate chance. I was out all day without food or water,
+rowing and drifting until Cruta lay like a speck in the distance. Then
+by chance I was picked up by an English yacht, and they brought me to
+London. I arrived there helpless and miserable, and, ah! how lonely!
+I dared not go back to the convent for fear I should be sent back to
+Cruta. There was only you. I went to your bankers, and they told me
+that you were abroad--on the Continent. By chance they asked me there
+my name, and by chance again I told them it truthfully. They told me
+that they had money for me there. I had only to sign a receipt, and
+they gave me more than I asked for--ten times more. Then I remembered
+the address of an English girl who had been at the convent with me,
+and she gave me a home for a time. It was through her dancing mistress
+that I became--a dancing girl. I have told you this, Paul, because I
+want you to promise me not to go to Cruta. It is an evil place. They
+are mad there. Promise me!"
+
+He looked at me gravely and very tenderly; but his tone was firm.
+"Adrea, it is necessary that I go there," he said. "I cannot rest for
+a moment until I know for certain whether a story which I have just
+been told is a true one. The proof lies in Cruta! It is no whim which
+is taking me there! I must go!"
+
+My heart was sick with dread. Yet what could I do? I said nothing;
+only I covered my face with my hands and wept.
+
+"Adrea, you are a foolish child!" he said, bending over me. "What is
+there for me to fear at Cruta? Look up and tell me!"
+
+I shook my head. "You would not heed me," I answered sadly. "I dare
+not tell you. But there is one thing," I added hastily. "Will you do
+it for me simply because I ask you?"
+
+"If it be possible, yes!"
+
+I stood still on a little hillock, and faced him eagerly. "Then do not
+go to Cruta until to-morrow!" I begged. "It will make no difference to
+you."
+
+"And what difference will it make to you, he asked, perplexed.
+
+"Never mind! promise!" He hesitated for a moment, with a frown on his
+forehead, and his face turned seaward.
+
+"Well! I will promise then!"
+
+I caught hold of his hand, and held it tightly. "You are very good to
+me!" I said. "_Allons!_ let us move onward!"
+
+We had reached the Hermitage, and I had spoken scarcely a single word
+of comfort. An icy coldness seemed to have stolen into my heart. I
+had ceased to think of Paul, or of my love. There was something else;
+another passion which made me blind. Yet I let him come in with me,
+and yielded myself up for a while to the dream of loving and being
+loved by him. While I lay in his arms, with my head upon his shoulder,
+and every now and then felt his light, caressing touch upon my
+face,--why then, the world for me was bounded by that little room, and
+I had no thoughts which travelled outside it. But it lasted only while
+he was with me. When he stood up, and said that he must go, I did not
+seek to keep him.
+
+"Shall I come again?" he asked, as we stood hand in hand before the
+door.
+
+I shook my head. "Not to-night love! I shall be better alone. I am
+weary, and I have my things to collect."
+
+I knew he would be surprised. He withdrew his hand, and manlike, was
+almost angry. "I forgot. You will leave here, I suppose!"
+
+I shrugged my shoulders. "What should keep me, Paul? I could not live
+here alone. Every stone and tree would be full of barren memories. No!
+to-morrow I go to London. I have sent all the servants away to-day,
+except Gomez. You will be with me early!"
+
+"I will be outside your window before you are up!" he promised with a
+touch of gaiety in his tone. "See that Gomez has breakfast for two!"
+
+He passed down the avenue, and out of sight. I closed the door with
+a little shudder and turned round. Gomez was by my side. Through the
+gloom I could see that his dark eyes were full of fire, and his olive
+features were set and grim.
+
+"What do you want Gomez?" I asked quickly.
+
+He drew close to my side. "The priest," he muttered, "has he--has he
+dared----"
+
+His breath was coming quickly. He spoke English but slightly, and in
+the excitement the words seemed to stick in his throat.
+
+I interrupted him. "He has told Mr. de Vaux some strange, horrible
+story. What do you know of it?"
+
+"All! All! All! I was there--in the chamber! My master's words to
+him--I heard them all. He has told, then! He has threatened! Oh! if
+only I had known when he was here!"
+
+The man's fierce face and gesture told their own tale. I beckoned
+him to follow me into the room where Paul and I had been sitting, and
+closed the door.
+
+"You were Martin de Vaux's faithful servant," I said. "Do you want to
+see his son driven from his home and robbed of his lands?"
+
+The man moved his lips, making a curious sound, and drew a long,
+gurgling breath. He was shaking with excitement.
+
+"Who should do it?"
+
+"The priest!" I answered softly.
+
+"Because of the words, the story of which my master spoke to him at
+his death in the monastery?"
+
+"Yes! because of that."
+
+"Ah!" He stole up to my side with a noiseless, animal movement, and
+whispered in my ear. His eyes were burning; his face was full of evil
+meaning. Yet I did not shrink from him. I welcomed him with a smile.
+He whispered into my ear. It was like the hiss of a snake; but I
+smiled. I whispered back again. He nodded. Ah! the way before me was
+growing clear at last. Was it not fate that had brought Gomez ready to
+my hand? Ay! fate! A good fate! A kind fate! We stood close together
+in that dimly lit room; and though we were alone in the house, we
+spoke in whispers to one another. When I moved to the door, Gomez
+followed me.
+
+I came down in ten minutes, clad in a long, dark cloak, with a small
+hat and a thick veil. I took a stick from the rack, and there was
+something else in my deep pocket.
+
+"Alone!" he whispered, as I moved towards the door.
+
+"Alone!" I answered. "Make a good fire in the drawing-room, and let
+there be food and wine there."
+
+"For two?" he asked with an evil smile.
+
+"For two!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+"ADREA'S DIARY"
+
+ "A land that is lonelier than a ruin."
+
+
+A cold twilight followed close upon the day. The sky was strewn with
+dark clouds, and a wild wind blew in my face. I was on an unknown
+road, and in all my life I had seen nothing so dreary.
+
+On one side, about a hundred yards away, was the sea; on the other
+was a broken stretch of bare moorland covered with only the scantiest
+herbage and piles of barren grey rocks. Some were lying together in
+quaint, grotesque shapes; others stood out alone against the sky,
+and broken fragments of all sizes covered the ground, choking and
+destroying all vegetation. There was no background of woods or trees;
+there was nothing between that barren, stony surface and the leaden
+sky. What turf there had been had lost its colour, and never a
+fragment of moss had grown upon one of those weather-beaten boulders.
+The sea air had stained them, and the grey evening mists had rotted
+them, until their surface was honeycombed with indentations, but
+neither had softened or toned down their fierce ugliness. Even in the
+bright sunlight such a country as this must still have been a country
+of desolation, and a light heart must sometimes have lost its gaiety
+and felt oppressed. To me, as I hurried along, with the cold evening
+settling down around me, that walk was horrible. Strange shadows
+seemed to dog my path and stalk solemnly along by my side. Footsteps
+seemed to follow behind me, and every stone I dislodged made me start.
+Sometimes I fancied that I heard strange whisperings in my ears, and
+I started round, shivering and trembling, to find myself alone. Once I
+stopped short. Was that a dead man in the way? How my heart beat! No!
+it was only a long boulder of rock! Listen! was not that the scream
+of a dying man? My own voice, raised in helpless terror, drowned the
+sound, and while I stood there ready to sink to the ground, a great
+sea-gull came circling round my head, and the blood flowed warm in my
+veins once more. How sad and mournful was that solitary cry and slow,
+hopeless flapping of the wings! Who was it said that the evil spirits
+of dead men dwell imprisoned in those sad-crying birds? It was
+very, very human, that cry. Bah! was I getting superstitious and
+faint-hearted before my task was begun? I set my teeth and stepped
+boldly onwards. For a while I had no more fancies.
+
+Throughout that hideous walk my whole imagination seemed coloured
+with a reflection of the purpose towards which I was tending. I do
+not write this in any morbid fit. Few women have passed through what
+I have passed through; fewer still have stopped to record their
+sensations. It is strange that it should afford me any satisfaction to
+record them here, but it is so. I have begun, and I must go on. This
+part of my life is drawing rapidly to a close, and with its close I
+shall seal this little book up and put it away for ever.
+
+The night grew darker, and the road was fast becoming little more than
+a rude cattle-track. A little distance ahead of me, from some building
+as yet unseen, a strong, clear light was steadily burning. Save for
+it, I might have feared that I had lost my way, for as yet I had
+passed no sign of human habitation. But that light was sufficient.
+Gomez had told me of it. It was the light which burned always, from
+dusk to morning, from the tower of the monastery of St. Bernard.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Two things seemed strange to me, or rather seem strange to me now,
+when I look back upon that walk. The first was my utter indifference
+to all physical pain. There was a hole in my boot, and I found
+afterwards that my foot must have been bleeding most of the time. I
+never felt it. I was conscious of neither pain nor fatigue. The second
+thing which surprises me is that, as I drew near to my journey's end,
+I grew calmer. I had no desire to draw back. I had no fear. The thing
+which was before me never assumed any definite shape! It was there--in
+the background--a dim, floating purpose, never once oppressing
+me, never forcing its way forward in my mind for more definite
+consideration, and only showing itself at all in a vague, lurid
+glow which seemed to change even the shapes of all the gruesome
+surroundings of my dismal walk. Towards the end of my expedition this
+became even more marked. My thoughts had recoiled from the present to
+the past. Vague pictures of the days that had gone by seemed floating
+before my eyes. I saw myself in the convent garden, with all my little
+world enclosed in those four walls, and I heard the shrill laughter
+of the girls with whom I was walking, and I even fancied that I could
+catch the perfume of the lilac trees which drooped over the smoothly
+kept lawn. And then the picture faded away, and from the vessel's side
+I saw Cruta, a purple-topped island rising like some precious jewel
+from the sea! I shuddered at the memory of that face, which soon
+became a living dread to me, and I heard again the passionate voice
+of a dark-robed man reading poetry, and crushing with white, nervous
+fingers the hyacinths whose odour was making the air faint. I saw his
+white, sad face, in which the struggle of the man against himself was
+already born--born, alas! in those long mornings by the sea, at my
+unconscious bidding! And soon Cruta, too, faded away, and you, Paul,
+my love, my dear, dear love, your face came to me. Almost my eyes
+closed, almost I stayed here to dream. Ah! how the magic of this love,
+this wonderful love, lightens my little world! My heart is stirred to
+music, my blood is dancing. I am chilled no longer. Ah! Paul, it is
+for you that I strike this blow, for you that I tread this stony way.
+It is sweet to think of it. I go on as blithely as ever a village
+maiden stepped forward to her wedding. The way is as sweet to me as
+a garden of roses. Your face, too, is dying out of my thoughts, Paul.
+Farewell! Farewell!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The valley of the shadow of death! Did any one speak those words? What
+an evil fancy! Yet the air seemed full of whisperings. The valley
+of the shadow of death! Yes! it might be that, and these cold, grey
+boulders the spirits of the evil ones risen up out of Hades. Is there
+a hell, I wonder? How chill and dark the air seems! There is death
+about!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The sound of a single bell broke in upon my thoughts. I raised
+my eyes. My journey was accomplished. Before me was a grim, stern
+building, and attached to it a chapel. It was the monastery of St.
+Bernard.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+"ADREA'S DIARY"
+
+ "Farewell to the dead ashes of life."
+
+
+The path which I had been following led straight up to the bare,
+arched door of the building. I had reached it unmolested, and rang the
+bell.
+
+What a hoarse, clanging sound! I shivered as I stood there listening
+to its gloomy echoes until they died away. No one came. The place
+seemed wrapped in an austere silence. I listened, but I could hear no
+sound within; only the dull, melancholy sighing of the wind amongst a
+sickly avenue of firs behind.
+
+I stretched out my hand, and rang again. Almost before the echoes had
+died away I heard footsteps within. A heavy bolt was withdrawn, and
+a dark-robed monk stood on the threshold before me. He recoiled for a
+moment at seeing a woman, and I thought that he would have closed the
+door, but he did not.
+
+"What would you have at this hour, sister?" he asked sternly. "The
+chapel is closed, and morning is the time for dispensing charity."
+
+"I have come in search of a priest who is only a visitor here," I
+said. "Father Adrian he is called!"
+
+He seemed still indisposed to admit me. "Is your business urgent?" he
+asked doubtfully. "Father Adrian is at his devotions, and must not be
+lightly disturbed."
+
+"It is urgent," I answered.
+
+He beckoned me to follow him, and in silence led me a few yards down a
+bare stone corridor. Then he threw open the door of a small room, and
+bade me enter.
+
+"This is the guest-chamber," he said. "Wait here, and I will summon
+Father Adrian!"
+
+He closed the door and disappeared. The interior of the room in which
+he had left me was bare and chilling. I turned from it to the window.
+Almost opposite was a small eminence, and at its summit a rude cross
+of Calvary. A dark figure, with clasped hands and bent head, was
+slowly descending the path.
+
+Even at that distance I thought I recognised the walk, and as he came
+nearer I saw that he was wearing the ordinary garb of a Roman Catholic
+priest instead of the monk's robes. I stood close to the window
+watching him, and as he crossed the open space before the door he
+raised his eyes and saw me. How he started, and how his eyes seemed
+to burn in their sockets! Doubtless he would have turned paler, but he
+was already deathly white. He stood there, swaying from side to side,
+with his eyes fastened wildly upon me, as though an apparition had
+appeared before him. Then he took a quick step forward; I heard the
+great front door creak and groan upon its hinges, and almost as soon
+as I could turn round he was on the threshold before me.
+
+"Adrea! Adrea!" he cried, in a low, suppressed whisper which shook
+with passion. "You here! What has happened? Stand in the light! Let me
+see your face!"
+
+I moved a step towards him, and raised my veil. "I am lonely," I said
+softly. "Was it very wrong of me to come here?"
+
+He stood before me, with hungry, incredulous eyes fastened upon my
+face, as though he would see through it into my false heart. Yet I
+did not flinch; I was actress enough for my part. I watched him
+tremble--watched the colour flush into his face and die away. It was
+a very storm of passion which shook him before he could find the words
+to answer me.
+
+"Adrea! Adrea! have you come here to mock me? As you are a woman, I
+implore you to spare me! Speak the truth!"
+
+I answered him softly, with my eyes fixed upon the ground. "I came
+because I was lonely. Let us go away from here! Come home with me!"
+
+"Home with you! Home with you!" He repeated my invitation. He scarcely
+seemed to understand.
+
+"Yes! I was very silly the other day! I did not understand you! I did
+not understand myself! And you see I have humbled myself very much! I
+have come to tell you so! Am I forgiven?"
+
+I raised my eyes to his, and added in a half whisper: "Won't you come
+home with me, and read aloud, as we used to on the rocks at Cruta?"
+
+He stood there as though fascinated. I began to feel impatient, but I
+dared not show any signs of it.
+
+Suddenly he took a quick step towards me, and before I could prevent
+it he had thrown himself at my feet on the cold stone floor, and was
+holding my hands tightly in his.
+
+"Adrea!" he cried, his voice choked with passion, "is this thing true?
+My brain reels with the delight of it; but, oh, forgive me if I seem
+to doubt! I know nothing of women, but surely your lips could never
+lie! You are not mocking me? Oh, Adrea, my love, lift up your eyes and
+swear that this is no dream. I am dizzy with joy! Speak to me! Let me
+look into your face! I am not doubting you, yet say it once more! Tell
+me it is not a dream!"
+
+I lied to him with my face, and with my eyes, and with my lips. "It is
+no dream," I said softly. "I have come to you, Adrian, because I want
+you. No one else would do."
+
+He stood up, pale and shaken. His voice was still full of deep,
+throbbing earnestness. "Adrea!" he cried, "to-day I have been fighting
+a grim fight. Look into my face and mark its traces. I am desperate!
+For hours I have knelt on what was once a hallowed spot. In vain! In
+vain! On my knees before the cross of Calvary I have striven to pray,
+as a man wrestles for his life with the waves of a great ocean. Alas!
+alas! In the twilight I fancied always that your face was moving
+amongst the shadows, and even the breeze which rustled in the shrubs
+around seemed ever to be murmuring your name. Oh, my love, my love,
+sometimes I wonder that I have lived through the anguish of these
+days. But it is over! You have come to me, and the evil days are past.
+I renounce my priesthood! It has become only a barren farce to me!
+Heaven or hell, what matters it? I leave here with you to-night never
+to return! Never! never! never!"
+
+He pressed hot kisses upon my hands; they stung me like molten lead,
+but I did not withdraw them. Then he rose up and held out his arms to
+me with a great yearning stealing into his dark eyes. But I kept him
+away.
+
+"Not here! not here!" I cried. "I heard footsteps outside. Let us go!"
+
+"You are right," he answered. "Wait for me; I have but few
+preparations to make."
+
+He left me, and I breathed freely again. I had no fears, no
+hesitation. I never dreamt of turning back; but I began to find my
+task more difficult even than I had imagined. It was his touch, his
+passionate looks and words which were so hard to endure. My lips could
+lie, but it was hard to govern my looks; and oh, how I hated him!
+
+Soon he was back--too soon for me; and then we left the place. He had
+changed his clothes, and, to my surprise, he wore an ordinary
+dark walking suit and a long ulster. He had discarded the priest
+altogether.
+
+At the bend he looked back. There was a rift in the clouds just behind
+the hill of Calvary, and the rude cross stood out vividly against the
+sky. "At last!" he murmured; "at last! Farewell to the dead ashes of
+life! It is rest to have ended the struggle, even to have fallen. My
+new life is here!"
+
+He touched my hand fondly, and held it within his own. "How deathly
+cold your hand is, Adrea!" he said. "It is the night air. You are
+well, are you not?" he added anxiously.
+
+"Quite well; only tired."
+
+He took my arm. I could not resist him, only I walked the more
+swiftly. He tried to check me, but I shook my head. "I am cold and
+tired," I told him. "This desolate walk frightened me, and even with
+you I think I am a little nervous. Let us hurry. Hark! What was that?"
+
+"A bittern in the marshes! Why, Adrea, how frightened you are! It is
+not like you!"
+
+"I know it," I answered; "but to-night--to-night the air seems full of
+whisperings and strange sounds. Yes, I am frightened."
+
+I shivered as I spoke. He would have drawn me closer to him, but I
+waved him away. How could he know anything of the horrors of that walk
+for me! Strange phantoms seemed ever rising from the sea, stalking
+across the path, and away over the moor, and passing and repassing,
+grinning and whispering in my ear. Sometimes it seemed as though I
+could have touched them by stretching out my hand; but when I tried,
+my fingers closed upon thin air. What were they? Why had they come to
+torment me? Was it because they scented an evil deed? Would they haunt
+me for ever like this? What folly! If I gave way so I should soon be
+altogether unnerved, and my task was still before me. I closed my eyes
+and opened them again. They had gone! It was good! I had conquered!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was late, and we had eaten and drunk together. He was lying back in
+an easy-chair, flushed, and strange to say, wonderfully handsome. The
+hollows in his cheeks seemed suddenly filled up, and his eyes were
+soft and bright. I sat at his feet looking into the firelight.
+
+"Will you answer me some questions, Adrian?" I asked. "There has been
+so much mystery around us lately, and, like a woman, I am curious."
+
+"Yes, I will tell you anything," he answered. "Am I not your slave,
+dearest? Only ask me them quickly. There are many things I have to
+talk about. What was that?" he added quickly. "Is there any one else
+in this room?"
+
+I shook my head. "No one; it was fancy. Tell me, who was Madame de
+Merteuill?"
+
+"My mother!"
+
+"Your mother?"
+
+"Yes; and the old Count of Cruta is my grandfather. Madame de
+Merteuill is his daughter. But that is not her real name!"
+
+There was a high screen just behind his chair,--a japanned one, which
+seemed to have been badly used, for there was a great hole in it.
+While we had been talking a strange thing had happened. A man's hand
+had slowly been thrust through, and a crumpled piece of paper was
+dropped upon the carpet. I moved to his side, and raised the cushion
+in his chair. Before I could help it he had caught my face, and
+pressed a hot, burning kiss upon my cheek. I dared not struggle. I
+had to yield, and endure for a moment his passionate embrace. Then I
+dropped my handkerchief upon the piece of paper, and picked up both
+hastily.
+
+"Will you tell me something else, please?"
+
+"Anything you ask! You know that I will!"
+
+"The De Vaux estates----"
+
+"Are mine. I am the son of Martin de Vaux. Paul de Vaux has no claim
+at all. If I had remained in the Church, it was my intention to found
+a great monastery here. But now----"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Everything is yours!"
+
+There was a moment's silence. I drew the piece of paper from my
+pocket, as though by accident, and read it to myself. There were only
+a few hastily scrawled lines:--
+
+"I dare not do it. I am afraid. I will put the knife on the floor."
+
+I glanced towards the hole. The hand was there, holding a long,
+gleaming dagger. It laid it noiselessly upon the carpet, and was
+withdrawn. I went over to his side, and knelt down there.
+
+"And what will become of Paul de Vaux?" I asked.
+
+He laughed grimly. "He must take his chance. He knows the whole story.
+He has known since last night. Adrea, tell me once more," he pleaded:
+"you never loved him really,--say that you never did!"
+
+"Are you jealous, sir?" I asked lightly. My left hand was wandering
+down his side! Ah! there was his heart! How it was beating! My right
+hand was on the floor, cautiously feeling its way towards the screen.
+It reached the dagger! I clutched it by the hilt! Now was the time.
+There was his heart. I knew the exact spot.
+
+"Adrea, are you ill?" he asked. "How white and strange you look! Ah!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was done! Lucrezia Borgia could not have bungled less! He lay
+doubled up in the chair, with a long Genoese dagger buried in his
+heart, and it was I who had done it!
+
+Gomez crawled from behind the screen, and looked first at him and
+then at me with protruding eyes. He tried to speak, but his teeth
+chattered.
+
+"It is done!" I said calmly, "and you are saved, Paul, my love," I
+whispered to myself. "Be a man, Gomez. We must carry it into the wood.
+Lift him gently; there must be no blood here."
+
+It took all our strength to move him, and we had to drag him, yard by
+yard, down the avenue and across the road into the little wood.
+
+My pen is weary of horrors. The memory of that hour is not to be
+written about. But when he turned away I took the flowers which he had
+begged for from my corsage and threw them down amongst the wet leaves.
+It was my sole moment of relenting.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+"THE LORD OF CRUTA"
+
+
+A strange figure stood on the edge of the castle cliff, looking across
+the bay of Cruta to the sea. He was tall, loose jointed, and gaunt,
+and the long grey beard and unkempt locks of flowing hair which
+streamed behind in the breeze showed that he was an old man; but his
+eyes, set back in deep hollows, and fringed with long, bushy grey
+lashes, were still dark and piercing. Great passions had branded
+his face with deep-set lines, but had failed to belittle him. On the
+contrary, his presence, though forbidding and awesome, was full of
+latent strength and dignity. To the islanders, who never mentioned
+their lord's name save with bated breath and after having zealously
+crossed themselves, he was the object of the most unbounded
+superstition. His personality and the strangeness of his habits
+appalled them. They scarcely believed him a being of the same world as
+their own. The most ignorant amongst them firmly believed that the sea
+obeyed his uplifted hand, and that when he spoke the thunder rolled
+amongst the hills. When stories were told of the mystery and strange
+isolation in which he lived, they nodded their heads and were willing
+to believe everything. No one ever met him or had speech with him, for
+twenty years had passed since he had issued from the castle gates. But
+sometimes, most often when a storm was brewing, they could see a
+tall, dark figure standing on the giddy edge of the castle wall which
+overhung the sea, or walking, with slow, stately movements, up and
+down the narrow foot-path at the summit of the cliff. If the moon had
+risen, or the sky were clear beyond, they could see the huge, gaunt
+figure outlined with grim distinctness against the empty background,
+always with his face to the sea, and with a long black cloak flowing
+behind. It was not often that they saw him, but when they did they
+told one another in whispers; and though the sky were cloudless and
+the sea calm, the women whose husbands were out in their fishing boats
+beyond the bay told their beads and prayed for their safe return, and
+those who had remained behind prepared for rough weather. Once, at
+a marriage feast, when all the little village was making merry, the
+whisper had gone about that "the Count was walking;" and immediately
+they had all departed for their homes in fear and silence, and the
+luckless bride and bridegroom had hastened to the priest and besought
+him to unloose the knot, that they might celebrate their wedding on
+some less ill-omened day.
+
+To-night the storm was already breaking when the Count appeared on the
+castle wall and turned his face seaward. One by one the fishing smacks
+were crossing the gathering line of surf, and gaining the deep, still
+waters of the bay. As they passed underneath the towering mass of
+granite rock, against the base of which the waters were boiling and
+seething, the men in the boats gazed fearfully up at that black speck
+far away above their heads, and crossed themselves. The Count had
+stood there for an hour, they whispered, ever since that piled-up mass
+of angry, lurid clouds had first gathered, and a warning breath of
+wind had swept across the smooth, glass-like surface of the water, now
+troubled and restless. Not one of them doubted but that his coming had
+brought the storm; but there was not one of them who dared to utter
+a word of complaint. Only they stood up in their boats, and shielding
+their eyes with an uplifted hand from the fierce rays of the sinking
+sun, gazed out seaward, searching for the boats not yet in safety.
+
+Suddenly a little murmur arose from amongst them, and a word was
+passed from one to another of their little crafts. The blinding glare
+of the sun and its reflection, stretched far away across the surface
+of the sea, had dazzled their eyes, and for the last quarter of an
+hour they had seen nothing on the westward horizon. But now the bright
+silver light was fading into a dull, glorious purple; and full upon
+its bosom a strange sail was seen, making direct for the harbour. The
+sunlight was still flashing upon its white sails,--little specks of
+gold upon a background of richer colouring--and they saw that she
+was a handsome, shapely-looking vessel, very different to the dirty
+Italian lugger which put in at their harbour for a few hours week by
+week.
+
+"Will she need a pilot?" cried Francesco, rising in his boat, and
+watching the stranger. "Let us wait here, and see if she signals for
+one!"
+
+"Let us all go! There will be something for each!" cried another.
+
+"We will race," Antonio answered, whose boat was the fastest. "The
+first to reach her shall have the stranger's money!"
+
+"No, no! that is not fair," chorused the others. "We will draw lots!"
+
+Then up rose old Guiseppe, the father of them all. He shook his head,
+and turned a sorrowing face seawards. "Peace! children. You are like
+chattering seabirds squabbling over a bait which will never be yours.
+Yonder ship will need no pilot! She is no stranger to Cruta!"
+
+They looked at her, and shook their heads. "We have never seen her
+before," they said.
+
+"Some of you are too young to remember her," the old man continued,
+"and you were all away when she was here within a twelvemonth ago! But
+I know her! Three times has she entered this harbour, and each time
+has she left sorrow and grief behind her. It is the ship of the
+English lord who stole away the daughter of our Count many years ago!"
+
+There was a little murmur of suppressed wonder. Then, as though moved
+by a common instinct, every face was turned upward to the castle wall.
+
+The Count had gone. But, even as they looked, he reappeared, leading
+another figure by the hand. They held their breath with wonder. No one
+had ever seen him there save alone, and now a woman stood by his
+side. They could see nothing of her, save her long hair flowing in
+the breeze, and the bare outline of her figure. "Who was she? Guiseppe
+must know! Who was she?" they asked him eagerly.
+
+He shook his head. "Better not ask," he answered. "Better not know!
+Strange things have happened up there! It is not for us to chatter of
+them!"
+
+"One night as I sailed homeward," Antonio said, in a low tone, "I
+heard strange cries from the castle. The night was still, and the
+breeze brought the sound to my ears. They came from up above, and
+when I strained my eyes I fancied that I could see a white figure--the
+figure of a woman--standing on the castle walls. She was crying for
+help, but suddenly, as though a hand were placed over her mouth, her
+cries ceased, and the figure vanished. It was three nights before the
+English lord died at the monastery!"
+
+Ferdinand stood up. "On that same night," he said, in a low, hoarse
+whisper, "I saw a figure steal up the path to the castle. It was the
+English lord! On the morrow I traced him back again with drops
+of blood. They led right into the monastery courtyard. Two days
+afterwards he died."
+
+"Silence! all of you!" commanded Guiseppe, with shaking voice. "Are
+these things to be spoken of thus openly? Know you not, you children,
+that the winds have ears, and he listens there above us."
+
+"It is a thousand feet!" muttered Antonio. "To him our boats can seem
+only as specks upon the water."
+
+"You fool!" answered Guiseppe. "Do you think that the man whose
+presence brings storm and wind upon us is like ordinary men? Do you
+think he cannot hear what he chooses!"
+
+"Ave Maria!" cried Antonio, crossing himself. "I would as soon face
+the devil himself as the Count! I shall ask Father Bernard to say a
+prayer for me to-night!"
+
+"Do! and I hope his penance will be a stiff one," answered Guiseppe
+grimly. "Come, let us trim our sails, and get homeward. The English
+ship will not want us, and we can watch who lands from the beach."
+
+"'Twould be no such bad thing if she struck on the rocks, if she
+brings such ill luck to the castle," muttered Antonio, as he unfurled
+the sail and grasped the tiller. "There would be some pickings for us,
+beyond doubt--some pretty pickings!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+"THE DAWN OF A SHORT, SWEET LIFE"
+
+
+The little group of fishing smacks, homely-looking and uncleanly, on
+close examination, presented a very different appearance from the deck
+of the English yacht fast nearing the harbour. Their brown sails had
+gleamed purple in the dying sunlight, and their rude outline seemed
+graceful and shapely as they rose and fell on the long waves. Paul,
+who stood on the captain's bridge of his yacht, uttered a little cry
+of admiration as they sailed out from the shadows of the huge rock,
+and fell into a rude semicircle across the bay.
+
+"What colouring one sees in these southern waters!" he remarked. "Did
+you notice the glinting light on those sails?"
+
+His companion, who was holding firmly the rail by his side, looked
+up and smiled. "Yes," she said softly; "it is beautiful! We have seen
+more beautiful things on this voyage, I think, than I ever saw before
+in my life. I have never been so happy! You are not angry with me now
+for coming, are you?"
+
+He looked down into her wistful, upturned face, and then away to the
+distant line where sea and sky met. "No! I am not angry," he said
+softly.
+
+Adrea was very beautiful. The fresh sea air and the southern sun had
+been as kind to her as to one of their own daughters. Only a very
+faint, delicate shade of pink had stained her clear, transparent skin,
+harmonising exquisitely with the slight olive hue of her complexion.
+The strong breeze had loosened the coils of her dark hair, and it was
+waving and flowing in picturesque freedom about her face. There was a
+change, too, in her appearance, greater than any the wind or sun
+could effect. Her dark eyes were glowing with a new life, and a soft,
+wistful joy shone in her face. Those few days had been like heaven for
+her. She had been alone, for the first time, with the man she loved;
+sailing upon a sunlit sea hour after hour, with his voice ever in her
+ears, and his tall figure by her side. The sense of his presence was
+ever upon her, bringing with it a calm, sweet restfulness, a happiness
+beyond anything which she had ever imagined.
+
+And it was heaven, too, after hell! Thrust away in a dark corner of
+her memory was the recollection of a day and a night full of grim,
+phantasmal horrors, which were fast becoming little more than a dream
+to her. The time was not yet come for remorse. In that deep glow of
+passionate and self-forgetful devotion, quickened now into fullest
+and sweetest life by his constant proximity, even sin itself, for his
+sake, seemed justified to her. Everything, too, which lay behind her
+brief stay in that bare, wind-swept country was fast assuming a far
+distant place in her thoughts. It was such a change from her little
+rooms in Grey Street, dainty and home-like though they had been, from
+the brilliantly lit drawing-rooms where she had performed, and the
+same wearisome compliments ever in her ears. The bonds of town life
+had always galled her. She was an artist, although she had denied
+it. She had become subject to her environment but it had been an
+imprisonment. Nature was her mother, and Nature had claimed her now.
+She knew it all; she knew that she could never be a dancer again. She
+had stolen out on to the deck each morning in her slippers, and had
+seen the dawn break through the clouds and descend upon the quivering
+waters. She had seen the eastern sky streaked with faint but
+marvellous colouring, growing deeper and deeper, until the sun's rim
+had risen from out of the water. Grey had become mauve, and white
+amber. It was wonderful! And by night she had leaned over the side
+of the yacht, and looked up into a sky ablaze with trembling stars,
+casting their golden reflections down upon the boundless waves which
+rose and fell beneath--waves which were sometimes green, and sometimes
+golden in the wonderful phosphoric light which touched them with a
+weird splendour. It was like the opening of a new world to Adrea. All
+that had gone before seemed harsh and artificial! It was the dawn of a
+new life.
+
+Paul had noticed the change. To him it had appeared chiefly as an
+increased womanliness, a gentle softness of speech and mannerism very
+charming and attractive. Those few days at sea together had been like
+a dream to him. He had come on board as nearly broken-hearted as a
+strong man could be, and fiercely anxious to reach his destination and
+know the whole, cruel truth. In a few hours all had been changed. His
+sorrows seemed numbed. He was no longer battling alone with his grief.
+Adrea knew all, and as they sailed southwards together, the sense
+of the present was strong enough to drive past and future from
+his thoughts. The clouds cleared from his face, and his heart was
+lightened. It was Adrea who had saved him from despair.
+
+He thought of this as she stood by his side, and he answered her
+question. Before their eyes, Cruta was rising up from the sea. The
+grim castle was there, looking as old as the rocks on which it was
+perched, the wide, open harbour, and the little fleet of fishing
+smacks. The seabirds circled about their heads; every moment brought
+the rocky little island more distinctly into view. Paul looked down
+into Adrea's face gravely.
+
+"It is our destination, Adrea," he said. "You must go now. There will
+be a lot of surf crossing the bar, and I shall have enough to do
+to run her in. Look behind! It is just as well we are going into
+harbour!"
+
+He pointed to the fast-gathering clouds coming up from the westward,
+and she paused with her foot on the ladder. "We leave the storm behind
+us," she said. "There is fair weather ahead!"
+
+She went down into her cabin, and left Paul upon the bridge, with his
+eyes fixed upon the castle. Fair weather ahead! How dared he hope
+for it! The sun had finally disappeared now, but some part of the
+afterglow still lingered in curious contrast to the lurid yellow and
+black clouds hurrying on behind him. The old castle was bathed for a
+moment in a sea of purple light,--every line of it, and the huge rock
+which it crowned, standing out with peculiar vividness against the
+empty background. But it was a brief glory. Even while Paul was
+gazing, the colouring faded away, and it resumed its former aspect.
+Fair weather ahead! Every moment, as memories of his former visit to
+the place thronged in upon him, Paul doubted it the more.
+
+He was close to the entrance of the harbour now, and all his thoughts
+and energies were required to pilot his yacht safely. In a few moments
+the brief line was passed, and the islanders waiting about upon the
+beach saw the English vessel ride smoothly into harbourage under
+shadow of the huge castle rock. Presently she dropped an anchor, and
+swung gracefully round. A boat was lowered, and made for the shore.
+
+There were plenty of hands willing to help pull her in. Paul stepped
+out on to the beach, and looked around for some one to whom he could
+make himself understood.
+
+They were all islanders of the rudest class; but seeing no one else,
+Paul lifted his hand to the castle, and asked them the way in Italian.
+They understood him, and pointed along the beach to a point where a
+rude road curved inland, and reappeared a little higher up in zigzag
+fashion behind the rocks. But no one offered to go a step with him. On
+the contrary, directly the question had left his lips, they all shrunk
+away, whispering and exclaiming amongst themselves.
+
+"It is the son of the Englishman!" cried Antonio. "He is going into
+the lion's mouth! Do not let us be seen with him. The Count may be
+watching."
+
+"I wonder if he knows his danger?" Guiseppe said thoughtfully. "He is
+young and brave looking. It would be a good action to warn him."
+
+"I would not risk it!" cried Antonio.
+
+"Nor I!" echoed Ferdinand.
+
+"Nor I!" chorused the others.
+
+Guiseppe glanced at them in contempt. Then he stepped forward and laid
+his hand upon Paul's shoulder--a strange, picturesque-looking object,
+in his bright scarlet shirt, and trousers turned up to his knees. He
+had been in Italy once, and he tried to speak the language of that
+country as well as he could.
+
+"Illustrious Englishman!" he said, "go not to that castle, the home of
+the Count of Cruta. Danger lurks there for you--danger and death. It
+is our lord who lives there; we are his vassals, and we are dumb. But
+he is wild and fierce, and your countrymen are like devils to him.
+Strange things have happened up there. Be wise. Put back your boat,
+weigh your anchor and sail away. The stormy seas are dangerous, but
+not so dangerous as the Castle of Cruta to an Englishman of your
+features. Take the word of Guiseppe, and depart!"
+
+Paul shook his head. He understood most of what Guiseppe had said,
+and he knew that it was kindly meant. "You are very good," he said.
+"I thank you for your warning; but I have important business with the
+Count, and I have come from England on purpose to see him. Here, spend
+this for me," he added, throwing a handful of silver money amongst the
+little group of men. "Yonder path will take me straight to the castle,
+I suppose. Good evening."
+
+He strode away along the beach alone. Meanwhile a strange thing was
+happening. The islanders were all gathered eagerly around the little
+shower of money, but not one had offered to touch a piece.
+
+"Holy Mother! there are fifty pieces!" cried Antonio. "If only I
+was sure that the Count would not see me! I would keep holiday for a
+month, and start again with a fresh set of fishing nets."
+
+"Touch not the money!" advised Guiseppe, shaking his head. "The
+Count's eyes are everywhere!"
+
+"It is very hard!" groaned Ferdinand. "It has been such a bad season,
+too!"
+
+"I know! I know!" cried Antonio excitedly. "We will go to the
+monastery, and get Father Bernard to come and bless it. He will claim
+half for the Church, but we can divide the other half, and we shall,
+each man, have given six pieces in charity. What say you? shall we
+go?"
+
+"Bravo! Antonio is right! Antonio is a sensible fellow!" they all
+cried. Then there was the sound of bare feet scampering over the hard
+sands as they hastened up to the monastery. Guiseppe was left alone.
+
+He waited until they were out of sight. Then he stooped down,
+and carefully collecting all the coins, placed them in his pouch.
+"Ignorant fools!" he muttered. "The Count can see no further than
+other men, and at any rate he will not see these in my pocket."
+
+He stood up, and gazed steadily along the path which Paul had taken.
+"What am I to do now?" he continued. "It is to the Englishman's father
+that I owe my boat and my little hoard of sayings. He behaved to me as
+a prince, did Signor de Vaux. Can I see his son hasten yonder to his
+doom without one effort to save him? No. The Count is terrible, but I
+need run no risk. At any rate, I will follow a little way."
+
+He walked swiftly along the beach, and commenced the ascent to the
+castle. In a few minutes the little band of fishermen returned,
+carrying lanterns in their hands, and with a priest walking amongst
+them. They reached the spot, and paused, while the priest commenced
+to mumble a prayer. He was scarcely half-way through when he was
+interrupted.
+
+"The money is gone!" cried Antonio.
+
+"Every piece!" echoed Ferdinand.
+
+There was a moment's blank silence. Then they all crossed themselves.
+"Let us go home," whispered Antonio hoarsely. "The Count knows. He has
+been here."
+
+The priest turned away disgusted, and the others followed him, talking
+with bated breath amongst themselves. And, in the darkness, no one
+noticed Guiseppe's absence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+"A VOICE AND FIGURE FROM THE DISTANT PAST"
+
+
+It was a long, steep ascent, hewn out of the solid rock; but at last
+Paul stood before the great gates of the castle, and paused to take
+breath. Hundreds of feet below him his yacht was riding at anchor,
+looking like a toy vessel upon a painted sea, and a little group of
+scattered lights showed him where the hamlet lay. Before him was the
+stern, massive front of the castle, wrapped in profound gloom, but
+standing out in clear, ponderous outline against the starlit sky.
+There seemed to be no light from any part of it, and the great iron
+gates leading into the courtyard were closed. Nor was there any sound
+at all, not even the barking of a dog. It was like a dwelling of the
+dead.
+
+A great, rusty bell-chain hung by the side of the gate, and as there
+seemed to be no other means of communication with the interior, Paul
+pulled it vigorously. Its hoarse echoes had scarcely died away before
+several rough-looking islanders, carrying flaring oil lamps, trooped
+into the courtyard from the rear of the building, and one of them,
+drawing the bolts, threw open the gates.
+
+"I have come to see the Count," Paul said, addressing the nearest of
+them. "Will you conduct me to him?"
+
+The man replied energetically, but in a _patois_ utterly
+unintelligible. He led the way across the courtyard towards the
+castle, however, and Paul followed close behind. They did not enter
+by the front, but by a low, nail-studded door at the extreme corner of
+the tower, which the man immediately closed and locked behind him.
+
+Paul looked around him curiously, but in the semi-darkness there was
+little to see. He was in a corridor, of which the walls were simply
+whitewashed, and the floor bare stone; but as they passed onward,
+down several passages, and up more than one flight of steps, the
+proportions of the place expanded. The ceilings grew loftier, and the
+corridors wider. Yet there was no attempt anywhere at decoration or
+furniture of any sort. The place was like an early-day prison--huge,
+bare, and damp. Once, crossing a balustraded corridor, there was a
+view of a huge hall down below, bare save for a few huge skins thrown
+carelessly around, and a great stack of firearms and other weapons
+which lined the walls on either side. It was the only sign of
+habitation that Paul had seen.
+
+Suddenly his guide paused, and held up his finger. Paul, too,
+listened; and close at hand he heard, to his surprise, the muffled
+sound of voices chanting some sad hymn in a deep minor key. The rise
+and fall of those mournful voices was wonderfully impressive. What
+could it mean? It was a dirge, a funeral hymn! Its every note seemed
+to breathe of death.
+
+"What is that?" Paul asked. "Is any one ill--dying?"
+
+The man shook his head. He could not understand. He only motioned to
+Paul to move silently, and hurried on. They were in a wide corridor,
+with disused doors on either side, but their feet fell no longer upon
+the bare stone. A rough sort of drugget had been hastily thrown down
+in the centre of the passage, and their movements roused no more
+strange echoes between the bare walls and the vaulted roof. At every
+step forward they took the chanting grew more distinct, and at last
+the man stopped at the end of the passage before a door, softly tapped
+at it. It was opened at once, and Paul found himself ushered into a
+great, dimly lit bedchamber.
+
+He glanced around him with keen interest. If the interior of the
+room was a little dilapidated, it was full of the remains of past
+magnificence. The walls were still covered with fine tapestry, of
+which the design was almost obliterated, although the texture and
+colouring still remained. The furniture was huge, and of the
+fashion of days gone by, and the bedstead was elaborately carved and
+surmounted by a coat of arms. Further Paul had but little opportunity
+to discover, for as soon as his presence became known in the room, a
+black-cowled monk left the bedside and approached him.
+
+"We have been expecting you," he said in Italian, "and we fear now
+that you come too late. Our poor lady is beyond human skill!"
+
+Paul looked at him in astonishment. "I do not quite understand you! It
+is the Count of Cruta whom I came to see!"
+
+The priest started back, and commenced fumbling with a lamp which
+stood on a table at the foot of the bed. "Are you not the German
+doctor from Palermo?" he asked, bending over towards Paul, with his
+keen, dark face alight with suspicion and distrust.
+
+Paul shook his head. "I am no doctor at all!" he answered. "I am an
+Englishman, and my name is Paul de Vaux!"
+
+"Ah!" There was a faint, incoherent cry from the bed--a cry, which,
+faint though it was, shook with stifled emotion. Both men turned
+round, and Paul could see that the other's face was dark and stern.
+
+The woman, who had been lying on the bed still and motionless as a
+corpse, had raised herself with a sudden, spasmodic movement. Her
+cheeks were sunken to the bone, and her eyes were large and staring.
+
+The seal of death was upon her face, but Paul recognised her. It
+was the woman whom he had seen last in the drawing-room of Major
+Harcourt's house, the woman whom Adrea had called her stepmother.
+
+He took a sudden step forward, and she held out her hands in a gesture
+half of welcome, half of fear. "Paul de Vaux! Holy Mother of God! What
+has brought you here--here into the tiger's den? Come close to me!
+Hasten!"
+
+Paul stepped forward, but the priest stood between them, holding
+out his hands in a threatening gesture. "Sister, forbear!" he cried
+sternly. "You have made your peace with God; you have done with the
+world and all its follies. Close your eyes and pray. Fix your thoughts
+upon things above!"
+
+She did not heed him. She did not even look towards him. Her eyes were
+fixed upon Paul, and he read their message aright.
+
+"This woman wishes to speak to me. Stand aside, and let me go to her!"
+he exclaimed. "If she be indeed dying, surely you should respect her
+wishes."
+
+He spoke imperatively, for the priest stood in the way, and prevented
+his approach; pointing towards the door with a stern, commanding
+gesture.
+
+"There must be no converse between you and this woman!" he said. "I am
+no lover of violent deeds; but if you insist upon forcing your way
+to her bedside, I shall summon the Count, and you will pay for your
+rashness with your life. Your name and features are a certain death
+warrant in this house. Escape while you may, and _pax vobiscum_.
+Remain and I cannot save you!"
+
+Paul glanced round the room. Two monks were standing with lighted
+tapers on the further side of the bed, one of whom was mumbling a
+Latin prayer. The man who had brought him here was gone. There was no
+one else in the room, except the priest and himself.
+
+"You are inhuman!" he said shortly. "The prayers of a dying woman are
+more to me than your threats. Stand on one side!"
+
+Paul laid his hand heavily upon the priest's shoulder. He was prepared
+even to have used force had it been necessary, but it was not. The
+latter moved away at once, shaking his robes free from Paul's touch
+with contemptuous gesture, and calling one of the monks to him, Paul
+sank on one knee by the side of the dying woman, and bent low down
+over her.
+
+"Madame de Merteuill, you have something to say to me!" he whispered.
+"What is it?"
+
+Her voice was very low and very faint. She was even then upon the
+threshold of death. Each word came out with a painful effort, but with
+a curious distinctness. "I am not Madame de Merteuill at all! I am the
+daughter of the Count of Cruta!"
+
+She paused to gather fresh strength, and Paul caught hold of some of
+the bedclothes, and clutched them in his fingers convulsively. This
+woman, the daughter of the Count of Cruta! this wan, faded creature,
+the girl whom his father had borne away in triumph! His brain reeled
+with the wonder of it! If only he had known a few weeks ago!
+She should never have left the Hermitage until she had told him
+everything! Was it too late now? She was trying to speak to him. Was
+he upon the brink of a tremendous revelation? Was the whole past about
+to be made clear? Oh! if the old Count would keep away for awhile.
+
+Her lips commenced to move. He bent close over her, determined not to
+lose a syllable. "You know the story about your father, Martin de Vaux
+and me. I----"
+
+"Yes, yes! I know!" he assured her softly. "I have only heard it
+lately!"
+
+"From whom?"
+
+"From the priest who was always with you at De Vaux,--from your son!"
+he added, as the truth suddenly swept in upon him. Yes; Father Adrian
+was this woman's son!
+
+Her corpse-like face was fixed steadily upon him. Her words were
+monotonous and slow, yet they preserved their distinctness. "You have
+come here to know the truth of the story he told you?"
+
+"Yes; I have come to discover it, if I can!"
+
+"The holy Saints must have brought you to me. The story----"
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"The story is false!"
+
+Paul bent lower still, with strained hearing. There had been a plot,
+then, after all. Oh, if she should die without finishing her story! He
+looked into her bloodless face, and his pulses throbbed at fever-heat.
+
+"You know my story," she murmured. "I commence at the time when I left
+your father in Paris. I had thought myself hardened in my sin; I was
+mistaken. Repentance crept slowly but surely in upon me immediately
+after my father's visit to us. His words haunted me. I began to steal
+away in the evening to vespers at the Church of St. Cecilia. One night
+a grave, sweet-faced priest stood up in the pulpit; and as his words
+sank into my heart my sin rose up before me black and grim, and the
+burden of it grew intolerable. After the service I sought him, and
+I confessed. On the morrow I left Martin secretly and without adieu.
+Count Hirsfeld aided my escape. I came here!
+
+"I came, hoping for forgiveness; but he, my father, could not forget
+the past. I found him living in grim and fierce solitude, shunned and
+dreaded by every one, ever brooding over my sin and his dishonour. He
+made me stay, yet he cursed me.
+
+"Six months after my arrival Adrian was born. It was while I lay
+between life and death that I wrote that letter to your father.
+Afterwards I told my father what I had done. The letter lay there;
+I dared not send it without my father's sanction. I sent for him and
+told him all. To my surprise, he consented. He did more than that; he
+spoke of it to Count Hirsfeld, and the Count volunteered to take the
+letter to England. Their readiness made me worried and anxious. I
+knew how they hated Martin de Vaux, and I was suspicious. I called the
+doctor to my side, and questioned him closely. He declared solemnly
+that I could not live a fortnight; it was impossible. I put my
+suspicions away. It was for the honour of his name that my father had
+consented to receive Martin beneath his roof; there could be no other
+reason. And I myself felt that the end was near. My body was cold, and
+there was a deadly faintness, against which I was always struggling. I
+dreaded only lest he should come too late!
+
+"It was only the night before his arrival that I learnt the truth. I
+was lying with my eyes closed, and they thought that I was asleep. The
+doctor and my father were talking together in whispers. The crisis
+was over, I heard them say. In a few days Adrian would be born, and I
+should speedily recover, if all went well. I nerved myself, and called
+my father to me. I had overheard, I said; if Martin came, I would
+not marry him. His anger was terrible. Both Count Hirsfeld and he had
+known from the commencement that I was likely to recover, but they
+wished to see Martin tricked into marrying me. I was firm; I would not
+consent! I had written that letter believing myself to be dying.
+If Martin came, I would not see him now. If he was forced into my
+presence, I should tell him the truth.
+
+"My father left me, speechless with rage. For the next week my door
+was kept carefully locked, and no one but the doctor and the nurse
+were permitted to enter. Yet I learnt afterwards all that happened.
+Marie, my maid, who was slowly dying of consumption, was moved into
+the principal bedchamber; and when Martin arrived, she was made to
+personate me. It was the priest who gained her consent; the priest who
+confessed her and gave her absolution. His share of the spoil was to
+be the De Vaux estates, handed over to the Church if ever they carried
+out their plot successfully. Martin came, and, as he thought, granted
+that fervent prayer of mine. They stood around him with drawn swords;
+they would not allow him to approach the bed. As soon as the ceremony
+was over, he was thrust from the castle.
+
+"It happened that in less than a week Marie died. From my bed, which
+faced the window, I saw the little funeral procession leave the
+castle--my father and Count Hirsfeld the chief mourners. I saw Martin
+following away off, with sorrowing face, and I was glad then that
+I had not deceived him. I saw him weeping over the grave which he
+believed to be mine. The day afterwards my son was born.
+
+"As soon as Adrian could crawl about, he was taken from me by the
+priests. They sent him to Italy, where he grew up a stranger to me.
+When he returned, I did not know him. I spoke to him of that false
+marriage; I wept for his lack of parentage. He knew everything; he
+spoke to me of it coldly, but without unkindness. He was a son of the
+Church, he said; he needed no other mother.
+
+"He dwelt for awhile at the monastery, and it was while he was there
+that I became suspicious. My father, and he, and the Superior of the
+monastery were always together. They seemed to be urging something
+upon him, which he was loath to undertake. By degrees I found it all
+out. Adrian was to go to England as my lawful son and claim the De
+Vaux estates for the Church. At first he was unwilling; but by degrees
+they won upon him. Warning was sent to Martin de Vaux, and he came
+here swiftly--to his death! I was kept a close prisoner, but I found
+out everything that was happening. For years afterwards, Adrian was
+undecided whether to go to England and claim the estates. At last he
+decided, unknown to me, to go. I escaped and followed him. I tried
+my best to persuade him, but failed. I came back here ill--to die--to
+die!"
+
+"And Adrea?"
+
+"Adrea? She knew nothing! How could she?"
+
+"Do you know who Adrea was?"
+
+She seemed surprised that anything else could, for a moment, occupy
+his mind after the story to which he had listened; but she struggled
+to answer him. "She was Count Hirsfeld's daughter! He never spoke to
+me of her mother! It was in Constantinople. I am afraid----"
+
+He bowed his head. "I understand," he said simply. The colour had
+suddenly flooded into his cheeks, and there was a mist before his
+eyes. Even in that supreme moment, when her senses were failing and
+her eyes were growing dim, she saw and understood.
+
+"I wanted to be kind to her always," she faltered. "We would have
+adopted her, but she would not stay here. She was unhappy, and I
+helped her to escape. I had my reasons!"
+
+He had already guessed at them, and he held out his hand. He did not
+wish to hear any more. There was a moment's silence. She was looking
+at him with dim, wistful eyes.
+
+"You--you are very like your father!" she said, painfully. "Will you
+kiss me?"
+
+He stooped down and kissed the pale, trembling lips, and held
+her hands tightly. Her breath was coming fast, and she spoke with
+difficulty.
+
+"Thank God they brought you here instead of the doctor! I can die--at
+peace now! But you--you are in danger! You must escape from here!
+You must not lose a minute! Oh, you do not know! you do not know! The
+Count is cruel--bitterly cruel! He will not come to me although I die.
+He will not forgive, although I have suffered agonies! He is my father
+but he will not forgive me. And you--you are in danger if he finds
+you! They have gone for him! Ah! I remember! Father Andrew went for
+him! He is afraid that I shall tell you the truth, and that the Church
+will not gain your property. Quick! you must go! Kiss me once more,
+Paul, and go! Go quickly! These monks are wolves, but they are
+cowards! Strike them down if they try to stop you! Don't hurt my
+father! Farewell! farewell!"
+
+"I will stay with you till the end," Paul whispered.
+
+"No, no! away! I cannot die in peace and think of you--in danger. I
+want to pray. Leave me, now, Paul. Dear Martin! Martin, my love--is it
+you?"
+
+Her mind was wandering, and she saw her lover of old days in the man
+whose hand she clasped so frantically; and Paul, although out in
+the passage he could hear the sound of hurrying feet, could not
+tear himself away from her dying embrace. A faint, curious smile was
+parting her pallid lips, and her dim eyes seemed suddenly to have
+caught a dim reflection of the light to come.
+
+"Martin! Martin! there is a mist everywhere--but I see you, dear love!
+Wait for me! Let us go hand in hand--hand in hand through the Valley
+of the Shadow of Death. Oh, my love! it has been a weary, weary while.
+Hold me tighter, Martin! I cannot feel your hand! Ah! at last, at
+last! Farewell sorrow, and grief, and suffering! We are together once
+more--a new world--behind the clouds! I am happy."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+"FROM OUT LIFE'S THUNDERS TO A STRANGE, SWEET WORLD"
+
+
+She was dead, and, after all, her end had been crowned with peace.
+She did not hear the door thrown roughly open, the swelling of angry
+voices, or the fast-approaching tramp of many feet. Nor did Paul heed
+any of these signs of coming danger; he had folded his strong arms
+around her, and his lips, pressed close to her, seemed to draw the
+last quivering breath from her frail body. It was only when her head
+sunk back, and he knew that she was dead, that he laid her reverently
+down and turned around.
+
+The room was full of strange flashes of light and grotesque shadows
+falling upon the white faces of half a dozen monks. Standing in front
+of them was Father Andrew, and by his side was an old man, tall and
+straight, with snow-white beard and hair. He stood in full glare of
+a torch held by one of the monks behind him, and his face seemed like
+the face of a corpse, save for the steady, malignant light in his
+jet-black eyes. As Paul turned round, with his features suddenly
+visible in a stream of lurid light, he raised his arm and pointed a
+long, skinny finger steadily towards him.
+
+"The son of the devil!" he cried, his deep, tremulous voice awakening
+strange echoes in the high vaulted chamber. "Welcome! Welcome! Thrice
+welcome!"
+
+Paul straightened himself, and reverently laid the little white hand
+which he had been clasping across the coverlet. "She is dead!" he said
+solemnly. "What I came here to learn from you, I have learnt from her.
+Let me go!"
+
+He moved a step forward, but the old man remained there in the way,
+motionless, and around the door were gathered a solid phalanx of
+monks. Paul halted, conscious at once of his danger. The white faces
+of the monks were all bent upon him, full of savage, animal ferocity,
+and a gleam of something still worse lit up the dark eyes of that old
+man. Their very silence was unnatural and oppressive. Paul bore it,
+looking round amongst them with questioning eyes, until he could bear
+it no longer.
+
+"Am I a prisoner?" he cried. "What do you want with me? Speak! some of
+you! Count of Cruta, answer me!"
+
+A dull, hollow laugh echoed through the chamber. Paul turned away,
+sick with horror. It was like being in the power of a hoard of madmen.
+The air of the place, too, seemed suddenly to have become stifling.
+The perspiration was standing out upon his forehead in great beads. It
+was a relief when the Count spoke.
+
+"You have done well, Paul de Vaux, to find your way here--here
+into the very presence of a dying woman, and force from her lips a
+confession that has made you glad. You think that you will go back now
+to your country, and cheat me of my well-planned vengeance. You will
+hold up your head once more; you will mock at the Church's rights. You
+will go your way through the world rich and honoured; you will call
+yourself by an old name. You will pluck all the roses of life. Worthy
+son of a worthy father! Look at me! Who was it who blasted my life, my
+happiness, my honour, my name? A name grander and older than his, as
+the oak is older and grander than the currant bush. When he took my
+daughter into his arms, he wrote the funeral of his race! I played
+with him, as a tiger plays with a miserable Hindoo! When life was
+sweetest to him, I struck. He came here for mercy; I laughed, and I
+was merciful. I stabbed him to the heart. The knife hangs side by side
+with the arms of the Crusaders of Cruta. You are his son! You are the
+next to die! You will not leave these walls alive! These monks know
+you! It is you who hold the lands of De Vaux, which by right belong to
+their Holy Church. You would go back to resist their just claims! The
+good of the Church demands that you should not go back! You shall not
+go back! The Count of Cruta demands that you shall not go back. You
+shall not go back! You shall be slain, even where your father was
+slain, but you shall not creep back to your hole to die! Your bones
+shall whiten and shrivel upon the rocks. Your blood shall be an
+honoured stain upon my floor. Monks of Cruta! there he stands! He who
+alone can resist your just possession of the broad lands and abbey
+of De Vaux. The despoiled Church cries to you to strike. The end is
+great! Haul him away!"
+
+They were around him like a pack of wolves, their lean faces hungry
+and fierce, and their long, skinny fingers clutching at his throat and
+at his clothing. One silently drew a knife and brandished it over him.
+Paul wrenched himself free with a tremendous effort, but they were
+upon him again. They forced him slowly backwards, backwards even
+across the bed where that dead woman lay with her eyes as yet
+unclosed. The great heat, as much as their numbers, was overpowering
+him. His eyes were bloodshot, and there was a choking in his throat.
+Again the long knife was lifted; other hands held him motionless,
+ready for the blow. He was too weak to struggle now. He saw the blue
+steel quivering in the air. Then he closed his eyes.
+
+What was that? There was a shrill cry from one of the monks, and Paul,
+finding their grasp relaxed, started up. They were cowering down like
+a flock of frightened animals. The room seemed full of red fire. The
+glass in the windows cracked; it flew into pieces, and a column of
+smoke curled in. The door was thrown open; Guiseppe stood for a moment
+on the threshold.
+
+"Fly!" he cried. "Fly! The castle is on fire. The flames are near!"
+
+They rushed for the door like panic-stricken cattle before a great
+prairie fire, biting and trampling upon one another in their haste.
+Paul followed, but the old Count stood in his way, trembling, not with
+fear, but with anger.
+
+"Cowards! beasts!" he cried after the flying monks. "But you shall not
+escape me!"
+
+He wound his long arms around his enemy, but the strength of his
+manhood was gone, and without effort Paul threw him on one side. Then,
+through the smoke, he found himself face to face with Guiseppe.
+
+"This way, Signor!" he said coolly. "Follow me closely!"
+
+The old Count was up again, and seemed about to attack them. Suddenly
+he changed his mind, and with a hoarse cry, ran down an empty
+corridor. Guiseppe and Paul turned in the opposite direction.
+
+"We must fly, Signor!" the man cried. "He goes to the cellars! He is a
+devil! He will blow up the castle! Cover up your nose and your mouth!"
+
+They hurried along wide, deserted corridors, down stone stairs, and
+finally reached what seemed to be a circular underground passage.
+Round and round they went, until Paul's head swam; but the air was
+cooler, and every moment brought relief. Suddenly there was a cold
+breeze. They turned one more corner, and Guiseppe stopped. They were
+in an open aperture facing the sea, barely twenty feet below. A small
+boat with a single man in it was there waiting.
+
+"Dive!" cried Guiseppe. "We must not wait for the rope!"
+
+Over they went almost simultaneously. The shock of the cold water
+sent the blood dancing once more through Paul's veins. He came to the
+surface just after his guide, cool and refreshed. They scrambled into
+the boat, and Paul gave a little cry of wonder. They were drifting on
+a sea of ruddy gold, and the space all around them was brilliant with
+the reflection. High above, the flames were leaping up towards the
+sky, and the dull sing-song of their roar set the very air vibrating.
+Guiseppe, still dripping, seized an oar.
+
+"Pull, for your lives! pull!" he cried anxiously.
+
+His companion shrugged his shoulders. "But why?"
+
+"Ask no questions! You will see!"
+
+They did see. They were barely half-way to the yacht, when there came
+the sound of a low rumbling from the castle. Suddenly it broke into a
+roar. Belching sheets of flame burst out on every side. Huge cracks in
+that brilliant light were suddenly visible in the walls, creeping in a
+jagged line from the foundation to the turret. Fragments of the
+stone work flew outwards and upwards. It seemed as though some mighty
+internal force were splitting the place up. The men in the boat sat
+breathless and transfixed. Only Guiseppe whispered: "It is the old
+Count! He is the devil! He has blown the place up!"
+
+There was another, and then a series of explosions. Fragments of the
+rock and stone fell hissing into the water scarcely a hundred feet
+away. Great waves rolled towards them. It seemed as though the earth
+underneath were shaking. Then it all died away, and there was silence.
+Only the blackened walls of the castle remained, with the dying flames
+still curling fitfully around them. The air grew darker, and the
+colour faded from the sea.
+
+"It is the last of the Count of Cruta, and his castle of horrors!"
+cried Guiseppe. "God be thanked!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+"LOVE THAN DEATH ITSELF MORE STRONG"
+
+
+I had no thought of writing in you again, my silent friend. Only a
+little while ago I said to myself, the time has gone by when solitude
+and heart hunger could drive me to your pages for consolation. Only a
+little while ago, it is true; and yet between the past and future is
+fixed a mighty gulf. As I write these words I stand upon the threshold
+of death! What death may mean, I know not! I have no religion to throw
+bright gleams of hope upon its dark mysteries. I have no hope of any
+other life, save the one I am quitting! If I am resigned and calm, it
+is because the lamp of my life has burnt out, and I am in darkness. I
+wait for death as a maiden waits for the first gleams of dawn on her
+marriage day.
+
+Who said that love was everlasting? They lied! Love is a dream, a
+floating shadow full of golden lights, quenched by the first breath of
+morning! Who should know, if I do not know? Who has done more for love
+than I--I whose hands are red with blood, I who this night must die?
+It was for his sake, I struck--for his sake! and now that the hour of
+my punishment must come, I sit here alone and forsaken, waiting for
+the signal which must end my life! It was for his sake! A death-white
+face rises up before me, and a hoarse, dying cry sobs ever in my ears!
+I pass on my way through the Valley of the Shadow of Death with no
+hope to cheer me, forsaken, friendless, and shaken with dim fears!
+Am I alone! He for whom I struck has turned from me. Oh, the bitter
+cruelty of it! It was he who taught me what love was, and yet of love
+he knows nothing, else I would not be here to meet my doom alone!
+Oh! Paul, Paul! Oh, for one touch of your hand, for one kind look! My
+heart is sick and faint with longing! Am I indeed so low and vile a
+thing that you should turn away with never a single word of farewell?
+O! my love, you are hard indeed! If my hands are stained with
+blood--for whose sake was it? It was only a word I craved for, Paul!
+Only a word--a look, even! Was it too great a boon to grant?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Oh, memory! help me, help me to keep sane just a few more hours--until
+the end comes. It is a last luxury! I will think of those golden days
+we spent together ere the blow fell. Ah! how happy we were! Every
+breath of life was sweet; every moment seemed charged with the
+delicious happiness! The past, with its haunting shadows, and the
+memory of that grim, deathly figure huddled up amongst the ferns
+in the bare pine wood had perished. Background and foreground had
+vanished in the bewildering joys of the present. Oh! Paul, that was
+happiness, indeed. All measures of outside things seemed lost! At
+times I found it hard to recollect in what country we were! Oh! the
+world, such as ours was, is a sweet, sweet world!
+
+At last the blow fell. He came to me one morning, as white as a sheet,
+with an old, soiled copy of the Times in his hand.
+
+"Read, Adrea," he cried, thrusting it into my hand. "A horrible thing
+has happened!"
+
+I let the paper fall through my fingers. An agony of fear was upon me.
+"I know! I know! Do not ask me to read it."
+
+"You knew, and you did not tell me!"
+
+"No! I--no!"
+
+There was a deadly swimming before my eyes, and a throbbing in my
+ears. I sank back, grateful for the unconsciousness which gave me
+respite, however short. When recovered, I was on the verge of a fever;
+and Paul, seeing my condition, did not refer to the news which had
+been such a shock to him. But for an hour the next day he was away
+from me, writing letters home. When he returned there was a restraint
+between us. He was kind as ever, but restless and unsettled. As yet he
+had no suspicion, but I could see that he was longing to get back to
+England.... The thought was like madness to me.
+
+Then came the beginning of the end. We were staying in a villa which
+we had rented for a month near Florence, and one day we drove into the
+city together to do some shopping. Paul was at the post-office, and I
+was crossing the square to go to him, when of a sudden I felt a hand
+upon my dress, and a hoarse whisper in my ear. I started round in
+terror. A man, pale and hollow-eyed, stood by my side. It was Gomez!
+
+"Listen quickly!" he said. "I must not stay by your side! You are in
+danger! The English police are upon your track!"
+
+I caught hold of the railing to prevent myself from falling. Above my
+head, a little flock of pigeons lazily flapped their wings against the
+deep blue sky. All around, the sunlit air was full of laughing voices,
+and gaily dressed crowds of people were passing backwards and forwards
+only a few yards away. Already, one or two were glancing in
+my direction curiously. In a moment Paul would come out of the
+post-office, looking for me. I made a great effort, and steadied
+myself.
+
+"Tell me! What can I do?"
+
+He answered me quickly, keeping his back turned to the stream of
+people. "You must fly! It may be already too late, but in twenty-four
+hours you will certainly be arrested if you are in Florence. I have
+travelled night and day to find you. The holy saints grant that it may
+not be too late. Call yourself by a strange name; and if Paul de Vaux
+be with you, see that he alters his also. There are already two of the
+detectives in Florence searching for you. A third, with a warrant,
+may be here at any time. Get to the furthest corner of the world, for
+everything is known. Farewell!"
+
+He left me abruptly; and although I felt that my doom had been spoken,
+I walked firmly across the square to meet Paul. I would tell him
+everything. He should be my judge. My love should plead for me! It
+would triumph; yes! it would triumph! I was convinced of it! As for
+the danger I was in, I thought less of that.
+
+On the steps of the postoffice I met Paul. He held in his hand a
+bundle of papers, one of which he had opened, and, as he raised his
+head and looked at me, I saw that what I had dreaded had come to pass.
+He looked like a man stricken down by some sudden and terrible blow.
+He was white even to the lips, and a strange light burned in his eyes.
+
+He laid his hand upon my arm. Was it my fancy, or did he really recoil
+a little as he touched me? "Let us go home!" he said hoarsely. "I
+have--something to say to you!"
+
+We entered the carriage, which was waiting near, and drove off. We
+came together into this room. It was barely two hours ago. He closed
+the door and turned towards me. I did not wait for his question. I
+told him everything!
+
+Ah me! I had thought that love was a different thing. I had sinned,
+it is true, but he was not my judge. So I commenced, humbled and
+sorrowful indeed, but with no fear of what was before me. But
+gradually, as I watched his face, a cold, ghastly dread crept in upon
+me. What did it mean--that blank look of horror, his quiet withdrawal
+from the only caress I attempted? I finished--abruptly--and called out
+to him piteously,--
+
+"Paul! Paul! Why do you turn away? Oh! kiss me, Paul! It was horrible,
+but it was to save you!"
+
+He did not answer; he did not hold out his arms, or make any movement
+towards me. I touched his arm; and oh! horrible! he shuddered. I crept
+away into a corner of the room, with a strange, burning pain in my
+heart.
+
+"How long is it, since you saw Gomez?" he asked, and his voice,
+strained, yet low, seemed to come from a far distance.
+
+"An hour!--perhaps more--I cannot tell!"
+
+He stood before the door like a ghost. "I must go and try to find him!
+Forgive me, Adrea! I cannot talk now! I will come back!"
+
+So he left me. I have not seen him since! God only knows whether I
+shall see him again! My heart is torn with the agony of it! I cannot
+bear it any longer! If he is not here in half an hour I shall end it!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He has not come! Ten minutes more!
+
+Five minutes!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is done; I have taken poison! In half an hour I shall be dead! Oh!
+Paul, my love, my love, come to me! If I could only die in your
+arms, if I could only feel once more your kisses upon my lips! It is
+horrible to die alone! Already I feel weaker! Oh! if there be a God
+in heaven, send me Paul just for one last moment! I do not ask for
+forgiveness or pardon, only send me Paul! I am afraid to die alone!
+Never to see him again! Oh! I shall cry out! Paul! Paul! come to me! I
+do not ask for heaven, only to die in his arms, to----
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There were sounds upon the stairs, and in the hall; the sounds of a
+man's quick entrance and approach. Adrea, with that passionate
+prayer still quivering upon her lips, dragged herself to the door and
+listened. A moment's agonised apprehension, and then she staggered
+back, faint with joy. The door was opened, and quickly closed; Paul
+stood before her.
+
+"Oh! my love! my love," she murmured. "Take me in your arms! It is for
+the last time!"
+
+He moved to her side, and supported her. "Adrea," he said quietly, "I
+want you to change your things quickly, and come with me. There is
+a carriage at the door, and I have chartered a steamer to take us to
+Genoa. From there we can sail to-morrow for New York. Gomez was right;
+you are in danger here! Be brave, little woman, and all will be well!"
+
+She clung to him passionately, with her arms locked around his neck,
+and her wet face close to his. Only a confused sense of his words
+reached her. His tone and his embrace were sufficient.
+
+"And you?"
+
+"I go with you, of course! We shall begin a new life in a new world!
+Come! We have no time to lose!"
+
+"A new life in a new world." She repeated the words dreamily, still
+holding him to her. Then a sudden dizziness came. It passed away, but
+it reminded her that the end could not be far off.
+
+"Adrea, do you not understand? How cold your lips are! Try and bear
+up, love! We have a long journey before us!"
+
+She shook her head slowly. He began to notice that she was like a dead
+weight in his arms.
+
+"It is a long journey, love, but I go alone. You cannot come, Paul!
+Yet I am not afraid, now that you are here!"
+
+"Adrea! what do you mean? I will not leave you! Have courage! Adrea!
+Soon we shall leave all dangers behind us!"
+
+"Paul! do you not understand? I am dying!"
+
+Dying! He looked at her face, calm and even smiling, but terribly
+blanched and white, and he saw the empty phial upon the table. The
+whole truth swept in upon him. He staggered and almost fell with her.
+
+"It is best so," she whispered. "I only minded when--I thought that
+you might not be back in time. I am quite--content now!"
+
+"A doctor!" he cried hoarsely. "I must fetch a doctor! Adrea----"
+
+"Please don't!" she interrupted. "Long before he could come--I should
+be dead. It is so much better! Did you think, Paul, that I could have
+you--tied for life--to a poor, hunted woman--forced to live always
+in a foreign country? Oh! no, no! I have had this poison by me ever
+since--in case--anything happened. Paul, carry me--to the sofa! There
+is--no pain--but I am getting weaker--very weak. My eyes are a little
+dim, too--but I can see you--Paul!"
+
+He obeyed her, and sank on his knees, with his arms still around her.
+It seemed to him that she had never been so lovely as in those last
+few minutes of her life. It was wonderful to see her resigned as she
+was.
+
+There was a brief silence, broken only by a sharp, convulsed sob from
+the kneeling man. Adrea, who heard it, stretched out her hand, and
+passed it caressingly along the side of his face. He caught it and
+covered it with kisses.
+
+"Paul, we have been happy together, have we not?"
+
+"My darling, you know it!"
+
+She raised herself a little, and spoke earnestly. "For me--it has been
+like heaven--and yet I am not sure--that it would have lasted.
+You would have wearied soon! My nature is too light a one to have
+satisfied you always. I have felt it! I--I know it!"
+
+She paused, struggling for breath. He did not answer her. He only
+held her tighter, and whispered her name lovingly. In a moment she
+re-opened her eyes.
+
+"So--it is best--" she continued, with a little more effort. "Paul,
+things seem all so clear--to me now! I think of you in the future--it
+must be a happy future, Paul--I know it will! I see you the master of
+that grand old home of yours, up amongst the moors you love so much.
+I can see you there in the future, living your quiet, country
+life--always the same, honourable and just. I like to think of you
+there--it is so natural. I want you--to forget--these days then!
+Remember that it was--I--who--came to you, Paul! You had no--choice.
+I would come. If there has been--any sin--it has been--mine only. You
+were far above--poor me! I have dragged you down--a little way--but
+you will go back again! You will marry--some one good and worthy of
+you. It is my--last wish! God bless you, Paul, dear--dear, Paul. I
+think that I am--going now--kiss me!"
+
+"My love! My love! Oh! that you could live to be happy with me once
+more!"
+
+"There are steps upon the stairs--I think--but they come--too late!
+The book on the table--take it! It will--tell you--what you do not
+know--of my life! Farewell! Sister Elise! Is that you? Ah! back
+once more--in the old convent garden! How sweet--and gentle--the air
+is--and what perfumes! You here, Paul! You too! How dim your face
+seems--and yet--how happy it makes me--to see it. Dear Paul! we have
+been--so happy! Farewell!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There were strangers in the room, but they came too late. They found
+only the corpse of a woman, whose dead lips were parted in a strangely
+sweet smile, and a strong man who had swooned by her side in the utter
+abandonment of his grief. The hand of human justice had been stayed by
+God's mercy!
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+DO YOU LIKE MENTAL SURPRISES?
+
+Things that make your eyes open wider, and cause you to assume a
+changed position, so that you can continue your reading without
+tiring? Sustained excitement and strange scenes that compel you to
+read on page after page with unflagging interest? Something that lifts
+you out of your world of care and business, and transports you to
+another land, clime, and scenes? Yes? Then don't fail to read
+
+THE
+
+MYSTERY OF THE RAVENSPURS
+
+BY FRED M. WHITE
+
+the best book written by this popular author, since his "Crimson
+Blind" and "Corner House," which met with such tremendous success.
+
+It is a romantic tale of adventure, mystery and amateur detective
+work, with scenes laid in England, India, and the distant and
+comparatively unknown Thibet. A band of mystics from the latter
+country are the prime movers in the various conspiracies, and their
+new, unique, weird, strange methods form one of the features of the
+story.
+
+The book contains 320 pages, with four full-page illustrations and
+wrapper design in colors by DE TAKACS, handsomely bound in cloth.
+
+PRICE, $1.25, NET. BY MAIL, POSTPAID, $1.35.
+
+WE HEARTILY RECOMMEND THIS BOOK.
+
+FOR SALE WHEREVER BOOKS ARE SOLD.
+
+J. S. OGILVIE PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+57 Rose Street, New York
+
+
+
+
+OGILVIE'S POPULAR COPYRIGHT LINE
+
+
+THE PEER AND THE WOMAN
+
+BY E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM
+
+AUTHOR OF "A MONK OF CRUTA," "THE MISSIONER," ETC.
+
+_One of the Most Popular Authors of the present day._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A story of romance, mystery, and adventure, in which, as in many
+mystery stories, there is the adventuress, with whom, for some reason,
+the peer, notwithstanding his breeding and social position, becomes
+entangled, until he is mysteriously put out of the way. From this
+point on complication and adventure succeed each other in rapid
+succession, holding the reader in rapt fascination until the end
+of the story is reached, where the plots of love and mysterious
+disappearances are surprisingly unfolded.
+
+This story has been written in Mr. Oppenheim's most entertaining and
+interesting style, and will be appreciated by all lovers of the class
+of fiction which has made him famous.
+
+_A Wonderful Story of Mystery._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bound in cloth, handsomely stamped in colors.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SENT BY MAIL, POSTAGE PAID, FOR 75 CENTS.
+
+You can buy this at any bookstore or direct from us.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+J. S. OGILVIE PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+57 Rose Street, New York
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's A Monk of Cruta, by E. Phillips Oppenheim
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MONK OF CRUTA ***
+
+***** This file should be named 31535.txt or 31535.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/1/5/3/31535/
+
+Produced by Alcina Hadwin, Suzanne Shell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/31535.zip b/31535.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4ae72c1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/31535.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c90cb46
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #31535 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/31535)