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+Project Gutenberg's It May Be True, Vol. III (of III), by Mrs. Wood
+
+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/license
+
+
+Title: It May Be True, Vol. III (of III)
+
+Author: Mrs. Wood
+
+Release Date: March 18, 2012 [EBook #39193]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IT MAY BE TRUE, VOL. III (OF III) ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Sue Fleming and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Note. There were a number of printer's errors
+ within the text which have not been altered.
+
+
+
+
+ IT MAY BE TRUE.
+
+
+ A NOVEL.
+
+
+ IN THREE VOLUMES.
+
+
+ BY
+ MRS. WOOD.
+
+
+ VOL. III.
+
+
+ London:
+ T. CAUTLEY NEWBY, PUBLISHER,
+ 30, WELBECK STREET, CAVENDISH SQUARE,
+ 1865.
+
+ [THE RIGHT OF TRANSLATION IS RESERVED.]
+
+
+
+
+ IT MAY BE TRUE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+IS THERE A FATE IN IT?
+
+ "The grief of slighted love, suppress'd,
+ Scarce dull'd her eye, scarce heav'd her breast;
+ Or if a tear, she strove to check,
+ A truant tear stole down her neck,
+ It seem'd a drop that, from his bill,
+ The linnet casts, beside a rill,
+ Flirting his sweet and tiny shower
+ Upon a milk-white April flower:--
+ Or if a sigh, breathed soft and low,
+ Escaped her fragrant lips; e'en so
+ The zephyr will, in heat of day,
+ Between two rose leaves fan its way."
+
+ COLMAN.
+
+
+Amy had been some three weeks at home, and as yet there had been no
+improvement in Mrs. Neville's health to justify her daughter's return to
+Brampton. There was the same lassitude, the same weariness. She would
+lie on the sofa day after day, with no bodily ailment save that of
+weakness, and an utter inability to get better, and apparently with no
+wish to do so. She never complained, but was ever grateful and content.
+It was as if life were waning away imperceptibly, and her spirits, which
+had always bravely struggled through all her trials and sorrows, had at
+last sunk never to rise again.
+
+Amy seldom left her, but generally sat by her side, on a low footstool,
+reading or working. Sometimes Mrs. Neville would lay her hand gently on
+the fair masses of hair, and Amy, whose heart was very sorrowful, would
+hold her head lower still so that her tears might fall unseen.
+
+There was something peculiarly tender and very pitying in the way the
+hand was placed on her head; at least Amy thought so, and strove more
+than ever to be cheerful, lest her mother, who lay so silently watching
+her, should guess at the secret grief in her heart which she was
+striving so hard, and she trusted successfully, to overcome; while, as
+yet, no word of it had passed between them. If Mrs. Neville thought her
+daughter's spirits less joyous, or her manner more quiet, while her eyes
+no longer flashed with their old bright expression, but at times drooped
+sadly under their long lashes, she said nothing; and Amy, while obliged
+sometimes to talk of her life at Brampton, never mentioned Charles's
+name; yet in the solitude of her own room she sometimes thought of him,
+and how as she had sat at one of the cross-stations, on her road from
+Standale, awaiting the arrival of the train that was to take her on to
+Ashleigh, she had seen Charles amongst the crowd hurrying into the one
+bound for Brampton; while she, soon afterwards, was speeding along over
+a part of the very way he had so recently travelled. Both had been
+waiting some twenty minutes at the same station, and yet neither had
+been near enough to speak, but had been as effectually separated as
+though miles had divided them, instead of so many yards. Strange
+fatality! which might have altered the future lives of both.
+
+Yes, he had gone to Brampton the very morning she had left it: one half
+hour later on her part, and they would have met. She was glad she had
+not missed the train, and that they had not met. Glad that she was
+absent from the park, and not obliged to see him day after day, or hear
+the children talk, as they sometimes did, of their uncle.
+
+Julia often wrote to Amy all the chit-chat of the park. How Charles
+Linchmore had returned, and was often at Frances' side; and how the
+latter's airs had become more intolerable in consequence. How Anne
+snubbed Mr. Hall as much as ever; but was, in Julia's opinion, more
+pleased with him, and more contented to put up with his grave reproofs
+than she used to be; and how Julia thought it would be a match in the
+end, and wondered what kind of a clergyman's wife she would make. And
+lastly, that Mr. Vavasour had left the park.
+
+Anne also wrote, but only once, and her letter was short; yet Amy read
+it over and over again, until she knew the last few lines by heart, and
+wondered what they meant; or whether they were hastily written, and had
+no point or hidden meaning, but were simply penned and then forgotten,
+as many things often were, that were said by Anne Bennet, in her quick
+impulsiveness. "Come back, Miss Neville," she wrote, "we all want you
+sadly. As for Charles, he is not himself, and will be lost!"
+
+These were the words that troubled Amy, were ever at her heart all day,
+and chased away sleep from her pillow, until her tired overwrought brain
+relieved itself in silent, secret tears--tears far more painful than
+passionate sobs. Those are at the surface, and soon over, they cure
+grief by their very bitterness, and by the self-abandonment of the
+sufferer; the others lie deeper and break the heart.
+
+These words of Anne's, whether incautiously written or not, determined
+Amy on not returning to Brampton, until Charles Linchmore's leave had
+expired; and that, she knew, must be in another week or so. If Miss
+Bennet meant he was fast losing his heart to Frances, and that Amy must
+go back to wean him away, how little she knew of the pride of her
+woman's nature. What! seek, or throw herself in the way of a man's love?
+Scarcely wooed, be won? Amy shrank at the very idea. No, if her love was
+worth having it was worth winning; and that,--not with the sternness of
+man's nature, not by the force of his strong will, not by exciting her
+jealousy with another, but by gentleness and kindness; and then her
+heart reverted to Robert Vavasour, and she wished she could love him,
+for had he not ever been kind to her? and gentle, very, even when she
+had pained him most.
+
+He had been very kind to her, there was no doubt about that, not only to
+her, but for her sake to those most dear to her. At one time came some
+beautiful hot-house grapes, at another some delicate game. Little Sarah
+called them the gifts of the "good unknown."
+
+The rail was open all the way to quiet Ashleigh now, and although the
+place did not boast of a railway van or even porter, still the station
+master always found some willing lad ready to take the basket to the
+cottage, and great was the excitement it caused to Sarah and even quiet
+old Hannah, but then the latter always knew her darling Miss Amy would
+marry an Earl at the very least.
+
+Mrs. Neville never questioned, but looked more searchingly in Amy's
+face, laid her hand more caressingly those days on her head, and spoke
+more softly and lovingly, while Amy never said a word.
+
+Once, when Sarah came dancing into the room, in her wild spirits, with
+another beautiful bunch of grapes, Mrs. Neville laid her thin, wasted
+hand on Amy's, and said gently,--
+
+"Is it all right, Amy?"
+
+"All," was the reply, and Mrs. Neville leant back again, apparently
+satisfied.
+
+But things could not go on thus for ever. Robert Vavasour, in his lonely
+home, thought more and more of Amy, and the days he was idly wasting
+away from her, when he ought to be striving for her love. At length, his
+solitude became unbearable, he could stand it no longer; whether wise or
+no, he must leave Somerton, the place was growing unbearable to him, and
+go to Ashleigh. But could he go without an intimation of some kind to
+her he loved? Yes, he must; for how send a note to Amy? Would she not
+look upon his letter as an impertinence, seeing she had given him no
+permission to write? So he made up his mind to go to Ashleigh without
+warning, for come what might, he must go.
+
+Robert Vavasour was not of an impulsive character, apt like Charles to
+be led away on the sudden spur of the moment, but he felt that remaining
+at Somerton would never advance his interest with her in whom all his
+dearest hopes of life were centred; he should simply lose the kindly
+feeling he had already gained in her heart, or what was worse still, be
+forgotten altogether.
+
+The craving wish to see her, grew stronger and stronger within him each
+day, until he could no longer refuse to gratify it, and ere another week
+passed over his head, he was speeding along the road to Ashleigh,
+arriving there by the one o'clock train.
+
+It was a stormy day, heavy showers of rain, with occasional sunshine,
+but Robert Vavasour, who saw everything _couleur de rose_, was charmed
+with the lovely scenery and quaintness of the cottages; in one of
+which,--perhaps the prettiest in the place,--he secured some, pleasant
+rooms for the time of his stay and then walked out in the hope of
+meeting her he loved. Vain hope! as Mrs. Neville seemed so much weaker,
+Amy did not leave her side. Hannah and little Sarah passed him on their
+way down the lane, and on their return, gave rather a high-flown account
+of the tall, handsome gentleman they had seen. Amy never guessed, or
+even thought of Robert Vavasour, but her heart fluttered strangely as it
+quickly passed through her mind that it might be Charles Linchmore. But
+alas! she failed in recognising the description so eagerly given and
+descanted on by Sarah.
+
+The morning of the next day was hopelessly wet, and Robert Vavasour's
+courage rose--with his anxiety to see Amy,--to fever heat; and,
+determined to see her at all hazards, he bent his steps towards the
+cottage.
+
+Sarah, tired of the dulness within doors, was gazing idly from the
+window, little thinking that her curiosity concerning the stranger she
+had seen only the day before was so soon to be gratified. But there he
+was coming along the road, and very eagerly the little girl watched him.
+
+"Oh! sister Amy," cried she, "here's the gentleman I saw yesterday, do
+come and look at him before he goes out of sight; he'll turn down the
+elm tree walk in another moment."
+
+But before Amy could have reached the window, had she been so inclined,
+he had opened the little gate, and was coming up the gravel walk.
+
+Sarah shrank away from the window, and clapped her hands with delight.
+"Why he's coming here, only think of that, Mamma. Oh! I guess it must be
+the 'good unknown' himself."
+
+In another moment all doubt was at an end, and Robert Vavasour in the
+little sitting-room, welcomed and thanked by Mrs. Neville at least, and
+Sarah also, if he might judge by her glistening eyes, although she was
+too shy to say a word, while Amy, if she did not say she was glad to see
+him, did not rebuke him for coming, nor appear to look on his visit as
+an intrusion; and soon he was quite at home with them all, and when Amy,
+who had been out to Hannah, to try and make some addition to their
+homely dinner, returned, she was surprised to see on what friendly terms
+he was.
+
+"I am afraid, dear mamma," she said, "you are exerting yourself too
+much. You are so unaccustomed to see a stranger."
+
+"Scarcely a stranger, Amy. Mr. Vavasour claims our friendship for his
+kindness; and besides, he tells me he has known you for some time."
+
+"Some two months, is it not?" replied Amy.
+
+"Hardly so long, I think, Miss Neville. It seems but yesterday since I
+first saw you."
+
+"Are you only here for the day?" asked Amy.
+
+"I am here for a week," he replied; "some good lady in the village has
+allowed me to take up my abode with her for that time, or it may be
+longer, as any one would be tempted to remain in the clean pretty room
+she showed me."
+
+"It must be Mrs. Turner, Mamma; her cottage is so very nice."
+
+"If it is," replied Mrs. Neville, "you will have no cause to complain,
+Mr. Vavasour; we stayed with her for a day or two on our first arrival,
+and were much pleased with her attention, and the cleanliness of the
+house."
+
+"Is this place often visited by strangers? It must in summer be a lovely
+spot. It is prettier than Brampton, Miss Neville."
+
+"Prettier, but not so grand; and the views are not so extensive."
+
+"You prefer Brampton?"
+
+"Oh, no! Ashleigh is my home, and then I like it for its very
+quietness."
+
+"It will no longer be quiet," replied Mrs. Neville. "Stray visitors have
+often reached it since I have been here; and now the easy access to it
+by rail will, of necessity, bring more, and Ashleigh will, perhaps,
+become immortalized by the lovers of pic-nics. But here is Hannah to
+announce dinner. You must excuse my joining you, Mr. Vavasour, as I am
+unable to leave the sofa."
+
+After dinner the weather changed; the heavy clouds cleared away, and a
+faint gleam of sunshine shone out.
+
+Amy proposed a walk, as she thought her mother would be glad of a little
+rest and quiet after her exertion, so with her sister she went with
+Robert Vavasour down into the village.
+
+So dreary as the lane looked now, with its tall leafless trees! But
+their visitor was charmed with everything, and would not allow its
+desolation. They inspected his new abode, which turned out to be Mrs.
+Turner's; then through the village, and home by road, and found Mrs.
+Elrington had come to spend the evening--and what a pleasant one it was!
+Even Amy allowed that, although she did not feel quite at rest within
+herself, or satisfied at Robert Vavasour's having come to Ashleigh;
+still she found herself later on in the evening laughing and chatting,
+in something of the old spirit, at seeing her mother take an interest in
+the conversation, and not nearly so weary and tired as she usually was.
+
+"You are so very good," said Amy, as she went out to open the cottage
+door for Robert, as he went away.
+
+"Good! Miss Neville. How? In what way?"
+
+"In being content with our dull life here."
+
+"It is anything but dull to me. My life lately has been a simply
+existing one--the slow passing of each day, or counting the hours for
+the night to arrive, and bring a short respite from the monotony of a
+dreary life. Being here is--is heaven to me! in comparison to my late
+existence at Somerton Park."
+
+There was no mistaking the impassioned tone in which this was said. Amy
+hastened to change the subject.
+
+"I am sure your visit has given Mamma pleasure."
+
+"Mrs. Neville seems a great invalid, I do not wonder at your anxiety for
+her while absent." As a stranger he had remarked the exhaustion and
+weariness, although to Amy her mother had seemed so much better.
+
+"Do you think she looks so very ill?" she asked, anxiously.
+
+"I think there is great weakness," he replied, evading a direct answer.
+"Have you a clever medical attendant here?"
+
+"Yes, I think so. Dr. Sellon, is at least, very kind and attentive, no
+one could be more so; he says Mamma merely wants rousing, and we must
+not allow this apathy and weariness to increase, but strive to divert
+her mind, even as it was this evening, and all through your kindness."
+
+"Ashleigh is a lovely spot, but rather too quiet for an invalid whose
+mind requires rousing, and whose vital energies seem so prostrated. I
+should suggest a total change of scene. A new and novel life, in fact,
+in a place perfectly strange to her, would, I should think, conduce more
+towards her recovery than all the doctors and medicine in the world."
+
+"Dr. Sellon has never said so; never even hinted at such a thing,"
+replied Amy, thoughtfully. Alas! how could it be managed, even with the
+sacrifice of all her salary.
+
+"Have you had any further advice?" he asked.
+
+"No. I wrote the other day to Dr. Ashley, our old doctor, who attended
+us all for so many years. I thought perhaps he might be coming this way
+and would call; but, although he wrote me a very kind reply, he does
+not even hint at such a stray chance happening."
+
+"Does he offer any opinion or advice on Mrs. Neville's case?"
+
+"Yes. You can read it if you like," and she took it from her pocket and
+gave it to him; "only do not mention anything about it to Mamma, she
+might not like my having written; or it might make her nervous in
+supposing herself worse than she is. It is not exactly a secret," she
+added, blushing slightly, "as Mrs. Elrington knows of it, and approved
+of my letter."
+
+"Do not wrong me by supposing I should think so, Miss Neville. I will
+take it home, and read it at my leisure, if you will allow me. Good
+night."
+
+The door closed, and he was gone before Amy could reply; but as she
+turned to re-enter the sitting-room, she sighed and murmured,
+
+"There is a fate in some things. Is there in my life?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+FOR BETTER, FOR WORSE.
+
+ "My life went darkling like the earth, nor knew it shone a star,
+ To that dear Heaven on which it hung in worship from afar.
+ O, many bared their beauty, like brave flowers to the bee;
+ He might have ranged through sunny fields, but nestled down to me;
+ And daintier dames would proudly have smiled him to their side,
+ But with a lowly majesty he sought me for his Bride;
+ And grandly gave his love to me, the dearest thing on Earth,
+ Like one who gives a jewel, unweeting of its worth."
+
+ MASSEY.
+
+
+A fortnight passed away, and still Robert Vavasour lingered at Ashleigh,
+although he seemed no nearer winning Amy's love than when he first came;
+yet he could not tear himself away. Sometimes he was gloomy and
+desponding; and on these days he never came near the cottage. At others
+his hopes rose when only a smile or glance kinder than usual came from
+her he loved, and then he was the life of the little party. But when he
+fancied Amy was beginning to care for him a little more, she would
+suddenly shrink within herself again, and become as cold and reserved as
+ever, but then he never thought that it was his almost tender manner
+that chilled and frightened her, lest he should think she was
+encouraging his suit. Still he hoped on, would not despair. What lover
+ever does? and _he_ loved her so dearly.
+
+One morning, finding Mrs. Neville alone, he told her of his love for
+Amy, of the compact between them, and of his hopes. The widow did not
+discourage them, she liked Mr. Vavasour, and would have rejoiced at
+seeing Amy his wife; still she would not influence Amy in any way, but
+leave her free to choose for herself; but since she loved no other,--and
+Mrs. Neville half sighed as if she almost doubted it,--she thought in
+time the young girl's heart might be won.
+
+And with this Robert Vavasour was obliged to be content. Content? he was
+anything but that; he was impatient, and fretted at the delay and slow
+progress he was making, he would have been more than human if he had
+not; but with Amy he was ever kind and gentle; she knew nothing, saw
+nothing of his anxious heart and sometimes despairing hopes.
+
+And so the days flew on, Mrs. Neville neither better nor worse; some
+days more languid, at others less so and able to sit up; but with no
+certainty about it, so as to lead those most anxious to believe she was
+in anyway advancing towards recovery.
+
+One morning they were surprised by a visit from Dr. Ashley. He had taken
+a holiday, he said, and thought he could not do better than run down to
+see his old friends, and was putting up, strange to say, at Mrs.
+Turner's, whose cottage had been pointed out to him as the prettiest in
+the village; and had certainly stretched like india rubber for the
+occasion, but then the gentleman already lodging there had kindly
+consented to share the parlour with him; and they were to dine together
+during his stay.
+
+If Amy suspected Robert Vavasour of being concerned in this sudden move,
+she said nothing; but then she had grown very silent of late; perhaps
+she pondered these things more deeply in her heart; certain it was she
+ceased to be so distant and reserved to Robert, and he in consequence
+became more gentle and loving. Perhaps if Amy's thoughts could have
+shaped themselves into words, they would have been, "_He_ does not love
+me or he would be here; and I? what can I do?"
+
+But Charles Linchmore's staying away was no proof that he did not love
+Amy, believing as he did that her heart was another's; had he not
+thought so, not even his sister-in-law's frowns and sarcasms would have
+kept him from her side. As it was, he knew not even of Robert Vavasour's
+presence at Ashleigh, as Amy, when she wrote to Julia and Anne, never
+mentioned it, feeling sure of a bantering letter in return; as of
+course they would guess of his love for her, and imagine it was going to
+be a match, whether she denied it or no; certainly they would never
+think of the true reason that had brought him--namely, her refusal.
+
+It was the second and last day of Dr. Ashley's stay; one of Mrs.
+Neville's worst days, and she had not as yet made her appearance
+downstairs when Mrs. Elrington entered the room where the two sisters
+sat.
+
+"Mamma has not come down yet," said Amy, "she was very wakeful all
+night, and I persuaded her to rest a little longer this morning,
+although she was very loath to do so, on Dr. Ashley's account."
+
+"Has he been to see her yet?"
+
+"No, but I am expecting him every moment. Mamma was so much better
+yesterday that perhaps she is now suffering from the over-excitement of
+seeing him."
+
+"Very possibly. Old times must have come before her so forcibly, and
+they are but sad ones for your mother to look back to. It is perhaps
+just as well Dr. Ashley should see her at her worst. What is his opinion
+of Mrs. Neville?"
+
+"I did not ask him, and he never volunteered to tell me; but I must
+ascertain to-day. Do you not think I ought to?"
+
+"Certainly I do, Amy; you would be wrong if you did not. I think if I
+were you I would ask his _true_," and Mrs. Elrington laid a stress on
+the word, "opinion on your mother's case."
+
+"Do you think her very ill?" asked Amy.
+
+"Yes, Amy, I do," replied Mrs. Elrington, gently. "That is to say, I
+think her very weak, weaker than she was when I wrote to you after her
+recovery from the severe illness she had."
+
+Amy sighed. "I sometimes fancy," she said, "that Ashleigh, lovely as it
+is, does not suit Mamma; you know her quiet life here is so very
+different from what she has been accustomed to; but I do not see how a
+change is to be effected."
+
+"It would be a great expense, certainly."
+
+"It would, and the means to effect it with will be smaller; as I fear,
+Mrs. Elrington, I shall have to resign my situation at Brampton; I
+cannot leave Mamma so lonely, neither can I be happy away from her while
+she is so ill."
+
+"I have been thinking the same thing, Amy; your mother certainly does
+require all your care and attention. It would not be right to leave
+her."
+
+"Do you think Mrs. Linchmore will be annoyed at my leaving in the middle
+of my quarter without any hint or warning whatever?"
+
+"Not under the circumstances, Amy. You were happy there?"
+
+"Yes, as happy as I shall ever be away from home; I was very fond of my
+pupils, of Edith especially."
+
+"Was she the youngest?"
+
+"No, the eldest. An orphan niece of Mr. Linchmore's, and adopted by him
+at her mother's and his sister's death. I shall regret leaving Brampton.
+I think change must be one of the worst trials of a governess's life."
+
+"It is a sad one, no doubt, when, as in your case, a governess happens
+to be attached to those she is leaving. Perhaps," continued Mrs.
+Elrington, as she rose, "I had better not wait to see your mother now.
+As soon as you have made up your mind, Amy, I would advise your writing
+at once to Mrs. Linchmore without delay."
+
+Amy leant back in her chair very sorrowfully after Mrs. Elrington had
+gone. If she had had any doubt about the propriety of leaving Brampton,
+her mother's old friend--she, whose advice she so valued--had cleared it
+away; it was evident the step must be taken, however slow her heart
+might be to break asunder the one tie that yet seemed to bind her to
+Charles Linchmore.
+
+"What are you thinking of, Amy?" asked Sarah, who had been watching her
+sister for some time. "You look so sad."
+
+"Do I? I was thinking of Mamma, and whether we could do anything to make
+her better; and about my leaving Brampton, Sarah."
+
+"But that will be so nice to have you always here; you can't be sorry
+about that, sister."
+
+"But then I shall lose a great deal of money; and Mamma will have to go
+without a great many things she really wants. Port wine cannot be bought
+for nothing, Sarah."
+
+"Ah! what a pity it is we are not rich, then we might take her back to
+our dear old home. I am sure she would get well there. Don't you think
+so?"
+
+"She might, Sarah. But I think if change is to do her good, she will
+require a greater change than that."
+
+"Further off still?" asked the child. "Where to, Amy?"
+
+"I cannot tell; but Dr. Ashley can."
+
+"But can't you guess at all? Not even the name?" persisted her sister.
+
+"No. But I think somewhere abroad; a long way off. And that would cost
+money. Yes, more money than we have, a great deal," sighed Amy.
+
+"Ah!" said the child, "when I'm grown up I'll marry a man with lots of
+money, just like Mr. Vavasour. Hannah says he's awfully rich; and then
+he should take us away to a lovely place by the sea-side where Mamma and
+all of us could live like princesses. I am sure she would get well
+then."
+
+This innocent remark of Sarah's was a home-thrust to Amy; a death blow
+to her hopes, and roused her at once. Should she sit so quietly and
+passively when her mother's life was at stake? Nurse and hoard up a love
+in her heart that she was ashamed had ever entered there from its very
+hopelessness and selfishness? There was Dr. Ashley coming up the walk,
+she would first ask his opinion as to the necessity of a change; and if
+he thought it necessary? Then--then. Once again Amy sighed, and said,
+"It is my fate; it must be so," and then went out into the other room,
+and quietly awaited the doctor's coming.
+
+Some ten minutes elapsed, during which Amy was restless and anxious;
+still she would not pause to think now, lest her heart should give way;
+so she walked about even as Frances Strickland often did in her
+impatient moods, took up the books one by one off the table and looked
+at their titles--read them she could not--and then the doctor's heavy
+tread sounded on the staircase, and she went out and met him.
+
+"Will you come in here, Dr. Ashley?" she said. "I want to thank you for
+so kindly coming to see Mamma. It is so very kind of you." Amy knew
+nothing of the ten pound note so carefully stowed away in his waistcoat
+pocket for the expenses of his homeward journey.
+
+"Pray say no more, my dear Miss Neville," he said. "It pains me."
+
+And Amy did not. Perhaps she thought it was painful to be thanked for
+what in her innermost heart she half suspected he was paid for.
+
+"How did you find Mamma, Dr. Ashley?" she asked.
+
+"Well, not quite so bright as yesterday, but still no material change
+for the worse. Dr Sellon tells me she often has these ups and downs."
+
+"Any unusual excitement appears to weaken her for the time. Dr. Sellon
+does not attend regularly. I only call him in when I think Mamma really
+requires it."
+
+"Quite right. Your mother's case is one requiring care and--and
+everything good and strengthening you can give her."
+
+"Do you think Mamma very ill?" Amy could not bring herself to ask if he
+thought she would recover, although that thought had been at her heart
+for days, and she had driven it away and would not give it utterance.
+
+"There is weakness,--great weakness," he replied. "I cannot see that
+Mrs. Neville has any other disease."
+
+"But--but I fear you are evading my question, Dr. Ashley. I wish to know
+exactly what your opinion is of Mamma."
+
+"My dear young lady," he said, kindly, "the opinion I have given is a
+true one, though perhaps not all the truth, and--well, she requires
+great care. There is a prostration of the vital powers--great want of
+energy. She wants rousing. Every means should be tried to accomplish
+that; otherwise, I need not say, this weakness and debility will
+increase, and of necessity do mischief."
+
+"Every means," replied Amy, "but what means? what must I do?"
+
+"Whatever lies in your power: whatever the patient, which I know she is
+in both senses of the word, expresses a wish for. She should be humoured
+in everything, but I need not tell you that, Miss Neville."
+
+"And can nothing else be done?--no change of air tried?"
+
+"Decidedly, if possible. It is the _one_ remedy needful; the only
+remedy, in fact, and I should have named it at first, only I deemed it
+impracticable of accomplishment."
+
+"You think Mamma might recover if she went away?" asked Amy.
+
+"With God's help, I do; but the step should be taken at once. If delayed
+it might be too late. And now, keep up your spirits and hope for the
+best. Remember there is nothing so bad as a tearful face and aching
+heart for your mother to see."
+
+"Too late!" Those words rang in Amy's ears all day. It should not be too
+late. And yet how nearly had her mother been sacrificed to her blind
+infatuation for one who she now felt had never loved her, but only
+carelessly flirted to trifle away the hours that perhaps hung heavy on
+his hands. Alas! what would Mr. Linchmore say, did he know that the very
+fate he had warned her would be hers if she allowed her heart to become
+enslaved by Mr. Vavasour, had even overtaken her at the hand of his
+brother.
+
+Not many days after Dr. Ashley had gone, a letter arrived from Anne
+Bennet. It ran thus:--
+
+ "Brampton Park,
+ "February 25th.
+
+ "MY DEAR MISS NEVILLE,
+
+ "I have almost made up my mind to torment you with a letter every
+ day, this place being so dull and dreary that the mere fact of
+ writing is quite a delightful episode in my long day. I should be
+ happy enough if Frances were away; but you know how I always
+ disliked that girl. Just imagine my disgust, then, at her remaining
+ here, for, of course, Julia has told you she herself and every one
+ else is gone, excepting Frances and Charles; the latter, I suppose,
+ remains in the hope of soon seeing you. Why don't you come back? I
+ declare it is shameful of you to remain away so long, when you must
+ know how wretched you are making him, and how devotedly he loves
+ you. I should not tell you this, only Frances drives me to it, and
+ I am just at the root of a grand secret. Julia behaved
+ shamefully--would not help me in the least, as she would persist in
+ declaring it was curiosity--how I hate the word!--so I had nothing
+ for it but to take Mr. Hall into my confidence, the result of which
+ has been that I have promised, some long time hence, to become Mrs.
+ Hall; and for the time being, we are turned into a pair of
+ turtle-doves, only instead of billing and cooing, we are snapping
+ and snarling all day. Adieu. Answer every word of this letter,
+ especially that relating to Charles, who is, I am certain, as
+ devotedly yours as
+
+ "Your loving friend,
+ "ANNE BENNET."
+
+This letter, with its mention of Charles Linchmore, pained Amy, and
+roused her slumbering pride. She would answer it at once, every word of
+it, and for ever put an end to Anne's mention of his name. She should
+see that Amy was as proud in some things as the haughty Mrs. Linchmore
+herself, or the defiant Frances. No woman should think she would stoop
+one iota for any man's love; while as for Charles, Anne was deceived in
+her belief of his love for her, even as she had been; but it was not
+well her heart should be reminded of the one image still slumbering
+there. Was she not as much bound to Robert Vavasour as if she were
+already engaged to him? or did she ever prevent his coming to the
+cottage by being ungracious?
+
+No; Amy had made up her mind to love him, and was ever ready to listen
+to his words, or walk with him. No fits of dread despair assailed him
+now. His whole life seemed a bright sunshine; even the dull, desolate
+walk up from the village was pleasant, because every step brought him
+nearer to the cottage.
+
+That evening--the evening of the day that brought Anne's letter--Amy,
+while old Hannah cleared away the tea things, went to her room and
+answered it. The doing so cost her many bitter thoughts, and perhaps a
+few tears were hastily dashed away. When it was done, her head ached
+sadly. She went to the window and threw it open. It was a lovely
+moonlight night. She crept softly downstairs and out into the garden,
+and leant over the little green gate at the end.
+
+Some ten minutes passed sadly away, and then a step sounded on the crisp
+gravel. Amy knew well it was Robert Vavasour's, still she did not move
+or turn her head. Was he going home without saying good night to her? or
+had he missed her and guessed where she was?
+
+"It is a cold night, Miss Neville," he said as he drew near. "Is it wise
+for you to be out without a shawl or wrap of any kind?"
+
+"The lovely night tempted me," she replied, "I thought it might cool my
+head, for it aches sadly."
+
+He did not reply. Amy too was silent; perhaps she guessed what he would
+say next.
+
+Presently he laid his hand on hers as it rested on the woodwork of the
+gate. She did not withdraw it, and then he boldly took the small fair
+hand in his.
+
+"Amy," he said, softly, while she trembled exceedingly, "do you remember
+I said I would ask you once again? The time has come. Amy, will you be
+my wife? I love you more dearly than when I first asked you in the old
+library at Brampton."
+
+She did not shrink from him or his encircling arm as she replied, "I
+think I love you now; I am sure I like you better, and will try to love
+you with all my heart. If this will satisfy you, then I will be your
+wife."
+
+And it did satisfy him, and he pressed his lips on her clear high,
+forehead, as, like a weary child, she laid her head on his shoulder as
+he gently drew her towards him.
+
+"I am very timid," she said, "and you must be patient, and not expect
+too much from me at first."
+
+These words, spoken so entreatingly and dependently, claiming, as they
+seemed to him, all his care and kindness, calmed him at once; he must
+be patient, and not frighten away by his too tender words the love only
+just dawning for him.
+
+"My darling," he whispered, "you will never find me other than kind and
+gentle with you. You have made me very happy, Amy."
+
+"Have I ever caused you unhappiness?" she asked, seeing he waited for a
+reply.
+
+"Only twice, Amy. Once when you tried to shut out all hope from my
+heart, and again when I fancied you cared for Charley Linchmore."
+
+That name! How it jarred through the chords of Amy's heart! Only a few
+moments ago she had determined on tearing it out, and never allowing
+another thought of him to enter there again. Was he dear to her still;
+now that she was the affianced bride of another? and that other, ought
+he not to know of her foolishness and folly? ought not every thought of
+her heart to be open to _him_ now? Yes, now; from this time, this hour;
+but not the past; that could only bring sorrow to him, shame to her.
+No! no! She could not lower herself in the eyes of Robert Vavasour, he
+who loved her so dearly, and whom she had just promised to try in time
+to love with all her heart. All her heart! Was this trembling at the
+mere mention of another's name the beginning of her promise? Would she
+ever forget Charles Linchmore? Ever love another as she could have loved
+him?
+
+Amy shivered slightly; but Robert Vavasour, who loved her more than his
+life, felt it.
+
+"You are cold, little one," he said, "and must go in. You know, Amy, I
+have the right to protect you from all ill now," and he led her back
+gently towards the cottage.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+LISTENING AT THE DOOR.
+
+ If thou hast crushed a flower,
+ The root may not be blighted;
+ If thou hast quenched a lamp,
+ Once more it may be lighted;
+ But on thy harp or on thy lute,
+ The string which thou hast broken
+ Shall never in sweet sound again
+ Give to thy touch a token!
+
+ If thou hast bruised a vine,
+ The summer's breath is healing,
+ And its clusters yet may glow
+ Thro' the leaves, their bloom revealing;
+ But if thou hast a cup o'erthrown
+ With a bright draught filled--oh! never
+ Shall earth give back the lavished wealth
+ To cool thy parched lips' fever.
+
+ Thy heart is like that cup,
+ If thou waste the love it bore thee;
+ And like that jewel gone,
+ Which the deep will not restore thee;
+ And like that string of heart or lute
+ Whence the sweet sound is scattered,--
+ Gently, oh! gently touch the chords,
+ So soon for ever shattered!
+
+ MRS. HEMANS.
+
+
+Anne had scarcely exaggerated when she told Amy that Brampton Park had
+become dull and stupid. It certainly had subsided into its old
+dullness, while the days themselves were even more dreary-looking than
+the house. Spring had commenced, the trees were beginning to put forth
+their blossoms, and the cold frosty weather had passed away; still the
+days were misty, and sometimes even foggy, with drizzling rain. Riding
+parties were scarcely ever attempted, and a walk was almost out of the
+question; while dancing and music were things unknown--the first
+impracticable, the latter no one seemed to have the spirits for. Mrs.
+Hopkins no longer walked about the corridors in stately importance; even
+Mason's crinoline seemed to have shrunk somewhat, as she flaunted less
+saucily about than when certain of meeting some one to whom to show off
+her last new cap.
+
+The two young girls still staying at Brampton did not get on very well
+together, although there was little show of outward unfriendliness on
+either part. Frances had long since found out that Anne Bennet disliked
+and suspected, even watched her; but no fear had she of being
+detected--her plans, so she flattered herself, had been too secretly and
+deeply laid for Anne's simple mind to fathom them; such a worm in her
+path she could tread upon whenever she liked, and utterly crush when it
+pleased her. So secure was she that often Anne was attacked with one of
+her sarcastic speeches. But Anne was too wary to be betrayed into an
+open quarrel, which would, most likely, have resulted in her being
+obliged to leave Brampton; so she contented herself by either treating
+her words with silent contempt or retorting in the same style, with the
+secret determination of some day having her revenge, much to poor Mr.
+Hall's dismay, as he was, of course, _faut de mieux_, as Anne said,
+taken into her confidence.
+
+Some twenty minutes Anne had been standing at one of the windows of the
+morning-room, which being just above the library, commanded a pretty
+good view down a part of the long avenue, through the branches of the
+still almost leafless trees.
+
+It was about a month since the eventful evening on which Amy had penned
+her reply to Anne.
+
+Charles, who had been reading, suddenly rose, and threw his book, with a
+gesture of weariness, on the table.
+
+"Are you going out?" asked Frances, laying her embroidery in her lap, as
+he rose.
+
+"Yes; it's close upon half-past four, and I shall just get a stroll
+before dinner; the book has made me stupid."
+
+"So has my embroidery. I think I will go with you, if you will let me."
+
+"You!" exclaimed Anne, from her distant post, ever ready to knock on the
+head any chance that drew the two together; "why your feet in their
+dainty boots would get soaked through and through, and you catch your
+death of cold. Do not encourage such self-immolation, Charles."
+
+"Yes," laughed Charles, "your town-made boots, Frances, were never made
+or intended for country wear. Anne's are, at least, an inch thick, and
+wade through any amount of mud or dirt: so if either of you come, it
+must be Anne."
+
+"I should say Anne would be a lively companion," retorted Frances,
+savagely. "I suppose by this time she could tell us how many drops of
+rain fall in a minute, and how many rooks have perched on the trees
+during the last half-hour."
+
+"I wish one of the rooks would fly and bring me the letter from Miss
+Neville that I have been expecting, and have been looking out for all
+the afternoon."
+
+This reply, with its allusion to the governess, Anne knew was the
+severest thing she could say; so, with a self-satisfied look at Frances'
+flushed face, she went away to put on her things.
+
+But her water-proof cloak could not be found--was nowhere. Anne was a
+great deal too independent to summon servants to her aid, so she must
+needs go down stairs to look for it, remembering, as she went, that she
+had hung it on the stand in the hall to dry. She was returning upstairs
+with it on her arm, when Charles's voice sounded in the morning-room.
+Anne hesitated a moment; but Frances's low mysterious tone was too great
+a temptation to be resisted, and with a half-frightened guilty look, she
+drew near the door and listened, thinking, perhaps, the end to be
+attained justified the means she was employing in attaining it.
+
+"My heart misgives me sometimes as to whether I did right in leaving her
+so precipitately, without a word," Charles was saying.
+
+"What would have been the use of speaking?" was the rejoinder, "when she
+so evidently cared, or rather showed her love for Mr. Vavasour."
+
+Anne could not hear the reply, and again Frances spoke.
+
+"I thought I never should recover her from that death-like faint."
+
+"If any woman deceived me, she did. I could have sworn she cared for me,
+on that very evening. How she trembled when I took her hand," said
+Charles.
+
+Again Anne was at fault with the answer; but whatever it was Charles's
+reply rang loud and clear--
+
+"I hate that fellow Vavasour!" he said.
+
+"Hush! hush!" said Frances; and Anne could imagine she was entreating
+him to talk lower; then the rustle of her dress was heard, and swift as
+thought Anne flew lightly and softly up the thickly-carpeted stairs. As
+she paused at the top, breathless and panting, she heard the door below
+gently closed.
+
+"Too late!" said she, with a smile of pleasure; and then went with
+something of a triumphant march to her room; where, shutting the door,
+she gave vent to one of her ringing laughs, which quickly subsided into
+a repentant, regretful look. "How shameful of me to laugh at such
+wickedness," said she, aloud; and then, settling herself in an old
+arm-chair, began to think over what she had heard, and draw her own
+conclusions therefrom.
+
+This to Anne's quick mind was not very difficult; she guessed it all, or
+almost all, at once, and never for a moment doubted they were talking
+of Miss Neville. Had she not given them the clue when she mentioned her
+name, before going up to dress?
+
+So Miss Neville had fainted. But where, and when? and how had Frances
+managed to persuade or convince Charles that the faint was caused by
+love for Mr. Vavasour? Charles had said, "That very evening." What
+evening? Was it the night before he went off so suddenly from Brampton?
+the night Mr. Vavasour had been brought home wounded and insensible? Was
+it possible Amy had fainted at seeing him? Yes, she might have done so;
+it was most probable she had; and yet that, as far as Anne could see,
+was no proof of her love for him. The sight might have grieved and
+shocked her, as it might have done any woman so timid as she was, and
+nervous and weak from the effects of recent illness.
+
+Anne had indeed arrived at the root of the mystery, and that in a manner
+she had little dreamed of. What a deep-laid plot it seemed, and how
+artfully and successfully concealed from her! She felt half inclined to
+rush boldly down, confront Frances, and tax her with her falsehood and
+injustice to Miss Neville; but on second thoughts she restrained herself
+and determined for once on assuming a new character. She would take a
+leaf out of Frances' book, and act as secretly and silently.
+
+As Anne sat ruminating a knock sounded at her door. What if it should be
+Frances? She sprung from her chair and busied herself in putting away
+her things ere she answered, "Come in;" but it was only a servant with
+letters, and at last Miss Neville's reply that she had been expecting
+for so many weeks.
+
+"Tell Mr. Charles," said Anne, "that it looks so very wet I have changed
+my mind and shall not go out. He need not wait for me."
+
+"Let Frances go out with him, if she likes," thought Anne; "hers will be
+but a short-lived pleasure. I will defeat her to-morrow," and then she
+once more sat down, and opened Amy's letter.
+
+
+ "Saturday.
+
+ "MY DEAR MISS BENNET,
+
+ "I feel much pleasure in congratulating you on your engagement to
+ Mr. Hall, and trust the day is not so far distant as you seem to
+ imagine when you will settle down into a pattern clergyman's wife.
+ I fear there is little chance of our meeting again as you so kindly
+ wish, as the very delicate state of my mother's health precludes
+ all possibility of my leaving home at present. It is therefore
+ imperative I should resign my situation with Mrs. Linchmore, much
+ as I shall regret leaving her and my pupils. Your allusion to Mr.
+ Charles Linchmore pains me. May I ask you to be silent on that
+ subject for the future; as, even in joke, I do not like any man
+ being thought to be desperately in love with me, and in this
+ instance Mr. Charles Linchmore barely treated me as a friend at
+ parting. With every wish for your future happiness in the new path
+ which you have chosen,
+
+ "I am,
+ "Yours very sincerely,
+ "AMY NEVILLE."
+
+This was the letter Amy had written, and which ought to have reached
+Anne a month ago, but Amy had entrusted the posting of it to a boy named
+Joe, who always came up every Sunday afternoon after church to have his
+dinner at the cottage. Unfortunately Joe forgot all about the letter,
+and before the next Sunday came round he was laid up with a fever, then
+prevalent at Ashleigh; and when able to get about again the letter never
+occurred to him until the first Sunday of his going to church; when
+again he donned his best suit, and on kneeling down, the letter rustled
+in his pocket. Joe's conscience smote him at once, and as soon as
+service was ended away he flew to the village post-office, spelling out
+as he went the address on the envelope; which, when he found was no
+sweetheart, but only a young lady, he concluded could be a letter of no
+consequence, and determined on saying nothing about its lying so long
+neglected in his pocket of his Sunday's best. Joe was not wise enough to
+know that trifles sometimes make or mar a life's happiness.
+
+Before Anne left her room she made up her mind how to act; not a word
+would she say that night to Charles, because nothing could be done, but
+on the morrow she would open his eyes, show him the snare into which he
+had fallen; the folly he had been guilty of through the cunning and
+duplicity of Frances.
+
+Anne sang all the way downstairs to the drawing-room as she went to
+dinner. The idea of having detected the proud Frances had perhaps more
+to do with this exuberance of spirits, than pleasure at Miss Neville's
+being done justice to, and Charles made happy; as for Mrs. Linchmore's
+frowns, Anne never gave them a thought.
+
+Charles spirits were, if anything, more forced than usual; Frances more
+reserved and silent, so that Anne's vivacity and evident good humour
+showed in their brightest colours.
+
+"What spirits you are in, Anne," remarked Mrs. Linchmore.
+
+"Perhaps friend Hall is on the wing," laughed Charles.
+
+"Or perhaps," replied Anne slowly, "my rooks have given me a lesson
+in--in--"
+
+"Cawing," suggested Frances, impertinently.
+
+"Why not in keeping a silent tongue?" Anne replied, with a scarcely
+perceptible touch of temper in the tone of her voice. "There is more
+wisdom in that, or perhaps my birds are wise birds, and have given me a
+hint where to find the golden link to my chain that has been missing so
+long."
+
+"When did you lose it, Anne?" asked Mrs. Linchmore, "this is the first I
+have heard about it."
+
+"Some two months ago, the morning after that poaching business," and
+Anne looked steadily at Frances; "but it is of no consequence now. I
+find my chain can be joined again without it."
+
+Frances quailed before that steady, searching look; then rose and
+crossed the room, passing close by Anne as she went. "Miss Bennet," said
+she, with one of her coldest and most sarcastic smiles, "Miss Bennet has
+recourse to enigmas at times,--enigmas not very difficult of solution,
+although I for one cannot see the point they aim at," and she passed on.
+
+Anne watched her opportunity all the evening, but to no purpose.
+Frances' suspicions were roused; it was impossible to get speech of
+Charles, and Anne was obliged to go up to bed with the rest, without
+having given one sign, or being able to say one word to him.
+
+But Anne was not to be thus foiled; as soon as she gained her room she
+sat down and penned a note to Charles. She had something of great
+importance to tell him; would he meet her in the library before
+breakfast, at eight o'clock? and then away she flew in fear and
+trepidation down the long, dark corridors, and knocked at Charles's
+door.
+
+"It is I, Anne Bennet," she said. "Open the door, quick! Make haste, I
+am frightened to death!"
+
+In another moment the door opened.
+
+"What is it?" said he, with a look of surprise.
+
+She thrust the note into his hand, and was hurrying away.
+
+"Stay, let me light you," he said.
+
+"Oh! no, not for worlds!" she replied, then fled hastily, and gained her
+room without being seen.
+
+Anne was too restless to sleep much that night, and was up and away
+downstairs the next morning before the hour she had named, and grew
+quite impatient at the slow movement of the minute hand of the clock on
+the chimney-piece, as she walked up and down awaiting Charles's coming.
+
+Suppose he should not come? But, no, he must think it was something
+important to drag her out of bed at that unearthly hour, full two hours
+before her usual time. But there was a step coming along the hall now;
+then the door opened and Charles entered.
+
+"You are sure Frances did not see you?" asked Anne.
+
+"Yes," replied he, in some amazement, "but her maid did."
+
+"Then I have not a moment to lose," said Annie, "come here and listen to
+me. Do you remember meeting me on the stairs, the morning you left
+Brampton so hurriedly? and your refusal to tell me why you had
+determined on doing so? or rather that you left because you had heard
+that Miss Neville no longer loved you?"
+
+"No, Anne, no, you are wrong," replied Charles, decidedly, "I told you I
+had found out that Miss Neville had never cared for me, that her heart
+was entirely another's."
+
+"It is all one and the same thing. I told you then that I did not
+believe it, and asked you to tell me how you had found it out, did I
+not?"
+
+"You did. But why rake up old feelings which only tend to wound and
+bruise the heart afresh?"
+
+"I am glad they do; if they did not I would not say one word in Miss
+Neville's defence."
+
+"Defence! You talk strangely, Anne. Don't whisper hope to my heart,
+which can only end in misery and despair. I dare not hope."
+
+"You will hope when you have heard all."
+
+"What have you to tell?" he asked, almost sternly.
+
+"Only this: that you left Brampton because Miss Neville had fainted on
+seeing Mr. Vavasour brought home wounded."
+
+"What surer proof could I have of her love for him?" he asked, sadly.
+
+"Proof! Do you call this proof?" said Anne, angrily, "do you forget how
+ill Miss Neville had been? how nervous and weak she yet was when this
+occurred? Was it a wonder she fainted? or a wonder that Frances, who
+hated and disliked her, should seize upon that accident to betray you
+both? And why? Only because had you told Miss Neville of your love, or
+divulged what you had seen to me, you would never have fallen into this
+snare so artfully laid for you, so cunningly worked out by Frances."
+
+"Who told you it was Frances?"
+
+"She herself," replied Anne, boldly facing the danger. "I have never
+left a stone unturned since that morning I met you on the stairs almost
+heart-broken. I was determined to find out why it was so. I suspected
+Frances, and have watched her all these long weeks, but she was too deep
+for me, too artful; and I never should have detected her, had I not
+over-heard her conversation with you yesterday. Then I found it all out;
+and I tell you Charles she has deceived you."
+
+"Go on," he said, "convince me it is so, and I will thank you from my
+heart, Anne; and--no, I am a fool to hope!" and he strode away towards
+the window.
+
+"You are a fool to despair! I tell you Charles, if any woman ever loved
+you, Miss Neville did. Were not the tears ready to start from her eyes
+when I gave her your message, and told her you were gone? You allowed
+her to think for weeks that you loved her, and then, for a mere trifle,
+left her without explanation or word of any kind. You behaved
+shamefully; while she never gave you an unkind word. The severest thing
+she ever said of you, was said in a letter I received from her
+yesterday. I told her you loved her, because I knew she was miserable
+thinking you did not; and read what she says."
+
+He took the letter from her hand, his face flushing while he read it.
+"If Frances has deceived me? If she has dared to do it?" he said. "By
+Heaven! she shall rue it deeply!"
+
+"And she has done so," pursued Anne, "and you are more to blame than she
+in allowing yourself to be deceived. How could you doubt Miss Neville?
+How believe that she, of all women in the world, would give away her
+heart unsought. You have condemned her unheard, and without the
+slightest foundation, and have behaved cruelly to her, and deserve to
+lose her."
+
+"Not if she loves me," he cried, starting up, "not if any words of mine
+have power to move her. God knows whether I shall be successful or no;
+but she shall hear how madly I love her."
+
+"Are you going to see her? and when?"
+
+"Now, this instant! your words have roused me to action!"
+
+He was gone. Anne went into the drawing-room and stood by the window.
+Some minutes slipped by, and then Frances entered.
+
+"Come here!" said Anne. "Come and look at Charles."
+
+Frances advanced and looked eagerly around.
+
+"I do not see him," she said.
+
+"Hark!" said Anne, "What is that?"
+
+It was the hasty canter of a horse's feet. In another moment Charles
+dashed past.
+
+Anne remembered the last time he had gone away. How she and Frances had
+stood together at the same window, even as they did now; only with this
+difference, that then, Frances' face was the triumphant one. Now they
+had changed places.
+
+Anne could not--did not pity her, as she drew near and took hold of her
+arm.
+
+"He has gone to tell Miss Neville he loves her," said she cruelly, as
+Frances looked enquiringly in her face.
+
+Frances paled to an almost death-like whiteness as she grasped, "God
+forgive you if he has. I never will!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+TOO LATE.
+
+ "So mournfully she gaz'd on him,
+ As if her heart would break;
+ Her silence more upbraided him,
+ Than all her tongue might speak!
+
+ She could do nought but gaze on him,
+ For answer she had none,
+ But tears that could not be repress'd,
+ Fell slowly, one by one.
+
+ Alas! that life should be so short--
+ So short and yet so sad;
+ Alas! that we so late are taught
+ To prize the time we had!"
+
+ CHARLES SWAIN.
+
+
+It was the evening after Amy had pledged herself to Robert Vavasour. The
+sun had slowly faded away, and twilight threw but a faint light into the
+room where she sat close to her mother's feet.
+
+Amy had been reading to Mrs. Neville and the book still open; lay in her
+lap, but it was too dark to read now, too dark for her mother to see
+her face, so Amy drew closer still ere she broached the subject nearest
+her heart. There was no shrinking or timidity, as there might have been
+had her love been wholly his, whose wife she had promised to become.
+
+"Mamma, did Mr. Vavasour ever speak to you of his love for me?" The
+words were spoken firmly, though almost in a whisper.
+
+"He did, Amy; and he also said you had refused his love."
+
+"I knew so little of him then, that when he named his love it seemed
+like a dream, so sudden and unexpected. I had never given it a thought,
+or believed such a thing possible. I know him better now; he is so good,
+so kind."
+
+She paused, perhaps hoping her mother would speak, but Mrs. Neville said
+not a word, and Amy went on somewhat falteringly, although she tried
+hard to speak steadily.
+
+"Mamma, I promised last evening I would be his wife--"
+
+"Have you done wisely, Amy? Are you sure you love him as his promised
+wife should?"
+
+"Yes," replied Amy, dreamily. "I like him, I am sure I like him very
+much indeed,--and--and then he is so gentle and loving with me; surely
+no one could help liking him."
+
+Mrs. Neville half raised herself on the sofa. "Amy! Amy! liking will not
+do. Do you love him, child?"
+
+"Yes, Mamma. Yes, I think so."
+
+"Only _think_, child? Nay you must be sure of it. Ask your heart if the
+time passes slowly when he is absent from the cottage. Do you watch and
+wait, and listen for his returning footsteps? Do you feel that without
+him life is not worth having, the world a blank? Is your whole heart
+with him when he is at your side? Do you tremble when his hand touches
+yours; and your voice grow softer as you speak to him? Do you feel that
+you dare not look up lest he should see the deep love in your eyes? if
+so Amy, then gladly will I consent to give you to him. But if not, I
+would rather, far rather see you in your grave than wedded to him."
+
+Amy was silent; not from any wish to draw back from her word or plighted
+troth; no, she had made up her mind to be Robert Vavasour's wife, her
+mother's thin wasted hand as it rested on hers only strengthened that
+resolution; the very feebleness with which she raised herself on the
+couch showed Amy how very weak and ill she was, and this one act might
+restore her to health. She did not hesitate, she would not draw back;
+had Charles loved her, it might have been different, but convinced of
+his falseness and trifling, no regret for him, now struggled at her
+heart, only shame that she could ever have allowed it to be drawn
+towards him, unsought.
+
+"You hesitate. You do not answer, Amy?" said Mrs. Neville, sadly, "and
+have deceived yourself and him."
+
+"No, Mamma, you are wrong. Although I do not love Mr. Vavasour like
+that; still I do love him, and in time, when I am his wife, I shall
+very dearly."
+
+Mrs. Neville sighed. "In this one important step of your life, Amy, when
+your whole future well-being depends upon it, there should be no secrets
+between us, recollect this one act may entail much misery; you cannot
+tell how much. Think of being bound for life to a man you do not love,
+think of the remorse you will feel at not being able to give him the
+love of your whole heart in return for his. Amy, my child, his very
+presence would be painful to you, his very love and kindness your
+greatest punishment and sorrow."
+
+"Yes Mamma, if I did not love him; but it will not be so. I shall love
+him."
+
+"And yet Amy, your very words almost forbid it, and fill my heart with
+fear and trembling," and again Mrs. Neville clasped her daughter's hand,
+while Amy, fairly overcome, bent down and laying her forehead on the
+soft pitying hand, burst into tears.
+
+"Hush, Amy! hush! You have done foolishly, but there is yet time; better
+give him sorrow and pain now than later."
+
+"No, Mamma, no; there is no need to give him pain," said Amy, presently.
+
+"Alas!" replied Mrs. Neville, "then why these tears?"
+
+"I weep," answered Amy, flinging--dashing back the tears as they crowded
+into her eyes, "I weep to think I have allowed my heart to think of
+another; one, too all unworthy of a woman's love; one who flirted and
+pretended to care for me; I weep for very shame, mother, to think how
+foolish I was, and how unworthy I am to be Robert Vavasour's wife."
+
+"You have been unhappy, my child, so unhappy; but I almost guessed it
+when I looked in your face months ago."
+
+"Yes, but not unhappy now, Mamma. I was very miserable, for I thought he
+loved me until he left me--went away without a word. Oh! mother, _that_
+was a bitter trial to me, and instead of trying to rouse myself and
+cast his image out of my heart, knowing I had done wrong in ever loving
+him, and doubly so now I had found out his cruel unworthiness, I nursed
+my love; bemoaned my fate; and steadily shut my heart against Mr.
+Vavasour. But it could not be; he was too noble hearted, so patient
+under my waywardness; sorrowful, but never reproachful; and--and so
+Mamma I have promised to become his wife; and am happy, not grieved or
+sad, at the idea; no, I will be his faithful, loving wife, and in his
+true heart forget this early foolish love that caused me so much
+unhappiness, and nearly lost me the heart of him who is now to be my
+husband."
+
+"You are right, Amy, to forget _him_, right to tear _his_ image from
+your heart; a man to treat you so is unworthy of any woman's love; and
+yet--yet I am scarcely satisfied. I fear this engagement. Is it not
+hasty, too hasty? Do not rush into a marriage hoping to escape from a
+love, however unworthy, still struggling at your heart; such a mistake
+might make the one regret of your whole life."
+
+"I do not. I will not," replied Amy firmly, as she rose, and stooping
+over her mother, kissed her fondly; "If this is the only reason you
+have, dear Mamma, for fear, then rest content: my engagement with Mr.
+Vavasour is for my--all our happiness; will you try and think so? I
+should feel very unhappy indeed if you refused your consent; or that my
+marriage grieved you."
+
+"It does not grieve me, Amy. Only," sighed Mrs. Neville, "I wish he had
+been your first love."
+
+"Nay, that is foolish, Mamma. Now often have I heard you say that few
+girls marry their first love."
+
+Again Mrs. Neville was silent. "Have you told Mr. Vavasour of this old
+love, Amy?" asked she presently.
+
+"Oh! no, no, Mamma. What good could it do? It would only grieve him;
+I,--I told him this much, that I--I hoped to love him better in time."
+
+"And he was satisfied?"
+
+"Quite," answered Amy, "and will you not say you are too, dearest
+Mamma?" and she laid her head lovingly on her mother's shoulder, and
+looked entreatingly in her face.
+
+"God bless and protect you, my child," said Mrs. Neville fervently,
+drawing her closer still, and kissing her fondly. "May He guide and
+strengthen us both, for indeed I am very sorrowful, and scarcely know
+whether this marriage is for my child's happiness or no; but I pray it
+may be with all my heart. You have your mother's best, holiest wishes,
+Amy."
+
+So Amy Neville became, with her mother's sanction, Robert Vavasour's
+affianced wife.
+
+Yet for days after that Mrs. Neville's heart seemed troubled and ill at
+ease, and she lay on the sofa watching, noting Amy's every look or
+action, until, by degrees, the troubled anxious look wore away; Amy
+seemed so contented and happy that her mother, who, in her secret
+heart, wished the marriage might be, gradually lost her fears, and each
+hour gained renewed confidence and hope. She grew better and stronger,
+and this alone in itself was sufficient to bring back the smiles into
+Amy's face, while each day disclosed some fresh trait of Robert
+Vavasour's goodness and kindness of heart. It was his voice read of an
+evening to her mother and never seemed to weary. It was his hand raised
+the invalid, or lifted her, as her strength increased, from the sofa to
+the easy chair.
+
+Amy rejoiced in the change, and while she never allowed her thoughts to
+wander to the past, with all its cruel hopes and fears, so she never
+halted or looked onward to the future; her life was of to-day, neither
+more nor less. Her mother was better; it was her act, her will, that had
+done it all. She was contented that it should be so, and fancied herself
+happy; perhaps was at this time really so, and might have been for ever,
+had she never seen Charles Linchmore again, never known how he, not
+she, had been deceived, but that was to be the one thorn in her onward
+path.
+
+In less than a month Amy was to be married. Mrs. Neville's objections as
+to haste were overruled, even old Mrs. Elrington had sided with the
+rest; but then Mrs. Neville knew nothing of Dr. Ashley's opinion, or
+that Amy had confided to her old friend the necessity there was for an
+immediate change.
+
+They were to go to Italy. Amy, her husband, and mother, with little
+Sarah, and even old Hannah accompanying them. What a pleasant party it
+would be! Already Amy began to picture to herself the delight she would
+experience in watching her mother's restoration to health and strength
+in that warm sunny clime, and how happy she would be by-and-by in
+bringing her back when quite well, to live in her own and Vavasour's
+home, that home he had so often talked to her of, and where, in a few
+weeks, she would be roaming about at will as its mistress.
+
+The days crept on steadily and surely slowly to all but Mrs. Neville,
+and with her the time seemed to fly; she was anxious and restless, while
+her doubts and fears only shaped themselves in words in old Hannah's
+presence; to the rest, even to Amy, she was passive and quiet,
+apparently resigned, only at heart sad.
+
+But old Hannah was a remorseless tyrant, who, feeling deeply and
+sorrowfully her darling's departure from home, sighing and even dropping
+a tear or two in secret, yet she never allowed Mrs. Neville to bewail
+it, but, on the contrary, seemed to look upon her doing so as a weakness
+and sin, requiring a steady though somewhat underhand reproof. Perhaps
+the very strength of mind Hannah displayed encouraged and strengthened
+her mistress.
+
+"We are to lose Miss Amy to-morrow, Hannah," said Mrs. Neville, in a sad
+tone of voice. "I wish the wedding had not been so sudden."
+
+"There, Ma'am, I don't call it sudden at all in the light wind," then
+silently and steadily went upstairs to change her bridal attire for a
+travelling dress.
+
+It would be quite half-an-hour before Vavasour could return; so she sat
+quietly awaiting him in the little sitting-room, perhaps for the first
+time that day feeling sad, just realising her position as a wife, and
+looking onwards into the future.
+
+She sat lost in a dreamy reverie, and heard not the swift opening and
+shutting of the little garden gate, or the sound of the still swifter
+step across the gravel walk, until it sounded quick and strong in the
+passage; then she started and arose quickly. Her husband had returned!
+and sooner than she expected. With a smile she turned to greet him, but
+it was Charles Linchmore who stood in the doorway, flushed and heated
+with the haste and impatience of his hurried ride from the station, and
+still more hasty journey.
+
+Amy's heart stood still. Why had he come? Then, woman-like, almost
+guessed before he spoke what he had come to say. But ere she could
+recover from the sudden shock of his presence he, with all the old
+impetuosity of his nature, was at her feet, pouring forth his long
+pent-up love, with all its wild jealousy and anguish. How he had been
+deceived by Frances, and driven well-nigh distracted. How through Anne's
+agency he had found out her deceit, and had started at once to explain
+all and be forgiven; how he believed now she had loved him, and still
+loved, or would love him again; all--all he told, while his words came
+fast and strong. Amy never attempted to stay them, neither could she, if
+she would. So he went on to the end; then looked up into her face, that
+white, wan, pale face, bending so sadly over him, with an agonised stony
+look spread over each feature, striking dismay into his heart and soul.
+
+"Speak to me!" he cried passionately. "Only say you forgive me my hasty
+belief in your falseness, only say that you love me still, and that I am
+not too late to make amends. Amy! my own Amy, speak to me!" and again
+he looked up beseechingly, with all his deep, earnest love written on
+his face, and speaking in his eyes.
+
+But she was silent and still, very still.
+
+Then the hand he held so tightly drew away from his hot, burning ones,
+and turning slowly, showed the wife's symbol, the plain gold band
+encircling the one small finger, while the pale, sad lips parted, and
+words came mournfully at last, but slowly and distinctly, settling like
+ice about his heart.
+
+"It is too late--I am married."
+
+Again that hasty, hurried step sounded, ringing out fiercely in the
+passage and along the quiet gravel walk. Once again the gate swung
+harshly and roughly on its frail hinges; then the sudden rush of a
+horse's quick hoofs rung out startlingly in the still, soft air, and in
+another moment died away in the far-off distance.
+
+"Where is your mistress? is she ready?" asked Vavasour of Amy's new
+maid, as ten minutes later he hastily entered the cottage.
+
+"My mistress is not ready, Sir," was the reply, with a pert toss of the
+head, while a peculiar expression played round the corners of her lips.
+"She is in the parlour, Sir. Mrs. Elrington thinks it's the heat of the
+day and the worry that has caused her to faint away."
+
+Yes; Amy lay on the sofa, quiet and motionless with scarcely any sign of
+life on her pale, sad face, while onward, onward, faster and faster
+still, rode Charles Linchmore.
+
+Would they ever meet again; and how?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+DEFEAT.
+
+ "Art thou then desolate
+ Of friends, of hopes forsaken? Come to me!
+ I am thine own. Have trusted hearts proved false?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Why didst thou ever leave me? Know'st thou all
+ I would have borne, and called it joy to bear,
+ For thy sake? Know'st thou that thy voice hath power
+ To shake me with a thrill of happiness
+ By one kind tone?--to fill mine eyes with tears
+ Of yearning love? And thou--Oh! thou didst throw
+ That crushed affection back upon my heart.
+ Yet come to me!"
+
+ "'Tis he--what doth he here!"
+
+ LARA.
+
+
+The great bell rang out at the lodge gate, and Charles Linchmore dashed
+up to the Hall almost as hastily as he had left it, and with scarce a
+word of greeting to the old butler, whom he passed on his way to the
+drawing-room, and never staying to change his dress, he strode on, all
+flushed and heated as he was, with his hurried journey and desperate
+thoughts, until he stood face to face with Mrs. Linchmore.
+
+"Why Charles!" exclaimed she, "what on earth has happened? What is the
+matter?"
+
+"Nothing," he replied. "Where's Frances?"
+
+"Nothing," she rejoined, indignantly, "to come into the room in such a
+plight as this! Look at the splashed state of your boots; and then your
+face. No one can look at that and not suspect something dreadful having
+happened. _I_ never saw anything so changed and altered as it is."
+
+"I dare say. I don't much care."
+
+"Are you mad? Where have you been?"
+
+"Nowhere. Where's Frances?" he asked again.
+
+"I do not know. But I advise you to make yourself a little more
+presentable before you seek her. These freaks--_mad_ freaks of riding
+half over the country, no one knows where, are not agreeable to those
+you come in contact with afterwards," and Mrs. Linchmore pushed her
+chair further away from him, and smoothed the rich folds of her dress,
+as though the act of doing that would soothe her ruffled temper.
+
+"It _was_ a mad freak," replied he, and without waiting for another
+word, or tendering an apology for his disordered dress, he strode away
+again, with the full determination of finding Frances.
+
+Every room below stairs he searched, but in vain; she was nowhere, and
+driven reckless by the agony of his thoughts he went straight up to her
+own room, and opened the door.
+
+She was lying on the sofa, her eyes red and swollen with weeping,
+passionate, hopeless tears at the thought that long before now he and
+Amy had met, and he consequently lost to herself for ever.
+
+"Charles!" she exclaimed, springing off the sofa, her cheeks flushing
+hotly with surprise and pleasure.
+
+But another glance at his face, and her heart sank within her, for its
+expression almost terrified her.
+
+He closed the door and came and stood opposite to where she was, looking
+as though he would have struck her.
+
+She quailed visibly before his menacing glance. Then resolutely regained
+the mastery over herself, and drawing up her figure proudly, she said,
+
+"Do you know this is my room? I wonder how you dare come here."
+
+"Your room? Well, what if it is, I care not," he replied. "I am reckless
+of everything."
+
+"But I am not; and--and," she hesitated, and tried again to steady her
+beating heart, "what--what has happened, Charles, that you look so
+strangely?"
+
+"Happened? Can you ask me what has happened, you who have wrecked the
+hopes of my whole life."
+
+"I, Charles? You talk in riddles; I do not understand you."
+
+"You dare not say that!" exclaimed he, hoarsely. "You know well that I
+loved her with all my heart and soul, and you--you schemed to draw her
+from me. I would have laid down my life for her; and you guessed it, and
+told me she loved another, and, like a fool, I believed you. You have
+driven me to despair; her to a life-long living death; and this, all
+this, I have dared to come and tell you."
+
+"It was no lie. She never loved you!"
+
+"She did!" he cried, hotly; "I swear she did. I saw it; knew it but a
+few hours since."
+
+"You have seen her?" asked Frances.
+
+"Seen her! Yes; and I wish to God I had died before seeing her," and he
+clasped his hands over his damp brow in an agony of grief.
+
+"See," he said, presently, "are you not satisfied with my sufferings?
+Look here;" and he drew his hand across his forehead and temples, and
+showed the large drops that fell from them. "I loved her as my life. My
+life, do I say? She was more than life to me, and I have lost her; and
+this--this is your devil's work."
+
+"Lost her!" echoed Frances, inquiringly.
+
+He heeded her not; but walked the room with rapid strides, then
+gradually calmed again, and then again burst forth with the hopeless
+agony of his thoughts, as he recalled Amy's last words:
+
+"_It is too late, I am married._"
+
+"Aye," he said, despairingly, "too late to save us both; too late,
+indeed."
+
+Frances could not listen calmly, or see unmoved the strong man's agony;
+but she never once repented the evil she had wrought, but rather gloried
+at heart in having so successfully separated him and Amy; and the more
+so now, because she saw how madly he loved her. She waited quietly,
+almost afraid to speak, until the paroxysm of grief had exhausted
+itself. Then she said, timidly,
+
+"Too late, Charles. Did you say too late?"
+
+But her words roused him to fury again.
+
+"I did," he cried; "I said too late; God knows I was too late. A day,
+only a day earlier, and I should have been in time to save her!"
+
+"To save Miss Neville? And from what?"
+
+"From what?" he cried; "you are not satisfied with my sufferings, then?
+but would drain the last bitter drop of agony in my cup--the telling;
+the naming--Oh, God! She is married!"
+
+Married! Frances was not prepared for this. A mist swam before her eyes;
+a sudden faintness seized her, and she clung to the back of the sofa for
+support.
+
+"Yes, married!" he cried, fiercely seizing her arm. "You would have me
+tell you, and you shall hear it too, and remember it to your dying day;
+and I--I saw her only an hour after she was lost to me for ever."
+
+But Frances' tongue was stayed, and she never answered one word.
+
+"You have driven me mad," he continued savagely, "and it is a mercy you
+have not a murder on your soul, for, by Heaven, I was tempted more than
+once to take my life on my road down here? Do you hear?" he cried.
+
+"Oh, Charles! don't, don't talk so wildly: you will kill me!"
+
+"Kill you! No, I don't wish to do that; I'll only wish you half the
+misery you have caused me, and that shall be your punishment and my
+revenge."
+
+And then he turned to leave her; but Frances sprang forward and stopped
+him.
+
+"Do not go away like that, Charles. Do not go, leaving almost a curse
+behind you. I have not been guilty of half the wickedness you accuse me
+of. I did say Miss Neville did not love you; but--but I believed it."
+
+"You did not," he cried. "You hated and then you slandered her."
+
+"And if I did, it was your fault; yours, for you taught me to love you."
+
+"You love me! It is like the rest false, and a flimsy attempt to
+palliate your wickedness."
+
+"No, no; it is true. I have loved you for years past," exclaimed
+Frances, sinking on her knees, and hiding her face, "and--and I thought
+you loved me, too, until _she_ came and took your love away; and then I
+hated her--yes, words cannot tell how much I hated her. What had I in
+life worth living for when your love was gone? and I thought if I could
+only take her away from you, your heart would come back to me again. If
+you have suffered, what have not I? and she never could have loved you
+to have married another. Oh! forgive me, Charles, forgive me! and
+don't--don't hate me."
+
+"Forgive you!" he replied. "No; years hence, when we meet again, I may,
+but not now."
+
+"Years hence? Are you going away, then? Oh! you cannot be so cruel!"
+
+"In another month I shall leave England, perhaps for ever,--a
+broken-hearted wretch, with an aimless, hopeless existence. All this you
+have driven me to, and yet you ask me to forgive you. For her
+sake--hers, of whom I dare not trust myself to speak--I will not, cannot
+forgive you!"
+
+The bitterness of his grief was over; the first burst was past; and he
+spoke calmer now, although his every word, the tone even of his voice,
+sank like ice into Frances' soul, convincing her how hopelessly she
+loved.
+
+"Oh! say not so, Charles," she cried, "or you will crush me utterly.
+See,--see how I must love you to kneel here, and to humble my pride so
+entirely as to tell you I--I love you."
+
+"Love! Does love break the heart of the loved one as you have broken
+mine? Call you such a deadly feeling as this, love? Say, rather, that
+you hate me."
+
+"No, no; never! Whatever you do, whatever you say, I shall love you
+still,--love you for ever!"
+
+"Give me your hate," he replied, "I would rather have that."
+
+But Frances only answered by sobs and wringing her hands.
+
+"If," he continued, "you have wrecked my happiness and hers through love
+of me, I wish to God you had hated me!"
+
+"I could not," sobbed Frances, utterly overcome. "You--you won my love
+two years ago. Yes! you loved me then."
+
+"Never!" he cried vehemently, almost savagely. "Never! I swear it!"
+
+"Cruel!" murmured Frances.
+
+"Cruel? Yes; what else do you deserve? Had you never told me that
+falsehood--never deceived me I--I might; but it is too late--all too
+late. And yet how I love her, love her to madness, and she the--the wife
+of another!" and he groaned and clenched his hands together, until the
+nails seemed buried in the very flesh, in utter anguish at the thought.
+
+"Don't talk of her so, Charles, you will break my heart. Have some
+pity."
+
+"Pity! I have none. What had you for either her or me. I tell you I have
+no mercy, no pity, only scorn and--and--" he would have said hate, but
+somehow the word would not come to his lips, as he looked at the bent,
+bowed figure kneeling so humbly before him.
+
+"Oh! don't go! don't go, Charles. Say one, only one kind word," cried
+Frances, imploringly, as he turned again to leave her.
+
+"Don't ask me," he replied, "for I have none to give. Don't ask me, lest
+I say more than I have done. Pray God that he will change your
+revengeful, cruel heart. I pray that we may never meet again."
+
+"Oh, my God, he's gone!" moaned Frances, as the door closed upon him,
+"and not one kind word, not one. Oh! I have not deserved it! indeed I
+haven't," and burying her face in the sofa cushion, she burst into a
+fresh passion of hopeless, despairing tears.
+
+After a few moments she raised her head again and sobbed and moaned
+afresh, as she cried.
+
+"He was cruel to the last, and all through her. Oh! I will hate her
+tenfold for this, and work her more misery if I can. I will never repent
+what I have done. Never! but will make her suffer more frightfully,
+if--if possible, than this!"
+
+She tossed back her hair, and almost for the moment regained her former
+proud bearing; for, strange and unnatural as it may seem, this
+desperate resolve of making Amy, if she could, more wretched than she
+had already, soothed and calmed for a time the hopeless nature of her
+thoughts, and was the one hope that supported her through the long,
+terrible hours of the night that followed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+AMY'S COURAGE FAILS HER.
+
+ "New joys, new virtues with that happy birth
+ Are born, and with the growing infant grow.
+ Source of our purest happiness below
+ Is that benignant law, which hath entwined
+ Dearest delight with strongest duty, so
+ That in the healthy heart and righteous mind
+ Even they co-exist, inseparably combined.
+
+ Oh! bliss for them when in that infant face
+ They now the unfolding faculties descry,
+ And fondly gazing, trace--or think they trace
+ The first faint speculation in that eye,
+ Which hitherto hath rolled in vacancy;
+ Oh! bliss in that soft countenance to seek
+ Some mark of recognition, and espy
+ The quiet smile which in the innocent cheek
+ Of kindness and of kind its consciousness doth speak!"
+
+ SOUTHEY.
+
+
+Time passed rapidly onwards; heedless, in its flight, of bruised hearts
+or desolate homes, but ruthlessly brushing past, hurrying on far away
+with careless front and iron tread; perhaps ere he came round again
+those hearts would be healed and those homes joyous again. Such things
+happen every day, and well for us that it is so.
+
+The first year of Amy's married life passed quietly by; just as the
+second dawned her son was born, but ere the third came to its close, her
+mother faded with the dying year.
+
+Mrs. Neville had been so much better during the first year of their
+sojourn abroad, so almost well again, that, as her last illness drew on,
+Amy, who had seen her almost as weak at Ashleigh, could not believe that
+she would not recover, and wilfully shut her eyes to what to others was
+so apparent, that this was a weakness even unto death. And so it was.
+Mrs. Neville died, and for a time Amy was inconsolable; even her baby's
+caresses failed to cheer and rouse her heart.
+
+Her husband returned with her to England. Amy wept bitterly as she stood
+in that home, where so often she had so fondly hoped to have welcomed
+her mother.
+
+Many changes had occurred during Amy's absence.
+
+Anne Bennet had married and was now living steadily enough--so she
+said--with her husband at his old curacy, not many miles distant from
+Brampton.
+
+Charles Linchmore, after his sad meeting with Amy, had returned for one
+night to the Park, and after his stormy interview with Frances, had,
+much to the astonishment of his brother and every one else but Anne,
+exchanged and gone abroad.
+
+Frances was still unmarried, perhaps still plotting on and waiting for
+one whose heart could now only be filled with anger and hatred towards
+her. But what woman does not hope? Perhaps she hoped still.
+
+A new governess reigned at Brampton in Amy's stead; the third since she
+had left. Surely there was some mismanagement somewhere? or Mrs.
+Linchmore had grown more exacting and overbearing; more dissatisfied
+with the means taken to please her?
+
+Little Sarah was away in London at school; while old Hannah reigned
+supreme as head nurse to the youthful heir.
+
+Amy was happy, notwithstanding the remembrance that like a dim,
+indistinct shadow flitted across her of that first sad love. Was _he_
+happy? and what had become of him? these were questions sometimes in her
+thoughts, although her heart was with her husband, who loved his fair
+young wife with all his heart, even more dearly than when first they
+married; while as yet nothing had occurred to check that love.
+
+Robert Vavasour had been absent from his home a fortnight. It was the
+evening of his return to Somerton.
+
+Amy drew a low chair close to her husband by the fireside as she said,
+"How glad I am to have you back again; I have missed you so much, and
+felt quite lonely, even with little Bertie."
+
+Robert looked down fondly in his wife's face. It was pleasant to know
+that his coming had given pleasure to her he loved.
+
+"And how was dear Sarah," she asked. "Did she look quite well and
+happy? Quite contented with school? Pray give me all the news you have,
+to tell."
+
+"And that will be little enough," he replied. "As to Sarah she looked the
+picture of health, and gave me no end of messages for you; but I am
+afraid I have forgotten them all; my memory fails me completely now I
+have you at my side."
+
+"Well I hope you have not forgotten the present for Bertie: his little
+tongue has talked of nothing else all day."
+
+"I know I did not forget my little wife," he said, as taking a ring from
+his pocket he placed it on her finger.
+
+"You are always good and kind," she replied, "always thinking of me."
+
+"Always, Amy."
+
+"And now do tell me all you have been doing this long time, and where
+you went, and whom you saw. Surely you must have some adventures worth
+relating?"
+
+"No, none. I went simply nowhere; London is chill enough in November,
+and even had it been otherwise the charm was wanting to induce me to go
+out. I saw few people I knew; but I met some old friends of yours,
+yesterday."
+
+"Yes?" said Amy, inquiringly.
+
+"Can you not guess who?"
+
+Amy's heart whispered the Linchmore's; but refused to say so.
+
+"Have you no curiosity?" he asked, "I thought you were all anxiety a
+moment ago."
+
+"No, I shall not guess," replied his wife. "You must tell me."
+
+"Must!" he laughed. "And suppose I refuse. What then?"
+
+"You will not," she said.
+
+"You are a tyrant, Amy. It was the Linchmores. I met him accidentally at
+the door of the club."
+
+"Ah! you went to the Club. You never told me that," was all she said.
+
+"Neither have you told me how many times you have been into the nursery
+to see Bertie since I have been away."
+
+"The cases are totally dissimilar," laughed Amy. "But what did Mr.
+Linchmore say? Was he glad to see you?"
+
+"Yes: and took me home to dine with his wife."
+
+"Mrs. Linchmore! How is she."
+
+"Much the same as ever; just as haughty and hard-looking."
+
+"Hard-looking? I never thought her that."
+
+"My wife always has a pleasant thought for everybody," returned Vavasour
+proudly; "but beautiful as Mrs. Linchmore undoubtedly is, there is a
+great want of softness in the expression of her face."
+
+"She treated me well, and I had no reason to--to find fault with her."
+There was a little hesitation, as if the heart did not quite keep pace
+with the words. Perhaps her husband noticed it, for he looked away ere
+he spoke again, as if not quite sure that what he had to say next would
+please her.
+
+"I am glad it was so, as Linchmore asked us to go and stay at Brampton
+for a time."
+
+Amy started visibly.
+
+"But you refused," she said hastily.
+
+"I did at first, but he would take no refusal."
+
+"You did not promise to go, Robert? Oh, I hope you did not!"
+
+"I could not well refuse. Nay, do not look so sad, Amy; rather than
+that, you shall write a refusal at once. We will not go, dearest."
+
+And Amy would have given worlds not to; but did not like giving an
+untruthful reason as the motive for staying away; still, how else could
+she shape her refusal, or excuse herself to her husband. She dared not
+tell him that revisiting old scenes, the old familiar walk and rooms,
+would recall by-gone memories afresh in her heart--another's words!
+another's looks! No, she could not tell him that; yet as she sat with
+her hand in his and looked into his face how she longed to open her
+heart and tell him all! all of that bitter, never-to-be-forgotten past.
+And yet she reasoned again as she had reasoned once before, against the
+whisper of her heart, and her mother's better judgment, that it could do
+no good, but only pain and grieve her husband to think that she, his
+wife, had ever cared for, or even thought of another; and she sighed as
+these sad recollections one by one came into her heart.
+
+"Why do you sigh Amy?" asked her husband.
+
+Alas! the question came too late; her resolve had been made and taken.
+She sat silent, though she would have given worlds to have been able to
+throw her arms round his neck and tell him all.
+
+Robert drew her fondly and tenderly towards him. "As my wife, Amy," he
+said, "none shall ever dare whisper a word or even breathe a thought
+that can reflect upon your former life at Brampton. Have no fear, little
+one, but trust in me."
+
+He had misinterpreted her silence, and thought the repugnance she felt
+at going back to Brampton was caused by pride. Well, perhaps it was
+best so.
+
+"We will go, Robert," she whispered tremblingly, while the words she
+ought to have spoken remained unsaid, and with her husband and little
+Bertie she went to Brampton, simply because she saw no help for it.
+
+It was one of those things that must be, and she nerved her heart to
+brave it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE FIRST DOUBT.
+
+ "And the strange inborn sense of coming ill
+ That ofttimes whispers to the haunted breast,
+ In a low tone which naught can drown or still;
+ Midst feasts and melodies a secret guest:
+ Whence doth that murmur wake, that shadow fall?
+ Why shakes the spirit thus?"
+
+ MRS. HEMANS.
+
+
+With a faint shadow of some coming evil, a dull foreboding at her heart,
+Amy once again found herself driving up the long avenue of Brampton
+Park.
+
+How things had changed since first as a timid, shrinking girl, she had
+entered its gates! How her heart had throbbed and beaten since then!
+been tried and strained to its very utmost. How much she had suffered;
+how much rebelled and murmured at. Involuntarily she drew closer to her
+husband, as she felt how near and dear she was to his heart: surely,
+with his strong hand to protect and guide, his loving heart to shield
+her, what had she to fear?
+
+Amy half expected to see the children as of old on the terrace
+impatiently waiting to embrace her as she stepped from the carriage; but
+no, only the old butler bowed, and seemed glad to see her, as she
+exchanged a few words with him, ere he ushered her with becoming
+ceremony into the drawing-room, where Mrs. Linchmore at once advanced to
+greet her, and for the first time in her life, much to Amy's
+astonishment, kissed her; but then she was no longer Miss Neville, but
+Mrs. Vavasour. Ah! things had changed indeed.
+
+Mr. Linchmore was as friendly and courteous as ever, with the same
+honest welcome as of old; yet Amy thought him changed, but could not
+quite see wherein the change lay. His hair was becoming slightly tinged
+with grey, but that could not make the alteration she fancied she had
+discovered; then he was surely graver and quieter as he handed her into
+dinner, more silent and reserved; while Mrs. Linchmore, if any thing,
+was more animated, more beautiful than ever; and she watched for the
+hard look Robert Vavasour had spoken of, but in vain; it was not there,
+could not be; while her face was so filled with smiles and good humour.
+
+Again Amy glanced at Mr. Linchmore. Surely her husband had made a
+mistake; for there the hard look was gravely stamped on each feature,
+and Amy sighed as she saw it, and wondered how the change had been
+wrought.
+
+Amy saw nothing of the children all that evening; the next morning she
+went to the school-room to see them.
+
+Away down the long corridor, past the very window where she had stood
+long ago with Charles Linchmore. Did she think of that now? or of the
+events that followed quick and fast upon it; or recall to mind the dark
+form of Frances Strickland, halting on the very ground she now stood
+on, then fading away, not softly and slowly but fiercely and hurriedly,
+in the distance--leaving a strange fear at her heart, only too well
+realised in the past events of her life. If Amy remembered all this, she
+never stayed her footsteps, but passed quickly on through the baize
+door, and in another moment the children's arms were about her neck,
+their kisses on her face; while Miss Barker, the new governess, rose in
+stately horror at this infringement of her rules.
+
+"Really young ladies, your reception of Mrs. Vavasour is boisterous in
+the extreme. Allow me, Madam, to apologise for my pupils."
+
+"Oh! but this is Miss Neville, our dear Miss Neville!" cried Fanny, then
+catching Miss Barker's still more frigid look, hung her head and dropped
+her hands she was in the act of clapping with delight, to her side.
+
+"We are old friends," said Amy, smiling: "very old friends, pray do not
+check them, I am so glad to see they have not forgotten me; and allow me
+to apologise in my turn for the interruption in their studies my sudden
+entrance has occasioned."
+
+Miss Barker smiled complacently. "Will you not be seated?" she said.
+
+"Thank you. I have come to ask, with Mrs. Linchmore's sanction, for a
+holiday."
+
+Miss Barker's brow clouded again.
+
+"I scarcely know what to say to this request, which has come on rather
+an unfortunate day. Fanny has not, as yet, been able to darn her torn
+dress in a satisfactory manner; Alice cannot make her sum prove; and
+Edith has mislaid her thimble--carelessness and untidiness combined."
+
+Each child looked down guiltily, as her shortcoming was being told in a
+grave voice; while Amy felt inclined to smile at the frigid tone,
+evidently freezing each little warm heart; but Miss Barker's look
+forbade even a smile or word, and a dead silence followed.
+
+"In the hope," continued she, presently, "that you will all try and do
+better to-morrow, I will accede to your Mamma's request. Put away your
+books, young ladies."
+
+They all rose slowly, very differently from their quick, joyous manner
+in Amy's time, cleared the table, then returned; and, notwithstanding
+Miss Barker's frowns, stationed themselves close to their old friend.
+
+"Here is a chair for you, Edith; pray recollect that stoop in your
+shoulders I am so frequently reminding you of; Alice, my love, try and
+sit still without that perpetual fidget; Fanny, I am sure Mrs. Vavasour
+would rather you came a little further away; there is no need for you to
+stand; here are plenty of chairs in the room."
+
+Amy grew wearied with her slow, methodical manner, and finding-fault
+tone, never raised or lowered in the slightest. It was a relief when she
+went away, and left Amy to talk to the children as she would, without
+feeling that a pair of small grey eyes were disagreeably fixed on her
+face.
+
+As soon as she was gone, Alice climbed off the stiff high-backed chair,
+where she had been perched, and settled herself quietly on Amy's lap;
+Edith with a great sigh of relief from the depths of her heart, knelt,
+regardless of the poor shoulders, on one side; while Fanny flew to the
+other, exclaiming, "Oh! isn't she disagreeable, Miss Neville?"
+
+Amy could not conscientiously answer no, so evaded a direct reply, and
+merely said, "I am no longer Miss Neville, Fanny, you must try and call
+me Mrs. Vavasour."
+
+"Yes, so we have, all the time you've been away; but now you've come
+again it's so natural to say Miss Neville."
+
+"And," said Edith, "we think of you so often, and always wish you back
+again."
+
+Then they talked away of old times, until Amy's heart grew sad. "Let us
+go and see Bertie," she said.
+
+Away went the children, with something of the spirit of by-gone days. It
+was well for them they did not stumble upon Miss Barker, as they danced
+along the passage; or sad indeed would have been the result of the
+expedition.
+
+Bertie was astonished at seeing so many new faces, and hid himself shyly
+beneath Hannah's apron, from whence at first, he refused to be coaxed or
+tormented; but by-and-by a small curly head and bright eyes peeped
+forth, and at length he surrendered at discretion to little Alice, as
+being the least formidable of the invaders.
+
+How he prattled away! while his tiny feet seemed never weary of running
+to and fro to fetch toys for his new friends' inspection. Amy was soon
+quite overlooked, and Hannah's existence forgotten altogether, until
+suddenly reminded it was time for his morning's nap; when,
+notwithstanding a determined resistance on his part, he was eventually
+overpowered and carried off to bed, with a promise of having a romp with
+the children some other day.
+
+Hannah had suddenly become within the last few days wonderfully
+dignified. The moment she entered the house where her young mistress
+had lived as a dependant, she thought in her heart that most likely the
+servants would be looking down upon them, or setting themselves up in
+consequence; so she determined upon giving herself airs, if nobody else
+did, and assumed at once a reserve and stateliness quite foreign to her
+nature; but which, nevertheless, fitted admirably to the tall, portly
+figure; gaining Mrs. Hopkins' confidence, and setting Mason's airs at
+defiance, while it won for her the respect of the other servants, who
+never ventured upon a word in her presence, even of disparagement
+against Miss Barker, whom they all cordially disliked.
+
+It was strange what bad odour the latter stood in, trying as she did her
+utmost to make herself agreeable to all parties. Her appearance was
+certainly against her, her face at first sight being anything but a
+prepossessing one. One felt a strange dislike at making her
+acquaintance, which dislike was scarcely lessened upon a more intimate
+knowledge of her. Then her tall, freezing looking form was as little
+ingratiating to the eye, as the fawning, wiry voice was to the heart
+and Mason had been heard to say, that of the two, Miss Neville, even
+with all her "stuck up" airs, was twice the lady; but the lady's maid
+distrusted the tongue that flattered her mistress more boldly and
+cunningly than she did; while Mrs. Linchmore, although she smiled
+blandly enough, and took little or no notice of the flattery, was
+sensible of a feeling of relief when the stiff, starched form was no
+longer present.
+
+Hannah made her acquaintance one morning on the lawn, and was no little
+astonished at the tight corkscrew curls tucked under the bonnet, and the
+prim, patronising tone with which the governess addressed her; but nurse
+did not belong to the house; there was no occasion to conciliate her.
+Evidently Miss Barker was no admirer of young children, for as little
+Bertie ran up to Alice, she exclaimed, "Dear me, what a fat child!"
+
+Hannah looked at her for a moment with indignation, and replied, "fat,
+yes, Ma'am, Master Bertie, thank God, is _fat_," and then added, in an
+under tone, loud enough to be heard, "It's just as well if some others
+were as fat!" and viewed, as she turned away, the lady's thin, spare
+form with utter disgust.
+
+Amy and her husband were the only visitors at Brampton, yet no one
+seemed dull. Amy could never be dull with her child, and Mrs. Linchmore
+appeared ever happy and contented.
+
+They were good musicians, both Mrs. Linchmore and her guest; the former
+excelled in playing, the latter in singing. Amy's voice was sweet and
+musical, not wanting in power--one of those voices so charming to the
+senses, claiming the attention of every hearer, thrilling through the
+heart with wonderful pathos, leaving pleasing memories behind, or else
+the eyes filled with tears, as some mournful notes stir the soul with
+long forgotten memories.
+
+Mrs. Linchmore's voice was at times too powerful, grating harshly on the
+ear; she dashed at the notes in the quick parts, and handled them too
+roughly and rapidly; there was a want of feeling pervading the whole,
+which made one feel glad when the voice ceased, and the fingers alone
+glided softly over the keys. It was marvellous how fast they flew; while
+the notes sounded clearly and distinctly, like the tinkling of bells.
+Now the tune swelled loud and strong; then appeared to die faintly away
+under the light touch of those wonderful fingers. Mrs. Linchmore knew
+she played well, however much Amy excelled her in singing, and would sit
+down after one of the latter's songs, and enchant her listeners with
+some soft, beautiful air, played to perfection; then would come a song,
+and after that another piece, short, but more silvery sounding than the
+first, while Amy's voice was well-nigh forgotten, and Mrs. Linchmore,
+with her beautiful smiling face and pleasant words, was considered the
+musician of the evening, and had all due homage awarded her. As it was
+in music, so it was in everything else, Mrs. Linchmore took by right of
+"tact" what Amy ought to have laid claim to, but then, one was a woman
+of the world, the other only just entering it. Amy wanted confidence;
+Mrs. Linchmore none.
+
+As the days grew shorter still, Robert Vavasour whiled away the long
+evenings by again, as of old, playing at chess with his hostess, while
+Amy, who did not understand the game, sat and talked or sang to Mr.
+Linchmore; at other times she grew weary of those long games, so
+entirely engrossing her husband's attention, and brought her work or a
+book, and drawing a chair close by, watched the progress of the play.
+
+By degrees the players themselves claimed her attention; how deeply
+interested they seemed! how intent on the pieces! Amy, as she plied her
+needle diligently at the work in her lap, was constantly looking at Mrs.
+Linchmore. How often her dark eyes flashed across the board in her
+adversary's face, and when the game was at an end how she laughed and
+talked, and how the rings sparkled on her white hands, as she
+re-arranged the pieces again in their places. Amy thought she wore too
+many rings: they certainly danced and flashed in the lamp light, and
+dazzled her so that she felt quite fascinated, and wondered what Robert
+thought, and whether he admired her, or saw still the hard look. Amy
+half wished he did, or that she possessed only a quarter of the power
+Mrs. Linchmore seemed to have of pleasing him. Perhaps he had found his
+evenings dull with only his wife to talk or read to. Why had he not told
+her he was so fond of chess? she might have learnt it; yes, she would
+learn it; and again Amy glanced at the board to watch the pieces and try
+and make out how they moved; then tired of looking, her attention would
+be once more riveted on Mrs. Linchmore, and with a dissatisfied sigh she
+wished herself back at Somerton.
+
+Thus came the first doubt to the young wife's heart; yet scarcely known
+to her, save for a strange cold feeling stirring sometimes within.
+
+Anne rode over one day to Brampton, and the flying visit of her old
+friend did Amy good: marriage seemed in no way to have altered her, she
+was just as merry-laughing and joking in much the same style as ever.
+Her husband was as proud of her as he well could be, rebuking her at
+times, not with words, but a look, when he thought her spirits were
+carrying her a little too far, while Anne appeared to look up and
+reverence him in all things, being checked in a moment by his grave
+face.
+
+The morning passed pleasantly. As Anne rose to go she said, "Tell
+Isabella I am sorry to have missed seeing her, although I should have
+been more sorry had you been absent, as my visit, strictly speaking, was
+to you, in fact for you alone."
+
+"I will give the first part of the message," replied Amy laughing, "and
+bury the other half in my heart, as it would be but a poor compliment
+repeated. Why not remain to luncheon; I expect Mrs. Linchmore home very
+shortly, she has driven into Standale."
+
+"Standale! I thought she hated the place."
+
+"The place, yes; but not the station."
+
+"What on earth has taken her there?"
+
+"To meet a friend."
+
+"Man or woman?" laughed Anne.
+
+"Indeed I never asked," replied Amy. "It was quite by accident I heard
+her say that unless Mr. Linchmore made haste she would not arrive in
+time to meet the train."
+
+"Oh! then he has gone too. Depend upon it, it's some old 'fogy' or
+another; Miss Tremlow, perhaps, with her carpet bag stuffed full of
+yellow pocket handkerchiefs; you know," continued she, mimicking that
+lady's tone and manner, "this is such a damp place, and the rheumatics
+are worse than ever."
+
+As Anne rode away Amy remained at the window with little Bertie, who had
+been brought down for inspection and approval, and duly admired and
+caressed.
+
+"I wish Anne had been going to remain, Robert," said Amy, "she is so
+pleasant."
+
+"She is all very well for a short time," he replied, "but really her
+tongue, to use rather a worn out simile, is like the clapper of a bell;
+always ringing."
+
+"Do you think she talks too much?"
+
+"Most decidedly I do."
+
+"But you do not admire a silent woman," said Amy drawing near the fire,
+and placing Bertie on the hearth rug.
+
+"More so than a very talkative one; but there is such a thing as a happy
+medium."
+
+Amy sighed. "I wish we were back at Somerton," she said.
+
+"Is my wife home-sick already? Would she not find it dull after
+Brampton?"
+
+"I could not find it dull. Should I not have you--" she would have said
+all to myself, but checked herself and added--"you and Bertie."
+
+"Why not have left out, Bertie?" he replied, "I shall grow jealous of
+that boy, Amy, if you always class us together. Can you not forget him
+sometimes?"
+
+"Forget him? Oh! no, never!" said Amy, catching up the child, who
+immediately climbed from his mother's arms on to Robert's knee and
+remained there; while his father, notwithstanding his jealousy, glanced
+proudly at his boy, and caressed both him and his mother.
+
+"Ah! you are just as fond of Bertie as I am," she said, as her husband
+drew her to his side.
+
+But even as she spoke she became conscious of a shadow between her and
+the light which streamed in through the large bay window of the
+dining-room; while Vavasour rose and held out his hand saying
+apologetically, "We did not hear the carriage drive up."
+
+"No, I could hardly expect you would, with so much to interest you
+within doors."
+
+Amy arose quickly as the voice struck her ear.
+
+"Frances! Miss Strickland!" she said.
+
+"Yes, the same. You look surprised. Did you not expect me?"
+
+"No," replied Amy, shortly.
+
+"It is quite an unexpected pleasure, and has surprised us both,"
+returned Robert, as he noticed his wife's unusual manner.
+
+"It is my fault. I told Isabella not to mention I was coming," returned
+she. "Perhaps I wanted to see if you would be pleased, or recognise me;
+every one says I am so very much altered."
+
+"I see no difference," replied Amy, as Frances glanced straight at her.
+
+"There is none," she answered, and the tone went to Amy's heart with a
+nervous thrill. "And so this is your boy. What is he called?"
+
+"Robert," answered Amy, feeling for the first time a strange dislike at
+saying his pet name. But her husband was not so scrupulous.
+
+"We call him Bertie," he said.
+
+"And so will I. Come and make friends, Bertie. What lovely hair he has,
+so soft and curly. I suppose,--indeed I can see,--you are quite proud of
+the boy, Mr. Vavasour."
+
+"Mrs. Vavasour is, if I am not."
+
+"Of course. All mothers are of their first-born. Do not go so near the
+fire, Bertie. You make me tremble lest anything should befall you."
+
+What could happen to the child? Amy drew him further away still, then
+took him in her arms as if only there he was safe and shielded from all
+harm.
+
+When Frances left the room Amy sighed more deeply than before, yet
+scarcely knew why she felt so low and sad, or why Frances' appearance
+should have brought with it a nervous dread; save that in that long-ago
+time, which she had tried to bury and forget, Frances had been her
+bitterest enemy, and she could not but feel that her coming now was
+disagreeable to her, nay more, caused a sudden, nameless fear to arise
+in her heart; and now although Frances' words were friendly, yet Amy
+detected, or fancied she did--a lurking sarcasm in their tone.
+
+"I wish we were back at Somerton, Robert," she said.
+
+"Again!" exclaimed Robert, "now Amy, you deserve to be scolded for this.
+What an impatient little woman you are! Shall we not be home in a
+month?"
+
+"Ah! in a month;" sighed Amy again, as she drew her child nearer to her
+heart, while her heart whispered, "Can anything happen in a month?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+GOING FOR THE DOCTOR.
+
+ "In God's name, then, take your own way," said Christian; "and,
+ for my sake, let never man hereafter limit a woman in the use of
+ her tongue; since he must make it amply up to her, in allowing
+ her the privilege of her own will. Who would have thought it?"
+
+ PEVERIL OF THE PEAK.
+
+
+Three years and more have passed away since we left Matthew the pikeman
+counting the stones in Goody Grey's box. Many changes have occurred
+since then, the greatest of all has fallen on his own cottage--Matthew
+has grown a sober man.
+
+But we must go back a little.
+
+We left Jane closing the cottage door, after the singular meeting that
+had taken place between her and Goody Grey, on Marks telling the latter
+of his sister-in-law's extraordinary fainting fit. When he and his wife
+returned to the cottage, Jane was carried up to bed, apparently too weak
+to be able to sit up, and there she remained for several weeks, more
+crazed than ever to Matthew's fancy, frightening him out of his wits at
+times, lest his wife should find out anything about the charm, and
+attribute, as he did, his sister-in-law's illness to it. One night his
+fears grew to such a pitch, he went and buried the box in the garden,
+and waited events in an easier frame of mind. Days passed, and at length
+Jane grew better, but strenuously refused to leave her room, and go
+below. In vain Mrs. Marks remonstrated, in vain she stormed, Jane was
+not to be persuaded, and at length was allowed to do as she pleased. But
+suddenly her illness took a turn; she crawled down stairs to dinner, and
+one day, to Matthew's intense disgust, resumed her old seat in the
+chimney corner.
+
+As the months rolled on the scrubbing and scouring within the cottage
+went on more mildly, while Mrs. Marks' strong stout arm grew thinner
+and weaker; the brush fell less harshly and severely on the ear, as it
+rushed over the table; the high pattens clanked less loudly in the yard;
+while the voice grew less shrill, and was no longer heard in loud
+domineering tones. The change was gradual; Matthew did not notice it at
+first, until just a few weeks before Amy returned to Brampton with her
+husband; then the change was unmistakable, the scrubbing and scouring
+ceased altogether. Mrs. Marks gave in, and acknowledged she was ill.
+
+How Matthew's conscience smote him then! He knew he had never had the
+courage to face Goody Grey with the box still filled with the small
+gravel, as when she gave it him, neither had he dared throw the stones
+away, lest, in offending the giver, worse disasters would follow; and he
+was too superstitious to think Goody Grey would know nothing at all
+about it, and believe as he might tell her that he had done as she had
+directed. No; he was certain that one word of distrust in his story,
+and he should break down altogether. He tried to reason with himself,
+and think that the tramping about in all weathers long ago had made his
+wife ill; but it would not do, his mind was not to be persuaded, and
+always reverted with increased dismay to the box, while his eye
+invariably rested upon its snug resting-place under the laurel, as he
+passed it on his way out to the gate. Many a time he determined upon
+digging up the box, and restoring it to its owner, just as it was: but
+when the time for action came, and he drew near the spot, his courage
+failed him, and he would pass on, cursing the hour when he had been
+tempted to ask the wise woman for the charm which he believed had done
+so much evil; while his fear of telling the secret in his tipsy
+unconsciousness had done what all Mrs. Marks' storming had failed to
+do--made him, for the time being, a sober man. He shunned the "Brampton
+Arms" as if the plague dwelt there, and sat in the chimney corner
+opposite Jane, gloomy, and fearful almost of his own shadow, while his
+sister-in-law's eyes seemed to pierce him through more keenly than ever.
+
+Mrs. Marks had steadily kept her promise, silently and secretly working
+with a will to seek out Hodge's son. Like most energetic women, a first
+failure did not daunt or dispirit her, it only roused her energies the
+more vigorously. She was not to be defeated. The more difficult of
+accomplishment the more determined was she, and in the end successful.
+She dodged Hodge's "wide-awake" friend, and found Tom; nay more, she
+spoke with him, tried to reclaim him; but there she failed--she was not
+the sort of woman to win him over. A kind word might have done much, but
+that, Mrs. Mark's heart had not for such a reprobate as he. She told him
+the truth, the plain hard truth, heaping maledictions on his head unless
+he gave up his evil ways, forsook his godless companions, and returned
+home. She used no persuasion, no entreaty. Had she spoken to him kindly
+of his mother, perhaps his heart might have softened; but Mrs. Marks'
+voice came loud and strong, words followed one another fast and
+indignantly, so that ere she had well-nigh exhausted all the scorn she
+had, his mind was made up, and he obstinately refused to return home,
+simply because she desired, nay, commanded him to do so. What! become
+the laughing-stock of the whole of Deane? be known and marked in the
+village as the vile sinner she denounced him to be? He laughed at her
+threats and taunts, and left her, feeling perhaps more hardened than
+ever.
+
+Matthew was not far wrong when he tried to persuade himself the walking
+about in all weathers--so mysterious to him--had ruined his wife's
+health. A pouring steady rain was falling the day of her interview with
+Hodge's son, but true to her purpose, she had walked for miles along a
+heavy road, and across still damper fields to find him; then, flushed
+and heated with her passionate words and subsequent defeat, had started
+back again through the same rain, and reached home thoroughly wet
+through; then came a violent cold, and from that time her strength
+seemed to fail, although unacknowledged to herself, while her limbs lost
+their power, and pained her strangely; still she worked on, with the
+will to get well, but alas! the strength to do so was gone.
+
+She wrote to Mrs. Hodge advising her to have nothing further to do with
+such a good-for-nothing son, but forget him as fast as she could. Mrs.
+Marks' letter was not meant unkindly, but she never attempted to lessen
+Tom's fault or palliate his conduct; the truth stood out in all its
+glaring hideousness. Having no children herself, she knew nothing of a
+mother's strong, steadfast love. The knowledge that her son, her
+first-born, was with a gang of poachers who had wounded the Squire's
+visitor and killed one of the game watchers, threw dismay into the
+mother's heart and broke it. She died, begging her husband to still look
+for Tom, and reclaim him if possible--a promise her husband felt
+impossible of fulfilment, as he, like Mrs. Marks, thought badly of his
+son's heart.
+
+Mrs. Marks could scarcely move her limbs at all now, except to creep
+down the narrow stairs of a day into the small parlour, where she sat
+and scolded to her heart's content, Sarah, the girl who came as a help
+now the mistress was ill, following her every movement with her eyes, if
+she could not with her feet.
+
+As her sister grew worse, Jane roused herself wonderfully, becoming as
+active as before she had been idle, and apparently as sane as she had
+been crazy; while as to Matthew, he turned into a model husband, helping
+in the work to be done as far as lay in his power, and nursing his sick
+wife with a tender solicitude quite foreign to his nature, while she
+grumbled at everything and everyone in turn, her eye, as I have said
+before, finding out their shortcomings in a moment, and denouncing them
+without mercy. But she was ill, must be ill to sit there so quietly and
+allow others to scrub down the table or be up to their elbows in the
+washing-tub; she deserved their pity and their silence, and they gave
+her both.
+
+"There, that will do," said she one day, as Matthew tried to settle the
+pillows more comfortably at her back. "I don't think it's near so easy
+like as it was before you touched it, but it wouldn't be you if you
+didn't want always to have a finger in the pie. Sarah, leave off that
+racket among the cups and saucers; what on earth are you at, girl? Are
+you trying to break them all? What are you after?"
+
+"I was a-dusting of the shelves, Mum," was the reply.
+
+"Fine dusting, upon my word, and with a corner of your apron, too; be
+off and fetch a cloth this moment, such slop-work as that'll never do
+here; let me catch you at it again, that's all, or that clatter of the
+crockery either, when my head aches and buzzes like as if a thousand
+mills was at work in it."
+
+"There, rest quiet, Missus," said Matthew; "it'll be all right
+by-and-bye."
+
+"That's as much as you know about it. I tell yer I never felt so bad,
+like, in all my life."
+
+"Ain't it most time to take the doctor's stuff?" suggested Matthew,
+meekly.
+
+"I'm sick of the medicine, and the doctor too. What good has he done me?
+I should like to know. I can't walk no better than I could a month ago.
+My limbs is as stiff as ever, and just every bit as painful."
+
+"That comes of them mad walks yer took in all weathers; yer would tramp
+about, and it's been t' undoing of yer altogether."
+
+A torrent of words followed this, of which Matthew took no heed, until
+she leant back, apparently exhausted, saying, "I feel awful bad. I
+wonder whatever in the world ails me?"
+
+"How d'yer feel?" asked her husband, compassionately.
+
+"My head whizzes, and I'm all over in a cold sweat, like; only feel my
+hand, don't it burn like a live coal?"
+
+"It do seem as though it were afire," he replied.
+
+"Seem!" cried Mrs. Marks. "Is that all the pity yer have in your heart
+for maybe your dying wife?"
+
+"Lord save us!" exclaimed Matthew. "I've been a deal worse myself, and
+got well again; don't be a frightening yourself in that way, or belike
+you'll think you've one foot in the grave."
+
+Then he poured some of the medicine in the glass, and held it towards
+her.
+
+"Here," said he, "here's what'll make you think different, and send away
+the dismals."
+
+"I won't take none of it," she replied; "not one drop. It weren't given
+to me for the fiery pains I've got about me now."
+
+"Come, Missus, come, don't'ee quarrel with the only thing that can do'ee
+good," said Matthew, coaxingly.
+
+"Do me good!" she exclaimed, with a sudden return of energy. "It's my
+belief yer trying to pisin me. Be off and fetch the doctor!"
+
+The doctor! Matthew stared in astonishment.
+
+"What are you gaping at? Do you take me for a fool, or yourself, which?
+Be off, I tell yer, and don't let yer shadow darken this door again
+without him. Maybe he'll be able to say what's ailing me."
+
+Away went Matthew, in a ludicrous state of bewilderment. His wife must
+be bad indeed to send for the doctor; why he had never known her do such
+a thing since they married. What a trouble he had had only a few months
+ago to get her to see young Mr. Blane, and now she wanted him to come at
+once. Matthew began to think his wife was crazy, as well as Jane;
+perhaps she had sent him on a fool's errand. He insensibly slackened his
+steps as he neared the village, and bethought him what he should say, as
+he suddenly recollected he had received no instructions whatever.
+
+The more he thought the more perplexed he grew, and seeing some boys
+playing at marbles, Matthew drew near, and leaning against the railings,
+watched them, and turned over again in his mind what he should say; but
+loiter as he would, he could think of nothing save his wife's angry
+face, as she had bade him begone; so, after a short delay, Matthew faced
+the danger by boldly ringing the surgery bell.
+
+"Is the Maister at home?" asked he, fervently wishing he might be miles
+away.
+
+Yes, Mr. Blane was in, and Marks followed the boy sorrowfully.
+
+"Good morning, Mr. Marks. Come for some medicine? Where's the bottle?"
+
+"No, thank'ee, Sir," said Matthew, twirling his hat about uncomfortably.
+"My wife's took worse, and wants to know if so be ye'd make it
+convenient to come and physic her?"
+
+Yes; Mr. Blane could go at once, having no other call upon his time just
+at present.
+
+"And what's the matter with Mrs. Marks?" asked he, when they were fairly
+on their way.
+
+"That's more nor I can tell, Sir. She's all over like a live coal, and
+'ud drink a bucket full if ye'd give it her."
+
+"Has she taken the medicine regularly?"
+
+This was a poser. Matthew scratched his head, took off his cap; he was
+in no way prepared for such a question. What should he say?
+
+"Well," said he presently, in a conciliating tone, "Well, you see, Sir,
+when folks is ill they takes queer fancies sometimes, as I dare say yer
+know better nor I can tell'ee. Now my wife's got hers, and no mistake;
+she says you've gived her pisin."
+
+It was Mr. Blane's turn now to be astonished, this being an answer he
+was not prepared for. "Poison!" he echoed.
+
+"Yes, just pisin, and nothing else; but there, Sir, there's no call to
+be frightened, her head's that dizzy she can't scarce open her eyes,
+much less know what she says."
+
+"Has she taken a fresh cold?"
+
+"Not that I knows on, Sir, t'aint possible now: her legs is so cramped
+she's 'bliged to bide in doors."
+
+"Poor thing! She seems patient enough under it all."
+
+"Lord bless yer, Sir! Patient? Why she lets fly more nor any 'ooman I
+know on; I can't say but what she do look meek enough when yer'e at the
+'pike, but as soon as she's the least way riled she'll find more words
+at her tongue's end than any other 'ooman in the parish. It's my belief
+that's all that's the matter with her now; she've bin rating the whole
+on us roundly one after t'other and has just worked herself into a
+biling rage, for nothing at all."
+
+"If that is all; the mischief is soon healed," said Mr. Blane, entering
+the cottage.
+
+Mrs. Marks sat just where her husband had left her, but her eyes were
+closed and her face strangely flushed. She looked up wearily and
+languidly, with not a trace of the temper her husband had spoken of, and
+said not a word as the doctor took her burning hand in his and felt its
+quick pulse.
+
+"You had better get your wife to bed, Marks it will be more comfortable
+for her than sitting here."
+
+"Yes, Sir," said Marks, wondering how it was to be accomplished. However
+he drew near and said, "Dont'ee think, old 'ooman, yer'd best do as the
+doctor 'vises yer."
+
+"In course," was the feeble reply, so different to the loud angry one
+Matthew expected that he was staggered, and still more so when she
+attempted to stand, but could not, and he and the young doctor between
+them had to carry her to bed.
+
+"What ails her, Sir?" asked Matthew, as Mr. Blane was going away. "D'yer
+think it's the tongue's done it?"
+
+"That may have increased the fever but not caused it," was the reply.
+
+"The faiver! Oh Lord; what's to be done now?"
+
+What was to be done, indeed?
+
+Jane gave up the house-work and tended her sister night and day, leaving
+Matthew and the girl to do as best they could without her, while for
+days Mrs. Marks struggled between life and death; then she grew better,
+the fever left her, and she lay weak as an infant, but otherwise
+progressing favourably.
+
+One evening Jane came downstairs and took up her station opposite her
+brother-in-law, who, instead of rejoicing at the change, viewed her
+presence with a rueful face. When his wife was present he could
+sometimes forget Jane, but all alone it was impossible; move which way
+he would he was sensible her eyes were on him as she plied her knitting
+needles at her old work. How he hated that constant click, click!
+
+"Did yer think t'was time for supper?" asked he presently, driven to say
+something to break the silence, becoming every moment more intolerable.
+
+"No."
+
+"How's the Missus this evening?"
+
+"Better. She's asleep."
+
+"That's all right. I'm glad on it," he said, "for she've had a hard
+time of it upstairs. When is it likely she'll be about again?"
+
+"What did the doctor say? Didn't he tell you when?"
+
+"He don't trouble to say much. I'm sure I'm right down glad when he
+don't say she's worse, for that's been the one word in his mouth
+lately."
+
+Jane made no reply, but the feeling that her eyes were fixed steadily on
+him exasperated him beyond control.
+
+"What d'yer see in my ugly mug?" he asked. "Have you fallen in love with
+it?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Then may be yer sees som'ut to skeer yer?"
+
+"It's bad to have anything on the mind," she replied.
+
+Matthew winced a little. "I'll tell you a piece of my mind," he said,
+throwing his half-smoked pipe into the fire, "I'll take Mrs. Marks'
+sauce and welcome, but I'm d--d if I take any other 'ooman's living."
+
+"I wonder whatever ails you?" said she, quietly.
+
+"Ails me? D'yer want to make believe I'm going to be knocked down with
+the faiver? I'm not such an ass, I can tell yer, yer looks a dale more
+likely yerself; and as to yer mind? yer look as though a horse couldn't
+carry the load yer've got on it. A terrible bad load too, I'll take my
+oath on it."
+
+Jane shivered from head to foot.
+
+"I'll take up the broth," she said, "most likely Anne's awake before
+now."
+
+But her hands trembled so she could scarcely take hold of the saucepan
+to pour it out, while the cup and saucer rattled and shook as she went
+across the room.
+
+Matthew sat sulkily by, and never offered to help her.
+
+"Well!" said he, as soon as she was gone, "it's my belief she'd have
+stuck me, if she'd only laid hold of a knife instead of a spoon. How
+trembly she was; her hands was all of a shake. She'll 'ave spilt all
+that 'ere stuff, whatever 'tis, afore my wife tucks it down. Well, if
+she 'aint crazed, I don't know who is."
+
+He lit a fresh pipe, and smoked away in contented solitariness.
+Presently, he looked thoughtful, knocked the ashes out of his pipe and
+said, "she's a-going to 'ave the faiver, or else she 'ave done som'ut
+bad in her day, and that's what's crazed her."
+
+Matthew was right as to the fever. Not many days passed before Jane was
+taken ill with it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+SEVERING THE CURL.
+
+ "But ever and anon of griefs subdued,
+ There comes a token like a scorpion's sting,
+ Scarce seen, but with fresh bitterness imbued;
+ And slight withal may be the things which bring
+ Back on the heart the weight which it would fling
+ Aside for ever: it may be a sound--
+ A tone of music--summer's eve--or spring--
+ A flower--the wind--the ocean--which shall wound,
+ Striking the electric chain wherewith we are darkly bound.
+
+ And how and why we know not, nor can trace
+ Home to its cloud this lightning of the mind,
+ But feel the shock renew'd, nor can efface
+ The blight and blackening which it leaves behind,
+ Which out of things familiar, undesign'd,
+ When least we deem of such, calls up to view
+ The spectres whom no exorcism can bind,
+ The cold--the changed--perchance the dead----"
+
+ CHILDE HAROLD.
+
+
+Can anything happen in a month? How often this question was in Amy's
+mind; how often in her thoughts. What could happen? Her heart suggested
+many things, strive as she would to think otherwise, and ever reverted
+with fear to her boy, whom she so passionately loved; old Hannah was
+surprised sometimes at the injunctions she received and wondered what
+her young mistress was so nervous about. The boy was well enough and
+hearty enough in all conscience: there was no occasion to make a "molly
+coddle" of him.
+
+Bertie had taken a fancy to Frances, and would sit on her knee in
+preference to others, or hold up his little face to be kissed, when he
+was shy at being caressed by anyone else. Amy viewed the liking with
+distrust; she disliked Frances, and could not bear to see her and the
+boy romping together, and would have checked it, if she could have found
+some reason for doing so; but Robert countenanced it, and often joined
+in their play, while Amy alone looked grave and sorrowful.
+
+Why had Frances come to Brampton? Had her stubborn heart at length given
+way, and did she regret the misery she had caused Amy and come to make
+atonement? To ask forgiveness and be forgiven? Were they to be
+reconciled at last? No. Not so. Frances came expecting to find Amy
+miserable, married to a man she could not love, and weeping the
+remembrance of the lost love. In that she would have gloried. But she
+came to find it otherwise; and how great was her disappointment, how
+bitter became her thoughts, how more than ever determined was she to
+pursue Amy and make her in the end utterly miserable. It wounded her to
+the quick to see Amy happy and contented with a husband who seemed to
+worship her and a child of whom she might well be proud. Was this to be
+the envied lot of her who had weaned the one heart away, so that harsh,
+bitter words had fallen on her ear as she had knelt in despair at his
+feet. Could she ever forget that? or his scorn? No! never! Amy's
+happiness must be undermined; had she not sworn it on that terrible,
+never-to-be forgotten night; sworn that Amy's sufferings should some day
+equal hers! There was little difficulty in accomplishing this if she
+went cautiously to work: haste alone could bring a failure.
+
+Amy saw little of her husband now; of a morning he rode with Mrs.
+Linchmore and Frances, or walked miles with Mr. Linchmore: there was
+always something to draw him from her side. Of an evening it was music
+and chess. At first Amy had ridden with the rest, but latterly she and
+Bertie had spent their mornings together; she could see no pleasure in
+riding by Frances' side, and Mrs. Linchmore was so timid she claimed all
+Robert's attention.
+
+Doubts fast and thick were springing up in Amy's heart. She shunned
+being alone with her husband, and insensibly grew cold and constrained.
+How seldom her eyes looked brightly on him, or her lips spoke loving
+words! while he never seemed to heed the change, or say aught of his
+love for her now, but grew colder too.
+
+They were both changed, husband and wife; the one had begun to doubt his
+wife's love; the other feared her husband's love was fading away, and
+she without the power to stay its flight. Ah! Frances had already
+wrought wondrous harm, although only a week since she came to Brampton.
+
+Amy stood at the window one morning, and watched the horses as they were
+being brought round, Frances's fiery one evincing his hot temper by
+arching his proud neck and coming along with a quick short trot, while
+the more sober Lady Emily pawed the ground with impatient hoof.
+Presently Frances came in ready for her ride, and then Vavasour.
+
+"Are you not going with us, Mrs. Vavasour?" asked Frances. "I thought I
+heard you say you would."
+
+Amy glanced at her husband. Would he, too, ask her? No; he stood quietly
+on the hearthrug, apparently indifferent as to her reply.
+
+"Thank you; I am rather busy this morning."
+
+"Busy? What can you find to do?"
+
+"I and Bertie are going for a walk."
+
+"Ah! I thought Bertie had a great deal to do with it. How fond you are
+of Bertie," and she laid an uncomfortable stress on the name as each
+time it passed her lips.
+
+Robert spoke at last. "Bertie is Mrs. Vavasour's loadstar," he said,
+quietly.
+
+Amy felt this to be unjust; not so would her husband have spoken to her
+a month ago.
+
+"My heart is large enough to hold more than the love for my boy," she
+replied.
+
+"I expect he holds by far the largest share of it," said Frances.
+
+Amy said nothing until she met Robert's gaze fixed inquiringly on her
+face. "My love for my child is a sacred love, and scarcely to be called
+in question, Miss Strickland," she answered.
+
+Frances's eyes flashed; then she laughed and struck her riding-habit
+with her whip. "Don't look so much in earnest, Mrs. Vavasour. I dare say
+you have lots of love in your heart for everybody."
+
+"Not for everyone," replied Amy, gravely.
+
+"Ah! you never fall in love at first sight, then; but when once you
+love, your love lasts for ever. Is it so?"
+
+"I have never asked myself the question."
+
+"But perhaps Mr. Vavasour has. What say you, Mr. Vavasour, you who are
+supposed to know every thought of your wife's heart?"
+
+"A woman's heart is too difficult a thing for us poor men to fathom."
+
+"Not always. I am going to call Isabella. You can ask your wife while
+I'm gone."
+
+Amy stood close by her husband, yet dared not raise her eyes to his.
+Would he ask her if he knew every thought of her heart, and if she said
+"no," sternly demand what she had to conceal? Now, more than ever, she
+wished she had told him all long ago. She knew the question must come.
+It came at last.
+
+"Amy, is it so? Do I know every thought of your heart?"
+
+"You ought to," she replied, tremblingly.
+
+"True." He sighed, then paused, as if expecting her to say more, but Amy
+was silent.
+
+"Do you love me better than all others, Amy? better than your boy?"
+
+"Nay, what a question. You know I love you, Robert."
+
+He strained her passionately to his heart: had he held her there a
+moment longer, Amy might have told him all, for she felt strangely
+softened; but Frances' voice sounded; he drew away from her without a
+word, and was gone.
+
+"I will ride to-morrow," thought Amy, "perhaps it will please him;" and
+Robert did look pleased the next day as she came out on the
+terrace--where he stood with Mrs. Linchmore,--in her riding habit and
+hat.
+
+"You are going with us?" he cried.
+
+"Yes, the day is so pleasant, I could not resist the temptation."
+
+Ah, yes! The day! His brow clouded, and he turned away.
+
+"I am glad you are coming," said Mrs. Linchmore, "as Frances does not
+ride."
+
+Frances not ride! For a moment Amy felt glad, then sorry. Would they
+think she had come purposely to prevent a tête-à-tête?
+
+"I did not know Miss Strickland was not to be of the party," said Amy,
+as her husband lifted her to the saddle.
+
+"Nor I," he replied.
+
+"You are not sorry I am going with you, Robert?"
+
+He looked at her in surprise. "Sorry, Amy?"
+
+"I mean; that is, I thought yesterday that perhaps you would like me to
+go."
+
+"Of course, not only yesterday, but to-day and every day," and then he
+mounted, and went on with Mrs. Linchmore.
+
+So the ride did not begin very auspiciously.
+
+Amy was a good rider, a graceful and fearless one, although perhaps not
+such a dashing horse-woman as Frances, and her husband looked at her
+with pride and pleasure as she cantered along on her spirited horse at
+his side. The exercise soon brought a glow to her cheeks, and a bright
+light to her eyes, while she laughed and chatted so joyously that Robert
+thought he had never seen her look so lovely, and forgot the dark lady
+at his side and riveted his attention on his wife.
+
+"Take care, Amy," said he, as her horse gave a sudden start, "tighten
+the curb a little more."
+
+But Amy only laughed. "I like him to jump about," she said, "it shows he
+is in as good spirits as his mistress."
+
+"I certainly never saw Mrs. Vavasour in such spirits," remarked Mrs.
+Linchmore, feeling herself neglected.
+
+But Amy was not to be checked by a grave look from her rival. Since
+yesterday, when she had stood at the window with her eyes filled with
+tears watching her and her husband ride away, she had determined on
+standing her ground as Robert's wife; she would not fall away from his
+side at the first danger that threatened, and quietly without an effort
+allow another to wean his heart from her, but would win back his love to
+where it had been; and then, not till then, open her heart--as she ought
+to have done long ago--and tell him all.
+
+Had Frances known of Amy's determination, or even of her contemplated
+ride, she would not have been walking so quietly along the lane
+rejoicing in the success of her stratagems. As she emerged into the road
+she met Bertie, who clapped his hands, and sprung out of his
+perambulator before Hannah's vigilant eye perceived him.
+
+"I'll go with you," he said, taking Frances' hand.
+
+"Come back, Master Bertie, this moment," said his nurse.
+
+"Let him come," exclaimed Frances, "you are a very naughty boy, all the
+same, for being so disobedient."
+
+"Please don't take him far, Miss, for it's most time for us to be
+turning home."
+
+"No; only to the turnpike gate and back."
+
+She took the boy's hand and away they went, Bertie chatting pleasantly
+until they reached the gate, where he made a stand and began climbing
+it, notwithstanding Frances' remonstrances. The continued talking
+brought Matthew to the window.
+
+"There's some folks from the Hall," said he to his sister-in-law, who
+was busy peeling some potatoes.
+
+Jane dropped the knife and turned sharply round. "Go out to them," she
+said, "we don't want them in here."
+
+"It's only a young gentleman a-climbing the gate," he replied.
+
+Jane picked up the knife and after a moment went on with her work; but
+Bertie had seen a cat with its kitten on the door-step; and had run into
+the cottage before Frances could prevent him.
+
+"Go away! don't come in here!" screamed Jane.
+
+"Put down the knife and hould yer oncivil tongue, yer dafty!" exclaimed
+Marks. "What the devil d'yer mean by it! Walk in, young gentleman, y'ere
+welcome to play with the cat as long as yer like. Take a seat, Miss,"
+and he brought forward one of the chairs and dusted it.
+
+But Frances took no heed of the invitation. "I am very angry with you,
+Bertie," she said, "What will Hannah say? Come away?"
+
+But Bertie would not, but went up to Jane with the kitten in his arms.
+
+"Very well," replied Frances, "I shall call Hannah," but in reality she
+went outside and waited for him, while Matthew, hat in hand, followed
+and talked to the young lady.
+
+"I wish pussy was my very own," said Bertie presently, after playing
+with it for a few moments.
+
+Jane had seated herself in a chair with her face half turned from him
+and paid no heed to his remark.
+
+"Will you give it me?" he asked in his childish way, pulling at her
+dress to attract her attention.
+
+"It isn't mine," she replied.
+
+Bertie put the kitten in her lap. "Isn't it pretty?" he said. "Don't you
+love it?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Do you love the big cat?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Don't you love anything?"
+
+"No. Nothing."
+
+"What's your name?"
+
+"Jane."
+
+"You're a naughty, cross woman, Jane, and _I_ shan't love you."
+
+"You don't need to," she replied. "Go away!"
+
+But Bertie continued playing with the kitten still laying in her lap. As
+he stooped his little face over it, his soft, dimpled cheek touched
+Jane's hand, while his fair, curly hair waved almost across the other.
+Presently Jane raised her hand, took off his cap and stroked his head
+gently.
+
+Bertie looked up half surprised. "Do you think it pretty?" he asked.
+
+"I don't know." But she did not take her hand away.
+
+"Would you like to have some of it?" he asked again, as Jane passed her
+fingers through one of the silky curls. "Cut it. Where's the scissors?"
+
+"There on the table over against the window," she replied.
+
+Bertie ran and fetched them, and presently a curl shiny and bright fell
+in Jane's lap.
+
+"There, that's my present," he said, "now won't you give me kitty?"
+
+"She's too small; she mustn't go from her mother," said Jane, lifting
+the curl and smoothing it softly.
+
+"Would her mother cry?"
+
+"Oh my God!" exclaimed Jane, burying her face in her hands, "you'll
+break my heart!"
+
+"But would her mother cry? Would she cry very much?" persisted Bertie,
+striving to draw her hands away.
+
+"Yes," replied Jane, "cry and go mad, and curse those who took him. But
+curses don't kill, ah no! they don't kill; they only wear the heart
+away."
+
+The child drew away, half frightened.
+
+"Bertie! Bertie! are you coming?" called Frances.
+
+"Good bye," he said, shyly. "You'll send me kitty by and by, won't you?"
+
+"Yes,--for the sake of the curl," she replied, wrapping it in paper, and
+placing it in her bosom.
+
+But Bertie only heard the "Yes." "Send it for me; only for me," he said.
+
+"Yes, for Master Bertie."
+
+"Bertie Vavasour," he said.
+
+"What?" screamed Jane, starting to her feet with a shriek that startled
+even Mrs. Marks, asleep in the room above. "Don't touch me! Don't come
+nigh me! Stand off! I'm crazed, I tell you, and don't know nothing. Oh!
+I'm deaf, and didn't hear it! No, no, I didn't hear it! I won't hear it!
+I'm crazed."
+
+"That yer are, yer she devil!" exclaimed Matthew, striding up to where
+she stood, as it were at bay, before some deadly enemy. "Are these yer
+manners, when gentry come to visit yer?" and he half thrust, half threw
+her out on the stairs.
+
+"She's crazed, Miss," said Matthew, returning, "and has got one of her
+fits on her; but she's as harmless as a fly. Don't 'ee cry, young
+Master," said he to Bertie, who with his arms clasped round Frances'
+neck, was sobbing violently. "She ain't well neither, Miss," continued
+he, "I thought, days ago, she were a-going to have the fever."
+
+"The fever!" exclaimed Frances, "what fever?"
+
+"I don't know, Miss, my wife have been sick of it for days past."
+
+"And how dare you!" cried Frances, passionately, seizing him by the arm;
+"how dare you let the boy come in. Don't you know it is murder. Oh, if
+he should get it! If he should get it!" and she flew from the cottage,
+leaving Matthew bewailing his thoughtlessness and folly.
+
+Frances disliked children, and had made up her mind to thoroughly hate
+Amy's child, long before she saw him; but the boy's determined will, so
+congenial to her spirit, and then his partiality to herself, overcame
+this resolution. Her object had been to conciliate the father through
+the boy; but in attaining this object she had taken a liking for the
+child, which she in vain tried to surmount; Bertie wound himself into
+that cruel heart, somehow, and held his place there in defiance of all
+obstacles.
+
+Her heart sank within her at Matthew's words, and felt strangely stirred
+as she drew away the little arms so tightly encircling her neck. "For
+Heaven's sake, Bertie, don't cry so, you'll make yourself so hot," and
+then she felt his hands and forehead to assure herself he had not
+already caught the fever.
+
+"She's a naughty woman," sobbed Bertie.
+
+"Yes, yes, she's a naughty woman;" and then by dint of coaxing and
+persuading there was little trace, when they reached Hannah at the
+further end of the village, of the fright or violent cry he had had;
+still, his nurse was not to be deceived.
+
+"What's the matter with Master Bertie?" she asked.
+
+"A poor idiot in one of the cottages frightened him," replied Frances;
+but she said not a word of the fever, or that the cottage was the one at
+the turnpike gate, and Bertie's version of the story was a great deal
+too unconnected to be understood, and merely seemed a corroboration of
+the one Frances had given.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+DOWN BY THE LAKE.
+
+ "At length within a lonely cell,
+ They saw a mournful dame.
+
+ Her gentle eyes were dimm'd with tears,
+ Her cheeks were pale with woe:
+ And long Sir Valentine besought
+ Her doleful tale to know.
+
+ 'Alas! young knight,' she weeping said,
+ 'Condole my wretched fate;
+ A childless mother here you see;
+ A wife without a mate'"
+
+ VALENTINE AND URSINE.
+
+
+Frances was nervous and anxious for days after her walk with Bertie; the
+sudden opening of a door made her start and tremble lest it should be
+some-one come to announce the boy's illness. Sometimes she watched and
+waited at the window half the morning to catch a glimpse of him going
+out for his daily walk, or if he did not come would seek him in the
+nursery, and bring him downstairs. She became Bertie's shadow, and he,
+in consequence, fonder of her than ever. But the days crept on and there
+was no symptom that he had taken the fever: so by degrees Frances forgot
+her fears--or rather they slumbered--and went back to her old ways. But
+it had become more difficult to deal with Amy now, she appeared to have
+changed so entirely; there was no making her jealous, even if she could
+manage to make Robert devote himself half the evening to her hostess.
+Amy seemed just as happy; she either was not jealous or was jealous and
+concealed it, and rode with her husband, let who would be of the party,
+or deserted Bertie and walked with him, even learnt to play billiards
+when she found Robert was fond of it; so that it was rarely chess now,
+but all, even Mr. Linchmore, joined of an evening in the former game.
+
+Still Robert's love was not what it had been. His wife felt that it was
+not; he loved her by fits and starts, while some days he was moody and
+even touchy; but Amy did not despair. How could she when she felt he
+still loved her? In another fortnight they would be back at Somerton,
+and away from Frances, who, Amy feared, was fast weaning her boy's as
+well as her husband's love from her, though how she had managed it she
+knew not.
+
+"I have just been talking with Mr. Grant, your head keeper," said Robert
+to Mr. Linchmore about a fortnight after the memorable walk to the
+turnpike, "he tells me the poaching goes on as sharp and fast as ever."
+
+"Worse," was the reply, "they are the same set we have always had, that
+is to say, we suppose so from their cunning and rashness."
+
+"You got rid of two or three of them at the Sessions, if you remember,
+when I was here nearly four years ago."
+
+"Yes, but the example does not appear to have done much good."
+
+"You want Charley here," said Frances, "to excite you all into going
+out in a body again and exterminating them. Do you remember your fears,
+Mrs. Vavasour."
+
+Amy looked up to reply, and meeting Frances' gaze, she grew confused and
+coloured deeply. "I should be more afraid now," said she with an effort
+at composure.
+
+"I was sorry to hear you had never succeeded in tracking that man?" said
+Vavasour, with his eyes fixed on his wife's now pale face.
+
+"You mean the man that wounded you? No, several were taken up on
+suspicion, but we were unable to prove anything against them, and the
+watcher, the poor man who was so frightfully bruised and otherwise
+ill-treated, swore, that none of them resembled his or your assailant."
+
+"I could have sworn to the man, too, I think."
+
+"You were abroad, and so I did not press the matter, and in time the
+affair blew over altogether."
+
+The conversation ended, and was perhaps forgotten by all save Robert
+Vavasour, and he could not forget it, but snatched his hat and strolled
+out hastily into the Park. What had made his wife's face flush so
+deeply? Had it anything to do with Charles, whom Frances was so
+constantly throwing at his teeth? He began to hate the very name, and
+was daily growing more madly suspicious of his wife, and yet had his
+thoughts framed themselves into words he would have shrunk from the bare
+idea of suspecting his idol. That she had not loved him with all her
+heart when he married her he knew: she had told him so; and how easy he
+had thought the task of winning the heart she had assured him none other
+had ever asked to have an interest in; but then had she loved none
+other? perhaps this very man of whom for one half hour he remembered
+being jealous long ago. When she told him the first, why if it was so,
+had she not told him the second? Why give him only half her confidence?
+Perhaps she loved him still? Perhaps the remembrance of him had called
+the guilty blush to her cheek? "Ah! if it is so!" he cried with angry
+vehemence, "he shall die. I will be revenged!"
+
+"Vengeance! who talks of vengeance?" said a voice near, and, looking up,
+he saw Goody Grey leaning on her staff. Involuntarily he tendered her
+some halfpence.
+
+"I want them not," she said. "It does not do for the blind to lead the
+blind."
+
+"What mean you, woman? I am in no mood to be trifled with."
+
+"Don't I know that?" she replied; "don't I know the bitterness of the
+heart? Do you think I have lived all these years and don't know where
+misery lies?"
+
+"Where does it lie?" he asked.
+
+"In your heart. Where it wouldn't have been if you hadn't been there;"
+and she pointed in the direction of the Hall. "'Tis a gay meeting, and
+may be as sad a parting."
+
+"Why so?" asked he again.
+
+"Do the hawk and dove agree together in the same nest?"
+
+"The dove would stand but a poor chance," said Robert.
+
+"True." She turned upon her heel and went into the cottage, and seating
+herself in a low chair, began rocking it backwards and forwards,
+singing, in a kind of low, monotonous chant,
+
+ "When the leaves from the trees begin to fall
+ Then the curse hangs darkly over the Hall."
+
+"That must be now, then," said Robert, who had followed her in, "for the
+leaves are falling thick enough and fast enough in the wood."
+
+"Darker and darker as the leaves fall thicker," she replied, "and
+darkest of all when they are on the ground, and the trees bare."
+
+"What will happen then?"
+
+"Ask your own heart: hasn't it anger, hatred, and despair in it? Did I
+not hear you call aloud for vengeance?"
+
+"And what good can come of it?" continued she, seeing he made no reply;
+"like you, I've had all that in my heart, until curses loud and bitter
+have followed one after another, heaped on those who injured me, and
+yet I'm as far off from happiness as ever. I began to seek it when I was
+a young woman, and look! my hair is grey, and yet I have not found it;
+while the fierce anger, the strong will to return evil for evil, have
+faded from my spirit like the slow whitening of these grey hairs.
+There's only despair now, and hatred for those, for _her_ who did me
+wrong."
+
+"Do we all hate as mercilessly as this? I feel that a look, a word of
+love would turn my heart from bitterness."
+
+"Then the injury has not been deep. I've lived here a lonely woman
+twenty years, and a look, a word, will sometimes call the fierce blood
+to my heart. When the injury is eternal and irremediable then the hate
+must be lasting too."
+
+"The injured heart may forgive," said Vavasour.
+
+"It may forgive. But forget its hate! its wrongs! its despair! Never,
+never," said she, fiercely.
+
+"It may be so," said Robert, half aloud.
+
+"May be so? It is so. Hate is a deadly enemy; don't let it creep into
+your heart; tear it out! cast it from you! for once you have it, it is
+yours for ever; even death cannot part it from you."
+
+"I doubt that. We know that even a dying sinner's heart may repent and
+be softened; the thought that he is perishing from the earth nursing a
+deadly sin at his heart would do much; he would never dare die so."
+
+"Prayers, the pleadings of an agonised, breaking heart may be vain--in
+vain--was vain, young man, for I tried it," replied Goody Grey, her
+voice suddenly changing from fierceness to mournful sadness.
+
+"Surely there could not be a heart so hard, if you pleaded rightly."
+
+"Don't tell me that!" she exclaimed, raising her voice, "don't tell me
+there was anything I might have done. Did I not kneel and pray? Did I
+not take back my curses and give blessings? Did I not plead my broken
+heart and withered youth? But death came, even as I knelt; the hate was
+too strong, and the words I panted to hear were unspoken. What have you
+to say to that?"
+
+"Hope," replied Robert; "what you have done at a death bed, I have done
+during life, and been refused; death has come since, and I am seemingly
+as far off as ever; and yet I hope on."
+
+"Hope on, hope ever," said she, sadly, "yes, that's all that's left me
+now, but it doesn't satisfy the cravings of my heart; never will!"
+
+"Have you no relations? You must live but a lonely life here," said
+Robert.
+
+"That is the only living thing that loves me," she replied, pointing to
+the parrot, sitting pluming his feathers. "He's been with me in joy and
+sorrow. Don't touch him; he is savage with strangers."
+
+"Not with me," said Robert, smoothing his feathers gently.
+
+"Then he knows friends from foes, or his heart's taken kindly to you
+like mine did, when I saw you with the bad passions written in your
+face."
+
+"I once had a bird like this," he replied, thoughtfully, "but it must be
+years ago, for I cannot recall to my recollection at this moment when it
+was."
+
+He passed from the cottage, while Goody Grey again rocked herself to and
+fro' and began her old song.
+
+ "When the leaves from the trees begin to fall
+ Then the curse----"
+
+The rest of the words were lost to his ear, but the sound of her voice
+was borne along by the breeze, and sounded mournfully and sadly as it
+swept through the leafless trees.
+
+Robert thought much of Goody Grey as he walked homewards. Here was a
+woman whose very life had wasted away in the vain search for what for
+twenty years,--perhaps more,--had eluded her grasp. Would it be the same
+with him? Would years,--his life slip by, and the mystery of his birth
+be a mystery still? Would hope fade away, and he, like her, grow
+despairing in the end? He felt a strange interest in that lone, unloved
+woman, with nothing in the world to love but a bird. Then his thoughts
+reverted to his wife, and his love for her. Why had she married him if
+her heart was another's? Why had she done him this wrong? Why make not
+only herself, but him miserable for life? But could deceit dwell in so
+lovely a form as his wife's? only a month ago he would have staked his
+life; nay, his very love upon her truth. And now--now--
+
+"Where are you going so fast, Robert? Are you walking for a wager? I
+have been vainly trying to come up with you for the last five minutes,"
+said Amy, taking his arm.
+
+"Have you been out walking without Bertie?" he said.
+
+"Yes, I meant to have gone with you; and ran upstairs for my hat, when I
+saw you preparing to go out."
+
+"Why did you not come then?"
+
+"I was too late; when I came back you had disappeared, Miss Strickland
+said down the long avenue: so I followed, and went through the village,
+and home by the lane, but somehow I missed you."
+
+"Miss Strickland was wrong. I went across the fields into the wood, as
+far as Mrs. Grey's cottage. What a singular being she is!"
+
+"Have you never seen her until to-day?"
+
+"Yes, several times, but never to speak to. She must have been very
+handsome in her youth."
+
+"What, with that dark frown on her brow?"
+
+"That has been caused from sorrow," replied Robert, "she has had some
+heavy, bitter trial to bear; besides that frown is not always there,
+once I noticed quite a softened expression steal over her face. I feel
+an interest in the old lady; she tells me she is alone in the
+world,--like myself. I feel alone sometimes."
+
+"You, Robert!" said Amy, in a tone of sadness and reproach.
+
+"I feel so sometimes, Amy."
+
+"What, with your wife's love?"
+
+"You have the boy to care for. You love him so much, Amy."
+
+"Yes," said she in a tone of disappointment.
+
+"See! there he comes up the walk."
+
+"Yes," she said again, but never turned her head or heeded Bertie's
+"Mamma!" "Mamma!"
+
+"I love you better than Bertie, Robert," she whispered softly a moment
+after.
+
+He did not reply; but she felt his arm tighten on her hand and press it
+slightly to his side. She did not return the pressure, she was only half
+satisfied as she left him and went up the terrace steps, while Robert's
+eyes followed her wistfully, until even the skirt of her dress swept
+through the door out of sight.
+
+Ah! had she only remained with him a little longer.
+
+Robert passed on down the terrace, and stood at the further end. Just
+then a window was flung open, and Frances Strickland called to his boy.
+They talked for a few moments, then Hannah passed on with her charge,
+while Robert still leant against the abutment of the window. Presently
+it closed gently, a voice saying at the same instant, "Poor Charley!
+Mrs. Vavasour will break her heart."
+
+Robert sprung to his feet and strode past the window at which Frances
+still stood, his shadow falling upon her darkly as he went on into the
+house,--into the room.
+
+Alone! and ready for a walk? That was well, he would not question her
+there; no, it must be away, far away, and safe from interruption.
+
+"I would speak with you, Miss Strickland," he said sternly, vainly
+striving to appear calm, and stay the fierce hot blood rushing to his
+heart and mounting to his brow.
+
+Frances followed him at once without a question; away into the Park,
+along the very road he had so lately traversed with his wife; she could
+scarcely keep up with his stride, or heavy iron-sounding step, that
+seemed as though it would crush every stone and pebble in his path to
+powder: still he went on; on through the trees and walks, startling the
+birds from the branches, but striking no dismay into Frances' breast;
+on, even down to the lake slumbering so peacefully and quietly. Here he
+stopped, and pointing to the clump of a tree, bade her be seated. Then
+he stood sternly before her.
+
+"Can you wonder I wish to speak with you?" he asked in a thick, harsh,
+almost agitated voice, which grew steadier as he went on.
+
+"No," she replied.
+
+"Nor why I have brought you thus far?"
+
+"No," she said again.
+
+"Then speak!" he cried, "and if you speak falsely I will hold you up as
+a scorn and shame amongst women."
+
+"I am not afraid," she said, "and can excuse your harsh words; but--"
+
+"I will have no buts," he said sternly, "you have slandered my wife,
+her I love more than my life; you shall either say you have lied
+falsely, or you shall make good your words."
+
+"Shall I begin at the beginning? Do you want to know all?"
+
+"Begin, and make an end quickly."
+
+And she did begin, even from the time when Amy had fainted, that
+memorable night, unto where Charles Linchmore had told her he had met
+Amy on her wedding day; and as she went on he buried his face in his
+hands, while his whole frame shook and trembled like an aspen.
+
+"Girl, have some mercy!" he cried.
+
+But she had none; no pity. Was not this woman his wife; and had she
+shown pity. So she never stayed her words, never softened them, she gave
+him what appeared the hard, stern, agonising truth, and he groaned with
+very anguish as she spoke.
+
+"Is that all?" he asked at last.
+
+"All."
+
+"And you will swear it. Swear it!" he cried hoarsely.
+
+"I will. But you need not believe me. Ask your wife? See what she says."
+
+He moved his hands from his face. It looked as though years had swept
+over it. "You have broken my heart," he said, in a quivering voice. And
+then he left her.
+
+Amy had gone to her room, sad and thoughtful, with the feeling, at last,
+that her husband doubted her love; and yet, she did love him better than
+she ever thought she should.
+
+As she turned his words over in her mind, she determined on delaying no
+longer; but now, at once, tell him all. She dreaded his anger and
+sorrowful look; but that, anything was better than the loss of his love.
+So she sat and listened, and awaited his coming. But he came not.
+
+The luncheon bell rang, and she went downstairs wondering at his
+absence.
+
+"I am sorry to say Mr. Linchmore has heard some bad news, Mrs.
+Vavasour," said Mrs. Linchmore.
+
+"My husband! Where is he?"--exclaimed Amy, panic stricken.
+
+"It has nothing to do with him," replied Mr. Linchmore, "my brother has,
+unfortunately, been wounded." And he looked somewhat surprised at her
+sudden fright.
+
+Then Amy was glad Robert was absent. "I am sorry," she faltered. "I hope
+it is not serious;" and her pale face paled whiter than before.
+
+"No, I trust not. He has been out with General Chamberlain's force."
+
+"He was very foolish to go to India at all," said Mr. Linchmore. "I dare
+say he would have had plenty of opportunities of winning laurels
+elsewhere; but he always was so impetuous,--here to-day and gone
+to-morrow."
+
+Then the conversation turned upon other subjects, and still Robert came
+not. Just as they rose from the table Frances came in.
+
+"Have you seen Mr. Vavasour?" asked Amy.
+
+"No. Has he not been in to luncheon? I thought I was late."
+
+Amy passed on up to her room again, and for a short time sat quietly by
+the fire, as she had done before; then, as the hours crept on, she rose
+and went to the window.
+
+The sun sank slowly, twilight came on, and the shadows of evening grew
+darker still; Amy could scarcely see the long avenue now, or the tall
+dark trees overshadowing it; and still she was alone. Then the door
+opened; but it was not her husband--it was Hannah, who stood looking at
+her with grave face.
+
+"If you please, Ma'am, I don't think Master Bertie is well. There is
+nothing to be frightened about; but he has been hot and feverish ever
+since he came home from his walk."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+REPENTANCE.
+
+ "Whispering tongues can poison truth,
+ And constancy lives in realms above;
+ And life is thorny, and youth is vain;
+ And to be wroth with one we love,
+ Doth work like madness in the brain."
+
+ COLERIDGE.
+
+ "My thoughts acquit you for dishonouring me
+ By any foul act; but the virtuous know
+ 'Tis not enough to clear ourselves, but the
+ Suspicions of our shame."
+
+ SHIRLEY.
+
+
+Robert came back at last, and years seemed to have swept over his head
+and gathered round his heart, since only a few hours before he had stood
+in his wife's room. But he looked for her in vain, she was not there,
+but away in the nursery, hushing, with tearful eyes and frightened
+heart, poor sick Bertie in her arms to sleep. Robert longed, yet
+dreaded to see her. Through all his misery his heart clung to his wife,
+and hoped, even when his lips murmured there was no hope. He took up the
+work on the table, a handkerchief Amy had been hemming, marked with his
+name, and sighed as he laid it down, and thought duty, not love, had
+induced her to work for him.
+
+So he waited on--waited patiently. At length she came.
+
+"Oh, Robert! I am so glad you are here. I have been longing for you, and
+quite frightened when you stayed away such a time."
+
+The mother's fears were roused, and she clung at once to her husband for
+help and support. Her trembling heart had forgotten for the moment all
+she had been braving her heart, and nerving her mind to tell him. The
+great fear supplanted for the time the lesser and more distant one.
+
+She had seated herself at Robert's feet, leaning her head on his knee.
+He let her remain so--did not even withdraw the hand she had taken, for
+the fierceness of his anger had passed away, and a great sorrow filled
+his heart. Did he not pity her as much as himself? she so fair and
+young. Had not she made them both miserable? Both he and her.
+
+But Amy saw nothing of all this--nothing of the grave, sorrowing
+face--her heart was thinking of poor Bertie's heavy eyes and hot hands,
+and how best she could break it to her husband, so as not to grieve him
+too much, for did he not love the boy as much as she did? and would he
+not fear and dread the worst? But even while she hesitated, her husband
+spoke--
+
+"Amy! Have you ever deceived me? I, who have loved you so faithfully."
+
+The cold, changed tone--the harsh voice struck her at once. She looked
+up quickly. There was that in his face which sent dismay into her heart,
+while her fears for Bertie fled as she gazed. Was she too late? Had her
+husband found out what she had been striving so hard for months to tell
+him? Yes, she felt, she knew she was too late; that he knew all, and
+waited for her words to confirm what he knew.
+
+"Never as your wife, Robert," she replied, tremblingly.
+
+"And when, then!"
+
+"Oh, Robert! don't look so sternly at me--don't speak so strangely. I
+meant to tell you, I did indeed. I have been striving all these months
+to tell you."
+
+Alas! there was something to tell, then; every word she uttered drove
+away hope more and more from his heart.
+
+"Months and years?" he said, mournfully.
+
+"No, no; to-day, this very day have I been watching and waiting. Oh! why
+did you not come back? Why did you not come back, Robert, so that I
+might have told you?"
+
+"You dared not," he said, sternly.
+
+"Oh, yes! I dared. I have done no sin, only deceived you, Robert, at--at
+first."
+
+"Only at first. Only for ever."
+
+"No, no; not for ever. I always meant to tell you, I did, indeed,
+Robert." She began to fear he distrusted her words already--she, whose
+very "yes" had been implicitly believed and reverenced. Alas! this first
+sin, perhaps the only one, into what meshes it leads us, often bringing
+terrible retribution.
+
+"Did you not fear living on in--in deceit?" he said. "Did you not feel
+how near you were to my heart--did you not know that my love for you
+was--was madness? that, lonely and unloved, I loved you with all the
+passion of my nature? If not, you knew that all my devotion was thrown
+away--utterly wasted--that your heart was another's, and could never be
+mine."
+
+He stopped; and the silence was unbroken, save by Amy's sobs.
+
+"Had you told me this," he said again, "do you think I would have
+brought this great sorrow upon you? put trouble and fear into your heart
+instead of love and happiness, and made your young life
+desolate--desolate and unbearable, but for the boy. He is the one green
+leaf in your path, I the withered one,--withered at heart and soul."
+
+"Robert! Robert! don't be so hard, so--so--" she could not bring to her
+lips to say cruel, "but forgive me!"
+
+He heeded her not, but went on.
+
+"And the day of your marriage," he said, "that day which should have
+been, and I fondly hoped was, the happiest day of your life; upon that
+day, of all others, you saw him."
+
+"Not wilfully, Robert, not--not wilfully," sobbed Amy.
+
+"That day, your marriage day, was the one on which you first learnt of
+_his_ love for you, and passed in one short half hour a whole lifetime
+of agony. Poor Amy! poor wife! Forgive you? yes; my heart is pitying
+enough and weak enough to forgive you your share in my misery for the
+sake of the anguish of your own."
+
+Amy only wept on. She could not answer. But he, her husband, needed no
+reply; her very silence, her utter grief and tears confirmed all he
+said.
+
+"Amy, did you never think the knowledge of all this--the tale would
+break my heart?"
+
+"Never! I feared your anger, your sorrowing looks, but--but
+that?--Never, never!"
+
+"And yet it will be so. It must be so."
+
+"Oh, no, no! Neither now nor ever, because--because I love you, Robert."
+
+"Amy! wife!" he said, sternly, "there must never be a question of love
+between us, now. That--that is at an end, and must never be named again.
+I forgive you, but forget I never can," and then he left her, before she
+could say one word. Left her to her young heart's anguish and bitter
+despair, tenfold greater than the anguish he had depicted being hers
+long ago, because hopeless--hopeless of ever now winning back his love
+again. And what a love it had been! She began to see, to feel it all
+now, now that it had gone, left her for ever.
+
+"God help me!" she cried, "I never, never thought it would have come to
+this. God help me! I have no other help now, and forgive me if I have
+broken his heart."
+
+Then by-and-by she rose, and with wan, stricken face, went back to her
+boy.
+
+Mr. Blane was bending over Bertie, who was crying in feeble, childish
+accents, "Give me some water to drink. Please give me some water."
+
+"Presently, my little man; all in good time."
+
+"But I want it now--I must have it now."
+
+"My mistress, Mrs. Vavasour, sir," said Hannah, as Amy entered, and
+stood silently by his side, and looked anxiously into his face, as she
+returned his greeting.
+
+"Dr. Bernard usually attends at the Hall," she said; "but he lives so
+far away, and I was so anxious about my boy. Is there much the matter
+with him?"
+
+"Ahem," said Mr. Blane, clearing his throat, as most medical men do when
+disliking to tell an unpleasant truth, or considering how best to shape
+an answer least terrifying to the mother's heart. "No--no," he said
+hesitatingly. "The child is very hot and feverish."
+
+"I hope he isn't going to sicken for a fever, sir," said Hannah.
+
+"I fear he has sickened for it," he replied.
+
+"Not the scarlet fever?" said Amy, in a frightened voice.
+
+"No. There has been a nasty kind of fever going about, which I fear your
+boy has somehow taken. I have had two cases lately, and in both
+instances the symptoms were similar to this."
+
+"Is it a dangerous fever?" asked Amy.
+
+"The old lady, my first patient, is quite well again, in fact better
+than she has been for the last six months, as the fever cured the
+rheumatics, and from being almost a cripple, she now walks nearly as
+well as ever. And," he said, rising to leave, "I should advise no one's
+entering this room but those who are obliged to--the fewer the
+better--and by all means keep the other children away, as the sore
+throat is decidedly infectious. Good-bye, Sir; take your medicine like
+a little man, and then we'll soon have you well again," said he to
+Bertie.
+
+"My boy, my poor Bertie," said Amy, as she sat by his side, and held the
+cool, refreshing drink to his parched lips. Did she need this fresh
+trial coming upon her already stricken heart?
+
+"Don't let the boy see you crying, Ma'am," said Hannah, "or perhaps
+he'll be getting frightened, and I'm sure that'll be bad for him."
+
+"No," said Amy. But though no tears were in her eyes, the traces of them
+were weighing down the heavy swollen eyelids; but tears she had none to
+shed, she had wept so much.
+
+So she sat by the side of her sick child's little cot with aching heart,
+all alone and lonely, with no one but old faithful Hannah to sympathize
+and watch with her; he, her husband, she dared not think of, or if she
+thought at all, it was to almost wish he would not come; so stern and
+grave a face might frighten her boy.
+
+"Are you not going down to dinner, Ma'am?" said Nurse at last, in a
+whisper, for Bertie had dropped off into an uneasy slumber.
+
+"Dinner? Ah! yes. I forgot. No, I shall not go down to dinner to-day. I
+shall not leave my boy."
+
+"I can take care of him, Ma'am, and then shouldn't you tell the Master?
+Haven't you forgotten him? There's no use keeping the bad news from
+him."
+
+Forgotten him? How could she forget? Were not his words still fresh at
+her heart?
+
+But Nurse was right, he ought to be told; there was Mrs. Linchmore, too,
+she--all, ought to know about Bertie.
+
+So Amy rose and went away in search of her husband. Where was he? Should
+she find him in his room? She hesitated ere she knocked, but his heavy
+tread a moment after assured her he was there. She did not look up as
+the door opened, but said simply, "Bertie is ill, Robert, very ill. Mr.
+Blane has been to see him, and says he has caught some fever, but not a
+dangerous one."
+
+All traces of sternness and anger fled from his brow, as he listened and
+caught the expression of his wife's face. He wondered at the calmness
+with which she spoke. His boy ill, little Bertie, in whose life her very
+soul had seemed wrapt? and she could stand and speak of it so coldly, so
+calmly as this? He wondered, and saw nothing of the anguish within, or
+how the one terrible blow he had dealt her had for the time broken and
+crushed her spirit. Only a few hours ago, and she would have wept and
+clung round his neck for help, in this her one great hour of need. But
+that was past, could not be; he would not have it so, her love had been
+forbidden.
+
+"I will go and see the boy," he said, gently.
+
+She turned and went on her way downstairs to the drawing-room.
+
+"Good gracious, Mrs. Vavasour! what is the matter?" cried Frances, her
+heart beating savagely, as she looked at the poor face, so wan and
+still, telling its own tale of woe long before the lips did.
+
+Amy took no notice of Frances, but passed on to where Mrs. Linchmore sat
+with the children. It was Alice's birthday, and Bertie was to have come
+down too, and as Amy remembered it, her heart for the first time felt
+full; but she drove back the tears, and said--
+
+"My child is ill. He has caught some fever; but not a dangerous one."
+
+How fond she was of repeating this latter phrase, as if the very fact of
+saying that it was not a dangerous fever would ease and convince her
+frightened, timid heart.
+
+The words startled everyone.
+
+"I am extremely sorry," said Mrs. Linchmore, drawing Alice away. "I
+trust, I hope it is not infectious?"
+
+"I very much fear it is, at least, Mr. Blane thinks the sore throat is,
+and advises the children, by all means, being kept apart."
+
+"They must go away, shall go away the very first thing to-morrow
+morning. It is as well to be on the safe side. Don't you think so,
+Robert?" said Mrs. Linchmore.
+
+"Decidedly. They can go into the village for the time or to Grant's
+cottage."
+
+"There are cases of the same fever in the village," said Amy.
+
+"Then they must go away altogether," said Mrs. Linchmore, hurriedly. "We
+must send them to Standale."
+
+"I am so sorry for Bertie, he'll have such lots of nasty medicine," said
+Fanny; "but won't it be nice to be without Miss Barker?"
+
+"Be silent, child!" said her mother, "Miss Barker will of course go with
+you."
+
+"Oh! how horrid!" returned Fanny. Even Mrs. Linchmore's frown could not
+prevent her from saying that.
+
+Amy passed out again even as she had come, almost brushing Frances'
+dress, but without looking at her, although, had she raised her eyes,
+she must have been struck with the whiteness of her face, which
+equalled, if not exceeded, her own.
+
+"Master has been here, Ma'am," said Hannah, as Amy returned, "and bid me
+tell you he had gone to fetch Dr. Bernard."
+
+Again Amy sat by her boy watching and waiting. What else was there to be
+done? He still slept--slept uneasily, troubled with that short, dry
+cough.
+
+Later on in the evening, when Dr. Bernard--whose mild hopeful face and
+kind cheering voice inspiring her poor heart with courage,--had been,
+and when the hours were creeping on into night a knock sounded at the
+door.
+
+"Miss Strickland is outside, Ma'am, and wants to come in. Shall I let
+her?" asked Hannah.
+
+Amy went out and closed the door behind her, and looked with unmoved
+eyes on Frances' flushed and anxious face.
+
+"How is he? May I go in?" she asked, eagerly.
+
+"Never, with my permission," was the chilling reply.
+
+"Only for five minutes; I am not afraid of the fever, and my looking at
+him can do him no harm. I will promise not to stay longer than that."
+
+"No. You shall not go in for half a minute, even."
+
+"You cannot be so cruel," said Frances; "you cannot tell how frightened
+and anxious I am. Oh! do let me see him."
+
+"I will not," said Amy, angrily.
+
+"Cruel, hard-hearted mother," cried Frances. "I know he has asked for
+me. I know he has called for me!"
+
+"I thank God he has not," replied Amy, "for _that_ would break my
+heart."
+
+"Then he will ask for me; and if he does, you will send for me, won't
+you?"
+
+"Never!" said Amy, as she turned away.
+
+"Oh! Mrs. Vavasour, I love the boy; don't you see that my heart is
+breaking while you stand there so pitilessly."
+
+"Had you loved the boy," said Amy, "you would not have crushed the
+mother's heart. What had I done to you, Frances Strickland, that you
+should pursue me so cruelly, first as a girl, when I never injured you,
+and then--now you have taken my husband's love from me, and would take
+my boy's also? But I will stand between him and you, cruel girl, as long
+as I live."
+
+"Don't say so. Think--think--what if he should die?" said Frances,
+fearfully.
+
+"Ah! God help me!" said Amy; she could say no more. But Frances clung to
+her dress.
+
+"It is I who should say, God help me!" she cried; "don't you know I took
+Bertie to the cottage where he caught the fever? Oh! Mrs. Vavasour, you
+don't know half my agony and remorse, or what I suffered when I found
+out what I had done."
+
+"My boy's illness, my husband's scorn, broken hopes, and grieving heart,
+my crushed spirit, all--all I owe to you. May God forgive you, Miss
+Strickland."
+
+"Yes, yes; God forgive me. I deny nothing. But, oh! will not you forgive
+me, Mrs. Vavasour? I will try, I will, indeed, to make amends."
+
+This abject appeal from the proud Frances? But Amy scarcely heeded it.
+
+"You cannot make amends," she said, despairingly. "It is past
+atonement--this great wrong you have done."
+
+"Oh! do not be so harsh and cruel to me; your heart was soft enough
+once."
+
+"It was. You have changed it, and are the first to feel its hardness. I
+am no longer what I was; but for my boy I should turn into a stone, or
+die."
+
+"And I? What am I to do? If--if anything should happen to Bertie. Oh! I
+shall go mad," she cried. "Think of my grief then. I, who unwittingly
+gave him this fever; think what my heart would feel, what it even feels
+now; and be not so merciless."
+
+"No, not half so merciless as your bad heart has been. I can give you no
+greater punishment than your own guilty remorse, and frightened heart. I
+will remain no longer, Miss Strickland. You shall not see my boy!"
+
+And Amy left Frances weeping, perhaps the first _genuine_ repentant
+tears she had ever shed.
+
+Robert sat at his boy's bed-side all that night, cooling his burning
+forehead and heated head with the cold wet cloth dipped in vinegar and
+water, or holding him up in his arms while his poor parched lips feebly
+yet eagerly drank from the cup his mother held so tremblingly before
+him, while Frances alternately walked her room despairingly, or crouched
+away in the dark on the stairs near, her ear vainly trying to catch the
+words of those mournful watchers and nurses who stepped about so softly
+in the sick chamber beyond.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+A FADING FLOWER.
+
+ "The coldness from my heart is gone,
+ But still the weight is there,
+ And thoughts which I abhor will come,
+ And tempt me to despair.
+
+ "Those thoughts I constantly repel;
+ And all, methinks, might yet be well,
+ Could I but weep once more;
+ And with true tears of penitence
+ My dreadful state deplore."
+
+ SOUTHEY.
+
+
+The long hours of night wore away, and the morning broke, bright, fresh,
+and frosty. Then the long corridor and passages echoed with the sound of
+hasty footsteps hurrying through them, while the quick, sudden opening
+and shutting of doors betokened an unusual stir in the Hall. The
+children were preparing for their journey.
+
+Half an hour later all was silent and still, more so than it had been
+for days. The children were gone.
+
+Again we enter the sick room. Bertie is no better, but, if anything,
+worse; his little face more flushed and heated, his burning hands
+wandering restlessly about, to and fro, as he tosses and turns upon his
+little cot, his anxious eyes no longer looking mournfully, and as it
+were imploringly in his mother's face for help from his pain, for Bertie
+is delirious, and does not even recognise her; his thoughts ramble, and
+he talks incoherently and strangely.
+
+Mrs. Hopkins often came to see him, bringing, as was her wont, in cases
+of illness, broths and cooling drinks she had prepared with her own
+hand; but Bertie was too ill to heed them, and Amy could but look her
+thanks--words she had none.
+
+It was on returning from one of these visits, with cup and saucer in
+hand, that she met Frances Strickland.
+
+"Have you been to see Master Bertie?" she asked.
+
+"Yes, Miss," replied Mrs. Hopkins, with a sigh.
+
+"And how is he? Do you think he is any better this morning?"
+
+"No, Miss, I don't. It's my belief he couldn't well be worse; but the
+doctor'll know better than me. I suppose he'll be here presently."
+
+"What makes you think him so ill?"
+
+"I've been the mother of four, Miss, and lost them all, and none of them
+looked a bit worse than Master Bertie, poor, innocent lamb."
+
+"But you had not two doctors," returned Frances.
+
+"No, nor half the nurses to wait on mine; but I'd the same loving,
+craving mother's heart and the same God to look up to and hope in," and
+the housekeeper passed on, as the rebuke fell from her lips.
+
+"Oh! I wish I could hope, I wish I could pray," cried Frances, as she
+went once more into the solitude of her own room; not only did she
+grieve for Bertie, but the terror lest through her means he should die
+had at last brought repentance to her unfeeling heart; she had been so
+wicked, so relentlessly cruel to his mother, that perhaps the boy's
+death was to be her punishment; and she could think of, scarcely look
+forward to, anything else.
+
+Dr. Bernard stayed at the Park all that night; he whispered no decided
+hope to Amy's heart. There was only a very grave look on his face as
+after bending over Bertie and feeling the quick, sharp pulse beating so
+fiercely against his finger, he said, "While there is life there is
+hope," and Amy was obliged to content her poor heart with this, and
+repeat it over and over again to herself all through that long sad
+night; the second of Bertie's illness, and of her own and her husband's
+watch, for Robert scarcely ever left his boy, but remained through the
+weary hours of night patiently by his side; only old Hannah snatching
+every now and then a moment's sleep.
+
+Towards the morning Bertie grew more composed, the hands tossed about
+less restlessly, and the weary, anxious eyes closed in sleep: so calm
+and still he looked that Amy bent down her head to catch the faint
+breath.
+
+"It is not death?" she said to Dr. Bernard, who had been hastily
+aroused.
+
+"No. The crisis is past I hope. The fever has left him. It is weakness,
+excessive weakness," but he did not add that that was as much to be
+dreaded as the fever; while Amy only prayed that when he awoke he would
+recognise her, so long it seemed since his little lips had said "Mamma."
+
+Just before luncheon, Anne with her husband drove up to the Hall. She
+was rushing into the morning-room with her usual haste and merry laugh,
+when she was checked by Mrs. Linchmore's grave face.
+
+"Has anything happened, Isabella? How grave you look."
+
+Yes a great deal had happened; she had a great deal to hear, and Anne
+sat herself down to listen to it all patiently--or as patiently as she
+could to the end. As soon as it was told, she was rushing impetuously
+from the room.
+
+"Is the boy in the small red room?" she asked.
+
+"Yes. But Anne, the fever is infectious; you had better stay away. Mrs.
+Vavasour can come and see you here."
+
+"As if she would leave him?" she cried, "not a bit of it, I know her
+better, besides I am not afraid of anything. I shall go." Anne was
+right, there was very little indeed she was afraid of.
+
+"But Anne, think of your husband; he might not like it."
+
+"Ah! true; how tiresome it is sometimes to have a husband! I suppose I
+shall have to wait a whole hour before he thinks of coming back."
+
+"Did he drive in with you?"
+
+"Yes, and has gone on in the pony carriage to call at the Rectory. Isn't
+it provoking. I have a great mind not to wait for him."
+
+"It might have been a great deal worse; suppose he had not driven in
+with you?"
+
+"Then I should have braved his anger and been at the boy's bed-side long
+ago," and she walked to the window, and strained her eyes impatiently
+down the drive.
+
+"Have you seen the child today?" she asked presently.
+
+"No, not since his illness; but Dr. Bernard tells me the fever left him
+early this morning."
+
+"It did? Oh! then he'll soon get better."
+
+"But he is so excessively weak, that he holds out small hopes of his
+recovery."
+
+"Poor dear Amy, how sad for her. Ah! there's the carriage at last; how
+delightful! Mr. Russell could not have been at home." And away she flew
+down the stairs, and stood impatiently on the terrace.
+
+"My dear Thomas," she exclaimed, "how slowly you drive. I always tell
+you you indulge the pony fearfully when I am not with you."
+
+Mr. Hall looked in surprise at his wife's anxious face. "Why, Anne," he
+said, "I had no idea you were in such a desperate hurry to return home,
+or I might have driven a little quicker."
+
+"Return," she cried, "I am not thinking of such a thing. I want to stay
+for a week, if you will only let me, and Isabella does not object; you
+can go and arrange it with her presently," said she, in her impetuous
+way.
+
+"But I have yet to hear why I am to do all this," returned her husband.
+
+"Ah, I forgot! It's because poor Amy Vavasour's child, that little boy
+we saw when we were last here, is dying of some fever. They say it's
+infectious, but you will not mind that, will you? I am not a bit afraid,
+and I do so want to comfort Amy."
+
+Mr. Hall looked very grave.
+
+"Oh, don't consider about it," she said, "you can stay, too, you know;
+there is no reason why you should go home before Saturday."
+
+"It is not that," he replied, "but this fever is infectious, Anne, and
+you will be running a great risk."
+
+"Do not think about it, Tom. I shall fret myself into a worse fever at
+home, and besides, think of poor Amy. I do not believe you can be so
+hard-hearted as to refuse me."
+
+So in the end, much against his wish, Mr. Hall yielded, and while he
+went to propose the plan to Mrs. Linchmore Anne went off on her mission
+of mercy, and was repaid by the sad smile, and almost glad light in
+Amy's eyes as she greeted her.
+
+Anne was shocked at the change in the boy; shocked too, with the
+mother's wan, haggard look.
+
+"My Mistress hasn't been in bed for these two nights past, Miss," said
+Nurse, interpreting Anne's thoughts.
+
+Not for two nights? It was absolutely necessary she should have some
+repose; so Anne set herself to work to accomplish it.
+
+"Why not lie down, Amy, while your boy is asleep?"
+
+"Impossible!" was the firm reply, "I could not."
+
+"But you will wear yourself out, you cannot possibly be of any use while
+he sleeps. I will sit by him for you, and call you the moment he wakes."
+
+"No, I must be by him when he wakes, I could not bear to think he looked
+at anyone else first; he has not known me for so long, that my heart is
+craving for some sign to show that he recognises me."
+
+This was conclusive, and Anne urged no more, but Robert said, "I think
+Mrs. Hall is right, Amy, in advising you to rest."
+
+"But I cannot leave the room, indeed I cannot."
+
+"There is no occasion for your doing so, you can lie on Hannah's bed."
+
+Anne expected a fresh expostulation, but no, Amy moved away at once, and
+did as her husband wished.
+
+"Where can I find a shawl for Amy, Mr. Vavasour?" said Anne, presently,
+"she will be frozen over there, without some wrap."
+
+He went away, and returned a moment after with one, which he spread over
+Amy as she lay, but without, to Anne's astonishment, one loving word or
+even look.
+
+"Try and sleep," he said, gently, "I will call you in an hour."
+
+She thanked him, and closed her eyes.
+
+But long before the hour had passed away, she was at Bertie's bed-side,
+with the little head nestled in her bosom, and the soft, thin hand
+clasped in hers; he was too weak to say much, but he had named her, had
+recognised her; that was enough, he would not die now, without giving
+her one loving look. Die? Yes, she felt he would die, so thin and
+wasted, so hollow his cheeks, so weak, so utterly weak; and then the
+sorrowing faces of those around, the still graver one, and pitying words
+of the old doctor. Ah! there was no need to tell her; her boy, her
+beautiful boy, must die. Oh! the anguish of her heart, surely if a
+fervent prayer could save him, he would be saved yet.
+
+Anne stole away by and by to her husband, and found him busy unpacking a
+carpet bag.
+
+"I have been home and back again, Anne," he said, "and made Mary put
+together the few things she thought you might require. I hope you will
+find them all right."
+
+"Oh! Tom, I do believe you are the only devoted, kind husband in the
+whole world; how fortunate it was I married you when I did."
+
+"Why so?" he asked.
+
+"Because I see so many bad specimens of married life, that if I had
+waited until now, I would not have had you at any price."
+
+"Oh, yes, you would," he said.
+
+"Don't be so conceited," she replied, "remember you have never been
+drilled yet."
+
+"I have my wife to be conceited of," he said, fondly; "and now Anne,
+tell me what news of the child?" She was grave in a moment.
+
+"There is no hope. None whatever. Dr. Bernard gives none."
+
+"And the mother?"
+
+"She is very quiet, very submissive under it all."
+
+"She knows the worst, then?"
+
+"She guesses it, and bears up wonderfully. How it will be by-and-by,
+when the worst is over, I don't like, cannot bear to think of; you must
+come and talk to her then?"
+
+"I?" he said, "no, that will never do; she has her husband."
+
+"He's a wretch! I have no patience with him. As cold as an icicle."
+
+"My dear Anne," he said, reprovingly.
+
+"Oh! my dear Tom, I am so glad you are not like him," and then she burst
+out crying, a most unusual thing for her, "and I am so glad now I have
+no children: it must be dreadful to lose them. After this I will be the
+most contented little mortal going."
+
+And she went back again to Amy, leaving her husband somewhat surprised,
+and regretful that he should have consented to have allowed her to
+remain in a scene evidently too much for her.
+
+Bertie had roused again. "Where's Missy? I want Missy?" he said, feebly.
+
+The cry went like a sharp knife through the mother's heart. She brought
+him toys and pictures, telling him the history of each, and quieting him
+as well as she could. At first he was amused and interested, but he soon
+wearied, and said again, "I want Missy."
+
+"Is it Alice he is crying for?" whispered Anne, as Amy moved away, and
+sent Hannah to take her place by the bed.
+
+"No, not Alice. Oh! Anne, he will break my heart. I had so hoped he had
+forgotten her."
+
+Again the little fretful cry sounded. "Tell Missy to come."
+
+"I _must_ go," said Amy, "there is no help for it."
+
+Frances had thrown herself despairingly on the bed, shutting out Jane,
+her maid, who had tried to comfort her, and even Mrs. Linchmore. At one
+moment she would not believe there was no hope--would not,--the next she
+wept and moaned with the certainty that there could be none; as she saw
+Amy enter, she covered her face with her hands, and groaned aloud;
+thinking there was but one reason the mother could have in coming to see
+her, and that was to upbraid her for having caused the death of her boy.
+
+"Miss Strickland I said you should not see my boy, but I cannot refuse
+his,--" Amy faltered,--"perhaps last request. He is asking for you. Will
+you come?"
+
+"Come!" exclaimed Frances, springing from the bed, and tossing back the
+hair from off her throbbing temples, "do you think I could refuse
+him--you, anything? and oh! forgive me, Mrs. Vavasour, for having caused
+you all this utter misery."
+
+"It is a fearful punishment," said Amy, looking at the ravages grief and
+remorse had made in her beautiful face.
+
+"Fearful!" she replied, "it will haunt me through life. Think of that,
+and say one word of forgiveness, only one."
+
+"I cannot forgive you, Miss Strickland. For my poor Bertie's illness I
+do; that was an unintentional injury, but his mother's misery--broken
+heart, no; that you might have prevented, and--and, God help me, but I
+cannot forgive that."
+
+"How could I hope you would," said Frances despairingly, as she prepared
+to follow Amy.
+
+"You must control your grief, Miss Strickland; be calm and passionless
+as of old. My boy must see no tears."
+
+"I wonder I have any to shed," she replied, "and God knows how I shall
+bear to see him."
+
+Anne looked bewildered as the door opened and Amy returned with Frances,
+and still more so when she saw the child's face light up with pleasure,
+and he tried in his feeble way to clasp her neck.
+
+"I cannot bear to look at it," said Amy, as she softly left the room.
+
+"Naughty! naughty Missy," he said as he kissed her.
+
+Frances felt as if she could have died then, without one sigh of regret.
+For a moment after he released her she did not raise her head.
+
+"My dear,--dear Bertie," she said, struggling with her tears. Then
+presently she sat down and fondled and stroked his thin small hand,
+soothing and coaxing him as well as she was able. If her heart could
+have broken, surely it would have broken then.
+
+"Ah! he's thin enough now, Miss," observed Nurse, "even that sour
+stiff-backed lady would have a hard matter to call him fat. He's never
+been the same since she looked at him with those sharp ferret eyes of
+hers;" and then she moved away and went and seated herself by the fire,
+recounting the whole history to Anne, of not only her dislike for Miss
+Barker, but the reason of Bertie's apparent partiality for Frances;
+while the latter sat and listened to Bertie's talk, he wounding and
+opening her heart afresh at every word he uttered.
+
+"Naughty Missy not to come to Bertie!" he said; and Frances could not
+tell him why she had stayed away; she could only remain silent and so
+allow him to conclude she had been unkind.
+
+She took up some of the books Amy had left.
+
+"Here are pretty pictures," she said, "shall Missy tell you some of the
+nice stories?"
+
+"No, you mustn't. Mamma tells me them; I like her to, she tells them so
+pretty."
+
+"Is there nothing Missy can do for you? Shall she sing you a song?"
+
+"Mamma sings 'Gentle Jesus;' you don't know one so pretty do you?"
+
+"No, Bertie, I am sure I don't."
+
+Presently his little face brightened. "I should like you to get me
+kitty," he said.
+
+"Yes. Who is kitty though?"
+
+"That's what Master Bertie cried for the very day he was taken ill. It's
+the kitten he saw in the village, Miss," said Hannah.
+
+"Bertie shall have kitty," said Frances, decidedly. "Missy will fetch
+her."
+
+"Yes, she's big now, her mother won't cry," he said, as if not quite
+satisfied that she would not.
+
+It had come on to rain, since the morning but what cared Frances for
+that; she scarcely stayed to snatch her hat and cloak before she was
+hurrying through it. What cared she for the rain or anything else? Her
+whole soul was with Bertie--the child who through her means was dying,
+and yet had clasped her neck so lovingly as she bent over him dismayed
+and appalled at the ravages illness had made in his sweet face.
+
+There was only Matthew in the little parlour as she entered the cottage.
+
+"You'd better not come in, Miss," he said "no offence, Miss, but my
+sister-in-law's been ill with the fever these days past."
+
+"It can make no difference now," she said, bitterly, "that little boy I
+brought here only ten days ago is--is dying of the fever he caught
+here."
+
+"Lord save us! Miss, dying?" said Matthew regretfully.
+
+"He has just asked for the kitten he saw here. Will you let him have it?
+It may be," she said despairingly, seeing he hesitated, "only--only for
+a day, or for--a few hours, you would never have the heart to refuse a
+child's last wish." In days gone by she would have abused him for the
+hand he had had in causing poor Bertie's illness, and her misery. But it
+was different now.
+
+"No, Miss, you're right, I haven't the heart to. What's the kitten's
+life worth next to the young master's. Here take it and welcome; though
+what the Missus'll say when she finds it's gone, and the old un a
+howling about the place I don't know, but there, it can't be helped,"
+said Matthew philosophically, as Frances wrapped the kitten up carefully
+in her cloak, and hurried away.
+
+The evening had closed in by the time Frances reached the Park again.
+She hastily changed her wet things, and went at once to Bertie's room,
+but her heart misgave her, as, going down the long corridor, she saw
+Anne seated on the ledge of the large window, with the traces of tears
+on her face.
+
+"I am not too late?" she asked.
+
+"I don't know," replied Anne. "He is very, very weak. I could not bear
+to stay."
+
+Frances went on, Robert, as well as Amy, was in the room. He moved a
+little on one side to allow Frances to come near. "Bertie, my boy," he
+said, "Missy has brought you Kitty."
+
+Frances leant over, and placed it beside him.
+
+He opened his eyes feebly, then took the kitten so full of life, and
+nestled it to his side.
+
+"Bertie is very sick," he said, weakly, as he tried to murmur his
+thanks.
+
+This was the first time he had spoken of feeling ill. How pitifully his
+little childish words smote upon the hearts of his sad, sorrowing
+parents.
+
+"Bertie is very sick," he said again. "I think Bertie is going to die.
+Poor Bertie!"
+
+His mother's tears fell like rain. "God will take care of my boy for
+me," she said. "My boy, my precious Bertie!"
+
+"Yes; but you mustn't cry, you and Papa, and Hannah."
+
+Robert's face was wet with tears, while old Hannah sat away in a corner,
+with her face covered up in her apron, sobbing audibly; but she stifled
+her sobs upon this, his--might be--last request.
+
+"God bless you, Bertie," said Frances, in a broken voice, ere she went
+away.
+
+"Good night," he said. "You may have my top, for bringing me Kitty. Papa
+will get it for you."
+
+And then he turned his head away wearily, and begged his mother to hush
+him in her arms to sleep. Robert lifted him gently, and laid him close
+to Amy. She drew him near, nearer still to her poor breaking heart, but
+she dared not press her lips to his, lest she should draw away the
+feeble breath, already coming so faintly, growing fainter and fainter
+every moment.
+
+"Kitty must go back to her mother," he said. "Take care of Kitty--pretty
+Kitty."
+
+But soon he grew too weak to heed even Kitty, and could only murmur
+short broken sentences about Papa, Mamma, and sometimes Missy.
+
+Presently he roused again. "Don't cry, Papa, Mamma--Kiss
+Bertie--Bertie's very sick. Tell Hannah to bring a light--Bertie wants
+to see you."
+
+Alas! his eyes had grown dim. He could no longer distinguish those he
+loved best, those who could scarcely answer his cry for their tears.
+They brought a light, old faithful Hannah did.
+
+"Can you see me, my own darling?" asked Amy.
+
+"No--no," he murmured, and his eyes closed gently, his breathing became
+more gentle still; once more he said, lovingly, "Dear Papa,--Dear
+Mamma," and then--he slept.
+
+"Don't disturb him, Robert," sobbed Amy to her husband, who was kneeling
+near.
+
+But Bertie had gone to a sleep from which there was no awaking.
+
+Bertie, little loving Bertie, was dead.
+
+ "Softly thou'st sunk to sleep,
+ From trials rude and sore;
+ Now the good Shepherd, with His sheep
+ Shall guard thee evermore."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+JANE'S STORY.
+
+ "An old, old woman cometh forth, when she hears the people cry;
+ Her hair is white as silver, like horn her glazed eye.
+ 'Twas she that nursed him at her breast, that nursed him long ago.
+ She knows not whom they all lament, but soon she well shall know;
+ With one deep shriek she through doth break, when her ear receives
+ their wailing,
+ 'Let me kiss my Celin ere I die--Alas! alas for Celin!'"
+
+ LOCKHART'S SPANISH BALLADS.
+
+
+The news of the sad death at the park spread like wildfire through the
+quiet, little village, and soon reached the turnpike gate, where Jane
+was fast recovering from the fever that had proved so fatal to poor
+Bertie. She, like Frances, moaned and wept when she heard of it; like
+her, her heart cowered and shrank within her; and for three days she
+could scarcely be persuaded to eat or drink, or say a word to anyone.
+Day after day she lay in her bed with her face steadily turned away
+from her sister, who as usual, tried to worry her into a more reasonable
+frame of mind, but finding it useless, left her to herself, and called
+her sullen; but it was not so, Jane's heart had been touched and
+softened ever since the unfortunate day of Bertie's visit; he had done
+more towards bringing repentance to that guilty heart than years of
+suffering had been able to accomplish; for Jane had suffered, suffered
+from the weight of a secret, that at times well-nigh made her as crazy
+as Marks imagined her to be. It was this terrible secret that had made
+her so silent and strange, this that had driven her neighbours to look
+upon her as half-witted. But she wanted no one's pity, no one's
+consolation, had steeled and hardened her heart against it, and let her
+life pass on and wither in its lone coldness. As she had lived, so she
+might have died, smothering all remorse, driving back each repentant
+feeling as it swept past her; might have died--but for Bertie's visit.
+Since then, the firm will to resist the good had been shaken; she was
+not only weak from the effects of the fever, but inwardly weak; weak at
+heart, weak in spirit. She battled with the repentant feelings so
+foreign to her, fought against what she had been a stranger too for so
+long, but it was all in vain; she resisted with a will, but it was a
+feeble will, and in the end the good triumphed, and Jane was won.
+
+One morning, the fourth since Bertie died, Mrs. Marks took up Jane's
+breakfast as usual, and placed it on a chair by the bed-side.
+
+"Here's a nice fresh egg," said she, "what you don't often see, this
+time of the year, I wish it might strengthen your lips, as well as your
+stomach. I'm sick of seeing you lie there with never a word. I'd rather
+a deal have a bad one, than none at all," and she drew back the
+curtains, and stirred up the freshly-lit fire.
+
+"I'm ready and willing to speak," replied Jane, "though God forgive me,
+it's bad enough, as you say, what I have to tell."
+
+Mrs. Marks was startled, not only at Jane's addressing her after so long
+a silence, but at the changed voice, so different to the usual reserved,
+measured tone, and short answers given in monosyllables. But she took no
+notice, and merely said,--
+
+"What's the matter? Ain't the breakfast to your liking?"
+
+"It's better than I deserve," was the reply.
+
+Mrs. Marks was more amazed than before. "You don't feel so well this
+morning, Jane," said she, kindly, "the weakness is bad on you, like it
+was on me; but, please God, you'll get round fast enough, never fear.
+Here!" and she placed the tray on the bed, "take a sup of the tea, and
+I'll put a dash of brandy in it; that'll rouse you up a bit, I'll be
+bound."
+
+Jane made no resistance, but as Mrs. Marks put down the cup, she placed
+her hand on hers, and said, "You won't think me crazy, Anne, if I ask
+you to send and beg young Master Robert to come and see me?"
+
+"Don't you know he's been dead these four days past? There--there, lie
+still, and don't be a worriting yourself this way; your head ain't
+strong yet."
+
+"It's stronger and better than it's been many a long day. Anne, I must
+see Master Robert, not the dead child, but the young Squire. I've that
+to tell him that'll make his heart ache, as it has mine, only there's
+sin on mine--sin on mine," said she, sitting up in bed, and rocking
+herself about.
+
+"Then don't tell it. What's the use of making heart aches?"
+
+"I can't bear the weight of it any longer. I must tell. Ever since I saw
+that child I've been striving against it; but it's no good--no good. I
+can't keep the secret any longer, Anne. I dare not. If I do it'll drive
+me clean out of my mind."
+
+"Just you answer me one question, Jane. Is it right to tell it? Can any
+good come of it?"
+
+"Yes, so help me God. It can! It will!"
+
+"Then," replied Mrs. Marks, "I'll send Matthew at once; mother and I
+always thought there was something had driven you to be so strange when
+you left your place up at the Park fifteen years ago."
+
+Jane laid herself down and covered up her face, while with a troubled
+sigh Mrs. Marks went below to seek her husband.
+
+Matthew was surprised and confounded when bidden go up to the Hall and
+fetch the Squire.
+
+"What!" he said, "are yer gone clean crazy as well as Jane! It's likely
+I'll go and fetch the Squire at the bidding of a 'dafty.' How do I know,
+but what it's a fool's errand he'll come on?"
+
+But reason as he would, his words had no weight with Mrs. Marks, and
+Matthew had to go in the end, though with a more misgiving heart and
+rueful countenance than when he had gone to the young doctor's.
+
+There was little occasion for misgivings on Matthew's part, Mr.
+Linchmore received him kindly, and promised to call at the turnpike
+during the day.
+
+What setting to rights of the cottage there was when Marks returned with
+the news! It was always tidy and clean, but now for the especial honour
+of the Squire's visit all its corners were ransacked and everything
+turned topsy-turvy. Mrs. Marks was still unable to help much in the
+work, but she dusted and tidied the cups and saucers, and knick-knacks,
+although they had not seen a speck of dust for days, and certainly not
+since she had been downstairs again; Sarah's arms ached with the
+scrubbing and scouring she was made to do in a certain given time, while
+her mistress stood by, scolding and finding fault by turns. Nothing was
+done well, or as it ought to be done; but then, as the girl said, Mrs.
+Marks was so finicking, there was no pleasing her, she should be glad
+enough when she was able to do the work for herself, and she could go
+home to her mother.
+
+When Mr. Linchmore came, he scarcely rested in the newly swept parlour
+at all, but desired at once to be shown to the sick woman's room. With
+many apologies from Mrs. Marks at her sister's inability to rise and see
+him, she preceded him up stairs.
+
+Jane was sitting propped up in bed with pillows, her pale face looking
+paler and more emaciated than usual. Mr. Linchmore's heart was touched
+with pity as he noted the care-worn, prematurely old face, with its deep
+lines telling of sorrow or sin. Sin! Surely if this woman's life had
+been sinful, what had he, with his strict principles of right, to do
+with such as her? What had she--as Marks assured him--to tell, that
+nearly concerned himself? His heart reverted to his mother. Was it of
+her she would speak? of her whose ungovernable temper had driven his
+father to seek with his children that happiness abroad that had been
+denied him at home? But then his mother had been mad, at least he had
+been taught to think that the one excuse for her strange conduct. How
+severe and tyrannical she had been, not only to his brother and
+himself, but to that sweet, uncomplaining sister, whose life had been,
+he truly believed, shortened through her violence, and yet again, when
+the passion was over, how fiercely loving, how vehemently passionate in
+her cravings for her children's love, which she alienated from her more
+and more each day. No; others might love and reverence the name of
+mother, but Mr. Linchmore's heart was stirred with no such feelings;
+only a vague sense of fear, a nameless dread of evil came across him as
+he fancied it might be of her Jane had to speak.
+
+He drew near, and bent down kindly. "I fear you have been very ill," he
+said, "with the same fever that has wrought such desolation in my home."
+
+"Yes, sir, I have been ill--am ill; but now it's more from remorse; from
+the guilt of a wicked, cruel heart, than this same fever you speak of."
+
+There was a pause. Jane spoke with difficulty, her breath came quick
+and short, as though her heart laboured heavily under the load of sin
+she spoke of.
+
+"Turn more to the light," she said, "so that I may see your face.
+So--that is well. Still like your mother, strangely like, with none of
+her hard passions or cruel hate. Your love might be fierce, burning, and
+strong, but unlike her you would sacrifice your own happiness to secure
+the well being of the one you love. Had she done so, what misery to her,
+what misery to me might have been spared?"
+
+"Did you know my mother?" asked Mr. Linchmore.
+
+"Tell him, Anne," said Jane, as Mrs. Marks held some wine and water to
+her pale lips, that seemed too feeble to utter another word.
+
+"If you please, sir," said Mrs. Marks, dropping her deepest curtsey,
+"this is Tabitha, my sister 'Tabitha Jane,' who was brought up so kindly
+by your lady mother; but there, I don't wonder you don't remember her. I
+had a hard matter to myself, when I went over to Dean to fetch her,
+come four years ago this next Christmas."
+
+"Tabitha! This Tabitha! The pale, meek girl, who bore so uncomplainingly
+what we boys resented. Can this be Tabitha?"
+
+"Yes," replied Jane. "It can. It is. The weight of a guilty secret has
+ploughed my face with these deep furrows. Call me not meek; I was
+anything but that, I was a sinful, wicked woman. Oh! I have much to
+tell: much that has been locked up in my heart for more than thirty
+years. How I have suffered under the burden that at last has grown too
+heavy for me to bear, and I sink under its load, must divulge it; must
+have her forgiveness, ere I die!"
+
+"Your words fill me with a foreboding of evil," replied Mr. Linchmore.
+"Think well before you speak, Tabitha. Is it necessary that this secret,
+sinful as you say it is, should be divulged. Does it concern, does it
+benefit those living?"
+
+"If it did not, I would never speak it, but struggle on with its
+sorrow, till I died. No hard, and cruel as my mistress was, not from
+Tabitha should come the tale that will denounce her and her evil ways."
+
+"She was my mother, Tabitha," said Mr. Linchmore, as if reproaching her
+harshness.
+
+"True, she was. I do not forget it; still I must speak, must tell of her
+sin and mine, for it is sin, fearful sin. I would, for your sake, Master
+Robert, that it were otherwise; but when I tell of my wrong-doing, with
+mine must come hers. It must. Justice must be done. The mother's
+craving, broken heart must be healed."
+
+"God forbid that I should be the one to stand in the way. Speak,
+Tabitha! but be as merciful as you can; remember you speak of one whose
+memory ought to be dear to me. I will steel my heart to hear--and bear."
+
+"Do so," she said. "It is a long story. I must go back to the days when
+I was a child, and your mother, Miss Julia, took me away from my home to
+hers. She was of an imperious will and proud nature; her mother had
+died at giving her birth, and her father had never controlled her in any
+way. She was as wild and wayward as the trees that grew in the forest
+near here, when they were shaken by the wind. With her, to ask was to
+have, and when she brought me home and declared her intention of
+bringing me up, and making a companion and plaything of me, no objection
+was raised, and she petted and scolded me by turns, as it suited her
+haughty will. At first I disliked her, then feared, and at length loved,
+worshipped her, as some beautiful spirit. Her father died; but then it
+was too late to save his child, or let others teach her wild spirit
+lessons of meekness and obedience; then your grandmother came and took
+us both away to live in her own home. She was a widow, with two sons,
+the eldest not quite so old as Miss Julia.
+
+"A change came over your mother. She loved. Loved the eldest of the two,
+your father; loved as only she could love, with all the wild, impetuous
+passion of her nature. It would have been strange had he not loved her
+in return--so beautiful, so wayward, so bright a being as she was then.
+They were engaged to be married, and, I believe, had they married then
+all would have gone well, and perhaps the evil that followed been
+averted. But they did not marry, they tarried--tarried until another
+girl, a niece, was left desolate, and she too came to Brampton."
+
+Jane, or Tabitha, paused for a moment, then went on more slowly,
+
+"She was, I believe, an angel of goodness, as pure as she was fair, and
+as meek and gentle as your mother was ungovernable. From this time
+nothing went right. Your father and my mistress had words together
+oftener than formerly; but while she wept and lamented in secret, he
+would seek Miss Mary, and pour out his wounded heart to her. By degrees
+Miss Julia grew to learn it, and became jealous. Then, with the
+fierceness of her nature, she would storm and rave if she but saw Master
+Robert speaking to her; and yet, when the angry fit was over, be as
+humbly loving, as passionately sorry.
+
+"Things could not go on like this for ever. I believe her temper was
+fairly wearing out your father's love, and that he would gladly have
+turned over to Miss Mary if he could; but I, who was set as a watch and
+a spy over the poor young thing--she was eighteen years younger than
+your mother--saw that her heart was another's, even young Mr. Archer's,
+who was part tutor, part companion to your father's younger brother. How
+I hated her then--for I had dared to love him myself--and determined on
+her ruin! How I hid the secret that would have made Miss Julia so happy
+in the deepest recesses of my heart, and urged my mistress on to believe
+that Miss Mary loved Master Robert!"
+
+Again Jane paused, then continued as she turned her face away from Mr.
+Linchmore, who was listening intently to her,
+
+"One morning, I remember it well,--I had quietly wrought Miss Julia up
+to such a pitch of frenzy, that I believe she would have stopped at
+nothing to accomplish the removal of her hated rival,--the door was
+suddenly flung open by your father; his face was pale, and he was
+evidently labouring under strong excitement. 'Julia,' he said, 'do you
+still wish to be my wife?'
+
+"There was no need of a reply, could he not see the sudden light in her
+eyes, the quick bright flash that spread like wildfire over her face.
+
+"That day week they were married, and went away from Brampton for a
+time.
+
+"I remained behind with my enemy, watching and waiting; but I could do
+her no harm. Your grandmother loved her as the apple of her eye. I could
+see Miss Julia--now Mrs. Robert Linchmore,--was as nothing to her. Then
+I tried to cause a quarrel between her and young Mr. Archer; in vain;
+they loved too well, my arts were useless, my plans and wishes
+powerless.
+
+"Your parents returned. A year passed away, and then you were born; but
+I could see your father was not happy. He still loved Miss Mary, strive
+as he would against it, while your mother treated her like a dog.
+
+"Another year, and your sister was born; but things went worse. Your
+mother was no sooner up and about again than your uncle's health failed
+terribly, and he and Mr. Archer went abroad.
+
+"Six months passed, during which your mother grew more insanely jealous
+of Miss Mary, and more tyrannical. She bore it all uncomplainingly; but
+I saw that she worried and fretted in secret, and grew thinner and
+thinner every day.
+
+"One morning I went hastily into her room, and found her working a
+baby's cap, which she hurriedly thrust on one side as I entered; but my
+suspicions were aroused at her evident confusion, and glancing at her,
+her sin--if sin it was, became evident to my eyes, and I flew, rather
+than walked to my mistress's room. The scene that followed between her
+and Miss Mary I will not describe; but through it all--although she did
+not deny the imputation we cast on her,--she vowed she was innocent, and
+Mr. Archer's lawful wife. I believed her then. I know she told the truth
+now.
+
+"That night she fled from the Park, while your father left soon after to
+join his brother, declaring he would never live with his wife again
+until she had done Miss Mary justice. Your grandmother never recovered
+the shock of all these terrible doings, she took Miss Mary's sin to
+heart. I don't think she believed it: but she sorrowed, and refused to
+be comforted, and soon after died. Then news reached us of Mr. Archer's
+death."
+
+Jane stopped again, and lay back feebly against the pillows.
+
+"With the news of his death came a letter, addressed, in his
+handwriting, to Miss Mary. I recognised the writing, and kept the
+letter, mad as it made me to read those loving words of his written to
+another. She never had the letter, or her marriage lines, which were
+with it."
+
+"Wretched woman!" said Mr. Linchmore, sternly. "Had you no heart--no
+mercy?"
+
+"No, none. And now I must hasten to close, for I am weak and faint. I
+told no one of the letter, but tracked, by my mistress's order, Miss
+Mary. I found her at last. She had heard of her husband's death, for she
+wore widow's mourning, and looked heart-broken. She was poor, too, with
+only the small annuity old Mrs. Linchmore had been able to leave her;
+for her husband, Mr. Archer, had not, I believe, a farthing to give her
+at his death; but what cared I for that. I took away the one tie that
+bound her to this earth--I took her child."
+
+"That was not my mother's sin," said Mr. Linchmore, interrupting her.
+"Thank God for that!"
+
+"Stop! Don't interrupt me! I did it, because she bade me do it. I don't
+think then I should have done it else, because _he_ was dead, and my
+heart did not feel so hard as it had done, and I should have told my
+mistress how I had belied Miss Mary to her, had I dared summon the
+courage to do so; but I dreaded to think of her anger at being deceived.
+Well, enough, I took the child. He was a lovely, sweet infant, gentle
+and fair like his mother had been, and I could not find it in my heart
+to do the evil with him my mistress wished; for her heart could not but
+feel savage at the thought of his being her husband's child. So I kept
+him hid away till long after I had stolen him; then I carried him to Mr.
+Vavasour, a kind, mild looking, middle-aged gentleman, who had often
+visited the Park at one time; but now, ever since Mrs. Robert had been
+left in possession, never came.
+
+"Mr. Vavasour refused to take the child at first, but I pleaded so hard;
+I told him what the boy's fate would be if he turned a deaf ear to my
+entreaties; that the mother hated him as a love child, and that the
+knowledge of his birth would bring sin and shame upon her, and much more
+beside, and in the end he consented to adopt him,--and did. Four years
+after this, your father returned home, and things went on more smoothly;
+your brother Charles was born, and my mistress seemed at last happy, and
+her restless spirit satisfied; but her temper, at times, was as bad as
+ever, and I don't believe, at heart, she was happy with the weight of
+the sin she thought she had been guilty of, on her conscience. How Miss
+Mary came to guess we had aught to do with her boy, I know not. But
+about a year after your brother's birth she came and taxed us with the
+theft. How altered she was! Grief and the mother's sorrow had done their
+work surely, and I scarcely dared look on the wreck I had helped to
+make.
+
+"She told us that the loss of her child had driven her mad, and that for
+months she had been watched and looked after. She conjured
+us--implored--all in vain; my mistress denied our guilt, and defied her;
+but your father believed the poor, sorrowing, frantic creature, and
+never spoke to his wife after, but left her, taking his children with
+him.
+
+"He never saw your mother again.
+
+"My mistress bore up bravely after he was gone. None guessed of her
+desolated heart, or that it still loved so passionately. During the five
+years that followed, I scarce know how she lived; I could see her heart
+was fast breaking, and that all her hope in life was gone. She grew more
+tyrannical than ever; there was not one of the few servants we had but
+did not fear her and think her mad. She would go down the small
+staircase that led from her room out into the park, and roam for hours
+at night. As she grew weaker and weaker, and I felt she would die, my
+heart relented more and more. I could not bear to witness her misery.
+Then I owned the boy was alive, and begged and implored her to let us
+find him and restore him to his mother; I dared not say I knew where he
+was, or that he was not her husband's child; but she resisted my
+entreaties with violence, and made me swear I never would tell what we
+had done. She grew worse and worse; but struggled on, defying every
+thing and everyone. I had a hard matter to get her to see the young
+doctor even.
+
+"One night she was so weak she would lay on a mattress on the floor, not
+having the strength to get into bed; as I sat by her side and watched,
+she fell into a deep sleep. Soon after, I heard steps coming up the
+secret stairs; I needed no one to tell who that was--my heart whispered
+it was Miss Mary long before she stood before me. She never said a word,
+but sat away on the other side of my mistress. My heart shuddered as I
+looked at her; she was more altered than ever; her hair was quite grey,
+such lovely fair hair as it had been!--the softness of her face was
+gone; the sweet gentle look had gone too, and a painful frown contracted
+her forehead. While I gazed, I forgot Miss Mary, and could think of
+nothing but the angry, bereaved, half-crazed Mrs. Archer. I knew then,
+that those who had injured her had no mercy to expect at her hands, and
+I felt afraid of her, and yet I dared not bid her go, but wished my
+mistress would tell her the truth when she awoke from that death-like
+slumber. I prayed she might,--for what harm could that angry mother do
+to a dying woman? But my prayer was not answered. I forgot, when I
+breathed it, my own sinfulness,--forgot, even, that if vengeance came at
+all, it would fall on me; and, if I had thought of it, I would not have
+stayed the truth from being told then. I swear I would not. I was too
+miserable. God knows, I would have told, myself, but for the sake of my
+oath, and that angry look on Mrs. Archer's face; it tied my tongue.
+
+"When my mistress roused, I shall never forget her anger at seeing Mrs.
+Archer. She heaped a storm of abuse on her head, while Mrs. Archer
+prayed and wept by turns; promising even to bless those who had robbed
+her, if they would only give her back her lost treasure. 'Give me back
+my boy!' was the ever repeated, fervent, agonized cry of her heart."
+
+"She did not, could not plead in vain," cried Mr. Linchmore. "No, no, my
+mother was not so bad as that!"
+
+"Nerve your heart to bear the rest, it is soon told. Tears streamed from
+her eyes in vain. She pleaded in vain. My mistress was obdurate. 'I
+die,' she said, 'but I die with the knowledge that you, who have been
+the one stumbling-block of my life, and have made it miserable, and a
+curse to me, are even more wretched than myself, for I will never speak
+the word that will make you happy. The secret shall die with me.' When
+Mrs. Archer saw that all her pleading was vain, she grew frantic, and
+scarce knew what she said in her madness. My mistress grew even more
+angry than she. I strove to quiet her, to stay the torrent of words, but
+her whole frame shook with angry passion as she sat up unaided on the
+bed. I saw it was too much for her, tried to avert it, but, before she
+could utter a word, she fell back again. 'God have mercy upon me!' she
+cried, and with that one prayer on her lips she died. I know no more, I
+fell insensible, as Mrs. Archer, seeing her last hope gone, gave one
+terrible fearful cry of despair."
+
+Jane paused. "I have no more to tell," she said feebly, "I thank God I
+have told it; I never would, but for the sake of the curl. I daren't let
+it lie in my bosom else."
+
+It was many minutes before Mr. Linchmore could speak, and then his voice
+quavered and shook, and his hands trembled as he drew them from his
+face, and asked, "Where is the mother--the child?"
+
+"Mr. Vavasour, up at the Park now, is the child. Mrs. Archer, the
+mother, lives down in the wood, yonder. I have never seen her but once
+since I came here; I have fled the sight of her. You know her as Mrs.
+Grey. You will see her, tell her what I say; she will believe it fast
+enough."
+
+"Your sin has been fearful; God knows it has," said Mr. Linchmore,
+trying to speak composedly.
+
+"I have been a sinful woman; humbly I acknowledge it, but if my sin has
+been great, what has been its punishment? Look in my face, you will read
+the traces of suffering there; but my heart, you cannot read that; and
+that has suffered tenfold."
+
+"What proof have you of all you say?"
+
+"Mrs. Archer will need none," she said, "if you tell her Tabitha swears
+it's the truth. But here's the letter with her marriage lines," she
+added, taking one from under her pillow, "many's the time I've been
+tempted to destroy it, but somehow daren't do it; and here's another old
+Mr. Vavasour gave me to keep, stating when and how we had received the
+child; in it you'll find the beads he wore round his neck when I stole
+him."
+
+"Are these all the proofs you can give?"
+
+"No. I've a stronger one than this. The child had a dark mark on his
+arm, it could not have escaped his mother's eye; it can't have worn
+away, it must be there now, and that'll tell who he is plainer and
+better than any words of mine. "Are you going?" she asked, as Mr.
+Linchmore rose.
+
+"Yes, the sooner I tell the dreadful tale the better, if my heart does
+not break the while. Have you anything else to say? Would you wish to
+see Mrs. Archer?"
+
+"Oh! no! no!" she said, "don't send her; I know I've no mercy to expect
+at her hands, I showed her none. She'll hate and curse me, may be."
+
+"You have little mercy to expect from one you have so deeply injured,"
+replied Mr. Linchmore, "but I will see you again, or send another to
+speak with you. My thoughts are in a whirl, and I cannot--I feel
+incapable of talking to you today."
+
+"And must I be satisfied with this?" said Jane, "well, I submit; I have
+not deserved a kind word from you. Still I loved your mother."
+
+"She would have been better for your hate," he replied, moodily, "but in
+case I should not come again, I leave you my forgiveness for the evil
+you have helped to work, though it goes hard against my heart to give
+it; but you have a higher mercy to ask for than mine. I trust you have
+implored that already--humbly and sincerely."
+
+"God knows I have," replied Jane, feebly.
+
+Mr. Linchmore went slowly from the cottage, scarcely heeding Mrs. Marks'
+curtseys and parting words, and struck across the fields towards the
+wood.
+
+It was a sinful, grievous tale, the one he had just heard, and a bitter
+trial to him, not only to listen to it, but to know that from his lips
+must come the words to denounce his mother,--proclaim her guilt. It went
+bitterly against him, although he had no loving reverence for his
+parent; still, it must be done, his misery must make another's
+happiness, must restore the son to his mother. He hesitated not, but
+walked firmly on, perhaps angrily.
+
+At the corner of the wood he met Marks, but his heart was too full for
+words with any one, and he merely acknowledged the passing touch of his
+hat, as he turned off into one of the by-paths, a nearer cut to Mrs.
+Grey's cottage. Just as he was about to emerge again into the broad
+beaten path, scarcely a dozen yards from the cottage, he stopped for a
+moment to collect his thoughts. A slight rustle in the bushes near
+attracted his attention. He looked up, and saw a man, gun in hand,
+creeping cautiously out of the underwood.
+
+At another time Mr. Linchmore would have confronted him at once, but now
+he allowed him to pass on unmolested. The man crossed the path, reached
+the opposite side, and was about plunging again into the bushes, when
+Robert Vavasour's hand arrested his footsteps.
+
+"What do you here with that gun, my man?" he asked.
+
+It was growing dusk, almost twilight in the wood; still, as the man
+suddenly turned his face full on Vavasour, the latter exclaimed,
+
+"Ah! it is you, is it? You villain! you don't escape me this time."
+
+A short quick scuffle, a bright flash, a loud report, and Robert
+Vavasour dropped to the ground.
+
+With a great oath, the man sprang up, but ere he could stir one step,
+Mr. Linchmore's hand was upon him. A desperate struggle ensued; but a
+stronger arm, a more powerful frame, contended with him now, and in a
+few moments he lay prostrate, but still struggling, on the ground.
+
+"Could you be content with nothing less than murder?" asked a voice,
+sternly.
+
+Mr. Linchmore shuddered as he recognised "Goody Grey."
+
+"For God's sake, Mrs. Grey, go and seek help for the wounded man
+yonder."
+
+"Why should I?" she exclaimed, fiercely. "I will never stir a finger for
+you or yours. I have sworn it."
+
+"It is your son, your long-lost son! Tabitha bid me tell you so."
+
+Goody Grey,--or rather Mrs. Archer's,--whole frame trembled violently;
+she quivered and shook, and leant heavily on her staff, as though she
+would have fallen.
+
+"Fly!" he continued. "For God's sake, fly! Rouse yourself, Mrs. Archer,
+and aid your son."
+
+"My son!" she repeated, softly and tenderly, but as if doubting his
+words.
+
+Again Mr. Linchmore implored her, again she heard those words "It is
+your son!" which seemed to burn her brain. But the power of replying, of
+moving, seemed taken from her.
+
+A minute passed, and then the weakness passed away. Her eyes flashed,
+her face flushed, then blanched again, while with a mighty effort she
+drew up her tall figure to its utmost height, and proudly, but
+hurriedly, went over to where Robert lay.
+
+She staunched the blood flowing from the wound, and tenderly knelt by
+his side and lifted his head gently on her bosom.
+
+There was a slight break in the branches of the trees overhead, so that
+what little light there was, streamed through the gap full down on the
+spot where Mrs. Archer knelt.
+
+She raised his coat sleeve, and baring his arm, bent down her head over
+it.
+
+A moment after a wild cry rent the air, and rang through the wood.
+
+"Oh! help! help!" she cried; "Oh! my son! my son!"
+
+There was no need to cry for help; the sound of the gun had been heard,
+and the keepers came crowding to the spot, and with them, Marks.
+
+A litter was soon constructed for the wounded man, and once more he was
+mournfully and sorrowfully borne away towards the Hall.
+
+Marks drew near the captured poacher, now standing sullenly and silently
+near.
+
+"Ah!" said Marks, as he was being led away, "I thought no good had
+brought farmer Hodge down here, four years ago. You'll may be swing for
+this, my lad; and break your father's heart, as you did your mother's,
+not so long ago."
+
+With which consolatory remark, Marks went back to his cottage.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+DESPAIR!
+
+ "Ah! what have eyes to do with sleep,
+ That seek, and vainly seek to weep?
+ No dew on the dark lash appears,--
+ The heart is all too full for tears."
+
+ L. E. L.
+
+ "The world's a room of sickness, where each heart,
+ Knows its own anguish and unrest,
+ The truest wisdom there, and noblest art,
+ Is his, who skills of comfort best,
+ Whom by the softest step and gentlest tone,
+ Enfeebled spirits own,
+ And love to raise the languid eye,
+ Where, like an angel's wing, they feel him fleeting by."
+
+ CHRISTIAN YEAR.
+
+
+Anne sat in the solitude of her own thoughts; not alone, for her husband
+was at a table near, busy with his morrow's sermon; but Anne, for once,
+did not mind the silence, she had many things to think of, many things
+that made her sad. First, the little dead child lying now so cold and
+still; then his poor, sorrowing, heart-broken mother, whom she had
+tried, but ineffectually, to comfort; and then the father, who ought to
+be the one earthly stay on which the wife's heart might lean, and whose
+love should wean away the sad remembrance, or soften the blow. But Anne
+had found out that a great gulf lay between husband and wife, though
+what had separated them baffled her utmost skill to discover.
+
+Robert must love his wife passionately, else why had he lifted her so
+tenderly in his arms, as she lay insensible when the truth of her great
+loss broke upon her; why had he carried her away, and as he laid her on
+her own bed, bent so lovingly over her, murmuring, as he chafed her
+hands, "My poor, stricken darling. My own lost love;" and yet, when
+consciousness returned, how self possessed! how altered! kind and
+considerate as before, but the loving words, the loving looks were
+wanting. And Amy, who had seemed so happy only a month ago, surely more
+than grief for her boy had fixed that stony look on her face, and
+caused those tearless, woeful eyes.
+
+Anne's thoughts grew quite painful at last; the eternal scratch of her
+husband's pen irritated her.
+
+"Do put down your pen for a minute, Tom. I feel so miserable."
+
+"In half a moment," he said. "There--now I am ready to listen. What was
+it you said?"
+
+"That I was miserable."
+
+"I do not wonder at it, there has been enough to make us all feel
+sorrowful."
+
+"Yes, but it is more than the poor child's death makes me feel so."
+
+"What else?" he asked.
+
+"Why Amy herself, and then her husband."
+
+"Let us pick the wife to pieces first, Anne."
+
+"Oh! Tom, it is no scandal at all, but the plain truth. I wish it were
+otherwise," she said with a sigh.
+
+"Well, begin at the beginning, and let me judge."
+
+"You put it all out of my head. There is no beginning," she said
+crossly.
+
+"Then the end," he replied.
+
+"There is neither beginning nor end: you make me feel quite vexed, Tom."
+
+"Neither beginning nor end? Then there can be nothing to tell."
+
+"No, nothing. You had better go on with your sermon and make an end of
+that."
+
+"I have made an end of it," he said, laughing, "and now, joking aside,
+Anne, what have you to say about Mrs. Vavasour?"
+
+"If you are serious, Tom, I will tell you, but not else," she replied.
+
+"I am serious, Anne; quite serious."
+
+"Then tell me what is to be done with that poor bereaved Amy,--who has
+not shed a single tear since her child's death, four days ago now;--or
+her husband, who I verily believe worships her, and yet is as cold as a
+stone, and from no want of love on her part either, for I can see
+plainly by the way she follows him with her eyes sometimes, that she is
+as fond of him as--as--"
+
+"You are of me," he said.
+
+"Nonsense, Tom. They were so happy last time we came over to see them,
+that I cannot understand what has caused the change. Can you make any
+guess at all so as to help me? for oh! Tom, I would give the world to
+know."
+
+"Curiosity again, Anne?"
+
+"No, not so," she replied, "or if it is, it is in the right place this
+time; as I want to help them to make up the difference, whatever it is
+but do not see how I can manage it, when I am so totally in the dark.
+One thing I am certain of, Amy will die unless I can bring her to shed
+some tears, so as to remove that stony look."
+
+"She has _one_ hope, _one_ consolation. Surely I need not remind my wife
+to lead her heart and thoughts gradually and gently to that."
+
+"I have tried it, tried everything; but, Tom, there is no occasion
+whatever for preaching.
+
+"Anne! Anne!"
+
+"Yes, I know it's wrong to say so, but it is the truth notwithstanding;
+I feel something else should be tried. She is too submissive under the
+blow, too patient; not a murmur has escaped her lips, if there had, I
+should stand a better chance of seeing tears; but as it is there is no
+need of consolation. I verily believe she wants to die. And then that
+Frances, I sometimes think she has had something to do with it all; you
+know I always disliked that girl, and never thought she had a spark of
+feeling in her, until I saw her coming away from poor Bertie's room that
+sad evening, and a more woe-begone, remorseful face I never wish to see;
+and then see how distracted she has been since. Isabella tells me it is
+dreadful to be with her."
+
+"Poor girl, I pity her with all my heart, she feels she has been mainly
+instrumental in bringing all this misery upon Mrs. Vavasour."
+
+"I am sure," said Anne, more to herself than her husband, "she has a
+great deal more than Bertie's death to answer for; she nearly broke his
+mother's and Charley's heart four years ago, and I half believe she has
+had something to do with the husband's now."
+
+"Be more charitable, Anne, and do not lay so many sins to her charge.
+That last is a very grievous one."
+
+"Well," said his wife, rising, "after all my talk, Tom, you have not
+helped me one bit, I do believe I am going away more miserable than ever
+to that poor Amy."
+
+"Things do look dark indeed, Anne," said he as he kissed her, "but we
+must hope in God's mercy all will be better soon; may He help you in
+your work of love with the poor heart-sorrowing mother."
+
+As Anne went out she met Frances Strickland's maid, "If you please
+Ma'am, where shall I find Mr. Hall, my young mistress wishes to see
+him."
+
+"I will tell him myself," said Anne, and back she went.
+
+"Tom! Frances Strickland wishes to see you."
+
+"To see me!" he exclaimed. "I have promised to walk as far as the
+turnpike with Linchmore. That woman from whom the child caught the fever
+sent to beg he would call on her some time this morning; he named two
+o'clock, and it is close upon that now. Will not Miss Strickland be
+satisfied with you as my substitute?"
+
+"I never thought of asking, and, indeed, I should not like to. She might
+think I was jealous." Mr. Hall laughed outright.
+
+"You are in such a dreadfully teasing mood this morning, Tom; I have no
+patience with you! Perhaps Frances is going to clear up all this
+mystery? I told you a moment ago I suspected she had had something to do
+with it, and now her remorse may be greater than she can bear;
+repentance may have come with her grief for poor Bertie. I only hope, if
+it is so, that she is not too late to make amends."
+
+"Then I must make my excuses to Linchmore, and give up my walk," he
+said, with a sigh; "and go and hear what she has to say?"
+
+"Yes, do, Tom, that will be so good of you. I will wait here, but do not
+be long, as this is your last day with me, you know."
+
+As soon as Mr. Hall had gone, Anne half regretted that she had not done
+as he suggested, and seen Frances instead. Suppose she should try and
+sow dissension in his heart? Anne's face flushed hotly at the bare idea,
+then again she consoled herself with the thought that he would be sure
+to come and tell her if she did, for the sake of the love he bore for
+her; still Anne passed a fidgety, uncomfortable half hour ere he
+returned.
+
+Mr. Hall's face was grave; graver than Anne ever remembered to have seen
+it, and she waited for him to speak first, and checked the impatient
+question already on her lips.
+
+"It is worse than I thought, Anne, much worse. Your judgment did not
+lead you astray. She has separated husband and wife."
+
+"Then she has told you all, Tom. Oh! how glad I am, not only for Amy's
+sake but for her own; it would have been so dreadful for her to have
+lived on upholding the falsehoods she must have told to work her ends."
+
+"That is the worst part of the business, Anne, she has unfortunately
+told the truth, and, as far as I can see, the chance of reconciling
+those who ought to be heart and soul to each other is remote indeed.
+Time and the wife's love--you say she does love him--may, by God's
+grace, do much. I see nothing that you or I can do."
+
+"Wretched girl! What has she told?"
+
+"What Vavasour ought only to have heard from his wife's lips. Of her
+previous love for another and of their unfortunate meeting the day of
+her marriage."
+
+"I always hoped she had told him," said Anne, clasping her hands
+despairingly. "The concealment was no sin on Amy's part, only weakness.
+But as for Frances, there can be no excuse for her. She has been
+cruelly, shamefully unkind, and revengeful!"
+
+"She has; there is no denying it, but all through your friend's own
+fault; she nursed in her heart--which should have been as clear as day
+to her husband--a secret; and that one sin has brought in the end its
+own punishment, and while we blame Frances' culpable revenge, we must
+blame the wife's breach of faith and disloyalty."
+
+"Oh, Tom, what hard words!" cried Anne, "poor Amy's has not been a
+guilty secret."
+
+"No, but appearances are sadly against her, and we know nothing of what
+the husband thinks; even if he does believe her guiltless, he must
+naturally feel wounded at his wife's want of love and trust."
+
+"Yes," replied Anne, sadly, "what you say is very just and true. Can
+nothing then be done? Nothing at all?"
+
+"Frances is ready to make what atonement she can for her fault; it may
+help us a little, but very little, I fear. She has promised to tell
+Vavasour that her own jealousy and grief at being supplanted in
+another's love by his wife, determined her on being revenged; she
+cannot unsay what she has said, because it is the truth; but she who
+caused the breach may be allowed to plead for forgiveness for herself
+and the wife she has injured. The repentance is no secret, Anne; she
+desired me to tell you all, and beg you to plead for her with Mrs.
+Vavasour."
+
+"Do you think I shall plead in vain, or that she will with Mr.
+Vavasour?"
+
+"I trust not," he said, doubtfully; "the knowledge that his wife has not
+intentionally sinned, but only through fear of losing his love, and the
+conviction that she loves him may soften his heart."
+
+"May; but I see you think it will be a long time first, and in the
+meantime Amy will break her heart. Oh! Tom, I don't believe he can be so
+cruel if he loves her; just now, too, when she is so heart broken, so
+sadly bereaved. Do make Frances tell Mr. Vavasour at once."
+
+"I intended to have done so," he replied, "but Vavasour has gone out, so
+we must wait as patiently as we can until he returns. In the meantime,
+Anne, I will give you something to occupy your time and thoughts. I have
+promised Miss Strickland that you will ask Mrs. Vavasour's forgiveness
+for her. She says it is hopeless; but that cannot be," he said, as Anne
+thought, somewhat sternly; "you had better go at once and ask it; she
+who has sinned herself, and knows the repentant heart's craving for
+forgiveness, what hope can she have of pardon if she withholds hers from
+one who has sinned against her even seventy times seven."
+
+Anne said not a word, but with desponding heart prepared to go.
+
+"I have only an hour to spare," said Mr. Hall. "It is now three, and at
+four I must get ready to start home. I have ordered the pony-carriage at
+half-past."
+
+"I shall be with you long before that," replied Anne, as she closed the
+door.
+
+Amy sat just where Anne had left her only an hour ago; the same
+hopelessly despairing, fixed, death-like look on her face, which was as
+white as the shawl wrapped round her. As Anne looked, she wondered if
+Frances alone had wrought the sad change, while her heart sank within
+her at the apparently hopeless task her husband had imposed upon her,
+and she hesitated and faltered slightly ere she went at once, as was her
+wont, to the point in view. Her sister Julia would have brought the
+subject gradually round to Frances, but that was not Anne's way; she
+was, in fact, too impetuous, rushing headlong into a difficulty, facing
+the danger, and braving it with that strong, true heart.
+
+"My husband has been to see Frances Strickland to-day, Amy."
+
+There was no reply; Anne hardly expected any, but Amy raised her eyes,
+and looked hastily and inquiringly in her face. Anne took courage;
+perhaps the very fact of Amy's knowing another held her secret might
+open the floodgates of her heart.
+
+"She hid nothing from Tom; told him all, everything, and is desperately
+sorry, as well she may be, for all the misery she has caused you."
+
+"As well she may be," repeated Amy.
+
+"She is repentant--truly repentant, Amy."
+
+"I know it; have known it for days past," was the cold reply.
+
+"She begs your forgiveness most humbly."
+
+"I know that also, and have given it."
+
+"She says otherwise, Amy," said Anne, rather puzzled.
+
+"I have forgiven her for my darling's loss. But for the other; if she
+has dared tell you of it--of her cruelty, I never will. I have said so.
+Let us talk of something else."
+
+"No, Amy, I must talk of this--only of this. Does not the very fact of
+her having owned her fault show how sincerely sorry she is. Think of
+Frances, the proud Frances, sueing for forgiveness; think how miserable,
+utterly miserable, she must be to stoop to that. How, almost
+broken-hearted! Surely, Amy, for the sake of her prayers--all our
+prayers, for the sake of the love your poor Bertie had for her, you will
+forgive her."
+
+"No. Had my boy lived he would have avenged his mother's wrongs, and
+hated her, even as I do."
+
+"Alas, Amy! You hate her. Your heart never used to be so cruel as this."
+
+"No, it did not. She has made me what I am. Has she not pursued me with
+her revengeful cruelty for years? Has she not taken my only earthly hope
+from me, even my husband's love? And yet you wonder that I am
+changed--can ask me to forgive her."
+
+"No, Amy, not taken your husband's love; he loves you still."
+
+"If he did, I should not be sitting here, broken hearted and alone, with
+nothing but my own sorrowful thoughts, and--and you to comfort me."
+
+"He will forgive you, and take you to his heart in time, Amy."
+
+"Never! How can I convince him that I love him now? His very kindness
+chills me--so different to what it was; the changed tone of his voice
+tells me I have lost his love. He lives; yet is dead to me,--is mine,
+yet, how far off from me; and she who has wrought me all this misery,
+done all she has it in her power to do, now sues for forgiveness. Is it
+possible I can forgive, or clasp her hand in mine again?" The stony look
+was gradually relaxing, a slight, colour mantled her cheeks, and she
+concluded, almost passionately,--"No, Anne, I will not forgive her! Will
+not! Urge me no more. I cannot speak to her, much less see her again."
+
+"And yet think of her kindness to your boy. He remembered it, and gave
+her his top when he was dying."
+
+"You are cruel to remind me of it," said Amy, taking some fresh flowers
+off the table she was wreathing into a cross for Bertie; her last sad,
+mournful, but loving work.
+
+Anne drew near, and passed her arm lovingly round her waist.
+
+"This," said she, touching the cross, "is the emblem of your faith; and
+what does it not teach? It tells you that He who died on it to save us
+miserable sinners forgave even his murderers. 'Forgive them, Father, for
+they know not what they do.' Not only forgave them, but excused their
+faults, and interceded for them. Amy, if this is your belief, if you
+indeed take Him as your model, then forgive, even as he forgave; if not,
+never dare to lay this sweet white cross on your dead child's breast;
+would he not now, a pure and immortal spirit, sorrow at his mother's
+want of faith, and hardness of heart."
+
+Amy's head drooped; every particle of angry colour fled from her face,
+while the hard, unforgiving look gradually died away as Anne went on.
+
+"Spare me, Anne! Spare me!" she said.
+
+"No, Amy dear, I must not, although it is as cruel to me to speak to you
+so harshly as it is for you to listen, and believe me when I say that
+your child, your little Bertie, was never further off from you than
+now, when you forgive not another her trespasses, even as you hope your
+own will be forgiven. Oh, Amy! think--can you kneel night and morning,
+and repeat that one sentence in your prayers, knowing how utterly you
+reject it? Can you press a last loving kiss on your child's pure lips,
+knowing how you are hugging one darling sin at your heart? Amy, Amy!
+listen to my warning voice, and forgive even as you hope to be
+forgiven," and Anne bent forward and lovingly kissed her forehead.
+
+The spell was broken: as Anne gently withdrew her lips, tears welled up
+from the poor overcharged heart, and Amy wept,--wept an agony of tears.
+
+"Oh, Anne!" she said presently, "Stop! stop! You will crush my heart. I
+_will_ forgive her, for the sake of my boy, my darling Bertie."
+
+"God bless you, dear Amy," replied Anne, delighted at not only having
+gained her wish, but at the sight of the tears she was shedding. "These
+tears will do you good. My heart has ached to see, day after day, your
+cold, calm, listless face."
+
+Anne could have cried herself for very joy, to think how nicely things
+were coming round; as for Robert Vavasour, of course, with Frances to
+plead for forgiveness, and his wife to throw her arms round his neck,
+and vow she loved him better than all the world beside, his stubborn
+heart must give in; so Anne sat quite contented and happy by Amy's side,
+and let her weep on. Then, as her watch told her the hour for her
+husband's departure drew near, she soothed and comforted Amy's weak,
+quivering heart, as well as she was able, and went--for Amy would go at
+once--as far as Frances Strickland's room door with her, then flew,
+rather than walked, to her own. Mr. Hall, carpet-bag in hand, was just
+coming out, and nearly ran over her as she burst open the door.
+
+"Is it you, Anne?" he said, as he staggered back, "I thought, at least,
+it was a cannon ball coming."
+
+"It's only my head," she said, laughing, "I was in such a hurry. I felt
+I should be too late. I ought to have packed up your things before I
+went to Amy."
+
+"Ought is a very fine word, but it is generally a late one."
+
+"I am so sorry," said Anne in a repentant voice.
+
+"My next wife shall never say she is sorry," he said smiling.
+
+"What a hardened wretch she will be!"
+
+"Not so," he replied, "she shall be the most gentle, submissive creature
+in the world; everything shall be in its right place, and there shall be
+a right time for everything."
+
+"Yes, Tom, I know I do try you dreadfully; but, all the same, you will
+never get another little wife to love you better than I do."
+
+"True, Anne," he said, "or one that I could ever love as I love you."
+
+"And now, Tom, do put down that horrid carpet-bag, I hate to feel you
+are going to leave me here even for a few days all by myself; and for
+the first time too. I can't think what I shall do without you."
+
+"But it is more than half-past four," he replied.
+
+"But not railway time, only the poor old pony's, and I am sure he will
+not mind waiting just to oblige his mistress."
+
+Mr. Hall sat down, and placed her by his side. "And now, Anne," he said,
+"tell me what success you have had with Mrs. Vavasour? but do not make a
+long story of it, as I really must be away in another ten minutes."
+
+"I had a hard matter to persuade her, Tom, but I managed it at last, and
+she is with Frances now. I feel so happy, because I am sure all will be
+right; poor Amy! how she did cry."
+
+"She cried at last, then?"
+
+"Heartily; and I know it will do her a world of good; she looked far
+happier when I left her than she has done for days."
+
+"And now, Anne, I really must go and see after the pony, and settle the
+carpet bag, but I will come back once more, and say good-bye."
+
+Ten minutes, twenty, slipped by, and Anne began to fear her husband had
+forgotten his promise; she wondered at his delay, and looked round to
+see if he had forgotten anything. His sermon, blotting book, small
+ink-bottle, all had gone. She turned to the chest of drawers and was
+ransacking them hurriedly, when she heard him come back.
+
+"Why, Tom," she said, without turning round, "Here are all your
+handkerchiefs, every one of them! Don't talk of my carelessness after
+this," and she laughingly held them up as a trophy.
+
+But her husband's face was white, so very white, that Anne's heart
+turned sick, and almost stopped beating.
+
+With a faint cry she crept up to him, and with a timid, frightened look,
+gazed into his face.
+
+"What is it?" she whispered, "are you ill? Oh! tell me! Tell me!"
+
+"No, no. It's worse, Anne, worse," he murmured hoarsely.
+
+"Oh! for God's sake tell me, Tom! or I shall die."
+
+"It is Vavasour," he said, as he took her in his arms and held her to
+his heart. "Forgive me for having frightened you so, Anne. But Vavasour
+has been shot."
+
+"Thank God you are well?" said Anne, bursting into tears, "But, oh, Amy!
+my poor darling Amy!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE LAST OF LITTLE BERTIE.
+
+ "She put him on a snow-white shroud,
+ A chaplet on his head;
+ And gathered only primroses
+ To scatter o'er the dead.
+
+ She laid him in his little grave--
+ 'Twas hard to lay him there:
+ When spring was putting forth its flowers,
+ And everything was fair.
+
+ And down within the silent grave,
+ He laid his weary head;
+ And soon the early violets
+ Grew o'er his grassy bed.
+
+ The mother went her household ways,
+ Again she knelt in prayer;
+ And only asked of Heaven its aid
+ Her heavy lot to bear."
+
+ L. E. L.
+
+
+On leaving Frances Strickland, Amy went to poor Bertie's room to lay the
+fair white cross in his coffin, and was bending down over her lost
+darling in an agony of tears which old Hannah vainly attempted to check,
+when the sudden, hasty gallop of a horse away from the stables struck
+her ear. It was the groom going for Dr. Bernard.
+
+Amy's mind, already unnerved and unstrung, was easily alarmed.
+
+"Alas! Hannah," said she, drawing near the darkened window "has any
+accident happened that some-one rides so furiously?"
+
+"My dear Miss Amy," replied Hannah, forgetting in her tender pity Amy's
+new tie, and thinking of her only as the wee child she had so lovingly
+nursed on her knee, "you must not be frightening yourself this way. What
+should have happened? God knows you've had enough to worry you. There,
+don't tremble that way, but let go the blind, and come away from the
+window."
+
+But Hannah's persuasions and entreaties were alike useless. Amy, with
+fluttering anxious heart still looked out through the deepening shadows
+of the day, now fast drawing into evening.
+
+Her husband was away. Oh! how she wished she could see him or hear his
+firm, yet for the last few days mournful step. Her heart had taken a
+strange fear, which she could neither shake off, nor subdue; a trembling
+nervous dread of some fast-coming evil.
+
+Mr. Linchmore came up the drive, and for a moment a joyous thrill crept
+through her as she thought it was her husband; but no, he came nearer
+still, then disappeared up the terrace with Mr. Hall, and only the groom
+with the pony carriage was left, standing quietly as it had stood ever
+since she had so eagerly strained her eyes from the window.
+
+Then once again--as it had done long, long ago--that strange, dull tramp
+from without smote her ear.
+
+Meanwhile, Anne had nerved her heart as well as she could, and gone
+sorrowfully enough to break the sad news to Amy.
+
+Not finding her either in her own or Miss Strickland's room, she guessed
+she was in poor Bertie's: besides, she missed the white cross.
+
+"Oh! Tom!" she said, going back to her husband, "What can I do? She is
+with her poor dead child, surely I need not; and indeed I feel I cannot
+go there and tell her."
+
+"No," replied Mr. Hall, after a moment's consideration, "perhaps it will
+be best to try and get Vavasour into his room without her knowledge. I
+think with caution it might be done. Go and remain near the nursery
+door, Anne; they will not have to pass it on their way up, and I will go
+and enjoin silence and caution."
+
+Anne sped away, and took up the post assigned her, listening eagerly,
+yet fearfully for the sound of the muffled footsteps, and straining her
+ears in the direction of the stairs, so that Amy stood before her,
+almost ere she had heard the opening of the door.
+
+Anne saw at once Amy guessed at some disaster, for she gently but firmly
+resisted Anne's endeavours to arrest her footsteps, and said, while she
+trembled excessively,
+
+"My husband! Is he dead?"
+
+"No. Oh no! Amy darling."
+
+Then as Amy would have passed on, she whispered, in a voice she in vain
+attempted to steady,
+
+"Don't go there Amy! pray don't!"
+
+But Amy paid no heed, but went and stood at the head of the stairs on
+the landing.
+
+In vain Mr. Linchmore and Mr. Hall gently tried to induce her to leave;
+she was deaf to reason.
+
+"I must be here," she murmured, with pale compressed lips, "I must be
+here."
+
+There was no help for it; so they bore him up slowly past her on into
+his room, and laid him on the bed, and there left him.
+
+"Do you think he will die?" asked Amy, fearfully, as she grasped old Dr.
+Bernard's arm tightly, some time later as he sat by the fire.
+
+How he felt for her, that old man, she so young, and so full of sorrow.
+He drew her hand in his, and stroked it gently and kindly.
+
+"Trust in God, and hope," was the reply.
+
+"I do trust," she replied, firmly. "I _will_ try and hope. But, oh! I
+love him! I love him!" she said.
+
+And this was the one cry for ever, if not on her lips, at her heart.
+
+She sat by the pale insensible form day after day; she knew no fatigue,
+heeded not the lapse of time. Once only she stole away to imprint a last
+loving kiss on her dead Bertie's lips ere they bore away the little
+coffin to its last resting-place in the cold churchyard; then silently
+she went back to her old place by her husband's bed-side. Would he die
+without one word? without recognising his wife who loved him so
+entirely? Oh! surely he would speak one loving word if but one; give her
+one loving look as of old. She felt that her boy's death was as nothing
+in comparison to this.
+
+As the love deep and strong welled up in her heart, she felt half
+frightened at its intensity, while it crept with a great fear as she
+whispered over and over again, "He will die." If he would but speak; or
+say one word.
+
+Alas! the words came at last, but only incoherent murmurings, indistinct
+unmeaning words. His eyes opened, and wandered about without knowledge,
+and though they rested on her, knew her not. His burning hands returned
+not the soft pressure, the loving touch, of hers. Would he die thus, and
+never know the deep love she had for him; the tenderness, devotion of
+her heart? She groaned in utter anguish and misery; but patiently sat
+on.
+
+In vain they tried, those kind friends, to draw her away; or if they did
+succeed in persuading her to lie down on a mattress on the floor, her
+large mournful eyes never closed in sleep, but still kept watch on the
+one loved form; her heart ever fearing he would die--praying that he
+might not.
+
+And Mrs. Grey, or rather Mrs. Archer, the newly-made mother; where was
+she? She kept watch, too, over her long-lost son, but without being the
+slightest help to the poor heart-broken wife, having apparently no
+thoughts, no words, no looks for anyone but the son who had been lost to
+her for so long. Fear mingled with her joy; fear like the wife's lest he
+should die.
+
+Amy was told part of her story by Mr. Linchmore, and made no objection
+to the poor mother sharing her watch; she was her husband's mother, that
+was enough. What he loved, she would love.
+
+Very silent and motionless Mrs. Archer sat. Amy sometimes wandered about
+restlessly, or gave way to passionate weeping now; but very patiently,
+very sorrowfully, the mother sat. They exchanged no words with each
+other, those two mournful watchers; Mrs. Archer had been told the young
+girl's relationship to her son, and sometimes her eyes rested lovingly
+on the pale, beautiful face.
+
+When Amy went to take a last look at her boy, she took Mrs. Archer's
+hand, and drew her away with her, and together they had stood and gazed
+at the little white marble face. Amy said no word, but as Mrs. Archer
+moved away, she murmured,--
+
+"Better thus, than lost. Lost for years."
+
+The shock of all these events proved too much for Anne, and when her
+husband returned on the Tuesday morning he could not but notice how wan
+and pale she looked, and so excitable, that the least thing in the world
+upset her. Instead of the glad, but perhaps sober welcome he expected,
+she threw her arms round his neck, as she had done at parting, and burst
+into tears, which she had a hard matter to prevent ending in hysterics.
+Mr. Hall's soothing, gentle manner soon calmed her; but she was very
+nearly giving way again that same evening, when he urged her immediate
+return home.
+
+"What! leave Amy, Tom, in all her trouble? Oh, no, never!"
+
+"The worry and excitement is too much for you, Anne, I cannot shut my
+eyes to that fact, and must not allow you to sacrifice your health for
+the sake of your friend."
+
+"My dear, dear husband, do let me stay?"
+
+But the look on her husband's face convinced her that his resolution was
+taken, and inflexible. She ceased to coax and persuade, and bethought
+her what could be done. Frances Strickland was still weak and ill;
+besides, her companionship was not in any way to be desired for Amy.
+
+"Have I not heard you, Anne," said Mr. Hall, as if answering her
+thoughts, "speak of some kind old lady, a great friend of Mrs.
+Vavasour's mother? Surely her aid as a companion, though not as a nurse,
+might be called upon now."
+
+Of course. Why had not Anne thought of it?
+
+In a few moments, with her usual haste, she was speeding away in search
+of Mrs. Linchmore, to beg her permission, before she invited Mrs.
+Elrington. It was given, though with Anne thought anything but a good
+grace, and the letter written and despatched, and Anne tried to appear
+content and satisfied that she was leaving; and doing right; and that
+Amy might not think it unkind. As she packed her box, she was forced to
+confess she _was_ weak, and that it was perhaps as well she had a
+husband to look after her some times, and that Mr. Hall was right, as he
+always was, in wishing her to have rest.
+
+The next few days passed much as the former ones to Amy, being, so to
+speak, a misery of doubt and hope; but on the morning of the third there
+came a change--a change for the better. Robert Vavasour slept. Not that
+dull, insensible sleep, a hovering between life and death, such as it
+had been when Amy first watched by him, but a soft, natural sleep; the
+breathing came faint, but regular; the face wore none of its former set,
+rigid look, but gradually grew into the old, old expression she loved so
+well. Then Amy knew her husband was better; God had been very merciful;
+he would not die and leave her desolate and alone; she knew it long
+before old Dr. Bernard's anxious face wore that pleasant, cheery smile,
+or Mrs. Archer had thanked God so fervently on her knees.
+
+Robert Vavasour slept, slept for hours; and during that long sleep Amy
+and Mrs. Archer arranged their future plans; her husband must not be
+told of his mother's existence yet; in the first place, he was not
+strong enough to bear any excitement, and in the next, the poor, fond
+mother hoped to win a little of his kindly feeling, if not his love,
+before she held him to her heart.
+
+"I hope to win his love in time," she said quietly to Amy, "to feel he
+loves me before he knows he is bound to do so. I cannot hope now for the
+first strong love of his heart--that deep earnest love with which he
+loves his wife; but I feel nevertheless that I shall be satisfied with
+my son's love. His face is like his father's, and he must be as noble
+and as good, to have won such love as yours."
+
+Then Mrs. Archer went away to seek Mr. Linchmore, and hear the story of
+her wrongs, leaving Amy to watch sadly and alone for her husband's
+awaking. Sadly, for how would his eyes meet hers? Would they have the
+same stern, severe look that had shivered her heart for so long? Would
+he still think she loved him not? But she would tell him all by-and-by.
+She could not live as she had lived: he must hear and judge whether she
+was as guilty as he thought her.
+
+Robert awoke to consciousness: awoke to see the soft eyes of his wife,
+looking mournfully, doubtfully, but oh! how lovingly at him. As his eyes
+met hers, a tender light played in them; he even pressed the hand she
+held so tremblingly in hers; but only for a moment, the next, as she
+bent down and pressed her lips to his, he gave a deep sigh, and turned
+his face away wearily.
+
+"He has not forgotten!" murmured Amy mournfully, as she rose and went to
+seek Dr. Bernard, "He has not forgiven!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+THE CLOUDS CLEAR.
+
+ "Nor could he from his heart throw off
+ The consciousness of his state;
+ It was there with a dull, uneasy sense,
+ A coldness and a weight.
+
+ It was there when he lay down at night,
+ It was there when at morn he rose;
+ He feels it whatever he does,
+ It is with him wherever he goes.
+
+ No occupation from his mind
+ That constant sense can keep;
+ It is present in his waking hours,
+ It is present in his sleep."
+
+ SOUTHEY.
+
+
+Mrs. Elrington could not resist Anne's pleading letter, but decided on
+going at once to Brampton; her heart was too compassionate to refuse to
+aid those in distress, and especially one who had ever held, as Amy had,
+a high place in her esteem and love.
+
+As soon as Anne received the answer so favourable to her wishes, she
+prepared at once to return home, and went to Amy--not with the glad news
+of the now expected guest, that she decided had best not be
+mentioned--but to say good-bye, and a very sorrowful one she felt it.
+
+Amy was sitting working in her own room, once poor Bertie's; her mind as
+busily employed as her fingers, only more mournfully; when Anne burst
+open the door in her usual hasty way.
+
+"Here I am!" she said, "Did you expect to see me? Did you think I should
+come to say good-bye?"
+
+"How should I?" answered Amy, "I never knew you were going to-day, and I
+am sorry to see you cloaked for your journey."
+
+"And so am I; but Tom would not rest quiet without me any longer, so
+dear, I must go; the pony chaise will be round directly, and yet I
+should have liked to have sat with you for an hour or so before
+leaving."
+
+"Then why did you put off coming to see me until the last moment, Anne?"
+
+"I did not know I was going until half an hour ago. How is that wretched
+Frances? Will you say I had not time to stay and see her; I should so
+hate--although, mind, I pity her with all my heart,--giving her a
+sisterly embrace."
+
+"But," said Amy, "What occasion is there for such a warm farewell?"
+
+"Ah! thereby hangs a tale. The fact is I don't wish to see Frances
+Strickland."
+
+"Poor girl! She has suffered so much."
+
+"I wonder you can find it in your heart to pity her; but you were always
+an angel of goodness."
+
+"You are wrong, Anne," sighed Amy, "and I think you should go and see
+Miss Strickland."
+
+"You are evidently in the dark, Amy; I thought Julia would have written
+to you, and told you, as--she has me,--that she has been so stupid, so
+foolish, as to engage herself to cousin Alfred, Frances' brother. Is it
+not tiresome of her?"
+
+"But the marriage will scarcely affect you, Anne?"
+
+"Oh, but it will, though; for I had made up my mind Julia would be an
+old maid; she always said she would, and come some day and look after my
+children, if I ever have any," said Anne, blushing; "for I am sure I
+should puzzle to know how to dress them, much less understand how to
+manage them. Mamma says Aunt Mary--Mrs. Strickland--is very angry about
+the marriage, so I really do think Julia ought to give it up."
+
+"Why does your Aunt dislike it?"
+
+"Because Julia is penniless and a nobody; meaning, I suppose, that
+Alfred should marry some high born girl, who would, I have no doubt,
+snub him in the end. But then it would be so nice for Aunt to say, 'My
+daughter-in-law, Lady so-and-so-that was,' or the Earl of _somebody_,
+my son's father-in-law. Instead of which she will only have to recall
+the plain and _poor_ Miss Bennet, that was. Fancy Alfred coming to stay
+with us in our nutshell!"
+
+"I never thought Mr. Strickland gave himself airs," replied Amy.
+
+"Nor does he. But it is disagreeable to see a man sitting over the fire
+all day; or in summer time basking lazily in the sun."
+
+"But Julia will probably change all that laziness and inaction. She is
+full of life and work herself. I think _he_ has chosen well."
+
+"Of course _he_ has; but I consider Julia to have sacrificed herself.
+And now, do come down and see me off."
+
+Amy put down her work and went.
+
+"I shall see you again soon, Amy dear," said Anne, with tearful eyes, as
+together they stood on the terrace. "Tom has promised to drive me over
+some day next week, not entirely for his dear wife's sake though; but
+because he has taken a great interest in some dreadful sinner in this
+parish, and she as violent a liking to him. The old rector has given Tom
+permission to visit her whenever he likes, glad enough, I dare say, to
+be rid the trouble of it himself. Poor woman! she cannot live long--a
+breaking up of nature, or something of that sort; but Mrs. Archer knows
+more about it than I do."
+
+"Anne! Anne! What are you talking about?" asked her husband, catching a
+word here and there, of her rambling speech. "Come! jump in, the pony is
+quite impatient to be off."
+
+"And so is his master," laughed Anne; "we shall drive off in grand
+style, and then dilly-dally for half-an-hour, or more, at the turnpike,
+while he chats to his heart's content with Jane; that's the name of his
+new friend, dear. There, I really must say good-bye, or perhaps Tom may
+go without me." And almost smothering Amy with kisses she sprang down
+the steps and in another moment was seated by her husband, and they
+drove off.
+
+A few hours after, Mrs. Elrington arrived at the Hall; but as she had
+truly said, long ago, it was pain and grief to her to look on Mrs.
+Linchmore's face again; and she leant heavily on Mr. Linchmore's arm, as
+she passed from the carriage.
+
+She paused a moment, as he would have led her into the drawing-room to
+his wife; and pointing through the half-open door, said simply, "We meet
+as strangers."
+
+And so they did--the once adopted daughter and fondly-loved mother; but
+it cost them _both_ an effort; for while Mrs. Elrington's hand trembled
+and shook like an aspen on the top of the stick with which she steadied
+her footsteps, Mr. Linchmore thought he had never seen his wife look
+more proudly beautiful and magnificent.
+
+Anne's letter represented Amy as heart-broken, not only with the loss of
+her child, but sorrow stricken with the anxiety caused by the fresh
+trial of her husband's illness. Anne said not a word of the _living_
+grief consuming her heart, but Mrs. Elrington had not been many days at
+Brampton ere she suspected it; that pale, sweet anxious face, so thin
+and care-worn, told its own tale, with the faltering, uncertain step;
+the mournful yet loving way with which she tended her husband now
+rapidly approaching convalescence. How she anticipated his every wish.
+Yet there was a hesitation, an uncertainty about it, all too evident to
+a watchful eye; it seemed as though with her anxiety to please, there
+was an evident fear of displeasing. Surely the wife needed the most care
+and tenderness now: the first she had, but the latter, where was that?
+Where the nameless attentions and thousand loving words her husband
+might speak?
+
+Mrs. Elrington saw with sorrow the coldness, and estrangement, that had
+crept between the two. Was that fair young wife so recently
+afflicted--so loving, so doubly bereaved at heart--to blame? or Robert?
+
+Mrs. Elrington loved Amy, and could not sit silently by without risking
+something to mend matters, so one day, when she and Robert were alone,
+she spoke.
+
+"I trust you are feeling stronger this morning, Mr. Vavasour?"
+
+"Thank you. Yes, I am I believe, mending apace."
+
+"I am glad of it, as I think your wife needs change, she is looking far
+from well; the sooner you take her home the better."
+
+"Bertie's death was a bitter trial; and she felt it deeply."
+
+"Bitter, indeed, it must have been, to have changed her so utterly. She
+is greatly altered since her marriage."
+
+Robert Vavasour sighed.
+
+"You are right," he replied. "I myself see the change, but without the
+power to remedy it now."
+
+"How so?" she asked.
+
+"You say altered since her marriage. It is true; for when Amy married
+she wilfully shut out from her heart all hopes of happiness."
+
+"You speak in riddles, Mr. Vavasour, which I am totally unable to
+comprehend."
+
+"I am a rich man, Mrs. Elrington, and that alone might have tempted many
+a girl, or led her to fancy she loved me."
+
+Mrs. Elrington drew up her head proudly. "But not Amy Neville," she
+replied, "no amount of wealth would have tempted her to marry a man she
+did not care for."
+
+"Care for," he repeated bitterly, "caring is not loving."
+
+Mrs. Elrington had arrived at the bottom of the mystery now; he fancied
+Amy did not love him! Amy who was devoting herself to him day after day,
+never weary of, but only happy when she was in his sick room, nursing
+and tending him as few wives would, treated so coldly, giving him all
+the loving worship of her young heart; while he refused to believe in
+it, but gloomily hugged the morbid fancy to his heart that she loved him
+not.
+
+Mrs. Elrington could have smiled at the delusion, if Amy's happiness had
+not been at stake; as it was she replied gravely, "You are mistaken,
+Mr. Vavasour, wilfully blind to what is openly apparent to all others
+who ever see you and your wife together. Why I verily believe Amy
+worships the very ground you stand on; but I fear no words of mine will
+convince you of the fact, while the indifference with which you are
+treating her is well-nigh breaking her heart."
+
+No, Robert Vavasour was not convinced.
+
+"She did not love me when she married me; her oath was false, she--" but
+no, his pride refused to allow him to tell of her love for another.
+
+"I cannot listen to this," replied Mrs. Elrington, rising, "whatever her
+love may have been in the days you speak of, I am convinced Amy has
+never acted falsely towards you since you called her wife; neither do I
+believe there lives a man who _now_ claims or holds one thought of hers
+from you. I am an old woman, Mr. Vavasour, and have seen a great deal of
+sorrow, and one heart broken through the cruelty of another; let not
+your wife's be so taken from you, but believe in her, trust in her,
+watch over her as the apple of your eye, for indeed she needs and
+demands all your love and tenderness; crush not the love that is even
+now struggling in her heart, at your hardness and neglect, or take care
+lest you build up a wall that you will find it impossible hereafter to
+knock down, or when falling, will bury her you love beneath its ruins."
+
+Robert's heart was strangely ill at ease and stirred by these words of
+Mrs. Elrington's. Perhaps he began to fear that even if his wife loved
+him not, he _had_ been unnecessarily hard and severe, and pitiless, very
+pitiless and unloving. Might he not yet succeed in winning her love--the
+only thing in the wide world that he coveted? But then again, the
+thought that she had loved another, had cruelly deceived him, when he
+had loved and trusted her so entirely, was gall and wormwood to him, and
+turned his heart, when he thought of it, to stone. No; even allowing
+that she might love him, he could never love her so passionately again.
+So Vavasour thought, and so men and women have thought, and will think
+again, as long as the world lasts, and yet, do what they will, the old
+love _will_ come again, with all its old intensity, overthrowing all
+their wise and determined resolutions.
+
+Deep in thought, Vavasour sat, until the minutes crept into hours, and
+then Mrs. Archer came, looking very different from the Mrs. Grey of old.
+The frown had not, it is true, disappeared, but it had faded and given
+way to a mild, happy expression pervading every feature of her face.
+There was still a mournful look--how could it be otherwise?--the
+mournful remembrance of the past; but even that was growing dim beside
+the ever-living presence of her son, and of her love for him. She had
+gained her wish, too, for Robert loved his mother, and, I think, was
+somewhat proud of her. There was nothing to be ashamed of, nothing he
+need blush for; she was his mother, he her son, acknowledged to be so by
+all the world.
+
+She was dressed in black silk, and grey-coloured ribbons in her cap;
+her glossy, almost snow-white hair, still beautiful in its abundance,
+rolled round her head. She had grown quiet and gentle, and had none of
+the wild passions or fits of half-madness now. As Robert sat gazing at
+her, he thought she must have been very beautiful in her youth, when
+that mass of hair was golden.
+
+"Amy is not here," she said, looking round.
+
+"No. I am alone, and rather tired of my solitude, with a don't-care
+feeling of being left any longer by myself just creeping over me."
+
+"I thought Amy had been with you, or I should have been here before. Ah!
+I see she has been, by the fresh flowers on the table. She is always
+thinking of you, my son; her love always in her heart."
+
+Robert moved impatiently. Had every one combined together to din his
+wife's love into his ears? Was he the victim of a conspiracy? So he
+replied, touchily.
+
+"Amy is kind enough, and I dare say I am an ungrateful wretch."
+
+"Not ungrateful; but you might be a little, just a little, more loving
+to her sometimes. She is such a loving, sweet young wife."
+
+"You think she loves me?"
+
+Mrs. Archer laughed. "Are you in earnest, my son?" she asked.
+
+"Never more so in my life," was the reply.
+
+His mother looked at him almost reproachfully.
+
+"Can anyone doubt it?" she answered. "I believe her whole soul is wrapt
+up in you, and I thank God that it is so, my son."
+
+Robert was silent,
+
+"She is a fragile flower," continued Mrs. Archer, "one that the
+slightest cold breath might crush, yet withal strong in her deep love
+for you. It must be that, that has enabled her to bear up as she has,
+for she has had enough to try the strongest of us, and, I fear, looks
+more thin and shadowy every day."
+
+"Mother!" cried Robert, in alarm. "You do not think Amy really ill?"
+
+"I don't know what to think. She suffered an agony while she and I sat
+watching those dreadful weary hours by your bed-side; and I know Dr.
+Bernard has now prescribed a tonic; but she does not gain strength, and
+seems more feeble than ever. Forgive me, my son, but I sometimes fear
+there is a coldness, a nameless chill between you, which makes my heart
+tremble for the future of both. For hers--because she will die, loving
+you so intensely, and--" Mrs. Archer hesitated a moment, "and with
+little return; for yours--lest, when too late, you will see your error,
+and the remorse may break your heart. Oh! my son, if she has erred, it
+cannot have been wilfully, and surely she has been sufficiently
+punished. Think," she added, laying her hand on his, as she was leaving
+the room, "think well on my words, for I can have but one wish at my
+heart, and that is my son's happiness."
+
+And Robert did think--think deeply all the rest of that day. He seemed
+never tired of thinking, while his eyes rested oftener on his wife, and
+he watched her intensely.
+
+What if she did love him? Ah! if only she did. His heart leapt wildly at
+the thought, and his jealous hatred seemed to have no place there now,
+but to be a far-off dream; or if it did intrude, he set it aside as a
+bugbear, or felt less savagely inclined than heretofore.
+
+Could it be for him--she, his wife, brought fresh flowers for those
+already fading? How graceful she looked as she arranged them; not
+hurriedly, but slowly and tastefully--as though her heart was with the
+work,--in the glass. Was it for him she trod so softly over the room,
+while everything she touched assumed a different look, and slid quietly
+into its place, as though under the influence of a magic wand.
+
+Hard and cruel! How chill those words of Mrs. Elrington's fell, like a
+dead weight on his heart, and had been ringing in his ears ever since.
+If Frances Strickland had told him a lie, then he had been hard and
+cruel. But his wife had never denied the facts, hideous as they
+appeared; but had Frances exaggerated the story, and why had he refused
+to listen to Amy's explanation? Might she not have cleared away half its
+hideousness? His heart surged like the troubled waves by the sea-shore,
+and his breath came quick and hot, as he felt that he might have been
+mistaken in fancying his wife loved him not. If all this long time it
+had been so, then, indeed, he had been hard and cruel; and would she
+ever forgive him? or could he ever forgive himself? Tormented with
+doubts and fears, he watched and waited, and gave no sign to his wife
+that he did so, while she grew paler and paler, fading imperceptibly.
+
+The days crept on--three more slipped by, and found Robert still
+undecided, still undetermined. Again Amy brought fresh flowers, and
+stood at the table arranging them as before, and again her husband's
+eyes watched her, and had she only looked up as the last flower was
+being placed in the glass, her heart would have found its rest, for her
+eyes must have seen the love trembling in her husband's; but Amy never
+looked, but went and sat over by the fire, without a word. Then Robert
+spoke--
+
+"Those flowers are very beautiful, Amy."
+
+The words themselves were nothing, but the tone was the tender tone of
+old. Had he spoken coldly she could have answered at once, but the old,
+old loving tone, smote on her poor overcharged heart, and she could not
+answer a word, while the heavy tears gathered under her eyelids, and
+trembled as they fell. But her face was from her husband, and as yet he
+did not see them. Then some one came in, and they were interrupted. But
+the time Amy sighed for was not far distant, it was only delayed awhile.
+
+Again they were alone; and again Robert spoke.
+
+"Were the flowers gathered for me, Amy?"
+
+The words were even more tenderly spoken than before; still there was no
+reply, and Robert half raised himself, and stooped forward to look into
+his wife's face; but she kept it steadfastly hidden: she dared not look
+until she could control some of the emotion, which seemed as though it
+would suffocate her.
+
+They were both silent now. Robert grieved at her silence, while Amy sat
+striving and fighting with her sobs; yet so very still that none could
+have guessed the pent-up agony she was enduring.
+
+By-and-bye she grew more composed; had conquered and mastered her
+emotion, and turned her head towards her husband; but he was reading,
+and if he saw her, never raised his eyes from his book.
+
+Unconsciously her thoughts wandered, wandered away to the days at
+Somerton when she had been so happy. Ah! what a world of woe had
+overtaken her since then. Her boy dead, her only one; her husband worse
+than dead, his love estranged, perhaps gone for ever! and yet if he had
+only allowed her to speak,--not to attempt to palliate her fault, but
+only to tell how dearly she loved him! she felt she _had_ rightly
+forfeited some of his esteem, but scarcely deserved all the bitter
+misery his coldness had cost her.
+
+Would he ever trust her again? Ever believe her love? Yet if she died
+for it, she must tell it him; the weight of it was killing her, and she
+clasped her small white hands tightly over her knees as she thought that
+perhaps the time for her to speak had come. Only a few moments ago he
+had spoken almost tenderly to her, and more like his former self, and he
+was better, almost well now, and able to bear what she had to say. The
+excitement of her sad tale would not hurt him half so much as the
+telling it would grieve her.
+
+He was no longer weak, but gaining strength every day; there was
+scarcely any trace of his illness now, save that ugly scar near his
+temple, and that was gradually fading away.
+
+How should she begin? What should she say? As she essayed to think, the
+suffocating feeling arose again in her throat; again the large heavy
+tears dropped one by one; but her face was turned full on her husband
+now, his eyes on hers, yet she knew it not; knew not that his book had
+been laid down long ago, and that he was watching eagerly the various
+emotions flitting over face.
+
+As the tears sprung from her eyes, he said, hastily reaching out his
+hand,
+
+"Come here, Amy! Come nearer to me."
+
+She saw him _then_. Their eyes met, and that one glance told _him_ his
+wife's love was his; told _her_ she was trusted and forgiven. In another
+moment she had tottered forward and was gathered to his heart, her tears
+falling like rain on his breast.
+
+"Oh! Robert! Robert!" she wailed.
+
+But loving words poured impetuously in her ears, loving arms were round
+her.
+
+"My wife! my own! My darling Amy. Hush! hush, love!"
+
+But she could not hush; but lay weeping, weeping passionately, nestled
+close to him; clasped tightly in his arms, as though he feared to lose
+her.
+
+He thought those tears would never cease, and almost grew frightened at
+their intensity, but they stopped at last, subsiding into sobs; and
+presently they were gone altogether, and she rested gently and quietly
+in his arms while she told him the tale that had nearly broken her heart
+and his; and if he thought her to blame, as without doubt she was, he
+forgave her now from his heart, and bitterly accused himself of being
+hard and cruel indeed; and thanked God he had not been too late in
+breaking down the wall that had severed them, and nearly buried them
+both in its ruins.
+
+Mrs. Elrington came in, but was moving softly away again when Robert
+called her back.
+
+"She does indeed love me," he said proudly and humbly; while he resisted
+Amy's efforts to free herself from his grasp, "Your words, dear lady,
+were severe but well timed. I deserved them and can thank you for them
+now; while all my life long I will strive to make amends for what my
+wife has suffered."
+
+Amy looked up, her bright face flushing with smiles, but her husband
+covered her mouth laughingly with his hand as she attempted to speak;
+possibly he thought she would, like a true woman, strive to hide his
+fault by exposing her own. But she struggled to free herself and said,
+
+"I am more happy than I deserve to be, dear Mrs. Elrington, my one sin
+so bitterly repented of having taught me the value of my husband's love,
+and how dear, how very dear, he is to me."
+
+"Heed her not! heed her not!" cried Robert.
+
+"God bless you both, my children," said Mrs. Elrington fervently.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+SUNSHINE.
+
+ "Here may ye see, that women be
+ In love meke, kynd and stable:
+ Let never man reprove them then,
+ Or call them variable."
+
+ THE NUT BROWN MAID.
+
+ Then only doth the soul of woman know
+ Its proper strength when love and duty meet;
+ Invincible the heart wherein they have their seat.
+
+ SOUTHEY.
+
+
+Mrs. Elrington did not remain much longer at Brampton, she and Mrs.
+Linchmore parting as distantly as they had met, Mr. Linchmore grieving
+that the visit from which he had hoped so much had failed in reconciling
+those who had once been bound together by the strongest ties of
+affection. They were severed utterly and for ever: the remembrance of
+the old tie only bringing sorrow to the hearts of each.
+
+Mrs. Linchmore never once relaxed from her pride and haughtiness but
+seemed to her husband's sorrow to bear herself more proudly and stormily
+every day; whatever her inward sufferings,--and she did suffer
+acutely,--she gave no outward sign, deceiving her husband into the
+belief that she was the injured one, who would not make one step forward
+to mend matters or heal the old wound, lest it should be construed into
+an acknowledgment that she, having done the wrong was anxious to make
+atonement.
+
+Mrs. Linchmore knew did she implore or even plead for Mrs. Elrington's
+love, it would not be given: forgiveness unasked had been granted her in
+that letter received long ago; but love the old love, could never be
+hers again. The injury was too deep wherewith she had injured her; the
+deceit too cruel and wilful. Her son's broken heart could never be
+forgotten; how could she love her who had broken it? It was a lasting
+injury; one neither could forget. It had well-nigh broken the mother's
+heart as well as the son's, leaving broken hopes; lonely, sad, even
+painful recollections: it had changed Mrs. Linchmore more sadly still.
+
+Mrs. Elrington apparently gave no heed to the contemptuous indifference
+with which she was every day greeted, but behaved as a guest who now
+sees her hostess for the first time, and only to Amy did she ever
+say--and that but once,--how changed, how sadly altered she thought Mrs.
+Linchmore.
+
+Jane never recovered from the weakness consequent on the fever, but
+gradually grew more feeble every day, weaker each time Mr. Hall went to
+see her; her one sorrow being the misery she had in her wickedness
+caused others; her one fear lest so grievous a sin could never be atoned
+for or forgiven; but a visit from Mrs. Archer--which she had never dared
+hope for, although she had over and over again begged her forgiveness
+through Mr. Hall, and been assured of it from him--served to calm and
+tranquillise her troubled spirit, and led her to look--to hope for a
+higher forgiveness still. Jane died thoroughly, sincerely repentant; the
+last few days of her life being the only peaceful happy ones she had
+known for years. Mrs. Marks regained the use of her limbs, and stormed
+at Matthew, and held her own sway in the cottage as much as ever, if not
+more so; but Marks said he did not mind it now, and was right down glad
+to hear his old woman's tongue going at it harder and faster than ever;
+it was dead-alive work enough when she was ill, and as he had ceased to
+frequent the "Brampton Arms," and was satisfied with his wife, why
+should we find fault with either her or her tongue?
+
+Tom Hodge did not fulfil Marks' prophecy, either as to the hanging, or
+breaking his father's heart; William Hodge came down to Standale to see
+his son, and left it an altered, almost an aged man. Like his wife, he
+took his son's crime to heart, and although Mrs. Marks said, in a
+sympathising way, Tom was _only_ in jail awaiting his trial for an
+attempt to kill, yet Hodge could not shut his eyes to the fact that he
+might have been heavily ironed for murder, and the thought crushed him.
+A change imperceptibly crept over him from that time, and although he
+struggled with the shame he felt for his eldest son's evil doings, and
+held his head as high as ever, the old hearty good-humoured manner had
+fled, and not many months passed ere he gave up the smith's
+business,--that had once been his pride and pleasure,--to his other and
+younger son.
+
+Tom Hodge's crime was proved; his reason for shooting at Robert Vavasour
+the second time being, that the latter had recognised him as the man who
+had wounded him four years ago. The act was not premeditated, but the
+momentary impulse of the surprise and sudden recognition. He was
+sentenced to penal servitude for a lengthened term of years; let us hope
+he returned a wiser and a better man.
+
+Frances, anxious to make all the amends in her power, and atone for the
+fault that had cost her so much, begged--when strong enough, and
+recovered from her illness, which was more of the mind than body--to see
+Mr. Vavasour; but he was obdurate.
+
+"Tell her," he said, "that I believe in my wife's faith and love so
+entirely, I need no assurance of it from one who _tried_ to injure her
+so deeply, no explanation of what I ought never to have doubted."
+
+So Frances left Brampton, carrying with her the life-long remembrance of
+poor little Bertie's death, which she could not but be persuaded was
+mainly attributable to her, and sent as a warning and punishment for her
+pride and revengeful wickedness. Perhaps, had the child lived, her bad,
+passionate heart might never have been touched, and she might have lived
+on still in her sinful revenge, working, if it were possible, more and
+more misery; but Bertie's sad early death wrought the change, bringing
+to her stony, unfeeling heart both sorrow and remorse, while the end for
+which she had so wickedly striven she never attained, losing in time all
+interest, all kindly, cousinly feeling even, in the heart, to gain which
+she had wrought so much evil, and brought all the worst passions of her
+nature into play.
+
+And Charles Linchmore? What need to say anything of him? He has ceased,
+perhaps, to hold any place in my reader's interest; but in case some
+care to know of his well-being, I may mention that he recovered from
+his wound, and when last heard of was talking of returning home to
+England.
+
+Mrs. Archer's days glided peacefully on, calmly, happy at last in her
+son's love, in witnessing his and his wife's happiness; and when another
+little Bertie, almost rivalling the first in beauty and spirits--in all
+save his mother's heart--played about in the old house at Somerton, the
+frown had faded away more visibly still, though the remembrance of the
+anguish of mind and miserable days she had passed, consequent upon her
+deceit and one false step, could never be forgotten, or cease to be
+regretted. Her mind could scarcely ever be said to have entirely
+recovered from the shock it had sustained, though all angry fierceness
+and bitter fits of half madness had fled, never to return.
+
+The mysterious light that had so troubled Amy, and been a source of
+superstition to the servants and villagers, was fully accounted for, as
+Mrs. Archer, in touching upon her previous miserable life to her son,
+mentioned, that having a key of the door leading up the secret stairs
+into old Mrs. Linchmore's room, she had sometimes been seized with an
+uncontrollable desire to revisit the scene where with the closing of the
+life of one, had died out so she thought, her sole cherished hope, the
+hope of ever finding her son. She had never divested herself of the idea
+that old Mrs. Linchmore had stolen the child; through all her wild
+dreams she had held to that, and fancied that at Brampton only should
+she ever hear of him again; and when, on his wife's death, Robert
+Linchmore's father had searched for and found her, she would accept
+nothing at his hands, poor as she was, but the cottage which, at her own
+earnest request, he built for her, while the secret of her relationship
+with those at the Hall had, she hoped, died with him, she having asked
+him never to divulge it; and he who had loved her once, nay, loved her
+still, and had been the unwitting means, through his wife's mad
+jealousy, of causing her so much misery, granted, though unwillingly,
+even that. At his death Mrs. Archer changed her name, and came to
+Brampton, fearing no recognition from those still living. How could they
+recognise in that broken-hearted, wild-looking woman, the once fair,
+gentle Miss Mary of the Hall.
+
+Anne came to see Amy as she had promised, and spent the day at Brampton,
+her heart feeling really rejoiced at the happy change in her friend.
+There was still a shade of sadness on Amy's face, but the weariful look
+was gone, and she appeared almost as bright and youthful as on the day
+when Anne had first made her acquaintance; while as to Robert Vavasour?
+Anne wondered how she ever could have thought him an icicle or
+indifferent to his wife, so fond of her as he seemed now, so anxious
+that she should not over exert herself; for she was anything but strong
+or recovered from the shock of the severe trials she had gone through.
+
+"I do think," said Anne, as Amy was busy putting together a few last
+things--a work which she either did not wish, or would not trust her
+maid to do for her; "I do think your husband is a most devoted one,
+Amy; there is only one other that excels him, and that's--my own!"
+
+Amy laughed. "Are you quite satisfied with your husband, Anne?"
+
+"What a question!" answered Anne indignantly.
+
+"Opinions formed hastily easily change," replied her friend, "Did not
+you say you would only marry a man with fierce moustaches and whiskers!"
+
+"I did," said Anne consciously, "and--and--well you have not seen Tom
+lately, or you would not say _that_, because a beard does improve him so
+much; and between ourselves, dear, I am nearly fidgeting myself to
+death, lest he _should_ grow a moustaches, for I have changed my
+opinion, and don't like them!"
+
+"The carriage is at the door, Amy," said her husband, entering the room.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Vavasour! how sorry I am you are going to take Amy away. It may
+be years before we meet again, as I know Mrs. Vavasour will never come
+to this odious place if she can help it."
+
+"Brampton," replied Amy, sorrowfully, "will always hold one little spot
+of ground towards which my heart will often yearn. As the resting-place
+of my boy, Anne, I think I shall--must revisit Brampton."
+
+"True. I am always wrong, and speak, as Tom says, without considering in
+the least what I am going to say. Forgive me Amy, I quite forgot for the
+moment your grief."
+
+"I hope," said Robert, as he drew his wife away, "you and Mr. Hall will
+soon come and see us, at Somerton. Amy and I will give you a hearty
+welcome."
+
+"I accept the invitation with pleasure, that is," said she correcting
+herself, "if Tom can find anyone to do his duty during his absence."
+
+As Amy drove away with Mrs. Archer and her husband, Anne waved a tearful
+adieu until the carriage turned the drive, and was out of sight.
+
+As they drove through the park Amy sat very silent; her husband did not
+interrupt her thoughts, perhaps he guessed her heart was too full for
+words: but as they passed through the large gates her eyes looked
+wistfully towards the--churchyard, little Bertie's last resting place,
+and as she pictured to herself the small white marble cross, looking
+whiter still with the sun reflected on it, and the little mound almost
+green now, and covered with the early primroses she had strewed there
+that morning,--her eyes filled with tears, and she sighed involuntarily.
+
+Robert drew her gently, but fondly, towards him.
+
+"Our boy is happy, Amy, darling. And you?"
+
+"I?" she replied, smiling and struggling with her tears. "I, Robert, am
+happier than I deserve to be, with you to love and to take care of me."
+
+"Not so, Amy," he said. "We have been both to blame. Perhaps, had it
+been otherwise, we should never have found out how dear we are to each
+other. Is it not so, my own dear love?"
+
+Amy did not reply, save by the loving light in her eyes, as she nestled
+closer to his side.
+
+If she had been greatly tried, she had indeed found her safest and best
+earthly resting-place now and for ever!
+
+
+ THE END.
+
+
+ T. C. NEWBY, 30, Welbeck Street Cavendish Square, London.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ WILSON'S
+ PATENT DRAWING-ROOM
+ BAGATELLE AND BILLIARD TABLES,
+ WITH REVERSIBLE TOPS.
+ Circular, Oblong, Oval, and other Shapes, in various Sizes
+ FORMING A HANDSOME TABLE.
+
+ [Illustration: Patent Bagatelle Table--Open.]
+
+ [Illustration: Patent Bagatelle Table--Closed.]
+
+ Prices from 5 to 25 Guineas. Prospectus Free by post.
+
+
+ WILSON AND CO., PATENTEES,
+
+ Cabinet Makers, Upholsterers, House Agents, Undertakers, &c.,
+ 18, WIGMORE STREET (Corner of Welbeck Street), LONDON, W.; also at the
+ MANUFACTURING COURT, CRYSTAL PALACE, SYDENHAM.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ In 1 Vol. Price 12s.
+
+ ON CHANGE OF CLIMATE,
+
+ A GUIDE FOR TRAVELLERS IN PURSUIT OF HEALTH.
+
+ BY THOMAS MORE MADDEN, M.D., M.R.C.S. ENG.
+
+ Illustrative of the Advantages of the various localities resorted
+ to by Invalids, for the cure or alleviation of chronic diseases,
+ especially consumption. With Observations on Climate, and its
+ Influences on Health and Disease, the result of extensive personal
+ experience of many Southern Climes.
+
+ SPAIN, PORTUGAL, ALGERIA, MOROCCO, FRANCE, ITALY,
+ THE MEDITERRANEAN ISLANDS, EGYPT, &c.
+
+"Dr. Madden has been to most of the places he describes, and his book
+contains the advantage of a guide, with the personal experience of a
+traveller. To persons who have determined that they ought to have change
+of climate, we can recommend Dr. Madden as a guide."--_Athenæum._
+
+"It contains much valuable information respecting various favorite
+places of resort, and is evidently the work of a well-informed
+physician."--_Lancet._
+
+"Dr. Madden's book deserves confidence--a most accurate and excellent
+work."--_Dublin Medical Review._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ THE
+
+ GENERAL FURNISHING
+
+ AND
+
+ UPHOLSTERY COMPANY
+
+ (LIMITED),
+
+ F. J. ACRES, MANAGER,
+
+ 24 and 25, Baker Street, W.
+
+
+ The Company are now Exhibiting all the most approved Novelties of the
+ Season in
+
+ CARPETS, CHINTZES,
+
+ MUSLIN CURTAINS,
+
+And every variety of textile fabric for Upholstery purposes constituting
+the most recherché selection in the trade.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ TEETH WITHOUT PAIN AND WITHOUT SPRINGS.
+
+ OSTEO EIDON FOR ARTIFICIAL TEETH,
+ EQUAL TO NATURE.
+
+
+ Complete Sets £4 4s., £7 7s., £10 10s., £15 15s., and £21.
+
+ SINGLE TEETH AND PARTIAL SETS AT PROPORTIONATELY MODERATE CHARGES.
+
+ A PERFECT FIT GUARANTEED.
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ London:
+ 27, HARLEY STREET, CAVENDISH SQUARE. W.
+ 134, DUKE STREET, LIVERPOOL.
+ 65, NEW STREET, BIRMINGHAM.
+
+ CITY ADDRESS:
+ 64, LUDGATE HILL, 64.
+ (4 doors from the Railway Bridge).
+
+ ONLY ONE VISIT REQUIRED FROM COUNTRY PATIENTS.
+
+Gabriel's Treatise on the Teeth, explaining their patented mode of
+supplying Teeth without Springs or Wires, may be had gratis on
+application, or free by post.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE TOILET.--A due attention to the gifts and graces of the person, and
+a becoming preservation of the advantages of nature, are of more value
+and importance with reference to our health and well-being, than many
+parties are inclined to suppose. Several of the most attractive portions
+of the human frame are delicate and fragile, in proportion as they are
+graceful and pleasing; and the due conservation of them is intimately
+associated with our health and comfort. The hair, for example, from the
+delicacy of its growth and texture, and its evident sympathy with the
+emotions of the mind; the skin, with its intimate relation to the most
+vital of our organs, as those of respiration, circulation and digestion,
+together with the delicacy and susceptibility of its own texture; and
+the teeth, also, from their peculiar structure, formed as they are, of
+bone or dentine, and cased with a fibrous investment of enamel; these
+admirable and highly essential portions of our frames, are all to be
+regarded not merely as objects of external beauty and display, but as
+having an intimate relation to our health, and the due discharge of the
+vital functions. The care of them ought never to be entrusted to
+ignorant or unskilful hands; and it is highly satisfactory to point out
+as protectors of these vital portions of our frame the preparations
+which have emanated from the laboratories of the Messrs. Rowlands, their
+unrivalled Macassar for the hair, their Kalydor for improving and
+beautifying the complexion, and their Odonto for the teeth and gums.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ NEW NOVELS IN THE PRESS.
+
+
+ In Three Vols.
+ THE MAITLANDS.
+
+
+ In Three Vols.
+ TREASON AT HOME.
+ By MRS. GREENOUGH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ BEDSTEADS, BEDDING, AND BED ROOM
+ FURNITURE.
+
+ HEAL & SON'S
+
+ Show Rooms contain a large assortment of Brass Bedsteads, suitable
+ both for home use and for Tropical Climates.
+
+Handsome Iron Bedsteads, with Brass Mountings, and elegantly Japanned.
+
+Plain Iron Bedsteads for Servants.
+
+Every description of Woodstead, in Mahogany, Birch, and Walnut Tree
+Woods, Polished Deal and Japanned, all fitted with Bedding and
+Furnitures complete.
+
+Also, every description of Bed Room Furniture, consisting of Wardrobes,
+Chests of Drawers, Washstands, Tables, Chairs, Sofas, Couches, and every
+article for the complete furnishing of a Bed Room.
+
+ AN
+
+ ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE,
+
+Containing Designs and Prices of 150 articles of Bed Room Furniture, as
+well as of 100 Bedsteads, and Prices of every description of Bedding.
+
+ Sent Free by Post.
+
+ HEAL & SON,
+
+ BEDSTEAD, BEDDING,
+
+ AND
+
+ BED ROOM FURNITURE MANUFACTURERS
+
+ 196, TOTTENHAM COURT ROAD,
+
+ LONDON. W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ J. W. BENSON,
+
+ WATCH AND CLOCK MAKER, BY WARRANT OF APPOINTMENT,
+ TO H.R.H. THE PRINCE OF WALES,
+
+
+Maker of the Great Clock for the Exhibition, 1862, and of the
+Chronograph Dial, by which was timed "The Derby" of 1862, 1863, and
+1864. Prize Medallist, Class XXXIII., and Honourable Mention, Class XV,
+begs respectfully to invite the attention of the nobility, gentry, and
+public to his establishment at
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL.
+
+Which, having recently been increased in size by the incorporation of
+the two houses in the rear, is now the most extensive and richly stocked
+in London. In
+
+ THE WATCH DEPARTMENT
+
+Will be found every description of Pocket Horological Machine, from the
+most expensive instruments of precision to the working man's substantial
+time-keeper. The stock comprises Watches, with every kind of case, gold
+and silver, plain, engine-turned, engraved, enamelled, chased, and
+jewelled, and with dials of enamel, silver, or gold, either neatly
+ornamented or richly embellished.
+
+ BENSON'S WATCHES.
+
+"The movements are of the finest quality which the art of horology is at
+present capable of producing."--_Illustrated London News_ 8th Nov.,
+1862.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ BENSON'S WATCHES.
+
+Adapted for every class, climate, and country. Wholesale and retail from
+200 guineas to 2-1/2 guineas each.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London
+
+
+ BENSON'S WATCHES.
+
+Chronometer, duplex, lever, horizontal, repeating, centre seconds,
+keyless, astronomical, reversible, chronograph, blind men's, Indian,
+presentation, and railway, to suit all classes.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ BENSON'S WATCHES.
+
+ London-made levers, gold from £10 10s., silver from £5 5s.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ BENSON'S WATCHES.
+
+ Swiss watches of guaranteed quality, gold from £5 5s.; silver from
+ £2 12s. 6d.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ Benson's Exact Watch.
+
+ Gold from £30; silver from £24.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ Benson's Indian Watch.
+
+ Gold, £23; silver, £11 11s.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ BENSON'S CLOCKS.
+
+"The clocks and watches were objects of great attraction, and well
+repaid the trouble of an inspection."--_Illustrated London News_, 8th
+November, 1862.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ BENSON'S CLOCKS.
+
+Suitable for the dining and drawing rooms, library, bedroom, hall,
+staircase, bracket, carriage, skeleton, chime, musical, night,
+astronomical, regulator, shop, warehouse, office, counting house, &c.,
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ BENSON'S CLOCKS.
+
+Drawing room clocks, richly gilt, and ornamented with fine enamels from
+the imperial manufactories of Sèvres, from £200 to £2 2s.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ BENSON'S CLOCKS,
+
+For the dining room, in every shape, style, and variety of bronze--red,
+green, copper, Florentine, &c. A thousand can be selected from, from 100
+guineas to 2 guineas.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ BENSON'S CLOCKS,
+
+In the following marbles:--Black, rouge antique, Sienne, d'Egypte, rouge
+vert, malachite, white, rosée, serpentine, Brocatelle, porphyry, green
+griotte, d'Ecosse, alabaster, lapis lazul Algerian onyx, Californian.
+
+ 33, & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ THE HOUSE-CLOCK DEPARTMENT,
+
+For whose more convenient accommodation J. W. BENSON has opened spacious
+show rooms at Ludgate Hill, will be found to contain the largest and
+most varied stock of Clocks of every description, in gilt, bronze,
+marbles, porcelain, and woods of the choicest kinds.
+
+In this department is also included a very fine collection of
+
+ BRONZES D'ART,
+
+BENSON'S ILLUSTRATED PAMPHLET, free by post for three stamps, contains a
+short history of Horology, with prices and patterns of every description
+of watch and clock, and enables those who live in any part of the world
+to select a watch, and have it sent safe by post.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, E.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ NEW NOVELS IN THE PRESS.
+
+
+ In Three Vols. (In November.)
+
+ COMMON SENSE,
+
+ By Mrs. J. C. NEWBY,
+ Author of "Wondrous Strange," "Kate Kennedy," &c.
+
+
+ In Three Vols. (In November.)
+
+ MAGGIE LYNNE,
+
+ By ALTON CLYDE,
+ Author of "Tried and True," &c.
+
+
+ In Three Vols. (In November.)
+
+ A TROUBLED STREAM,
+
+ By C. HARDCASTLE,
+ Author of "The Cliffords of Oakley," "Constance Date."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ THE
+
+ GENERAL FURNISHING
+
+ AND
+
+ UPHOLSTERY COMPANY
+
+ (LIMITED),
+
+ F. J. ACRES, MANAGER,
+
+ 24 and 25, Baker Street, W.
+
+
+ The Company are now Exhibiting all the most approved Novelties of the
+ Season in
+
+ CARPETS, CHINTZES,
+ MUSLIN CURTAINS,
+
+And every variety of textile fabric for Upholstery purposes constituting
+the most recherché selection in the trade.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's It May Be True, Vol. III (of III), by Mrs. Wood
+
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of It May Be True (Vol. III), by Mrs. Wood.
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+/* Images */
+.figcenter {
+ margin: auto;
+ text-align: center;
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+
+/* Poetry */
+.poem {
+ margin-left:35%;
+ margin-right:10%;
+ text-align: left;
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's It May Be True, Vol. III (of III), by Mrs. Wood
+
+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/license
+
+
+Title: It May Be True, Vol. III (of III)
+
+Author: Mrs. Wood
+
+Release Date: March 18, 2012 [EBook #39193]
+[Last updated: September 23, 2013]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IT MAY BE TRUE, VOL. III (OF III) ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Sue Fleming and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive)
+
+
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+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="notebox">
+<p><b>Transcriber's Note: </b> There were a number of printer's errors
+within the text which have not been altered.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 233px;">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="233" height="400" alt="" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<h1>IT MAY BE TRUE.</h1>
+<p class="title">
+
+<small>A NOVEL.</small><br />
+
+<small>IN THREE VOLUMES.</small><br />
+
+<small>BY</small><br />
+
+<big>MRS. WOOD.</big><br />
+
+<small>VOL. III.</small><br />
+</p><p class="title">
+<small>LONDON:</small><br />
+
+<small>T. CAUTLEY NEWBY, PUBLISHER,</small><br />
+<small>30, WELBECK STREET, CAVENDISH SQUARE,</small><br />
+<small>1865.</small><br />
+
+<small>[THE RIGHT OF TRANSLATION IS RESERVED.]</small>
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h1><a name="IT_MAY_BE_TRUE" id="IT_MAY_BE_TRUE"></a>IT MAY BE TRUE.</h1>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+<h4>IS THERE A FATE IN IT?</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"The grief of slighted love, suppress'd,</span>
+<span class="i2">Scarce dull'd her eye, scarce heav'd her breast;</span>
+<span class="i2">Or if a tear, she strove to check,</span>
+<span class="i2">A truant tear stole down her neck,</span>
+<span class="i2">It seem'd a drop that, from his bill,</span>
+<span class="i2">The linnet casts, beside a rill,</span>
+<span class="i2">Flirting his sweet and tiny shower</span>
+<span class="i2">Upon a milk-white April flower:&mdash;</span>
+<span class="i2">Or if a sigh, breathed soft and low,</span>
+<span class="i2">Escaped her fragrant lips; e'en so</span>
+<span class="i2">The zephyr will, in heat of day,</span>
+<span class="i2">Between two rose leaves fan its way."</span>
+<span class="i20"><span class="smcap">Colman.</span></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Amy had been some three weeks at home, and as yet there had been no
+improvement in Mrs. Neville's health to justify her daughter's return to
+Brampton. There was the same lassitude, the same weariness. She would
+lie on the sofa day after day, with no bodily ailment save that of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span>
+weakness, and an utter inability to get better, and apparently with no
+wish to do so. She never complained, but was ever grateful and content.
+It was as if life were waning away imperceptibly, and her spirits, which
+had always bravely struggled through all her trials and sorrows, had at
+last sunk never to rise again.</p>
+
+<p>Amy seldom left her, but generally sat by her side, on a low footstool,
+reading or working. Sometimes Mrs. Neville would lay her hand gently on
+the fair masses of hair, and Amy, whose heart was very sorrowful, would
+hold her head lower still so that her tears might fall unseen.</p>
+
+<p>There was something peculiarly tender and very pitying in the way the
+hand was placed on her head; at least Amy thought so, and strove more
+than ever to be cheerful, lest her mother, who lay so silently watching
+her, should guess at the secret grief in her heart which she was
+striving so hard, and she trusted successfully, to overcome; while, as
+yet, no word of it had passed between
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
+them. If Mrs. Neville thought her
+daughter's spirits less joyous, or her manner more quiet, while her eyes
+no longer flashed with their old bright expression, but at times drooped
+sadly under their long lashes, she said nothing; and Amy, while obliged
+sometimes to talk of her life at Brampton, never mentioned Charles's
+name; yet in the solitude of her own room she sometimes thought of him,
+and how as she had sat at one of the cross-stations, on her road from
+Standale, awaiting the arrival of the train that was to take her on to
+Ashleigh, she had seen Charles amongst the crowd hurrying into the one
+bound for Brampton; while she, soon afterwards, was speeding along over
+a part of the very way he had so recently travelled. Both had been
+waiting some twenty minutes at the same station, and yet neither had
+been near enough to speak, but had been as effectually separated as
+though miles had divided them, instead of so many yards. Strange
+fatality! which might have altered the future lives of both.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Yes, he had gone to Brampton the very morning she had left it: one half
+hour later on her part, and they would have met. She was glad she had
+not missed the train, and that they had not met. Glad that she was
+absent from the park, and not obliged to see him day after day, or hear
+the children talk, as they sometimes did, of their uncle.</p>
+
+<p>Julia often wrote to Amy all the chit-chat of the park. How Charles
+Linchmore had returned, and was often at Frances' side; and how the
+latter's airs had become more intolerable in consequence. How Anne
+snubbed Mr. Hall as much as ever; but was, in Julia's opinion, more
+pleased with him, and more contented to put up with his grave reproofs
+than she used to be; and how Julia thought it would be a match in the
+end, and wondered what kind of a clergyman's wife she would make. And
+lastly, that Mr. Vavasour had left the park.</p>
+
+<p>Anne also wrote, but only once, and her letter was short; yet Amy read
+it over and over again,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span> until she knew the last few lines by heart, and
+wondered what they meant; or whether they were hastily written, and had
+no point or hidden meaning, but were simply penned and then forgotten,
+as many things often were, that were said by Anne Bennet, in her quick
+impulsiveness. "Come back, Miss Neville," she wrote, "we all want you
+sadly. As for Charles, he is not himself, and will be lost!"</p>
+
+<p>These were the words that troubled Amy, were ever at her heart all day,
+and chased away sleep from her pillow, until her tired overwrought brain
+relieved itself in silent, secret tears&mdash;tears far more painful than
+passionate sobs. Those are at the surface, and soon over, they cure
+grief by their very bitterness, and by the self-abandonment of the
+sufferer; the others lie deeper and break the heart.</p>
+
+<p>These words of Anne's, whether incautiously written or not, determined
+Amy on not returning to Brampton, until Charles Linchmore's leave had
+expired; and that, she knew, must be in an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>other week or so. If Miss
+Bennet meant he was fast losing his heart to Frances, and that Amy must
+go back to wean him away, how little she knew of the pride of her
+woman's nature. What! seek, or throw herself in the way of a man's love?
+Scarcely wooed, be won? Amy shrank at the very idea. No, if her love was
+worth having it was worth winning; and that,&mdash;not with the sternness of
+man's nature, not by the force of his strong will, not by exciting her
+jealousy with another, but by gentleness and kindness; and then her
+heart reverted to Robert Vavasour, and she wished she could love him,
+for had he not ever been kind to her? and gentle, very, even when she
+had pained him most.</p>
+
+<p>He had been very kind to her, there was no doubt about that, not only to
+her, but for her sake to those most dear to her. At one time came some
+beautiful hot-house grapes, at another some delicate game. Little Sarah
+called them the gifts of the "good unknown."</p>
+
+<p>The rail was open all the way to quiet Ashleigh<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span> now, and although the
+place did not boast of a railway van or even porter, still the station
+master always found some willing lad ready to take the basket to the
+cottage, and great was the excitement it caused to Sarah and even quiet
+old Hannah, but then the latter always knew her darling Miss Amy would
+marry an Earl at the very least.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Neville never questioned, but looked more searchingly in Amy's
+face, laid her hand more caressingly those days on her head, and spoke
+more softly and lovingly, while Amy never said a word.</p>
+
+<p>Once, when Sarah came dancing into the room, in her wild spirits, with
+another beautiful bunch of grapes, Mrs. Neville laid her thin, wasted
+hand on Amy's, and said gently,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Is it all right, Amy?"</p>
+
+<p>"All," was the reply, and Mrs. Neville leant back again, apparently
+satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>But things could not go on thus for ever. Robert Vavasour, in his lonely
+home, thought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span> more and more of Amy, and the days he was idly wasting
+away from her, when he ought to be striving for her love. At length, his
+solitude became unbearable, he could stand it no longer; whether wise or
+no, he must leave Somerton, the place was growing unbearable to him, and
+go to Ashleigh. But could he go without an intimation of some kind to
+her he loved? Yes, he must; for how send a note to Amy? Would she not
+look upon his letter as an impertinence, seeing she had given him no
+permission to write? So he made up his mind to go to Ashleigh without
+warning, for come what might, he must go.</p>
+
+<p>Robert Vavasour was not of an impulsive character, apt like Charles to
+be led away on the sudden spur of the moment, but he felt that remaining
+at Somerton would never advance his interest with her in whom all his
+dearest hopes of life were centred; he should simply lose the kindly
+feeling he had already gained in her heart, or what was worse still, be
+forgotten altogether.</p>
+
+<p>The craving wish to see her, grew stronger and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span> stronger within him each
+day, until he could no longer refuse to gratify it, and ere another week
+passed over his head, he was speeding along the road to Ashleigh,
+arriving there by the one o'clock train.</p>
+
+<p>It was a stormy day, heavy showers of rain, with occasional sunshine,
+but Robert Vavasour, who saw everything <i>couleur de rose</i>, was charmed
+with the lovely scenery and quaintness of the cottages; in one of
+which,&mdash;perhaps the prettiest in the place,&mdash;he secured some, pleasant
+rooms for the time of his stay and then walked out in the hope of
+meeting her he loved. Vain hope! as Mrs. Neville seemed so much weaker,
+Amy did not leave her side. Hannah and little Sarah passed him on their
+way down the lane, and on their return, gave rather a high-flown account
+of the tall, handsome gentleman they had seen. Amy never guessed, or
+even thought of Robert Vavasour, but her heart fluttered strangely as it
+quickly passed through her mind that it might be Charles Linchmore. But
+alas! she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
+failed in recognising the description so eagerly given and descanted on by Sarah.</p>
+
+<p>The morning of the next day was hopelessly wet, and Robert Vavasour's
+courage rose&mdash;with his anxiety to see Amy,&mdash;to fever heat; and,
+determined to see her at all hazards, he bent his steps towards the
+cottage.</p>
+
+<p>Sarah, tired of the dulness within doors, was gazing idly from the
+window, little thinking that her curiosity concerning the stranger she
+had seen only the day before was so soon to be gratified. But there he
+was coming along the road, and very eagerly the little girl watched him.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! sister Amy," cried she, "here's the gentleman I saw yesterday, do
+come and look at him before he goes out of sight; he'll turn down the
+elm tree walk in another moment."</p>
+
+<p>But before Amy could have reached the window, had she been so inclined,
+he had opened the little gate, and was coming up the gravel walk.</p>
+
+<p>Sarah shrank away from the window, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span> clapped her hands with delight.
+"Why he's coming here, only think of that, Mamma. Oh! I guess it must be
+the 'good unknown' himself."</p>
+
+<p>In another moment all doubt was at an end, and Robert Vavasour in the
+little sitting-room, welcomed and thanked by Mrs. Neville at least, and
+Sarah also, if he might judge by her glistening eyes, although she was
+too shy to say a word, while Amy, if she did not say she was glad to see
+him, did not rebuke him for coming, nor appear to look on his visit as
+an intrusion; and soon he was quite at home with them all, and when Amy,
+who had been out to Hannah, to try and make some addition to their
+homely dinner, returned, she was surprised to see on what friendly terms
+he was.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid, dear mamma," she said, "you are exerting yourself too
+much. You are so unaccustomed to see a stranger."</p>
+
+<p>"Scarcely a stranger, Amy. Mr. Vavasour claims our friendship for his
+kindness; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span> besides, he tells me he has known you for some time."</p>
+
+<p>"Some two months, is it not?" replied Amy.</p>
+
+<p>"Hardly so long, I think, Miss Neville. It seems but yesterday since I
+first saw you."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you only here for the day?" asked Amy.</p>
+
+<p>"I am here for a week," he replied; "some good lady in the village has
+allowed me to take up my abode with her for that time, or it may be
+longer, as any one would be tempted to remain in the clean pretty room
+she showed me."</p>
+
+<p>"It must be Mrs. Turner, Mamma; her cottage is so very nice."</p>
+
+<p>"If it is," replied Mrs. Neville, "you will have no cause to complain,
+Mr. Vavasour; we stayed with her for a day or two on our first arrival,
+and were much pleased with her attention, and the cleanliness of the
+house."</p>
+
+<p>"Is this place often visited by strangers? It must in summer be a lovely
+spot. It is prettier than Brampton, Miss Neville." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Prettier, but not so grand; and the views are not so extensive."</p>
+
+<p>"You prefer Brampton?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no! Ashleigh is my home, and then I like it for its very
+quietness."</p>
+
+<p>"It will no longer be quiet," replied Mrs. Neville. "Stray visitors have
+often reached it since I have been here; and now the easy access to it
+by rail will, of necessity, bring more, and Ashleigh will, perhaps,
+become immortalized by the lovers of pic-nics. But here is Hannah to
+announce dinner. You must excuse my joining you, Mr. Vavasour, as I am
+unable to leave the sofa."</p>
+
+<p>After dinner the weather changed; the heavy clouds cleared away, and a
+faint gleam of sunshine shone out.</p>
+
+<p>Amy proposed a walk, as she thought her mother would be glad of a little
+rest and quiet after her exertion, so with her sister she went with
+Robert Vavasour down into the village.</p>
+
+<p>So dreary as the lane looked now, with its tall<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span> leafless trees! But
+their visitor was charmed with everything, and would not allow its
+desolation. They inspected his new abode, which turned out to be Mrs.
+Turner's; then through the village, and home by road, and found Mrs.
+Elrington had come to spend the evening&mdash;and what a pleasant one it was!
+Even Amy allowed that, although she did not feel quite at rest within
+herself, or satisfied at Robert Vavasour's having come to Ashleigh;
+still she found herself later on in the evening laughing and chatting,
+in something of the old spirit, at seeing her mother take an interest in
+the conversation, and not nearly so weary and tired as she usually was.</p>
+
+<p>"You are so very good," said Amy, as she went out to open the cottage
+door for Robert, as he went away.</p>
+
+<p>"Good! Miss Neville. How? In what way?"</p>
+
+<p>"In being content with our dull life here."</p>
+
+<p>"It is anything but dull to me. My life lately has been a simply
+existing one&mdash;the slow passing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span> of each day, or counting the hours for
+the night to arrive, and bring a short respite from the monotony of a
+dreary life. Being here is&mdash;is heaven to me! in comparison to my late
+existence at Somerton Park."</p>
+
+<p>There was no mistaking the impassioned tone in which this was said. Amy
+hastened to change the subject.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure your visit has given Mamma pleasure."</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Neville seems a great invalid, I do not wonder at your anxiety for
+her while absent." As a stranger he had remarked the exhaustion and
+weariness, although to Amy her mother had seemed so much better.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think she looks so very ill?" she asked, anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"I think there is great weakness," he replied, evading a direct answer.
+"Have you a clever medical attendant here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I think so. Dr. Sellon, is at least, very kind and attentive, no
+one could be more so;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span> he says Mamma merely wants rousing, and we must
+not allow this apathy and weariness to increase, but strive to divert
+her mind, even as it was this evening, and all through your kindness."</p>
+
+<p>"Ashleigh is a lovely spot, but rather too quiet for an invalid whose
+mind requires rousing, and whose vital energies seem so prostrated. I
+should suggest a total change of scene. A new and novel life, in fact,
+in a place perfectly strange to her, would, I should think, conduce more
+towards her recovery than all the doctors and medicine in the world."</p>
+
+<p>"Dr. Sellon has never said so; never even hinted at such a thing,"
+replied Amy, thoughtfully. Alas! how could it be managed, even with the
+sacrifice of all her salary.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you had any further advice?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"No. I wrote the other day to Dr. Ashley, our old doctor, who attended
+us all for so many years. I thought perhaps he might be coming this way
+and would call; but, although he wrote<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span> me a very kind reply, he does
+not even hint at such a stray chance happening."</p>
+
+<p>"Does he offer any opinion or advice on Mrs. Neville's case?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. You can read it if you like," and she took it from her pocket and
+gave it to him; "only do not mention anything about it to Mamma, she
+might not like my having written; or it might make her nervous in
+supposing herself worse than she is. It is not exactly a secret," she
+added, blushing slightly, "as Mrs. Elrington knows of it, and approved
+of my letter."</p>
+
+<p>"Do not wrong me by supposing I should think so, Miss Neville. I will
+take it home, and read it at my leisure, if you will allow me. Good
+night."</p>
+
+<p>The door closed, and he was gone before Amy could reply; but as she
+turned to re-enter the sitting-room, she sighed and murmured,</p>
+
+<p>"There is a fate in some things. Is there in my life?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<h4>FOR BETTER, FOR WORSE.</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"My life went darkling like the earth, nor knew it shone a star,</span>
+<span class="i2">To that dear Heaven on which it hung in worship from afar.</span>
+<span class="i2">O, many bared their beauty, like brave flowers to the bee;</span>
+<span class="i2">He might have ranged through sunny fields, but nestled down to me;</span>
+<span class="i2">And daintier dames would proudly have smiled him to their side,</span>
+<span class="i2">But with a lowly majesty he sought me for his Bride;</span>
+<span class="i2">And grandly gave his love to me, the dearest thing on Earth,</span>
+<span class="i2">Like one who gives a jewel, unweeting of its worth."</span>
+
+<span class="i20"><span class="smcap">Massey.</span></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>A fortnight passed away, and still Robert Vavasour lingered at Ashleigh,
+although he seemed no nearer winning Amy's love than when he first came;
+yet he could not tear himself away. Sometimes he was gloomy and
+desponding; and on these days he never came near the cottage. At<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span> others
+his hopes rose when only a smile or glance kinder than usual came from
+her he loved, and then he was the life of the little party. But when he
+fancied Amy was beginning to care for him a little more, she would
+suddenly shrink within herself again, and become as cold and reserved as
+ever, but then he never thought that it was his almost tender manner
+that chilled and frightened her, lest he should think she was
+encouraging his suit. Still he hoped on, would not despair. What lover
+ever does? and <i>he</i> loved her so dearly.</p>
+
+<p>One morning, finding Mrs. Neville alone, he told her of his love for
+Amy, of the compact between them, and of his hopes. The widow did not
+discourage them, she liked Mr. Vavasour, and would have rejoiced at
+seeing Amy his wife; still she would not influence Amy in any way, but
+leave her free to choose for herself; but since she loved no other,&mdash;and
+Mrs. Neville half sighed as if she almost doubted it,&mdash;she thought in
+time the young girl's heart might be won.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And with this Robert Vavasour was obliged to be content. Content? he was
+anything but that; he was impatient, and fretted at the delay and slow
+progress he was making, he would have been more than human if he had
+not; but with Amy he was ever kind and gentle; she knew nothing, saw
+nothing of his anxious heart and sometimes despairing hopes.</p>
+
+<p>And so the days flew on, Mrs. Neville neither better nor worse; some
+days more languid, at others less so and able to sit up; but with no
+certainty about it, so as to lead those most anxious to believe she was
+in anyway advancing towards recovery.</p>
+
+<p>One morning they were surprised by a visit from Dr. Ashley. He had taken
+a holiday, he said, and thought he could not do better than run down to
+see his old friends, and was putting up, strange to say, at Mrs.
+Turner's, whose cottage had been pointed out to him as the prettiest in
+the village; and had certainly stretched like india rubber for the
+occasion, but then the gentleman<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span> already lodging there had kindly
+consented to share the parlour with him; and they were to dine together
+during his stay.</p>
+
+<p>If Amy suspected Robert Vavasour of being concerned in this sudden move,
+she said nothing; but then she had grown very silent of late; perhaps
+she pondered these things more deeply in her heart; certain it was she
+ceased to be so distant and reserved to Robert, and he in consequence
+became more gentle and loving. Perhaps if Amy's thoughts could have
+shaped themselves into words, they would have been, "<i>He</i> does not love
+me or he would be here; and I? what can I do?"</p>
+
+<p>But Charles Linchmore's staying away was no proof that he did not love
+Amy, believing as he did that her heart was another's; had he not
+thought so, not even his sister-in-law's frowns and sarcasms would have
+kept him from her side. As it was, he knew not even of Robert Vavasour's
+presence at Ashleigh, as Amy, when she wrote to Julia and Anne, never
+mentioned it, feeling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span> sure of a bantering letter in return; as of
+course they would guess of his love for her, and imagine it was going to
+be a match, whether she denied it or no; certainly they would never
+think of the true reason that had brought him&mdash;namely, her refusal.</p>
+
+<p>It was the second and last day of Dr. Ashley's stay; one of Mrs.
+Neville's worst days, and she had not as yet made her appearance
+downstairs when Mrs. Elrington entered the room where the two sisters
+sat.</p>
+
+<p>"Mamma has not come down yet," said Amy, "she was very wakeful all
+night, and I persuaded her to rest a little longer this morning,
+although she was very loath to do so, on Dr. Ashley's account."</p>
+
+<p>"Has he been to see her yet?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, but I am expecting him every moment. Mamma was so much better
+yesterday that perhaps she is now suffering from the over-excitement of
+seeing him."</p>
+
+<p>"Very possibly. Old times must have come<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span> before her so forcibly, and
+they are but sad ones for your mother to look back to. It is perhaps
+just as well Dr. Ashley should see her at her worst. What is his opinion
+of Mrs. Neville?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did not ask him, and he never volunteered to tell me; but I must
+ascertain to-day. Do you not think I ought to?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly I do, Amy; you would be wrong if you did not. I think if I
+were you I would ask his <i>true</i>," and Mrs. Elrington laid a stress on
+the word, "opinion on your mother's case."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think her very ill?" asked Amy.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Amy, I do," replied Mrs. Elrington, gently. "That is to say, I
+think her very weak, weaker than she was when I wrote to you after her
+recovery from the severe illness she had."</p>
+
+<p>Amy sighed. "I sometimes fancy," she said, "that Ashleigh, lovely as it
+is, does not suit Mamma; you know her quiet life here is so very
+different from what she has been accustomed to; but I do not see how a
+change is to be effected."</p>
+
+<p>"It would be a great expense, certainly." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"It would, and the means to effect it with will be smaller; as I fear,
+Mrs. Elrington, I shall have to resign my situation at Brampton; I
+cannot leave Mamma so lonely, neither can I be happy away from her while
+she is so ill."</p>
+
+<p>"I have been thinking the same thing, Amy; your mother certainly does
+require all your care and attention. It would not be right to leave
+her."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think Mrs. Linchmore will be annoyed at my leaving in the middle
+of my quarter without any hint or warning whatever?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not under the circumstances, Amy. You were happy there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, as happy as I shall ever be away from home; I was very fond of my
+pupils, of Edith especially."</p>
+
+<p>"Was she the youngest?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, the eldest. An orphan niece of Mr. Linchmore's, and adopted by him
+at her mother's and his sister's death. I shall regret leaving Brampton.
+I think change must be one of the worst trials of a governess's life." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"It is a sad one, no doubt, when, as in your case, a governess happens
+to be attached to those she is leaving. Perhaps," continued Mrs.
+Elrington, as she rose, "I had better not wait to see your mother now.
+As soon as you have made up your mind, Amy, I would advise your writing
+at once to Mrs. Linchmore without delay."</p>
+
+<p>Amy leant back in her chair very sorrowfully after Mrs. Elrington had
+gone. If she had had any doubt about the propriety of leaving Brampton,
+her mother's old friend&mdash;she, whose advice she so valued&mdash;had cleared it
+away; it was evident the step must be taken, however slow her heart
+might be to break asunder the one tie that yet seemed to bind her to
+Charles Linchmore.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you thinking of, Amy?" asked Sarah, who had been watching her
+sister for some time. "You look so sad."</p>
+
+<p>"Do I? I was thinking of Mamma, and whether we could do anything to make
+her better; and about my leaving Brampton, Sarah." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"But that will be so nice to have you always here; you can't be sorry
+about that, sister."</p>
+
+<p>"But then I shall lose a great deal of money; and Mamma will have to go
+without a great many things she really wants. Port wine cannot be bought
+for nothing, Sarah."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! what a pity it is we are not rich, then we might take her back to
+our dear old home. I am sure she would get well there. Don't you think
+so?"</p>
+
+<p>"She might, Sarah. But I think if change is to do her good, she will
+require a greater change than that."</p>
+
+<p>"Further off still?" asked the child. "Where to, Amy?"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell; but Dr. Ashley can."</p>
+
+<p>"But can't you guess at all? Not even the name?" persisted her sister.</p>
+
+<p>"No. But I think somewhere abroad; a long way off. And that would cost
+money. Yes, more money than we have, a great deal," sighed Amy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" said the child, "when I'm grown up I'll marry a man with lots of
+money, just like Mr. Vavasour. Hannah says he's awfully rich; and then
+he should take us away to a lovely place by the sea-side where Mamma and
+all of us could live like princesses. I am sure she would get well
+then."</p>
+
+<p>This innocent remark of Sarah's was a home-thrust to Amy; a death blow
+to her hopes, and roused her at once. Should she sit so quietly and
+passively when her mother's life was at stake? Nurse and hoard up a love
+in her heart that she was ashamed had ever entered there from its very
+hopelessness and selfishness? There was Dr. Ashley coming up the walk,
+she would first ask his opinion as to the necessity of a change; and if
+he thought it necessary? Then&mdash;then. Once again Amy sighed, and said,
+"It is my fate; it must be so," and then went out into the other room,
+and quietly awaited the doctor's coming.</p>
+
+<p>Some ten minutes elapsed, during which Amy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span> was restless and anxious;
+still she would not pause to think now, lest her heart should give way;
+so she walked about even as Frances Strickland often did in her
+impatient moods, took up the books one by one off the table and looked
+at their titles&mdash;read them she could not&mdash;and then the doctor's heavy
+tread sounded on the staircase, and she went out and met him.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you come in here, Dr. Ashley?" she said. "I want to thank you for
+so kindly coming to see Mamma. It is so very kind of you." Amy knew
+nothing of the ten pound note so carefully stowed away in his waistcoat
+pocket for the expenses of his homeward journey.</p>
+
+<p>"Pray say no more, my dear Miss Neville," he said. "It pains me."</p>
+
+<p>And Amy did not. Perhaps she thought it was painful to be thanked for
+what in her innermost heart she half suspected he was paid for.</p>
+
+<p>"How did you find Mamma, Dr. Ashley?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span> "Well, not quite so bright as yesterday, but still no material change
+for the worse. Dr Sellon tells me she often has these ups and downs."</p>
+
+<p>"Any unusual excitement appears to weaken her for the time. Dr. Sellon
+does not attend regularly. I only call him in when I think Mamma really
+requires it."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite right. Your mother's case is one requiring care and&mdash;and
+everything good and strengthening you can give her."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think Mamma very ill?" Amy could not bring herself to ask if he
+thought she would recover, although that thought had been at her heart
+for days, and she had driven it away and would not give it utterance.</p>
+
+<p>"There is weakness,&mdash;great weakness," he replied. "I cannot see that
+Mrs. Neville has any other disease."</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;but I fear you are evading my question, Dr. Ashley. I wish to know
+exactly what your opinion is of Mamma."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear young lady," he said, kindly, "the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span> opinion I have given is a
+true one, though perhaps not all the truth, and&mdash;well, she requires
+great care. There is a prostration of the vital powers&mdash;great want of
+energy. She wants rousing. Every means should be tried to accomplish
+that; otherwise, I need not say, this weakness and debility will
+increase, and of necessity do mischief."</p>
+
+<p>"Every means," replied Amy, "but what means? what must I do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Whatever lies in your power: whatever the patient, which I know she is
+in both senses of the word, expresses a wish for. She should be humoured
+in everything, but I need not tell you that, Miss Neville."</p>
+
+<p>"And can nothing else be done?&mdash;no change of air tried?"</p>
+
+<p>"Decidedly, if possible. It is the <i>one</i> remedy needful; the only
+remedy, in fact, and I should have named it at first, only I deemed it
+impracticable of accomplishment." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You think Mamma might recover if she went away?" asked Amy.</p>
+
+<p>"With God's help, I do; but the step should be taken at once. If delayed
+it might be too late. And now, keep up your spirits and hope for the
+best. Remember there is nothing so bad as a tearful face and aching
+heart for your mother to see."</p>
+
+<p>"Too late!" Those words rang in Amy's ears all day. It should not be too
+late. And yet how nearly had her mother been sacrificed to her blind
+infatuation for one who she now felt had never loved her, but only
+carelessly flirted to trifle away the hours that perhaps hung heavy on
+his hands. Alas! what would Mr. Linchmore say, did he know that the very
+fate he had warned her would be hers if she allowed her heart to become
+enslaved by Mr. Vavasour, had even overtaken her at the hand of his
+brother.</p>
+
+<p>Not many days after Dr. Ashley had gone,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span> a letter arrived from Anne
+Bennet. It ran thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p style='text-align: right'>"Brampton Park, &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; <br />
+"February 25th. &nbsp; &nbsp; </p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">My dear Miss Neville</span>,</p>
+
+<p> &nbsp; &nbsp; "I have almost made up my mind to torment you with a letter every day,
+this place being so dull and dreary that the mere fact of writing is
+quite a delightful episode in my long day. I should be happy enough if
+Frances were away; but you know how I always disliked that girl. Just
+imagine my disgust, then, at her remaining here, for, of course, Julia
+has told you she herself and every one else is gone, excepting Frances
+and Charles; the latter, I suppose, remains in the hope of soon seeing
+you. Why don't you come back? I declare it is shameful of you to remain
+away so long, when you must know how wretched you are making him, and
+how devotedly he loves you. I should not tell you this, only Frances
+drives me to it, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span> and I am just at the root of a grand secret. Julia
+behaved shamefully&mdash;would not help me in the least, as she would persist
+in declaring it was curiosity&mdash;how I hate the word!&mdash;so I had nothing
+for it but to take Mr. Hall into my confidence, the result of which has
+been that I have promised, some long time hence, to become Mrs. Hall;
+and for the time being, we are turned into a pair of turtle-doves, only
+instead of billing and cooing, we are snapping and snarling all day.
+Adieu. Answer every word of this letter, especially that relating to
+Charles, who is, I am certain, as devotedly yours as</p>
+
+<p style='text-align: right'>"Your loving friend, &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; <br />
+<span class="smcap">"Anne Bennet."</span> &nbsp; &nbsp; </p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This letter, with its mention of Charles Linchmore, pained Amy, and
+roused her slumbering pride. She would answer it at once, every word of
+it, and for ever put an end to Anne's mention of his name. She should
+see that Amy was as proud in some things as the haughty Mrs. Linchmore<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
+herself, or the defiant Frances. No woman should think she would stoop
+one iota for any man's love; while as for Charles, Anne was deceived in
+her belief of his love for her, even as she had been; but it was not
+well her heart should be reminded of the one image still slumbering
+there. Was she not as much bound to Robert Vavasour as if she were
+already engaged to him? or did she ever prevent his coming to the
+cottage by being ungracious?</p>
+
+<p>No; Amy had made up her mind to love him, and was ever ready to listen
+to his words, or walk with him. No fits of dread despair assailed him
+now. His whole life seemed a bright sunshine; even the dull, desolate
+walk up from the village was pleasant, because every step brought him
+nearer to the cottage.</p>
+
+<p>That evening&mdash;the evening of the day that brought Anne's letter&mdash;Amy,
+while old Hannah cleared away the tea things, went to her room and
+answered it. The doing so cost her many bitter thoughts, and perhaps a
+few tears were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span> hastily dashed away. When it was done, her head ached
+sadly. She went to the window and threw it open. It was a lovely
+moonlight night. She crept softly downstairs and out into the garden,
+and leant over the little green gate at the end.</p>
+
+<p>Some ten minutes passed sadly away, and then a step sounded on the crisp
+gravel. Amy knew well it was Robert Vavasour's, still she did not move
+or turn her head. Was he going home without saying good night to her? or
+had he missed her and guessed where she was?</p>
+
+<p>"It is a cold night, Miss Neville," he said as he drew near. "Is it wise
+for you to be out without a shawl or wrap of any kind?"</p>
+
+<p>"The lovely night tempted me," she replied, "I thought it might cool my
+head, for it aches sadly."</p>
+
+<p>He did not reply. Amy too was silent; perhaps she guessed what he would
+say next.</p>
+
+<p>Presently he laid his hand on hers as it rested on the woodwork of the
+gate. She did not with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>draw it, and then he boldly took the small fair
+hand in his.</p>
+
+<p>"Amy," he said, softly, while she trembled exceedingly, "do you remember
+I said I would ask you once again? The time has come. Amy, will you be
+my wife? I love you more dearly than when I first asked you in the old
+library at Brampton."</p>
+
+<p>She did not shrink from him or his encircling arm as she replied, "I
+think I love you now; I am sure I like you better, and will try to love
+you with all my heart. If this will satisfy you, then I will be your
+wife."</p>
+
+<p>And it did satisfy him, and he pressed his lips on her clear high,
+forehead, as, like a weary child, she laid her head on his shoulder as
+he gently drew her towards him.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very timid," she said, "and you must be patient, and not expect
+too much from me at first."</p>
+
+<p>These words, spoken so entreatingly and dependently, claiming, as they
+seemed to him, all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span> his care and kindness, calmed him at once; he must
+be patient, and not frighten away by his too tender words the love only
+just dawning for him.</p>
+
+<p>"My darling," he whispered, "you will never find me other than kind and
+gentle with you. You have made me very happy, Amy."</p>
+
+<p>"Have I ever caused you unhappiness?" she asked, seeing he waited for a
+reply.</p>
+
+<p>"Only twice, Amy. Once when you tried to shut out all hope from my
+heart, and again when I fancied you cared for Charley Linchmore."</p>
+
+<p>That name! How it jarred through the chords of Amy's heart! Only a few
+moments ago she had determined on tearing it out, and never allowing
+another thought of him to enter there again. Was he dear to her still;
+now that she was the affianced bride of another? and that other, ought
+he not to know of her foolishness and folly? ought not every thought of
+her heart to be open to <i>him</i> now? Yes, now; from this time, this hour;
+but not the past; that could only bring<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span> sorrow to him, shame to her.
+No! no! She could not lower herself in the eyes of Robert Vavasour, he
+who loved her so dearly, and whom she had just promised to try in time
+to love with all her heart. All her heart! Was this trembling at the
+mere mention of another's name the beginning of her promise? Would she
+ever forget Charles Linchmore? Ever love another as she could have loved
+him?</p>
+
+<p>Amy shivered slightly; but Robert Vavasour, who loved her more than his
+life, felt it.</p>
+
+<p>"You are cold, little one," he said, "and must go in. You know, Amy, I
+have the right to protect you from all ill now," and he led her back
+gently towards the cottage.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<h4>LISTENING AT THE DOOR.</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">If thou hast crushed a flower,</span>
+<span class="i4">The root may not be blighted;</span>
+<span class="i2">If thou hast quenched a lamp,</span>
+<span class="i4">Once more it may be lighted;</span>
+<span class="i2">But on thy harp or on thy lute,</span>
+<span class="i4">The string which thou hast broken</span>
+<span class="i2">Shall never in sweet sound again</span>
+<span class="i4">Give to thy touch a token!</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">If thou hast bruised a vine,</span>
+<span class="i4">The summer's breath is healing,</span>
+<span class="i2">And its clusters yet may glow</span>
+<span class="i4">Thro' the leaves, their bloom revealing;</span>
+<span class="i2">But if thou hast a cup o'erthrown</span>
+<span class="i4">With a bright draught filled&mdash;oh! never</span>
+<span class="i2">Shall earth give back the lavished wealth</span>
+<span class="i4">To cool thy parched lips' fever.</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">Thy heart is like that cup,</span>
+<span class="i4">If thou waste the love it bore thee;</span>
+<span class="i2">And like that jewel gone,</span>
+<span class="i4">Which the deep will not restore thee;</span>
+<span class="i2">And like that string of heart or lute</span>
+<span class="i4">Whence the sweet sound is scattered,&mdash;</span>
+<span class="i2">Gently, oh! gently touch the chords,</span>
+<span class="i4">So soon for ever shattered!</span>
+<span class="i20"><span class="smcap">Mrs. Hemans.</span></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Anne had scarcely exaggerated when she told Amy that Brampton Park had
+become dull and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span> stupid. It certainly had subsided into its old
+dullness, while the days themselves were even more dreary-looking than
+the house. Spring had commenced, the trees were beginning to put forth
+their blossoms, and the cold frosty weather had passed away; still the
+days were misty, and sometimes even foggy, with drizzling rain. Riding
+parties were scarcely ever attempted, and a walk was almost out of the
+question; while dancing and music were things unknown&mdash;the first
+impracticable, the latter no one seemed to have the spirits for. Mrs.
+Hopkins no longer walked about the corridors in stately importance; even
+Mason's crinoline seemed to have shrunk somewhat, as she flaunted less
+saucily about than when certain of meeting some one to whom to show off
+her last new cap.</p>
+
+<p>The two young girls still staying at Brampton did not get on very well
+together, although there was little show of outward unfriendliness on
+either part. Frances had long since found out that Anne Bennet disliked
+and suspected, even<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span> watched her; but no fear had she of being
+detected&mdash;her plans, so she flattered herself, had been too secretly and
+deeply laid for Anne's simple mind to fathom them; such a worm in her
+path she could tread upon whenever she liked, and utterly crush when it
+pleased her. So secure was she that often Anne was attacked with one of
+her sarcastic speeches. But Anne was too wary to be betrayed into an
+open quarrel, which would, most likely, have resulted in her being
+obliged to leave Brampton; so she contented herself by either treating
+her words with silent contempt or retorting in the same style, with the
+secret determination of some day having her revenge, much to poor Mr.
+Hall's dismay, as he was, of course, <i>faut de mieux</i>, as Anne said,
+taken into her confidence.</p>
+
+<p>Some twenty minutes Anne had been standing at one of the windows of the
+morning-room, which being just above the library, commanded a pretty
+good view down a part of the long avenue, through the branches of the
+still almost leafless trees.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It was about a month since the eventful evening on which Amy had penned
+her reply to Anne.</p>
+
+<p>Charles, who had been reading, suddenly rose, and threw his book, with a
+gesture of weariness, on the table.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you going out?" asked Frances, laying her embroidery in her lap, as
+he rose.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; it's close upon half-past four, and I shall just get a stroll
+before dinner; the book has made me stupid."</p>
+
+<p>"So has my embroidery. I think I will go with you, if you will let me."</p>
+
+<p>"You!" exclaimed Anne, from her distant post, ever ready to knock on the
+head any chance that drew the two together; "why your feet in their
+dainty boots would get soaked through and through, and you catch your
+death of cold. Do not encourage such self-immolation, Charles."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," laughed Charles, "your town-made boots, Frances, were never made
+or intended for country wear. Anne's are, at least, an inch thick, and
+wade through any amount of mud or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span> dirt: so if either of you come, it
+must be Anne."</p>
+
+<p>"I should say Anne would be a lively companion," retorted Frances,
+savagely. "I suppose by this time she could tell us how many drops of
+rain fall in a minute, and how many rooks have perched on the trees
+during the last half-hour."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish one of the rooks would fly and bring me the letter from Miss
+Neville that I have been expecting, and have been looking out for all
+the afternoon."</p>
+
+<p>This reply, with its allusion to the governess, Anne knew was the
+severest thing she could say; so, with a self-satisfied look at Frances'
+flushed face, she went away to put on her things.</p>
+
+<p>But her water-proof cloak could not be found&mdash;was nowhere. Anne was a
+great deal too independent to summon servants to her aid, so she must
+needs go down stairs to look for it, remembering, as she went, that she
+had hung it on the stand in the hall to dry. She was returning upstairs
+with it on her arm, when Charles's voice sounded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span> in the morning-room.
+Anne hesitated a moment; but Frances's low mysterious tone was too great
+a temptation to be resisted, and with a half-frightened guilty look, she
+drew near the door and listened, thinking, perhaps, the end to be
+attained justified the means she was employing in attaining it.</p>
+
+<p>"My heart misgives me sometimes as to whether I did right in leaving her
+so precipitately, without a word," Charles was saying.</p>
+
+<p>"What would have been the use of speaking?" was the rejoinder, "when she
+so evidently cared, or rather showed her love for Mr. Vavasour."</p>
+
+<p>Anne could not hear the reply, and again Frances spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought I never should recover her from that death-like faint."</p>
+
+<p>"If any woman deceived me, she did. I could have sworn she cared for me,
+on that very evening. How she trembled when I took her hand," said
+Charles.</p>
+
+<p>Again Anne was at fault with the answer; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span> whatever it was Charles's
+reply rang loud and clear&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I hate that fellow Vavasour!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush! hush!" said Frances; and Anne could imagine she was entreating
+him to talk lower; then the rustle of her dress was heard, and swift as
+thought Anne flew lightly and softly up the thickly-carpeted stairs. As
+she paused at the top, breathless and panting, she heard the door below
+gently closed.</p>
+
+<p>"Too late!" said she, with a smile of pleasure; and then went with
+something of a triumphant march to her room; where, shutting the door,
+she gave vent to one of her ringing laughs, which quickly subsided into
+a repentant, regretful look. "How shameful of me to laugh at such
+wickedness," said she, aloud; and then, settling herself in an old
+arm-chair, began to think over what she had heard, and draw her own
+conclusions therefrom.</p>
+
+<p>This to Anne's quick mind was not very difficult; she guessed it all, or
+almost all, at once,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span> and never for a moment doubted they were talking
+of Miss Neville. Had she not given them the clue when she mentioned her
+name, before going up to dress?</p>
+
+<p>So Miss Neville had fainted. But where, and when? and how had Frances
+managed to persuade or convince Charles that the faint was caused by
+love for Mr. Vavasour? Charles had said, "That very evening." What
+evening? Was it the night before he went off so suddenly from Brampton?
+the night Mr. Vavasour had been brought home wounded and insensible? Was
+it possible Amy had fainted at seeing him? Yes, she might have done so;
+it was most probable she had; and yet that, as far as Anne could see,
+was no proof of her love for him. The sight might have grieved and
+shocked her, as it might have done any woman so timid as she was, and
+nervous and weak from the effects of recent illness.</p>
+
+<p>Anne had indeed arrived at the root of the mystery, and that in a manner
+she had little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span> dreamed of. What a deep-laid plot it seemed, and how
+artfully and successfully concealed from her! She felt half inclined to
+rush boldly down, confront Frances, and tax her with her falsehood and
+injustice to Miss Neville; but on second thoughts she restrained herself
+and determined for once on assuming a new character. She would take a
+leaf out of Frances' book, and act as secretly and silently.</p>
+
+<p>As Anne sat ruminating a knock sounded at her door. What if it should be
+Frances? She sprung from her chair and busied herself in putting away
+her things ere she answered, "Come in;" but it was only a servant with
+letters, and at last Miss Neville's reply that she had been expecting
+for so many weeks.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell Mr. Charles," said Anne, "that it looks so very wet I have changed
+my mind and shall not go out. He need not wait for me."</p>
+
+<p>"Let Frances go out with him, if she likes," thought Anne; "hers will be
+but a short-lived pleasure. I will defeat her to-morrow," and then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span> she
+once more sat down, and opened Amy's letter.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p style='text-align: right'>"Saturday. &nbsp; &nbsp; </p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">My dear Miss Bennet</span>,</p>
+
+<p> &nbsp; &nbsp; "I feel much pleasure in congratulating you on your engagement to
+Mr. Hall, and trust the day is not so far distant as you seem to
+imagine when you will settle down into a pattern clergyman's wife.
+I fear there is little chance of our meeting again as you so kindly
+wish, as the very delicate state of my mother's health precludes
+all possibility of my leaving home at present. It is therefore
+imperative I should resign my situation with Mrs. Linchmore, much
+as I shall regret leaving her and my pupils. Your allusion to Mr.
+Charles Linchmore pains me. May I ask you to be silent on that
+subject for the future; as, even in joke, I do not like any man
+being thought to be desperately in love with me, and in this
+instance Mr. Charles Linchmore barely treated me as a friend at
+parting. With <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>every wish for your future happiness in the new path
+which you have chosen,</p>
+
+<p style='text-align: right'><span style="margin-right: 10em;">"I am,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-right: 2em;">"Yours very sincerely,</span><br />
+"<span class="smcap">Amy Neville</span>." &nbsp; &nbsp; </p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This was the letter Amy had written, and which ought to have reached
+Anne a month ago, but Amy had entrusted the posting of it to a boy named
+Joe, who always came up every Sunday afternoon after church to have his
+dinner at the cottage. Unfortunately Joe forgot all about the letter,
+and before the next Sunday came round he was laid up with a fever, then
+prevalent at Ashleigh; and when able to get about again the letter never
+occurred to him until the first Sunday of his going to church; when
+again he donned his best suit, and on kneeling down, the letter rustled
+in his pocket. Joe's conscience smote him at once, and as soon as
+service was ended away he flew to the village post-office, spelling out
+as he went the address on the envelope; which, when he found<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span> was no
+sweetheart, but only a young lady, he concluded could be a letter of no
+consequence, and determined on saying nothing about its lying so long
+neglected in his pocket of his Sunday's best. Joe was not wise enough to
+know that trifles sometimes make or mar a life's happiness.</p>
+
+<p>Before Anne left her room she made up her mind how to act; not a word
+would she say that night to Charles, because nothing could be done, but
+on the morrow she would open his eyes, show him the snare into which he
+had fallen; the folly he had been guilty of through the cunning and
+duplicity of Frances.</p>
+
+<p>Anne sang all the way downstairs to the drawing-room as she went to
+dinner. The idea of having detected the proud Frances had perhaps more
+to do with this exuberance of spirits, than pleasure at Miss Neville's
+being done justice to, and Charles made happy; as for Mrs. Linchmore's
+frowns, Anne never gave them a thought.</p>
+
+<p>Charles spirits were, if anything, more forced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span> than usual; Frances more
+reserved and silent, so that Anne's vivacity and evident good humour
+showed in their brightest colours.</p>
+
+<p>"What spirits you are in, Anne," remarked Mrs. Linchmore.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps friend Hall is on the wing," laughed Charles.</p>
+
+<p>"Or perhaps," replied Anne slowly, "my rooks have given me a lesson
+in&mdash;in&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Cawing," suggested Frances, impertinently.</p>
+
+<p>"Why not in keeping a silent tongue?" Anne replied, with a scarcely
+perceptible touch of temper in the tone of her voice. "There is more
+wisdom in that, or perhaps my birds are wise birds, and have given me a
+hint where to find the golden link to my chain that has been missing so
+long."</p>
+
+<p>"When did you lose it, Anne?" asked Mrs. Linchmore, "this is the first I
+have heard about it."</p>
+
+<p>"Some two months ago, the morning after that poaching business," and
+Anne looked steadily at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span> Frances; "but it is of no consequence now. I
+find my chain can be joined again without it."</p>
+
+<p>Frances quailed before that steady, searching look; then rose and
+crossed the room, passing close by Anne as she went. "Miss Bennet," said
+she, with one of her coldest and most sarcastic smiles, "Miss Bennet has
+recourse to enigmas at times,&mdash;enigmas not very difficult of solution,
+although I for one cannot see the point they aim at," and she passed on.</p>
+
+<p>Anne watched her opportunity all the evening, but to no purpose.
+Frances' suspicions were roused; it was impossible to get speech of
+Charles, and Anne was obliged to go up to bed with the rest, without
+having given one sign, or being able to say one word to him.</p>
+
+<p>But Anne was not to be thus foiled; as soon as she gained her room she
+sat down and penned a note to Charles. She had something of great
+importance to tell him; would he meet her in the library before
+breakfast, at eight o'clock? and then away she flew in fear and
+trepidation down<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span> the long, dark corridors, and knocked at Charles's
+door.</p>
+
+<p>"It is I, Anne Bennet," she said. "Open the door, quick! Make haste, I
+am frightened to death!"</p>
+
+<p>In another moment the door opened.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?" said he, with a look of surprise.</p>
+
+<p>She thrust the note into his hand, and was hurrying away.</p>
+
+<p>"Stay, let me light you," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! no, not for worlds!" she replied, then fled hastily, and gained her
+room without being seen.</p>
+
+<p>Anne was too restless to sleep much that night, and was up and away
+downstairs the next morning before the hour she had named, and grew
+quite impatient at the slow movement of the minute hand of the clock on
+the chimney-piece, as she walked up and down awaiting Charles's
+coming.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Suppose he should not come? But, no, he must think it was something
+important to drag her out of bed at that unearthly hour, full two hours
+before her usual time. But there was a step coming along the hall now;
+then the door opened and Charles entered.</p>
+
+<p>"You are sure Frances did not see you?" asked Anne.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied he, in some amazement, "but her maid did."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I have not a moment to lose," said Annie, "come here and listen to
+me. Do you remember meeting me on the stairs, the morning you left
+Brampton so hurriedly? and your refusal to tell me why you had
+determined on doing so? or rather that you left because you had heard
+that Miss Neville no longer loved you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Anne, no, you are wrong," replied Charles, decidedly, "I told you I
+had found out that Miss Neville had never cared for me, that her heart
+was entirely another's." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"It is all one and the same thing. I told you then that I did not
+believe it, and asked you to tell me how you had found it out, did I
+not?"</p>
+
+<p>"You did. But why rake up old feelings which only tend to wound and
+bruise the heart afresh?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad they do; if they did not I would not say one word in Miss
+Neville's defence."</p>
+
+<p>"Defence! You talk strangely, Anne. Don't whisper hope to my heart,
+which can only end in misery and despair. I dare not hope."</p>
+
+<p>"You will hope when you have heard all."</p>
+
+<p>"What have you to tell?" he asked, almost sternly.</p>
+
+<p>"Only this: that you left Brampton because Miss Neville had fainted on
+seeing Mr. Vavasour brought home wounded."</p>
+
+<p>"What surer proof could I have of her love for him?" he asked, sadly.</p>
+
+<p>"Proof! Do you call this proof?" said Anne, angrily, "do you forget how
+ill Miss Neville had been? how nervous and weak she yet was when this
+occurred? Was it a wonder she fainted?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span> or a wonder that Frances, who
+hated and disliked her, should seize upon that accident to betray you
+both? And why? Only because had you told Miss Neville of your love, or
+divulged what you had seen to me, you would never have fallen into this
+snare so artfully laid for you, so cunningly worked out by Frances."</p>
+
+<p>"Who told you it was Frances?"</p>
+
+<p>"She herself," replied Anne, boldly facing the danger. "I have never
+left a stone unturned since that morning I met you on the stairs almost
+heart-broken. I was determined to find out why it was so. I suspected
+Frances, and have watched her all these long weeks, but she was too deep
+for me, too artful; and I never should have detected her, had I not
+over-heard her conversation with you yesterday. Then I found it all out;
+and I tell you Charles she has deceived you."</p>
+
+<p>"Go on," he said, "convince me it is so, and I will thank you from my
+heart, Anne; and&mdash;no, I am a fool to hope!" and he strode away towards
+the window.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You are a fool to despair! I tell you Charles, if any woman ever loved
+you, Miss Neville did. Were not the tears ready to start from her eyes
+when I gave her your message, and told her you were gone? You allowed
+her to think for weeks that you loved her, and then, for a mere trifle,
+left her without explanation or word of any kind. You behaved
+shamefully; while she never gave you an unkind word. The severest thing
+she ever said of you, was said in a letter I received from her
+yesterday. I told her you loved her, because I knew she was miserable
+thinking you did not; and read what she says."</p>
+
+<p>He took the letter from her hand, his face flushing while he read it.
+"If Frances has deceived me? If she has dared to do it?" he said. "By
+Heaven! she shall rue it deeply!"</p>
+
+<p>"And she has done so," pursued Anne, "and you are more to blame than she
+in allowing yourself to be deceived. How could you doubt Miss Neville?
+How believe that she, of all women in the world, would give away her
+heart<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span> unsought. You have condemned her unheard, and without the
+slightest foundation, and have behaved cruelly to her, and deserve to
+lose her."</p>
+
+<p>"Not if she loves me," he cried, starting up, "not if any words of mine
+have power to move her. God knows whether I shall be successful or no;
+but she shall hear how madly I love her."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you going to see her? and when?"</p>
+
+<p>"Now, this instant! your words have roused me to action!"</p>
+
+<p>He was gone. Anne went into the drawing-room and stood by the window.
+Some minutes slipped by, and then Frances entered.</p>
+
+<p>"Come here!" said Anne. "Come and look at Charles."</p>
+
+<p>Frances advanced and looked eagerly around.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not see him," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Hark!" said Anne, "What is that?"</p>
+
+<p>It was the hasty canter of a horse's feet. In another moment Charles
+dashed past.</p>
+
+<p>Anne remembered the last time he had gone<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span> away. How she and Frances had
+stood together at the same window, even as they did now; only with this
+difference, that then, Frances' face was the triumphant one. Now they
+had changed places.</p>
+
+<p>Anne could not&mdash;did not pity her, as she drew near and took hold of her
+arm.</p>
+
+<p>"He has gone to tell Miss Neville he loves her," said she cruelly, as
+Frances looked enquiringly in her face.</p>
+
+<p>Frances paled to an almost death-like whiteness as she grasped, "God
+forgive you if he has. I never will!" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<h4>TOO LATE.</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"So mournfully she gaz'd on him,</span>
+<span class="i4">As if her heart would break;</span>
+<span class="i2">Her silence more upbraided him,</span>
+<span class="i4">Than all her tongue might speak!</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">She could do nought but gaze on him,</span>
+<span class="i4">For answer she had none,</span>
+<span class="i2">But tears that could not be repress'd,</span>
+<span class="i4">Fell slowly, one by one.</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">Alas! that life should be so short&mdash;</span>
+<span class="i4">So short and yet so sad;</span>
+<span class="i2">Alas! that we so late are taught</span>
+<span class="i4">To prize the time we had!</span>
+<span class="i20"><span class="smcap">Charles Swain.</span></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>It was the evening after Amy had pledged herself to Robert Vavasour. The
+sun had slowly faded away, and twilight threw but a faint light into the
+room where she sat close to her mother's feet.</p>
+
+<p>Amy had been reading to Mrs. Neville and the book still open; lay in her
+lap, but it was too<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span> dark to read now, too dark for her mother to see
+her face, so Amy drew closer still ere she broached the subject nearest
+her heart. There was no shrinking or timidity, as there might have been
+had her love been wholly his, whose wife she had promised to become.</p>
+
+<p>"Mamma, did Mr. Vavasour ever speak to you of his love for me?" The
+words were spoken firmly, though almost in a whisper.</p>
+
+<p>"He did, Amy; and he also said you had refused his love."</p>
+
+<p>"I knew so little of him then, that when he named his love it seemed
+like a dream, so sudden and unexpected. I had never given it a thought,
+or believed such a thing possible. I know him better now; he is so good,
+so kind."</p>
+
+<p>She paused, perhaps hoping her mother would speak, but Mrs. Neville said
+not a word, and Amy went on somewhat falteringly, although she tried
+hard to speak steadily.</p>
+
+<p>"Mamma, I promised last evening I would be his wife&mdash;" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Have you done wisely, Amy? Are you sure you love him as his promised
+wife should?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied Amy, dreamily. "I like him, I am sure I like him very
+much indeed,&mdash;and&mdash;and then he is so gentle and loving with me; surely
+no one could help liking him."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Neville half raised herself on the sofa. "Amy! Amy! liking will not
+do. Do you love him, child?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Mamma. Yes, I think so."</p>
+
+<p>"Only <i>think</i>, child? Nay you must be sure of it. Ask your heart if the
+time passes slowly when he is absent from the cottage. Do you watch and
+wait, and listen for his returning footsteps? Do you feel that without
+him life is not worth having, the world a blank? Is your whole heart
+with him when he is at your side? Do you tremble when his hand touches
+yours; and your voice grow softer as you speak to him? Do you feel that
+you dare not look up lest he should see the deep love in your eyes? if
+so Amy, then gladly will I consent to give you to him. But if not, I
+would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span> rather, far rather see you in your grave than wedded to him."</p>
+
+<p>Amy was silent; not from any wish to draw back from her word or plighted
+troth; no, she had made up her mind to be Robert Vavasour's wife, her
+mother's thin wasted hand as it rested on hers only strengthened that
+resolution; the very feebleness with which she raised herself on the
+couch showed Amy how very weak and ill she was, and this one act might
+restore her to health. She did not hesitate, she would not draw back;
+had Charles loved her, it might have been different, but convinced of
+his falseness and trifling, no regret for him, now struggled at her
+heart, only shame that she could ever have allowed it to be drawn
+towards him, unsought.</p>
+
+<p>"You hesitate. You do not answer, Amy?" said Mrs. Neville, sadly, "and
+have deceived yourself and him."</p>
+
+<p>"No, Mamma, you are wrong. Although I do not love Mr. Vavasour like
+that; still I do love<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span> him, and in time, when I am his wife, I shall
+very dearly."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Neville sighed. "In this one important step of your life, Amy, when
+your whole future well-being depends upon it, there should be no secrets
+between us, recollect this one act may entail much misery; you cannot
+tell how much. Think of being bound for life to a man you do not love,
+think of the remorse you will feel at not being able to give him the
+love of your whole heart in return for his. Amy, my child, his very
+presence would be painful to you, his very love and kindness your
+greatest punishment and sorrow."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes Mamma, if I did not love him; but it will not be so. I shall love
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet Amy, your very words almost forbid it, and fill my heart with
+fear and trembling," and again Mrs. Neville clasped her daughter's hand,
+while Amy, fairly overcome, bent down and laying her forehead on the
+soft pitying hand, burst into tears.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Hush, Amy! hush! You have done foolishly, but there is yet time; better
+give him sorrow and pain now than later."</p>
+
+<p>"No, Mamma, no; there is no need to give him pain," said Amy, presently.</p>
+
+<p>"Alas!" replied Mrs. Neville, "then why these tears?"</p>
+
+<p>"I weep," answered Amy, flinging&mdash;dashing back the tears as they crowded
+into her eyes, "I weep to think I have allowed my heart to think of
+another; one, too all unworthy of a woman's love; one who flirted and
+pretended to care for me; I weep for very shame, mother, to think how
+foolish I was, and how unworthy I am to be Robert Vavasour's wife."</p>
+
+<p>"You have been unhappy, my child, so unhappy; but I almost guessed it
+when I looked in your face months ago."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but not unhappy now, Mamma. I was very miserable, for I thought he
+loved me until he left me&mdash;went away without a word. Oh! mother, <i>that</i>
+was a bitter trial to me, and instead<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span> of trying to rouse myself and
+cast his image out of my heart, knowing I had done wrong in ever loving
+him, and doubly so now I had found out his cruel unworthiness, I nursed
+my love; bemoaned my fate; and steadily shut my heart against Mr.
+Vavasour. But it could not be; he was too noble hearted, so patient
+under my waywardness; sorrowful, but never reproachful; and&mdash;and so
+Mamma I have promised to become his wife; and am happy, not grieved or
+sad, at the idea; no, I will be his faithful, loving wife, and in his
+true heart forget this early foolish love that caused me so much
+unhappiness, and nearly lost me the heart of him who is now to be my
+husband."</p>
+
+<p>"You are right, Amy, to forget <i>him</i>, right to tear <i>his</i> image from
+your heart; a man to treat you so is unworthy of any woman's love; and
+yet&mdash;yet I am scarcely satisfied. I fear this engagement. Is it not
+hasty, too hasty? Do not rush into a marriage hoping to escape from a
+love, however unworthy, still struggling at your heart;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span> such a mistake
+might make the one regret of your whole life."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not. I will not," replied Amy firmly, as she rose, and stooping
+over her mother, kissed her fondly; "If this is the only reason you
+have, dear Mamma, for fear, then rest content: my engagement with Mr.
+Vavasour is for my&mdash;all our happiness; will you try and think so? I
+should feel very unhappy indeed if you refused your consent; or that my
+marriage grieved you."</p>
+
+<p>"It does not grieve me, Amy. Only," sighed Mrs. Neville, "I wish he had
+been your first love."</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, that is foolish, Mamma. Now often have I heard you say that few
+girls marry their first love."</p>
+
+<p>Again Mrs. Neville was silent. "Have you told Mr. Vavasour of this old
+love, Amy?" asked she presently.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! no, no, Mamma. What good could it do? It would only grieve him;
+I,&mdash;I told him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span> this much, that I&mdash;I hoped to love him better in time."</p>
+
+<p>"And he was satisfied?"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite," answered Amy, "and will you not say you are too, dearest
+Mamma?" and she laid her head lovingly on her mother's shoulder, and
+looked entreatingly in her face.</p>
+
+<p>"God bless and protect you, my child," said Mrs. Neville fervently,
+drawing her closer still, and kissing her fondly. "May He guide and
+strengthen us both, for indeed I am very sorrowful, and scarcely know
+whether this marriage is for my child's happiness or no; but I pray it
+may be with all my heart. You have your mother's best, holiest wishes,
+Amy."</p>
+
+<p>So Amy Neville became, with her mother's sanction, Robert Vavasour's
+affianced wife.</p>
+
+<p>Yet for days after that Mrs. Neville's heart seemed troubled and ill at
+ease, and she lay on the sofa watching, noting Amy's every look or
+action, until, by degrees, the troubled anxious look wore away; Amy
+seemed so contented and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span> happy that her mother, who, in her secret
+heart, wished the marriage might be, gradually lost her fears, and each
+hour gained renewed confidence and hope. She grew better and stronger,
+and this alone in itself was sufficient to bring back the smiles into
+Amy's face, while each day disclosed some fresh trait of Robert
+Vavasour's goodness and kindness of heart. It was his voice read of an
+evening to her mother and never seemed to weary. It was his hand raised
+the invalid, or lifted her, as her strength increased, from the sofa to
+the easy chair.</p>
+
+<p>Amy rejoiced in the change, and while she never allowed her thoughts to
+wander to the past, with all its cruel hopes and fears, so she never
+halted or looked onward to the future; her life was of to-day, neither
+more nor less. Her mother was better; it was her act, her will, that had
+done it all. She was contented that it should be so, and fancied herself
+happy; perhaps was at this time really so, and might have been for ever,
+had she never seen Charles Linchmore again, never<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span> known how he, not
+she, had been deceived, but that was to be the one thorn in her onward
+path.</p>
+
+<p>In less than a month Amy was to be married. Mrs. Neville's objections as
+to haste were overruled, even old Mrs. Elrington had sided with the
+rest; but then Mrs. Neville knew nothing of Dr. Ashley's opinion, or
+that Amy had confided to her old friend the necessity there was for an
+immediate change.</p>
+
+<p>They were to go to Italy. Amy, her husband, and mother, with little
+Sarah, and even old Hannah accompanying them. What a pleasant party it
+would be! Already Amy began to picture to herself the delight she would
+experience in watching her mother's restoration to health and strength
+in that warm sunny clime, and how happy she would be by-and-by in
+bringing her back when quite well, to live in her own and Vavasour's
+home, that home he had so often talked to her of, and where, in a few
+weeks, she would be roaming about at will as its mistress.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The days crept on steadily and surely slowly to all but Mrs. Neville,
+and with her the time seemed to fly; she was anxious and restless, while
+her doubts and fears only shaped themselves in words in old Hannah's
+presence; to the rest, even to Amy, she was passive and quiet,
+apparently resigned, only at heart sad.</p>
+
+<p>But old Hannah was a remorseless tyrant, who, feeling deeply and
+sorrowfully her darling's departure from home, sighing and even dropping
+a tear or two in secret, yet she never allowed Mrs. Neville to bewail
+it, but, on the contrary, seemed to look upon her doing so as a weakness
+and sin, requiring a steady though somewhat underhand reproof. Perhaps
+the very strength of mind Hannah displayed encouraged and strengthened
+her mistress.</p>
+
+<p>"We are to lose Miss Amy to-morrow, Hannah," said Mrs. Neville, in a sad
+tone of voice. "I wish the wedding had not been so sudden."</p>
+
+<p>"There, Ma'am, I don't call it sudden at all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span> in the light wind," then
+silently and steadily went upstairs to change her bridal attire for a
+travelling dress.</p>
+
+<p>It would be quite half-an-hour before Vavasour could return; so she sat
+quietly awaiting him in the little sitting-room, perhaps for the first
+time that day feeling sad, just realising her position as a wife, and
+looking onwards into the future.</p>
+
+<p>She sat lost in a dreamy reverie, and heard not the swift opening and
+shutting of the little garden gate, or the sound of the still swifter
+step across the gravel walk, until it sounded quick and strong in the
+passage; then she started and arose quickly. Her husband had returned!
+and sooner than she expected. With a smile she turned to greet him, but
+it was Charles Linchmore who stood in the doorway, flushed and heated
+with the haste and impatience of his hurried ride from the station, and
+still more hasty journey.</p>
+
+<p>Amy's heart stood still. Why had he come? Then, woman-like, almost
+guessed before he spoke<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span> what he had come to say. But ere she could
+recover from the sudden shock of his presence he, with all the old
+impetuosity of his nature, was at her feet, pouring forth his long
+pent-up love, with all its wild jealousy and anguish. How he had been
+deceived by Frances, and driven well-nigh distracted. How through Anne's
+agency he had found out her deceit, and had started at once to explain
+all and be forgiven; how he believed now she had loved him, and still
+loved, or would love him again; all&mdash;all he told, while his words came
+fast and strong. Amy never attempted to stay them, neither could she, if
+she would. So he went on to the end; then looked up into her face, that
+white, wan, pale face, bending so sadly over him, with an agonised stony
+look spread over each feature, striking dismay into his heart and soul.</p>
+
+<p>"Speak to me!" he cried passionately. "Only say you forgive me my hasty
+belief in your falseness, only say that you love me still, and that I am
+not too late to make amends. Amy! my own<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span> Amy, speak to me!" and again
+he looked up beseechingly, with all his deep, earnest love written on
+his face, and speaking in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>But she was silent and still, very still.</p>
+
+<p>Then the hand he held so tightly drew away from his hot, burning ones,
+and turning slowly, showed the wife's symbol, the plain gold band
+encircling the one small finger, while the pale, sad lips parted, and
+words came mournfully at last, but slowly and distinctly, settling like
+ice about his heart.</p>
+
+<p>"It is too late&mdash;I am married."</p>
+
+<p>Again that hasty, hurried step sounded, ringing out fiercely in the
+passage and along the quiet gravel walk. Once again the gate swung
+harshly and roughly on its frail hinges; then the sudden rush of a
+horse's quick hoofs rung out startlingly in the still, soft air, and in
+another moment died away in the far-off distance.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is your mistress? is she ready?" asked Vavasour of Amy's new
+maid, as ten minutes later he hastily entered the cottage.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"My mistress is not ready, Sir," was the reply, with a pert toss of the
+head, while a peculiar expression played round the corners of her lips.
+"She is in the parlour, Sir. Mrs. Elrington thinks it's the heat of the
+day and the worry that has caused her to faint away."</p>
+
+<p>Yes; Amy lay on the sofa, quiet and motionless with scarcely any sign of
+life on her pale, sad face, while onward, onward, faster and faster
+still, rode Charles Linchmore.</p>
+
+<p>Would they ever meet again; and how?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<h4>DEFEAT.</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4"> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "Art thou then desolate</span>
+<span class="i2">Of friends, of hopes forsaken? Come to me!</span>
+<span class="i2">I am thine own. Have trusted hearts proved false?</span></div></div>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">Why didst thou ever leave me? Know'st thou all</span>
+<span class="i2">I would have borne, and called it joy to bear,</span>
+<span class="i2">For thy sake? Know'st thou that thy voice hath power</span>
+<span class="i2">To shake me with a thrill of happiness</span>
+<span class="i2">By one kind tone?&mdash;to fill mine eyes with tears</span>
+<span class="i2">Of yearning love? And thou&mdash;Oh! thou didst throw</span>
+<span class="i2">That crushed affection back upon my heart.</span>
+<span class="i2">Yet come to me!"</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4"> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "'Tis he&mdash;what doth he here!"</span>
+<span class="i20"><span class="smcap">Lara.</span></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>The great bell rang out at the lodge gate, and Charles Linchmore dashed
+up to the Hall almost as hastily as he had left it, and with scarce a
+word of greeting to the old butler, whom he passed on his way to the
+drawing-room, and never staying to change his dress, he strode on,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span> all
+flushed and heated as he was, with his hurried journey and desperate
+thoughts, until he stood face to face with Mrs. Linchmore.</p>
+
+<p>"Why Charles!" exclaimed she, "what on earth has happened? What is the
+matter?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing," he replied. "Where's Frances?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing," she rejoined, indignantly, "to come into the room in such a
+plight as this! Look at the splashed state of your boots; and then your
+face. No one can look at that and not suspect something dreadful having
+happened. <i>I</i> never saw anything so changed and altered as it is."</p>
+
+<p>"I dare say. I don't much care."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you mad? Where have you been?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nowhere. Where's Frances?" he asked again.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know. But I advise you to make yourself a little more
+presentable before you seek her. These freaks&mdash;<i>mad</i> freaks of riding
+half over the country, no one knows where, are not agreeable to those
+you come in contact with after<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>wards," and Mrs. Linchmore pushed her
+chair further away from him, and smoothed the rich folds of her dress,
+as though the act of doing that would soothe her ruffled temper.</p>
+
+<p>"It <i>was</i> a mad freak," replied he, and without waiting for another
+word, or tendering an apology for his disordered dress, he strode away
+again, with the full determination of finding Frances.</p>
+
+<p>Every room below stairs he searched, but in vain; she was nowhere, and
+driven reckless by the agony of his thoughts he went straight up to her
+own room, and opened the door.</p>
+
+<p>She was lying on the sofa, her eyes red and swollen with weeping,
+passionate, hopeless tears at the thought that long before now he and
+Amy had met, and he consequently lost to herself for ever.</p>
+
+<p>"Charles!" she exclaimed, springing off the sofa, her cheeks flushing
+hotly with surprise and pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>But another glance at his face, and her heart sank within her, for its
+expression almost terrified her.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He closed the door and came and stood opposite to where she was, looking
+as though he would have struck her.</p>
+
+<p>She quailed visibly before his menacing glance. Then resolutely regained
+the mastery over herself, and drawing up her figure proudly, she said,</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know this is my room? I wonder how you dare come here."</p>
+
+<p>"Your room? Well, what if it is, I care not," he replied. "I am reckless
+of everything."</p>
+
+<p>"But I am not; and&mdash;and," she hesitated, and tried again to steady her
+beating heart, "what&mdash;what has happened, Charles, that you look so
+strangely?"</p>
+
+<p>"Happened? Can you ask me what has happened, you who have wrecked the
+hopes of my whole life."</p>
+
+<p>"I, Charles? You talk in riddles; I do not understand you."</p>
+
+<p>"You dare not say that!" exclaimed he, hoarsely. "You know well that I
+loved her with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span> all my heart and soul, and you&mdash;you schemed to draw her
+from me. I would have laid down my life for her; and you guessed it, and
+told me she loved another, and, like a fool, I believed you. You have
+driven me to despair; her to a life-long living death; and this, all
+this, I have dared to come and tell you."</p>
+
+<p>"It was no lie. She never loved you!"</p>
+
+<p>"She did!" he cried, hotly; "I swear she did. I saw it; knew it but a
+few hours since."</p>
+
+<p>"You have seen her?" asked Frances.</p>
+
+<p>"Seen her! Yes; and I wish to God I had died before seeing her," and he
+clasped his hands over his damp brow in an agony of grief.</p>
+
+<p>"See," he said, presently, "are you not satisfied with my sufferings?
+Look here;" and he drew his hand across his forehead and temples, and
+showed the large drops that fell from them. "I loved her as my life. My
+life, do I say? She was more than life to me, and I have lost her; and
+this&mdash;this is your devil's work."</p>
+
+<p>"Lost her!" echoed Frances, inquiringly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He heeded her not; but walked the room with rapid strides, then
+gradually calmed again, and then again burst forth with the hopeless
+agony of his thoughts, as he recalled Amy's last words:</p>
+
+<p>"<i>It is too late, I am married.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"Aye," he said, despairingly, "too late to save us both; too late,
+indeed."</p>
+
+<p>Frances could not listen calmly, or see unmoved the strong man's agony;
+but she never once repented the evil she had wrought, but rather gloried
+at heart in having so successfully separated him and Amy; and the more
+so now, because she saw how madly he loved her. She waited quietly,
+almost afraid to speak, until the paroxysm of grief had exhausted
+itself. Then she said, timidly,</p>
+
+<p>"Too late, Charles. Did you say too late?"</p>
+
+<p>But her words roused him to fury again.</p>
+
+<p>"I did," he cried; "I said too late; God knows I was too late. A day,
+only a day earlier, and I should have been in time to save her!"</p>
+
+<p>"To save Miss Neville? And from what?" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"From what?" he cried; "you are not satisfied with my sufferings, then?
+but would drain the last bitter drop of agony in my cup&mdash;the telling;
+the naming&mdash;Oh, God! She is married!"</p>
+
+<p>Married! Frances was not prepared for this. A mist swam before her eyes;
+a sudden faintness seized her, and she clung to the back of the sofa for
+support.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, married!" he cried, fiercely seizing her arm. "You would have me
+tell you, and you shall hear it too, and remember it to your dying day;
+and I&mdash;I saw her only an hour after she was lost to me for ever."</p>
+
+<p>But Frances' tongue was stayed, and she never answered one word.</p>
+
+<p>"You have driven me mad," he continued savagely, "and it is a mercy you
+have not a murder on your soul, for, by Heaven, I was tempted more than
+once to take my life on my road down here? Do you hear?" he cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Charles! don't, don't talk so wildly: you will kill me!" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Kill you! No, I don't wish to do that; I'll only wish you half the
+misery you have caused me, and that shall be your punishment and my
+revenge."</p>
+
+<p>And then he turned to leave her; but Frances sprang forward and stopped
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not go away like that, Charles. Do not go, leaving almost a curse
+behind you. I have not been guilty of half the wickedness you accuse me
+of. I did say Miss Neville did not love you; but&mdash;but I believed it."</p>
+
+<p>"You did not," he cried. "You hated and then you slandered her."</p>
+
+<p>"And if I did, it was your fault; yours, for you taught me to love you."</p>
+
+<p>"You love me! It is like the rest false, and a flimsy attempt to
+palliate your wickedness."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no; it is true. I have loved you for years past," exclaimed
+Frances, sinking on her knees, and hiding her face, "and&mdash;and I thought
+you loved me, too, until <i>she</i> came and took your love away; and then I
+hated her&mdash;yes, words<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span> cannot tell how much I hated her. What had I in
+life worth living for when your love was gone? and I thought if I could
+only take her away from you, your heart would come back to me again. If
+you have suffered, what have not I? and she never could have loved you
+to have married another. Oh! forgive me, Charles, forgive me! and
+don't&mdash;don't hate me."</p>
+
+<p>"Forgive you!" he replied. "No; years hence, when we meet again, I may,
+but not now."</p>
+
+<p>"Years hence? Are you going away, then? Oh! you cannot be so cruel!"</p>
+
+<p>"In another month I shall leave England, perhaps for ever,&mdash;a
+broken-hearted wretch, with an aimless, hopeless existence. All this you
+have driven me to, and yet you ask me to forgive you. For her
+sake&mdash;hers, of whom I dare not trust myself to speak&mdash;I will not, cannot
+forgive you!"</p>
+
+<p>The bitterness of his grief was over; the first burst was past; and he
+spoke calmer now, although his every word, the tone even of his voice,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
+sank like ice into Frances' soul, convincing her how hopelessly she
+loved.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! say not so, Charles," she cried, "or you will crush me utterly.
+See,&mdash;see how I must love you to kneel here, and to humble my pride so
+entirely as to tell you I&mdash;I love you."</p>
+
+<p>"Love! Does love break the heart of the loved one as you have broken
+mine? Call you such a deadly feeling as this, love? Say, rather, that
+you hate me."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no; never! Whatever you do, whatever you say, I shall love you
+still,&mdash;love you for ever!"</p>
+
+<p>"Give me your hate," he replied, "I would rather have that."</p>
+
+<p>But Frances only answered by sobs and wringing her hands.</p>
+
+<p>"If," he continued, "you have wrecked my happiness and hers through love
+of me, I wish to God you had hated me!"</p>
+
+<p>"I could not," sobbed Frances, utterly overcome. "You&mdash;you won my love
+two years ago. Yes! you loved me then." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Never!" he cried vehemently, almost savagely. "Never! I swear it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Cruel!" murmured Frances.</p>
+
+<p>"Cruel? Yes; what else do you deserve? Had you never told me that
+falsehood&mdash;never deceived me I&mdash;I might; but it is too late&mdash;all too
+late. And yet how I love her, love her to madness, and she the&mdash;the wife
+of another!" and he groaned and clenched his hands together, until the
+nails seemed buried in the very flesh, in utter anguish at the thought.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't talk of her so, Charles, you will break my heart. Have some
+pity."</p>
+
+<p>"Pity! I have none. What had you for either her or me. I tell you I have
+no mercy, no pity, only scorn and&mdash;and&mdash;" he would have said hate, but
+somehow the word would not come to his lips, as he looked at the bent,
+bowed figure kneeling so humbly before him.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! don't go! don't go, Charles. Say one, only one kind word," cried
+Frances, imploringly, as he turned again to leave her.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Don't ask me," he replied, "for I have none to give. Don't ask me, lest
+I say more than I have done. Pray God that he will change your
+revengeful, cruel heart. I pray that we may never meet again."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my God, he's gone!" moaned Frances, as the door closed upon him,
+"and not one kind word, not one. Oh! I have not deserved it! indeed I
+haven't," and burying her face in the sofa cushion, she burst into a
+fresh passion of hopeless, despairing tears.</p>
+
+<p>After a few moments she raised her head again and sobbed and moaned
+afresh, as she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"He was cruel to the last, and all through her. Oh! I will hate her
+tenfold for this, and work her more misery if I can. I will never repent
+what I have done. Never! but will make her suffer more frightfully,
+if&mdash;if possible, than this!"</p>
+
+<p>She tossed back her hair, and almost for the moment regained her former
+proud bearing; for,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span> strange and unnatural as it may seem, this
+desperate resolve of making Amy, if she could, more wretched than she
+had already, soothed and calmed for a time the hopeless nature of her
+thoughts, and was the one hope that supported her through the long,
+terrible hours of the night that followed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<h4>AMY'S COURAGE FAILS HER.</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"New joys, new virtues with that happy birth</span>
+<span class="i2">Are born, and with the growing infant grow.</span>
+<span class="i2">Source of our purest happiness below</span>
+<span class="i2">Is that benignant law, which hath entwined</span>
+<span class="i2">Dearest delight with strongest duty, so</span>
+<span class="i2">That in the healthy heart and righteous mind</span>
+<span class="i2">Even they co-exist, inseparably combined.</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">Oh! bliss for them when in that infant face</span>
+<span class="i2">They now the unfolding faculties descry,</span>
+<span class="i2">And fondly gazing, trace&mdash;or think they trace</span>
+<span class="i2">The first faint speculation in that eye,</span>
+<span class="i2">Which hitherto hath rolled in vacancy;</span>
+<span class="i2">Oh! bliss in that soft countenance to seek</span>
+<span class="i2">Some mark of recognition, and espy</span>
+<span class="i2">The quiet smile which in the innocent cheek</span>
+<span class="i2">Of kindness and of kind its consciousness doth speak!"</span>
+<span class="i20"><span class="smcap">Southey.</span></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Time passed rapidly onwards; heedless, in its flight, of bruised hearts
+or desolate homes, but ruthlessly brushing past, hurrying on far away
+with careless front and iron tread; perhaps ere he came round again
+those hearts would be healed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span> and those homes joyous again. Such things
+happen every day, and well for us that it is so.</p>
+
+<p>The first year of Amy's married life passed quietly by; just as the
+second dawned her son was born, but ere the third came to its close, her
+mother faded with the dying year.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Neville had been so much better during the first year of their
+sojourn abroad, so almost well again, that, as her last illness drew on,
+Amy, who had seen her almost as weak at Ashleigh, could not believe that
+she would not recover, and wilfully shut her eyes to what to others was
+so apparent, that this was a weakness even unto death. And so it was.
+Mrs. Neville died, and for a time Amy was inconsolable; even her baby's
+caresses failed to cheer and rouse her heart.</p>
+
+<p>Her husband returned with her to England. Amy wept bitterly as she stood
+in that home, where so often she had so fondly hoped to have welcomed
+her mother.</p>
+
+<p>Many changes had occurred during Amy's absence.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Anne Bennet had married and was now living steadily enough&mdash;so she
+said&mdash;with her husband at his old curacy, not many miles distant from
+Brampton.</p>
+
+<p>Charles Linchmore, after his sad meeting with Amy, had returned for one
+night to the Park, and after his stormy interview with Frances, had,
+much to the astonishment of his brother and every one else but Anne,
+exchanged and gone abroad.</p>
+
+<p>Frances was still unmarried, perhaps still plotting on and waiting for
+one whose heart could now only be filled with anger and hatred towards
+her. But what woman does not hope? Perhaps she hoped still.</p>
+
+<p>A new governess reigned at Brampton in Amy's stead; the third since she
+had left. Surely there was some mismanagement somewhere? or Mrs.
+Linchmore had grown more exacting and overbearing; more dissatisfied
+with the means taken to please her?</p>
+
+<p>Little Sarah was away in London at school;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span> while old Hannah reigned
+supreme as head nurse to the youthful heir.</p>
+
+<p>Amy was happy, notwithstanding the remembrance that like a dim,
+indistinct shadow flitted across her of that first sad love. Was <i>he</i>
+happy? and what had become of him? these were questions sometimes in her
+thoughts, although her heart was with her husband, who loved his fair
+young wife with all his heart, even more dearly than when first they
+married; while as yet nothing had occurred to check that love.</p>
+
+<p>Robert Vavasour had been absent from his home a fortnight. It was the
+evening of his return to Somerton.</p>
+
+<p>Amy drew a low chair close to her husband by the fireside as she said,
+"How glad I am to have you back again; I have missed you so much, and
+felt quite lonely, even with little Bertie."</p>
+
+<p>Robert looked down fondly in his wife's face. It was pleasant to know
+that his coming had given pleasure to her he loved.</p>
+
+<p>"And how was dear Sarah," she asked. "Did<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span> she look quite well and
+happy? Quite contented with school? Pray give me all the news you have,
+to tell."</p>
+
+<p>"And that will be little enough," he replied. "As to Sarah she looked the
+picture of health, and gave me no end of messages for you; but I am
+afraid I have forgotten them all; my memory fails me completely now I
+have you at my side."</p>
+
+<p>"Well I hope you have not forgotten the present for Bertie: his little
+tongue has talked of nothing else all day."</p>
+
+<p>"I know I did not forget my little wife," he said, as taking a ring from
+his pocket he placed it on her finger.</p>
+
+<p>"You are always good and kind," she replied, "always thinking of me."</p>
+
+<p>"Always, Amy."</p>
+
+<p>"And now do tell me all you have been doing this long time, and where
+you went, and whom you saw. Surely you must have some adventures worth
+relating?" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"No, none. I went simply nowhere; London is chill enough in November,
+and even had it been otherwise the charm was wanting to induce me to go
+out. I saw few people I knew; but I met some old friends of yours,
+yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes?" said Amy, inquiringly.</p>
+
+<p>"Can you not guess who?"</p>
+
+<p>Amy's heart whispered the Linchmore's; but refused to say so.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you no curiosity?" he asked, "I thought you were all anxiety a
+moment ago."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I shall not guess," replied his wife. "You must tell me."</p>
+
+<p>"Must!" he laughed. "And suppose I refuse. What then?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will not," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a tyrant, Amy. It was the Linchmores. I met him accidentally at
+the door of the club."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! you went to the Club. You never told me that," was all she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Neither have you told me how many times<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span> you have been into the nursery
+to see Bertie since I have been away."</p>
+
+<p>"The cases are totally dissimilar," laughed Amy. "But what did Mr.
+Linchmore say? Was he glad to see you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes: and took me home to dine with his wife."</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Linchmore! How is she."</p>
+
+<p>"Much the same as ever; just as haughty and hard-looking."</p>
+
+<p>"Hard-looking? I never thought her that."</p>
+
+<p>"My wife always has a pleasant thought for everybody," returned Vavasour
+proudly; "but beautiful as Mrs. Linchmore undoubtedly is, there is a
+great want of softness in the expression of her face."</p>
+
+<p>"She treated me well, and I had no reason to&mdash;to find fault with her."
+There was a little hesitation, as if the heart did not quite keep pace
+with the words. Perhaps her husband noticed it, for he looked away ere
+he spoke again, as if not quite sure that what he had to say next would
+please her.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I am glad it was so, as Linchmore asked us to go and stay at Brampton
+for a time."</p>
+
+<p>Amy started visibly.</p>
+
+<p>"But you refused," she said hastily.</p>
+
+<p>"I did at first, but he would take no refusal."</p>
+
+<p>"You did not promise to go, Robert? Oh, I hope you did not!"</p>
+
+<p>"I could not well refuse. Nay, do not look so sad, Amy; rather than
+that, you shall write a refusal at once. We will not go, dearest."</p>
+
+<p>And Amy would have given worlds not to; but did not like giving an
+untruthful reason as the motive for staying away; still, how else could
+she shape her refusal, or excuse herself to her husband. She dared not
+tell him that revisiting old scenes, the old familiar walk and rooms,
+would recall by-gone memories afresh in her heart&mdash;another's words!
+another's looks! No, she could not tell him that; yet as she sat with
+her hand in his and looked into his face how she longed to open her
+heart and tell him all! all of that bitter, never-to-be-forgotten past.
+And yet she reasoned again<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span> as she had reasoned once before, against the
+whisper of her heart, and her mother's better judgment, that it could do
+no good, but only pain and grieve her husband to think that she, his
+wife, had ever cared for, or even thought of another; and she sighed as
+these sad recollections one by one came into her heart.</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you sigh Amy?" asked her husband.</p>
+
+<p>Alas! the question came too late; her resolve had been made and taken.
+She sat silent, though she would have given worlds to have been able to
+throw her arms round his neck and tell him all.</p>
+
+<p>Robert drew her fondly and tenderly towards him. "As my wife, Amy," he
+said, "none shall ever dare whisper a word or even breathe a thought
+that can reflect upon your former life at Brampton. Have no fear, little
+one, but trust in me."</p>
+
+<p>He had misinterpreted her silence, and thought the repugnance she felt
+at going back to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span> Brampton was caused by pride. Well, perhaps it was
+best so.</p>
+
+<p>"We will go, Robert," she whispered tremblingly, while the words she
+ought to have spoken remained unsaid, and with her husband and little
+Bertie she went to Brampton, simply because she saw no help for it.</p>
+
+<p>It was one of those things that must be, and she nerved her heart to
+brave it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<h4>THE FIRST DOUBT.</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"And the strange inborn sense of coming ill</span>
+<span class="i2">That ofttimes whispers to the haunted breast,</span>
+<span class="i2">In a low tone which naught can drown or still;</span>
+<span class="i2">Midst feasts and melodies a secret guest:</span>
+<span class="i2">Whence doth that murmur wake, that shadow fall?</span>
+<span class="i2">Why shakes the spirit thus?"</span>
+<span class="i20"><span class="smcap">Mrs. Hemans.</span></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>With a faint shadow of some coming evil, a dull foreboding at her heart,
+Amy once again found herself driving up the long avenue of Brampton
+Park.</p>
+
+<p>How things had changed since first as a timid, shrinking girl, she had
+entered its gates! How her heart had throbbed and beaten since then!
+been tried and strained to its very utmost. How much she had suffered;
+how much rebelled and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span> murmured at. Involuntarily she drew closer to her
+husband, as she felt how near and dear she was to his heart: surely,
+with his strong hand to protect and guide, his loving heart to shield
+her, what had she to fear?</p>
+
+<p>Amy half expected to see the children as of old on the terrace
+impatiently waiting to embrace her as she stepped from the carriage; but
+no, only the old butler bowed, and seemed glad to see her, as she
+exchanged a few words with him, ere he ushered her with becoming
+ceremony into the drawing-room, where Mrs. Linchmore at once advanced to
+greet her, and for the first time in her life, much to Amy's
+astonishment, kissed her; but then she was no longer Miss Neville, but
+Mrs. Vavasour. Ah! things had changed indeed.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Linchmore was as friendly and courteous as ever, with the same
+honest welcome as of old; yet Amy thought him changed, but could not
+quite see wherein the change lay. His hair was becoming slightly tinged
+with grey, but that could not make the alteration she fancied she had
+dis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>covered; then he was surely graver and quieter as he handed her
+into dinner, more silent and reserved; while Mrs. Linchmore, if any
+thing, was more animated, more beautiful than ever; and she watched for
+the hard look Robert Vavasour had spoken of, but in vain; it was not
+there, could not be; while her face was so filled with smiles and good
+humour.</p>
+
+<p>Again Amy glanced at Mr. Linchmore. Surely her husband had made a
+mistake; for there the hard look was gravely stamped on each feature,
+and Amy sighed as she saw it, and wondered how the change had been
+wrought.</p>
+
+<p>Amy saw nothing of the children all that evening; the next morning she
+went to the school-room to see them.</p>
+
+<p>Away down the long corridor, past the very window where she had stood
+long ago with Charles Linchmore. Did she think of that now? or of the
+events that followed quick and fast upon it; or recall to mind the dark
+form of Frances Strickland, halting on the very ground she now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span> stood
+on, then fading away, not softly and slowly but fiercely and hurriedly,
+in the distance&mdash;leaving a strange fear at her heart, only too well
+realised in the past events of her life. If Amy remembered all this, she
+never stayed her footsteps, but passed quickly on through the baize
+door, and in another moment the children's arms were about her neck,
+their kisses on her face; while Miss Barker, the new governess, rose in
+stately horror at this infringement of her rules.</p>
+
+<p>"Really young ladies, your reception of Mrs. Vavasour is boisterous in
+the extreme. Allow me, Madam, to apologise for my pupils."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! but this is Miss Neville, our dear Miss Neville!" cried Fanny, then
+catching Miss Barker's still more frigid look, hung her head and dropped
+her hands she was in the act of clapping with delight, to her side.</p>
+
+<p>"We are old friends," said Amy, smiling: "very old friends, pray do not
+check them, I am so glad to see they have not forgotten me; and allow me
+to apologise in my turn for the inter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>ruption in their studies my
+sudden entrance has occasioned."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barker smiled complacently. "Will you not be seated?" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you. I have come to ask, with Mrs. Linchmore's sanction, for a
+holiday."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barker's brow clouded again.</p>
+
+<p>"I scarcely know what to say to this request, which has come on rather
+an unfortunate day. Fanny has not, as yet, been able to darn her torn
+dress in a satisfactory manner; Alice cannot make her sum prove; and
+Edith has mislaid her thimble&mdash;carelessness and untidiness combined."</p>
+
+<p>Each child looked down guiltily, as her shortcoming was being told in a
+grave voice; while Amy felt inclined to smile at the frigid tone,
+evidently freezing each little warm heart; but Miss Barker's look
+forbade even a smile or word, and a dead silence followed.</p>
+
+<p>"In the hope," continued she, presently, "that you will all try and do
+better to-morrow, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span> will accede to your Mamma's request. Put away your
+books, young ladies."</p>
+
+<p>They all rose slowly, very differently from their quick, joyous manner
+in Amy's time, cleared the table, then returned; and, notwithstanding
+Miss Barker's frowns, stationed themselves close to their old friend.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is a chair for you, Edith; pray recollect that stoop in your
+shoulders I am so frequently reminding you of; Alice, my love, try and
+sit still without that perpetual fidget; Fanny, I am sure Mrs. Vavasour
+would rather you came a little further away; there is no need for you to
+stand; here are plenty of chairs in the room."</p>
+
+<p>Amy grew wearied with her slow, methodical manner, and finding-fault
+tone, never raised or lowered in the slightest. It was a relief when she
+went away, and left Amy to talk to the children as she would, without
+feeling that a pair of small grey eyes were disagreeably fixed on her
+face.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as she was gone, Alice climbed off the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span> stiff high-backed chair,
+where she had been perched, and settled herself quietly on Amy's lap;
+Edith with a great sigh of relief from the depths of her heart, knelt,
+regardless of the poor shoulders, on one side; while Fanny flew to the
+other, exclaiming, "Oh! isn't she disagreeable, Miss Neville?"</p>
+
+<p>Amy could not conscientiously answer no, so evaded a direct reply, and
+merely said, "I am no longer Miss Neville, Fanny, you must try and call
+me Mrs. Vavasour."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, so we have, all the time you've been away; but now you've come
+again it's so natural to say Miss Neville."</p>
+
+<p>"And," said Edith, "we think of you so often, and always wish you back
+again."</p>
+
+<p>Then they talked away of old times, until Amy's heart grew sad. "Let us
+go and see Bertie," she said.</p>
+
+<p>Away went the children, with something of the spirit of by-gone days. It
+was well for them they did not stumble upon Miss Barker, as they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span> danced
+along the passage; or sad indeed would have been the result of the
+expedition.</p>
+
+<p>Bertie was astonished at seeing so many new faces, and hid himself shyly
+beneath Hannah's apron, from whence at first, he refused to be coaxed or
+tormented; but by-and-by a small curly head and bright eyes peeped
+forth, and at length he surrendered at discretion to little Alice, as
+being the least formidable of the invaders.</p>
+
+<p>How he prattled away! while his tiny feet seemed never weary of running
+to and fro to fetch toys for his new friends' inspection. Amy was soon
+quite overlooked, and Hannah's existence forgotten altogether, until
+suddenly reminded it was time for his morning's nap; when,
+notwithstanding a determined resistance on his part, he was eventually
+overpowered and carried off to bed, with a promise of having a romp with
+the children some other day.</p>
+
+<p>Hannah had suddenly become within the last few days wonderfully
+dignified. The moment she entered the house where her young mistress<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
+had lived as a dependant, she thought in her heart that most likely the
+servants would be looking down upon them, or setting themselves up in
+consequence; so she determined upon giving herself airs, if nobody else
+did, and assumed at once a reserve and stateliness quite foreign to her
+nature; but which, nevertheless, fitted admirably to the tall, portly
+figure; gaining Mrs. Hopkins' confidence, and setting Mason's airs at
+defiance, while it won for her the respect of the other servants, who
+never ventured upon a word in her presence, even of disparagement
+against Miss Barker, whom they all cordially disliked.</p>
+
+<p>It was strange what bad odour the latter stood in, trying as she did her
+utmost to make herself agreeable to all parties. Her appearance was
+certainly against her, her face at first sight being anything but a
+prepossessing one. One felt a strange dislike at making her
+acquaintance, which dislike was scarcely lessened upon a more intimate
+knowledge of her. Then her tall, freezing looking form was as little
+ingratiating to the eye,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span> as the fawning, wiry voice was to the heart
+and Mason had been heard to say, that of the two, Miss Neville, even
+with all her "stuck up" airs, was twice the lady; but the lady's maid
+distrusted the tongue that flattered her mistress more boldly and
+cunningly than she did; while Mrs. Linchmore, although she smiled
+blandly enough, and took little or no notice of the flattery, was
+sensible of a feeling of relief when the stiff, starched form was no
+longer present.</p>
+
+<p>Hannah made her acquaintance one morning on the lawn, and was no little
+astonished at the tight corkscrew curls tucked under the bonnet, and the
+prim, patronising tone with which the governess addressed her; but nurse
+did not belong to the house; there was no occasion to conciliate her.
+Evidently Miss Barker was no admirer of young children, for as little
+Bertie ran up to Alice, she exclaimed, "Dear me, what a fat child!"</p>
+
+<p>Hannah looked at her for a moment with indignation, and replied, "fat,
+yes, Ma'am,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span> Master Bertie, thank God, is <i>fat</i>," and then added, in an
+under tone, loud enough to be heard, "It's just as well if some others
+were as fat!" and viewed, as she turned away, the lady's thin, spare
+form with utter disgust.</p>
+
+<p>Amy and her husband were the only visitors at Brampton, yet no one
+seemed dull. Amy could never be dull with her child, and Mrs. Linchmore
+appeared ever happy and contented.</p>
+
+<p>They were good musicians, both Mrs. Linchmore and her guest; the former
+excelled in playing, the latter in singing. Amy's voice was sweet and
+musical, not wanting in power&mdash;one of those voices so charming to the
+senses, claiming the attention of every hearer, thrilling through the
+heart with wonderful pathos, leaving pleasing memories behind, or else
+the eyes filled with tears, as some mournful notes stir the soul with
+long forgotten memories.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Linchmore's voice was at times too powerful, grating harshly on the
+ear; she dashed at the notes in the quick parts, and handled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span> them too
+roughly and rapidly; there was a want of feeling pervading the whole,
+which made one feel glad when the voice ceased, and the fingers alone
+glided softly over the keys. It was marvellous how fast they flew; while
+the notes sounded clearly and distinctly, like the tinkling of bells.
+Now the tune swelled loud and strong; then appeared to die faintly away
+under the light touch of those wonderful fingers. Mrs. Linchmore knew
+she played well, however much Amy excelled her in singing, and would sit
+down after one of the latter's songs, and enchant her listeners with
+some soft, beautiful air, played to perfection; then would come a song,
+and after that another piece, short, but more silvery sounding than the
+first, while Amy's voice was well-nigh forgotten, and Mrs. Linchmore,
+with her beautiful smiling face and pleasant words, was considered the
+musician of the evening, and had all due homage awarded her. As it was
+in music, so it was in everything else, Mrs. Linchmore took by right of
+"tact" what Amy ought to have laid claim to,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span> but then, one was a woman
+of the world, the other only just entering it. Amy wanted confidence;
+Mrs. Linchmore none.</p>
+
+<p>As the days grew shorter still, Robert Vavasour whiled away the long
+evenings by again, as of old, playing at chess with his hostess, while
+Amy, who did not understand the game, sat and talked or sang to Mr.
+Linchmore; at other times she grew weary of those long games, so
+entirely engrossing her husband's attention, and brought her work or a
+book, and drawing a chair close by, watched the progress of the play.</p>
+
+<p>By degrees the players themselves claimed her attention; how deeply
+interested they seemed! how intent on the pieces! Amy, as she plied her
+needle diligently at the work in her lap, was constantly looking at Mrs.
+Linchmore. How often her dark eyes flashed across the board in her
+adversary's face, and when the game was at an end how she laughed and
+talked, and how the rings sparkled on her white hands, as she
+re-arranged the pieces again in their places. Amy thought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span> she wore too
+many rings: they certainly danced and flashed in the lamp light, and
+dazzled her so that she felt quite fascinated, and wondered what Robert
+thought, and whether he admired her, or saw still the hard look. Amy
+half wished he did, or that she possessed only a quarter of the power
+Mrs. Linchmore seemed to have of pleasing him. Perhaps he had found his
+evenings dull with only his wife to talk or read to. Why had he not told
+her he was so fond of chess? she might have learnt it; yes, she would
+learn it; and again Amy glanced at the board to watch the pieces and try
+and make out how they moved; then tired of looking, her attention would
+be once more riveted on Mrs. Linchmore, and with a dissatisfied sigh she
+wished herself back at Somerton.</p>
+
+<p>Thus came the first doubt to the young wife's heart; yet scarcely known
+to her, save for a strange cold feeling stirring sometimes within.</p>
+
+<p>Anne rode over one day to Brampton, and the flying visit of her old
+friend did Amy good: marriage seemed in no way to have altered her, she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
+was just as merry-laughing and joking in much the same style as ever.
+Her husband was as proud of her as he well could be, rebuking her at
+times, not with words, but a look, when he thought her spirits were
+carrying her a little too far, while Anne appeared to look up and
+reverence him in all things, being checked in a moment by his grave
+face.</p>
+
+<p>The morning passed pleasantly. As Anne rose to go she said, "Tell
+Isabella I am sorry to have missed seeing her, although I should have
+been more sorry had you been absent, as my visit, strictly speaking, was
+to you, in fact for you alone."</p>
+
+<p>"I will give the first part of the message," replied Amy laughing, "and
+bury the other half in my heart, as it would be but a poor compliment
+repeated. Why not remain to luncheon; I expect Mrs. Linchmore home very
+shortly, she has driven into Standale."</p>
+
+<p>"Standale! I thought she hated the place."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span></p><p>"The place, yes; but not the station."</p>
+
+<p>"What on earth has taken her there?"</p>
+
+<p>"To meet a friend."</p>
+
+<p>"Man or woman?" laughed Anne.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed I never asked," replied Amy. "It was quite by accident I heard
+her say that unless Mr. Linchmore made haste she would not arrive in
+time to meet the train."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! then he has gone too. Depend upon it, it's some old 'fogy' or
+another; Miss Tremlow, perhaps, with her carpet bag stuffed full of
+yellow pocket handkerchiefs; you know," continued she, mimicking that
+lady's tone and manner, "this is such a damp place, and the rheumatics
+are worse than ever."</p>
+
+<p>As Anne rode away Amy remained at the window with little Bertie, who had
+been brought down for inspection and approval, and duly admired and
+caressed.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish Anne had been going to remain, Robert," said Amy, "she is so
+pleasant."</p>
+
+<p>"She is all very well for a short time," he replied, "but really her
+tongue, to use rather a worn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span> out simile, is like the clapper of a bell;
+always ringing."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think she talks too much?"</p>
+
+<p>"Most decidedly I do."</p>
+
+<p>"But you do not admire a silent woman," said Amy drawing near the fire,
+and placing Bertie on the hearth rug.</p>
+
+<p>"More so than a very talkative one; but there is such a thing as a happy
+medium."</p>
+
+<p>Amy sighed. "I wish we were back at Somerton," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Is my wife home-sick already? Would she not find it dull after
+Brampton?"</p>
+
+<p>"I could not find it dull. Should I not have you&mdash;" she would have said
+all to myself, but checked herself and added&mdash;"you and Bertie."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not have left out, Bertie?" he replied, "I shall grow jealous of
+that boy, Amy, if you always class us together. Can you not forget him
+sometimes?"</p>
+
+<p>"Forget him? Oh! no, never!" said Amy, catching up the child, who
+immediately climbed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span> from his mother's arms on to Robert's knee and
+remained there; while his father, notwithstanding his jealousy, glanced
+proudly at his boy, and caressed both him and his mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! you are just as fond of Bertie as I am," she said, as her husband
+drew her to his side.</p>
+
+<p>But even as she spoke she became conscious of a shadow between her and
+the light which streamed in through the large bay window of the
+dining-room; while Vavasour rose and held out his hand saying
+apologetically, "We did not hear the carriage drive up."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I could hardly expect you would, with so much to interest you
+within doors."</p>
+
+<p>Amy arose quickly as the voice struck her ear.</p>
+
+<p>"Frances! Miss Strickland!" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, the same. You look surprised. Did you not expect me?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," replied Amy, shortly.</p>
+
+<p>"It is quite an unexpected pleasure, and has surprised us both,"
+returned Robert, as he noticed his wife's unusual manner.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"It is my fault. I told Isabella not to mention I was coming," returned
+she. "Perhaps I wanted to see if you would be pleased, or recognise me;
+every one says I am so very much altered."</p>
+
+<p>"I see no difference," replied Amy, as Frances glanced straight at her.</p>
+
+<p>"There is none," she answered, and the tone went to Amy's heart with a
+nervous thrill. "And so this is your boy. What is he called?"</p>
+
+<p>"Robert," answered Amy, feeling for the first time a strange dislike at
+saying his pet name. But her husband was not so scrupulous.</p>
+
+<p>"We call him Bertie," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"And so will I. Come and make friends, Bertie. What lovely hair he has,
+so soft and curly. I suppose,&mdash;indeed I can see,&mdash;you are quite proud of
+the boy, Mr. Vavasour."</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Vavasour is, if I am not."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course. All mothers are of their first-born. Do not go so near the
+fire, Bertie. You make me tremble lest anything should befall you." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>What could happen to the child? Amy drew him further away still, then
+took him in her arms as if only there he was safe and shielded from all
+harm.</p>
+
+<p>When Frances left the room Amy sighed more deeply than before, yet
+scarcely knew why she felt so low and sad, or why Frances' appearance
+should have brought with it a nervous dread; save that in that long-ago
+time, which she had tried to bury and forget, Frances had been her
+bitterest enemy, and she could not but feel that her coming now was
+disagreeable to her, nay more, caused a sudden, nameless fear to arise
+in her heart; and now although Frances' words were friendly, yet Amy
+detected, or fancied she did&mdash;a lurking sarcasm in their tone.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish we were back at Somerton, Robert," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Again!" exclaimed Robert, "now Amy, you deserve to be scolded for this.
+What an impatient little woman you are! Shall we not be home in a
+month?" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Ah! in a month;" sighed Amy again, as she drew her child nearer to her
+heart, while her heart whispered, "Can anything happen in a month?" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<h4>GOING FOR THE DOCTOR.</h4>
+
+<blockquote><p>"In God's name, then, take your own way," said Christian; "and, for
+my sake, let never man hereafter limit a woman in the use of her
+tongue; since he must make it amply up to her, in allowing her the
+privilege of her own will. Who would have thought it?"</p>
+
+<p style='text-align: right'><span class="smcap">Peveril of the Peak.</span></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<p>Three years and more have passed away since we left Matthew the pikeman
+counting the stones in Goody Grey's box. Many changes have occurred
+since then, the greatest of all has fallen on his own cottage&mdash;Matthew
+has grown a sober man.</p>
+
+<p>But we must go back a little.</p>
+
+<p>We left Jane closing the cottage door, after the singular meeting that
+had taken place between her and Goody Grey, on Marks telling the latter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
+of his sister-in-law's extraordinary fainting fit. When he and his wife
+returned to the cottage, Jane was carried up to bed, apparently too weak
+to be able to sit up, and there she remained for several weeks, more
+crazed than ever to Matthew's fancy, frightening him out of his wits at
+times, lest his wife should find out anything about the charm, and
+attribute, as he did, his sister-in-law's illness to it. One night his
+fears grew to such a pitch, he went and buried the box in the garden,
+and waited events in an easier frame of mind. Days passed, and at length
+Jane grew better, but strenuously refused to leave her room, and go
+below. In vain Mrs. Marks remonstrated, in vain she stormed, Jane was
+not to be persuaded, and at length was allowed to do as she pleased. But
+suddenly her illness took a turn; she crawled down stairs to dinner, and
+one day, to Matthew's intense disgust, resumed her old seat in the
+chimney corner.</p>
+
+<p>As the months rolled on the scrubbing and scouring within the cottage
+went on more mildly,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span> while Mrs. Marks' strong stout arm grew thinner
+and weaker; the brush fell less harshly and severely on the ear, as it
+rushed over the table; the high pattens clanked less loudly in the yard;
+while the voice grew less shrill, and was no longer heard in loud
+domineering tones. The change was gradual; Matthew did not notice it at
+first, until just a few weeks before Amy returned to Brampton with her
+husband; then the change was unmistakable, the scrubbing and scouring
+ceased altogether. Mrs. Marks gave in, and acknowledged she was ill.</p>
+
+<p>How Matthew's conscience smote him then! He knew he had never had the
+courage to face Goody Grey with the box still filled with the small
+gravel, as when she gave it him, neither had he dared throw the stones
+away, lest, in offending the giver, worse disasters would follow; and he
+was too superstitious to think Goody Grey would know nothing at all
+about it, and believe as he might tell her that he had done as she had
+directed. No; he was certain that one word of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span> distrust in his story,
+and he should break down altogether. He tried to reason with himself,
+and think that the tramping about in all weathers long ago had made his
+wife ill; but it would not do, his mind was not to be persuaded, and
+always reverted with increased dismay to the box, while his eye
+invariably rested upon its snug resting-place under the laurel, as he
+passed it on his way out to the gate. Many a time he determined upon
+digging up the box, and restoring it to its owner, just as it was: but
+when the time for action came, and he drew near the spot, his courage
+failed him, and he would pass on, cursing the hour when he had been
+tempted to ask the wise woman for the charm which he believed had done
+so much evil; while his fear of telling the secret in his tipsy
+unconsciousness had done what all Mrs. Marks' storming had failed to
+do&mdash;made him, for the time being, a sober man. He shunned the "Brampton
+Arms" as if the plague dwelt there, and sat in the chimney corner
+opposite Jane, gloomy, and fearful almost of his own<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span> shadow, while his
+sister-in-law's eyes seemed to pierce him through more keenly than ever.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Marks had steadily kept her promise, silently and secretly working
+with a will to seek out Hodge's son. Like most energetic women, a first
+failure did not daunt or dispirit her, it only roused her energies the
+more vigorously. She was not to be defeated. The more difficult of
+accomplishment the more determined was she, and in the end successful.
+She dodged Hodge's "wide-awake" friend, and found Tom; nay more, she
+spoke with him, tried to reclaim him; but there she failed&mdash;she was not
+the sort of woman to win him over. A kind word might have done much, but
+that, Mrs. Mark's heart had not for such a reprobate as he. She told him
+the truth, the plain hard truth, heaping maledictions on his head unless
+he gave up his evil ways, forsook his godless companions, and returned
+home. She used no persuasion, no entreaty. Had she spoken to him kindly
+of his mother, perhaps his heart might have softened; but Mrs. Marks'
+voice<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span> came loud and strong, words followed one another fast and
+indignantly, so that ere she had well-nigh exhausted all the scorn she
+had, his mind was made up, and he obstinately refused to return home,
+simply because she desired, nay, commanded him to do so. What! become
+the laughing-stock of the whole of Deane? be known and marked in the
+village as the vile sinner she denounced him to be? He laughed at her
+threats and taunts, and left her, feeling perhaps more hardened than
+ever.</p>
+
+<p>Matthew was not far wrong when he tried to persuade himself the walking
+about in all weathers&mdash;so mysterious to him&mdash;had ruined his wife's
+health. A pouring steady rain was falling the day of her interview with
+Hodge's son, but true to her purpose, she had walked for miles along a
+heavy road, and across still damper fields to find him; then, flushed
+and heated with her passionate words and subsequent defeat, had started
+back again through the same rain, and reached home thoroughly wet
+through; then came a violent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span> cold, and from that time her strength
+seemed to fail, although unacknowledged to herself, while her limbs lost
+their power, and pained her strangely; still she worked on, with the
+will to get well, but alas! the strength to do so was gone.</p>
+
+<p>She wrote to Mrs. Hodge advising her to have nothing further to do with
+such a good-for-nothing son, but forget him as fast as she could. Mrs.
+Marks' letter was not meant unkindly, but she never attempted to lessen
+Tom's fault or palliate his conduct; the truth stood out in all its
+glaring hideousness. Having no children herself, she knew nothing of a
+mother's strong, steadfast love. The knowledge that her son, her
+first-born, was with a gang of poachers who had wounded the Squire's
+visitor and killed one of the game watchers, threw dismay into the
+mother's heart and broke it. She died, begging her husband to still look
+for Tom, and reclaim him if possible&mdash;a promise her husband felt
+impossible of fulfilment, as he, like Mrs. Marks, thought badly of his
+son's heart.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Marks could scarcely move her limbs at all now, except to creep
+down the narrow stairs of a day into the small parlour, where she sat
+and scolded to her heart's content, Sarah, the girl who came as a help
+now the mistress was ill, following her every movement with her eyes, if
+she could not with her feet.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span></p><p>As her sister grew worse, Jane roused herself wonderfully, becoming as
+active as before she had been idle, and apparently as sane as she had
+been crazy; while as to Matthew, he turned into a model husband, helping
+in the work to be done as far as lay in his power, and nursing his sick
+wife with a tender solicitude quite foreign to his nature, while she
+grumbled at everything and everyone in turn, her eye, as I have said
+before, finding out their shortcomings in a moment, and denouncing them
+without mercy. But she was ill, must be ill to sit there so quietly and
+allow others to scrub down the table or be up to their elbows in the
+washing-tub; she deserved their pity and their silence, and they gave
+her both.</p>
+
+<p>"There, that will do," said she one day, as Matthew tried to settle the
+pillows more comfortably at her back. "I don't think it's near so easy
+like as it was before you touched it, but it wouldn't be you if you
+didn't want always to have a finger in the pie. Sarah, leave off that
+racket among the cups and saucers; what on earth are you at, girl? Are
+you trying to break them all? What are you after?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was a-dusting of the shelves, Mum," was the reply.</p>
+
+<p>"Fine dusting, upon my word, and with a corner of your apron, too; be
+off and fetch a cloth this moment, such slop-work as that'll never do
+here; let me catch you at it again, that's all, or that clatter of the
+crockery either, when my head aches and buzzes like as if a thousand
+mills was at work in it."</p>
+
+<p>"There, rest quiet, Missus," said Matthew; "it'll be all right
+by-and-bye."</p>
+
+<p>"That's as much as you know about it. I tell yer I never felt so bad,
+like, in all my life." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Ain't it most time to take the doctor's stuff?" suggested Matthew,
+meekly.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sick of the medicine, and the doctor too. What good has he done me?
+I should like to know. I can't walk no better than I could a month ago.
+My limbs is as stiff as ever, and just every bit as painful."</p>
+
+<p>"That comes of them mad walks yer took in all weathers; yer would tramp
+about, and it's been t' undoing of yer altogether."</p>
+
+<p>A torrent of words followed this, of which Matthew took no heed, until
+she leant back, apparently exhausted, saying, "I feel awful bad. I
+wonder whatever in the world ails me?"</p>
+
+<p>"How d'yer feel?" asked her husband, compassionately.</p>
+
+<p>"My head whizzes, and I'm all over in a cold sweat, like; only feel my
+hand, don't it burn like a live coal?"</p>
+
+<p>"It do seem as though it were afire," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Seem!" cried Mrs. Marks. "Is that all the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span> pity yer have in your heart
+for maybe your dying wife?"</p>
+
+<p>"Lord save us!" exclaimed Matthew. "I've been a deal worse myself, and
+got well again; don't be a frightening yourself in that way, or belike
+you'll think you've one foot in the grave."</p>
+
+<p>Then he poured some of the medicine in the glass, and held it towards
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," said he, "here's what'll make you think different, and send away
+the dismals."</p>
+
+<p>"I won't take none of it," she replied; "not one drop. It weren't given
+to me for the fiery pains I've got about me now."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Missus, come, don't'ee quarrel with the only thing that can do'ee
+good," said Matthew, coaxingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Do me good!" she exclaimed, with a sudden return of energy. "It's my
+belief yer trying to pisin me. Be off and fetch the doctor!"</p>
+
+<p>The doctor! Matthew stared in astonishment.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"What are you gaping at? Do you take me for a fool, or yourself, which?
+Be off, I tell yer, and don't let yer shadow darken this door again
+without him. Maybe he'll be able to say what's ailing me."</p>
+
+<p>Away went Matthew, in a ludicrous state of bewilderment. His wife must
+be bad indeed to send for the doctor; why he had never known her do such
+a thing since they married. What a trouble he had had only a few months
+ago to get her to see young Mr. Blane, and now she wanted him to come at
+once. Matthew began to think his wife was crazy, as well as Jane;
+perhaps she had sent him on a fool's errand. He insensibly slackened his
+steps as he neared the village, and bethought him what he should say, as
+he suddenly recollected he had received no instructions whatever.</p>
+
+<p>The more he thought the more perplexed he grew, and seeing some boys
+playing at marbles, Matthew drew near, and leaning against the railings,
+watched them, and turned over again in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span> his mind what he should say; but
+loiter as he would, he could think of nothing save his wife's angry
+face, as she had bade him begone; so, after a short delay, Matthew faced
+the danger by boldly ringing the surgery bell.</p>
+
+<p>"Is the Maister at home?" asked he, fervently wishing he might be miles
+away.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, Mr. Blane was in, and Marks followed the boy sorrowfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Good morning, Mr. Marks. Come for some medicine? Where's the bottle?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, thank'ee, Sir," said Matthew, twirling his hat about uncomfortably.
+"My wife's took worse, and wants to know if so be ye'd make it
+convenient to come and physic her?"</p>
+
+<p>Yes; Mr. Blane could go at once, having no other call upon his time just
+at present.</p>
+
+<p>"And what's the matter with Mrs. Marks?" asked he, when they were fairly
+on their way.</p>
+
+<p>"That's more nor I can tell, Sir. She's all over like a live coal, and
+'ud drink a bucket full if ye'd give it her." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Has she taken the medicine regularly?"</p>
+
+<p>This was a poser. Matthew scratched his head, took off his cap; he was
+in no way prepared for such a question. What should he say?</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said he presently, in a conciliating tone, "Well, you see, Sir,
+when folks is ill they takes queer fancies sometimes, as I dare say yer
+know better nor I can tell'ee. Now my wife's got hers, and no mistake;
+she says you've gived her pisin."</p>
+
+<p>It was Mr. Blane's turn now to be astonished, this being an answer he
+was not prepared for. "Poison!" he echoed.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, just pisin, and nothing else; but there, Sir, there's no call to
+be frightened, her head's that dizzy she can't scarce open her eyes,
+much less know what she says."</p>
+
+<p>"Has she taken a fresh cold?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not that I knows on, Sir, t'aint possible now: her legs is so cramped
+she's 'bliged to bide in doors." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Poor thing! She seems patient enough under it all."</p>
+
+<p>"Lord bless yer, Sir! Patient? Why she lets fly more nor any 'ooman I
+know on; I can't say but what she do look meek enough when yer'e at the
+'pike, but as soon as she's the least way riled she'll find more words
+at her tongue's end than any other 'ooman in the parish. It's my belief
+that's all that's the matter with her now; she've bin rating the whole
+on us roundly one after t'other and has just worked herself into a
+biling rage, for nothing at all."</p>
+
+<p>"If that is all; the mischief is soon healed," said Mr. Blane, entering
+the cottage.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Marks sat just where her husband had left her, but her eyes were
+closed and her face strangely flushed. She looked up wearily and
+languidly, with not a trace of the temper her husband had spoken of, and
+said not a word as the doctor took her burning hand in his and felt its
+quick pulse.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You had better get your wife to bed, Marks it will be more comfortable
+for her than sitting here."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Sir," said Marks, wondering how it was to be accomplished. However
+he drew near and said, "Dont'ee think, old 'ooman, yer'd best do as the
+doctor 'vises yer."</p>
+
+<p>"In course," was the feeble reply, so different to the loud angry one
+Matthew expected that he was staggered, and still more so when she
+attempted to stand, but could not, and he and the young doctor between
+them had to carry her to bed.</p>
+
+<p>"What ails her, Sir?" asked Matthew, as Mr. Blane was going away. "D'yer
+think it's the tongue's done it?"</p>
+
+<p>"That may have increased the fever but not caused it," was the reply.</p>
+
+<p>"The faiver! Oh Lord; what's to be done now?"</p>
+
+<p>What was to be done, indeed?</p>
+
+<p>Jane gave up the house-work and tended her sister night and day, leaving
+Matthew and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span> girl to do as best they could without her, while for
+days Mrs. Marks struggled between life and death; then she grew better,
+the fever left her, and she lay weak as an infant, but otherwise
+progressing favourably.</p>
+
+<p>One evening Jane came downstairs and took up her station opposite her
+brother-in-law, who, instead of rejoicing at the change, viewed her
+presence with a rueful face. When his wife was present he could
+sometimes forget Jane, but all alone it was impossible; move which way
+he would he was sensible her eyes were on him as she plied her knitting
+needles at her old work. How he hated that constant click, click!</p>
+
+<p>"Did yer think t'was time for supper?" asked he presently, driven to say
+something to break the silence, becoming every moment more intolerable.</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"How's the Missus this evening?"</p>
+
+<p>"Better. She's asleep."</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right. I'm glad on it," he said,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span> "for she've had a hard
+time of it upstairs. When is it likely she'll be about again?"</p>
+
+<p>"What did the doctor say? Didn't he tell you when?"</p>
+
+<p>"He don't trouble to say much. I'm sure I'm right down glad when he
+don't say she's worse, for that's been the one word in his mouth
+lately."</p>
+
+<p>Jane made no reply, but the feeling that her eyes were fixed steadily on
+him exasperated him beyond control.</p>
+
+<p>"What d'yer see in my ugly mug?" he asked. "Have you fallen in love with
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"Then may be yer sees som'ut to skeer yer?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's bad to have anything on the mind," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>Matthew winced a little. "I'll tell you a piece of my mind," he said,
+throwing his half-smoked pipe into the fire, "I'll take Mrs. Marks'
+sauce and welcome, but I'm d&mdash;d if I take any other 'ooman's living." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I wonder whatever ails you?" said she, quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"Ails me? D'yer want to make believe I'm going to be knocked down with
+the faiver? I'm not such an ass, I can tell yer, yer looks a dale more
+likely yerself; and as to yer mind? yer look as though a horse couldn't
+carry the load yer've got on it. A terrible bad load too, I'll take my
+oath on it."</p>
+
+<p>Jane shivered from head to foot.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll take up the broth," she said, "most likely Anne's awake before
+now."</p>
+
+<p>But her hands trembled so she could scarcely take hold of the saucepan
+to pour it out, while the cup and saucer rattled and shook as she went
+across the room.</p>
+
+<p>Matthew sat sulkily by, and never offered to help her.</p>
+
+<p>"Well!" said he, as soon as she was gone, "it's my belief she'd have
+stuck me, if she'd only laid hold of a knife instead of a spoon. How
+trembly she was; her hands was all of a shake.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span> She'll 'ave spilt all
+that 'ere stuff, whatever 'tis, afore my wife tucks it down. Well, if
+she 'aint crazed, I don't know who is."</p>
+
+<p>He lit a fresh pipe, and smoked away in contented solitariness.
+Presently, he looked thoughtful, knocked the ashes out of his pipe and
+said, "she's a-going to 'ave the faiver, or else she 'ave done som'ut
+bad in her day, and that's what's crazed her."</p>
+
+<p>Matthew was right as to the fever. Not many days passed before Jane was
+taken ill with it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+<h4>SEVERING THE CURL.</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"But ever and anon of griefs subdued,</span>
+<span class="i2">There comes a token like a scorpion's sting,</span>
+<span class="i2">Scarce seen, but with fresh bitterness imbued;</span>
+<span class="i2">And slight withal may be the things which bring</span>
+<span class="i2">Back on the heart the weight which it would fling</span>
+<span class="i2">Aside for ever: it may be a sound&mdash;</span>
+<span class="i2">A tone of music&mdash;summer's eve&mdash;or spring&mdash;</span>
+<span class="i2">A flower&mdash;the wind&mdash;the ocean&mdash;which shall wound,</span>
+<span class="i2">Striking the electric chain wherewith we are darkly bound.</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">And how and why we know not, nor can trace</span>
+<span class="i2">Home to its cloud this lightning of the mind,</span>
+<span class="i2">But feel the shock renew'd, nor can efface</span>
+<span class="i2">The blight and blackening which it leaves behind,</span>
+<span class="i2">Which out of things familiar, undesign'd,</span>
+<span class="i2">When least we deem of such, calls up to view</span>
+<span class="i2">The spectres whom no exorcism can bind,</span>
+<span class="i2">The cold&mdash;the changed&mdash;perchance the dead&mdash;&mdash;"</span>
+<span class="i20"><span class="smcap">Childe Harold.</span></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Can anything happen in a month? How often this question was in Amy's
+mind; how often in her thoughts. What could happen? Her heart suggested
+many things, strive as she would to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span> think otherwise, and ever reverted
+with fear to her boy, whom she so passionately loved; old Hannah was
+surprised sometimes at the injunctions she received and wondered what
+her young mistress was so nervous about. The boy was well enough and
+hearty enough in all conscience: there was no occasion to make a "molly
+coddle" of him.</p>
+
+<p>Bertie had taken a fancy to Frances, and would sit on her knee in
+preference to others, or hold up his little face to be kissed, when he
+was shy at being caressed by anyone else. Amy viewed the liking with
+distrust; she disliked Frances, and could not bear to see her and the
+boy romping together, and would have checked it, if she could have found
+some reason for doing so; but Robert countenanced it, and often joined
+in their play, while Amy alone looked grave and sorrowful.</p>
+
+<p>Why had Frances come to Brampton? Had her stubborn heart at length given
+way, and did she regret the misery she had caused Amy and come to make
+atonement? To ask forgiveness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span> and be forgiven? Were they to be
+reconciled at last? No. Not so. Frances came expecting to find Amy
+miserable, married to a man she could not love, and weeping the
+remembrance of the lost love. In that she would have gloried. But she
+came to find it otherwise; and how great was her disappointment, how
+bitter became her thoughts, how more than ever determined was she to
+pursue Amy and make her in the end utterly miserable. It wounded her to
+the quick to see Amy happy and contented with a husband who seemed to
+worship her and a child of whom she might well be proud. Was this to be
+the envied lot of her who had weaned the one heart away, so that harsh,
+bitter words had fallen on her ear as she had knelt in despair at his
+feet. Could she ever forget that? or his scorn? No! never! Amy's
+happiness must be undermined; had she not sworn it on that terrible,
+never-to-be forgotten night; sworn that Amy's sufferings should some day
+equal hers! There was little difficulty in accomplishing this if she
+went<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span> cautiously to work: haste alone could bring a failure.</p>
+
+<p>Amy saw little of her husband now; of a morning he rode with Mrs.
+Linchmore and Frances, or walked miles with Mr. Linchmore: there was
+always something to draw him from her side. Of an evening it was music
+and chess. At first Amy had ridden with the rest, but latterly she and
+Bertie had spent their mornings together; she could see no pleasure in
+riding by Frances' side, and Mrs. Linchmore was so timid she claimed all
+Robert's attention.</p>
+
+<p>Doubts fast and thick were springing up in Amy's heart. She shunned
+being alone with her husband, and insensibly grew cold and constrained.
+How seldom her eyes looked brightly on him, or her lips spoke loving
+words! while he never seemed to heed the change, or say aught of his
+love for her now, but grew colder too.</p>
+
+<p>They were both changed, husband and wife; the one had begun to doubt his
+wife's love; the other feared her husband's love was fading away,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span> and
+she without the power to stay its flight. Ah! Frances had already
+wrought wondrous harm, although only a week since she came to Brampton.</p>
+
+<p>Amy stood at the window one morning, and watched the horses as they were
+being brought round, Frances's fiery one evincing his hot temper by
+arching his proud neck and coming along with a quick short trot, while
+the more sober Lady Emily pawed the ground with impatient hoof.
+Presently Frances came in ready for her ride, and then Vavasour.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you not going with us, Mrs. Vavasour?" asked Frances. "I thought I
+heard you say you would."</p>
+
+<p>Amy glanced at her husband. Would he, too, ask her? No; he stood quietly
+on the hearthrug, apparently indifferent as to her reply.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you; I am rather busy this morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Busy? What can you find to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"I and Bertie are going for a walk."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! I thought Bertie had a great deal to do with it. How fond you are
+of Bertie," and she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span> laid an uncomfortable stress on the name as each
+time it passed her lips.</p>
+
+<p>Robert spoke at last. "Bertie is Mrs. Vavasour's loadstar," he said,
+quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Amy felt this to be unjust; not so would her husband have spoken to her
+a month ago.</p>
+
+<p>"My heart is large enough to hold more than the love for my boy," she
+replied.</p>
+
+<p>"I expect he holds by far the largest share of it," said Frances.</p>
+
+<p>Amy said nothing until she met Robert's gaze fixed inquiringly on her
+face. "My love for my child is a sacred love, and scarcely to be called
+in question, Miss Strickland," she answered.</p>
+
+<p>Frances's eyes flashed; then she laughed and struck her riding-habit
+with her whip. "Don't look so much in earnest, Mrs. Vavasour. I dare say
+you have lots of love in your heart for everybody."</p>
+
+<p>"Not for everyone," replied Amy, gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! you never fall in love at first sight, then; but when once you
+love, your love lasts for ever. Is it so?" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I have never asked myself the question."</p>
+
+<p>"But perhaps Mr. Vavasour has. What say you, Mr. Vavasour, you who are
+supposed to know every thought of your wife's heart?"</p>
+
+<p>"A woman's heart is too difficult a thing for us poor men to fathom."</p>
+
+<p>"Not always. I am going to call Isabella. You can ask your wife while
+I'm gone."</p>
+
+<p>Amy stood close by her husband, yet dared not raise her eyes to his.
+Would he ask her if he knew every thought of her heart, and if she said
+"no," sternly demand what she had to conceal? Now, more than ever, she
+wished she had told him all long ago. She knew the question must come.
+It came at last.</p>
+
+<p>"Amy, is it so? Do I know every thought of your heart?"</p>
+
+<p>"You ought to," she replied, tremblingly.</p>
+
+<p>"True." He sighed, then paused, as if expecting her to say more, but Amy
+was silent.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you love me better than all others, Amy? better than your boy?" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Nay, what a question. You know I love you, Robert."</p>
+
+<p>He strained her passionately to his heart: had he held her there a
+moment longer, Amy might have told him all, for she felt strangely
+softened; but Frances' voice sounded; he drew away from her without a
+word, and was gone.</p>
+
+<p>"I will ride to-morrow," thought Amy, "perhaps it will please him;" and
+Robert did look pleased the next day as she came out on the
+terrace&mdash;where he stood with Mrs. Linchmore,&mdash;in her riding habit and
+hat.</p>
+
+<p>"You are going with us?" he cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, the day is so pleasant, I could not resist the temptation."</p>
+
+<p>Ah, yes! The day! His brow clouded, and he turned away.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad you are coming," said Mrs. Linchmore, "as Frances does not
+ride."</p>
+
+<p>Frances not ride! For a moment Amy felt glad, then sorry. Would they
+think she had come purposely to prevent a tête-à-tête?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I did not know Miss Strickland was not to be of the party," said Amy,
+as her husband lifted her to the saddle.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor I," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"You are not sorry I am going with you, Robert?"</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her in surprise. "Sorry, Amy?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean; that is, I thought yesterday that perhaps you would like me to
+go."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, not only yesterday, but to-day and every day," and then he
+mounted, and went on with Mrs. Linchmore.</p>
+
+<p>So the ride did not begin very auspiciously.</p>
+
+<p>Amy was a good rider, a graceful and fearless one, although perhaps not
+such a dashing horse-woman as Frances, and her husband looked at her
+with pride and pleasure as she cantered along on her spirited horse at
+his side. The exercise soon brought a glow to her cheeks, and a bright
+light to her eyes, while she laughed and chatted so joyously that Robert
+thought he had never<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span> seen her look so lovely, and forgot the dark lady
+at his side and riveted his attention on his wife.</p>
+
+<p>"Take care, Amy," said he, as her horse gave a sudden start, "tighten
+the curb a little more."</p>
+
+<p>But Amy only laughed. "I like him to jump about," she said, "it shows he
+is in as good spirits as his mistress."</p>
+
+<p>"I certainly never saw Mrs. Vavasour in such spirits," remarked Mrs.
+Linchmore, feeling herself neglected.</p>
+
+<p>But Amy was not to be checked by a grave look from her rival. Since
+yesterday, when she had stood at the window with her eyes filled with
+tears watching her and her husband ride away, she had determined on
+standing her ground as Robert's wife; she would not fall away from his
+side at the first danger that threatened, and quietly without an effort
+allow another to wean his heart from her, but would win back his love to
+where it had been; and then, not till then, open her heart&mdash;as she ought
+to have done long ago&mdash;and tell him all.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Had Frances known of Amy's determination, or even of her contemplated
+ride, she would not have been walking so quietly along the lane
+rejoicing in the success of her stratagems. As she emerged into the road
+she met Bertie, who clapped his hands, and sprung out of his
+perambulator before Hannah's vigilant eye perceived him.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll go with you," he said, taking Frances' hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Come back, Master Bertie, this moment," said his nurse.</p>
+
+<p>"Let him come," exclaimed Frances, "you are a very naughty boy, all the
+same, for being so disobedient."</p>
+
+<p>"Please don't take him far, Miss, for it's most time for us to be
+turning home."</p>
+
+<p>"No; only to the turnpike gate and back."</p>
+
+<p>She took the boy's hand and away they went, Bertie chatting pleasantly
+until they reached the gate, where he made a stand and began climbing
+it, notwithstanding Frances' remonstrances.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span> The continued talking
+brought Matthew to the window.</p>
+
+<p>"There's some folks from the Hall," said he to his sister-in-law, who
+was busy peeling some potatoes.</p>
+
+<p>Jane dropped the knife and turned sharply round. "Go out to them," she
+said, "we don't want them in here."</p>
+
+<p>"It's only a young gentleman a-climbing the gate," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>Jane picked up the knife and after a moment went on with her work; but
+Bertie had seen a cat with its kitten on the door-step; and had run into
+the cottage before Frances could prevent him.</p>
+
+<p>"Go away! don't come in here!" screamed Jane.</p>
+
+<p>"Put down the knife and hould yer oncivil tongue, yer dafty!" exclaimed
+Marks. "What the devil d'yer mean by it! Walk in, young gentleman, y'ere
+welcome to play with the cat as long as yer like. Take a seat, Miss,"
+and he brought forward one of the chairs and dusted it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But Frances took no heed of the invitation. "I am very angry with you,
+Bertie," she said, "What will Hannah say? Come away?"</p>
+
+<p>But Bertie would not, but went up to Jane with the kitten in his arms.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," replied Frances, "I shall call Hannah," but in reality she
+went outside and waited for him, while Matthew, hat in hand, followed
+and talked to the young lady.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish pussy was my very own," said Bertie presently, after playing
+with it for a few moments.</p>
+
+<p>Jane had seated herself in a chair with her face half turned from him
+and paid no heed to his remark.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you give it me?" he asked in his childish way, pulling at her
+dress to attract her attention.</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't mine," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>Bertie put the kitten in her lap. "Isn't it pretty?" he said. "Don't you
+love it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Do you love the big cat?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you love anything?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. Nothing."</p>
+
+<p>"What's your name?"</p>
+
+<p>"Jane."</p>
+
+<p>"You're a naughty, cross woman, Jane, and <i>I</i> shan't love you."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't need to," she replied. "Go away!"</p>
+
+<p>But Bertie continued playing with the kitten still laying in her lap. As
+he stooped his little face over it, his soft, dimpled cheek touched
+Jane's hand, while his fair, curly hair waved almost across the other.
+Presently Jane raised her hand, took off his cap and stroked his head
+gently.</p>
+
+<p>Bertie looked up half surprised. "Do you think it pretty?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know." But she did not take her hand away.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you like to have some of it?" he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span> asked again, as Jane passed her
+fingers through one of the silky curls. "Cut it. Where's the scissors?"</p>
+
+<p>"There on the table over against the window," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>Bertie ran and fetched them, and presently a curl shiny and bright fell
+in Jane's lap.</p>
+
+<p>"There, that's my present," he said, "now won't you give me kitty?"</p>
+
+<p>"She's too small; she mustn't go from her mother," said Jane, lifting
+the curl and smoothing it softly.</p>
+
+<p>"Would her mother cry?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh my God!" exclaimed Jane, burying her face in her hands, "you'll
+break my heart!"</p>
+
+<p>"But would her mother cry? Would she cry very much?" persisted Bertie,
+striving to draw her hands away.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied Jane, "cry and go mad, and curse those who took him. But
+curses don't kill, ah no! they don't kill; they only wear the heart
+away." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The child drew away, half frightened.</p>
+
+<p>"Bertie! Bertie! are you coming?" called Frances.</p>
+
+<p>"Good bye," he said, shyly. "You'll send me kitty by and by, won't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes,&mdash;for the sake of the curl," she replied, wrapping it in paper, and
+placing it in her bosom.</p>
+
+<p>But Bertie only heard the "Yes." "Send it for me; only for me," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, for Master Bertie."</p>
+
+<p>"Bertie Vavasour," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"What?" screamed Jane, starting to her feet with a shriek that startled
+even Mrs. Marks, asleep in the room above. "Don't touch me! Don't come
+nigh me! Stand off! I'm crazed, I tell you, and don't know nothing. Oh!
+I'm deaf, and didn't hear it! No, no, I didn't hear it! I won't hear it!
+I'm crazed."</p>
+
+<p>"That yer are, yer she devil!" exclaimed Matthew, striding up to where
+she stood, as it were at bay, before some deadly enemy. "Are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span> these yer
+manners, when gentry come to visit yer?" and he half thrust, half threw
+her out on the stairs.</p>
+
+<p>"She's crazed, Miss," said Matthew, returning, "and has got one of her
+fits on her; but she's as harmless as a fly. Don't 'ee cry, young
+Master," said he to Bertie, who with his arms clasped round Frances'
+neck, was sobbing violently. "She ain't well neither, Miss," continued
+he, "I thought, days ago, she were a-going to have the fever."</p>
+
+<p>"The fever!" exclaimed Frances, "what fever?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know, Miss, my wife have been sick of it for days past."</p>
+
+<p>"And how dare you!" cried Frances, passionately, seizing him by the arm;
+"how dare you let the boy come in. Don't you know it is murder. Oh, if
+he should get it! If he should get it!" and she flew from the cottage,
+leaving Matthew bewailing his thoughtlessness and folly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Frances disliked children, and had made up her mind to thoroughly hate
+Amy's child, long before she saw him; but the boy's determined will, so
+congenial to her spirit, and then his partiality to herself, overcame
+this resolution. Her object had been to conciliate the father through
+the boy; but in attaining this object she had taken a liking for the
+child, which she in vain tried to surmount; Bertie wound himself into
+that cruel heart, somehow, and held his place there in defiance of all
+obstacles.</p>
+
+<p>Her heart sank within her at Matthew's words, and felt strangely stirred
+as she drew away the little arms so tightly encircling her neck. "For
+Heaven's sake, Bertie, don't cry so, you'll make yourself so hot," and
+then she felt his hands and forehead to assure herself he had not
+already caught the fever.</p>
+
+<p>"She's a naughty woman," sobbed Bertie.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, she's a naughty woman;" and then by dint of coaxing and
+persuading there was little trace, when they reached Hannah at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
+further end of the village, of the fright or violent cry he had had;
+still, his nurse was not to be deceived.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter with Master Bertie?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"A poor idiot in one of the cottages frightened him," replied Frances;
+but she said not a word of the fever, or that the cottage was the one at
+the turnpike gate, and Bertie's version of the story was a great deal
+too unconnected to be understood, and merely seemed a corroboration of
+the one Frances had given.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+
+<h4>DOWN BY THE LAKE.</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"At length within a lonely cell,</span>
+<span class="i4">They saw a mournful dame.</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">Her gentle eyes were dimm'd with tears,</span>
+<span class="i4">Her cheeks were pale with woe:</span>
+<span class="i2">And long Sir Valentine besought</span>
+<span class="i4">Her doleful tale to know.</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">'Alas! young knight,' she weeping said,</span>
+<span class="i4">'Condole my wretched fate;</span>
+<span class="i2">A childless mother here you see;</span>
+<span class="i4">A wife without a mate'"</span>
+<span class="i20"><span class="smcap">Valentine and Ursine.</span></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Frances was nervous and anxious for days after her walk with Bertie; the
+sudden opening of a door made her start and tremble lest it should be
+some-one come to announce the boy's illness. Sometimes she watched and
+waited at the window half the morning to catch a glimpse of him going<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
+out for his daily walk, or if he did not come would seek him in the
+nursery, and bring him downstairs. She became Bertie's shadow, and he,
+in consequence, fonder of her than ever. But the days crept on and there
+was no symptom that he had taken the fever: so by degrees Frances forgot
+her fears&mdash;or rather they slumbered&mdash;and went back to her old ways. But
+it had become more difficult to deal with Amy now, she appeared to have
+changed so entirely; there was no making her jealous, even if she could
+manage to make Robert devote himself half the evening to her hostess.
+Amy seemed just as happy; she either was not jealous or was jealous and
+concealed it, and rode with her husband, let who would be of the party,
+or deserted Bertie and walked with him, even learnt to play billiards
+when she found Robert was fond of it; so that it was rarely chess now,
+but all, even Mr. Linchmore, joined of an evening in the former game.</p>
+
+<p>Still Robert's love was not what it had been. His wife felt that it was
+not; he loved her by fits<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span> and starts, while some days he was moody and
+even touchy; but Amy did not despair. How could she when she felt he
+still loved her? In another fortnight they would be back at Somerton,
+and away from Frances, who, Amy feared, was fast weaning her boy's as
+well as her husband's love from her, though how she had managed it she
+knew not.</p>
+
+<p>"I have just been talking with Mr. Grant, your head keeper," said Robert
+to Mr. Linchmore about a fortnight after the memorable walk to the
+turnpike, "he tells me the poaching goes on as sharp and fast as ever."</p>
+
+<p>"Worse," was the reply, "they are the same set we have always had, that
+is to say, we suppose so from their cunning and rashness."</p>
+
+<p>"You got rid of two or three of them at the Sessions, if you remember,
+when I was here nearly four years ago."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but the example does not appear to have done much good."</p>
+
+<p>"You want Charley here," said Frances, "to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span> excite you all into going
+out in a body again and exterminating them. Do you remember your fears,
+Mrs. Vavasour."</p>
+
+<p>Amy looked up to reply, and meeting Frances' gaze, she grew confused and
+coloured deeply. "I should be more afraid now," said she with an effort
+at composure.</p>
+
+<p>"I was sorry to hear you had never succeeded in tracking that man?" said
+Vavasour, with his eyes fixed on his wife's now pale face.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean the man that wounded you? No, several were taken up on
+suspicion, but we were unable to prove anything against them, and the
+watcher, the poor man who was so frightfully bruised and otherwise
+ill-treated, swore, that none of them resembled his or your assailant."</p>
+
+<p>"I could have sworn to the man, too, I think."</p>
+
+<p>"You were abroad, and so I did not press the matter, and in time the
+affair blew over altogether."</p>
+
+<p>The conversation ended, and was perhaps forgotten by all save Robert
+Vavasour, and he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span> could not forget it, but snatched his hat and strolled
+out hastily into the Park. What had made his wife's face flush so
+deeply? Had it anything to do with Charles, whom Frances was so
+constantly throwing at his teeth? He began to hate the very name, and
+was daily growing more madly suspicious of his wife, and yet had his
+thoughts framed themselves into words he would have shrunk from the bare
+idea of suspecting his idol. That she had not loved him with all her
+heart when he married her he knew: she had told him so; and how easy he
+had thought the task of winning the heart she had assured him none other
+had ever asked to have an interest in; but then had she loved none
+other? perhaps this very man of whom for one half hour he remembered
+being jealous long ago. When she told him the first, why if it was so,
+had she not told him the second? Why give him only half her confidence?
+Perhaps she loved him still? Perhaps the remembrance of him had called
+the guilty blush to her cheek? "Ah! if it is so!" he cried with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span> angry
+vehemence, "he shall die. I will be revenged!"</p>
+
+<p>"Vengeance! who talks of vengeance?" said a voice near, and, looking up,
+he saw Goody Grey leaning on her staff. Involuntarily he tendered her
+some halfpence.</p>
+
+<p>"I want them not," she said. "It does not do for the blind to lead the
+blind."</p>
+
+<p>"What mean you, woman? I am in no mood to be trifled with."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't I know that?" she replied; "don't I know the bitterness of the
+heart? Do you think I have lived all these years and don't know where
+misery lies?"</p>
+
+<p>"Where does it lie?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"In your heart. Where it wouldn't have been if you hadn't been there;"
+and she pointed in the direction of the Hall. "'Tis a gay meeting, and
+may be as sad a parting."</p>
+
+<p>"Why so?" asked he again.</p>
+
+<p>"Do the hawk and dove agree together in the same nest?" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"The dove would stand but a poor chance," said Robert.</p>
+
+<p>"True." She turned upon her heel and went into the cottage, and seating
+herself in a low chair, began rocking it backwards and forwards,
+singing, in a kind of low, monotonous chant,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"When the leaves from the trees begin to fall</span>
+<span class="i2">Then the curse hangs darkly over the Hall."</span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"That must be now, then," said Robert, who had followed her in, "for the
+leaves are falling thick enough and fast enough in the wood."</p>
+
+<p>"Darker and darker as the leaves fall thicker," she replied, "and
+darkest of all when they are on the ground, and the trees bare."</p>
+
+<p>"What will happen then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ask your own heart: hasn't it anger, hatred, and despair in it? Did I
+not hear you call aloud for vengeance?"</p>
+
+<p>"And what good can come of it?" continued she, seeing he made no reply;
+"like you, I've had all that in my heart, until curses loud and bitter
+have followed one after another, heaped on those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span> who injured me, and
+yet I'm as far off from happiness as ever. I began to seek it when I was
+a young woman, and look! my hair is grey, and yet I have not found it;
+while the fierce anger, the strong will to return evil for evil, have
+faded from my spirit like the slow whitening of these grey hairs.
+There's only despair now, and hatred for those, for <i>her</i> who did me
+wrong."</p>
+
+<p>"Do we all hate as mercilessly as this? I feel that a look, a word of
+love would turn my heart from bitterness."</p>
+
+<p>"Then the injury has not been deep. I've lived here a lonely woman
+twenty years, and a look, a word, will sometimes call the fierce blood
+to my heart. When the injury is eternal and irremediable then the hate
+must be lasting too."</p>
+
+<p>"The injured heart may forgive," said Vavasour.</p>
+
+<p>"It may forgive. But forget its hate! its wrongs! its despair! Never,
+never," said she, fiercely.</p>
+
+<p>"It may be so," said Robert, half aloud.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"May be so? It is so. Hate is a deadly enemy; don't let it creep into
+your heart; tear it out! cast it from you! for once you have it, it is
+yours for ever; even death cannot part it from you."</p>
+
+<p>"I doubt that. We know that even a dying sinner's heart may repent and
+be softened; the thought that he is perishing from the earth nursing a
+deadly sin at his heart would do much; he would never dare die so."</p>
+
+<p>"Prayers, the pleadings of an agonised, breaking heart may be vain&mdash;in
+vain&mdash;was vain, young man, for I tried it," replied Goody Grey, her
+voice suddenly changing from fierceness to mournful sadness.</p>
+
+<p>"Surely there could not be a heart so hard, if you pleaded rightly."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't tell me that!" she exclaimed, raising her voice, "don't tell me
+there was anything I might have done. Did I not kneel and pray? Did I
+not take back my curses and give blessings? Did I not plead my broken
+heart and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span> withered youth? But death came, even as I knelt; the hate was
+too strong, and the words I panted to hear were unspoken. What have you
+to say to that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hope," replied Robert; "what you have done at a death bed, I have done
+during life, and been refused; death has come since, and I am seemingly
+as far off as ever; and yet I hope on."</p>
+
+<p>"Hope on, hope ever," said she, sadly, "yes, that's all that's left me
+now, but it doesn't satisfy the cravings of my heart; never will!"</p>
+
+<p>"Have you no relations? You must live but a lonely life here," said
+Robert.</p>
+
+<p>"That is the only living thing that loves me," she replied, pointing to
+the parrot, sitting pluming his feathers. "He's been with me in joy and
+sorrow. Don't touch him; he is savage with strangers."</p>
+
+<p>"Not with me," said Robert, smoothing his feathers gently.</p>
+
+<p>"Then he knows friends from foes, or his heart's taken kindly to you
+like mine did, when I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span> saw you with the bad passions written in your
+face."</p>
+
+<p>"I once had a bird like this," he replied, thoughtfully, "but it must be
+years ago, for I cannot recall to my recollection at this moment when it
+was."</p>
+
+<p>He passed from the cottage, while Goody Grey again rocked herself to and
+fro' and began her old song.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"When the leaves from the trees begin to fall</span>
+<span class="i2">Then the curse&mdash;&mdash;"</span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The rest of the words were lost to his ear, but the sound of her voice
+was borne along by the breeze, and sounded mournfully and sadly as it
+swept through the leafless trees.</p>
+
+<p>Robert thought much of Goody Grey as he walked homewards. Here was a
+woman whose very life had wasted away in the vain search for what for
+twenty years,&mdash;perhaps more,&mdash;had eluded her grasp. Would it be the same
+with him? Would years,&mdash;his life slip by, and the mystery of his birth
+be a mystery still?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span> Would hope fade away, and he, like her, grow
+despairing in the end? He felt a strange interest in that lone, unloved
+woman, with nothing in the world to love but a bird. Then his thoughts
+reverted to his wife, and his love for her. Why had she married him if
+her heart was another's? Why had she done him this wrong? Why make not
+only herself, but him miserable for life? But could deceit dwell in so
+lovely a form as his wife's? only a month ago he would have staked his
+life; nay, his very love upon her truth. And now&mdash;now&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Where are you going so fast, Robert? Are you walking for a wager? I
+have been vainly trying to come up with you for the last five minutes,"
+said Amy, taking his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you been out walking without Bertie?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I meant to have gone with you; and ran upstairs for my hat, when I
+saw you preparing to go out."</p>
+
+<p>"Why did you not come then?" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I was too late; when I came back you had disappeared, Miss Strickland
+said down the long avenue: so I followed, and went through the village,
+and home by the lane, but somehow I missed you."</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Strickland was wrong. I went across the fields into the wood, as
+far as Mrs. Grey's cottage. What a singular being she is!"</p>
+
+<p>"Have you never seen her until to-day?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, several times, but never to speak to. She must have been very
+handsome in her youth."</p>
+
+<p>"What, with that dark frown on her brow?"</p>
+
+<p>"That has been caused from sorrow," replied Robert, "she has had some
+heavy, bitter trial to bear; besides that frown is not always there,
+once I noticed quite a softened expression steal over her face. I feel
+an interest in the old lady; she tells me she is alone in the
+world,&mdash;like myself. I feel alone sometimes."</p>
+
+<p>"You, Robert!" said Amy, in a tone of sadness and reproach.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I feel so sometimes, Amy."</p>
+
+<p>"What, with your wife's love?"</p>
+
+<p>"You have the boy to care for. You love him so much, Amy."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said she in a tone of disappointment.</p>
+
+<p>"See! there he comes up the walk."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said again, but never turned her head or heeded Bertie's
+"Mamma!" "Mamma!"</p>
+
+<p>"I love you better than Bertie, Robert," she whispered softly a moment
+after.</p>
+
+<p>He did not reply; but she felt his arm tighten on her hand and press it
+slightly to his side. She did not return the pressure, she was only half
+satisfied as she left him and went up the terrace steps, while Robert's
+eyes followed her wistfully, until even the skirt of her dress swept
+through the door out of sight.</p>
+
+<p>Ah! had she only remained with him a little longer.</p>
+
+<p>Robert passed on down the terrace, and stood at the further end. Just
+then a window was flung open, and Frances Strickland called to his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span> boy.
+They talked for a few moments, then Hannah passed on with her charge,
+while Robert still leant against the abutment of the window. Presently
+it closed gently, a voice saying at the same instant, "Poor Charley!
+Mrs. Vavasour will break her heart."</p>
+
+<p>Robert sprung to his feet and strode past the window at which Frances
+still stood, his shadow falling upon her darkly as he went on into the
+house,&mdash;into the room.</p>
+
+<p>Alone! and ready for a walk? That was well, he would not question her
+there; no, it must be away, far away, and safe from interruption.</p>
+
+<p>"I would speak with you, Miss Strickland," he said sternly, vainly
+striving to appear calm, and stay the fierce hot blood rushing to his
+heart and mounting to his brow.</p>
+
+<p>Frances followed him at once without a question; away into the Park,
+along the very road he had so lately traversed with his wife; she could
+scarcely keep up with his stride, or heavy iron-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>sounding step, that
+seemed as though it would crush every stone and pebble in his path to
+powder: still he went on; on through the trees and walks, startling the
+birds from the branches, but striking no dismay into Frances' breast;
+on, even down to the lake slumbering so peacefully and quietly. Here he
+stopped, and pointing to the clump of a tree, bade her be seated. Then
+he stood sternly before her.</p>
+
+<p>"Can you wonder I wish to speak with you?" he asked in a thick, harsh,
+almost agitated voice, which grew steadier as he went on.</p>
+
+<p>"No," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor why I have brought you thus far?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said again.</p>
+
+<p>"Then speak!" he cried, "and if you speak falsely I will hold you up as
+a scorn and shame amongst women."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not afraid," she said, "and can excuse your harsh words; but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I will have no buts," he said sternly, "you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span> have slandered my wife,
+her I love more than my life; you shall either say you have lied
+falsely, or you shall make good your words."</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I begin at the beginning? Do you want to know all?"</p>
+
+<p>"Begin, and make an end quickly."</p>
+
+<p>And she did begin, even from the time when Amy had fainted, that
+memorable night, unto where Charles Linchmore had told her he had met
+Amy on her wedding day; and as she went on he buried his face in his
+hands, while his whole frame shook and trembled like an aspen.</p>
+
+<p>"Girl, have some mercy!" he cried.</p>
+
+<p>But she had none; no pity. Was not this woman his wife; and had she
+shown pity. So she never stayed her words, never softened them, she gave
+him what appeared the hard, stern, agonising truth, and he groaned with
+very anguish as she spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that all?" he asked at last.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"All."</p>
+
+<p>"And you will swear it. Swear it!" he cried hoarsely.</p>
+
+<p>"I will. But you need not believe me. Ask your wife? See what she says."</p>
+
+<p>He moved his hands from his face. It looked as though years had swept
+over it. "You have broken my heart," he said, in a quivering voice. And
+then he left her.</p>
+
+<p>Amy had gone to her room, sad and thoughtful, with the feeling, at last,
+that her husband doubted her love; and yet, she did love him better than
+she ever thought she should.</p>
+
+<p>As she turned his words over in her mind, she determined on delaying no
+longer; but now, at once, tell him all. She dreaded his anger and
+sorrowful look; but that, anything was better than the loss of his love.
+So she sat and listened, and awaited his coming. But he came not.</p>
+
+<p>The luncheon bell rang, and she went downstairs wondering at his
+absence.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry to say Mr. Linchmore has heard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span> some bad news, Mrs.
+Vavasour," said Mrs. Linchmore.</p>
+
+<p>"My husband! Where is he?"&mdash;exclaimed Amy, panic stricken.</p>
+
+<p>"It has nothing to do with him," replied Mr. Linchmore, "my brother has,
+unfortunately, been wounded." And he looked somewhat surprised at her
+sudden fright.</p>
+
+<p>Then Amy was glad Robert was absent. "I am sorry," she faltered. "I hope
+it is not serious;" and her pale face paled whiter than before.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I trust not. He has been out with General Chamberlain's force."</p>
+
+<p>"He was very foolish to go to India at all," said Mr. Linchmore. "I dare
+say he would have had plenty of opportunities of winning laurels
+elsewhere; but he always was so impetuous,&mdash;here to-day and gone
+to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>Then the conversation turned upon other subjects, and still Robert came
+not. Just as they rose from the table Frances came in.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Have you seen Mr. Vavasour?" asked Amy.</p>
+
+<p>"No. Has he not been in to luncheon? I thought I was late."</p>
+
+<p>Amy passed on up to her room again, and for a short time sat quietly by
+the fire, as she had done before; then, as the hours crept on, she rose
+and went to the window.</p>
+
+<p>The sun sank slowly, twilight came on, and the shadows of evening grew
+darker still; Amy could scarcely see the long avenue now, or the tall
+dark trees overshadowing it; and still she was alone. Then the door
+opened; but it was not her husband&mdash;it was Hannah, who stood looking at
+her with grave face.</p>
+
+<p>"If you please, Ma'am, I don't think Master Bertie is well. There is
+nothing to be frightened about; but he has been hot and feverish ever
+since he came home from his walk."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+
+<h4>REPENTANCE.</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"Whispering tongues can poison truth,</span>
+<span class="i2">And constancy lives in realms above;</span>
+<span class="i2">And life is thorny, and youth is vain;</span>
+<span class="i2">And to be wroth with one we love,</span>
+<span class="i2">Doth work like madness in the brain."</span>
+<span class="i20"><span class="smcap">Coleridge.</span></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"My thoughts acquit you for dishonouring me</span>
+<span class="i2">By any foul act; but the virtuous know</span>
+<span class="i2">'Tis not enough to clear ourselves, but the</span>
+<span class="i2">Suspicions of our shame."</span>
+<span class="i20"><span class="smcap">Shirley.</span></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Robert came back at last, and years seemed to have swept over his head
+and gathered round his heart, since only a few hours before he had stood
+in his wife's room. But he looked for her in vain, she was not there,
+but away in the nursery, hushing, with tearful eyes and frightened
+heart, poor sick Bertie in her arms to sleep. Robert<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span> longed, yet
+dreaded to see her. Through all his misery his heart clung to his wife,
+and hoped, even when his lips murmured there was no hope. He took up the
+work on the table, a handkerchief Amy had been hemming, marked with his
+name, and sighed as he laid it down, and thought duty, not love, had
+induced her to work for him.</p>
+
+<p>So he waited on&mdash;waited patiently. At length she came.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Robert! I am so glad you are here. I have been longing for you, and
+quite frightened when you stayed away such a time."</p>
+
+<p>The mother's fears were roused, and she clung at once to her husband for
+help and support. Her trembling heart had forgotten for the moment all
+she had been braving her heart, and nerving her mind to tell him. The
+great fear supplanted for the time the lesser and more distant one.</p>
+
+<p>She had seated herself at Robert's feet, leaning her head on his knee.
+He let her remain so&mdash;did not even withdraw the hand she had taken,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span> for
+the fierceness of his anger had passed away, and a great sorrow filled
+his heart. Did he not pity her as much as himself? she so fair and
+young. Had not she made them both miserable? Both he and her.</p>
+
+<p>But Amy saw nothing of all this&mdash;nothing of the grave, sorrowing
+face&mdash;her heart was thinking of poor Bertie's heavy eyes and hot hands,
+and how best she could break it to her husband, so as not to grieve him
+too much, for did he not love the boy as much as she did? and would he
+not fear and dread the worst? But even while she hesitated, her husband
+spoke&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Amy! Have you ever deceived me? I, who have loved you so faithfully."</p>
+
+<p>The cold, changed tone&mdash;the harsh voice struck her at once. She looked
+up quickly. There was that in his face which sent dismay into her heart,
+while her fears for Bertie fled as she gazed. Was she too late? Had her
+husband found out what she had been striving so hard for months to tell
+him? Yes, she felt, she knew she was too late;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span> that he knew all, and
+waited for her words to confirm what he knew.</p>
+
+<p>"Never as your wife, Robert," she replied, tremblingly.</p>
+
+<p>"And when, then!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Robert! don't look so sternly at me&mdash;don't speak so strangely. I
+meant to tell you, I did indeed. I have been striving all these months
+to tell you."</p>
+
+<p>Alas! there was something to tell, then; every word she uttered drove
+away hope more and more from his heart.</p>
+
+<p>"Months and years?" he said, mournfully.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no; to-day, this very day have I been watching and waiting. Oh! why
+did you not come back? Why did you not come back, Robert, so that I
+might have told you?"</p>
+
+<p>"You dared not," he said, sternly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes! I dared. I have done no sin, only deceived you, Robert, at&mdash;at
+first."</p>
+
+<p>"Only at first. Only for ever."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no; not for ever. I always meant to tell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span> you, I did, indeed,
+Robert." She began to fear he distrusted her words already&mdash;she, whose
+very "yes" had been implicitly believed and reverenced. Alas! this first
+sin, perhaps the only one, into what meshes it leads us, often bringing
+terrible retribution.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you not fear living on in&mdash;in deceit?" he said. "Did you not feel
+how near you were to my heart&mdash;did you not know that my love for you
+was&mdash;was madness? that, lonely and unloved, I loved you with all the
+passion of my nature? If not, you knew that all my devotion was thrown
+away&mdash;utterly wasted&mdash;that your heart was another's, and could never be
+mine."</p>
+
+<p>He stopped; and the silence was unbroken, save by Amy's sobs.</p>
+
+<p>"Had you told me this," he said again, "do you think I would have
+brought this great sorrow upon you? put trouble and fear into your heart
+instead of love and happiness, and made your young life
+desolate&mdash;desolate and unbearable, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span> for the boy. He is the one green
+leaf in your path, I the withered one,&mdash;withered at heart and soul."</p>
+
+<p>"Robert! Robert! don't be so hard, so&mdash;so&mdash;" she could not bring to her
+lips to say cruel, "but forgive me!"</p>
+
+<p>He heeded her not, but went on.</p>
+
+<p>"And the day of your marriage," he said, "that day which should have
+been, and I fondly hoped was, the happiest day of your life; upon that
+day, of all others, you saw him."</p>
+
+<p>"Not wilfully, Robert, not&mdash;not wilfully," sobbed Amy.</p>
+
+<p>"That day, your marriage day, was the one on which you first learnt of
+<i>his</i> love for you, and passed in one short half hour a whole lifetime
+of agony. Poor Amy! poor wife! Forgive you? yes; my heart is pitying
+enough and weak enough to forgive you your share in my misery for the
+sake of the anguish of your own."</p>
+
+<p>Amy only wept on. She could not answer.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span> But he, her husband, needed no
+reply; her very silence, her utter grief and tears confirmed all he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>"Amy, did you never think the knowledge of all this&mdash;the tale would
+break my heart?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never! I feared your anger, your sorrowing looks, but&mdash;but
+that?&mdash;Never, never!"</p>
+
+<p>"And yet it will be so. It must be so."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, no! Neither now nor ever, because&mdash;because I love you, Robert."</p>
+
+<p>"Amy! wife!" he said, sternly, "there must never be a question of love
+between us, now. That&mdash;that is at an end, and must never be named again.
+I forgive you, but forget I never can," and then he left her, before she
+could say one word. Left her to her young heart's anguish and bitter
+despair, tenfold greater than the anguish he had depicted being hers
+long ago, because hopeless&mdash;hopeless of ever now winning back his love
+again. And what a love it had been! She began to see, to feel it all
+now, now that it had gone, left her for ever.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"God help me!" she cried, "I never, never thought it would have come to
+this. God help me! I have no other help now, and forgive me if I have
+broken his heart."</p>
+
+<p>Then by-and-by she rose, and with wan, stricken face, went back to her
+boy.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Blane was bending over Bertie, who was crying in feeble, childish
+accents, "Give me some water to drink. Please give me some water."</p>
+
+<p>"Presently, my little man; all in good time."</p>
+
+<p>"But I want it now&mdash;I must have it now."</p>
+
+<p>"My mistress, Mrs. Vavasour, sir," said Hannah, as Amy entered, and
+stood silently by his side, and looked anxiously into his face, as she
+returned his greeting.</p>
+
+<p>"Dr. Bernard usually attends at the Hall," she said; "but he lives so
+far away, and I was so anxious about my boy. Is there much the matter
+with him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ahem," said Mr. Blane, clearing his throat, as most medical men do when
+disliking to tell an unpleasant truth, or considering how best to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span> shape
+an answer least terrifying to the mother's heart. "No&mdash;no," he said
+hesitatingly. "The child is very hot and feverish."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope he isn't going to sicken for a fever, sir," said Hannah.</p>
+
+<p>"I fear he has sickened for it," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Not the scarlet fever?" said Amy, in a frightened voice.</p>
+
+<p>"No. There has been a nasty kind of fever going about, which I fear your
+boy has somehow taken. I have had two cases lately, and in both
+instances the symptoms were similar to this."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it a dangerous fever?" asked Amy.</p>
+
+<p>"The old lady, my first patient, is quite well again, in fact better
+than she has been for the last six months, as the fever cured the
+rheumatics, and from being almost a cripple, she now walks nearly as
+well as ever. And," he said, rising to leave, "I should advise no one's
+entering this room but those who are obliged to&mdash;the fewer the
+better&mdash;and by all means keep the other children away, as the sore
+throat is decidedly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span> infectious. Good-bye, Sir; take your medicine like
+a little man, and then we'll soon have you well again," said he to
+Bertie.</p>
+
+<p>"My boy, my poor Bertie," said Amy, as she sat by his side, and held the
+cool, refreshing drink to his parched lips. Did she need this fresh
+trial coming upon her already stricken heart?</p>
+
+<p>"Don't let the boy see you crying, Ma'am," said Hannah, "or perhaps
+he'll be getting frightened, and I'm sure that'll be bad for him."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Amy. But though no tears were in her eyes, the traces of them
+were weighing down the heavy swollen eyelids; but tears she had none to
+shed, she had wept so much.</p>
+
+<p>So she sat by the side of her sick child's little cot with aching heart,
+all alone and lonely, with no one but old faithful Hannah to sympathize
+and watch with her; he, her husband, she dared not think of, or if she
+thought at all, it was to almost wish he would not come; so stern and
+grave a face might frighten her boy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Are you not going down to dinner, Ma'am?" said Nurse at last, in a
+whisper, for Bertie had dropped off into an uneasy slumber.</p>
+
+<p>"Dinner? Ah! yes. I forgot. No, I shall not go down to dinner to-day. I
+shall not leave my boy."</p>
+
+<p>"I can take care of him, Ma'am, and then shouldn't you tell the Master?
+Haven't you forgotten him? There's no use keeping the bad news from
+him."</p>
+
+<p>Forgotten him? How could she forget? Were not his words still fresh at
+her heart?</p>
+
+<p>But Nurse was right, he ought to be told; there was Mrs. Linchmore, too,
+she&mdash;all, ought to know about Bertie.</p>
+
+<p>So Amy rose and went away in search of her husband. Where was he? Should
+she find him in his room? She hesitated ere she knocked, but his heavy
+tread a moment after assured her he was there. She did not look up as
+the door opened, but said simply, "Bertie is ill, Robert, very ill. Mr.
+Blane has been to see him, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span> says he has caught some fever, but not a
+dangerous one."</p>
+
+<p>All traces of sternness and anger fled from his brow, as he listened and
+caught the expression of his wife's face. He wondered at the calmness
+with which she spoke. His boy ill, little Bertie, in whose life her very
+soul had seemed wrapt? and she could stand and speak of it so coldly, so
+calmly as this? He wondered, and saw nothing of the anguish within, or
+how the one terrible blow he had dealt her had for the time broken and
+crushed her spirit. Only a few hours ago, and she would have wept and
+clung round his neck for help, in this her one great hour of need. But
+that was past, could not be; he would not have it so, her love had been
+forbidden.</p>
+
+<p>"I will go and see the boy," he said, gently.</p>
+
+<p>She turned and went on her way downstairs to the drawing-room.</p>
+
+<p>"Good gracious, Mrs. Vavasour! what is the matter?" cried Frances, her
+heart beating savagely, as she looked at the poor face, so wan<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span> and
+still, telling its own tale of woe long before the lips did.</p>
+
+<p>Amy took no notice of Frances, but passed on to where Mrs. Linchmore sat
+with the children. It was Alice's birthday, and Bertie was to have come
+down too, and as Amy remembered it, her heart for the first time felt
+full; but she drove back the tears, and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My child is ill. He has caught some fever; but not a dangerous one."</p>
+
+<p>How fond she was of repeating this latter phrase, as if the very fact of
+saying that it was not a dangerous fever would ease and convince her
+frightened, timid heart.</p>
+
+<p>The words startled everyone.</p>
+
+<p>"I am extremely sorry," said Mrs. Linchmore, drawing Alice away. "I
+trust, I hope it is not infectious?"</p>
+
+<p>"I very much fear it is, at least, Mr. Blane thinks the sore throat is,
+and advises the children, by all means, being kept apart."</p>
+
+<p>"They must go away, shall go away the very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span> first thing to-morrow
+morning. It is as well to be on the safe side. Don't you think so,
+Robert?" said Mrs. Linchmore.</p>
+
+<p>"Decidedly. They can go into the village for the time or to Grant's
+cottage."</p>
+
+<p>"There are cases of the same fever in the village," said Amy.</p>
+
+<p>"Then they must go away altogether," said Mrs. Linchmore, hurriedly. "We
+must send them to Standale."</p>
+
+<p>"I am so sorry for Bertie, he'll have such lots of nasty medicine," said
+Fanny; "but won't it be nice to be without Miss Barker?"</p>
+
+<p>"Be silent, child!" said her mother, "Miss Barker will of course go with
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! how horrid!" returned Fanny. Even Mrs. Linchmore's frown could not
+prevent her from saying that.</p>
+
+<p>Amy passed out again even as she had come, almost brushing Frances'
+dress, but without looking at her, although, had she raised her eyes,
+she must have been struck with the whiteness of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span> her face, which
+equalled, if not exceeded, her own.</p>
+
+<p>"Master has been here, Ma'am," said Hannah, as Amy returned, "and bid me
+tell you he had gone to fetch Dr. Bernard."</p>
+
+<p>Again Amy sat by her boy watching and waiting. What else was there to be
+done? He still slept&mdash;slept uneasily, troubled with that short, dry
+cough.</p>
+
+<p>Later on in the evening, when Dr. Bernard&mdash;whose mild hopeful face and
+kind cheering voice inspiring her poor heart with courage,&mdash;had been,
+and when the hours were creeping on into night a knock sounded at the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Strickland is outside, Ma'am, and wants to come in. Shall I let
+her?" asked Hannah.</p>
+
+<p>Amy went out and closed the door behind her, and looked with unmoved
+eyes on Frances' flushed and anxious face.</p>
+
+<p>"How is he? May I go in?" she asked, eagerly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Never, with my permission," was the chilling reply.</p>
+
+<p>"Only for five minutes; I am not afraid of the fever, and my looking at
+him can do him no harm. I will promise not to stay longer than that."</p>
+
+<p>"No. You shall not go in for half a minute, even."</p>
+
+<p>"You cannot be so cruel," said Frances; "you cannot tell how frightened
+and anxious I am. Oh! do let me see him."</p>
+
+<p>"I will not," said Amy, angrily.</p>
+
+<p>"Cruel, hard-hearted mother," cried Frances. "I know he has asked for
+me. I know he has called for me!"</p>
+
+<p>"I thank God he has not," replied Amy, "for <i>that</i> would break my
+heart."</p>
+
+<p>"Then he will ask for me; and if he does, you will send for me, won't
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never!" said Amy, as she turned away.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Mrs. Vavasour, I love the boy; don't<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span> you see that my heart is
+breaking while you stand there so pitilessly."</p>
+
+<p>"Had you loved the boy," said Amy, "you would not have crushed the
+mother's heart. What had I done to you, Frances Strickland, that you
+should pursue me so cruelly, first as a girl, when I never injured you,
+and then&mdash;now you have taken my husband's love from me, and would take
+my boy's also? But I will stand between him and you, cruel girl, as long
+as I live."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't say so. Think&mdash;think&mdash;what if he should die?" said Frances,
+fearfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! God help me!" said Amy; she could say no more. But Frances clung to
+her dress.</p>
+
+<p>"It is I who should say, God help me!" she cried; "don't you know I took
+Bertie to the cottage where he caught the fever? Oh! Mrs. Vavasour, you
+don't know half my agony and remorse, or what I suffered when I found
+out what I had done."</p>
+
+<p>"My boy's illness, my husband's scorn, broken hopes, and grieving heart,
+my crushed spirit, all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>&mdash;all I owe to you. May God forgive you, Miss
+Strickland."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes; God forgive me. I deny nothing. But, oh! will not you forgive
+me, Mrs. Vavasour? I will try, I will, indeed, to make amends."</p>
+
+<p>This abject appeal from the proud Frances? But Amy scarcely heeded it.</p>
+
+<p>"You cannot make amends," she said, despairingly. "It is past
+atonement&mdash;this great wrong you have done."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! do not be so harsh and cruel to me; your heart was soft enough
+once."</p>
+
+<p>"It was. You have changed it, and are the first to feel its hardness. I
+am no longer what I was; but for my boy I should turn into a stone, or
+die."</p>
+
+<p>"And I? What am I to do? If&mdash;if anything should happen to Bertie. Oh! I
+shall go mad," she cried. "Think of my grief then. I, who unwittingly
+gave him this fever; think what my heart would feel, what it even feels
+now; and be not so merciless." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"No, not half so merciless as your bad heart has been. I can give you no
+greater punishment than your own guilty remorse, and frightened heart. I
+will remain no longer, Miss Strickland. You shall not see my boy!"</p>
+
+<p>And Amy left Frances weeping, perhaps the first <i>genuine</i> repentant
+tears she had ever shed.</p>
+
+<p>Robert sat at his boy's bed-side all that night, cooling his burning
+forehead and heated head with the cold wet cloth dipped in vinegar and
+water, or holding him up in his arms while his poor parched lips feebly
+yet eagerly drank from the cup his mother held so tremblingly before
+him, while Frances alternately walked her room despairingly, or crouched
+away in the dark on the stairs near, her ear vainly trying to catch the
+words of those mournful watchers and nurses who stepped about so softly
+in the sick chamber beyond.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+
+<h4>A FADING FLOWER.</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"The coldness from my heart is gone,</span>
+<span class="i4">But still the weight is there,</span>
+<span class="i2">And thoughts which I abhor will come,</span>
+<span class="i4">And tempt me to despair.</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"Those thoughts I constantly repel;</span>
+<span class="i4">And all, methinks, might yet be well,</span>
+<span class="i2">Could I but weep once more;</span>
+<span class="i4">And with true tears of penitence</span>
+<span class="i2">My dreadful state deplore."</span>
+<span class="i20"><span class="smcap">Southey.</span></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>The long hours of night wore away, and the morning broke, bright, fresh,
+and frosty. Then the long corridor and passages echoed with the sound of
+hasty footsteps hurrying through them, while the quick, sudden opening
+and shutting of doors betokened an unusual stir in the Hall. The
+children were preparing for their journey.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Half an hour later all was silent and still, more so than it had been
+for days. The children were gone.</p>
+
+<p>Again we enter the sick room. Bertie is no better, but, if anything,
+worse; his little face more flushed and heated, his burning hands
+wandering restlessly about, to and fro, as he tosses and turns upon his
+little cot, his anxious eyes no longer looking mournfully, and as it
+were imploringly in his mother's face for help from his pain, for Bertie
+is delirious, and does not even recognise her; his thoughts ramble, and
+he talks incoherently and strangely.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Hopkins often came to see him, bringing, as was her wont, in cases
+of illness, broths and cooling drinks she had prepared with her own
+hand; but Bertie was too ill to heed them, and Amy could but look her
+thanks&mdash;words she had none.</p>
+
+<p>It was on returning from one of these visits, with cup and saucer in
+hand, that she met Frances Strickland.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Have you been to see Master Bertie?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Miss," replied Mrs. Hopkins, with a sigh.</p>
+
+<p>"And how is he? Do you think he is any better this morning?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Miss, I don't. It's my belief he couldn't well be worse; but the
+doctor'll know better than me. I suppose he'll be here presently."</p>
+
+<p>"What makes you think him so ill?"</p>
+
+<p>"I've been the mother of four, Miss, and lost them all, and none of them
+looked a bit worse than Master Bertie, poor, innocent lamb."</p>
+
+<p>"But you had not two doctors," returned Frances.</p>
+
+<p>"No, nor half the nurses to wait on mine; but I'd the same loving,
+craving mother's heart and the same God to look up to and hope in," and
+the housekeeper passed on, as the rebuke fell from her lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! I wish I could hope, I wish I could pray," cried Frances, as she
+went once more into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span> the solitude of her own room; not only did she
+grieve for Bertie, but the terror lest through her means he should die
+had at last brought repentance to her unfeeling heart; she had been so
+wicked, so relentlessly cruel to his mother, that perhaps the boy's
+death was to be her punishment; and she could think of, scarcely look
+forward to, anything else.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Bernard stayed at the Park all that night; he whispered no decided
+hope to Amy's heart. There was only a very grave look on his face as
+after bending over Bertie and feeling the quick, sharp pulse beating so
+fiercely against his finger, he said, "While there is life there is
+hope," and Amy was obliged to content her poor heart with this, and
+repeat it over and over again to herself all through that long sad
+night; the second of Bertie's illness, and of her own and her husband's
+watch, for Robert scarcely ever left his boy, but remained through the
+weary hours of night patiently by his side; only old Hannah snatching
+every now and then a moment's sleep.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Towards the morning Bertie grew more composed, the hands tossed about
+less restlessly, and the weary, anxious eyes closed in sleep: so calm
+and still he looked that Amy bent down her head to catch the faint
+breath.</p>
+
+<p>"It is not death?" she said to Dr. Bernard, who had been hastily
+aroused.</p>
+
+<p>"No. The crisis is past I hope. The fever has left him. It is weakness,
+excessive weakness," but he did not add that that was as much to be
+dreaded as the fever; while Amy only prayed that when he awoke he would
+recognise her, so long it seemed since his little lips had said "Mamma."</p>
+
+<p>Just before luncheon, Anne with her husband drove up to the Hall. She
+was rushing into the morning-room with her usual haste and merry laugh,
+when she was checked by Mrs. Linchmore's grave face.</p>
+
+<p>"Has anything happened, Isabella? How grave you look."</p>
+
+<p>Yes a great deal had happened; she had a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span> great deal to hear, and Anne
+sat herself down to listen to it all patiently&mdash;or as patiently as she
+could to the end. As soon as it was told, she was rushing impetuously
+from the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Is the boy in the small red room?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. But Anne, the fever is infectious; you had better stay away. Mrs.
+Vavasour can come and see you here."</p>
+
+<p>"As if she would leave him?" she cried, "not a bit of it, I know her
+better, besides I am not afraid of anything. I shall go." Anne was
+right, there was very little indeed she was afraid of.</p>
+
+<p>"But Anne, think of your husband; he might not like it."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! true; how tiresome it is sometimes to have a husband! I suppose I
+shall have to wait a whole hour before he thinks of coming back."</p>
+
+<p>"Did he drive in with you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and has gone on in the pony carriage to call at the Rectory. Isn't
+it provoking. I have a great mind not to wait for him." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"It might have been a great deal worse; suppose he had not driven in
+with you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Then I should have braved his anger and been at the boy's bed-side long
+ago," and she walked to the window, and strained her eyes impatiently
+down the drive.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you seen the child today?" she asked presently.</p>
+
+<p>"No, not since his illness; but Dr. Bernard tells me the fever left him
+early this morning."</p>
+
+<p>"It did? Oh! then he'll soon get better."</p>
+
+<p>"But he is so excessively weak, that he holds out small hopes of his
+recovery."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor dear Amy, how sad for her. Ah! there's the carriage at last; how
+delightful! Mr. Russell could not have been at home." And away she flew
+down the stairs, and stood impatiently on the terrace.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Thomas," she exclaimed, "how slowly you drive. I always tell
+you you indulge the pony fearfully when I am not with you."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hall looked in surprise at his wife's anxious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span> face. "Why, Anne," he
+said, "I had no idea you were in such a desperate hurry to return home,
+or I might have driven a little quicker."</p>
+
+<p>"Return," she cried, "I am not thinking of such a thing. I want to stay
+for a week, if you will only let me, and Isabella does not object; you
+can go and arrange it with her presently," said she, in her impetuous
+way.</p>
+
+<p>"But I have yet to hear why I am to do all this," returned her husband.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, I forgot! It's because poor Amy Vavasour's child, that little boy
+we saw when we were last here, is dying of some fever. They say it's
+infectious, but you will not mind that, will you? I am not a bit afraid,
+and I do so want to comfort Amy."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hall looked very grave.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, don't consider about it," she said, "you can stay, too, you know;
+there is no reason why you should go home before Saturday."</p>
+
+<p>"It is not that," he replied, "but this fever is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span> infectious, Anne, and
+you will be running a great risk."</p>
+
+<p>"Do not think about it, Tom. I shall fret myself into a worse fever at
+home, and besides, think of poor Amy. I do not believe you can be so
+hard-hearted as to refuse me."</p>
+
+<p>So in the end, much against his wish, Mr. Hall yielded, and while he
+went to propose the plan to Mrs. Linchmore Anne went off on her mission
+of mercy, and was repaid by the sad smile, and almost glad light in
+Amy's eyes as she greeted her.</p>
+
+<p>Anne was shocked at the change in the boy; shocked too, with the
+mother's wan, haggard look.</p>
+
+<p>"My Mistress hasn't been in bed for these two nights past, Miss," said
+Nurse, interpreting Anne's thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>Not for two nights? It was absolutely necessary she should have some
+repose; so Anne set herself to work to accomplish it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Why not lie down, Amy, while your boy is asleep?"</p>
+
+<p>"Impossible!" was the firm reply, "I could not."</p>
+
+<p>"But you will wear yourself out, you cannot possibly be of any use while
+he sleeps. I will sit by him for you, and call you the moment he wakes."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I must be by him when he wakes, I could not bear to think he looked
+at anyone else first; he has not known me for so long, that my heart is
+craving for some sign to show that he recognises me."</p>
+
+<p>This was conclusive, and Anne urged no more, but Robert said, "I think
+Mrs. Hall is right, Amy, in advising you to rest."</p>
+
+<p>"But I cannot leave the room, indeed I cannot."</p>
+
+<p>"There is no occasion for your doing so, you can lie on Hannah's bed."</p>
+
+<p>Anne expected a fresh expostulation, but no, Amy moved away at once, and
+did as her husband wished.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Where can I find a shawl for Amy, Mr. Vavasour?" said Anne, presently,
+"she will be frozen over there, without some wrap."</p>
+
+<p>He went away, and returned a moment after with one, which he spread over
+Amy as she lay, but without, to Anne's astonishment, one loving word or
+even look.</p>
+
+<p>"Try and sleep," he said, gently, "I will call you in an hour."</p>
+
+<p>She thanked him, and closed her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>But long before the hour had passed away, she was at Bertie's bed-side,
+with the little head nestled in her bosom, and the soft, thin hand
+clasped in hers; he was too weak to say much, but he had named her, had
+recognised her; that was enough, he would not die now, without giving
+her one loving look. Die? Yes, she felt he would die, so thin and
+wasted, so hollow his cheeks, so weak, so utterly weak; and then the
+sorrowing faces of those around, the still graver one, and pitying words
+of the old doctor. Ah! there was no need to tell her; her boy, her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
+beautiful boy, must die. Oh! the anguish of her heart, surely if a
+fervent prayer could save him, he would be saved yet.</p>
+
+<p>Anne stole away by and by to her husband, and found him busy unpacking a
+carpet bag.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been home and back again, Anne," he said, "and made Mary put
+together the few things she thought you might require. I hope you will
+find them all right."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Tom, I do believe you are the only devoted, kind husband in the
+whole world; how fortunate it was I married you when I did."</p>
+
+<p>"Why so?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Because I see so many bad specimens of married life, that if I had
+waited until now, I would not have had you at any price."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, you would," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be so conceited," she replied, "remember you have never been
+drilled yet."</p>
+
+<p>"I have my wife to be conceited of," he said, fondly; "and now Anne,
+tell me what news of the child?" She was grave in a moment.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"There is no hope. None whatever. Dr. Bernard gives none."</p>
+
+<p>"And the mother?"</p>
+
+<p>"She is very quiet, very submissive under it all."</p>
+
+<p>"She knows the worst, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"She guesses it, and bears up wonderfully. How it will be by-and-by,
+when the worst is over, I don't like, cannot bear to think of; you must
+come and talk to her then?"</p>
+
+<p>"I?" he said, "no, that will never do; she has her husband."</p>
+
+<p>"He's a wretch! I have no patience with him. As cold as an icicle."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Anne," he said, reprovingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! my dear Tom, I am so glad you are not like him," and then she burst
+out crying, a most unusual thing for her, "and I am so glad now I have
+no children: it must be dreadful to lose them. After this I will be the
+most contented little mortal going."</p>
+
+<p>And she went back again to Amy, leaving her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span> husband somewhat surprised,
+and regretful that he should have consented to have allowed her to
+remain in a scene evidently too much for her.</p>
+
+<p>Bertie had roused again. "Where's Missy? I want Missy?" he said, feebly.</p>
+
+<p>The cry went like a sharp knife through the mother's heart. She brought
+him toys and pictures, telling him the history of each, and quieting him
+as well as she could. At first he was amused and interested, but he soon
+wearied, and said again, "I want Missy."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it Alice he is crying for?" whispered Anne, as Amy moved away, and
+sent Hannah to take her place by the bed.</p>
+
+<p>"No, not Alice. Oh! Anne, he will break my heart. I had so hoped he had
+forgotten her."</p>
+
+<p>Again the little fretful cry sounded. "Tell Missy to come."</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>must</i> go," said Amy, "there is no help for it."</p>
+
+<p>Frances had thrown herself despairingly on the bed, shutting out Jane,
+her maid, who had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span> tried to comfort her, and even Mrs. Linchmore. At one
+moment she would not believe there was no hope&mdash;would not,&mdash;the next she
+wept and moaned with the certainty that there could be none; as she saw
+Amy enter, she covered her face with her hands, and groaned aloud;
+thinking there was but one reason the mother could have in coming to see
+her, and that was to upbraid her for having caused the death of her boy.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Strickland I said you should not see my boy, but I cannot refuse
+his,&mdash;" Amy faltered,&mdash;"perhaps last request. He is asking for you. Will
+you come?"</p>
+
+<p>"Come!" exclaimed Frances, springing from the bed, and tossing back the
+hair from off her throbbing temples, "do you think I could refuse
+him&mdash;you, anything? and oh! forgive me, Mrs. Vavasour, for having caused
+you all this utter misery."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a fearful punishment," said Amy, looking at the ravages grief and
+remorse had made in her beautiful face.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Fearful!" she replied, "it will haunt me through life. Think of that,
+and say one word of forgiveness, only one."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot forgive you, Miss Strickland. For my poor Bertie's illness I
+do; that was an unintentional injury, but his mother's misery&mdash;broken
+heart, no; that you might have prevented, and&mdash;and, God help me, but I
+cannot forgive that."</p>
+
+<p>"How could I hope you would," said Frances despairingly, as she prepared
+to follow Amy.</p>
+
+<p>"You must control your grief, Miss Strickland; be calm and passionless
+as of old. My boy must see no tears."</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder I have any to shed," she replied, "and God knows how I shall
+bear to see him."</p>
+
+<p>Anne looked bewildered as the door opened and Amy returned with Frances,
+and still more so when she saw the child's face light up with pleasure,
+and he tried in his feeble way to clasp her neck.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot bear to look at it," said Amy, as she softly left the room.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Naughty! naughty Missy," he said as he kissed her.</p>
+
+<p>Frances felt as if she could have died then, without one sigh of regret.
+For a moment after he released her she did not raise her head.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear,&mdash;dear Bertie," she said, struggling with her tears. Then
+presently she sat down and fondled and stroked his thin small
+hand, soothing and coaxing him as well as she was able. If her heart
+could have broken, surely it would have broken then.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! he's thin enough now, Miss," observed Nurse, "even that sour
+stiff-backed lady would have a hard matter to call him fat. He's never
+been the same since she looked at him with those sharp ferret eyes of
+hers;" and then she moved away and went and seated herself by the fire,
+recounting the whole history to Anne, of not only her dislike for Miss
+Barker, but the reason of Bertie's apparent partiality for Frances;
+while the latter sat and listened to Bertie's talk, he wounding and
+opening her heart afresh at every word he uttered.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Naughty Missy not to come to Bertie!" he said; and Frances could not
+tell him why she had stayed away; she could only remain silent and so
+allow him to conclude she had been unkind.</p>
+
+<p>She took up some of the books Amy had left.</p>
+
+<p>"Here are pretty pictures," she said, "shall Missy tell you some of the
+nice stories?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, you mustn't. Mamma tells me them; I like her to, she tells them so
+pretty."</p>
+
+<p>"Is there nothing Missy can do for you? Shall she sing you a song?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mamma sings 'Gentle Jesus;' you don't know one so pretty do you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Bertie, I am sure I don't."</p>
+
+<p>Presently his little face brightened. "I should like you to get me
+kitty," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Who is kitty though?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's what Master Bertie cried for the very day he was taken ill. It's
+the kitten he saw in the village, Miss," said Hannah.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Bertie shall have kitty," said Frances, decidedly. "Missy will fetch
+her."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, she's big now, her mother won't cry," he said, as if not quite
+satisfied that she would not.</p>
+
+<p>It had come on to rain, since the morning but what cared Frances for
+that; she scarcely stayed to snatch her hat and cloak before she was
+hurrying through it. What cared she for the rain or anything else? Her
+whole soul was with Bertie&mdash;the child who through her means was dying,
+and yet had clasped her neck so lovingly as she bent over him dismayed
+and appalled at the ravages illness had made in his sweet face.</p>
+
+<p>There was only Matthew in the little parlour as she entered the cottage.</p>
+
+<p>"You'd better not come in, Miss," he said "no offence, Miss, but my
+sister-in-law's been ill with the fever these days past."</p>
+
+<p>"It can make no difference now," she said, bitterly, "that little boy I
+brought here only ten days ago is&mdash;is dying of the fever he caught
+here." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Lord save us! Miss, dying?" said Matthew regretfully.</p>
+
+<p>"He has just asked for the kitten he saw here. Will you let him have it?
+It may be," she said despairingly, seeing he hesitated, "only&mdash;only for
+a day, or for&mdash;a few hours, you would never have the heart to refuse a
+child's last wish." In days gone by she would have abused him for the
+hand he had had in causing poor Bertie's illness, and her misery. But it
+was different now.</p>
+
+<p>"No, Miss, you're right, I haven't the heart to. What's the kitten's
+life worth next to the young master's. Here take it and welcome; though
+what the Missus'll say when she finds it's gone, and the old un a
+howling about the place I don't know, but there, it can't be helped,"
+said Matthew philosophically, as Frances wrapped the kitten up carefully
+in her cloak, and hurried away.</p>
+
+<p>The evening had closed in by the time Frances reached the Park again.
+She hastily changed her wet things, and went at once to Bertie's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span> room,
+but her heart misgave her, as, going down the long corridor, she saw
+Anne seated on the ledge of the large window, with the traces of tears
+on her face.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not too late?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know," replied Anne. "He is very, very weak. I could not bear
+to stay."</p>
+
+<p>Frances went on, Robert, as well as Amy, was in the room. He moved a
+little on one side to allow Frances to come near. "Bertie, my boy," he
+said, "Missy has brought you Kitty."</p>
+
+<p>Frances leant over, and placed it beside him.</p>
+
+<p>He opened his eyes feebly, then took the kitten so full of life, and
+nestled it to his side.</p>
+
+<p>"Bertie is very sick," he said, weakly, as he tried to murmur his
+thanks.</p>
+
+<p>This was the first time he had spoken of feeling ill. How pitifully his
+little childish words smote upon the hearts of his sad, sorrowing
+parents.</p>
+
+<p>"Bertie is very sick," he said again. "I think Bertie is going to die.
+Poor Bertie!"</p>
+
+<p>His mother's tears fell like rain. "God will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span> take care of my boy for
+me," she said. "My boy, my precious Bertie!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but you mustn't cry, you and Papa, and Hannah."</p>
+
+<p>Robert's face was wet with tears, while old Hannah sat away in a corner,
+with her face covered up in her apron, sobbing audibly; but she stifled
+her sobs upon this, his&mdash;might be&mdash;last request.</p>
+
+<p>"God bless you, Bertie," said Frances, in a broken voice, ere she went
+away.</p>
+
+<p>"Good night," he said. "You may have my top, for bringing me Kitty. Papa
+will get it for you."</p>
+
+<p>And then he turned his head away wearily, and begged his mother to hush
+him in her arms to sleep. Robert lifted him gently, and laid him close
+to Amy. She drew him near, nearer still to her poor breaking heart, but
+she dared not press her lips to his, lest she should draw away the
+feeble breath, already coming so faintly, growing fainter and fainter
+every moment.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Kitty must go back to her mother," he said. "Take care of Kitty&mdash;pretty
+Kitty."</p>
+
+<p>But soon he grew too weak to heed even Kitty, and could only murmur
+short broken sentences about Papa, Mamma, and sometimes Missy.</p>
+
+<p>Presently he roused again. "Don't cry, Papa, Mamma&mdash;Kiss
+Bertie&mdash;Bertie's very sick. Tell Hannah to bring a light&mdash;Bertie wants
+to see you."</p>
+
+<p>Alas! his eyes had grown dim. He could no longer distinguish those he
+loved best, those who could scarcely answer his cry for their tears.
+They brought a light, old faithful Hannah did.</p>
+
+<p>"Can you see me, my own darling?" asked Amy.</p>
+
+<p>"No&mdash;no," he murmured, and his eyes closed gently, his breathing became
+more gentle still; once more he said, lovingly, "Dear Papa,&mdash;Dear
+Mamma," and then&mdash;he slept.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't disturb him, Robert," sobbed Amy to her husband, who was kneeling
+near.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But Bertie had gone to a sleep from which there was no awaking.</p>
+
+<p>Bertie, little loving Bertie, was dead.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"Softly thou'st sunk to sleep,</span>
+<span class="i4">From trials rude and sore;</span>
+<span class="i2">Now the good Shepherd, with His sheep</span>
+<span class="i4">Shall guard thee evermore."</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span></div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+
+<h4>JANE'S STORY.</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"An old, old woman cometh forth, when she hears the people cry;</span>
+<span class="i2">Her hair is white as silver, like horn her glazed eye.</span>
+<span class="i2">'Twas she that nursed him at her breast, that nursed him long ago.</span>
+<span class="i2">She knows not whom they all lament, but soon she well shall know;</span>
+<span class="i2">With one deep shriek she through doth break, when her ear receives their wailing,</span>
+<span class="i2">'Let me kiss my Celin ere I die&mdash;Alas! alas for Celin!'"</span>
+<span class="i20"><span class="smcap">Lockhart's Spanish Ballads.</span></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>The news of the sad death at the park spread like wildfire through the
+quiet, little village, and soon reached the turnpike gate, where Jane
+was fast recovering from the fever that had proved so fatal to poor
+Bertie. She, like Frances, moaned and wept when she heard of it; like
+her, her heart cowered and shrank within her; and for three days she
+could scarcely be persuaded to eat or drink, or say a word to anyone.
+Day<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span> after day she lay in her bed with her face steadily turned away
+from her sister, who as usual, tried to worry her into a more reasonable
+frame of mind, but finding it useless, left her to herself, and called
+her sullen; but it was not so, Jane's heart had been touched and
+softened ever since the unfortunate day of Bertie's visit; he had done
+more towards bringing repentance to that guilty heart than years of
+suffering had been able to accomplish; for Jane had suffered, suffered
+from the weight of a secret, that at times well-nigh made her as crazy
+as Marks imagined her to be. It was this terrible secret that had made
+her so silent and strange, this that had driven her neighbours to look
+upon her as half-witted. But she wanted no one's pity, no one's
+consolation, had steeled and hardened her heart against it, and let her
+life pass on and wither in its lone coldness. As she had lived, so she
+might have died, smothering all remorse, driving back each repentant
+feeling as it swept past her; might have died&mdash;but for Bertie's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span> visit.
+Since then, the firm will to resist the good had been shaken; she was
+not only weak from the effects of the fever, but inwardly weak; weak at
+heart, weak in spirit. She battled with the repentant feelings so
+foreign to her, fought against what she had been a stranger too for so
+long, but it was all in vain; she resisted with a will, but it was a
+feeble will, and in the end the good triumphed, and Jane was won.</p>
+
+<p>One morning, the fourth since Bertie died, Mrs. Marks took up Jane's
+breakfast as usual, and placed it on a chair by the bed-side.</p>
+
+<p>"Here's a nice fresh egg," said she, "what you don't often see, this
+time of the year, I wish it might strengthen your lips, as well as your
+stomach. I'm sick of seeing you lie there with never a word. I'd rather
+a deal have a bad one, than none at all," and she drew back the
+curtains, and stirred up the freshly-lit fire.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm ready and willing to speak," replied Jane, "though God forgive me,
+it's bad enough, as you say, what I have to tell." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Marks was startled, not only at Jane's addressing her after so long
+a silence, but at the changed voice, so different to the usual reserved,
+measured tone, and short answers given in monosyllables. But she took
+no notice, and merely said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter? Ain't the breakfast to your liking?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's better than I deserve," was the reply.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Marks was more amazed than before. "You don't feel so well this
+morning, Jane," said she, kindly, "the weakness is bad on you, like it
+was on me; but, please God, you'll get round fast enough, never fear.
+Here!" and she placed the tray on the bed, "take a sup of the tea, and
+I'll put a dash of brandy in it; that'll rouse you up a bit, I'll be
+bound."</p>
+
+<p>Jane made no resistance, but as Mrs. Marks put down the cup, she placed
+her hand on hers, and said, "You won't think me crazy, Anne, if I ask
+you to send and beg young Master Robert to come and see me?" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Don't you know he's been dead these four days past? There&mdash;there, lie
+still, and don't be a worriting yourself this way; your head ain't
+strong yet."</p>
+
+<p>"It's stronger and better than it's been many a long day. Anne, I must
+see Master Robert, not the dead child, but the young Squire. I've that
+to tell him that'll make his heart ache, as it has mine, only there's
+sin on mine&mdash;sin on mine," said she, sitting up in bed, and rocking
+herself about.</p>
+
+<p>"Then don't tell it. What's the use of making heart aches?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can't bear the weight of it any longer. I must tell. Ever since I saw
+that child I've been striving against it; but it's no good&mdash;no good. I
+can't keep the secret any longer, Anne. I dare not. If I do it'll drive
+me clean out of my mind."</p>
+
+<p>"Just you answer me one question, Jane. Is it right to tell it? Can any
+good come of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, so help me God. It can! It will!" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Then," replied Mrs. Marks, "I'll send Matthew at once; mother and I
+always thought there was something had driven you to be so strange when
+you left your place up at the Park fifteen years ago."</p>
+
+<p>Jane laid herself down and covered up her face, while with a troubled
+sigh Mrs. Marks went below to seek her husband.</p>
+
+<p>Matthew was surprised and confounded when bidden go up to the Hall and
+fetch the Squire.</p>
+
+<p>"What!" he said, "are yer gone clean crazy as well as Jane! It's likely
+I'll go and fetch the Squire at the bidding of a 'dafty.' How do I know,
+but what it's a fool's errand he'll come on?"</p>
+
+<p>But reason as he would, his words had no weight with Mrs. Marks, and
+Matthew had to go in the end, though with a more misgiving heart and
+rueful countenance than when he had gone to the young doctor's.</p>
+
+<p>There was little occasion for misgivings on Matthew's part, Mr.
+Linchmore received him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span> kindly, and promised to call at the turnpike
+during the day.</p>
+
+<p>What setting to rights of the cottage there was when Marks returned with
+the news! It was always tidy and clean, but now for the especial honour
+of the Squire's visit all its corners were ransacked and everything
+turned topsy-turvy. Mrs. Marks was still unable to help much in the
+work, but she dusted and tidied the cups and saucers, and knick-knacks,
+although they had not seen a speck of dust for days, and certainly not
+since she had been downstairs again; Sarah's arms ached with the
+scrubbing and scouring she was made to do in a certain given time, while
+her mistress stood by, scolding and finding fault by turns. Nothing was
+done well, or as it ought to be done; but then, as the girl said, Mrs.
+Marks was so finicking, there was no pleasing her, she should be glad
+enough when she was able to do the work for herself, and she could go
+home to her mother.</p>
+
+<p>When Mr. Linchmore came, he scarcely rested<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span> in the newly swept parlour
+at all, but desired at once to be shown to the sick woman's room. With
+many apologies from Mrs. Marks at her sister's inability to rise and see
+him, she preceded him up stairs.</p>
+
+<p>Jane was sitting propped up in bed with pillows, her pale face looking
+paler and more emaciated than usual. Mr. Linchmore's heart was touched
+with pity as he noted the care-worn, prematurely old face, with its deep
+lines telling of sorrow or sin. Sin! Surely if this woman's life had
+been sinful, what had he, with his strict principles of right, to do
+with such as her? What had she&mdash;as Marks assured him&mdash;to tell, that
+nearly concerned himself? His heart reverted to his mother. Was it of
+her she would speak? of her whose ungovernable temper had driven his
+father to seek with his children that happiness abroad that had been
+denied him at home? But then his mother had been mad, at least he had
+been taught to think that the one excuse for her strange conduct. How
+severe and tyrannical she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span> had been, not only to his brother and
+himself, but to that sweet, uncomplaining sister, whose life had been,
+he truly believed, shortened through her violence, and yet again, when
+the passion was over, how fiercely loving, how vehemently passionate in
+her cravings for her children's love, which she alienated from her more
+and more each day. No; others might love and reverence the name of
+mother, but Mr. Linchmore's heart was stirred with no such feelings;
+only a vague sense of fear, a nameless dread of evil came across him as
+he fancied it might be of her Jane had to speak.</p>
+
+<p>He drew near, and bent down kindly. "I fear you have been very ill," he
+said, "with the same fever that has wrought such desolation in my home."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, I have been ill&mdash;am ill; but now it's more from remorse; from
+the guilt of a wicked, cruel heart, than this same fever you speak of."</p>
+
+<p>There was a pause. Jane spoke with difficulty,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span> her breath came quick
+and short, as though her heart laboured heavily under the load of sin
+she spoke of.</p>
+
+<p>"Turn more to the light," she said, "so that I may see your face.
+So&mdash;that is well. Still like your mother, strangely like, with none of
+her hard passions or cruel hate. Your love might be fierce, burning, and
+strong, but unlike her you would sacrifice your own happiness to secure
+the well being of the one you love. Had she done so, what misery to her,
+what misery to me might have been spared?"</p>
+
+<p>"Did you know my mother?" asked Mr. Linchmore.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell him, Anne," said Jane, as Mrs. Marks held some wine and water to
+her pale lips, that seemed too feeble to utter another word.</p>
+
+<p>"If you please, sir," said Mrs. Marks, dropping her deepest curtsey,
+"this is Tabitha, my sister 'Tabitha Jane,' who was brought up so kindly
+by your lady mother; but there, I don't wonder you don't remember her. I
+had a hard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span> matter to myself, when I went over to Dean to fetch her,
+come four years ago this next Christmas."</p>
+
+<p>"Tabitha! This Tabitha! The pale, meek girl, who bore so uncomplainingly
+what we boys resented. Can this be Tabitha?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied Jane. "It can. It is. The weight of a guilty secret has
+ploughed my face with these deep furrows. Call me not meek; I was
+anything but that, I was a sinful, wicked woman. Oh! I have much to
+tell: much that has been locked up in my heart for more than thirty
+years. How I have suffered under the burden that at last has grown too
+heavy for me to bear, and I sink under its load, must divulge it; must
+have her forgiveness, ere I die!"</p>
+
+<p>"Your words fill me with a foreboding of evil," replied Mr. Linchmore.
+"Think well before you speak, Tabitha. Is it necessary that this secret,
+sinful as you say it is, should be divulged. Does it concern, does it
+benefit those living?"</p>
+
+<p>"If it did not, I would never speak it, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span> struggle on with its
+sorrow, till I died. No hard, and cruel as my mistress was, not from
+Tabitha should come the tale that will denounce her and her evil ways."</p>
+
+<p>"She was my mother, Tabitha," said Mr. Linchmore, as if reproaching her
+harshness.</p>
+
+<p>"True, she was. I do not forget it; still I must speak, must tell of her
+sin and mine, for it is sin, fearful sin. I would, for your sake, Master
+Robert, that it were otherwise; but when I tell of my wrong-doing, with
+mine must come hers. It must. Justice must be done. The mother's
+craving, broken heart must be healed."</p>
+
+<p>"God forbid that I should be the one to stand in the way. Speak,
+Tabitha! but be as merciful as you can; remember you speak of one whose
+memory ought to be dear to me. I will steel my heart to hear&mdash;and bear."</p>
+
+<p>"Do so," she said. "It is a long story. I must go back to the days when
+I was a child, and your mother, Miss Julia, took me away from my home to
+hers. She was of an imperious will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span> and proud nature; her mother had
+died at giving her birth, and her father had never controlled her in any
+way. She was as wild and wayward as the trees that grew in the forest
+near here, when they were shaken by the wind. With her, to ask was to
+have, and when she brought me home and declared her intention of
+bringing me up, and making a companion and plaything of me, no objection
+was raised, and she petted and scolded me by turns, as it suited her
+haughty will. At first I disliked her, then feared, and at length loved,
+worshipped her, as some beautiful spirit. Her father died; but then it
+was too late to save his child, or let others teach her wild spirit
+lessons of meekness and obedience; then your grandmother came and took
+us both away to live in her own home. She was a widow, with two sons,
+the eldest not quite so old as Miss Julia.</p>
+
+<p>"A change came over your mother. She loved. Loved the eldest of the two,
+your father; loved as only she could love, with all the wild, impetuous
+passion of her nature. It would have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span> been strange had he not loved her
+in return&mdash;so beautiful, so wayward, so bright a being as she was then.
+They were engaged to be married, and, I believe, had they married then
+all would have gone well, and perhaps the evil that followed been
+averted. But they did not marry, they tarried&mdash;tarried until another
+girl, a niece, was left desolate, and she too came to Brampton."</p>
+
+<p>Jane, or Tabitha, paused for a moment, then went on more slowly,</p>
+
+<p>"She was, I believe, an angel of goodness, as pure as she was fair, and
+as meek and gentle as your mother was ungovernable. From this time
+nothing went right. Your father and my mistress had words together
+oftener than formerly; but while she wept and lamented in secret, he
+would seek Miss Mary, and pour out his wounded heart to her. By degrees
+Miss Julia grew to learn it, and became jealous. Then, with the
+fierceness of her nature, she would storm and rave if she but saw Master
+Robert speaking to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span> her; and yet, when the angry fit was over, be as
+humbly loving, as passionately sorry.</p>
+
+<p>"Things could not go on like this for ever. I believe her temper was
+fairly wearing out your father's love, and that he would gladly have
+turned over to Miss Mary if he could; but I, who was set as a watch and
+a spy over the poor young thing&mdash;she was eighteen years younger than
+your mother&mdash;saw that her heart was another's, even young Mr. Archer's,
+who was part tutor, part companion to your father's younger brother. How
+I hated her then&mdash;for I had dared to love him myself&mdash;and determined on
+her ruin! How I hid the secret that would have made Miss Julia so happy
+in the deepest recesses of my heart, and urged my mistress on to believe
+that Miss Mary loved Master Robert!"</p>
+
+<p>Again Jane paused, then continued as she turned her face away from Mr.
+Linchmore, who was listening intently to her,</p>
+
+<p>"One morning, I remember it well,&mdash;I had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span> quietly wrought Miss Julia up
+to such a pitch of frenzy, that I believe she would have stopped at
+nothing to accomplish the removal of her hated rival,&mdash;the door was
+suddenly flung open by your father; his face was pale, and he was
+evidently labouring under strong excitement. 'Julia,' he said, 'do you
+still wish to be my wife?'</p>
+
+<p>"There was no need of a reply, could he not see the sudden light in her
+eyes, the quick bright flash that spread like wildfire over her face.</p>
+
+<p>"That day week they were married, and went away from Brampton for a
+time.</p>
+
+<p>"I remained behind with my enemy, watching and waiting; but I could do
+her no harm. Your grandmother loved her as the apple of her eye. I could
+see Miss Julia&mdash;now Mrs. Robert Linchmore,&mdash;was as nothing to her. Then
+I tried to cause a quarrel between her and young Mr. Archer; in vain;
+they loved too well, my arts were useless, my plans and wishes
+powerless.</p>
+
+<p>"Your parents returned. A year passed away,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span> and then you were born; but
+I could see your father was not happy. He still loved Miss Mary, strive
+as he would against it, while your mother treated her like a dog.</p>
+
+<p>"Another year, and your sister was born; but things went worse. Your
+mother was no sooner up and about again than your uncle's health failed
+terribly, and he and Mr. Archer went abroad.</p>
+
+<p>"Six months passed, during which your mother grew more insanely jealous
+of Miss Mary, and more tyrannical. She bore it all uncomplainingly; but
+I saw that she worried and fretted in secret, and grew thinner and
+thinner every day.</p>
+
+<p>"One morning I went hastily into her room, and found her working a
+baby's cap, which she hurriedly thrust on one side as I entered; but my
+suspicions were aroused at her evident confusion, and glancing at her,
+her sin&mdash;if sin it was, became evident to my eyes, and I flew, rather
+than walked to my mistress's room. The scene that followed between her
+and Miss Mary I will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span> not describe; but through it all&mdash;although she did
+not deny the imputation we cast on her,&mdash;she vowed she was innocent, and
+Mr. Archer's lawful wife. I believed her then. I know she told the truth
+now.</p>
+
+<p>"That night she fled from the Park, while your father left soon after to
+join his brother, declaring he would never live with his wife again
+until she had done Miss Mary justice. Your grandmother never recovered
+the shock of all these terrible doings, she took Miss Mary's sin to
+heart. I don't think she believed it: but she sorrowed, and refused to
+be comforted, and soon after died. Then news reached us of Mr. Archer's
+death."</p>
+
+<p>Jane stopped again, and lay back feebly against the pillows.</p>
+
+<p>"With the news of his death came a letter, addressed, in his
+handwriting, to Miss Mary. I recognised the writing, and kept the
+letter, mad as it made me to read those loving words of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span> written to
+another. She never had the letter, or her marriage lines, which were
+with it."</p>
+
+<p>"Wretched woman!" said Mr. Linchmore, sternly. "Had you no heart&mdash;no
+mercy?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, none. And now I must hasten to close, for I am weak and faint. I
+told no one of the letter, but tracked, by my mistress's order, Miss
+Mary. I found her at last. She had heard of her husband's death, for she
+wore widow's mourning, and looked heart-broken. She was poor, too, with
+only the small annuity old Mrs. Linchmore had been able to leave her;
+for her husband, Mr. Archer, had not, I believe, a farthing to give her
+at his death; but what cared I for that. I took away the one tie that
+bound her to this earth&mdash;I took her child."</p>
+
+<p>"That was not my mother's sin," said Mr. Linchmore, interrupting her.
+"Thank God for that!"</p>
+
+<p>"Stop! Don't interrupt me! I did it, because she bade me do it. I don't
+think then I should have done it else, because <i>he</i> was dead,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span> and my
+heart did not feel so hard as it had done, and I should have told my
+mistress how I had belied Miss Mary to her, had I dared summon the
+courage to do so; but I dreaded to think of her anger at being deceived.
+Well, enough, I took the child. He was a lovely, sweet infant, gentle
+and fair like his mother had been, and I could not find it in my heart
+to do the evil with him my mistress wished; for her heart could not but
+feel savage at the thought of his being her husband's child. So I kept
+him hid away till long after I had stolen him; then I carried him to Mr.
+Vavasour, a kind, mild looking, middle-aged gentleman, who had often
+visited the Park at one time; but now, ever since Mrs. Robert had been
+left in possession, never came.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Vavasour refused to take the child at first, but I pleaded so hard;
+I told him what the boy's fate would be if he turned a deaf ear to my
+entreaties; that the mother hated him as a love child, and that the
+knowledge of his birth would bring sin and shame upon her, and much more
+be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>side, and in the end he consented to adopt him,&mdash;and did. Four
+years after this, your father returned home, and things went on more
+smoothly; your brother Charles was born, and my mistress seemed at last
+happy, and her restless spirit satisfied; but her temper, at times, was
+as bad as ever, and I don't believe, at heart, she was happy with the
+weight of the sin she thought she had been guilty of, on her conscience.
+How Miss Mary came to guess we had aught to do with her boy, I know not.
+But about a year after your brother's birth she came and taxed us with
+the theft. How altered she was! Grief and the mother's sorrow had done
+their work surely, and I scarcely dared look on the wreck I had helped
+to make.</p>
+
+<p>"She told us that the loss of her child had driven her mad, and that for
+months she had been watched and looked after. She conjured
+us&mdash;implored&mdash;all in vain; my mistress denied our guilt, and defied her;
+but your father believed the poor, sorrowing, frantic creature, and
+never<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span> spoke to his wife after, but left her, taking his children with
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"He never saw your mother again.</p>
+
+<p>"My mistress bore up bravely after he was gone. None guessed of her
+desolated heart, or that it still loved so passionately. During the five
+years that followed, I scarce know how she lived; I could see her heart
+was fast breaking, and that all her hope in life was gone. She grew more
+tyrannical than ever; there was not one of the few servants we had but
+did not fear her and think her mad. She would go down the small
+staircase that led from her room out into the park, and roam for hours
+at night. As she grew weaker and weaker, and I felt she would die, my
+heart relented more and more. I could not bear to witness her misery.
+Then I owned the boy was alive, and begged and implored her to let us
+find him and restore him to his mother; I dared not say I knew where he
+was, or that he was not her husband's child; but she resisted my
+entreaties with violence, and made me swear I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span> never would tell what we
+had done. She grew worse and worse; but struggled on, defying every
+thing and everyone. I had a hard matter to get her to see the young
+doctor even.</p>
+
+<p>"One night she was so weak she would lay on a mattress on the floor, not
+having the strength to get into bed; as I sat by her side and watched,
+she fell into a deep sleep. Soon after, I heard steps coming up the
+secret stairs; I needed no one to tell who that was&mdash;my heart whispered
+it was Miss Mary long before she stood before me. She never said a word,
+but sat away on the other side of my mistress. My heart shuddered as I
+looked at her; she was more altered than ever; her hair was quite grey,
+such lovely fair hair as it had been!&mdash;the softness of her face was
+gone; the sweet gentle look had gone too, and a painful frown contracted
+her forehead. While I gazed, I forgot Miss Mary, and could think of
+nothing but the angry, bereaved, half-crazed Mrs. Archer. I knew then,
+that those who had injured her had no mercy to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span> expect at her hands, and
+I felt afraid of her, and yet I dared not bid her go, but wished my
+mistress would tell her the truth when she awoke from that death-like
+slumber. I prayed she might,&mdash;for what harm could that angry mother do
+to a dying woman? But my prayer was not answered. I forgot, when I
+breathed it, my own sinfulness,&mdash;forgot, even, that if vengeance came at
+all, it would fall on me; and, if I had thought of it, I would not have
+stayed the truth from being told then. I swear I would not. I was too
+miserable. God knows, I would have told, myself, but for the sake of my
+oath, and that angry look on Mrs. Archer's face; it tied my tongue.</p>
+
+<p>"When my mistress roused, I shall never forget her anger at seeing Mrs.
+Archer. She heaped a storm of abuse on her head, while Mrs. Archer
+prayed and wept by turns; promising even to bless those who had robbed
+her, if they would only give her back her lost treasure. 'Give me back
+my boy!' was the ever repeated, fervent, agonized cry of her heart." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"She did not, could not plead in vain," cried Mr. Linchmore. "No, no, my
+mother was not so bad as that!"</p>
+
+<p>"Nerve your heart to bear the rest, it is soon told. Tears streamed from
+her eyes in vain. She pleaded in vain. My mistress was obdurate. 'I
+die,' she said, 'but I die with the knowledge that you, who have been
+the one stumbling-block of my life, and have made it miserable, and a
+curse to me, are even more wretched than myself, for I will never speak
+the word that will make you happy. The secret shall die with me.' When
+Mrs. Archer saw that all her pleading was vain, she grew frantic, and
+scarce knew what she said in her madness. My mistress grew even more
+angry than she. I strove to quiet her, to stay the torrent of words, but
+her whole frame shook with angry passion as she sat up unaided on the
+bed. I saw it was too much for her, tried to avert it, but, before she
+could utter a word, she fell back again. 'God have mercy upon me!' she
+cried, and with that one prayer on her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span> lips she died. I know no more, I
+fell insensible, as Mrs. Archer, seeing her last hope gone, gave one
+terrible fearful cry of despair."</p>
+
+<p>Jane paused. "I have no more to tell," she said feebly, "I thank God I
+have told it; I never would, but for the sake of the curl. I daren't let
+it lie in my bosom else."</p>
+
+<p>It was many minutes before Mr. Linchmore could speak, and then his voice
+quavered and shook, and his hands trembled as he drew them from his
+face, and asked, "Where is the mother&mdash;the child?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Vavasour, up at the Park now, is the child. Mrs. Archer, the
+mother, lives down in the wood, yonder. I have never seen her but once
+since I came here; I have fled the sight of her. You know her as Mrs.
+Grey. You will see her, tell her what I say; she will believe it fast
+enough."</p>
+
+<p>"Your sin has been fearful; God knows it has," said Mr. Linchmore,
+trying to speak composedly.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been a sinful woman; humbly I ac<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>knowledge it, but if my sin has
+been great, what has been its punishment? Look in my face, you will read
+the traces of suffering there; but my heart, you cannot read that; and
+that has suffered tenfold."</p>
+
+<p>"What proof have you of all you say?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Archer will need none," she said, "if you tell her Tabitha swears
+it's the truth. But here's the letter with her marriage lines," she
+added, taking one from under her pillow, "many's the time I've been
+tempted to destroy it, but somehow daren't do it; and here's another old
+Mr. Vavasour gave me to keep, stating when and how we had received the
+child; in it you'll find the beads he wore round his neck when I stole
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"Are these all the proofs you can give?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. I've a stronger one than this. The child had a dark mark on his
+arm, it could not have escaped his mother's eye; it can't have worn
+away, it must be there now, and that'll tell who he is plainer and
+better than any words of mine. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span> "Are you going?" she asked, as Mr.
+Linchmore rose.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, the sooner I tell the dreadful tale the better, if my heart does
+not break the while. Have you anything else to say? Would you wish to
+see Mrs. Archer?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! no! no!" she said, "don't send her; I know I've no mercy to expect
+at her hands, I showed her none. She'll hate and curse me, may be."</p>
+
+<p>"You have little mercy to expect from one you have so deeply injured,"
+replied Mr. Linchmore, "but I will see you again, or send another to
+speak with you. My thoughts are in a whirl, and I cannot&mdash;I feel
+incapable of talking to you today."</p>
+
+<p>"And must I be satisfied with this?" said Jane, "well, I submit; I have
+not deserved a kind word from you. Still I loved your mother."</p>
+
+<p>"She would have been better for your hate," he replied, moodily, "but in
+case I should not come again, I leave you my forgiveness for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span> evil
+you have helped to work, though it goes hard against my heart to give
+it; but you have a higher mercy to ask for than mine. I trust you have
+implored that already&mdash;humbly and sincerely."</p>
+
+<p>"God knows I have," replied Jane, feebly.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Linchmore went slowly from the cottage, scarcely heeding Mrs. Marks'
+curtseys and parting words, and struck across the fields towards the
+wood.</p>
+
+<p>It was a sinful, grievous tale, the one he had just heard, and a bitter
+trial to him, not only to listen to it, but to know that from his lips
+must come the words to denounce his mother,&mdash;proclaim her guilt. It went
+bitterly against him, although he had no loving reverence for his
+parent; still, it must be done, his misery must make another's
+happiness, must restore the son to his mother. He hesitated not, but
+walked firmly on, perhaps angrily.</p>
+
+<p>At the corner of the wood he met Marks, but his heart was too full for
+words with any one, and he merely acknowledged the passing touch of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
+hat, as he turned off into one of the by-paths, a nearer cut to Mrs.
+Grey's cottage. Just as he was about to emerge again into the broad
+beaten path, scarcely a dozen yards from the cottage, he stopped for a
+moment to collect his thoughts. A slight rustle in the bushes near
+attracted his attention. He looked up, and saw a man, gun in hand,
+creeping cautiously out of the underwood.</p>
+
+<p>At another time Mr. Linchmore would have confronted him at once, but now
+he allowed him to pass on unmolested. The man crossed the path, reached
+the opposite side, and was about plunging again into the bushes, when
+Robert Vavasour's hand arrested his footsteps.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you here with that gun, my man?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>It was growing dusk, almost twilight in the wood; still, as the man
+suddenly turned his face full on Vavasour, the latter exclaimed,</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! it is you, is it? You villain! you don't escape me this time." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A short quick scuffle, a bright flash, a loud report, and Robert
+Vavasour dropped to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>With a great oath, the man sprang up, but ere he could stir one step,
+Mr. Linchmore's hand was upon him. A desperate struggle ensued; but a
+stronger arm, a more powerful frame, contended with him now, and in a
+few moments he lay prostrate, but still struggling, on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>"Could you be content with nothing less than murder?" asked a voice,
+sternly.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Linchmore shuddered as he recognised "Goody Grey."</p>
+
+<p>"For God's sake, Mrs. Grey, go and seek help for the wounded man
+yonder."</p>
+
+<p>"Why should I?" she exclaimed, fiercely. "I will never stir a finger for
+you or yours. I have sworn it."</p>
+
+<p>"It is your son, your long-lost son! Tabitha bid me tell you so."</p>
+
+<p>Goody Grey,&mdash;or rather Mrs. Archer's,&mdash;whole frame trembled violently;
+she quivered and shook,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span> and leant heavily on her staff, as though she
+would have fallen.</p>
+
+<p>"Fly!" he continued. "For God's sake, fly! Rouse yourself, Mrs. Archer,
+and aid your son."</p>
+
+<p>"My son!" she repeated, softly and tenderly, but as if doubting his
+words.</p>
+
+<p>Again Mr. Linchmore implored her, again she heard those words "It is
+your son!" which seemed to burn her brain. But the power of replying, of
+moving, seemed taken from her.</p>
+
+<p>A minute passed, and then the weakness passed away. Her eyes flashed,
+her face flushed, then blanched again, while with a mighty effort she
+drew up her tall figure to its utmost height, and proudly, but
+hurriedly, went over to where Robert lay.</p>
+
+<p>She staunched the blood flowing from the wound, and tenderly knelt by
+his side and lifted his head gently on her bosom.</p>
+
+<p>There was a slight break in the branches of the trees overhead, so that
+what little light there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span> was, streamed through the gap full down on the
+spot where Mrs. Archer knelt.</p>
+
+<p>She raised his coat sleeve, and baring his arm, bent down her head over
+it.</p>
+
+<p>A moment after a wild cry rent the air, and rang through the wood.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! help! help!" she cried; "Oh! my son! my son!"</p>
+
+<p>There was no need to cry for help; the sound of the gun had been heard,
+and the keepers came crowding to the spot, and with them, Marks.</p>
+
+<p>A litter was soon constructed for the wounded man, and once more he was
+mournfully and sorrowfully borne away towards the Hall.</p>
+
+<p>Marks drew near the captured poacher, now standing sullenly and silently
+near.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" said Marks, as he was being led away, "I thought no good had
+brought farmer Hodge down here, four years ago. You'll may be swing for
+this, my lad; and break your father's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span> heart, as you did your mother's,
+not so long ago."</p>
+
+<p>With which consolatory remark, Marks went back to his cottage.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+
+<h4>DESPAIR!</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Ah! what have eyes to do with sleep,</span>
+<span class="i4">That seek, and vainly seek to weep?</span>
+<span class="i4">No dew on the dark lash appears,&mdash;</span>
+<span class="i4">The heart is all too full for tears."</span>
+<span class="i20">L. E. L.</span>
+</div></div>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"The world's a room of sickness, where each heart,</span>
+<span class="i4">&nbsp; &nbsp; Knows its own anguish and unrest,</span>
+<span class="i2">The truest wisdom there, and noblest art,</span>
+<span class="i4">&nbsp; &nbsp; Is his, who skills of comfort best,</span>
+<span class="i2">Whom by the softest step and gentlest tone,</span>
+<span class="i4">&nbsp; &nbsp; Enfeebled spirits own,</span>
+<span class="i2">And love to raise the languid eye,</span>
+<span class="i2">Where, like an angel's wing, they feel him fleeting by."</span>
+<span class="i20"><span class="smcap">Christian Year.</span></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Anne sat in the solitude of her own thoughts; not alone, for her husband
+was at a table near, busy with his morrow's sermon; but Anne, for once,
+did not mind the silence, she had many things to think of, many things
+that made her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span> sad. First, the little dead child lying now so cold and
+still; then his poor, sorrowing, heart-broken mother, whom she had tried,
+but ineffectually, to comfort; and then the father, who ought to be the
+one earthly stay on which the wife's heart might lean, and whose love
+should wean away the sad remembrance, or soften the blow. But Anne had
+found out that a great gulf lay between husband and wife, though what
+had separated them baffled her utmost skill to discover.</p>
+
+<p>Robert must love his wife passionately, else why had he lifted her so
+tenderly in his arms, as she lay insensible when the truth of her great
+loss broke upon her; why had he carried her away, and as he laid her on
+her own bed, bent so lovingly over her, murmuring, as he chafed her
+hands, "My poor, stricken darling. My own lost love;" and yet, when
+consciousness returned, how self possessed! how altered! kind and
+considerate as before, but the loving words, the loving looks were
+wanting. And Amy, who had seemed so happy only a month ago, surely more
+than grief<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span> for her boy had fixed that stony look on her face, and
+caused those tearless, woeful eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Anne's thoughts grew quite painful at last; the eternal scratch of her
+husband's pen irritated her.</p>
+
+<p>"Do put down your pen for a minute, Tom. I feel so miserable."</p>
+
+<p>"In half a moment," he said. "There&mdash;now I am ready to listen. What was
+it you said?"</p>
+
+<p>"That I was miserable."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not wonder at it, there has been enough to make us all feel
+sorrowful."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but it is more than the poor child's death makes me feel so."</p>
+
+<p>"What else?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Why Amy herself, and then her husband."</p>
+
+<p>"Let us pick the wife to pieces first, Anne."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Tom, it is no scandal at all, but the plain truth. I wish it were
+otherwise," she said with a sigh.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, begin at the beginning, and let me judge." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You put it all out of my head. There is no beginning," she said
+crossly.</p>
+
+<p>"Then the end," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"There is neither beginning nor end: you make me feel quite vexed, Tom."</p>
+
+<p>"Neither beginning nor end? Then there can be nothing to tell."</p>
+
+<p>"No, nothing. You had better go on with your sermon and make an end of
+that."</p>
+
+<p>"I have made an end of it," he said, laughing, "and now, joking aside,
+Anne, what have you to say about Mrs. Vavasour?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you are serious, Tom, I will tell you, but not else," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>"I am serious, Anne; quite serious."</p>
+
+<p>"Then tell me what is to be done with that poor bereaved Amy,&mdash;who has
+not shed a single tear since her child's death, four days ago now;&mdash;or
+her husband, who I verily believe worships her, and yet is as cold as a
+stone, and from no want of love on her part either, for I can see
+plainly by the way she follows him with her eyes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span> sometimes, that she is
+as fond of him as&mdash;as&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You are of me," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense, Tom. They were so happy last time we came over to see them,
+that I cannot understand what has caused the change. Can you make any
+guess at all so as to help me? for oh! Tom, I would give the world to
+know."</p>
+
+<p>"Curiosity again, Anne?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, not so," she replied, "or if it is, it is in the right place this
+time; as I want to help them to make up the difference, whatever it is
+but do not see how I can manage it, when I am so totally in the dark.
+One thing I am certain of, Amy will die unless I can bring her to shed
+some tears, so as to remove that stony look."</p>
+
+<p>"She has <i>one</i> hope, <i>one</i> consolation. Surely I need not remind my wife
+to lead her heart and thoughts gradually and gently to that."</p>
+
+<p>"I have tried it, tried everything; but, Tom, there is no occasion
+whatever for preaching.</p>
+
+<p>"Anne! Anne!" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I know it's wrong to say so, but it is the truth notwithstanding;
+I feel something else should be tried. She is too submissive under the
+blow, too patient; not a murmur has escaped her lips, if there had, I
+should stand a better chance of seeing tears; but as it is there is no
+need of consolation. I verily believe she wants to die. And then that
+Frances, I sometimes think she has had something to do with it all; you
+know I always disliked that girl, and never thought she had a spark of
+feeling in her, until I saw her coming away from poor Bertie's room that
+sad evening, and a more woe-begone, remorseful face I never wish to see;
+and then see how distracted she has been since. Isabella tells me it is
+dreadful to be with her."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor girl, I pity her with all my heart, she feels she has been mainly
+instrumental in bringing all this misery upon Mrs. Vavasour."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure," said Anne, more to herself than her husband, "she has a
+great deal more than Bertie's death to answer for; she nearly broke his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
+mother's and Charley's heart four years ago, and I half believe she has
+had something to do with the husband's now."</p>
+
+<p>"Be more charitable, Anne, and do not lay so many sins to her charge.
+That last is a very grievous one."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said his wife, rising, "after all my talk, Tom, you have not
+helped me one bit, I do believe I am going away more miserable than ever
+to that poor Amy."</p>
+
+<p>"Things do look dark indeed, Anne," said he as he kissed her, "but we
+must hope in God's mercy all will be better soon; may He help you in
+your work of love with the poor heart-sorrowing mother."</p>
+
+<p>As Anne went out she met Frances Strickland's maid, "If you please
+Ma'am, where shall I find Mr. Hall, my young mistress wishes to see
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell him myself," said Anne, and back she went.</p>
+
+<p>"Tom! Frances Strickland wishes to see you." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"To see me!" he exclaimed. "I have promised to walk as far as the
+turnpike with Linchmore. That woman from whom the child caught the fever
+sent to beg he would call on her some time this morning; he named two
+o'clock, and it is close upon that now. Will not Miss Strickland be
+satisfied with you as my substitute?"</p>
+
+<p>"I never thought of asking, and, indeed, I should not like to. She might
+think I was jealous." Mr. Hall laughed outright.</p>
+
+<p>"You are in such a dreadfully teasing mood this morning, Tom; I have no
+patience with you! Perhaps Frances is going to clear up all this
+mystery? I told you a moment ago I suspected she had had something to do
+with it, and now her remorse may be greater than she can bear;
+repentance may have come with her grief for poor Bertie. I only hope, if
+it is so, that she is not too late to make amends."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I must make my excuses to Linchmore, and give up my walk," he
+said, with a sigh; "and go and hear what she has to say?" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes, do, Tom, that will be so good of you. I will wait here, but do not
+be long, as this is your last day with me, you know."</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Mr. Hall had gone, Anne half regretted that she had not done
+as he suggested, and seen Frances instead. Suppose she should try and
+sow dissension in his heart? Anne's face flushed hotly at the bare idea,
+then again she consoled herself with the thought that he would be sure
+to come and tell her if she did, for the sake of the love he bore for
+her; still Anne passed a fidgety, uncomfortable half hour ere he
+returned.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hall's face was grave; graver than Anne ever remembered to have seen
+it, and she waited for him to speak first, and checked the impatient
+question already on her lips.</p>
+
+<p>"It is worse than I thought, Anne, much worse. Your judgment did not
+lead you astray. She has separated husband and wife."</p>
+
+<p>"Then she has told you all, Tom. Oh! how glad I am, not only for Amy's
+sake but for her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span> own; it would have been so dreadful for her to have
+lived on upholding the falsehoods she must have told to work her ends."</p>
+
+<p>"That is the worst part of the business, Anne, she has unfortunately
+told the truth, and, as far as I can see, the chance of reconciling
+those who ought to be heart and soul to each other is remote indeed.
+Time and the wife's love&mdash;you say she does love him&mdash;may, by God's
+grace, do much. I see nothing that you or I can do."</p>
+
+<p>"Wretched girl! What has she told?"</p>
+
+<p>"What Vavasour ought only to have heard from his wife's lips. Of her
+previous love for another and of their unfortunate meeting the day of
+her marriage."</p>
+
+<p>"I always hoped she had told him," said Anne, clasping her hands
+despairingly. "The concealment was no sin on Amy's part, only weakness.
+But as for Frances, there can be no excuse for her. She has been
+cruelly, shamefully unkind, and revengeful!"</p>
+
+<p>"She has; there is no denying it, but all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span> through your friend's own
+fault; she nursed in her heart&mdash;which should have been as clear as day
+to her husband&mdash;a secret; and that one sin has brought in the end its
+own punishment, and while we blame Frances' culpable revenge, we must
+blame the wife's breach of faith and disloyalty."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Tom, what hard words!" cried Anne, "poor Amy's has not been a
+guilty secret."</p>
+
+<p>"No, but appearances are sadly against her, and we know nothing of what
+the husband thinks; even if he does believe her guiltless, he must
+naturally feel wounded at his wife's want of love and trust."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied Anne, sadly, "what you say is very just and true. Can
+nothing then be done? Nothing at all?"</p>
+
+<p>"Frances is ready to make what atonement she can for her fault; it may
+help us a little, but very little, I fear. She has promised to tell
+Vavasour that her own jealousy and grief at being supplanted in
+another's love by his wife,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span> determined her on being revenged; she
+cannot unsay what she has said, because it is the truth; but she who
+caused the breach may be allowed to plead for forgiveness for herself
+and the wife she has injured. The repentance is no secret, Anne; she
+desired me to tell you all, and beg you to plead for her with Mrs.
+Vavasour."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think I shall plead in vain, or that she will with Mr.
+Vavasour?"</p>
+
+<p>"I trust not," he said, doubtfully; "the knowledge that his wife has not
+intentionally sinned, but only through fear of losing his love, and the
+conviction that she loves him may soften his heart."</p>
+
+<p>"May; but I see you think it will be a long time first, and in the
+meantime Amy will break her heart. Oh! Tom, I don't believe he can be so
+cruel if he loves her; just now, too, when she is so heart broken, so
+sadly bereaved. Do make Frances tell Mr. Vavasour at once."</p>
+
+<p>"I intended to have done so," he replied, "but Vavasour has gone out, so
+we must wait as pa<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>tiently as we can until he returns. In the meantime,
+Anne, I will give you something to occupy your time and thoughts. I have
+promised Miss Strickland that you will ask Mrs. Vavasour's forgiveness
+for her. She says it is hopeless; but that cannot be," he said, as Anne
+thought, somewhat sternly; "you had better go at once and ask it; she
+who has sinned herself, and knows the repentant heart's craving for
+forgiveness, what hope can she have of pardon if she withholds hers from
+one who has sinned against her even seventy times seven."</p>
+
+<p>Anne said not a word, but with desponding heart prepared to go.</p>
+
+<p>"I have only an hour to spare," said Mr. Hall. "It is now three, and at
+four I must get ready to start home. I have ordered the pony-carriage at
+half-past."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be with you long before that," replied Anne, as she closed the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>Amy sat just where Anne had left her only an hour ago; the same
+hopelessly despairing, fixed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span> death-like look on her face, which was as
+white as the shawl wrapped round her. As Anne looked, she wondered if
+Frances alone had wrought the sad change, while her heart sank within
+her at the apparently hopeless task her husband had imposed upon her,
+and she hesitated and faltered slightly ere she went at once, as was her
+wont, to the point in view. Her sister Julia would have brought the
+subject gradually round to Frances, but that was not Anne's way; she
+was, in fact, too impetuous, rushing headlong into a difficulty, facing
+the danger, and braving it with that strong, true heart.</p>
+
+<p>"My husband has been to see Frances Strickland to-day, Amy."</p>
+
+<p>There was no reply; Anne hardly expected any, but Amy raised her eyes,
+and looked hastily and inquiringly in her face. Anne took courage;
+perhaps the very fact of Amy's knowing another held her secret might
+open the floodgates of her heart.</p>
+
+<p>"She hid nothing from Tom; told him all,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span> everything, and is desperately
+sorry, as well she may be, for all the misery she has caused you."</p>
+
+<p>"As well she may be," repeated Amy.</p>
+
+<p>"She is repentant&mdash;truly repentant, Amy."</p>
+
+<p>"I know it; have known it for days past," was the cold reply.</p>
+
+<p>"She begs your forgiveness most humbly."</p>
+
+<p>"I know that also, and have given it."</p>
+
+<p>"She says otherwise, Amy," said Anne, rather puzzled.</p>
+
+<p>"I have forgiven her for my darling's loss. But for the other; if she
+has dared tell you of it&mdash;of her cruelty, I never will. I have said so.
+Let us talk of something else."</p>
+
+<p>"No, Amy, I must talk of this&mdash;only of this. Does not the very fact of
+her having owned her fault show how sincerely sorry she is. Think of
+Frances, the proud Frances, sueing for forgiveness; think how miserable,
+utterly miserable, she must be to stoop to that. How, almost
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>broken-hearted! Surely, Amy, for the sake of her prayers&mdash;all our
+prayers, for the sake of the love your poor Bertie had for her, you will
+forgive her."</p>
+
+<p>"No. Had my boy lived he would have avenged his mother's wrongs, and
+hated her, even as I do."</p>
+
+<p>"Alas, Amy! You hate her. Your heart never used to be so cruel as this."</p>
+
+<p>"No, it did not. She has made me what I am. Has she not pursued me with
+her revengeful cruelty for years? Has she not taken my only earthly hope
+from me, even my husband's love? And yet you wonder that I am
+changed&mdash;can ask me to forgive her."</p>
+
+<p>"No, Amy, not taken your husband's love; he loves you still."</p>
+
+<p>"If he did, I should not be sitting here, broken hearted and alone, with
+nothing but my own sorrowful thoughts, and&mdash;and you to comfort me."</p>
+
+<p>"He will forgive you, and take you to his heart in time, Amy."</p>
+
+<p>"Never! How can I convince him that I love<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span> him now? His very kindness
+chills me&mdash;so different to what it was; the changed tone of his voice
+tells me I have lost his love. He lives; yet is dead to me,&mdash;is mine,
+yet, how far off from me; and she who has wrought me all this misery,
+done all she has it in her power to do, now sues for forgiveness. Is it
+possible I can forgive, or clasp her hand in mine again?" The stony look
+was gradually relaxing, a slight, colour mantled her cheeks, and she
+concluded, almost passionately,&mdash;"No, Anne, I will not forgive her! Will
+not! Urge me no more. I cannot speak to her, much less see her again."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet think of her kindness to your boy. He remembered it, and gave
+her his top when he was dying."</p>
+
+<p>"You are cruel to remind me of it," said Amy, taking some fresh flowers
+off the table she was wreathing into a cross for Bertie; her last sad,
+mournful, but loving work.</p>
+
+<p>Anne drew near, and passed her arm lovingly round her waist.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"This," said she, touching the cross, "is the emblem of your faith; and
+what does it not teach? It tells you that He who died on it to save us
+miserable sinners forgave even his murderers. 'Forgive them, Father, for
+they know not what they do.' Not only forgave them, but excused their
+faults, and interceded for them. Amy, if this is your belief, if you
+indeed take Him as your model, then forgive, even as he forgave; if not,
+never dare to lay this sweet white cross on your dead child's breast;
+would he not now, a pure and immortal spirit, sorrow at his mother's
+want of faith, and hardness of heart."</p>
+
+<p>Amy's head drooped; every particle of angry colour fled from her face,
+while the hard, unforgiving look gradually died away as Anne went on.</p>
+
+<p>"Spare me, Anne! Spare me!" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"No, Amy dear, I must not, although it is as cruel to me to speak to you
+so harshly as it is for you to listen, and believe me when I say that
+your child, your little Bertie, was never<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span> further off from you than
+now, when you forgive not another her trespasses, even as you hope your
+own will be forgiven. Oh, Amy! think&mdash;can you kneel night and morning,
+and repeat that one sentence in your prayers, knowing how utterly you
+reject it? Can you press a last loving kiss on your child's pure lips,
+knowing how you are hugging one darling sin at your heart? Amy, Amy!
+listen to my warning voice, and forgive even as you hope to be
+forgiven," and Anne bent forward and lovingly kissed her forehead.</p>
+
+<p>The spell was broken: as Anne gently withdrew her lips, tears welled up
+from the poor overcharged heart, and Amy wept,&mdash;wept an agony of tears.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Anne!" she said presently, "Stop! stop! You will crush my heart. I
+<i>will</i> forgive her, for the sake of my boy, my darling Bertie."</p>
+
+<p>"God bless you, dear Amy," replied Anne, delighted at not only having
+gained her wish, but at the sight of the tears she was shedding. "These
+tears will do you good. My heart has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span> ached to see, day after day, your
+cold, calm, listless face."</p>
+
+<p>Anne could have cried herself for very joy, to think how nicely things
+were coming round; as for Robert Vavasour, of course, with Frances to
+plead for forgiveness, and his wife to throw her arms round his neck,
+and vow she loved him better than all the world beside, his stubborn
+heart must give in; so Anne sat quite contented and happy by Amy's side,
+and let her weep on. Then, as her watch told her the hour for her
+husband's departure drew near, she soothed and comforted Amy's weak,
+quivering heart, as well as she was able, and went&mdash;for Amy would go at
+once&mdash;as far as Frances Strickland's room door with her, then flew,
+rather than walked, to her own. Mr. Hall, carpet-bag in hand, was just
+coming out, and nearly ran over her as she burst open the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it you, Anne?" he said, as he staggered back, "I thought, at least,
+it was a cannon ball coming." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"It's only my head," she said, laughing, "I was in such a hurry. I felt
+I should be too late. I ought to have packed up your things before I
+went to Amy."</p>
+
+<p>"Ought is a very fine word, but it is generally a late one."</p>
+
+<p>"I am so sorry," said Anne in a repentant voice.</p>
+
+<p>"My next wife shall never say she is sorry," he said smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"What a hardened wretch she will be!"</p>
+
+<p>"Not so," he replied, "she shall be the most gentle, submissive creature
+in the world; everything shall be in its right place, and there shall be
+a right time for everything."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Tom, I know I do try you dreadfully; but, all the same, you will
+never get another little wife to love you better than I do."</p>
+
+<p>"True, Anne," he said, "or one that I could ever love as I love you."</p>
+
+<p>"And now, Tom, do put down that horrid carpet-bag, I hate to feel you
+are going to leave<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span> me here even for a few days all by myself; and for
+the first time too. I can't think what I shall do without you."</p>
+
+<p>"But it is more than half-past four," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"But not railway time, only the poor old pony's, and I am sure he will
+not mind waiting just to oblige his mistress."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hall sat down, and placed her by his side. "And now, Anne," he said,
+"tell me what success you have had with Mrs. Vavasour? but do not make a
+long story of it, as I really must be away in another ten minutes."</p>
+
+<p>"I had a hard matter to persuade her, Tom, but I managed it at last, and
+she is with Frances now. I feel so happy, because I am sure all will be
+right; poor Amy! how she did cry."</p>
+
+<p>"She cried at last, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Heartily; and I know it will do her a world of good; she looked far
+happier when I left her than she has done for days."</p>
+
+<p>"And now, Anne, I really must go and see<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span> after the pony, and settle the
+carpet bag, but I will come back once more, and say good-bye."</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes, twenty, slipped by, and Anne began to fear her husband had
+forgotten his promise; she wondered at his delay, and looked round to
+see if he had forgotten anything. His sermon, blotting book, small
+ink-bottle, all had gone. She turned to the chest of drawers and was
+ransacking them hurriedly, when she heard him come back.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Tom," she said, without turning round, "Here are all your
+handkerchiefs, every one of them! Don't talk of my carelessness after
+this," and she laughingly held them up as a trophy.</p>
+
+<p>But her husband's face was white, so very white, that Anne's heart
+turned sick, and almost stopped beating.</p>
+
+<p>With a faint cry she crept up to him, and with a timid, frightened look,
+gazed into his face.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?" she whispered, "are you ill? Oh! tell me! Tell me!" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"No, no. It's worse, Anne, worse," he murmured hoarsely.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! for God's sake tell me, Tom! or I shall die."</p>
+
+<p>"It is Vavasour," he said, as he took her in his arms and held her to
+his heart. "Forgive me for having frightened you so, Anne. But Vavasour
+has been shot."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God you are well?" said Anne, bursting into tears, "But, oh, Amy!
+my poor darling Amy!" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
+
+<h4>THE LAST OF LITTLE BERTIE.</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"She put him on a snow-white shroud,</span>
+<span class="i4">A chaplet on his head;</span>
+<span class="i2">And gathered only primroses</span>
+<span class="i4">To scatter o'er the dead.</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">She laid him in his little grave&mdash;</span>
+<span class="i4">'Twas hard to lay him there:</span>
+<span class="i2">When spring was putting forth its flowers,</span>
+<span class="i4">And everything was fair.</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">And down within the silent grave,</span>
+<span class="i4">He laid his weary head;</span>
+<span class="i2">And soon the early violets</span>
+<span class="i4">Grew o'er his grassy bed.</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">The mother went her household ways,</span>
+<span class="i4">Again she knelt in prayer;</span>
+<span class="i2">And only asked of Heaven its aid</span>
+<span class="i4">Her heavy lot to bear."</span>
+<span class="i20">L. E. L.</span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>On leaving Frances Strickland, Amy went to poor Bertie's room to lay the
+fair white cross in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span> his coffin, and was bending down over her lost
+darling in an agony of tears which old Hannah vainly attempted to check,
+when the sudden, hasty gallop of a horse away from the stables struck
+her ear. It was the groom going for Dr. Bernard.</p>
+
+<p>Amy's mind, already unnerved and unstrung, was easily alarmed.</p>
+
+<p>"Alas! Hannah," said she, drawing near the darkened window "has any
+accident happened that some-one rides so furiously?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Miss Amy," replied Hannah, forgetting in her tender pity Amy's
+new tie, and thinking of her only as the wee child she had so lovingly
+nursed on her knee, "you must not be frightening yourself this way. What
+should have happened? God knows you've had enough to worry you. There,
+don't tremble that way, but let go the blind, and come away from the
+window."</p>
+
+<p>But Hannah's persuasions and entreaties were alike useless. Amy, with
+fluttering anxious heart<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span> still looked out through the deepening shadows
+of the day, now fast drawing into evening.</p>
+
+<p>Her husband was away. Oh! how she wished she could see him or hear his
+firm, yet for the last few days mournful step. Her heart had taken a
+strange fear, which she could neither shake off, nor subdue; a trembling
+nervous dread of some fast-coming evil.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Linchmore came up the drive, and for a moment a joyous thrill crept
+through her as she thought it was her husband; but no, he came nearer
+still, then disappeared up the terrace with Mr. Hall, and only the groom
+with the pony carriage was left, standing quietly as it had stood ever
+since she had so eagerly strained her eyes from the window.</p>
+
+<p>Then once again&mdash;as it had done long, long ago&mdash;that strange, dull tramp
+from without smote her ear.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, Anne had nerved her heart as well as she could, and gone
+sorrowfully enough to break the sad news to Amy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Not finding her either in her own or Miss Strickland's room, she guessed
+she was in poor Bertie's: besides, she missed the white cross.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Tom!" she said, going back to her husband, "What can I do? She is
+with her poor dead child, surely I need not; and indeed I feel I cannot
+go there and tell her."</p>
+
+<p>"No," replied Mr. Hall, after a moment's consideration, "perhaps it will
+be best to try and get Vavasour into his room without her knowledge. I
+think with caution it might be done. Go and remain near the nursery
+door, Anne; they will not have to pass it on their way up, and I will go
+and enjoin silence and caution."</p>
+
+<p>Anne sped away, and took up the post assigned her, listening eagerly,
+yet fearfully for the sound of the muffled footsteps, and straining her
+ears in the direction of the stairs, so that Amy stood before her,
+almost ere she had heard the opening of the door.</p>
+
+<p>Anne saw at once Amy guessed at some disaster, for she gently but firmly
+resisted Anne's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span> endeavours to arrest her footsteps, and said, while she
+trembled excessively,</p>
+
+<p>"My husband! Is he dead?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. Oh no! Amy darling."</p>
+
+<p>Then as Amy would have passed on, she whispered, in a voice she in vain
+attempted to steady,</p>
+
+<p>"Don't go there Amy! pray don't!"</p>
+
+<p>But Amy paid no heed, but went and stood at the head of the stairs on
+the landing.</p>
+
+<p>In vain Mr. Linchmore and Mr. Hall gently tried to induce her to leave;
+she was deaf to reason.</p>
+
+<p>"I must be here," she murmured, with pale compressed lips, "I must be
+here."</p>
+
+<p>There was no help for it; so they bore him up slowly past her on into
+his room, and laid him on the bed, and there left him.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think he will die?" asked Amy, fearfully, as she grasped old Dr.
+Bernard's arm tightly, some time later as he sat by the fire.</p>
+
+<p>How he felt for her, that old man, she so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span> young, and so full of sorrow.
+He drew her hand in his, and stroked it gently and kindly.</p>
+
+<p>"Trust in God, and hope," was the reply.</p>
+
+<p>"I do trust," she replied, firmly. "I <i>will</i> try and hope. But, oh! I
+love him! I love him!" she said.</p>
+
+<p>And this was the one cry for ever, if not on her lips, at her heart.</p>
+
+<p>She sat by the pale insensible form day after day; she knew no fatigue,
+heeded not the lapse of time. Once only she stole away to imprint a last
+loving kiss on her dead Bertie's lips ere they bore away the little
+coffin to its last resting-place in the cold churchyard; then silently
+she went back to her old place by her husband's bed-side. Would he
+die without one word? without recognising his wife who loved him so
+entirely? Oh! surely he would speak one loving word if but one; give her
+one loving look as of old. She felt that her boy's death was as nothing
+in comparison to this.</p>
+
+<p>As the love deep and strong welled up in her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span> heart, she felt half
+frightened at its intensity, while it crept with a great fear as she
+whispered over and over again, "He will die." If he would but speak; or
+say one word.</p>
+
+<p>Alas! the words came at last, but only incoherent murmurings, indistinct
+unmeaning words. His eyes opened, and wandered about without knowledge,
+and though they rested on her, knew her not. His burning hands returned
+not the soft pressure, the loving touch, of hers. Would he die thus, and
+never know the deep love she had for him; the tenderness, devotion of
+her heart? She groaned in utter anguish and misery; but patiently sat
+on.</p>
+
+<p>In vain they tried, those kind friends, to draw her away; or if they did
+succeed in persuading her to lie down on a mattress on the floor, her
+large mournful eyes never closed in sleep, but still kept watch on the
+one loved form; her heart ever fearing he would die&mdash;praying that he
+might not.</p>
+
+<p>And Mrs. Grey, or rather Mrs. Archer, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span> newly-made mother; where was
+she? She kept watch, too, over her long-lost son, but without being the
+slightest help to the poor heart-broken wife, having apparently no
+thoughts, no words, no looks for anyone but the son who had been lost to
+her for so long. Fear mingled with her joy; fear like the wife's lest he
+should die.</p>
+
+<p>Amy was told part of her story by Mr. Linchmore, and made no objection
+to the poor mother sharing her watch; she was her husband's mother, that
+was enough. What he loved, she would love.</p>
+
+<p>Very silent and motionless Mrs. Archer sat. Amy sometimes wandered about
+restlessly, or gave way to passionate weeping now; but very patiently,
+very sorrowfully, the mother sat. They exchanged no words with each
+other, those two mournful watchers; Mrs. Archer had been told the young
+girl's relationship to her son, and sometimes her eyes rested lovingly
+on the pale, beautiful face.</p>
+
+<p>When Amy went to take a last look at her boy,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span> she took Mrs. Archer's
+hand, and drew her away with her, and together they had stood and gazed
+at the little white marble face. Amy said no word, but as Mrs. Archer
+moved away, she murmured,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Better thus, than lost. Lost for years."</p>
+
+<p>The shock of all these events proved too much for Anne, and when her
+husband returned on the Tuesday morning he could not but notice how wan
+and pale she looked, and so excitable, that the least thing in the world
+upset her. Instead of the glad, but perhaps sober welcome he expected,
+she threw her arms round his neck, as she had done at parting, and burst
+into tears, which she had a hard matter to prevent ending in hysterics.
+Mr. Hall's soothing, gentle manner soon calmed her; but she was very
+nearly giving way again that same evening, when he urged her immediate
+return home.</p>
+
+<p>"What! leave Amy, Tom, in all her trouble? Oh, no, never!"</p>
+
+<p>"The worry and excitement is too much for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span> you, Anne, I cannot shut my
+eyes to that fact, and must not allow you to sacrifice your health for
+the sake of your friend."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, dear husband, do let me stay?"</p>
+
+<p>But the look on her husband's face convinced her that his resolution was
+taken, and inflexible. She ceased to coax and persuade, and bethought
+her what could be done. Frances Strickland was still weak and ill;
+besides, her companionship was not in any way to be desired for Amy.</p>
+
+<p>"Have I not heard you, Anne," said Mr. Hall, as if answering her
+thoughts, "speak of some kind old lady, a great friend of Mrs.
+Vavasour's mother? Surely her aid as a companion, though not as a nurse,
+might be called upon now."</p>
+
+<p>Of course. Why had not Anne thought of it?</p>
+
+<p>In a few moments, with her usual haste, she was speeding away in search
+of Mrs. Linchmore, to beg her permission, before she invited Mrs.
+Elrington. It was given, though with Anne thought anything but a good
+grace, and the letter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span> written and despatched, and Anne tried to appear
+content and satisfied that she was leaving; and doing right; and that
+Amy might not think it unkind. As she packed her box, she was forced to
+confess she <i>was</i> weak, and that it was perhaps as well she had a
+husband to look after her some times, and that Mr. Hall was right, as he
+always was, in wishing her to have rest.</p>
+
+<p>The next few days passed much as the former ones to Amy, being, so to
+speak, a misery of doubt and hope; but on the morning of the third there
+came a change&mdash;a change for the better. Robert Vavasour slept. Not that
+dull, insensible sleep, a hovering between life and death, such as it
+had been when Amy first watched by him, but a soft, natural sleep; the
+breathing came faint, but regular; the face wore none of its former set,
+rigid look, but gradually grew into the old, old expression she loved so
+well. Then Amy knew her husband was better; God had been very merciful;
+he would not die and leave her desolate and alone; she knew it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span> long
+before old Dr. Bernard's anxious face wore that pleasant, cheery smile,
+or Mrs. Archer had thanked God so fervently on her knees.</p>
+
+<p>Robert Vavasour slept, slept for hours; and during that long sleep Amy
+and Mrs. Archer arranged their future plans; her husband must not be
+told of his mother's existence yet; in the first place, he was not
+strong enough to bear any excitement, and in the next, the poor, fond
+mother hoped to win a little of his kindly feeling, if not his love,
+before she held him to her heart.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope to win his love in time," she said quietly to Amy, "to feel he
+loves me before he knows he is bound to do so. I cannot hope now for the
+first strong love of his heart&mdash;that deep earnest love with which he
+loves his wife; but I feel nevertheless that I shall be satisfied with
+my son's love. His face is like his father's, and he must be as noble
+and as good, to have won such love as yours."</p>
+
+<p>Then Mrs. Archer went away to seek Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span> Linchmore, and hear the story of
+her wrongs, leaving Amy to watch sadly and alone for her husband's
+awaking. Sadly, for how would his eyes meet hers? Would they have the
+same stern, severe look that had shivered her heart for so long? Would
+he still think she loved him not? But she would tell him all by-and-by.
+She could not live as she had lived: he must hear and judge whether she
+was as guilty as he thought her.</p>
+
+<p>Robert awoke to consciousness: awoke to see the soft eyes of his wife,
+looking mournfully, doubtfully, but oh! how lovingly at him. As his eyes
+met hers, a tender light played in them; he even pressed the hand she
+held so tremblingly in hers; but only for a moment, the next, as she
+bent down and pressed her lips to his, he gave a deep sigh, and turned
+his face away wearily.</p>
+
+<p>"He has not forgotten!" murmured Amy mournfully, as she rose and went to
+seek Dr. Bernard, "He has not forgiven!" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
+
+<h4>THE CLOUDS CLEAR.</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"Nor could he from his heart throw off</span>
+<span class="i4">The consciousness of his state;</span>
+<span class="i2">It was there with a dull, uneasy sense,</span>
+<span class="i4">A coldness and a weight.</span></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">It was there when he lay down at night,</span>
+<span class="i4">It was there when at morn he rose;</span>
+<span class="i2">He feels it whatever he does,</span>
+<span class="i4">It is with him wherever he goes.</span></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">No occupation from his mind</span>
+<span class="i4">That constant sense can keep;</span>
+<span class="i2">It is present in his waking hours,</span>
+<span class="i4">It is present in his sleep."</span>
+<span class="i20"><span class="smcap">Southey.</span></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Mrs. Elrington could not resist Anne's pleading letter, but decided on
+going at once to Brampton; her heart was too compassionate to refuse to
+aid those in distress, and especially one who had ever held, as Amy had,
+a high place in her esteem and love.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As soon as Anne received the answer so favourable to her wishes, she
+prepared at once to return home, and went to Amy&mdash;not with the glad news
+of the now expected guest, that she decided had best not be
+mentioned&mdash;but to say good-bye, and a very sorrowful one she felt it.</p>
+
+<p>Amy was sitting working in her own room, once poor Bertie's; her mind as
+busily employed as her fingers, only more mournfully; when Anne burst
+open the door in her usual hasty way.</p>
+
+<p>"Here I am!" she said, "Did you expect to see me? Did you think I should
+come to say good-bye?"</p>
+
+<p>"How should I?" answered Amy, "I never knew you were going to-day, and I
+am sorry to see you cloaked for your journey."</p>
+
+<p>"And so am I; but Tom would not rest quiet without me any longer, so
+dear, I must go; the pony chaise will be round directly, and yet I
+should have liked to have sat with you for an hour or so before
+leaving." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Then why did you put off coming to see me until the last moment, Anne?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did not know I was going until half an hour ago. How is that wretched
+Frances? Will you say I had not time to stay and see her; I should so
+hate&mdash;although, mind, I pity her with all my heart,&mdash;giving her a
+sisterly embrace."</p>
+
+<p>"But," said Amy, "What occasion is there for such a warm farewell?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! thereby hangs a tale. The fact is I don't wish to see Frances
+Strickland."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor girl! She has suffered so much."</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder you can find it in your heart to pity her; but you were always
+an angel of goodness."</p>
+
+<p>"You are wrong, Anne," sighed Amy, "and I think you should go and see
+Miss Strickland."</p>
+
+<p>"You are evidently in the dark, Amy; I thought Julia would have written
+to you, and told you, as&mdash;she has me,&mdash;that she has been so stupid, so
+foolish, as to engage herself to cousin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span> Alfred, Frances' brother. Is it
+not tiresome of her?"</p>
+
+<p>"But the marriage will scarcely affect you, Anne?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but it will, though; for I had made up my mind Julia would be an
+old maid; she always said she would, and come some day and look after my
+children, if I ever have any," said Anne, blushing; "for I am sure I
+should puzzle to know how to dress them, much less understand how to
+manage them. Mamma says Aunt Mary&mdash;Mrs. Strickland&mdash;is very angry about
+the marriage, so I really do think Julia ought to give it up."</p>
+
+<p>"Why does your Aunt dislike it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because Julia is penniless and a nobody; meaning, I suppose, that
+Alfred should marry some high born girl, who would, I have no doubt,
+snub him in the end. But then it would be so nice for Aunt to say, 'My
+daughter-in-law, Lady so-and-so-that was,' or the Earl of <i>somebody</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
+my son's father-in-law. Instead of which she will only have to recall
+the plain and <i>poor</i> Miss Bennet, that was. Fancy Alfred coming to stay
+with us in our nutshell!"</p>
+
+<p>"I never thought Mr. Strickland gave himself airs," replied Amy.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor does he. But it is disagreeable to see a man sitting over the fire
+all day; or in summer time basking lazily in the sun."</p>
+
+<p>"But Julia will probably change all that laziness and inaction. She is
+full of life and work herself. I think <i>he</i> has chosen well."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course <i>he</i> has; but I consider Julia to have sacrificed herself.
+And now, do come down and see me off."</p>
+
+<p>Amy put down her work and went.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall see you again soon, Amy dear," said Anne, with tearful eyes, as
+together they stood on the terrace. "Tom has promised to drive me over
+some day next week, not entirely for his dear wife's sake though; but
+because he has taken a great interest in some dreadful sinner in this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
+parish, and she as violent a liking to him. The old rector has given Tom
+permission to visit her whenever he likes, glad enough, I dare say, to
+be rid the trouble of it himself. Poor woman! she cannot live long&mdash;a
+breaking up of nature, or something of that sort; but Mrs. Archer knows
+more about it than I do."</p>
+
+<p>"Anne! Anne! What are you talking about?" asked her husband, catching a
+word here and there, of her rambling speech. "Come! jump in, the pony is
+quite impatient to be off."</p>
+
+<p>"And so is his master," laughed Anne; "we shall drive off in grand
+style, and then dilly-dally for half-an-hour, or more, at the turnpike,
+while he chats to his heart's content with Jane; that's the name of his
+new friend, dear. There, I really must say good-bye, or perhaps Tom may
+go without me." And almost smothering Amy with kisses she sprang down
+the steps and in another moment was seated by her husband, and they
+drove off.</p>
+
+<p>A few hours after, Mrs. Elrington arrived at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span> the Hall; but as she had
+truly said, long ago, it was pain and grief to her to look on Mrs.
+Linchmore's face again; and she leant heavily on Mr. Linchmore's arm, as
+she passed from the carriage.</p>
+
+<p>She paused a moment, as he would have led her into the drawing-room to
+his wife; and pointing through the half-open door, said simply, "We meet
+as strangers."</p>
+
+<p>And so they did&mdash;the once adopted daughter and fondly-loved mother; but
+it cost them <i>both</i> an effort; for while Mrs. Elrington's hand trembled
+and shook like an aspen on the top of the stick with which she steadied
+her footsteps, Mr. Linchmore thought he had never seen his wife look
+more proudly beautiful and magnificent.</p>
+
+<p>Anne's letter represented Amy as heart-broken, not only with the loss of
+her child, but sorrow stricken with the anxiety caused by the fresh
+trial of her husband's illness. Anne said not a word of the <i>living</i>
+grief consuming her heart, but Mrs. Elrington had not been many days at
+Brampton ere she suspected it; that pale, sweet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span> anxious face, so thin
+and care-worn, told its own tale, with the faltering, uncertain step;
+the mournful yet loving way with which she tended her husband now
+rapidly approaching convalescence. How she anticipated his every wish.
+Yet there was a hesitation, an uncertainty about it, all too evident to
+a watchful eye; it seemed as though with her anxiety to please, there
+was an evident fear of displeasing. Surely the wife needed the most care
+and tenderness now: the first she had, but the latter, where was that?
+Where the nameless attentions and thousand loving words her husband
+might speak?</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Elrington saw with sorrow the coldness, and estrangement, that had
+crept between the two. Was that fair young wife so recently
+afflicted&mdash;so loving, so doubly bereaved at heart&mdash;to blame? or Robert?</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Elrington loved Amy, and could not sit silently by without risking
+something to mend matters, so one day, when she and Robert were alone,
+she spoke.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I trust you are feeling stronger this morning, Mr. Vavasour?"</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you. Yes, I am I believe, mending apace."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad of it, as I think your wife needs change, she is looking far
+from well; the sooner you take her home the better."</p>
+
+<p>"Bertie's death was a bitter trial; and she felt it deeply."</p>
+
+<p>"Bitter, indeed, it must have been, to have changed her so utterly. She
+is greatly altered since her marriage."</p>
+
+<p>Robert Vavasour sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"You are right," he replied. "I myself see the change, but without the
+power to remedy it now."</p>
+
+<p>"How so?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"You say altered since her marriage. It is true; for when Amy married
+she wilfully shut out from her heart all hopes of happiness."</p>
+
+<p>"You speak in riddles, Mr. Vavasour, which I am totally unable to
+comprehend." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I am a rich man, Mrs. Elrington, and that alone might have tempted many
+a girl, or led her to fancy she loved me."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Elrington drew up her head proudly. "But not Amy Neville," she
+replied, "no amount of wealth would have tempted her to marry a man she
+did not care for."</p>
+
+<p>"Care for," he repeated bitterly, "caring is not loving."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Elrington had arrived at the bottom of the mystery now; he fancied
+Amy did not love him! Amy who was devoting herself to him day after day,
+never weary of, but only happy when she was in his sick room, nursing
+and tending him as few wives would, treated so coldly, giving him all
+the loving worship of her young heart; while he refused to believe in
+it, but gloomily hugged the morbid fancy to his heart that she loved him
+not.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Elrington could have smiled at the delusion, if Amy's happiness had
+not been at stake; as it was she replied gravely,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span> "You are mistaken,
+Mr. Vavasour, wilfully blind to what is openly apparent to all others
+who ever see you and your wife together. Why I verily believe Amy
+worships the very ground you stand on; but I fear no words of mine will
+convince you of the fact, while the indifference with which you are
+treating her is well-nigh breaking her heart."</p>
+
+<p>No, Robert Vavasour was not convinced.</p>
+
+<p>"She did not love me when she married me; her oath was false, she&mdash;" but
+no, his pride refused to allow him to tell of her love for another.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot listen to this," replied Mrs. Elrington, rising, "whatever her
+love may have been in the days you speak of, I am convinced Amy has
+never acted falsely towards you since you called her wife; neither do I
+believe there lives a man who <i>now</i> claims or holds one thought of hers
+from you. I am an old woman, Mr. Vavasour, and have seen a great deal of
+sorrow, and one heart broken through the cruelty of another; let not
+your wife's be so taken from you, but believe in her,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span> trust in her,
+watch over her as the apple of your eye, for indeed she needs and
+demands all your love and tenderness; crush not the love that is even
+now struggling in her heart, at your hardness and neglect, or take care
+lest you build up a wall that you will find it impossible hereafter to
+knock down, or when falling, will bury her you love beneath its ruins."</p>
+
+<p>Robert's heart was strangely ill at ease and stirred by these words of
+Mrs. Elrington's. Perhaps he began to fear that even if his wife loved
+him not, he <i>had</i> been unnecessarily hard and severe, and pitiless, very
+pitiless and unloving. Might he not yet succeed in winning her love&mdash;the
+only thing in the wide world that he coveted? But then again, the
+thought that she had loved another, had cruelly deceived him, when he
+had loved and trusted her so entirely, was gall and wormwood to him, and
+turned his heart, when he thought of it, to stone. No; even allowing
+that she might love him, he could never love her so passionately again.
+So Vavasour thought, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span> so men and women have thought, and will think
+again, as long as the world lasts, and yet, do what they will, the old
+love <i>will</i> come again, with all its old intensity, overthrowing all
+their wise and determined resolutions.</p>
+
+<p>Deep in thought, Vavasour sat, until the minutes crept into hours, and
+then Mrs. Archer came, looking very different from the Mrs. Grey of old.
+The frown had not, it is true, disappeared, but it had faded and given
+way to a mild, happy expression pervading every feature of her face.
+There was still a mournful look&mdash;how could it be otherwise?&mdash;the
+mournful remembrance of the past; but even that was growing dim beside
+the ever-living presence of her son, and of her love for him. She had
+gained her wish, too, for Robert loved his mother, and, I think, was
+somewhat proud of her. There was nothing to be ashamed of, nothing he
+need blush for; she was his mother, he her son, acknowledged to be so by
+all the world.</p>
+
+<p>She was dressed in black silk, and grey-coloured<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span> ribbons in her cap;
+her glossy, almost snow-white hair, still beautiful in its abundance,
+rolled round her head. She had grown quiet and gentle, and had none of
+the wild passions or fits of half-madness now. As Robert sat gazing at
+her, he thought she must have been very beautiful in her youth, when
+that mass of hair was golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Amy is not here," she said, looking round.</p>
+
+<p>"No. I am alone, and rather tired of my solitude, with a don't-care
+feeling of being left any longer by myself just creeping over me."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought Amy had been with you, or I should have been here before. Ah!
+I see she has been, by the fresh flowers on the table. She is always
+thinking of you, my son; her love always in her heart."</p>
+
+<p>Robert moved impatiently. Had every one combined together to din his
+wife's love into his ears? Was he the victim of a conspiracy? So he
+replied, touchily.</p>
+
+<p>"Amy is kind enough, and I dare say I am an ungrateful wretch." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Not ungrateful; but you might be a little, just a little, more loving
+to her sometimes. She is such a loving, sweet young wife."</p>
+
+<p>"You think she loves me?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Archer laughed. "Are you in earnest, my son?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Never more so in my life," was the reply.</p>
+
+<p>His mother looked at him almost reproachfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Can anyone doubt it?" she answered. "I believe her whole soul is wrapt
+up in you, and I thank God that it is so, my son."</p>
+
+<p>Robert was silent,</p>
+
+<p>"She is a fragile flower," continued Mrs. Archer, "one that the
+slightest cold breath might crush, yet withal strong in her deep love
+for you. It must be that, that has enabled her to bear up as she has,
+for she has had enough to try the strongest of us, and, I fear, looks
+more thin and shadowy every day."</p>
+
+<p>"Mother!" cried Robert, in alarm. "You do not think Amy really ill?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know what to think. She suffered an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span> agony while she and I sat
+watching those dreadful weary hours by your bed-side; and I know Dr.
+Bernard has now prescribed a tonic; but she does not gain strength, and
+seems more feeble than ever. Forgive me, my son, but I sometimes fear
+there is a coldness, a nameless chill between you, which makes my heart
+tremble for the future of both. For hers&mdash;because she will die, loving
+you so intensely, and&mdash;" Mrs. Archer hesitated a moment, "and with
+little return; for yours&mdash;lest, when too late, you will see your error,
+and the remorse may break your heart. Oh! my son, if she has erred, it
+cannot have been wilfully, and surely she has been sufficiently
+punished. Think," she added, laying her hand on his, as she was leaving
+the room, "think well on my words, for I can have but one wish at my
+heart, and that is my son's happiness."</p>
+
+<p>And Robert did think&mdash;think deeply all the rest of that day. He seemed
+never tired of thinking, while his eyes rested oftener on his wife, and
+he watched her intensely.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>What if she did love him? Ah! if only she did. His heart leapt wildly at
+the thought, and his jealous hatred seemed to have no place there now,
+but to be a far-off dream; or if it did intrude, he set it aside as a
+bugbear, or felt less savagely inclined than heretofore.</p>
+
+<p>Could it be for him&mdash;she, his wife, brought fresh flowers for those
+already fading? How graceful she looked as she arranged them; not
+hurriedly, but slowly and tastefully&mdash;as though her heart was with the
+work,&mdash;in the glass. Was it for him she trod so softly over the room,
+while everything she touched assumed a different look, and slid quietly
+into its place, as though under the influence of a magic wand.</p>
+
+<p>Hard and cruel! How chill those words of Mrs. Elrington's fell, like a
+dead weight on his heart, and had been ringing in his ears ever since.
+If Frances Strickland had told him a lie, then he had been hard and
+cruel. But his wife had never denied the facts, hideous as they
+appeared; but had Frances exaggerated the story, and why<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span> had he refused
+to listen to Amy's explanation? Might she not have cleared away half its
+hideousness? His heart surged like the troubled waves by the sea-shore,
+and his breath came quick and hot, as he felt that he might have been
+mistaken in fancying his wife loved him not. If all this long time it
+had been so, then, indeed, he had been hard and cruel; and would she
+ever forgive him? or could he ever forgive himself? Tormented with
+doubts and fears, he watched and waited, and gave no sign to his wife
+that he did so, while she grew paler and paler, fading imperceptibly.</p>
+
+<p>The days crept on&mdash;three more slipped by, and found Robert still
+undecided, still undetermined. Again Amy brought fresh flowers, and
+stood at the table arranging them as before, and again her husband's
+eyes watched her, and had she only looked up as the last flower was
+being placed in the glass, her heart would have found its rest, for her
+eyes must have seen the love trembling in her husband's; but Amy never
+looked, but went<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span> and sat over by the fire, without a word. Then Robert
+spoke&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Those flowers are very beautiful, Amy."</p>
+
+<p>The words themselves were nothing, but the tone was the tender tone of
+old. Had he spoken coldly she could have answered at once, but the old,
+old loving tone, smote on her poor overcharged heart, and she could not
+answer a word, while the heavy tears gathered under her eyelids, and
+trembled as they fell. But her face was from her husband, and as yet he
+did not see them. Then some one came in, and they were interrupted. But
+the time Amy sighed for was not far distant, it was only delayed awhile.</p>
+
+<p>Again they were alone; and again Robert spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Were the flowers gathered for me, Amy?"</p>
+
+<p>The words were even more tenderly spoken than before; still there was no
+reply, and Robert half raised himself, and stooped forward to look into
+his wife's face; but she kept it steadfastly hidden: she dared not look
+until she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span> could control some of the emotion, which seemed as though it
+would suffocate her.</p>
+
+<p>They were both silent now. Robert grieved at her silence, while Amy sat
+striving and fighting with her sobs; yet so very still that none could
+have guessed the pent-up agony she was enduring.</p>
+
+<p>By-and-bye she grew more composed; had conquered and mastered her
+emotion, and turned her head towards her husband; but he was reading,
+and if he saw her, never raised his eyes from his book.</p>
+
+<p>Unconsciously her thoughts wandered, wandered away to the days at
+Somerton when she had been so happy. Ah! what a world of woe had
+overtaken her since then. Her boy dead, her only one; her husband worse
+than dead, his love estranged, perhaps gone for ever! and yet if he had
+only allowed her to speak,&mdash;not to attempt to palliate her fault, but
+only to tell how dearly she loved him! she felt she <i>had</i> rightly
+forfeited some of his esteem, but scarcely deserved all the bitter
+misery his coldness had cost her.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Would he ever trust her again? Ever believe her love? Yet if she died
+for it, she must tell it him; the weight of it was killing her, and she
+clasped her small white hands tightly over her knees as she thought that
+perhaps the time for her to speak had come. Only a few moments ago he
+had spoken almost tenderly to her, and more like his former self, and he
+was better, almost well now, and able to bear what she had to say. The
+excitement of her sad tale would not hurt him half so much as the
+telling it would grieve her.</p>
+
+<p>He was no longer weak, but gaining strength every day; there was
+scarcely any trace of his illness now, save that ugly scar near his
+temple, and that was gradually fading away.</p>
+
+<p>How should she begin? What should she say? As she essayed to think, the
+suffocating feeling arose again in her throat; again the large heavy
+tears dropped one by one; but her face was turned full on her husband
+now, his eyes on hers, yet she knew it not; knew not that his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span> book had
+been laid down long ago, and that he was watching eagerly the various
+emotions flitting over face.</p>
+
+<p>As the tears sprung from her eyes, he said, hastily reaching out his
+hand,</p>
+
+<p>"Come here, Amy! Come nearer to me."</p>
+
+<p>She saw him <i>then</i>. Their eyes met, and that one glance told <i>him</i> his
+wife's love was his; told <i>her</i> she was trusted and forgiven. In another
+moment she had tottered forward and was gathered to his heart, her tears
+falling like rain on his breast.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Robert! Robert!" she wailed.</p>
+
+<p>But loving words poured impetuously in her ears, loving arms were round
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"My wife! my own! My darling Amy. Hush! hush, love!"</p>
+
+<p>But she could not hush; but lay weeping, weeping passionately, nestled
+close to him; clasped tightly in his arms, as though he feared to lose
+her.</p>
+
+<p>He thought those tears would never cease,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span> and almost grew frightened at
+their intensity, but they stopped at last, subsiding into sobs; and
+presently they were gone altogether, and she rested gently and quietly
+in his arms while she told him the tale that had nearly broken her heart
+and his; and if he thought her to blame, as without doubt she was, he
+forgave her now from his heart, and bitterly accused himself of being
+hard and cruel indeed; and thanked God he had not been too late in
+breaking down the wall that had severed them, and nearly buried them
+both in its ruins.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Elrington came in, but was moving softly away again when Robert
+called her back.</p>
+
+<p>"She does indeed love me," he said proudly and humbly; while he resisted
+Amy's efforts to free herself from his grasp, "Your words, dear lady,
+were severe but well timed. I deserved them and can thank you for them
+now; while all my life long I will strive to make amends for what my
+wife has suffered." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Amy looked up, her bright face flushing with smiles, but her husband
+covered her mouth laughingly with his hand as she attempted to speak;
+possibly he thought she would, like a true woman, strive to hide his
+fault by exposing her own. But she struggled to free herself and said,</p>
+
+<p>"I am more happy than I deserve to be, dear Mrs. Elrington, my one sin
+so bitterly repented of having taught me the value of my husband's love,
+and how dear, how very dear, he is to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Heed her not! heed her not!" cried Robert.</p>
+
+<p>"God bless you both, my children," said Mrs. Elrington fervently.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
+
+<h4>SUNSHINE.</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"Here may ye see, that women be</span>
+<span class="i4">In love meke, kynd and stable:</span>
+<span class="i2">Let never man reprove them then,</span>
+<span class="i4">Or call them variable."</span>
+<span class="i20"><span class="smcap">The Nut Brown Maid.</span></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">Then only doth the soul of woman know</span>
+<span class="i2">Its proper strength when love and duty meet;</span>
+<span class="i2">Invincible the heart wherein they have their seat.</span>
+<span class="i20"><span class="smcap">Southey.</span></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Mrs. Elrington did not remain much longer at Brampton, she and Mrs.
+Linchmore parting as distantly as they had met, Mr. Linchmore grieving
+that the visit from which he had hoped so much had failed in reconciling
+those who had once been bound together by the strongest ties of
+affection. They were severed utterly and for ever: the remembrance of
+the old tie only bringing sorrow to the hearts of each.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Linchmore never once relaxed from her pride and haughtiness but
+seemed to her husband's sorrow to bear herself more proudly and stormily
+every day; whatever her inward sufferings,&mdash;and she did suffer
+acutely,&mdash;she gave no outward sign, deceiving her husband into the
+belief that she was the injured one, who would not make one step forward
+to mend matters or heal the old wound, lest it should be construed into
+an acknowledgment that she, having done the wrong was anxious to make
+atonement.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Linchmore knew did she implore or even plead for Mrs. Elrington's
+love, it would not be given: forgiveness unasked had been granted her in
+that letter received long ago; but love the old love, could never be
+hers again. The injury was too deep wherewith she had injured her; the
+deceit too cruel and wilful. Her son's broken heart could never be
+forgotten; how could she love her who had broken it? It was a lasting
+injury; one neither could forget. It had well-nigh broken the mother's
+heart as well as the son's, leaving broken hopes; lonely, sad, even<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
+painful recollections: it had changed Mrs. Linchmore more sadly still.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Elrington apparently gave no heed to the contemptuous indifference
+with which she was every day greeted, but behaved as a guest who now
+sees her hostess for the first time, and only to Amy did she ever
+say&mdash;and that but once,&mdash;how changed, how sadly altered she thought Mrs.
+Linchmore.</p>
+
+<p>Jane never recovered from the weakness consequent on the fever, but
+gradually grew more feeble every day, weaker each time Mr. Hall went to
+see her; her one sorrow being the misery she had in her wickedness
+caused others; her one fear lest so grievous a sin could never be atoned
+for or forgiven; but a visit from Mrs. Archer&mdash;which she had never dared
+hope for, although she had over and over again begged her forgiveness
+through Mr. Hall, and been assured of it from him&mdash;served to calm and
+tranquillise her troubled spirit, and led her to look&mdash;to hope for a
+higher forgiveness still. Jane died thoroughly, sincerely repentant; the
+last few days of her life being the only peaceful happy ones she had
+known for years.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span> Mrs. Marks regained the use of her limbs, and stormed
+at Matthew, and held her own sway in the cottage as much as ever, if not
+more so; but Marks said he did not mind it now, and was right down glad
+to hear his old woman's tongue going at it harder and faster than ever;
+it was dead-alive work enough when she was ill, and as he had ceased to
+frequent the "Brampton Arms," and was satisfied with his wife, why
+should we find fault with either her or her tongue?</p>
+
+<p>Tom Hodge did not fulfil Marks' prophecy, either as to the hanging, or
+breaking his father's heart; William Hodge came down to Standale to see
+his son, and left it an altered, almost an aged man. Like his wife, he
+took his son's crime to heart, and although Mrs. Marks said, in a
+sympathising way, Tom was <i>only</i> in jail awaiting his trial for an
+attempt to kill, yet Hodge could not shut his eyes to the fact that he
+might have been heavily ironed for murder, and the thought crushed him.
+A change imperceptibly crept over him from that time, and although he
+struggled with the shame he felt for his eldest son's evil<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span> doings, and
+held his head as high as ever, the old hearty good-humoured manner had
+fled, and not many months passed ere he gave up the smith's
+business,&mdash;that had once been his pride and pleasure,&mdash;to his other and
+younger son.</p>
+
+<p>Tom Hodge's crime was proved; his reason for shooting at Robert Vavasour
+the second time being, that the latter had recognised him as the man who
+had wounded him four years ago. The act was not premeditated, but the
+momentary impulse of the surprise and sudden recognition. He was
+sentenced to penal servitude for a lengthened term of years; let us hope
+he returned a wiser and a better man.</p>
+
+<p>Frances, anxious to make all the amends in her power, and atone for the
+fault that had cost her so much, begged&mdash;when strong enough, and
+recovered from her illness, which was more of the mind than body&mdash;to see
+Mr. Vavasour; but he was obdurate.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell her," he said, "that I believe in my wife's faith and love so
+entirely, I need no assurance of it from one who <i>tried</i> to injure her
+so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span> deeply, no explanation of what I ought never to have doubted."</p>
+
+<p>So Frances left Brampton, carrying with her the life-long remembrance of
+poor little Bertie's death, which she could not but be persuaded was
+mainly attributable to her, and sent as a warning and punishment for her
+pride and revengeful wickedness. Perhaps, had the child lived, her bad,
+passionate heart might never have been touched, and she might have lived
+on still in her sinful revenge, working, if it were possible, more and
+more misery; but Bertie's sad early death wrought the change, bringing
+to her stony, unfeeling heart both sorrow and remorse, while the end for
+which she had so wickedly striven she never attained, losing in time all
+interest, all kindly, cousinly feeling even, in the heart, to gain which
+she had wrought so much evil, and brought all the worst passions of her
+nature into play.</p>
+
+<p>And Charles Linchmore? What need to say anything of him? He has ceased,
+perhaps, to hold any place in my reader's interest; but in case some
+care to know of his well-being, I may<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span> mention that he recovered from
+his wound, and when last heard of was talking of returning home to
+England.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Archer's days glided peacefully on, calmly, happy at last in her
+son's love, in witnessing his and his wife's happiness; and when another
+little Bertie, almost rivalling the first in beauty and spirits&mdash;in all
+save his mother's heart&mdash;played about in the old house at Somerton, the
+frown had faded away more visibly still, though the remembrance of the
+anguish of mind and miserable days she had passed, consequent upon her
+deceit and one false step, could never be forgotten, or cease to be
+regretted. Her mind could scarcely ever be said to have entirely
+recovered from the shock it had sustained, though all angry fierceness
+and bitter fits of half madness had fled, never to return.</p>
+
+<p>The mysterious light that had so troubled Amy, and been a source of
+superstition to the servants and villagers, was fully accounted for, as
+Mrs. Archer, in touching upon her previous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span> miserable life to her son,
+mentioned, that having a key of the door leading up the secret stairs
+into old Mrs. Linchmore's room, she had sometimes been seized with an
+uncontrollable desire to revisit the scene where with the closing of the
+life of one, had died out so she thought, her sole cherished hope, the
+hope of ever finding her son. She had never divested herself of the idea
+that old Mrs. Linchmore had stolen the child; through all her wild
+dreams she had held to that, and fancied that at Brampton only should
+she ever hear of him again; and when, on his wife's death, Robert
+Linchmore's father had searched for and found her, she would accept
+nothing at his hands, poor as she was, but the cottage which, at her own
+earnest request, he built for her, while the secret of her relationship
+with those at the Hall had, she hoped, died with him, she having asked
+him never to divulge it; and he who had loved her once, nay, loved her
+still, and had been the unwitting means, through his wife's mad
+jealousy, of causing her so much misery, granted, though unwillingly,
+even that. At his death<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span> Mrs. Archer changed her name, and came to
+Brampton, fearing no recognition from those still living. How could they
+recognise in that broken-hearted, wild-looking woman, the once fair,
+gentle Miss Mary of the Hall.</p>
+
+<p>Anne came to see Amy as she had promised, and spent the day at Brampton,
+her heart feeling really rejoiced at the happy change in her friend.
+There was still a shade of sadness on Amy's face, but the weariful look
+was gone, and she appeared almost as bright and youthful as on the day
+when Anne had first made her acquaintance; while as to Robert Vavasour?
+Anne wondered how she ever could have thought him an icicle or
+indifferent to his wife, so fond of her as he seemed now, so anxious
+that she should not over exert herself; for she was anything but strong
+or recovered from the shock of the severe trials she had gone through.</p>
+
+<p>"I do think," said Anne, as Amy was busy putting together a few last
+things&mdash;a work which she either did not wish, or would not trust her
+maid to do for her; "I do think your hus<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span>band is a most devoted one,
+Amy; there is only one other that excels him, and that's&mdash;my own!"</p>
+
+<p>Amy laughed. "Are you quite satisfied with your husband, Anne?"</p>
+
+<p>"What a question!" answered Anne indignantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Opinions formed hastily easily change," replied her friend, "Did not
+you say you would only marry a man with fierce moustaches and whiskers!"</p>
+
+<p>"I did," said Anne consciously, "and&mdash;and&mdash;well you have not seen Tom
+lately, or you would not say <i>that</i>, because a beard does improve him so
+much; and between ourselves, dear, I am nearly fidgeting myself to
+death, lest he <i>should</i> grow a moustaches, for I have changed my
+opinion, and don't like them!"</p>
+
+<p>"The carriage is at the door, Amy," said her husband, entering the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mr. Vavasour! how sorry I am you are going to take Amy away. It may
+be years before we meet again, as I know Mrs. Vavasour will never come
+to this odious place if she can help it."</p>
+
+<p>"Brampton," replied Amy, sorrowfully, "will always hold one little spot
+of ground towards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span> which my heart will often yearn. As the resting-place
+of my boy, Anne, I think I shall&mdash;must revisit Brampton."</p>
+
+<p>"True. I am always wrong, and speak, as Tom says, without considering in
+the least what I am going to say. Forgive me Amy, I quite forgot for the
+moment your grief."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope," said Robert, as he drew his wife away, "you and Mr. Hall will
+soon come and see us, at Somerton. Amy and I will give you a hearty
+welcome."</p>
+
+<p>"I accept the invitation with pleasure, that is," said she correcting
+herself, "if Tom can find anyone to do his duty during his absence."</p>
+
+<p>As Amy drove away with Mrs. Archer and her husband, Anne waved a tearful
+adieu until the carriage turned the drive, and was out of sight.</p>
+
+<p>As they drove through the park Amy sat very silent; her husband did not
+interrupt her thoughts, perhaps he guessed her heart was too full for
+words: but as they passed through the large gates her eyes looked
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>wistfully towards the&mdash;churchyard, little Bertie's last resting place,
+and as she pictured to herself the small white marble cross, looking
+whiter still with the sun reflected on it, and the little mound almost
+green now, and covered with the early primroses she had strewed there
+that morning,&mdash;her eyes filled with tears, and she sighed involuntarily.</p>
+
+<p>Robert drew her gently, but fondly, towards him.</p>
+
+<p>"Our boy is happy, Amy, darling. And you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I?" she replied, smiling and struggling with her tears. "I, Robert, am
+happier than I deserve to be, with you to love and to take care of me."</p>
+
+<p>"Not so, Amy," he said. "We have been both to blame. Perhaps, had it
+been otherwise, we should never have found out how dear we are to each
+other. Is it not so, my own dear love?"</p>
+
+<p>Amy did not reply, save by the loving light in her eyes, as she nestled
+closer to his side.</p>
+
+<p>If she had been greatly tried, she had indeed found her safest and best
+earthly resting-place now and for ever!</p>
+
+<p class="center">THE END.</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">T. C. Newby</span>, 30, Welbeck Street Cavendish Square, London.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+<p class="center">
+<big><b>WILSON'S</b></big><br />
+PATENT DRAWING-ROOM<br />
+<big>BAGATELLE AND BILLIARD TABLES,</big><br />
+<small>WITH REVERSIBLE TOPS.</small><br />
+<small>Circular, Oblong, Oval, and other Shapes, in various Sizes</small><br />
+<small>FORMING A HANDSOME TABLE.</small><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 670px;">
+<img src="images/ad2.jpg" width="670" height="400" alt="" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="center">Prices from 5 to 25 Guineas. &nbsp; &nbsp; Prospectus Free by post.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><big><b>WILSON AND CO., PATENTEES,</b></big><br />
+<small>Cabinet Makers, Upholsterers, House Agents, Undertakers, &amp;c.,</small><br />
+<small>18, WIGMORE STREET (Corner of Welbeck Street), LONDON, W.; also at the</small><br />
+<small>MANUFACTURING COURT, CRYSTAL PALACE, SYDENHAM.</small></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p class="center">In 1 Vol. &nbsp; Price 12s.<br />
+
+<big><b>ON CHANGE OF CLIMATE,</b></big><br />
+
+<small>A GUIDE FOR TRAVELLERS IN PURSUIT OF HEALTH.</small>
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">By THOMAS MORE MADDEN, M.D., M.R.C.S. Eng.</span></p>
+
+
+<blockquote><p>Illustrative of the Advantages of the various localities resorted
+to by Invalids, for the cure or alleviation of chronic diseases,
+especially consumption. With Observations on Climate, and its
+Influences on Health and Disease, the result of extensive personal
+experience of many Southern Climes.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">SPAIN, PORTUGAL, ALGERIA, MOROCCO, FRANCE, ITALY,<br />
+THE MEDITERRANEAN ISLANDS, EGYPT, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"Dr. Madden has been to most of the places he describes, and his book
+contains the advantage of a guide, with the personal experience of a
+traveller. To persons who have determined that they ought to have change
+of climate, we can recommend Dr. Madden as a guide."&mdash;<i>Athenæum.</i></p>
+
+<p>"It contains much valuable information respecting various favorite
+places of resort, and is evidently the work of a well-informed
+physician."&mdash;<i>Lancet.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Dr. Madden's book deserves confidence&mdash;a most accurate and excellent
+work."&mdash;<i>Dublin Medical Review.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<p class="title">
+<small>THE</small><br />
+<br />
+<big>GENERAL FURNISHING</big><br />
+<br />
+<small>AND</small><br />
+<br />
+UPHOLSTERY COMPANY<br />
+<br />
+(LIMITED),</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">
+F. J. ACRES, MANAGER,<br />
+<br />
+24 and 25, Baker Street, W.<br />
+<br /><br />
+<small>The Company are now Exhibiting all the most approved Novelties of the<br />
+Season in</small><br />
+<br />
+<big>CARPETS, CHINTZES,</big><br />
+<br />
+MUSLIN CURTAINS,<br />
+<br />
+<small>And every variety of textile fabric for Upholstery purposes constituting<br />
+the most recherché selection in the trade.</small></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 150px;">
+<img src="images/ad11.jpg" width="150" height="55" alt="" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="center">
+<big><b>TEETH WITHOUT PAIN AND WITHOUT SPRINGS.</b><br />
+<br />
+
+OSTEO EIDON FOR ARTIFICIAL TEETH,<br />
+EQUAL TO NATURE.</big></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">Complete Sets £4 4s., £7 7s., £10 10s., £15 15s., and £21.<br />
+<br />
+<small>SINGLE TEETH AND PARTIAL SETS AT PROPORTIONATELY<br />
+MODERATE CHARGES.</small></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">A PERFECT FIT GUARANTEED.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 250px;">
+<img src="images/ad12.jpg" width="250" height="100" alt="" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="center">London:<br />
+27, HARLEY STREET, CAVENDISH SQUARE. W.<br />
+134, DUKE STREET, LIVERPOOL.<br />
+<small>65, NEW STREET, BIRMINGHAM.</small><br /></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">City Address</span>:
+64, LUDGATE HILL, 64.<br />
+<small>(4 doors from the Railway Bridge).</small></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center"><small>ONLY ONE VISIT REQUIRED FROM COUNTRY PATIENTS.</small></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Gabriel's Treatise on the Teeth, explaining their patented mode of
+supplying Teeth without Springs or Wires, may be had gratis on
+application, or free by post.</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="smcap">The Toilet.</span>&mdash;A due attention to the gifts and graces of the person, and
+a becoming preservation of the advantages of nature, are of more value
+and importance with reference to our health and well-being, than many
+parties are inclined to suppose. Several of the most attractive portions
+of the human frame are delicate and fragile, in proportion as they are
+graceful and pleasing; and the due conservation of them is intimately
+associated with our health and comfort. The hair, for example, from the
+delicacy of its growth and texture, and its evident sympathy with the
+emotions of the mind; the skin, with its intimate relation to the most
+vital of our organs, as those of respiration, circulation and digestion,
+together with the delicacy and susceptibility of its own texture; and
+the teeth, also, from their peculiar structure, formed as they are, of
+bone or dentine, and cased with a fibrous investment of enamel; these
+admirable and highly essential portions of our frames, are all to be
+regarded not merely as objects of external beauty and display, but as
+having an intimate relation to our health, and the due discharge of the
+vital functions. The care of them ought never to be entrusted to
+ignorant or unskilful hands; and it is highly satisfactory to point out
+as protectors of these vital portions of our frame the preparations
+which have emanated from the laboratories of the Messrs. Rowlands, their
+unrivalled Macassar for the hair, their Kalydor for improving and
+beautifying the complexion, and their Odonto for the teeth and gums.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p class="title">NEW NOVELS IN THE PRESS.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h3 class="center"><small>In Three Vols.</small><br />
+
+THE MAITLANDS.</h3>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h3 class="center"><small>In Three Vols.</small><br />
+
+TREASON AT HOME.<br />
+
+<small>By MRS. GREENOUGH.</small></h3>
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2>BEDSTEADS, BEDDING, AND BED ROOM<br />
+FURNITURE.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">HEAL &amp; SON'S</p>
+
+
+<p class="center">Show Rooms contain a large assortment of Brass Bedsteads,
+suitable both for home use and for Tropical Climates.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Handsome Iron Bedsteads, with Brass Mountings, and elegantly
+Japanned.</p>
+
+<p>Plain Iron Bedsteads for Servants.</p>
+
+<p>Every description of Woodstead, in Mahogany, Birch, and Walnut
+Tree Woods, Polished Deal and Japanned, all fitted with Bedding
+and Furnitures complete.</p>
+
+<p>Also, every description of Bed Room Furniture, consisting of
+Wardrobes, Chests of Drawers, Washstands, Tables, Chairs, Sofas,
+Couches, and every article for the complete furnishing of a Bed
+Room.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">AN</p>
+
+<p class="center"><big>ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE,</big></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Containing Designs and Prices of 150 articles of Bed Room Furniture, as
+well as of 100 Bedsteads, and Prices of every description of Bedding</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">Sent Free by Post.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p class="title">
+<big>HEAL &amp; SON,</big><br />
+BEDSTEAD, BEDDING,<br />
+<small>AND</small><br />
+BED ROOM FURNITURE MANUFACTURERS<br />
+<br />
+<small>196, TOTTENHAM COURT ROAD,</small>,<br />
+<small><span class="smcap">London. W.</span></small></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p class="center"><big><b>J. W. BENSON,</b></big></p>
+
+<p class="center">WATCH AND CLOCK MAKER, BY WARRANT OF APPOINTMENT, TO<br />
+H.R.H. THE PRINCE OF WALES,</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Maker of the Great Clock for the Exhibition, 1862, and of the
+Chronograph Dial, by which was timed "The Derby" of 1862, 1863, and
+1864. Prize Medallist, Class XXXIII., and Honourable Mention, Class XV,
+begs respectfully to invite the attention of the nobility, gentry, and
+public to his establishment at</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">33 &amp; 34, LUDGATE HILL.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Which, having recently been increased in size by the incorporation of
+the two houses in the rear, is now the most extensive and richly stocked
+in London. In</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">THE WATCH DEPARTMENT</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Will be found every description of Pocket Horological Machine, from the
+most expensive instruments of precision to the working man's substantial
+time-keeper. The stock comprises Watches, with every kind of case, gold
+and silver, plain, engine-turned, engraved, enamelled, chased, and
+jewelled, and with dials of enamel, silver, or gold, either neatly
+ornamented or richly embellished.</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 48%;">
+
+<p class="center"><big>BENSON'S WATCHES.</big></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"The movements are of the finest quality which the art of horology is at
+present capable of producing."&mdash;<i>Illustrated London News</i> 8th Nov.,
+1862.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">33 &amp; 34, <span class="smcap">Ludgate Hill</span>, London.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><big>BENSON'S WATCHES.</big></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Adapted for every class, climate, and country. Wholesale and retail from
+200 guineas to 2&frac12; guineas each.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">33 &amp; 34, <span class="smcap">Ludgate Hill</span>, London</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><big>BENSON'S WATCHES.</big></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Chronometer, duplex, lever, horizontal, repeating, centre seconds,
+keyless, astronomical, reversible, chronograph, blind men's, Indian,
+presentation, and railway, to suit all classes.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">33 &amp; 34, <span class="smcap">Ludgate Hill</span>, London.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><big>BENSON'S WATCHES.</big></p>
+
+<p class="center">London-made levers, gold from £10
+10s., silver from £5 5s.</p>
+
+<p class="center">33 &amp; 34, <span class="smcap">Ludgate Hill</span>, London.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><big>BENSON'S WATCHES.</big></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Swiss watches of guaranteed quality, gold from £5 5s.; silver from £2
+12s. 6d.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">33 &amp; 34, <span class="smcap">Ludgate Hill</span>, London.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><big>Benson's Exact Watch.</big></p>
+
+<p class="center">Gold from £30; silver from £24.</p>
+
+<p class="center">33 &amp; 34, <span class="smcap">Ludgate Hill</span>, London.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><big>Benson's Indian Watch.</big></p>
+
+<p class="center">Gold, £23; silver, £11 11s.</p>
+
+<p class="center">33 &amp; 34, <span class="smcap">Ludgate Hill</span>, London.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="figright" style="width: 48%;">
+<p class="center"><big>BENSON'S CLOCKS.</big></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"The clocks and watches were objects of great attraction, and well
+repaid the trouble of an inspection."&mdash;<i>Illustrated London News</i>, 8th
+November, 1862.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">33 &amp; 34, <span class="smcap">Ludgate Hill</span>, London.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><big>BENSON'S CLOCKS.</big></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Suitable for the dining and drawing rooms, library, bedroom, hall,
+staircase, bracket, carriage, skeleton, chime, musical, night,
+astronomical, regulator, shop, warehouse, office, counting house, &amp;c.,</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">33 &amp; 34, <span class="smcap">Ludgate Hill</span>, London.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><big>BENSON'S CLOCKS.</big></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Drawing room clocks, richly gilt, and ornamented with fine enamels from
+the imperial manufactories of Sèvres, from £200 to £2 2s.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">33 &amp; 34, <span class="smcap">Ludgate Hill</span>, London.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><big>BENSON'S CLOCKS,</big></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>For the dining room, in every shape, style, and variety of bronze&mdash;red,
+green, copper, Florentine, &amp;c. A thousand can be selected from, from 100
+guineas to 2 guineas.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">33 &amp; 34, <span class="smcap">Ludgate Hill</span>, London.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><big>BENSON'S CLOCKS,</big></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>In the following marbles:&mdash;Black, rouge antique, Sienne, d'Egypte, rouge
+vert, malachite, white, rosée, serpentine, Brocatelle, porphyry, green
+griotte, d'Ecosse, alabaster, lapis lazul Algerian onyx, Californian.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">33, &amp; 34, <span class="smcap">Ludgate Hill</span>, London.</p>
+</div>
+<div style="clear: both;"></div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><big>THE HOUSE-CLOCK DEPARTMENT,</big></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>For whose more convenient accommodation <span class="smcap">J. W. Benson</span> has opened spacious
+show rooms at Ludgate Hill, will be found to contain the largest and
+most varied stock of Clocks of every description, in gilt, bronze,
+marbles, porcelain, and woods of the choicest kinds.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">In this department is also included a very fine collection of</p>
+
+<p class="center">BRONZES D'ART,</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>BENSON'S ILLUSTRATED PAMPHLET, free by post for three stamps, contains a
+short history of Horology, with prices and patterns of every description
+of watch and clock, and enables those who live in any part of the world
+to select a watch, and have it sent safe by post.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center"><big><b>33 &amp; 34, LUDGATE HILL, E.C.</b></big></p>
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<p class="center">NEW NOVELS IN THE PRESS.</p>
+<hr class="tb" />
+<p class="center">In Three Vols. (In November.)</p>
+<p class="center"><big>COMMON SENSE,</big></p>
+<p class="center">By Mrs. <span class="smcap">J. C. Newby,</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">Author of "Wondrous Strange," "Kate Kennedy," &amp;c.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<p class="center">In Three Vols. (In November.)</p>
+<p class="center"><big>MAGGIE LYNNE,</big></p>
+<p class="center">By <span class="smcap">Alton Clyde</span>,</p>
+
+<p class="center">Author of "Tried and True," &amp;c.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<p class="center">In Three Vols. (In November.)</p>
+<p class="center"><big>A TROUBLED STREAM,</big></p>
+<p class="center">By <span class="smcap">C. Hardcastle</span>,</p>
+
+<p class="center">Author of "The Cliffords of Oakley," "Constance Date."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<p class="title">
+<small>THE</small><br />
+<br />
+<big>GENERAL FURNISHING</big><br />
+<br />
+<small>AND</small><br />
+<br />
+UPHOLSTERY COMPANY<br />
+<br />
+(LIMITED),</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">
+F. J. ACRES, MANAGER,<br /><br />
+24 and 25, Baker Street, W.<br />
+<br /><br />
+<small>The Company are now Exhibiting all the most approved Novelties of the<br />
+Season in</small><br />
+<br />
+<big>CARPETS, CHINTZES,</big><br />
+<br />
+MUSLIN CURTAINS,<br />
+<br />
+<small>And every variety of textile fabric for Upholstery purposes constituting<br />
+the most recherché selection in the trade.</small></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's It May Be True, Vol. III (of III), by Mrs. Wood
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IT MAY BE TRUE, VOL. III (OF III) ***
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+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg's It May Be True, Vol. III (of III), by Mrs. Wood
+
+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/license
+
+
+Title: It May Be True, Vol. III (of III)
+
+Author: Mrs. Wood
+
+Release Date: March 18, 2012 [EBook #39193]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IT MAY BE TRUE, VOL. III (OF III) ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Sue Fleming and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Note. There were a number of printer's errors
+ within the text which have not been altered.
+
+
+
+
+ IT MAY BE TRUE.
+
+
+ A NOVEL.
+
+
+ IN THREE VOLUMES.
+
+
+ BY
+ MRS. WOOD.
+
+
+ VOL. III.
+
+
+ London:
+ T. CAUTLEY NEWBY, PUBLISHER,
+ 30, WELBECK STREET, CAVENDISH SQUARE,
+ 1865.
+
+ [THE RIGHT OF TRANSLATION IS RESERVED.]
+
+
+
+
+ IT MAY BE TRUE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+IS THERE A FATE IN IT?
+
+ "The grief of slighted love, suppress'd,
+ Scarce dull'd her eye, scarce heav'd her breast;
+ Or if a tear, she strove to check,
+ A truant tear stole down her neck,
+ It seem'd a drop that, from his bill,
+ The linnet casts, beside a rill,
+ Flirting his sweet and tiny shower
+ Upon a milk-white April flower:--
+ Or if a sigh, breathed soft and low,
+ Escaped her fragrant lips; e'en so
+ The zephyr will, in heat of day,
+ Between two rose leaves fan its way."
+
+ COLMAN.
+
+
+Amy had been some three weeks at home, and as yet there had been no
+improvement in Mrs. Neville's health to justify her daughter's return to
+Brampton. There was the same lassitude, the same weariness. She would
+lie on the sofa day after day, with no bodily ailment save that of
+weakness, and an utter inability to get better, and apparently with no
+wish to do so. She never complained, but was ever grateful and content.
+It was as if life were waning away imperceptibly, and her spirits, which
+had always bravely struggled through all her trials and sorrows, had at
+last sunk never to rise again.
+
+Amy seldom left her, but generally sat by her side, on a low footstool,
+reading or working. Sometimes Mrs. Neville would lay her hand gently on
+the fair masses of hair, and Amy, whose heart was very sorrowful, would
+hold her head lower still so that her tears might fall unseen.
+
+There was something peculiarly tender and very pitying in the way the
+hand was placed on her head; at least Amy thought so, and strove more
+than ever to be cheerful, lest her mother, who lay so silently watching
+her, should guess at the secret grief in her heart which she was
+striving so hard, and she trusted successfully, to overcome; while, as
+yet, no word of it had passed between them. If Mrs. Neville thought her
+daughter's spirits less joyous, or her manner more quiet, while her eyes
+no longer flashed with their old bright expression, but at times drooped
+sadly under their long lashes, she said nothing; and Amy, while obliged
+sometimes to talk of her life at Brampton, never mentioned Charles's
+name; yet in the solitude of her own room she sometimes thought of him,
+and how as she had sat at one of the cross-stations, on her road from
+Standale, awaiting the arrival of the train that was to take her on to
+Ashleigh, she had seen Charles amongst the crowd hurrying into the one
+bound for Brampton; while she, soon afterwards, was speeding along over
+a part of the very way he had so recently travelled. Both had been
+waiting some twenty minutes at the same station, and yet neither had
+been near enough to speak, but had been as effectually separated as
+though miles had divided them, instead of so many yards. Strange
+fatality! which might have altered the future lives of both.
+
+Yes, he had gone to Brampton the very morning she had left it: one half
+hour later on her part, and they would have met. She was glad she had
+not missed the train, and that they had not met. Glad that she was
+absent from the park, and not obliged to see him day after day, or hear
+the children talk, as they sometimes did, of their uncle.
+
+Julia often wrote to Amy all the chit-chat of the park. How Charles
+Linchmore had returned, and was often at Frances' side; and how the
+latter's airs had become more intolerable in consequence. How Anne
+snubbed Mr. Hall as much as ever; but was, in Julia's opinion, more
+pleased with him, and more contented to put up with his grave reproofs
+than she used to be; and how Julia thought it would be a match in the
+end, and wondered what kind of a clergyman's wife she would make. And
+lastly, that Mr. Vavasour had left the park.
+
+Anne also wrote, but only once, and her letter was short; yet Amy read
+it over and over again, until she knew the last few lines by heart, and
+wondered what they meant; or whether they were hastily written, and had
+no point or hidden meaning, but were simply penned and then forgotten,
+as many things often were, that were said by Anne Bennet, in her quick
+impulsiveness. "Come back, Miss Neville," she wrote, "we all want you
+sadly. As for Charles, he is not himself, and will be lost!"
+
+These were the words that troubled Amy, were ever at her heart all day,
+and chased away sleep from her pillow, until her tired overwrought brain
+relieved itself in silent, secret tears--tears far more painful than
+passionate sobs. Those are at the surface, and soon over, they cure
+grief by their very bitterness, and by the self-abandonment of the
+sufferer; the others lie deeper and break the heart.
+
+These words of Anne's, whether incautiously written or not, determined
+Amy on not returning to Brampton, until Charles Linchmore's leave had
+expired; and that, she knew, must be in another week or so. If Miss
+Bennet meant he was fast losing his heart to Frances, and that Amy must
+go back to wean him away, how little she knew of the pride of her
+woman's nature. What! seek, or throw herself in the way of a man's love?
+Scarcely wooed, be won? Amy shrank at the very idea. No, if her love was
+worth having it was worth winning; and that,--not with the sternness of
+man's nature, not by the force of his strong will, not by exciting her
+jealousy with another, but by gentleness and kindness; and then her
+heart reverted to Robert Vavasour, and she wished she could love him,
+for had he not ever been kind to her? and gentle, very, even when she
+had pained him most.
+
+He had been very kind to her, there was no doubt about that, not only to
+her, but for her sake to those most dear to her. At one time came some
+beautiful hot-house grapes, at another some delicate game. Little Sarah
+called them the gifts of the "good unknown."
+
+The rail was open all the way to quiet Ashleigh now, and although the
+place did not boast of a railway van or even porter, still the station
+master always found some willing lad ready to take the basket to the
+cottage, and great was the excitement it caused to Sarah and even quiet
+old Hannah, but then the latter always knew her darling Miss Amy would
+marry an Earl at the very least.
+
+Mrs. Neville never questioned, but looked more searchingly in Amy's
+face, laid her hand more caressingly those days on her head, and spoke
+more softly and lovingly, while Amy never said a word.
+
+Once, when Sarah came dancing into the room, in her wild spirits, with
+another beautiful bunch of grapes, Mrs. Neville laid her thin, wasted
+hand on Amy's, and said gently,--
+
+"Is it all right, Amy?"
+
+"All," was the reply, and Mrs. Neville leant back again, apparently
+satisfied.
+
+But things could not go on thus for ever. Robert Vavasour, in his lonely
+home, thought more and more of Amy, and the days he was idly wasting
+away from her, when he ought to be striving for her love. At length, his
+solitude became unbearable, he could stand it no longer; whether wise or
+no, he must leave Somerton, the place was growing unbearable to him, and
+go to Ashleigh. But could he go without an intimation of some kind to
+her he loved? Yes, he must; for how send a note to Amy? Would she not
+look upon his letter as an impertinence, seeing she had given him no
+permission to write? So he made up his mind to go to Ashleigh without
+warning, for come what might, he must go.
+
+Robert Vavasour was not of an impulsive character, apt like Charles to
+be led away on the sudden spur of the moment, but he felt that remaining
+at Somerton would never advance his interest with her in whom all his
+dearest hopes of life were centred; he should simply lose the kindly
+feeling he had already gained in her heart, or what was worse still, be
+forgotten altogether.
+
+The craving wish to see her, grew stronger and stronger within him each
+day, until he could no longer refuse to gratify it, and ere another week
+passed over his head, he was speeding along the road to Ashleigh,
+arriving there by the one o'clock train.
+
+It was a stormy day, heavy showers of rain, with occasional sunshine,
+but Robert Vavasour, who saw everything _couleur de rose_, was charmed
+with the lovely scenery and quaintness of the cottages; in one of
+which,--perhaps the prettiest in the place,--he secured some, pleasant
+rooms for the time of his stay and then walked out in the hope of
+meeting her he loved. Vain hope! as Mrs. Neville seemed so much weaker,
+Amy did not leave her side. Hannah and little Sarah passed him on their
+way down the lane, and on their return, gave rather a high-flown account
+of the tall, handsome gentleman they had seen. Amy never guessed, or
+even thought of Robert Vavasour, but her heart fluttered strangely as it
+quickly passed through her mind that it might be Charles Linchmore. But
+alas! she failed in recognising the description so eagerly given and
+descanted on by Sarah.
+
+The morning of the next day was hopelessly wet, and Robert Vavasour's
+courage rose--with his anxiety to see Amy,--to fever heat; and,
+determined to see her at all hazards, he bent his steps towards the
+cottage.
+
+Sarah, tired of the dulness within doors, was gazing idly from the
+window, little thinking that her curiosity concerning the stranger she
+had seen only the day before was so soon to be gratified. But there he
+was coming along the road, and very eagerly the little girl watched him.
+
+"Oh! sister Amy," cried she, "here's the gentleman I saw yesterday, do
+come and look at him before he goes out of sight; he'll turn down the
+elm tree walk in another moment."
+
+But before Amy could have reached the window, had she been so inclined,
+he had opened the little gate, and was coming up the gravel walk.
+
+Sarah shrank away from the window, and clapped her hands with delight.
+"Why he's coming here, only think of that, Mamma. Oh! I guess it must be
+the 'good unknown' himself."
+
+In another moment all doubt was at an end, and Robert Vavasour in the
+little sitting-room, welcomed and thanked by Mrs. Neville at least, and
+Sarah also, if he might judge by her glistening eyes, although she was
+too shy to say a word, while Amy, if she did not say she was glad to see
+him, did not rebuke him for coming, nor appear to look on his visit as
+an intrusion; and soon he was quite at home with them all, and when Amy,
+who had been out to Hannah, to try and make some addition to their
+homely dinner, returned, she was surprised to see on what friendly terms
+he was.
+
+"I am afraid, dear mamma," she said, "you are exerting yourself too
+much. You are so unaccustomed to see a stranger."
+
+"Scarcely a stranger, Amy. Mr. Vavasour claims our friendship for his
+kindness; and besides, he tells me he has known you for some time."
+
+"Some two months, is it not?" replied Amy.
+
+"Hardly so long, I think, Miss Neville. It seems but yesterday since I
+first saw you."
+
+"Are you only here for the day?" asked Amy.
+
+"I am here for a week," he replied; "some good lady in the village has
+allowed me to take up my abode with her for that time, or it may be
+longer, as any one would be tempted to remain in the clean pretty room
+she showed me."
+
+"It must be Mrs. Turner, Mamma; her cottage is so very nice."
+
+"If it is," replied Mrs. Neville, "you will have no cause to complain,
+Mr. Vavasour; we stayed with her for a day or two on our first arrival,
+and were much pleased with her attention, and the cleanliness of the
+house."
+
+"Is this place often visited by strangers? It must in summer be a lovely
+spot. It is prettier than Brampton, Miss Neville."
+
+"Prettier, but not so grand; and the views are not so extensive."
+
+"You prefer Brampton?"
+
+"Oh, no! Ashleigh is my home, and then I like it for its very
+quietness."
+
+"It will no longer be quiet," replied Mrs. Neville. "Stray visitors have
+often reached it since I have been here; and now the easy access to it
+by rail will, of necessity, bring more, and Ashleigh will, perhaps,
+become immortalized by the lovers of pic-nics. But here is Hannah to
+announce dinner. You must excuse my joining you, Mr. Vavasour, as I am
+unable to leave the sofa."
+
+After dinner the weather changed; the heavy clouds cleared away, and a
+faint gleam of sunshine shone out.
+
+Amy proposed a walk, as she thought her mother would be glad of a little
+rest and quiet after her exertion, so with her sister she went with
+Robert Vavasour down into the village.
+
+So dreary as the lane looked now, with its tall leafless trees! But
+their visitor was charmed with everything, and would not allow its
+desolation. They inspected his new abode, which turned out to be Mrs.
+Turner's; then through the village, and home by road, and found Mrs.
+Elrington had come to spend the evening--and what a pleasant one it was!
+Even Amy allowed that, although she did not feel quite at rest within
+herself, or satisfied at Robert Vavasour's having come to Ashleigh;
+still she found herself later on in the evening laughing and chatting,
+in something of the old spirit, at seeing her mother take an interest in
+the conversation, and not nearly so weary and tired as she usually was.
+
+"You are so very good," said Amy, as she went out to open the cottage
+door for Robert, as he went away.
+
+"Good! Miss Neville. How? In what way?"
+
+"In being content with our dull life here."
+
+"It is anything but dull to me. My life lately has been a simply
+existing one--the slow passing of each day, or counting the hours for
+the night to arrive, and bring a short respite from the monotony of a
+dreary life. Being here is--is heaven to me! in comparison to my late
+existence at Somerton Park."
+
+There was no mistaking the impassioned tone in which this was said. Amy
+hastened to change the subject.
+
+"I am sure your visit has given Mamma pleasure."
+
+"Mrs. Neville seems a great invalid, I do not wonder at your anxiety for
+her while absent." As a stranger he had remarked the exhaustion and
+weariness, although to Amy her mother had seemed so much better.
+
+"Do you think she looks so very ill?" she asked, anxiously.
+
+"I think there is great weakness," he replied, evading a direct answer.
+"Have you a clever medical attendant here?"
+
+"Yes, I think so. Dr. Sellon, is at least, very kind and attentive, no
+one could be more so; he says Mamma merely wants rousing, and we must
+not allow this apathy and weariness to increase, but strive to divert
+her mind, even as it was this evening, and all through your kindness."
+
+"Ashleigh is a lovely spot, but rather too quiet for an invalid whose
+mind requires rousing, and whose vital energies seem so prostrated. I
+should suggest a total change of scene. A new and novel life, in fact,
+in a place perfectly strange to her, would, I should think, conduce more
+towards her recovery than all the doctors and medicine in the world."
+
+"Dr. Sellon has never said so; never even hinted at such a thing,"
+replied Amy, thoughtfully. Alas! how could it be managed, even with the
+sacrifice of all her salary.
+
+"Have you had any further advice?" he asked.
+
+"No. I wrote the other day to Dr. Ashley, our old doctor, who attended
+us all for so many years. I thought perhaps he might be coming this way
+and would call; but, although he wrote me a very kind reply, he does
+not even hint at such a stray chance happening."
+
+"Does he offer any opinion or advice on Mrs. Neville's case?"
+
+"Yes. You can read it if you like," and she took it from her pocket and
+gave it to him; "only do not mention anything about it to Mamma, she
+might not like my having written; or it might make her nervous in
+supposing herself worse than she is. It is not exactly a secret," she
+added, blushing slightly, "as Mrs. Elrington knows of it, and approved
+of my letter."
+
+"Do not wrong me by supposing I should think so, Miss Neville. I will
+take it home, and read it at my leisure, if you will allow me. Good
+night."
+
+The door closed, and he was gone before Amy could reply; but as she
+turned to re-enter the sitting-room, she sighed and murmured,
+
+"There is a fate in some things. Is there in my life?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+FOR BETTER, FOR WORSE.
+
+ "My life went darkling like the earth, nor knew it shone a star,
+ To that dear Heaven on which it hung in worship from afar.
+ O, many bared their beauty, like brave flowers to the bee;
+ He might have ranged through sunny fields, but nestled down to me;
+ And daintier dames would proudly have smiled him to their side,
+ But with a lowly majesty he sought me for his Bride;
+ And grandly gave his love to me, the dearest thing on Earth,
+ Like one who gives a jewel, unweeting of its worth."
+
+ MASSEY.
+
+
+A fortnight passed away, and still Robert Vavasour lingered at Ashleigh,
+although he seemed no nearer winning Amy's love than when he first came;
+yet he could not tear himself away. Sometimes he was gloomy and
+desponding; and on these days he never came near the cottage. At others
+his hopes rose when only a smile or glance kinder than usual came from
+her he loved, and then he was the life of the little party. But when he
+fancied Amy was beginning to care for him a little more, she would
+suddenly shrink within herself again, and become as cold and reserved as
+ever, but then he never thought that it was his almost tender manner
+that chilled and frightened her, lest he should think she was
+encouraging his suit. Still he hoped on, would not despair. What lover
+ever does? and _he_ loved her so dearly.
+
+One morning, finding Mrs. Neville alone, he told her of his love for
+Amy, of the compact between them, and of his hopes. The widow did not
+discourage them, she liked Mr. Vavasour, and would have rejoiced at
+seeing Amy his wife; still she would not influence Amy in any way, but
+leave her free to choose for herself; but since she loved no other,--and
+Mrs. Neville half sighed as if she almost doubted it,--she thought in
+time the young girl's heart might be won.
+
+And with this Robert Vavasour was obliged to be content. Content? he was
+anything but that; he was impatient, and fretted at the delay and slow
+progress he was making, he would have been more than human if he had
+not; but with Amy he was ever kind and gentle; she knew nothing, saw
+nothing of his anxious heart and sometimes despairing hopes.
+
+And so the days flew on, Mrs. Neville neither better nor worse; some
+days more languid, at others less so and able to sit up; but with no
+certainty about it, so as to lead those most anxious to believe she was
+in anyway advancing towards recovery.
+
+One morning they were surprised by a visit from Dr. Ashley. He had taken
+a holiday, he said, and thought he could not do better than run down to
+see his old friends, and was putting up, strange to say, at Mrs.
+Turner's, whose cottage had been pointed out to him as the prettiest in
+the village; and had certainly stretched like india rubber for the
+occasion, but then the gentleman already lodging there had kindly
+consented to share the parlour with him; and they were to dine together
+during his stay.
+
+If Amy suspected Robert Vavasour of being concerned in this sudden move,
+she said nothing; but then she had grown very silent of late; perhaps
+she pondered these things more deeply in her heart; certain it was she
+ceased to be so distant and reserved to Robert, and he in consequence
+became more gentle and loving. Perhaps if Amy's thoughts could have
+shaped themselves into words, they would have been, "_He_ does not love
+me or he would be here; and I? what can I do?"
+
+But Charles Linchmore's staying away was no proof that he did not love
+Amy, believing as he did that her heart was another's; had he not
+thought so, not even his sister-in-law's frowns and sarcasms would have
+kept him from her side. As it was, he knew not even of Robert Vavasour's
+presence at Ashleigh, as Amy, when she wrote to Julia and Anne, never
+mentioned it, feeling sure of a bantering letter in return; as of
+course they would guess of his love for her, and imagine it was going to
+be a match, whether she denied it or no; certainly they would never
+think of the true reason that had brought him--namely, her refusal.
+
+It was the second and last day of Dr. Ashley's stay; one of Mrs.
+Neville's worst days, and she had not as yet made her appearance
+downstairs when Mrs. Elrington entered the room where the two sisters
+sat.
+
+"Mamma has not come down yet," said Amy, "she was very wakeful all
+night, and I persuaded her to rest a little longer this morning,
+although she was very loath to do so, on Dr. Ashley's account."
+
+"Has he been to see her yet?"
+
+"No, but I am expecting him every moment. Mamma was so much better
+yesterday that perhaps she is now suffering from the over-excitement of
+seeing him."
+
+"Very possibly. Old times must have come before her so forcibly, and
+they are but sad ones for your mother to look back to. It is perhaps
+just as well Dr. Ashley should see her at her worst. What is his opinion
+of Mrs. Neville?"
+
+"I did not ask him, and he never volunteered to tell me; but I must
+ascertain to-day. Do you not think I ought to?"
+
+"Certainly I do, Amy; you would be wrong if you did not. I think if I
+were you I would ask his _true_," and Mrs. Elrington laid a stress on
+the word, "opinion on your mother's case."
+
+"Do you think her very ill?" asked Amy.
+
+"Yes, Amy, I do," replied Mrs. Elrington, gently. "That is to say, I
+think her very weak, weaker than she was when I wrote to you after her
+recovery from the severe illness she had."
+
+Amy sighed. "I sometimes fancy," she said, "that Ashleigh, lovely as it
+is, does not suit Mamma; you know her quiet life here is so very
+different from what she has been accustomed to; but I do not see how a
+change is to be effected."
+
+"It would be a great expense, certainly."
+
+"It would, and the means to effect it with will be smaller; as I fear,
+Mrs. Elrington, I shall have to resign my situation at Brampton; I
+cannot leave Mamma so lonely, neither can I be happy away from her while
+she is so ill."
+
+"I have been thinking the same thing, Amy; your mother certainly does
+require all your care and attention. It would not be right to leave
+her."
+
+"Do you think Mrs. Linchmore will be annoyed at my leaving in the middle
+of my quarter without any hint or warning whatever?"
+
+"Not under the circumstances, Amy. You were happy there?"
+
+"Yes, as happy as I shall ever be away from home; I was very fond of my
+pupils, of Edith especially."
+
+"Was she the youngest?"
+
+"No, the eldest. An orphan niece of Mr. Linchmore's, and adopted by him
+at her mother's and his sister's death. I shall regret leaving Brampton.
+I think change must be one of the worst trials of a governess's life."
+
+"It is a sad one, no doubt, when, as in your case, a governess happens
+to be attached to those she is leaving. Perhaps," continued Mrs.
+Elrington, as she rose, "I had better not wait to see your mother now.
+As soon as you have made up your mind, Amy, I would advise your writing
+at once to Mrs. Linchmore without delay."
+
+Amy leant back in her chair very sorrowfully after Mrs. Elrington had
+gone. If she had had any doubt about the propriety of leaving Brampton,
+her mother's old friend--she, whose advice she so valued--had cleared it
+away; it was evident the step must be taken, however slow her heart
+might be to break asunder the one tie that yet seemed to bind her to
+Charles Linchmore.
+
+"What are you thinking of, Amy?" asked Sarah, who had been watching her
+sister for some time. "You look so sad."
+
+"Do I? I was thinking of Mamma, and whether we could do anything to make
+her better; and about my leaving Brampton, Sarah."
+
+"But that will be so nice to have you always here; you can't be sorry
+about that, sister."
+
+"But then I shall lose a great deal of money; and Mamma will have to go
+without a great many things she really wants. Port wine cannot be bought
+for nothing, Sarah."
+
+"Ah! what a pity it is we are not rich, then we might take her back to
+our dear old home. I am sure she would get well there. Don't you think
+so?"
+
+"She might, Sarah. But I think if change is to do her good, she will
+require a greater change than that."
+
+"Further off still?" asked the child. "Where to, Amy?"
+
+"I cannot tell; but Dr. Ashley can."
+
+"But can't you guess at all? Not even the name?" persisted her sister.
+
+"No. But I think somewhere abroad; a long way off. And that would cost
+money. Yes, more money than we have, a great deal," sighed Amy.
+
+"Ah!" said the child, "when I'm grown up I'll marry a man with lots of
+money, just like Mr. Vavasour. Hannah says he's awfully rich; and then
+he should take us away to a lovely place by the sea-side where Mamma and
+all of us could live like princesses. I am sure she would get well
+then."
+
+This innocent remark of Sarah's was a home-thrust to Amy; a death blow
+to her hopes, and roused her at once. Should she sit so quietly and
+passively when her mother's life was at stake? Nurse and hoard up a love
+in her heart that she was ashamed had ever entered there from its very
+hopelessness and selfishness? There was Dr. Ashley coming up the walk,
+she would first ask his opinion as to the necessity of a change; and if
+he thought it necessary? Then--then. Once again Amy sighed, and said,
+"It is my fate; it must be so," and then went out into the other room,
+and quietly awaited the doctor's coming.
+
+Some ten minutes elapsed, during which Amy was restless and anxious;
+still she would not pause to think now, lest her heart should give way;
+so she walked about even as Frances Strickland often did in her
+impatient moods, took up the books one by one off the table and looked
+at their titles--read them she could not--and then the doctor's heavy
+tread sounded on the staircase, and she went out and met him.
+
+"Will you come in here, Dr. Ashley?" she said. "I want to thank you for
+so kindly coming to see Mamma. It is so very kind of you." Amy knew
+nothing of the ten pound note so carefully stowed away in his waistcoat
+pocket for the expenses of his homeward journey.
+
+"Pray say no more, my dear Miss Neville," he said. "It pains me."
+
+And Amy did not. Perhaps she thought it was painful to be thanked for
+what in her innermost heart she half suspected he was paid for.
+
+"How did you find Mamma, Dr. Ashley?" she asked.
+
+"Well, not quite so bright as yesterday, but still no material change
+for the worse. Dr Sellon tells me she often has these ups and downs."
+
+"Any unusual excitement appears to weaken her for the time. Dr. Sellon
+does not attend regularly. I only call him in when I think Mamma really
+requires it."
+
+"Quite right. Your mother's case is one requiring care and--and
+everything good and strengthening you can give her."
+
+"Do you think Mamma very ill?" Amy could not bring herself to ask if he
+thought she would recover, although that thought had been at her heart
+for days, and she had driven it away and would not give it utterance.
+
+"There is weakness,--great weakness," he replied. "I cannot see that
+Mrs. Neville has any other disease."
+
+"But--but I fear you are evading my question, Dr. Ashley. I wish to know
+exactly what your opinion is of Mamma."
+
+"My dear young lady," he said, kindly, "the opinion I have given is a
+true one, though perhaps not all the truth, and--well, she requires
+great care. There is a prostration of the vital powers--great want of
+energy. She wants rousing. Every means should be tried to accomplish
+that; otherwise, I need not say, this weakness and debility will
+increase, and of necessity do mischief."
+
+"Every means," replied Amy, "but what means? what must I do?"
+
+"Whatever lies in your power: whatever the patient, which I know she is
+in both senses of the word, expresses a wish for. She should be humoured
+in everything, but I need not tell you that, Miss Neville."
+
+"And can nothing else be done?--no change of air tried?"
+
+"Decidedly, if possible. It is the _one_ remedy needful; the only
+remedy, in fact, and I should have named it at first, only I deemed it
+impracticable of accomplishment."
+
+"You think Mamma might recover if she went away?" asked Amy.
+
+"With God's help, I do; but the step should be taken at once. If delayed
+it might be too late. And now, keep up your spirits and hope for the
+best. Remember there is nothing so bad as a tearful face and aching
+heart for your mother to see."
+
+"Too late!" Those words rang in Amy's ears all day. It should not be too
+late. And yet how nearly had her mother been sacrificed to her blind
+infatuation for one who she now felt had never loved her, but only
+carelessly flirted to trifle away the hours that perhaps hung heavy on
+his hands. Alas! what would Mr. Linchmore say, did he know that the very
+fate he had warned her would be hers if she allowed her heart to become
+enslaved by Mr. Vavasour, had even overtaken her at the hand of his
+brother.
+
+Not many days after Dr. Ashley had gone, a letter arrived from Anne
+Bennet. It ran thus:--
+
+ "Brampton Park,
+ "February 25th.
+
+ "MY DEAR MISS NEVILLE,
+
+ "I have almost made up my mind to torment you with a letter every
+ day, this place being so dull and dreary that the mere fact of
+ writing is quite a delightful episode in my long day. I should be
+ happy enough if Frances were away; but you know how I always
+ disliked that girl. Just imagine my disgust, then, at her remaining
+ here, for, of course, Julia has told you she herself and every one
+ else is gone, excepting Frances and Charles; the latter, I suppose,
+ remains in the hope of soon seeing you. Why don't you come back? I
+ declare it is shameful of you to remain away so long, when you must
+ know how wretched you are making him, and how devotedly he loves
+ you. I should not tell you this, only Frances drives me to it, and
+ I am just at the root of a grand secret. Julia behaved
+ shamefully--would not help me in the least, as she would persist in
+ declaring it was curiosity--how I hate the word!--so I had nothing
+ for it but to take Mr. Hall into my confidence, the result of which
+ has been that I have promised, some long time hence, to become Mrs.
+ Hall; and for the time being, we are turned into a pair of
+ turtle-doves, only instead of billing and cooing, we are snapping
+ and snarling all day. Adieu. Answer every word of this letter,
+ especially that relating to Charles, who is, I am certain, as
+ devotedly yours as
+
+ "Your loving friend,
+ "ANNE BENNET."
+
+This letter, with its mention of Charles Linchmore, pained Amy, and
+roused her slumbering pride. She would answer it at once, every word of
+it, and for ever put an end to Anne's mention of his name. She should
+see that Amy was as proud in some things as the haughty Mrs. Linchmore
+herself, or the defiant Frances. No woman should think she would stoop
+one iota for any man's love; while as for Charles, Anne was deceived in
+her belief of his love for her, even as she had been; but it was not
+well her heart should be reminded of the one image still slumbering
+there. Was she not as much bound to Robert Vavasour as if she were
+already engaged to him? or did she ever prevent his coming to the
+cottage by being ungracious?
+
+No; Amy had made up her mind to love him, and was ever ready to listen
+to his words, or walk with him. No fits of dread despair assailed him
+now. His whole life seemed a bright sunshine; even the dull, desolate
+walk up from the village was pleasant, because every step brought him
+nearer to the cottage.
+
+That evening--the evening of the day that brought Anne's letter--Amy,
+while old Hannah cleared away the tea things, went to her room and
+answered it. The doing so cost her many bitter thoughts, and perhaps a
+few tears were hastily dashed away. When it was done, her head ached
+sadly. She went to the window and threw it open. It was a lovely
+moonlight night. She crept softly downstairs and out into the garden,
+and leant over the little green gate at the end.
+
+Some ten minutes passed sadly away, and then a step sounded on the crisp
+gravel. Amy knew well it was Robert Vavasour's, still she did not move
+or turn her head. Was he going home without saying good night to her? or
+had he missed her and guessed where she was?
+
+"It is a cold night, Miss Neville," he said as he drew near. "Is it wise
+for you to be out without a shawl or wrap of any kind?"
+
+"The lovely night tempted me," she replied, "I thought it might cool my
+head, for it aches sadly."
+
+He did not reply. Amy too was silent; perhaps she guessed what he would
+say next.
+
+Presently he laid his hand on hers as it rested on the woodwork of the
+gate. She did not withdraw it, and then he boldly took the small fair
+hand in his.
+
+"Amy," he said, softly, while she trembled exceedingly, "do you remember
+I said I would ask you once again? The time has come. Amy, will you be
+my wife? I love you more dearly than when I first asked you in the old
+library at Brampton."
+
+She did not shrink from him or his encircling arm as she replied, "I
+think I love you now; I am sure I like you better, and will try to love
+you with all my heart. If this will satisfy you, then I will be your
+wife."
+
+And it did satisfy him, and he pressed his lips on her clear high,
+forehead, as, like a weary child, she laid her head on his shoulder as
+he gently drew her towards him.
+
+"I am very timid," she said, "and you must be patient, and not expect
+too much from me at first."
+
+These words, spoken so entreatingly and dependently, claiming, as they
+seemed to him, all his care and kindness, calmed him at once; he must
+be patient, and not frighten away by his too tender words the love only
+just dawning for him.
+
+"My darling," he whispered, "you will never find me other than kind and
+gentle with you. You have made me very happy, Amy."
+
+"Have I ever caused you unhappiness?" she asked, seeing he waited for a
+reply.
+
+"Only twice, Amy. Once when you tried to shut out all hope from my
+heart, and again when I fancied you cared for Charley Linchmore."
+
+That name! How it jarred through the chords of Amy's heart! Only a few
+moments ago she had determined on tearing it out, and never allowing
+another thought of him to enter there again. Was he dear to her still;
+now that she was the affianced bride of another? and that other, ought
+he not to know of her foolishness and folly? ought not every thought of
+her heart to be open to _him_ now? Yes, now; from this time, this hour;
+but not the past; that could only bring sorrow to him, shame to her.
+No! no! She could not lower herself in the eyes of Robert Vavasour, he
+who loved her so dearly, and whom she had just promised to try in time
+to love with all her heart. All her heart! Was this trembling at the
+mere mention of another's name the beginning of her promise? Would she
+ever forget Charles Linchmore? Ever love another as she could have loved
+him?
+
+Amy shivered slightly; but Robert Vavasour, who loved her more than his
+life, felt it.
+
+"You are cold, little one," he said, "and must go in. You know, Amy, I
+have the right to protect you from all ill now," and he led her back
+gently towards the cottage.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+LISTENING AT THE DOOR.
+
+ If thou hast crushed a flower,
+ The root may not be blighted;
+ If thou hast quenched a lamp,
+ Once more it may be lighted;
+ But on thy harp or on thy lute,
+ The string which thou hast broken
+ Shall never in sweet sound again
+ Give to thy touch a token!
+
+ If thou hast bruised a vine,
+ The summer's breath is healing,
+ And its clusters yet may glow
+ Thro' the leaves, their bloom revealing;
+ But if thou hast a cup o'erthrown
+ With a bright draught filled--oh! never
+ Shall earth give back the lavished wealth
+ To cool thy parched lips' fever.
+
+ Thy heart is like that cup,
+ If thou waste the love it bore thee;
+ And like that jewel gone,
+ Which the deep will not restore thee;
+ And like that string of heart or lute
+ Whence the sweet sound is scattered,--
+ Gently, oh! gently touch the chords,
+ So soon for ever shattered!
+
+ MRS. HEMANS.
+
+
+Anne had scarcely exaggerated when she told Amy that Brampton Park had
+become dull and stupid. It certainly had subsided into its old
+dullness, while the days themselves were even more dreary-looking than
+the house. Spring had commenced, the trees were beginning to put forth
+their blossoms, and the cold frosty weather had passed away; still the
+days were misty, and sometimes even foggy, with drizzling rain. Riding
+parties were scarcely ever attempted, and a walk was almost out of the
+question; while dancing and music were things unknown--the first
+impracticable, the latter no one seemed to have the spirits for. Mrs.
+Hopkins no longer walked about the corridors in stately importance; even
+Mason's crinoline seemed to have shrunk somewhat, as she flaunted less
+saucily about than when certain of meeting some one to whom to show off
+her last new cap.
+
+The two young girls still staying at Brampton did not get on very well
+together, although there was little show of outward unfriendliness on
+either part. Frances had long since found out that Anne Bennet disliked
+and suspected, even watched her; but no fear had she of being
+detected--her plans, so she flattered herself, had been too secretly and
+deeply laid for Anne's simple mind to fathom them; such a worm in her
+path she could tread upon whenever she liked, and utterly crush when it
+pleased her. So secure was she that often Anne was attacked with one of
+her sarcastic speeches. But Anne was too wary to be betrayed into an
+open quarrel, which would, most likely, have resulted in her being
+obliged to leave Brampton; so she contented herself by either treating
+her words with silent contempt or retorting in the same style, with the
+secret determination of some day having her revenge, much to poor Mr.
+Hall's dismay, as he was, of course, _faut de mieux_, as Anne said,
+taken into her confidence.
+
+Some twenty minutes Anne had been standing at one of the windows of the
+morning-room, which being just above the library, commanded a pretty
+good view down a part of the long avenue, through the branches of the
+still almost leafless trees.
+
+It was about a month since the eventful evening on which Amy had penned
+her reply to Anne.
+
+Charles, who had been reading, suddenly rose, and threw his book, with a
+gesture of weariness, on the table.
+
+"Are you going out?" asked Frances, laying her embroidery in her lap, as
+he rose.
+
+"Yes; it's close upon half-past four, and I shall just get a stroll
+before dinner; the book has made me stupid."
+
+"So has my embroidery. I think I will go with you, if you will let me."
+
+"You!" exclaimed Anne, from her distant post, ever ready to knock on the
+head any chance that drew the two together; "why your feet in their
+dainty boots would get soaked through and through, and you catch your
+death of cold. Do not encourage such self-immolation, Charles."
+
+"Yes," laughed Charles, "your town-made boots, Frances, were never made
+or intended for country wear. Anne's are, at least, an inch thick, and
+wade through any amount of mud or dirt: so if either of you come, it
+must be Anne."
+
+"I should say Anne would be a lively companion," retorted Frances,
+savagely. "I suppose by this time she could tell us how many drops of
+rain fall in a minute, and how many rooks have perched on the trees
+during the last half-hour."
+
+"I wish one of the rooks would fly and bring me the letter from Miss
+Neville that I have been expecting, and have been looking out for all
+the afternoon."
+
+This reply, with its allusion to the governess, Anne knew was the
+severest thing she could say; so, with a self-satisfied look at Frances'
+flushed face, she went away to put on her things.
+
+But her water-proof cloak could not be found--was nowhere. Anne was a
+great deal too independent to summon servants to her aid, so she must
+needs go down stairs to look for it, remembering, as she went, that she
+had hung it on the stand in the hall to dry. She was returning upstairs
+with it on her arm, when Charles's voice sounded in the morning-room.
+Anne hesitated a moment; but Frances's low mysterious tone was too great
+a temptation to be resisted, and with a half-frightened guilty look, she
+drew near the door and listened, thinking, perhaps, the end to be
+attained justified the means she was employing in attaining it.
+
+"My heart misgives me sometimes as to whether I did right in leaving her
+so precipitately, without a word," Charles was saying.
+
+"What would have been the use of speaking?" was the rejoinder, "when she
+so evidently cared, or rather showed her love for Mr. Vavasour."
+
+Anne could not hear the reply, and again Frances spoke.
+
+"I thought I never should recover her from that death-like faint."
+
+"If any woman deceived me, she did. I could have sworn she cared for me,
+on that very evening. How she trembled when I took her hand," said
+Charles.
+
+Again Anne was at fault with the answer; but whatever it was Charles's
+reply rang loud and clear--
+
+"I hate that fellow Vavasour!" he said.
+
+"Hush! hush!" said Frances; and Anne could imagine she was entreating
+him to talk lower; then the rustle of her dress was heard, and swift as
+thought Anne flew lightly and softly up the thickly-carpeted stairs. As
+she paused at the top, breathless and panting, she heard the door below
+gently closed.
+
+"Too late!" said she, with a smile of pleasure; and then went with
+something of a triumphant march to her room; where, shutting the door,
+she gave vent to one of her ringing laughs, which quickly subsided into
+a repentant, regretful look. "How shameful of me to laugh at such
+wickedness," said she, aloud; and then, settling herself in an old
+arm-chair, began to think over what she had heard, and draw her own
+conclusions therefrom.
+
+This to Anne's quick mind was not very difficult; she guessed it all, or
+almost all, at once, and never for a moment doubted they were talking
+of Miss Neville. Had she not given them the clue when she mentioned her
+name, before going up to dress?
+
+So Miss Neville had fainted. But where, and when? and how had Frances
+managed to persuade or convince Charles that the faint was caused by
+love for Mr. Vavasour? Charles had said, "That very evening." What
+evening? Was it the night before he went off so suddenly from Brampton?
+the night Mr. Vavasour had been brought home wounded and insensible? Was
+it possible Amy had fainted at seeing him? Yes, she might have done so;
+it was most probable she had; and yet that, as far as Anne could see,
+was no proof of her love for him. The sight might have grieved and
+shocked her, as it might have done any woman so timid as she was, and
+nervous and weak from the effects of recent illness.
+
+Anne had indeed arrived at the root of the mystery, and that in a manner
+she had little dreamed of. What a deep-laid plot it seemed, and how
+artfully and successfully concealed from her! She felt half inclined to
+rush boldly down, confront Frances, and tax her with her falsehood and
+injustice to Miss Neville; but on second thoughts she restrained herself
+and determined for once on assuming a new character. She would take a
+leaf out of Frances' book, and act as secretly and silently.
+
+As Anne sat ruminating a knock sounded at her door. What if it should be
+Frances? She sprung from her chair and busied herself in putting away
+her things ere she answered, "Come in;" but it was only a servant with
+letters, and at last Miss Neville's reply that she had been expecting
+for so many weeks.
+
+"Tell Mr. Charles," said Anne, "that it looks so very wet I have changed
+my mind and shall not go out. He need not wait for me."
+
+"Let Frances go out with him, if she likes," thought Anne; "hers will be
+but a short-lived pleasure. I will defeat her to-morrow," and then she
+once more sat down, and opened Amy's letter.
+
+
+ "Saturday.
+
+ "MY DEAR MISS BENNET,
+
+ "I feel much pleasure in congratulating you on your engagement to
+ Mr. Hall, and trust the day is not so far distant as you seem to
+ imagine when you will settle down into a pattern clergyman's wife.
+ I fear there is little chance of our meeting again as you so kindly
+ wish, as the very delicate state of my mother's health precludes
+ all possibility of my leaving home at present. It is therefore
+ imperative I should resign my situation with Mrs. Linchmore, much
+ as I shall regret leaving her and my pupils. Your allusion to Mr.
+ Charles Linchmore pains me. May I ask you to be silent on that
+ subject for the future; as, even in joke, I do not like any man
+ being thought to be desperately in love with me, and in this
+ instance Mr. Charles Linchmore barely treated me as a friend at
+ parting. With every wish for your future happiness in the new path
+ which you have chosen,
+
+ "I am,
+ "Yours very sincerely,
+ "AMY NEVILLE."
+
+This was the letter Amy had written, and which ought to have reached
+Anne a month ago, but Amy had entrusted the posting of it to a boy named
+Joe, who always came up every Sunday afternoon after church to have his
+dinner at the cottage. Unfortunately Joe forgot all about the letter,
+and before the next Sunday came round he was laid up with a fever, then
+prevalent at Ashleigh; and when able to get about again the letter never
+occurred to him until the first Sunday of his going to church; when
+again he donned his best suit, and on kneeling down, the letter rustled
+in his pocket. Joe's conscience smote him at once, and as soon as
+service was ended away he flew to the village post-office, spelling out
+as he went the address on the envelope; which, when he found was no
+sweetheart, but only a young lady, he concluded could be a letter of no
+consequence, and determined on saying nothing about its lying so long
+neglected in his pocket of his Sunday's best. Joe was not wise enough to
+know that trifles sometimes make or mar a life's happiness.
+
+Before Anne left her room she made up her mind how to act; not a word
+would she say that night to Charles, because nothing could be done, but
+on the morrow she would open his eyes, show him the snare into which he
+had fallen; the folly he had been guilty of through the cunning and
+duplicity of Frances.
+
+Anne sang all the way downstairs to the drawing-room as she went to
+dinner. The idea of having detected the proud Frances had perhaps more
+to do with this exuberance of spirits, than pleasure at Miss Neville's
+being done justice to, and Charles made happy; as for Mrs. Linchmore's
+frowns, Anne never gave them a thought.
+
+Charles spirits were, if anything, more forced than usual; Frances more
+reserved and silent, so that Anne's vivacity and evident good humour
+showed in their brightest colours.
+
+"What spirits you are in, Anne," remarked Mrs. Linchmore.
+
+"Perhaps friend Hall is on the wing," laughed Charles.
+
+"Or perhaps," replied Anne slowly, "my rooks have given me a lesson
+in--in--"
+
+"Cawing," suggested Frances, impertinently.
+
+"Why not in keeping a silent tongue?" Anne replied, with a scarcely
+perceptible touch of temper in the tone of her voice. "There is more
+wisdom in that, or perhaps my birds are wise birds, and have given me a
+hint where to find the golden link to my chain that has been missing so
+long."
+
+"When did you lose it, Anne?" asked Mrs. Linchmore, "this is the first I
+have heard about it."
+
+"Some two months ago, the morning after that poaching business," and
+Anne looked steadily at Frances; "but it is of no consequence now. I
+find my chain can be joined again without it."
+
+Frances quailed before that steady, searching look; then rose and
+crossed the room, passing close by Anne as she went. "Miss Bennet," said
+she, with one of her coldest and most sarcastic smiles, "Miss Bennet has
+recourse to enigmas at times,--enigmas not very difficult of solution,
+although I for one cannot see the point they aim at," and she passed on.
+
+Anne watched her opportunity all the evening, but to no purpose.
+Frances' suspicions were roused; it was impossible to get speech of
+Charles, and Anne was obliged to go up to bed with the rest, without
+having given one sign, or being able to say one word to him.
+
+But Anne was not to be thus foiled; as soon as she gained her room she
+sat down and penned a note to Charles. She had something of great
+importance to tell him; would he meet her in the library before
+breakfast, at eight o'clock? and then away she flew in fear and
+trepidation down the long, dark corridors, and knocked at Charles's
+door.
+
+"It is I, Anne Bennet," she said. "Open the door, quick! Make haste, I
+am frightened to death!"
+
+In another moment the door opened.
+
+"What is it?" said he, with a look of surprise.
+
+She thrust the note into his hand, and was hurrying away.
+
+"Stay, let me light you," he said.
+
+"Oh! no, not for worlds!" she replied, then fled hastily, and gained her
+room without being seen.
+
+Anne was too restless to sleep much that night, and was up and away
+downstairs the next morning before the hour she had named, and grew
+quite impatient at the slow movement of the minute hand of the clock on
+the chimney-piece, as she walked up and down awaiting Charles's coming.
+
+Suppose he should not come? But, no, he must think it was something
+important to drag her out of bed at that unearthly hour, full two hours
+before her usual time. But there was a step coming along the hall now;
+then the door opened and Charles entered.
+
+"You are sure Frances did not see you?" asked Anne.
+
+"Yes," replied he, in some amazement, "but her maid did."
+
+"Then I have not a moment to lose," said Annie, "come here and listen to
+me. Do you remember meeting me on the stairs, the morning you left
+Brampton so hurriedly? and your refusal to tell me why you had
+determined on doing so? or rather that you left because you had heard
+that Miss Neville no longer loved you?"
+
+"No, Anne, no, you are wrong," replied Charles, decidedly, "I told you I
+had found out that Miss Neville had never cared for me, that her heart
+was entirely another's."
+
+"It is all one and the same thing. I told you then that I did not
+believe it, and asked you to tell me how you had found it out, did I
+not?"
+
+"You did. But why rake up old feelings which only tend to wound and
+bruise the heart afresh?"
+
+"I am glad they do; if they did not I would not say one word in Miss
+Neville's defence."
+
+"Defence! You talk strangely, Anne. Don't whisper hope to my heart,
+which can only end in misery and despair. I dare not hope."
+
+"You will hope when you have heard all."
+
+"What have you to tell?" he asked, almost sternly.
+
+"Only this: that you left Brampton because Miss Neville had fainted on
+seeing Mr. Vavasour brought home wounded."
+
+"What surer proof could I have of her love for him?" he asked, sadly.
+
+"Proof! Do you call this proof?" said Anne, angrily, "do you forget how
+ill Miss Neville had been? how nervous and weak she yet was when this
+occurred? Was it a wonder she fainted? or a wonder that Frances, who
+hated and disliked her, should seize upon that accident to betray you
+both? And why? Only because had you told Miss Neville of your love, or
+divulged what you had seen to me, you would never have fallen into this
+snare so artfully laid for you, so cunningly worked out by Frances."
+
+"Who told you it was Frances?"
+
+"She herself," replied Anne, boldly facing the danger. "I have never
+left a stone unturned since that morning I met you on the stairs almost
+heart-broken. I was determined to find out why it was so. I suspected
+Frances, and have watched her all these long weeks, but she was too deep
+for me, too artful; and I never should have detected her, had I not
+over-heard her conversation with you yesterday. Then I found it all out;
+and I tell you Charles she has deceived you."
+
+"Go on," he said, "convince me it is so, and I will thank you from my
+heart, Anne; and--no, I am a fool to hope!" and he strode away towards
+the window.
+
+"You are a fool to despair! I tell you Charles, if any woman ever loved
+you, Miss Neville did. Were not the tears ready to start from her eyes
+when I gave her your message, and told her you were gone? You allowed
+her to think for weeks that you loved her, and then, for a mere trifle,
+left her without explanation or word of any kind. You behaved
+shamefully; while she never gave you an unkind word. The severest thing
+she ever said of you, was said in a letter I received from her
+yesterday. I told her you loved her, because I knew she was miserable
+thinking you did not; and read what she says."
+
+He took the letter from her hand, his face flushing while he read it.
+"If Frances has deceived me? If she has dared to do it?" he said. "By
+Heaven! she shall rue it deeply!"
+
+"And she has done so," pursued Anne, "and you are more to blame than she
+in allowing yourself to be deceived. How could you doubt Miss Neville?
+How believe that she, of all women in the world, would give away her
+heart unsought. You have condemned her unheard, and without the
+slightest foundation, and have behaved cruelly to her, and deserve to
+lose her."
+
+"Not if she loves me," he cried, starting up, "not if any words of mine
+have power to move her. God knows whether I shall be successful or no;
+but she shall hear how madly I love her."
+
+"Are you going to see her? and when?"
+
+"Now, this instant! your words have roused me to action!"
+
+He was gone. Anne went into the drawing-room and stood by the window.
+Some minutes slipped by, and then Frances entered.
+
+"Come here!" said Anne. "Come and look at Charles."
+
+Frances advanced and looked eagerly around.
+
+"I do not see him," she said.
+
+"Hark!" said Anne, "What is that?"
+
+It was the hasty canter of a horse's feet. In another moment Charles
+dashed past.
+
+Anne remembered the last time he had gone away. How she and Frances had
+stood together at the same window, even as they did now; only with this
+difference, that then, Frances' face was the triumphant one. Now they
+had changed places.
+
+Anne could not--did not pity her, as she drew near and took hold of her
+arm.
+
+"He has gone to tell Miss Neville he loves her," said she cruelly, as
+Frances looked enquiringly in her face.
+
+Frances paled to an almost death-like whiteness as she grasped, "God
+forgive you if he has. I never will!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+TOO LATE.
+
+ "So mournfully she gaz'd on him,
+ As if her heart would break;
+ Her silence more upbraided him,
+ Than all her tongue might speak!
+
+ She could do nought but gaze on him,
+ For answer she had none,
+ But tears that could not be repress'd,
+ Fell slowly, one by one.
+
+ Alas! that life should be so short--
+ So short and yet so sad;
+ Alas! that we so late are taught
+ To prize the time we had!"
+
+ CHARLES SWAIN.
+
+
+It was the evening after Amy had pledged herself to Robert Vavasour. The
+sun had slowly faded away, and twilight threw but a faint light into the
+room where she sat close to her mother's feet.
+
+Amy had been reading to Mrs. Neville and the book still open; lay in her
+lap, but it was too dark to read now, too dark for her mother to see
+her face, so Amy drew closer still ere she broached the subject nearest
+her heart. There was no shrinking or timidity, as there might have been
+had her love been wholly his, whose wife she had promised to become.
+
+"Mamma, did Mr. Vavasour ever speak to you of his love for me?" The
+words were spoken firmly, though almost in a whisper.
+
+"He did, Amy; and he also said you had refused his love."
+
+"I knew so little of him then, that when he named his love it seemed
+like a dream, so sudden and unexpected. I had never given it a thought,
+or believed such a thing possible. I know him better now; he is so good,
+so kind."
+
+She paused, perhaps hoping her mother would speak, but Mrs. Neville said
+not a word, and Amy went on somewhat falteringly, although she tried
+hard to speak steadily.
+
+"Mamma, I promised last evening I would be his wife--"
+
+"Have you done wisely, Amy? Are you sure you love him as his promised
+wife should?"
+
+"Yes," replied Amy, dreamily. "I like him, I am sure I like him very
+much indeed,--and--and then he is so gentle and loving with me; surely
+no one could help liking him."
+
+Mrs. Neville half raised herself on the sofa. "Amy! Amy! liking will not
+do. Do you love him, child?"
+
+"Yes, Mamma. Yes, I think so."
+
+"Only _think_, child? Nay you must be sure of it. Ask your heart if the
+time passes slowly when he is absent from the cottage. Do you watch and
+wait, and listen for his returning footsteps? Do you feel that without
+him life is not worth having, the world a blank? Is your whole heart
+with him when he is at your side? Do you tremble when his hand touches
+yours; and your voice grow softer as you speak to him? Do you feel that
+you dare not look up lest he should see the deep love in your eyes? if
+so Amy, then gladly will I consent to give you to him. But if not, I
+would rather, far rather see you in your grave than wedded to him."
+
+Amy was silent; not from any wish to draw back from her word or plighted
+troth; no, she had made up her mind to be Robert Vavasour's wife, her
+mother's thin wasted hand as it rested on hers only strengthened that
+resolution; the very feebleness with which she raised herself on the
+couch showed Amy how very weak and ill she was, and this one act might
+restore her to health. She did not hesitate, she would not draw back;
+had Charles loved her, it might have been different, but convinced of
+his falseness and trifling, no regret for him, now struggled at her
+heart, only shame that she could ever have allowed it to be drawn
+towards him, unsought.
+
+"You hesitate. You do not answer, Amy?" said Mrs. Neville, sadly, "and
+have deceived yourself and him."
+
+"No, Mamma, you are wrong. Although I do not love Mr. Vavasour like
+that; still I do love him, and in time, when I am his wife, I shall
+very dearly."
+
+Mrs. Neville sighed. "In this one important step of your life, Amy, when
+your whole future well-being depends upon it, there should be no secrets
+between us, recollect this one act may entail much misery; you cannot
+tell how much. Think of being bound for life to a man you do not love,
+think of the remorse you will feel at not being able to give him the
+love of your whole heart in return for his. Amy, my child, his very
+presence would be painful to you, his very love and kindness your
+greatest punishment and sorrow."
+
+"Yes Mamma, if I did not love him; but it will not be so. I shall love
+him."
+
+"And yet Amy, your very words almost forbid it, and fill my heart with
+fear and trembling," and again Mrs. Neville clasped her daughter's hand,
+while Amy, fairly overcome, bent down and laying her forehead on the
+soft pitying hand, burst into tears.
+
+"Hush, Amy! hush! You have done foolishly, but there is yet time; better
+give him sorrow and pain now than later."
+
+"No, Mamma, no; there is no need to give him pain," said Amy, presently.
+
+"Alas!" replied Mrs. Neville, "then why these tears?"
+
+"I weep," answered Amy, flinging--dashing back the tears as they crowded
+into her eyes, "I weep to think I have allowed my heart to think of
+another; one, too all unworthy of a woman's love; one who flirted and
+pretended to care for me; I weep for very shame, mother, to think how
+foolish I was, and how unworthy I am to be Robert Vavasour's wife."
+
+"You have been unhappy, my child, so unhappy; but I almost guessed it
+when I looked in your face months ago."
+
+"Yes, but not unhappy now, Mamma. I was very miserable, for I thought he
+loved me until he left me--went away without a word. Oh! mother, _that_
+was a bitter trial to me, and instead of trying to rouse myself and
+cast his image out of my heart, knowing I had done wrong in ever loving
+him, and doubly so now I had found out his cruel unworthiness, I nursed
+my love; bemoaned my fate; and steadily shut my heart against Mr.
+Vavasour. But it could not be; he was too noble hearted, so patient
+under my waywardness; sorrowful, but never reproachful; and--and so
+Mamma I have promised to become his wife; and am happy, not grieved or
+sad, at the idea; no, I will be his faithful, loving wife, and in his
+true heart forget this early foolish love that caused me so much
+unhappiness, and nearly lost me the heart of him who is now to be my
+husband."
+
+"You are right, Amy, to forget _him_, right to tear _his_ image from
+your heart; a man to treat you so is unworthy of any woman's love; and
+yet--yet I am scarcely satisfied. I fear this engagement. Is it not
+hasty, too hasty? Do not rush into a marriage hoping to escape from a
+love, however unworthy, still struggling at your heart; such a mistake
+might make the one regret of your whole life."
+
+"I do not. I will not," replied Amy firmly, as she rose, and stooping
+over her mother, kissed her fondly; "If this is the only reason you
+have, dear Mamma, for fear, then rest content: my engagement with Mr.
+Vavasour is for my--all our happiness; will you try and think so? I
+should feel very unhappy indeed if you refused your consent; or that my
+marriage grieved you."
+
+"It does not grieve me, Amy. Only," sighed Mrs. Neville, "I wish he had
+been your first love."
+
+"Nay, that is foolish, Mamma. Now often have I heard you say that few
+girls marry their first love."
+
+Again Mrs. Neville was silent. "Have you told Mr. Vavasour of this old
+love, Amy?" asked she presently.
+
+"Oh! no, no, Mamma. What good could it do? It would only grieve him;
+I,--I told him this much, that I--I hoped to love him better in time."
+
+"And he was satisfied?"
+
+"Quite," answered Amy, "and will you not say you are too, dearest
+Mamma?" and she laid her head lovingly on her mother's shoulder, and
+looked entreatingly in her face.
+
+"God bless and protect you, my child," said Mrs. Neville fervently,
+drawing her closer still, and kissing her fondly. "May He guide and
+strengthen us both, for indeed I am very sorrowful, and scarcely know
+whether this marriage is for my child's happiness or no; but I pray it
+may be with all my heart. You have your mother's best, holiest wishes,
+Amy."
+
+So Amy Neville became, with her mother's sanction, Robert Vavasour's
+affianced wife.
+
+Yet for days after that Mrs. Neville's heart seemed troubled and ill at
+ease, and she lay on the sofa watching, noting Amy's every look or
+action, until, by degrees, the troubled anxious look wore away; Amy
+seemed so contented and happy that her mother, who, in her secret
+heart, wished the marriage might be, gradually lost her fears, and each
+hour gained renewed confidence and hope. She grew better and stronger,
+and this alone in itself was sufficient to bring back the smiles into
+Amy's face, while each day disclosed some fresh trait of Robert
+Vavasour's goodness and kindness of heart. It was his voice read of an
+evening to her mother and never seemed to weary. It was his hand raised
+the invalid, or lifted her, as her strength increased, from the sofa to
+the easy chair.
+
+Amy rejoiced in the change, and while she never allowed her thoughts to
+wander to the past, with all its cruel hopes and fears, so she never
+halted or looked onward to the future; her life was of to-day, neither
+more nor less. Her mother was better; it was her act, her will, that had
+done it all. She was contented that it should be so, and fancied herself
+happy; perhaps was at this time really so, and might have been for ever,
+had she never seen Charles Linchmore again, never known how he, not
+she, had been deceived, but that was to be the one thorn in her onward
+path.
+
+In less than a month Amy was to be married. Mrs. Neville's objections as
+to haste were overruled, even old Mrs. Elrington had sided with the
+rest; but then Mrs. Neville knew nothing of Dr. Ashley's opinion, or
+that Amy had confided to her old friend the necessity there was for an
+immediate change.
+
+They were to go to Italy. Amy, her husband, and mother, with little
+Sarah, and even old Hannah accompanying them. What a pleasant party it
+would be! Already Amy began to picture to herself the delight she would
+experience in watching her mother's restoration to health and strength
+in that warm sunny clime, and how happy she would be by-and-by in
+bringing her back when quite well, to live in her own and Vavasour's
+home, that home he had so often talked to her of, and where, in a few
+weeks, she would be roaming about at will as its mistress.
+
+The days crept on steadily and surely slowly to all but Mrs. Neville,
+and with her the time seemed to fly; she was anxious and restless, while
+her doubts and fears only shaped themselves in words in old Hannah's
+presence; to the rest, even to Amy, she was passive and quiet,
+apparently resigned, only at heart sad.
+
+But old Hannah was a remorseless tyrant, who, feeling deeply and
+sorrowfully her darling's departure from home, sighing and even dropping
+a tear or two in secret, yet she never allowed Mrs. Neville to bewail
+it, but, on the contrary, seemed to look upon her doing so as a weakness
+and sin, requiring a steady though somewhat underhand reproof. Perhaps
+the very strength of mind Hannah displayed encouraged and strengthened
+her mistress.
+
+"We are to lose Miss Amy to-morrow, Hannah," said Mrs. Neville, in a sad
+tone of voice. "I wish the wedding had not been so sudden."
+
+"There, Ma'am, I don't call it sudden at all in the light wind," then
+silently and steadily went upstairs to change her bridal attire for a
+travelling dress.
+
+It would be quite half-an-hour before Vavasour could return; so she sat
+quietly awaiting him in the little sitting-room, perhaps for the first
+time that day feeling sad, just realising her position as a wife, and
+looking onwards into the future.
+
+She sat lost in a dreamy reverie, and heard not the swift opening and
+shutting of the little garden gate, or the sound of the still swifter
+step across the gravel walk, until it sounded quick and strong in the
+passage; then she started and arose quickly. Her husband had returned!
+and sooner than she expected. With a smile she turned to greet him, but
+it was Charles Linchmore who stood in the doorway, flushed and heated
+with the haste and impatience of his hurried ride from the station, and
+still more hasty journey.
+
+Amy's heart stood still. Why had he come? Then, woman-like, almost
+guessed before he spoke what he had come to say. But ere she could
+recover from the sudden shock of his presence he, with all the old
+impetuosity of his nature, was at her feet, pouring forth his long
+pent-up love, with all its wild jealousy and anguish. How he had been
+deceived by Frances, and driven well-nigh distracted. How through Anne's
+agency he had found out her deceit, and had started at once to explain
+all and be forgiven; how he believed now she had loved him, and still
+loved, or would love him again; all--all he told, while his words came
+fast and strong. Amy never attempted to stay them, neither could she, if
+she would. So he went on to the end; then looked up into her face, that
+white, wan, pale face, bending so sadly over him, with an agonised stony
+look spread over each feature, striking dismay into his heart and soul.
+
+"Speak to me!" he cried passionately. "Only say you forgive me my hasty
+belief in your falseness, only say that you love me still, and that I am
+not too late to make amends. Amy! my own Amy, speak to me!" and again
+he looked up beseechingly, with all his deep, earnest love written on
+his face, and speaking in his eyes.
+
+But she was silent and still, very still.
+
+Then the hand he held so tightly drew away from his hot, burning ones,
+and turning slowly, showed the wife's symbol, the plain gold band
+encircling the one small finger, while the pale, sad lips parted, and
+words came mournfully at last, but slowly and distinctly, settling like
+ice about his heart.
+
+"It is too late--I am married."
+
+Again that hasty, hurried step sounded, ringing out fiercely in the
+passage and along the quiet gravel walk. Once again the gate swung
+harshly and roughly on its frail hinges; then the sudden rush of a
+horse's quick hoofs rung out startlingly in the still, soft air, and in
+another moment died away in the far-off distance.
+
+"Where is your mistress? is she ready?" asked Vavasour of Amy's new
+maid, as ten minutes later he hastily entered the cottage.
+
+"My mistress is not ready, Sir," was the reply, with a pert toss of the
+head, while a peculiar expression played round the corners of her lips.
+"She is in the parlour, Sir. Mrs. Elrington thinks it's the heat of the
+day and the worry that has caused her to faint away."
+
+Yes; Amy lay on the sofa, quiet and motionless with scarcely any sign of
+life on her pale, sad face, while onward, onward, faster and faster
+still, rode Charles Linchmore.
+
+Would they ever meet again; and how?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+DEFEAT.
+
+ "Art thou then desolate
+ Of friends, of hopes forsaken? Come to me!
+ I am thine own. Have trusted hearts proved false?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Why didst thou ever leave me? Know'st thou all
+ I would have borne, and called it joy to bear,
+ For thy sake? Know'st thou that thy voice hath power
+ To shake me with a thrill of happiness
+ By one kind tone?--to fill mine eyes with tears
+ Of yearning love? And thou--Oh! thou didst throw
+ That crushed affection back upon my heart.
+ Yet come to me!"
+
+ "'Tis he--what doth he here!"
+
+ LARA.
+
+
+The great bell rang out at the lodge gate, and Charles Linchmore dashed
+up to the Hall almost as hastily as he had left it, and with scarce a
+word of greeting to the old butler, whom he passed on his way to the
+drawing-room, and never staying to change his dress, he strode on, all
+flushed and heated as he was, with his hurried journey and desperate
+thoughts, until he stood face to face with Mrs. Linchmore.
+
+"Why Charles!" exclaimed she, "what on earth has happened? What is the
+matter?"
+
+"Nothing," he replied. "Where's Frances?"
+
+"Nothing," she rejoined, indignantly, "to come into the room in such a
+plight as this! Look at the splashed state of your boots; and then your
+face. No one can look at that and not suspect something dreadful having
+happened. _I_ never saw anything so changed and altered as it is."
+
+"I dare say. I don't much care."
+
+"Are you mad? Where have you been?"
+
+"Nowhere. Where's Frances?" he asked again.
+
+"I do not know. But I advise you to make yourself a little more
+presentable before you seek her. These freaks--_mad_ freaks of riding
+half over the country, no one knows where, are not agreeable to those
+you come in contact with afterwards," and Mrs. Linchmore pushed her
+chair further away from him, and smoothed the rich folds of her dress,
+as though the act of doing that would soothe her ruffled temper.
+
+"It _was_ a mad freak," replied he, and without waiting for another
+word, or tendering an apology for his disordered dress, he strode away
+again, with the full determination of finding Frances.
+
+Every room below stairs he searched, but in vain; she was nowhere, and
+driven reckless by the agony of his thoughts he went straight up to her
+own room, and opened the door.
+
+She was lying on the sofa, her eyes red and swollen with weeping,
+passionate, hopeless tears at the thought that long before now he and
+Amy had met, and he consequently lost to herself for ever.
+
+"Charles!" she exclaimed, springing off the sofa, her cheeks flushing
+hotly with surprise and pleasure.
+
+But another glance at his face, and her heart sank within her, for its
+expression almost terrified her.
+
+He closed the door and came and stood opposite to where she was, looking
+as though he would have struck her.
+
+She quailed visibly before his menacing glance. Then resolutely regained
+the mastery over herself, and drawing up her figure proudly, she said,
+
+"Do you know this is my room? I wonder how you dare come here."
+
+"Your room? Well, what if it is, I care not," he replied. "I am reckless
+of everything."
+
+"But I am not; and--and," she hesitated, and tried again to steady her
+beating heart, "what--what has happened, Charles, that you look so
+strangely?"
+
+"Happened? Can you ask me what has happened, you who have wrecked the
+hopes of my whole life."
+
+"I, Charles? You talk in riddles; I do not understand you."
+
+"You dare not say that!" exclaimed he, hoarsely. "You know well that I
+loved her with all my heart and soul, and you--you schemed to draw her
+from me. I would have laid down my life for her; and you guessed it, and
+told me she loved another, and, like a fool, I believed you. You have
+driven me to despair; her to a life-long living death; and this, all
+this, I have dared to come and tell you."
+
+"It was no lie. She never loved you!"
+
+"She did!" he cried, hotly; "I swear she did. I saw it; knew it but a
+few hours since."
+
+"You have seen her?" asked Frances.
+
+"Seen her! Yes; and I wish to God I had died before seeing her," and he
+clasped his hands over his damp brow in an agony of grief.
+
+"See," he said, presently, "are you not satisfied with my sufferings?
+Look here;" and he drew his hand across his forehead and temples, and
+showed the large drops that fell from them. "I loved her as my life. My
+life, do I say? She was more than life to me, and I have lost her; and
+this--this is your devil's work."
+
+"Lost her!" echoed Frances, inquiringly.
+
+He heeded her not; but walked the room with rapid strides, then
+gradually calmed again, and then again burst forth with the hopeless
+agony of his thoughts, as he recalled Amy's last words:
+
+"_It is too late, I am married._"
+
+"Aye," he said, despairingly, "too late to save us both; too late,
+indeed."
+
+Frances could not listen calmly, or see unmoved the strong man's agony;
+but she never once repented the evil she had wrought, but rather gloried
+at heart in having so successfully separated him and Amy; and the more
+so now, because she saw how madly he loved her. She waited quietly,
+almost afraid to speak, until the paroxysm of grief had exhausted
+itself. Then she said, timidly,
+
+"Too late, Charles. Did you say too late?"
+
+But her words roused him to fury again.
+
+"I did," he cried; "I said too late; God knows I was too late. A day,
+only a day earlier, and I should have been in time to save her!"
+
+"To save Miss Neville? And from what?"
+
+"From what?" he cried; "you are not satisfied with my sufferings, then?
+but would drain the last bitter drop of agony in my cup--the telling;
+the naming--Oh, God! She is married!"
+
+Married! Frances was not prepared for this. A mist swam before her eyes;
+a sudden faintness seized her, and she clung to the back of the sofa for
+support.
+
+"Yes, married!" he cried, fiercely seizing her arm. "You would have me
+tell you, and you shall hear it too, and remember it to your dying day;
+and I--I saw her only an hour after she was lost to me for ever."
+
+But Frances' tongue was stayed, and she never answered one word.
+
+"You have driven me mad," he continued savagely, "and it is a mercy you
+have not a murder on your soul, for, by Heaven, I was tempted more than
+once to take my life on my road down here? Do you hear?" he cried.
+
+"Oh, Charles! don't, don't talk so wildly: you will kill me!"
+
+"Kill you! No, I don't wish to do that; I'll only wish you half the
+misery you have caused me, and that shall be your punishment and my
+revenge."
+
+And then he turned to leave her; but Frances sprang forward and stopped
+him.
+
+"Do not go away like that, Charles. Do not go, leaving almost a curse
+behind you. I have not been guilty of half the wickedness you accuse me
+of. I did say Miss Neville did not love you; but--but I believed it."
+
+"You did not," he cried. "You hated and then you slandered her."
+
+"And if I did, it was your fault; yours, for you taught me to love you."
+
+"You love me! It is like the rest false, and a flimsy attempt to
+palliate your wickedness."
+
+"No, no; it is true. I have loved you for years past," exclaimed
+Frances, sinking on her knees, and hiding her face, "and--and I thought
+you loved me, too, until _she_ came and took your love away; and then I
+hated her--yes, words cannot tell how much I hated her. What had I in
+life worth living for when your love was gone? and I thought if I could
+only take her away from you, your heart would come back to me again. If
+you have suffered, what have not I? and she never could have loved you
+to have married another. Oh! forgive me, Charles, forgive me! and
+don't--don't hate me."
+
+"Forgive you!" he replied. "No; years hence, when we meet again, I may,
+but not now."
+
+"Years hence? Are you going away, then? Oh! you cannot be so cruel!"
+
+"In another month I shall leave England, perhaps for ever,--a
+broken-hearted wretch, with an aimless, hopeless existence. All this you
+have driven me to, and yet you ask me to forgive you. For her
+sake--hers, of whom I dare not trust myself to speak--I will not, cannot
+forgive you!"
+
+The bitterness of his grief was over; the first burst was past; and he
+spoke calmer now, although his every word, the tone even of his voice,
+sank like ice into Frances' soul, convincing her how hopelessly she
+loved.
+
+"Oh! say not so, Charles," she cried, "or you will crush me utterly.
+See,--see how I must love you to kneel here, and to humble my pride so
+entirely as to tell you I--I love you."
+
+"Love! Does love break the heart of the loved one as you have broken
+mine? Call you such a deadly feeling as this, love? Say, rather, that
+you hate me."
+
+"No, no; never! Whatever you do, whatever you say, I shall love you
+still,--love you for ever!"
+
+"Give me your hate," he replied, "I would rather have that."
+
+But Frances only answered by sobs and wringing her hands.
+
+"If," he continued, "you have wrecked my happiness and hers through love
+of me, I wish to God you had hated me!"
+
+"I could not," sobbed Frances, utterly overcome. "You--you won my love
+two years ago. Yes! you loved me then."
+
+"Never!" he cried vehemently, almost savagely. "Never! I swear it!"
+
+"Cruel!" murmured Frances.
+
+"Cruel? Yes; what else do you deserve? Had you never told me that
+falsehood--never deceived me I--I might; but it is too late--all too
+late. And yet how I love her, love her to madness, and she the--the wife
+of another!" and he groaned and clenched his hands together, until the
+nails seemed buried in the very flesh, in utter anguish at the thought.
+
+"Don't talk of her so, Charles, you will break my heart. Have some
+pity."
+
+"Pity! I have none. What had you for either her or me. I tell you I have
+no mercy, no pity, only scorn and--and--" he would have said hate, but
+somehow the word would not come to his lips, as he looked at the bent,
+bowed figure kneeling so humbly before him.
+
+"Oh! don't go! don't go, Charles. Say one, only one kind word," cried
+Frances, imploringly, as he turned again to leave her.
+
+"Don't ask me," he replied, "for I have none to give. Don't ask me, lest
+I say more than I have done. Pray God that he will change your
+revengeful, cruel heart. I pray that we may never meet again."
+
+"Oh, my God, he's gone!" moaned Frances, as the door closed upon him,
+"and not one kind word, not one. Oh! I have not deserved it! indeed I
+haven't," and burying her face in the sofa cushion, she burst into a
+fresh passion of hopeless, despairing tears.
+
+After a few moments she raised her head again and sobbed and moaned
+afresh, as she cried.
+
+"He was cruel to the last, and all through her. Oh! I will hate her
+tenfold for this, and work her more misery if I can. I will never repent
+what I have done. Never! but will make her suffer more frightfully,
+if--if possible, than this!"
+
+She tossed back her hair, and almost for the moment regained her former
+proud bearing; for, strange and unnatural as it may seem, this
+desperate resolve of making Amy, if she could, more wretched than she
+had already, soothed and calmed for a time the hopeless nature of her
+thoughts, and was the one hope that supported her through the long,
+terrible hours of the night that followed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+AMY'S COURAGE FAILS HER.
+
+ "New joys, new virtues with that happy birth
+ Are born, and with the growing infant grow.
+ Source of our purest happiness below
+ Is that benignant law, which hath entwined
+ Dearest delight with strongest duty, so
+ That in the healthy heart and righteous mind
+ Even they co-exist, inseparably combined.
+
+ Oh! bliss for them when in that infant face
+ They now the unfolding faculties descry,
+ And fondly gazing, trace--or think they trace
+ The first faint speculation in that eye,
+ Which hitherto hath rolled in vacancy;
+ Oh! bliss in that soft countenance to seek
+ Some mark of recognition, and espy
+ The quiet smile which in the innocent cheek
+ Of kindness and of kind its consciousness doth speak!"
+
+ SOUTHEY.
+
+
+Time passed rapidly onwards; heedless, in its flight, of bruised hearts
+or desolate homes, but ruthlessly brushing past, hurrying on far away
+with careless front and iron tread; perhaps ere he came round again
+those hearts would be healed and those homes joyous again. Such things
+happen every day, and well for us that it is so.
+
+The first year of Amy's married life passed quietly by; just as the
+second dawned her son was born, but ere the third came to its close, her
+mother faded with the dying year.
+
+Mrs. Neville had been so much better during the first year of their
+sojourn abroad, so almost well again, that, as her last illness drew on,
+Amy, who had seen her almost as weak at Ashleigh, could not believe that
+she would not recover, and wilfully shut her eyes to what to others was
+so apparent, that this was a weakness even unto death. And so it was.
+Mrs. Neville died, and for a time Amy was inconsolable; even her baby's
+caresses failed to cheer and rouse her heart.
+
+Her husband returned with her to England. Amy wept bitterly as she stood
+in that home, where so often she had so fondly hoped to have welcomed
+her mother.
+
+Many changes had occurred during Amy's absence.
+
+Anne Bennet had married and was now living steadily enough--so she
+said--with her husband at his old curacy, not many miles distant from
+Brampton.
+
+Charles Linchmore, after his sad meeting with Amy, had returned for one
+night to the Park, and after his stormy interview with Frances, had,
+much to the astonishment of his brother and every one else but Anne,
+exchanged and gone abroad.
+
+Frances was still unmarried, perhaps still plotting on and waiting for
+one whose heart could now only be filled with anger and hatred towards
+her. But what woman does not hope? Perhaps she hoped still.
+
+A new governess reigned at Brampton in Amy's stead; the third since she
+had left. Surely there was some mismanagement somewhere? or Mrs.
+Linchmore had grown more exacting and overbearing; more dissatisfied
+with the means taken to please her?
+
+Little Sarah was away in London at school; while old Hannah reigned
+supreme as head nurse to the youthful heir.
+
+Amy was happy, notwithstanding the remembrance that like a dim,
+indistinct shadow flitted across her of that first sad love. Was _he_
+happy? and what had become of him? these were questions sometimes in her
+thoughts, although her heart was with her husband, who loved his fair
+young wife with all his heart, even more dearly than when first they
+married; while as yet nothing had occurred to check that love.
+
+Robert Vavasour had been absent from his home a fortnight. It was the
+evening of his return to Somerton.
+
+Amy drew a low chair close to her husband by the fireside as she said,
+"How glad I am to have you back again; I have missed you so much, and
+felt quite lonely, even with little Bertie."
+
+Robert looked down fondly in his wife's face. It was pleasant to know
+that his coming had given pleasure to her he loved.
+
+"And how was dear Sarah," she asked. "Did she look quite well and
+happy? Quite contented with school? Pray give me all the news you have,
+to tell."
+
+"And that will be little enough," he replied. "As to Sarah she looked the
+picture of health, and gave me no end of messages for you; but I am
+afraid I have forgotten them all; my memory fails me completely now I
+have you at my side."
+
+"Well I hope you have not forgotten the present for Bertie: his little
+tongue has talked of nothing else all day."
+
+"I know I did not forget my little wife," he said, as taking a ring from
+his pocket he placed it on her finger.
+
+"You are always good and kind," she replied, "always thinking of me."
+
+"Always, Amy."
+
+"And now do tell me all you have been doing this long time, and where
+you went, and whom you saw. Surely you must have some adventures worth
+relating?"
+
+"No, none. I went simply nowhere; London is chill enough in November,
+and even had it been otherwise the charm was wanting to induce me to go
+out. I saw few people I knew; but I met some old friends of yours,
+yesterday."
+
+"Yes?" said Amy, inquiringly.
+
+"Can you not guess who?"
+
+Amy's heart whispered the Linchmore's; but refused to say so.
+
+"Have you no curiosity?" he asked, "I thought you were all anxiety a
+moment ago."
+
+"No, I shall not guess," replied his wife. "You must tell me."
+
+"Must!" he laughed. "And suppose I refuse. What then?"
+
+"You will not," she said.
+
+"You are a tyrant, Amy. It was the Linchmores. I met him accidentally at
+the door of the club."
+
+"Ah! you went to the Club. You never told me that," was all she said.
+
+"Neither have you told me how many times you have been into the nursery
+to see Bertie since I have been away."
+
+"The cases are totally dissimilar," laughed Amy. "But what did Mr.
+Linchmore say? Was he glad to see you?"
+
+"Yes: and took me home to dine with his wife."
+
+"Mrs. Linchmore! How is she."
+
+"Much the same as ever; just as haughty and hard-looking."
+
+"Hard-looking? I never thought her that."
+
+"My wife always has a pleasant thought for everybody," returned Vavasour
+proudly; "but beautiful as Mrs. Linchmore undoubtedly is, there is a
+great want of softness in the expression of her face."
+
+"She treated me well, and I had no reason to--to find fault with her."
+There was a little hesitation, as if the heart did not quite keep pace
+with the words. Perhaps her husband noticed it, for he looked away ere
+he spoke again, as if not quite sure that what he had to say next would
+please her.
+
+"I am glad it was so, as Linchmore asked us to go and stay at Brampton
+for a time."
+
+Amy started visibly.
+
+"But you refused," she said hastily.
+
+"I did at first, but he would take no refusal."
+
+"You did not promise to go, Robert? Oh, I hope you did not!"
+
+"I could not well refuse. Nay, do not look so sad, Amy; rather than
+that, you shall write a refusal at once. We will not go, dearest."
+
+And Amy would have given worlds not to; but did not like giving an
+untruthful reason as the motive for staying away; still, how else could
+she shape her refusal, or excuse herself to her husband. She dared not
+tell him that revisiting old scenes, the old familiar walk and rooms,
+would recall by-gone memories afresh in her heart--another's words!
+another's looks! No, she could not tell him that; yet as she sat with
+her hand in his and looked into his face how she longed to open her
+heart and tell him all! all of that bitter, never-to-be-forgotten past.
+And yet she reasoned again as she had reasoned once before, against the
+whisper of her heart, and her mother's better judgment, that it could do
+no good, but only pain and grieve her husband to think that she, his
+wife, had ever cared for, or even thought of another; and she sighed as
+these sad recollections one by one came into her heart.
+
+"Why do you sigh Amy?" asked her husband.
+
+Alas! the question came too late; her resolve had been made and taken.
+She sat silent, though she would have given worlds to have been able to
+throw her arms round his neck and tell him all.
+
+Robert drew her fondly and tenderly towards him. "As my wife, Amy," he
+said, "none shall ever dare whisper a word or even breathe a thought
+that can reflect upon your former life at Brampton. Have no fear, little
+one, but trust in me."
+
+He had misinterpreted her silence, and thought the repugnance she felt
+at going back to Brampton was caused by pride. Well, perhaps it was
+best so.
+
+"We will go, Robert," she whispered tremblingly, while the words she
+ought to have spoken remained unsaid, and with her husband and little
+Bertie she went to Brampton, simply because she saw no help for it.
+
+It was one of those things that must be, and she nerved her heart to
+brave it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE FIRST DOUBT.
+
+ "And the strange inborn sense of coming ill
+ That ofttimes whispers to the haunted breast,
+ In a low tone which naught can drown or still;
+ Midst feasts and melodies a secret guest:
+ Whence doth that murmur wake, that shadow fall?
+ Why shakes the spirit thus?"
+
+ MRS. HEMANS.
+
+
+With a faint shadow of some coming evil, a dull foreboding at her heart,
+Amy once again found herself driving up the long avenue of Brampton
+Park.
+
+How things had changed since first as a timid, shrinking girl, she had
+entered its gates! How her heart had throbbed and beaten since then!
+been tried and strained to its very utmost. How much she had suffered;
+how much rebelled and murmured at. Involuntarily she drew closer to her
+husband, as she felt how near and dear she was to his heart: surely,
+with his strong hand to protect and guide, his loving heart to shield
+her, what had she to fear?
+
+Amy half expected to see the children as of old on the terrace
+impatiently waiting to embrace her as she stepped from the carriage; but
+no, only the old butler bowed, and seemed glad to see her, as she
+exchanged a few words with him, ere he ushered her with becoming
+ceremony into the drawing-room, where Mrs. Linchmore at once advanced to
+greet her, and for the first time in her life, much to Amy's
+astonishment, kissed her; but then she was no longer Miss Neville, but
+Mrs. Vavasour. Ah! things had changed indeed.
+
+Mr. Linchmore was as friendly and courteous as ever, with the same
+honest welcome as of old; yet Amy thought him changed, but could not
+quite see wherein the change lay. His hair was becoming slightly tinged
+with grey, but that could not make the alteration she fancied she had
+discovered; then he was surely graver and quieter as he handed her into
+dinner, more silent and reserved; while Mrs. Linchmore, if any thing,
+was more animated, more beautiful than ever; and she watched for the
+hard look Robert Vavasour had spoken of, but in vain; it was not there,
+could not be; while her face was so filled with smiles and good humour.
+
+Again Amy glanced at Mr. Linchmore. Surely her husband had made a
+mistake; for there the hard look was gravely stamped on each feature,
+and Amy sighed as she saw it, and wondered how the change had been
+wrought.
+
+Amy saw nothing of the children all that evening; the next morning she
+went to the school-room to see them.
+
+Away down the long corridor, past the very window where she had stood
+long ago with Charles Linchmore. Did she think of that now? or of the
+events that followed quick and fast upon it; or recall to mind the dark
+form of Frances Strickland, halting on the very ground she now stood
+on, then fading away, not softly and slowly but fiercely and hurriedly,
+in the distance--leaving a strange fear at her heart, only too well
+realised in the past events of her life. If Amy remembered all this, she
+never stayed her footsteps, but passed quickly on through the baize
+door, and in another moment the children's arms were about her neck,
+their kisses on her face; while Miss Barker, the new governess, rose in
+stately horror at this infringement of her rules.
+
+"Really young ladies, your reception of Mrs. Vavasour is boisterous in
+the extreme. Allow me, Madam, to apologise for my pupils."
+
+"Oh! but this is Miss Neville, our dear Miss Neville!" cried Fanny, then
+catching Miss Barker's still more frigid look, hung her head and dropped
+her hands she was in the act of clapping with delight, to her side.
+
+"We are old friends," said Amy, smiling: "very old friends, pray do not
+check them, I am so glad to see they have not forgotten me; and allow me
+to apologise in my turn for the interruption in their studies my sudden
+entrance has occasioned."
+
+Miss Barker smiled complacently. "Will you not be seated?" she said.
+
+"Thank you. I have come to ask, with Mrs. Linchmore's sanction, for a
+holiday."
+
+Miss Barker's brow clouded again.
+
+"I scarcely know what to say to this request, which has come on rather
+an unfortunate day. Fanny has not, as yet, been able to darn her torn
+dress in a satisfactory manner; Alice cannot make her sum prove; and
+Edith has mislaid her thimble--carelessness and untidiness combined."
+
+Each child looked down guiltily, as her shortcoming was being told in a
+grave voice; while Amy felt inclined to smile at the frigid tone,
+evidently freezing each little warm heart; but Miss Barker's look
+forbade even a smile or word, and a dead silence followed.
+
+"In the hope," continued she, presently, "that you will all try and do
+better to-morrow, I will accede to your Mamma's request. Put away your
+books, young ladies."
+
+They all rose slowly, very differently from their quick, joyous manner
+in Amy's time, cleared the table, then returned; and, notwithstanding
+Miss Barker's frowns, stationed themselves close to their old friend.
+
+"Here is a chair for you, Edith; pray recollect that stoop in your
+shoulders I am so frequently reminding you of; Alice, my love, try and
+sit still without that perpetual fidget; Fanny, I am sure Mrs. Vavasour
+would rather you came a little further away; there is no need for you to
+stand; here are plenty of chairs in the room."
+
+Amy grew wearied with her slow, methodical manner, and finding-fault
+tone, never raised or lowered in the slightest. It was a relief when she
+went away, and left Amy to talk to the children as she would, without
+feeling that a pair of small grey eyes were disagreeably fixed on her
+face.
+
+As soon as she was gone, Alice climbed off the stiff high-backed chair,
+where she had been perched, and settled herself quietly on Amy's lap;
+Edith with a great sigh of relief from the depths of her heart, knelt,
+regardless of the poor shoulders, on one side; while Fanny flew to the
+other, exclaiming, "Oh! isn't she disagreeable, Miss Neville?"
+
+Amy could not conscientiously answer no, so evaded a direct reply, and
+merely said, "I am no longer Miss Neville, Fanny, you must try and call
+me Mrs. Vavasour."
+
+"Yes, so we have, all the time you've been away; but now you've come
+again it's so natural to say Miss Neville."
+
+"And," said Edith, "we think of you so often, and always wish you back
+again."
+
+Then they talked away of old times, until Amy's heart grew sad. "Let us
+go and see Bertie," she said.
+
+Away went the children, with something of the spirit of by-gone days. It
+was well for them they did not stumble upon Miss Barker, as they danced
+along the passage; or sad indeed would have been the result of the
+expedition.
+
+Bertie was astonished at seeing so many new faces, and hid himself shyly
+beneath Hannah's apron, from whence at first, he refused to be coaxed or
+tormented; but by-and-by a small curly head and bright eyes peeped
+forth, and at length he surrendered at discretion to little Alice, as
+being the least formidable of the invaders.
+
+How he prattled away! while his tiny feet seemed never weary of running
+to and fro to fetch toys for his new friends' inspection. Amy was soon
+quite overlooked, and Hannah's existence forgotten altogether, until
+suddenly reminded it was time for his morning's nap; when,
+notwithstanding a determined resistance on his part, he was eventually
+overpowered and carried off to bed, with a promise of having a romp with
+the children some other day.
+
+Hannah had suddenly become within the last few days wonderfully
+dignified. The moment she entered the house where her young mistress
+had lived as a dependant, she thought in her heart that most likely the
+servants would be looking down upon them, or setting themselves up in
+consequence; so she determined upon giving herself airs, if nobody else
+did, and assumed at once a reserve and stateliness quite foreign to her
+nature; but which, nevertheless, fitted admirably to the tall, portly
+figure; gaining Mrs. Hopkins' confidence, and setting Mason's airs at
+defiance, while it won for her the respect of the other servants, who
+never ventured upon a word in her presence, even of disparagement
+against Miss Barker, whom they all cordially disliked.
+
+It was strange what bad odour the latter stood in, trying as she did her
+utmost to make herself agreeable to all parties. Her appearance was
+certainly against her, her face at first sight being anything but a
+prepossessing one. One felt a strange dislike at making her
+acquaintance, which dislike was scarcely lessened upon a more intimate
+knowledge of her. Then her tall, freezing looking form was as little
+ingratiating to the eye, as the fawning, wiry voice was to the heart
+and Mason had been heard to say, that of the two, Miss Neville, even
+with all her "stuck up" airs, was twice the lady; but the lady's maid
+distrusted the tongue that flattered her mistress more boldly and
+cunningly than she did; while Mrs. Linchmore, although she smiled
+blandly enough, and took little or no notice of the flattery, was
+sensible of a feeling of relief when the stiff, starched form was no
+longer present.
+
+Hannah made her acquaintance one morning on the lawn, and was no little
+astonished at the tight corkscrew curls tucked under the bonnet, and the
+prim, patronising tone with which the governess addressed her; but nurse
+did not belong to the house; there was no occasion to conciliate her.
+Evidently Miss Barker was no admirer of young children, for as little
+Bertie ran up to Alice, she exclaimed, "Dear me, what a fat child!"
+
+Hannah looked at her for a moment with indignation, and replied, "fat,
+yes, Ma'am, Master Bertie, thank God, is _fat_," and then added, in an
+under tone, loud enough to be heard, "It's just as well if some others
+were as fat!" and viewed, as she turned away, the lady's thin, spare
+form with utter disgust.
+
+Amy and her husband were the only visitors at Brampton, yet no one
+seemed dull. Amy could never be dull with her child, and Mrs. Linchmore
+appeared ever happy and contented.
+
+They were good musicians, both Mrs. Linchmore and her guest; the former
+excelled in playing, the latter in singing. Amy's voice was sweet and
+musical, not wanting in power--one of those voices so charming to the
+senses, claiming the attention of every hearer, thrilling through the
+heart with wonderful pathos, leaving pleasing memories behind, or else
+the eyes filled with tears, as some mournful notes stir the soul with
+long forgotten memories.
+
+Mrs. Linchmore's voice was at times too powerful, grating harshly on the
+ear; she dashed at the notes in the quick parts, and handled them too
+roughly and rapidly; there was a want of feeling pervading the whole,
+which made one feel glad when the voice ceased, and the fingers alone
+glided softly over the keys. It was marvellous how fast they flew; while
+the notes sounded clearly and distinctly, like the tinkling of bells.
+Now the tune swelled loud and strong; then appeared to die faintly away
+under the light touch of those wonderful fingers. Mrs. Linchmore knew
+she played well, however much Amy excelled her in singing, and would sit
+down after one of the latter's songs, and enchant her listeners with
+some soft, beautiful air, played to perfection; then would come a song,
+and after that another piece, short, but more silvery sounding than the
+first, while Amy's voice was well-nigh forgotten, and Mrs. Linchmore,
+with her beautiful smiling face and pleasant words, was considered the
+musician of the evening, and had all due homage awarded her. As it was
+in music, so it was in everything else, Mrs. Linchmore took by right of
+"tact" what Amy ought to have laid claim to, but then, one was a woman
+of the world, the other only just entering it. Amy wanted confidence;
+Mrs. Linchmore none.
+
+As the days grew shorter still, Robert Vavasour whiled away the long
+evenings by again, as of old, playing at chess with his hostess, while
+Amy, who did not understand the game, sat and talked or sang to Mr.
+Linchmore; at other times she grew weary of those long games, so
+entirely engrossing her husband's attention, and brought her work or a
+book, and drawing a chair close by, watched the progress of the play.
+
+By degrees the players themselves claimed her attention; how deeply
+interested they seemed! how intent on the pieces! Amy, as she plied her
+needle diligently at the work in her lap, was constantly looking at Mrs.
+Linchmore. How often her dark eyes flashed across the board in her
+adversary's face, and when the game was at an end how she laughed and
+talked, and how the rings sparkled on her white hands, as she
+re-arranged the pieces again in their places. Amy thought she wore too
+many rings: they certainly danced and flashed in the lamp light, and
+dazzled her so that she felt quite fascinated, and wondered what Robert
+thought, and whether he admired her, or saw still the hard look. Amy
+half wished he did, or that she possessed only a quarter of the power
+Mrs. Linchmore seemed to have of pleasing him. Perhaps he had found his
+evenings dull with only his wife to talk or read to. Why had he not told
+her he was so fond of chess? she might have learnt it; yes, she would
+learn it; and again Amy glanced at the board to watch the pieces and try
+and make out how they moved; then tired of looking, her attention would
+be once more riveted on Mrs. Linchmore, and with a dissatisfied sigh she
+wished herself back at Somerton.
+
+Thus came the first doubt to the young wife's heart; yet scarcely known
+to her, save for a strange cold feeling stirring sometimes within.
+
+Anne rode over one day to Brampton, and the flying visit of her old
+friend did Amy good: marriage seemed in no way to have altered her, she
+was just as merry-laughing and joking in much the same style as ever.
+Her husband was as proud of her as he well could be, rebuking her at
+times, not with words, but a look, when he thought her spirits were
+carrying her a little too far, while Anne appeared to look up and
+reverence him in all things, being checked in a moment by his grave
+face.
+
+The morning passed pleasantly. As Anne rose to go she said, "Tell
+Isabella I am sorry to have missed seeing her, although I should have
+been more sorry had you been absent, as my visit, strictly speaking, was
+to you, in fact for you alone."
+
+"I will give the first part of the message," replied Amy laughing, "and
+bury the other half in my heart, as it would be but a poor compliment
+repeated. Why not remain to luncheon; I expect Mrs. Linchmore home very
+shortly, she has driven into Standale."
+
+"Standale! I thought she hated the place."
+
+"The place, yes; but not the station."
+
+"What on earth has taken her there?"
+
+"To meet a friend."
+
+"Man or woman?" laughed Anne.
+
+"Indeed I never asked," replied Amy. "It was quite by accident I heard
+her say that unless Mr. Linchmore made haste she would not arrive in
+time to meet the train."
+
+"Oh! then he has gone too. Depend upon it, it's some old 'fogy' or
+another; Miss Tremlow, perhaps, with her carpet bag stuffed full of
+yellow pocket handkerchiefs; you know," continued she, mimicking that
+lady's tone and manner, "this is such a damp place, and the rheumatics
+are worse than ever."
+
+As Anne rode away Amy remained at the window with little Bertie, who had
+been brought down for inspection and approval, and duly admired and
+caressed.
+
+"I wish Anne had been going to remain, Robert," said Amy, "she is so
+pleasant."
+
+"She is all very well for a short time," he replied, "but really her
+tongue, to use rather a worn out simile, is like the clapper of a bell;
+always ringing."
+
+"Do you think she talks too much?"
+
+"Most decidedly I do."
+
+"But you do not admire a silent woman," said Amy drawing near the fire,
+and placing Bertie on the hearth rug.
+
+"More so than a very talkative one; but there is such a thing as a happy
+medium."
+
+Amy sighed. "I wish we were back at Somerton," she said.
+
+"Is my wife home-sick already? Would she not find it dull after
+Brampton?"
+
+"I could not find it dull. Should I not have you--" she would have said
+all to myself, but checked herself and added--"you and Bertie."
+
+"Why not have left out, Bertie?" he replied, "I shall grow jealous of
+that boy, Amy, if you always class us together. Can you not forget him
+sometimes?"
+
+"Forget him? Oh! no, never!" said Amy, catching up the child, who
+immediately climbed from his mother's arms on to Robert's knee and
+remained there; while his father, notwithstanding his jealousy, glanced
+proudly at his boy, and caressed both him and his mother.
+
+"Ah! you are just as fond of Bertie as I am," she said, as her husband
+drew her to his side.
+
+But even as she spoke she became conscious of a shadow between her and
+the light which streamed in through the large bay window of the
+dining-room; while Vavasour rose and held out his hand saying
+apologetically, "We did not hear the carriage drive up."
+
+"No, I could hardly expect you would, with so much to interest you
+within doors."
+
+Amy arose quickly as the voice struck her ear.
+
+"Frances! Miss Strickland!" she said.
+
+"Yes, the same. You look surprised. Did you not expect me?"
+
+"No," replied Amy, shortly.
+
+"It is quite an unexpected pleasure, and has surprised us both,"
+returned Robert, as he noticed his wife's unusual manner.
+
+"It is my fault. I told Isabella not to mention I was coming," returned
+she. "Perhaps I wanted to see if you would be pleased, or recognise me;
+every one says I am so very much altered."
+
+"I see no difference," replied Amy, as Frances glanced straight at her.
+
+"There is none," she answered, and the tone went to Amy's heart with a
+nervous thrill. "And so this is your boy. What is he called?"
+
+"Robert," answered Amy, feeling for the first time a strange dislike at
+saying his pet name. But her husband was not so scrupulous.
+
+"We call him Bertie," he said.
+
+"And so will I. Come and make friends, Bertie. What lovely hair he has,
+so soft and curly. I suppose,--indeed I can see,--you are quite proud of
+the boy, Mr. Vavasour."
+
+"Mrs. Vavasour is, if I am not."
+
+"Of course. All mothers are of their first-born. Do not go so near the
+fire, Bertie. You make me tremble lest anything should befall you."
+
+What could happen to the child? Amy drew him further away still, then
+took him in her arms as if only there he was safe and shielded from all
+harm.
+
+When Frances left the room Amy sighed more deeply than before, yet
+scarcely knew why she felt so low and sad, or why Frances' appearance
+should have brought with it a nervous dread; save that in that long-ago
+time, which she had tried to bury and forget, Frances had been her
+bitterest enemy, and she could not but feel that her coming now was
+disagreeable to her, nay more, caused a sudden, nameless fear to arise
+in her heart; and now although Frances' words were friendly, yet Amy
+detected, or fancied she did--a lurking sarcasm in their tone.
+
+"I wish we were back at Somerton, Robert," she said.
+
+"Again!" exclaimed Robert, "now Amy, you deserve to be scolded for this.
+What an impatient little woman you are! Shall we not be home in a
+month?"
+
+"Ah! in a month;" sighed Amy again, as she drew her child nearer to her
+heart, while her heart whispered, "Can anything happen in a month?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+GOING FOR THE DOCTOR.
+
+ "In God's name, then, take your own way," said Christian; "and,
+ for my sake, let never man hereafter limit a woman in the use of
+ her tongue; since he must make it amply up to her, in allowing
+ her the privilege of her own will. Who would have thought it?"
+
+ PEVERIL OF THE PEAK.
+
+
+Three years and more have passed away since we left Matthew the pikeman
+counting the stones in Goody Grey's box. Many changes have occurred
+since then, the greatest of all has fallen on his own cottage--Matthew
+has grown a sober man.
+
+But we must go back a little.
+
+We left Jane closing the cottage door, after the singular meeting that
+had taken place between her and Goody Grey, on Marks telling the latter
+of his sister-in-law's extraordinary fainting fit. When he and his wife
+returned to the cottage, Jane was carried up to bed, apparently too weak
+to be able to sit up, and there she remained for several weeks, more
+crazed than ever to Matthew's fancy, frightening him out of his wits at
+times, lest his wife should find out anything about the charm, and
+attribute, as he did, his sister-in-law's illness to it. One night his
+fears grew to such a pitch, he went and buried the box in the garden,
+and waited events in an easier frame of mind. Days passed, and at length
+Jane grew better, but strenuously refused to leave her room, and go
+below. In vain Mrs. Marks remonstrated, in vain she stormed, Jane was
+not to be persuaded, and at length was allowed to do as she pleased. But
+suddenly her illness took a turn; she crawled down stairs to dinner, and
+one day, to Matthew's intense disgust, resumed her old seat in the
+chimney corner.
+
+As the months rolled on the scrubbing and scouring within the cottage
+went on more mildly, while Mrs. Marks' strong stout arm grew thinner
+and weaker; the brush fell less harshly and severely on the ear, as it
+rushed over the table; the high pattens clanked less loudly in the yard;
+while the voice grew less shrill, and was no longer heard in loud
+domineering tones. The change was gradual; Matthew did not notice it at
+first, until just a few weeks before Amy returned to Brampton with her
+husband; then the change was unmistakable, the scrubbing and scouring
+ceased altogether. Mrs. Marks gave in, and acknowledged she was ill.
+
+How Matthew's conscience smote him then! He knew he had never had the
+courage to face Goody Grey with the box still filled with the small
+gravel, as when she gave it him, neither had he dared throw the stones
+away, lest, in offending the giver, worse disasters would follow; and he
+was too superstitious to think Goody Grey would know nothing at all
+about it, and believe as he might tell her that he had done as she had
+directed. No; he was certain that one word of distrust in his story,
+and he should break down altogether. He tried to reason with himself,
+and think that the tramping about in all weathers long ago had made his
+wife ill; but it would not do, his mind was not to be persuaded, and
+always reverted with increased dismay to the box, while his eye
+invariably rested upon its snug resting-place under the laurel, as he
+passed it on his way out to the gate. Many a time he determined upon
+digging up the box, and restoring it to its owner, just as it was: but
+when the time for action came, and he drew near the spot, his courage
+failed him, and he would pass on, cursing the hour when he had been
+tempted to ask the wise woman for the charm which he believed had done
+so much evil; while his fear of telling the secret in his tipsy
+unconsciousness had done what all Mrs. Marks' storming had failed to
+do--made him, for the time being, a sober man. He shunned the "Brampton
+Arms" as if the plague dwelt there, and sat in the chimney corner
+opposite Jane, gloomy, and fearful almost of his own shadow, while his
+sister-in-law's eyes seemed to pierce him through more keenly than ever.
+
+Mrs. Marks had steadily kept her promise, silently and secretly working
+with a will to seek out Hodge's son. Like most energetic women, a first
+failure did not daunt or dispirit her, it only roused her energies the
+more vigorously. She was not to be defeated. The more difficult of
+accomplishment the more determined was she, and in the end successful.
+She dodged Hodge's "wide-awake" friend, and found Tom; nay more, she
+spoke with him, tried to reclaim him; but there she failed--she was not
+the sort of woman to win him over. A kind word might have done much, but
+that, Mrs. Mark's heart had not for such a reprobate as he. She told him
+the truth, the plain hard truth, heaping maledictions on his head unless
+he gave up his evil ways, forsook his godless companions, and returned
+home. She used no persuasion, no entreaty. Had she spoken to him kindly
+of his mother, perhaps his heart might have softened; but Mrs. Marks'
+voice came loud and strong, words followed one another fast and
+indignantly, so that ere she had well-nigh exhausted all the scorn she
+had, his mind was made up, and he obstinately refused to return home,
+simply because she desired, nay, commanded him to do so. What! become
+the laughing-stock of the whole of Deane? be known and marked in the
+village as the vile sinner she denounced him to be? He laughed at her
+threats and taunts, and left her, feeling perhaps more hardened than
+ever.
+
+Matthew was not far wrong when he tried to persuade himself the walking
+about in all weathers--so mysterious to him--had ruined his wife's
+health. A pouring steady rain was falling the day of her interview with
+Hodge's son, but true to her purpose, she had walked for miles along a
+heavy road, and across still damper fields to find him; then, flushed
+and heated with her passionate words and subsequent defeat, had started
+back again through the same rain, and reached home thoroughly wet
+through; then came a violent cold, and from that time her strength
+seemed to fail, although unacknowledged to herself, while her limbs lost
+their power, and pained her strangely; still she worked on, with the
+will to get well, but alas! the strength to do so was gone.
+
+She wrote to Mrs. Hodge advising her to have nothing further to do with
+such a good-for-nothing son, but forget him as fast as she could. Mrs.
+Marks' letter was not meant unkindly, but she never attempted to lessen
+Tom's fault or palliate his conduct; the truth stood out in all its
+glaring hideousness. Having no children herself, she knew nothing of a
+mother's strong, steadfast love. The knowledge that her son, her
+first-born, was with a gang of poachers who had wounded the Squire's
+visitor and killed one of the game watchers, threw dismay into the
+mother's heart and broke it. She died, begging her husband to still look
+for Tom, and reclaim him if possible--a promise her husband felt
+impossible of fulfilment, as he, like Mrs. Marks, thought badly of his
+son's heart.
+
+Mrs. Marks could scarcely move her limbs at all now, except to creep
+down the narrow stairs of a day into the small parlour, where she sat
+and scolded to her heart's content, Sarah, the girl who came as a help
+now the mistress was ill, following her every movement with her eyes, if
+she could not with her feet.
+
+As her sister grew worse, Jane roused herself wonderfully, becoming as
+active as before she had been idle, and apparently as sane as she had
+been crazy; while as to Matthew, he turned into a model husband, helping
+in the work to be done as far as lay in his power, and nursing his sick
+wife with a tender solicitude quite foreign to his nature, while she
+grumbled at everything and everyone in turn, her eye, as I have said
+before, finding out their shortcomings in a moment, and denouncing them
+without mercy. But she was ill, must be ill to sit there so quietly and
+allow others to scrub down the table or be up to their elbows in the
+washing-tub; she deserved their pity and their silence, and they gave
+her both.
+
+"There, that will do," said she one day, as Matthew tried to settle the
+pillows more comfortably at her back. "I don't think it's near so easy
+like as it was before you touched it, but it wouldn't be you if you
+didn't want always to have a finger in the pie. Sarah, leave off that
+racket among the cups and saucers; what on earth are you at, girl? Are
+you trying to break them all? What are you after?"
+
+"I was a-dusting of the shelves, Mum," was the reply.
+
+"Fine dusting, upon my word, and with a corner of your apron, too; be
+off and fetch a cloth this moment, such slop-work as that'll never do
+here; let me catch you at it again, that's all, or that clatter of the
+crockery either, when my head aches and buzzes like as if a thousand
+mills was at work in it."
+
+"There, rest quiet, Missus," said Matthew; "it'll be all right
+by-and-bye."
+
+"That's as much as you know about it. I tell yer I never felt so bad,
+like, in all my life."
+
+"Ain't it most time to take the doctor's stuff?" suggested Matthew,
+meekly.
+
+"I'm sick of the medicine, and the doctor too. What good has he done me?
+I should like to know. I can't walk no better than I could a month ago.
+My limbs is as stiff as ever, and just every bit as painful."
+
+"That comes of them mad walks yer took in all weathers; yer would tramp
+about, and it's been t' undoing of yer altogether."
+
+A torrent of words followed this, of which Matthew took no heed, until
+she leant back, apparently exhausted, saying, "I feel awful bad. I
+wonder whatever in the world ails me?"
+
+"How d'yer feel?" asked her husband, compassionately.
+
+"My head whizzes, and I'm all over in a cold sweat, like; only feel my
+hand, don't it burn like a live coal?"
+
+"It do seem as though it were afire," he replied.
+
+"Seem!" cried Mrs. Marks. "Is that all the pity yer have in your heart
+for maybe your dying wife?"
+
+"Lord save us!" exclaimed Matthew. "I've been a deal worse myself, and
+got well again; don't be a frightening yourself in that way, or belike
+you'll think you've one foot in the grave."
+
+Then he poured some of the medicine in the glass, and held it towards
+her.
+
+"Here," said he, "here's what'll make you think different, and send away
+the dismals."
+
+"I won't take none of it," she replied; "not one drop. It weren't given
+to me for the fiery pains I've got about me now."
+
+"Come, Missus, come, don't'ee quarrel with the only thing that can do'ee
+good," said Matthew, coaxingly.
+
+"Do me good!" she exclaimed, with a sudden return of energy. "It's my
+belief yer trying to pisin me. Be off and fetch the doctor!"
+
+The doctor! Matthew stared in astonishment.
+
+"What are you gaping at? Do you take me for a fool, or yourself, which?
+Be off, I tell yer, and don't let yer shadow darken this door again
+without him. Maybe he'll be able to say what's ailing me."
+
+Away went Matthew, in a ludicrous state of bewilderment. His wife must
+be bad indeed to send for the doctor; why he had never known her do such
+a thing since they married. What a trouble he had had only a few months
+ago to get her to see young Mr. Blane, and now she wanted him to come at
+once. Matthew began to think his wife was crazy, as well as Jane;
+perhaps she had sent him on a fool's errand. He insensibly slackened his
+steps as he neared the village, and bethought him what he should say, as
+he suddenly recollected he had received no instructions whatever.
+
+The more he thought the more perplexed he grew, and seeing some boys
+playing at marbles, Matthew drew near, and leaning against the railings,
+watched them, and turned over again in his mind what he should say; but
+loiter as he would, he could think of nothing save his wife's angry
+face, as she had bade him begone; so, after a short delay, Matthew faced
+the danger by boldly ringing the surgery bell.
+
+"Is the Maister at home?" asked he, fervently wishing he might be miles
+away.
+
+Yes, Mr. Blane was in, and Marks followed the boy sorrowfully.
+
+"Good morning, Mr. Marks. Come for some medicine? Where's the bottle?"
+
+"No, thank'ee, Sir," said Matthew, twirling his hat about uncomfortably.
+"My wife's took worse, and wants to know if so be ye'd make it
+convenient to come and physic her?"
+
+Yes; Mr. Blane could go at once, having no other call upon his time just
+at present.
+
+"And what's the matter with Mrs. Marks?" asked he, when they were fairly
+on their way.
+
+"That's more nor I can tell, Sir. She's all over like a live coal, and
+'ud drink a bucket full if ye'd give it her."
+
+"Has she taken the medicine regularly?"
+
+This was a poser. Matthew scratched his head, took off his cap; he was
+in no way prepared for such a question. What should he say?
+
+"Well," said he presently, in a conciliating tone, "Well, you see, Sir,
+when folks is ill they takes queer fancies sometimes, as I dare say yer
+know better nor I can tell'ee. Now my wife's got hers, and no mistake;
+she says you've gived her pisin."
+
+It was Mr. Blane's turn now to be astonished, this being an answer he
+was not prepared for. "Poison!" he echoed.
+
+"Yes, just pisin, and nothing else; but there, Sir, there's no call to
+be frightened, her head's that dizzy she can't scarce open her eyes,
+much less know what she says."
+
+"Has she taken a fresh cold?"
+
+"Not that I knows on, Sir, t'aint possible now: her legs is so cramped
+she's 'bliged to bide in doors."
+
+"Poor thing! She seems patient enough under it all."
+
+"Lord bless yer, Sir! Patient? Why she lets fly more nor any 'ooman I
+know on; I can't say but what she do look meek enough when yer'e at the
+'pike, but as soon as she's the least way riled she'll find more words
+at her tongue's end than any other 'ooman in the parish. It's my belief
+that's all that's the matter with her now; she've bin rating the whole
+on us roundly one after t'other and has just worked herself into a
+biling rage, for nothing at all."
+
+"If that is all; the mischief is soon healed," said Mr. Blane, entering
+the cottage.
+
+Mrs. Marks sat just where her husband had left her, but her eyes were
+closed and her face strangely flushed. She looked up wearily and
+languidly, with not a trace of the temper her husband had spoken of, and
+said not a word as the doctor took her burning hand in his and felt its
+quick pulse.
+
+"You had better get your wife to bed, Marks it will be more comfortable
+for her than sitting here."
+
+"Yes, Sir," said Marks, wondering how it was to be accomplished. However
+he drew near and said, "Dont'ee think, old 'ooman, yer'd best do as the
+doctor 'vises yer."
+
+"In course," was the feeble reply, so different to the loud angry one
+Matthew expected that he was staggered, and still more so when she
+attempted to stand, but could not, and he and the young doctor between
+them had to carry her to bed.
+
+"What ails her, Sir?" asked Matthew, as Mr. Blane was going away. "D'yer
+think it's the tongue's done it?"
+
+"That may have increased the fever but not caused it," was the reply.
+
+"The faiver! Oh Lord; what's to be done now?"
+
+What was to be done, indeed?
+
+Jane gave up the house-work and tended her sister night and day, leaving
+Matthew and the girl to do as best they could without her, while for
+days Mrs. Marks struggled between life and death; then she grew better,
+the fever left her, and she lay weak as an infant, but otherwise
+progressing favourably.
+
+One evening Jane came downstairs and took up her station opposite her
+brother-in-law, who, instead of rejoicing at the change, viewed her
+presence with a rueful face. When his wife was present he could
+sometimes forget Jane, but all alone it was impossible; move which way
+he would he was sensible her eyes were on him as she plied her knitting
+needles at her old work. How he hated that constant click, click!
+
+"Did yer think t'was time for supper?" asked he presently, driven to say
+something to break the silence, becoming every moment more intolerable.
+
+"No."
+
+"How's the Missus this evening?"
+
+"Better. She's asleep."
+
+"That's all right. I'm glad on it," he said, "for she've had a hard
+time of it upstairs. When is it likely she'll be about again?"
+
+"What did the doctor say? Didn't he tell you when?"
+
+"He don't trouble to say much. I'm sure I'm right down glad when he
+don't say she's worse, for that's been the one word in his mouth
+lately."
+
+Jane made no reply, but the feeling that her eyes were fixed steadily on
+him exasperated him beyond control.
+
+"What d'yer see in my ugly mug?" he asked. "Have you fallen in love with
+it?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Then may be yer sees som'ut to skeer yer?"
+
+"It's bad to have anything on the mind," she replied.
+
+Matthew winced a little. "I'll tell you a piece of my mind," he said,
+throwing his half-smoked pipe into the fire, "I'll take Mrs. Marks'
+sauce and welcome, but I'm d--d if I take any other 'ooman's living."
+
+"I wonder whatever ails you?" said she, quietly.
+
+"Ails me? D'yer want to make believe I'm going to be knocked down with
+the faiver? I'm not such an ass, I can tell yer, yer looks a dale more
+likely yerself; and as to yer mind? yer look as though a horse couldn't
+carry the load yer've got on it. A terrible bad load too, I'll take my
+oath on it."
+
+Jane shivered from head to foot.
+
+"I'll take up the broth," she said, "most likely Anne's awake before
+now."
+
+But her hands trembled so she could scarcely take hold of the saucepan
+to pour it out, while the cup and saucer rattled and shook as she went
+across the room.
+
+Matthew sat sulkily by, and never offered to help her.
+
+"Well!" said he, as soon as she was gone, "it's my belief she'd have
+stuck me, if she'd only laid hold of a knife instead of a spoon. How
+trembly she was; her hands was all of a shake. She'll 'ave spilt all
+that 'ere stuff, whatever 'tis, afore my wife tucks it down. Well, if
+she 'aint crazed, I don't know who is."
+
+He lit a fresh pipe, and smoked away in contented solitariness.
+Presently, he looked thoughtful, knocked the ashes out of his pipe and
+said, "she's a-going to 'ave the faiver, or else she 'ave done som'ut
+bad in her day, and that's what's crazed her."
+
+Matthew was right as to the fever. Not many days passed before Jane was
+taken ill with it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+SEVERING THE CURL.
+
+ "But ever and anon of griefs subdued,
+ There comes a token like a scorpion's sting,
+ Scarce seen, but with fresh bitterness imbued;
+ And slight withal may be the things which bring
+ Back on the heart the weight which it would fling
+ Aside for ever: it may be a sound--
+ A tone of music--summer's eve--or spring--
+ A flower--the wind--the ocean--which shall wound,
+ Striking the electric chain wherewith we are darkly bound.
+
+ And how and why we know not, nor can trace
+ Home to its cloud this lightning of the mind,
+ But feel the shock renew'd, nor can efface
+ The blight and blackening which it leaves behind,
+ Which out of things familiar, undesign'd,
+ When least we deem of such, calls up to view
+ The spectres whom no exorcism can bind,
+ The cold--the changed--perchance the dead----"
+
+ CHILDE HAROLD.
+
+
+Can anything happen in a month? How often this question was in Amy's
+mind; how often in her thoughts. What could happen? Her heart suggested
+many things, strive as she would to think otherwise, and ever reverted
+with fear to her boy, whom she so passionately loved; old Hannah was
+surprised sometimes at the injunctions she received and wondered what
+her young mistress was so nervous about. The boy was well enough and
+hearty enough in all conscience: there was no occasion to make a "molly
+coddle" of him.
+
+Bertie had taken a fancy to Frances, and would sit on her knee in
+preference to others, or hold up his little face to be kissed, when he
+was shy at being caressed by anyone else. Amy viewed the liking with
+distrust; she disliked Frances, and could not bear to see her and the
+boy romping together, and would have checked it, if she could have found
+some reason for doing so; but Robert countenanced it, and often joined
+in their play, while Amy alone looked grave and sorrowful.
+
+Why had Frances come to Brampton? Had her stubborn heart at length given
+way, and did she regret the misery she had caused Amy and come to make
+atonement? To ask forgiveness and be forgiven? Were they to be
+reconciled at last? No. Not so. Frances came expecting to find Amy
+miserable, married to a man she could not love, and weeping the
+remembrance of the lost love. In that she would have gloried. But she
+came to find it otherwise; and how great was her disappointment, how
+bitter became her thoughts, how more than ever determined was she to
+pursue Amy and make her in the end utterly miserable. It wounded her to
+the quick to see Amy happy and contented with a husband who seemed to
+worship her and a child of whom she might well be proud. Was this to be
+the envied lot of her who had weaned the one heart away, so that harsh,
+bitter words had fallen on her ear as she had knelt in despair at his
+feet. Could she ever forget that? or his scorn? No! never! Amy's
+happiness must be undermined; had she not sworn it on that terrible,
+never-to-be forgotten night; sworn that Amy's sufferings should some day
+equal hers! There was little difficulty in accomplishing this if she
+went cautiously to work: haste alone could bring a failure.
+
+Amy saw little of her husband now; of a morning he rode with Mrs.
+Linchmore and Frances, or walked miles with Mr. Linchmore: there was
+always something to draw him from her side. Of an evening it was music
+and chess. At first Amy had ridden with the rest, but latterly she and
+Bertie had spent their mornings together; she could see no pleasure in
+riding by Frances' side, and Mrs. Linchmore was so timid she claimed all
+Robert's attention.
+
+Doubts fast and thick were springing up in Amy's heart. She shunned
+being alone with her husband, and insensibly grew cold and constrained.
+How seldom her eyes looked brightly on him, or her lips spoke loving
+words! while he never seemed to heed the change, or say aught of his
+love for her now, but grew colder too.
+
+They were both changed, husband and wife; the one had begun to doubt his
+wife's love; the other feared her husband's love was fading away, and
+she without the power to stay its flight. Ah! Frances had already
+wrought wondrous harm, although only a week since she came to Brampton.
+
+Amy stood at the window one morning, and watched the horses as they were
+being brought round, Frances's fiery one evincing his hot temper by
+arching his proud neck and coming along with a quick short trot, while
+the more sober Lady Emily pawed the ground with impatient hoof.
+Presently Frances came in ready for her ride, and then Vavasour.
+
+"Are you not going with us, Mrs. Vavasour?" asked Frances. "I thought I
+heard you say you would."
+
+Amy glanced at her husband. Would he, too, ask her? No; he stood quietly
+on the hearthrug, apparently indifferent as to her reply.
+
+"Thank you; I am rather busy this morning."
+
+"Busy? What can you find to do?"
+
+"I and Bertie are going for a walk."
+
+"Ah! I thought Bertie had a great deal to do with it. How fond you are
+of Bertie," and she laid an uncomfortable stress on the name as each
+time it passed her lips.
+
+Robert spoke at last. "Bertie is Mrs. Vavasour's loadstar," he said,
+quietly.
+
+Amy felt this to be unjust; not so would her husband have spoken to her
+a month ago.
+
+"My heart is large enough to hold more than the love for my boy," she
+replied.
+
+"I expect he holds by far the largest share of it," said Frances.
+
+Amy said nothing until she met Robert's gaze fixed inquiringly on her
+face. "My love for my child is a sacred love, and scarcely to be called
+in question, Miss Strickland," she answered.
+
+Frances's eyes flashed; then she laughed and struck her riding-habit
+with her whip. "Don't look so much in earnest, Mrs. Vavasour. I dare say
+you have lots of love in your heart for everybody."
+
+"Not for everyone," replied Amy, gravely.
+
+"Ah! you never fall in love at first sight, then; but when once you
+love, your love lasts for ever. Is it so?"
+
+"I have never asked myself the question."
+
+"But perhaps Mr. Vavasour has. What say you, Mr. Vavasour, you who are
+supposed to know every thought of your wife's heart?"
+
+"A woman's heart is too difficult a thing for us poor men to fathom."
+
+"Not always. I am going to call Isabella. You can ask your wife while
+I'm gone."
+
+Amy stood close by her husband, yet dared not raise her eyes to his.
+Would he ask her if he knew every thought of her heart, and if she said
+"no," sternly demand what she had to conceal? Now, more than ever, she
+wished she had told him all long ago. She knew the question must come.
+It came at last.
+
+"Amy, is it so? Do I know every thought of your heart?"
+
+"You ought to," she replied, tremblingly.
+
+"True." He sighed, then paused, as if expecting her to say more, but Amy
+was silent.
+
+"Do you love me better than all others, Amy? better than your boy?"
+
+"Nay, what a question. You know I love you, Robert."
+
+He strained her passionately to his heart: had he held her there a
+moment longer, Amy might have told him all, for she felt strangely
+softened; but Frances' voice sounded; he drew away from her without a
+word, and was gone.
+
+"I will ride to-morrow," thought Amy, "perhaps it will please him;" and
+Robert did look pleased the next day as she came out on the
+terrace--where he stood with Mrs. Linchmore,--in her riding habit and
+hat.
+
+"You are going with us?" he cried.
+
+"Yes, the day is so pleasant, I could not resist the temptation."
+
+Ah, yes! The day! His brow clouded, and he turned away.
+
+"I am glad you are coming," said Mrs. Linchmore, "as Frances does not
+ride."
+
+Frances not ride! For a moment Amy felt glad, then sorry. Would they
+think she had come purposely to prevent a tete-a-tete?
+
+"I did not know Miss Strickland was not to be of the party," said Amy,
+as her husband lifted her to the saddle.
+
+"Nor I," he replied.
+
+"You are not sorry I am going with you, Robert?"
+
+He looked at her in surprise. "Sorry, Amy?"
+
+"I mean; that is, I thought yesterday that perhaps you would like me to
+go."
+
+"Of course, not only yesterday, but to-day and every day," and then he
+mounted, and went on with Mrs. Linchmore.
+
+So the ride did not begin very auspiciously.
+
+Amy was a good rider, a graceful and fearless one, although perhaps not
+such a dashing horse-woman as Frances, and her husband looked at her
+with pride and pleasure as she cantered along on her spirited horse at
+his side. The exercise soon brought a glow to her cheeks, and a bright
+light to her eyes, while she laughed and chatted so joyously that Robert
+thought he had never seen her look so lovely, and forgot the dark lady
+at his side and riveted his attention on his wife.
+
+"Take care, Amy," said he, as her horse gave a sudden start, "tighten
+the curb a little more."
+
+But Amy only laughed. "I like him to jump about," she said, "it shows he
+is in as good spirits as his mistress."
+
+"I certainly never saw Mrs. Vavasour in such spirits," remarked Mrs.
+Linchmore, feeling herself neglected.
+
+But Amy was not to be checked by a grave look from her rival. Since
+yesterday, when she had stood at the window with her eyes filled with
+tears watching her and her husband ride away, she had determined on
+standing her ground as Robert's wife; she would not fall away from his
+side at the first danger that threatened, and quietly without an effort
+allow another to wean his heart from her, but would win back his love to
+where it had been; and then, not till then, open her heart--as she ought
+to have done long ago--and tell him all.
+
+Had Frances known of Amy's determination, or even of her contemplated
+ride, she would not have been walking so quietly along the lane
+rejoicing in the success of her stratagems. As she emerged into the road
+she met Bertie, who clapped his hands, and sprung out of his
+perambulator before Hannah's vigilant eye perceived him.
+
+"I'll go with you," he said, taking Frances' hand.
+
+"Come back, Master Bertie, this moment," said his nurse.
+
+"Let him come," exclaimed Frances, "you are a very naughty boy, all the
+same, for being so disobedient."
+
+"Please don't take him far, Miss, for it's most time for us to be
+turning home."
+
+"No; only to the turnpike gate and back."
+
+She took the boy's hand and away they went, Bertie chatting pleasantly
+until they reached the gate, where he made a stand and began climbing
+it, notwithstanding Frances' remonstrances. The continued talking
+brought Matthew to the window.
+
+"There's some folks from the Hall," said he to his sister-in-law, who
+was busy peeling some potatoes.
+
+Jane dropped the knife and turned sharply round. "Go out to them," she
+said, "we don't want them in here."
+
+"It's only a young gentleman a-climbing the gate," he replied.
+
+Jane picked up the knife and after a moment went on with her work; but
+Bertie had seen a cat with its kitten on the door-step; and had run into
+the cottage before Frances could prevent him.
+
+"Go away! don't come in here!" screamed Jane.
+
+"Put down the knife and hould yer oncivil tongue, yer dafty!" exclaimed
+Marks. "What the devil d'yer mean by it! Walk in, young gentleman, y'ere
+welcome to play with the cat as long as yer like. Take a seat, Miss,"
+and he brought forward one of the chairs and dusted it.
+
+But Frances took no heed of the invitation. "I am very angry with you,
+Bertie," she said, "What will Hannah say? Come away?"
+
+But Bertie would not, but went up to Jane with the kitten in his arms.
+
+"Very well," replied Frances, "I shall call Hannah," but in reality she
+went outside and waited for him, while Matthew, hat in hand, followed
+and talked to the young lady.
+
+"I wish pussy was my very own," said Bertie presently, after playing
+with it for a few moments.
+
+Jane had seated herself in a chair with her face half turned from him
+and paid no heed to his remark.
+
+"Will you give it me?" he asked in his childish way, pulling at her
+dress to attract her attention.
+
+"It isn't mine," she replied.
+
+Bertie put the kitten in her lap. "Isn't it pretty?" he said. "Don't you
+love it?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Do you love the big cat?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Don't you love anything?"
+
+"No. Nothing."
+
+"What's your name?"
+
+"Jane."
+
+"You're a naughty, cross woman, Jane, and _I_ shan't love you."
+
+"You don't need to," she replied. "Go away!"
+
+But Bertie continued playing with the kitten still laying in her lap. As
+he stooped his little face over it, his soft, dimpled cheek touched
+Jane's hand, while his fair, curly hair waved almost across the other.
+Presently Jane raised her hand, took off his cap and stroked his head
+gently.
+
+Bertie looked up half surprised. "Do you think it pretty?" he asked.
+
+"I don't know." But she did not take her hand away.
+
+"Would you like to have some of it?" he asked again, as Jane passed her
+fingers through one of the silky curls. "Cut it. Where's the scissors?"
+
+"There on the table over against the window," she replied.
+
+Bertie ran and fetched them, and presently a curl shiny and bright fell
+in Jane's lap.
+
+"There, that's my present," he said, "now won't you give me kitty?"
+
+"She's too small; she mustn't go from her mother," said Jane, lifting
+the curl and smoothing it softly.
+
+"Would her mother cry?"
+
+"Oh my God!" exclaimed Jane, burying her face in her hands, "you'll
+break my heart!"
+
+"But would her mother cry? Would she cry very much?" persisted Bertie,
+striving to draw her hands away.
+
+"Yes," replied Jane, "cry and go mad, and curse those who took him. But
+curses don't kill, ah no! they don't kill; they only wear the heart
+away."
+
+The child drew away, half frightened.
+
+"Bertie! Bertie! are you coming?" called Frances.
+
+"Good bye," he said, shyly. "You'll send me kitty by and by, won't you?"
+
+"Yes,--for the sake of the curl," she replied, wrapping it in paper, and
+placing it in her bosom.
+
+But Bertie only heard the "Yes." "Send it for me; only for me," he said.
+
+"Yes, for Master Bertie."
+
+"Bertie Vavasour," he said.
+
+"What?" screamed Jane, starting to her feet with a shriek that startled
+even Mrs. Marks, asleep in the room above. "Don't touch me! Don't come
+nigh me! Stand off! I'm crazed, I tell you, and don't know nothing. Oh!
+I'm deaf, and didn't hear it! No, no, I didn't hear it! I won't hear it!
+I'm crazed."
+
+"That yer are, yer she devil!" exclaimed Matthew, striding up to where
+she stood, as it were at bay, before some deadly enemy. "Are these yer
+manners, when gentry come to visit yer?" and he half thrust, half threw
+her out on the stairs.
+
+"She's crazed, Miss," said Matthew, returning, "and has got one of her
+fits on her; but she's as harmless as a fly. Don't 'ee cry, young
+Master," said he to Bertie, who with his arms clasped round Frances'
+neck, was sobbing violently. "She ain't well neither, Miss," continued
+he, "I thought, days ago, she were a-going to have the fever."
+
+"The fever!" exclaimed Frances, "what fever?"
+
+"I don't know, Miss, my wife have been sick of it for days past."
+
+"And how dare you!" cried Frances, passionately, seizing him by the arm;
+"how dare you let the boy come in. Don't you know it is murder. Oh, if
+he should get it! If he should get it!" and she flew from the cottage,
+leaving Matthew bewailing his thoughtlessness and folly.
+
+Frances disliked children, and had made up her mind to thoroughly hate
+Amy's child, long before she saw him; but the boy's determined will, so
+congenial to her spirit, and then his partiality to herself, overcame
+this resolution. Her object had been to conciliate the father through
+the boy; but in attaining this object she had taken a liking for the
+child, which she in vain tried to surmount; Bertie wound himself into
+that cruel heart, somehow, and held his place there in defiance of all
+obstacles.
+
+Her heart sank within her at Matthew's words, and felt strangely stirred
+as she drew away the little arms so tightly encircling her neck. "For
+Heaven's sake, Bertie, don't cry so, you'll make yourself so hot," and
+then she felt his hands and forehead to assure herself he had not
+already caught the fever.
+
+"She's a naughty woman," sobbed Bertie.
+
+"Yes, yes, she's a naughty woman;" and then by dint of coaxing and
+persuading there was little trace, when they reached Hannah at the
+further end of the village, of the fright or violent cry he had had;
+still, his nurse was not to be deceived.
+
+"What's the matter with Master Bertie?" she asked.
+
+"A poor idiot in one of the cottages frightened him," replied Frances;
+but she said not a word of the fever, or that the cottage was the one at
+the turnpike gate, and Bertie's version of the story was a great deal
+too unconnected to be understood, and merely seemed a corroboration of
+the one Frances had given.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+DOWN BY THE LAKE.
+
+ "At length within a lonely cell,
+ They saw a mournful dame.
+
+ Her gentle eyes were dimm'd with tears,
+ Her cheeks were pale with woe:
+ And long Sir Valentine besought
+ Her doleful tale to know.
+
+ 'Alas! young knight,' she weeping said,
+ 'Condole my wretched fate;
+ A childless mother here you see;
+ A wife without a mate'"
+
+ VALENTINE AND URSINE.
+
+
+Frances was nervous and anxious for days after her walk with Bertie; the
+sudden opening of a door made her start and tremble lest it should be
+some-one come to announce the boy's illness. Sometimes she watched and
+waited at the window half the morning to catch a glimpse of him going
+out for his daily walk, or if he did not come would seek him in the
+nursery, and bring him downstairs. She became Bertie's shadow, and he,
+in consequence, fonder of her than ever. But the days crept on and there
+was no symptom that he had taken the fever: so by degrees Frances forgot
+her fears--or rather they slumbered--and went back to her old ways. But
+it had become more difficult to deal with Amy now, she appeared to have
+changed so entirely; there was no making her jealous, even if she could
+manage to make Robert devote himself half the evening to her hostess.
+Amy seemed just as happy; she either was not jealous or was jealous and
+concealed it, and rode with her husband, let who would be of the party,
+or deserted Bertie and walked with him, even learnt to play billiards
+when she found Robert was fond of it; so that it was rarely chess now,
+but all, even Mr. Linchmore, joined of an evening in the former game.
+
+Still Robert's love was not what it had been. His wife felt that it was
+not; he loved her by fits and starts, while some days he was moody and
+even touchy; but Amy did not despair. How could she when she felt he
+still loved her? In another fortnight they would be back at Somerton,
+and away from Frances, who, Amy feared, was fast weaning her boy's as
+well as her husband's love from her, though how she had managed it she
+knew not.
+
+"I have just been talking with Mr. Grant, your head keeper," said Robert
+to Mr. Linchmore about a fortnight after the memorable walk to the
+turnpike, "he tells me the poaching goes on as sharp and fast as ever."
+
+"Worse," was the reply, "they are the same set we have always had, that
+is to say, we suppose so from their cunning and rashness."
+
+"You got rid of two or three of them at the Sessions, if you remember,
+when I was here nearly four years ago."
+
+"Yes, but the example does not appear to have done much good."
+
+"You want Charley here," said Frances, "to excite you all into going
+out in a body again and exterminating them. Do you remember your fears,
+Mrs. Vavasour."
+
+Amy looked up to reply, and meeting Frances' gaze, she grew confused and
+coloured deeply. "I should be more afraid now," said she with an effort
+at composure.
+
+"I was sorry to hear you had never succeeded in tracking that man?" said
+Vavasour, with his eyes fixed on his wife's now pale face.
+
+"You mean the man that wounded you? No, several were taken up on
+suspicion, but we were unable to prove anything against them, and the
+watcher, the poor man who was so frightfully bruised and otherwise
+ill-treated, swore, that none of them resembled his or your assailant."
+
+"I could have sworn to the man, too, I think."
+
+"You were abroad, and so I did not press the matter, and in time the
+affair blew over altogether."
+
+The conversation ended, and was perhaps forgotten by all save Robert
+Vavasour, and he could not forget it, but snatched his hat and strolled
+out hastily into the Park. What had made his wife's face flush so
+deeply? Had it anything to do with Charles, whom Frances was so
+constantly throwing at his teeth? He began to hate the very name, and
+was daily growing more madly suspicious of his wife, and yet had his
+thoughts framed themselves into words he would have shrunk from the bare
+idea of suspecting his idol. That she had not loved him with all her
+heart when he married her he knew: she had told him so; and how easy he
+had thought the task of winning the heart she had assured him none other
+had ever asked to have an interest in; but then had she loved none
+other? perhaps this very man of whom for one half hour he remembered
+being jealous long ago. When she told him the first, why if it was so,
+had she not told him the second? Why give him only half her confidence?
+Perhaps she loved him still? Perhaps the remembrance of him had called
+the guilty blush to her cheek? "Ah! if it is so!" he cried with angry
+vehemence, "he shall die. I will be revenged!"
+
+"Vengeance! who talks of vengeance?" said a voice near, and, looking up,
+he saw Goody Grey leaning on her staff. Involuntarily he tendered her
+some halfpence.
+
+"I want them not," she said. "It does not do for the blind to lead the
+blind."
+
+"What mean you, woman? I am in no mood to be trifled with."
+
+"Don't I know that?" she replied; "don't I know the bitterness of the
+heart? Do you think I have lived all these years and don't know where
+misery lies?"
+
+"Where does it lie?" he asked.
+
+"In your heart. Where it wouldn't have been if you hadn't been there;"
+and she pointed in the direction of the Hall. "'Tis a gay meeting, and
+may be as sad a parting."
+
+"Why so?" asked he again.
+
+"Do the hawk and dove agree together in the same nest?"
+
+"The dove would stand but a poor chance," said Robert.
+
+"True." She turned upon her heel and went into the cottage, and seating
+herself in a low chair, began rocking it backwards and forwards,
+singing, in a kind of low, monotonous chant,
+
+ "When the leaves from the trees begin to fall
+ Then the curse hangs darkly over the Hall."
+
+"That must be now, then," said Robert, who had followed her in, "for the
+leaves are falling thick enough and fast enough in the wood."
+
+"Darker and darker as the leaves fall thicker," she replied, "and
+darkest of all when they are on the ground, and the trees bare."
+
+"What will happen then?"
+
+"Ask your own heart: hasn't it anger, hatred, and despair in it? Did I
+not hear you call aloud for vengeance?"
+
+"And what good can come of it?" continued she, seeing he made no reply;
+"like you, I've had all that in my heart, until curses loud and bitter
+have followed one after another, heaped on those who injured me, and
+yet I'm as far off from happiness as ever. I began to seek it when I was
+a young woman, and look! my hair is grey, and yet I have not found it;
+while the fierce anger, the strong will to return evil for evil, have
+faded from my spirit like the slow whitening of these grey hairs.
+There's only despair now, and hatred for those, for _her_ who did me
+wrong."
+
+"Do we all hate as mercilessly as this? I feel that a look, a word of
+love would turn my heart from bitterness."
+
+"Then the injury has not been deep. I've lived here a lonely woman
+twenty years, and a look, a word, will sometimes call the fierce blood
+to my heart. When the injury is eternal and irremediable then the hate
+must be lasting too."
+
+"The injured heart may forgive," said Vavasour.
+
+"It may forgive. But forget its hate! its wrongs! its despair! Never,
+never," said she, fiercely.
+
+"It may be so," said Robert, half aloud.
+
+"May be so? It is so. Hate is a deadly enemy; don't let it creep into
+your heart; tear it out! cast it from you! for once you have it, it is
+yours for ever; even death cannot part it from you."
+
+"I doubt that. We know that even a dying sinner's heart may repent and
+be softened; the thought that he is perishing from the earth nursing a
+deadly sin at his heart would do much; he would never dare die so."
+
+"Prayers, the pleadings of an agonised, breaking heart may be vain--in
+vain--was vain, young man, for I tried it," replied Goody Grey, her
+voice suddenly changing from fierceness to mournful sadness.
+
+"Surely there could not be a heart so hard, if you pleaded rightly."
+
+"Don't tell me that!" she exclaimed, raising her voice, "don't tell me
+there was anything I might have done. Did I not kneel and pray? Did I
+not take back my curses and give blessings? Did I not plead my broken
+heart and withered youth? But death came, even as I knelt; the hate was
+too strong, and the words I panted to hear were unspoken. What have you
+to say to that?"
+
+"Hope," replied Robert; "what you have done at a death bed, I have done
+during life, and been refused; death has come since, and I am seemingly
+as far off as ever; and yet I hope on."
+
+"Hope on, hope ever," said she, sadly, "yes, that's all that's left me
+now, but it doesn't satisfy the cravings of my heart; never will!"
+
+"Have you no relations? You must live but a lonely life here," said
+Robert.
+
+"That is the only living thing that loves me," she replied, pointing to
+the parrot, sitting pluming his feathers. "He's been with me in joy and
+sorrow. Don't touch him; he is savage with strangers."
+
+"Not with me," said Robert, smoothing his feathers gently.
+
+"Then he knows friends from foes, or his heart's taken kindly to you
+like mine did, when I saw you with the bad passions written in your
+face."
+
+"I once had a bird like this," he replied, thoughtfully, "but it must be
+years ago, for I cannot recall to my recollection at this moment when it
+was."
+
+He passed from the cottage, while Goody Grey again rocked herself to and
+fro' and began her old song.
+
+ "When the leaves from the trees begin to fall
+ Then the curse----"
+
+The rest of the words were lost to his ear, but the sound of her voice
+was borne along by the breeze, and sounded mournfully and sadly as it
+swept through the leafless trees.
+
+Robert thought much of Goody Grey as he walked homewards. Here was a
+woman whose very life had wasted away in the vain search for what for
+twenty years,--perhaps more,--had eluded her grasp. Would it be the same
+with him? Would years,--his life slip by, and the mystery of his birth
+be a mystery still? Would hope fade away, and he, like her, grow
+despairing in the end? He felt a strange interest in that lone, unloved
+woman, with nothing in the world to love but a bird. Then his thoughts
+reverted to his wife, and his love for her. Why had she married him if
+her heart was another's? Why had she done him this wrong? Why make not
+only herself, but him miserable for life? But could deceit dwell in so
+lovely a form as his wife's? only a month ago he would have staked his
+life; nay, his very love upon her truth. And now--now--
+
+"Where are you going so fast, Robert? Are you walking for a wager? I
+have been vainly trying to come up with you for the last five minutes,"
+said Amy, taking his arm.
+
+"Have you been out walking without Bertie?" he said.
+
+"Yes, I meant to have gone with you; and ran upstairs for my hat, when I
+saw you preparing to go out."
+
+"Why did you not come then?"
+
+"I was too late; when I came back you had disappeared, Miss Strickland
+said down the long avenue: so I followed, and went through the village,
+and home by the lane, but somehow I missed you."
+
+"Miss Strickland was wrong. I went across the fields into the wood, as
+far as Mrs. Grey's cottage. What a singular being she is!"
+
+"Have you never seen her until to-day?"
+
+"Yes, several times, but never to speak to. She must have been very
+handsome in her youth."
+
+"What, with that dark frown on her brow?"
+
+"That has been caused from sorrow," replied Robert, "she has had some
+heavy, bitter trial to bear; besides that frown is not always there,
+once I noticed quite a softened expression steal over her face. I feel
+an interest in the old lady; she tells me she is alone in the
+world,--like myself. I feel alone sometimes."
+
+"You, Robert!" said Amy, in a tone of sadness and reproach.
+
+"I feel so sometimes, Amy."
+
+"What, with your wife's love?"
+
+"You have the boy to care for. You love him so much, Amy."
+
+"Yes," said she in a tone of disappointment.
+
+"See! there he comes up the walk."
+
+"Yes," she said again, but never turned her head or heeded Bertie's
+"Mamma!" "Mamma!"
+
+"I love you better than Bertie, Robert," she whispered softly a moment
+after.
+
+He did not reply; but she felt his arm tighten on her hand and press it
+slightly to his side. She did not return the pressure, she was only half
+satisfied as she left him and went up the terrace steps, while Robert's
+eyes followed her wistfully, until even the skirt of her dress swept
+through the door out of sight.
+
+Ah! had she only remained with him a little longer.
+
+Robert passed on down the terrace, and stood at the further end. Just
+then a window was flung open, and Frances Strickland called to his boy.
+They talked for a few moments, then Hannah passed on with her charge,
+while Robert still leant against the abutment of the window. Presently
+it closed gently, a voice saying at the same instant, "Poor Charley!
+Mrs. Vavasour will break her heart."
+
+Robert sprung to his feet and strode past the window at which Frances
+still stood, his shadow falling upon her darkly as he went on into the
+house,--into the room.
+
+Alone! and ready for a walk? That was well, he would not question her
+there; no, it must be away, far away, and safe from interruption.
+
+"I would speak with you, Miss Strickland," he said sternly, vainly
+striving to appear calm, and stay the fierce hot blood rushing to his
+heart and mounting to his brow.
+
+Frances followed him at once without a question; away into the Park,
+along the very road he had so lately traversed with his wife; she could
+scarcely keep up with his stride, or heavy iron-sounding step, that
+seemed as though it would crush every stone and pebble in his path to
+powder: still he went on; on through the trees and walks, startling the
+birds from the branches, but striking no dismay into Frances' breast;
+on, even down to the lake slumbering so peacefully and quietly. Here he
+stopped, and pointing to the clump of a tree, bade her be seated. Then
+he stood sternly before her.
+
+"Can you wonder I wish to speak with you?" he asked in a thick, harsh,
+almost agitated voice, which grew steadier as he went on.
+
+"No," she replied.
+
+"Nor why I have brought you thus far?"
+
+"No," she said again.
+
+"Then speak!" he cried, "and if you speak falsely I will hold you up as
+a scorn and shame amongst women."
+
+"I am not afraid," she said, "and can excuse your harsh words; but--"
+
+"I will have no buts," he said sternly, "you have slandered my wife,
+her I love more than my life; you shall either say you have lied
+falsely, or you shall make good your words."
+
+"Shall I begin at the beginning? Do you want to know all?"
+
+"Begin, and make an end quickly."
+
+And she did begin, even from the time when Amy had fainted, that
+memorable night, unto where Charles Linchmore had told her he had met
+Amy on her wedding day; and as she went on he buried his face in his
+hands, while his whole frame shook and trembled like an aspen.
+
+"Girl, have some mercy!" he cried.
+
+But she had none; no pity. Was not this woman his wife; and had she
+shown pity. So she never stayed her words, never softened them, she gave
+him what appeared the hard, stern, agonising truth, and he groaned with
+very anguish as she spoke.
+
+"Is that all?" he asked at last.
+
+"All."
+
+"And you will swear it. Swear it!" he cried hoarsely.
+
+"I will. But you need not believe me. Ask your wife? See what she says."
+
+He moved his hands from his face. It looked as though years had swept
+over it. "You have broken my heart," he said, in a quivering voice. And
+then he left her.
+
+Amy had gone to her room, sad and thoughtful, with the feeling, at last,
+that her husband doubted her love; and yet, she did love him better than
+she ever thought she should.
+
+As she turned his words over in her mind, she determined on delaying no
+longer; but now, at once, tell him all. She dreaded his anger and
+sorrowful look; but that, anything was better than the loss of his love.
+So she sat and listened, and awaited his coming. But he came not.
+
+The luncheon bell rang, and she went downstairs wondering at his
+absence.
+
+"I am sorry to say Mr. Linchmore has heard some bad news, Mrs.
+Vavasour," said Mrs. Linchmore.
+
+"My husband! Where is he?"--exclaimed Amy, panic stricken.
+
+"It has nothing to do with him," replied Mr. Linchmore, "my brother has,
+unfortunately, been wounded." And he looked somewhat surprised at her
+sudden fright.
+
+Then Amy was glad Robert was absent. "I am sorry," she faltered. "I hope
+it is not serious;" and her pale face paled whiter than before.
+
+"No, I trust not. He has been out with General Chamberlain's force."
+
+"He was very foolish to go to India at all," said Mr. Linchmore. "I dare
+say he would have had plenty of opportunities of winning laurels
+elsewhere; but he always was so impetuous,--here to-day and gone
+to-morrow."
+
+Then the conversation turned upon other subjects, and still Robert came
+not. Just as they rose from the table Frances came in.
+
+"Have you seen Mr. Vavasour?" asked Amy.
+
+"No. Has he not been in to luncheon? I thought I was late."
+
+Amy passed on up to her room again, and for a short time sat quietly by
+the fire, as she had done before; then, as the hours crept on, she rose
+and went to the window.
+
+The sun sank slowly, twilight came on, and the shadows of evening grew
+darker still; Amy could scarcely see the long avenue now, or the tall
+dark trees overshadowing it; and still she was alone. Then the door
+opened; but it was not her husband--it was Hannah, who stood looking at
+her with grave face.
+
+"If you please, Ma'am, I don't think Master Bertie is well. There is
+nothing to be frightened about; but he has been hot and feverish ever
+since he came home from his walk."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+REPENTANCE.
+
+ "Whispering tongues can poison truth,
+ And constancy lives in realms above;
+ And life is thorny, and youth is vain;
+ And to be wroth with one we love,
+ Doth work like madness in the brain."
+
+ COLERIDGE.
+
+ "My thoughts acquit you for dishonouring me
+ By any foul act; but the virtuous know
+ 'Tis not enough to clear ourselves, but the
+ Suspicions of our shame."
+
+ SHIRLEY.
+
+
+Robert came back at last, and years seemed to have swept over his head
+and gathered round his heart, since only a few hours before he had stood
+in his wife's room. But he looked for her in vain, she was not there,
+but away in the nursery, hushing, with tearful eyes and frightened
+heart, poor sick Bertie in her arms to sleep. Robert longed, yet
+dreaded to see her. Through all his misery his heart clung to his wife,
+and hoped, even when his lips murmured there was no hope. He took up the
+work on the table, a handkerchief Amy had been hemming, marked with his
+name, and sighed as he laid it down, and thought duty, not love, had
+induced her to work for him.
+
+So he waited on--waited patiently. At length she came.
+
+"Oh, Robert! I am so glad you are here. I have been longing for you, and
+quite frightened when you stayed away such a time."
+
+The mother's fears were roused, and she clung at once to her husband for
+help and support. Her trembling heart had forgotten for the moment all
+she had been braving her heart, and nerving her mind to tell him. The
+great fear supplanted for the time the lesser and more distant one.
+
+She had seated herself at Robert's feet, leaning her head on his knee.
+He let her remain so--did not even withdraw the hand she had taken, for
+the fierceness of his anger had passed away, and a great sorrow filled
+his heart. Did he not pity her as much as himself? she so fair and
+young. Had not she made them both miserable? Both he and her.
+
+But Amy saw nothing of all this--nothing of the grave, sorrowing
+face--her heart was thinking of poor Bertie's heavy eyes and hot hands,
+and how best she could break it to her husband, so as not to grieve him
+too much, for did he not love the boy as much as she did? and would he
+not fear and dread the worst? But even while she hesitated, her husband
+spoke--
+
+"Amy! Have you ever deceived me? I, who have loved you so faithfully."
+
+The cold, changed tone--the harsh voice struck her at once. She looked
+up quickly. There was that in his face which sent dismay into her heart,
+while her fears for Bertie fled as she gazed. Was she too late? Had her
+husband found out what she had been striving so hard for months to tell
+him? Yes, she felt, she knew she was too late; that he knew all, and
+waited for her words to confirm what he knew.
+
+"Never as your wife, Robert," she replied, tremblingly.
+
+"And when, then!"
+
+"Oh, Robert! don't look so sternly at me--don't speak so strangely. I
+meant to tell you, I did indeed. I have been striving all these months
+to tell you."
+
+Alas! there was something to tell, then; every word she uttered drove
+away hope more and more from his heart.
+
+"Months and years?" he said, mournfully.
+
+"No, no; to-day, this very day have I been watching and waiting. Oh! why
+did you not come back? Why did you not come back, Robert, so that I
+might have told you?"
+
+"You dared not," he said, sternly.
+
+"Oh, yes! I dared. I have done no sin, only deceived you, Robert, at--at
+first."
+
+"Only at first. Only for ever."
+
+"No, no; not for ever. I always meant to tell you, I did, indeed,
+Robert." She began to fear he distrusted her words already--she, whose
+very "yes" had been implicitly believed and reverenced. Alas! this first
+sin, perhaps the only one, into what meshes it leads us, often bringing
+terrible retribution.
+
+"Did you not fear living on in--in deceit?" he said. "Did you not feel
+how near you were to my heart--did you not know that my love for you
+was--was madness? that, lonely and unloved, I loved you with all the
+passion of my nature? If not, you knew that all my devotion was thrown
+away--utterly wasted--that your heart was another's, and could never be
+mine."
+
+He stopped; and the silence was unbroken, save by Amy's sobs.
+
+"Had you told me this," he said again, "do you think I would have
+brought this great sorrow upon you? put trouble and fear into your heart
+instead of love and happiness, and made your young life
+desolate--desolate and unbearable, but for the boy. He is the one green
+leaf in your path, I the withered one,--withered at heart and soul."
+
+"Robert! Robert! don't be so hard, so--so--" she could not bring to her
+lips to say cruel, "but forgive me!"
+
+He heeded her not, but went on.
+
+"And the day of your marriage," he said, "that day which should have
+been, and I fondly hoped was, the happiest day of your life; upon that
+day, of all others, you saw him."
+
+"Not wilfully, Robert, not--not wilfully," sobbed Amy.
+
+"That day, your marriage day, was the one on which you first learnt of
+_his_ love for you, and passed in one short half hour a whole lifetime
+of agony. Poor Amy! poor wife! Forgive you? yes; my heart is pitying
+enough and weak enough to forgive you your share in my misery for the
+sake of the anguish of your own."
+
+Amy only wept on. She could not answer. But he, her husband, needed no
+reply; her very silence, her utter grief and tears confirmed all he
+said.
+
+"Amy, did you never think the knowledge of all this--the tale would
+break my heart?"
+
+"Never! I feared your anger, your sorrowing looks, but--but
+that?--Never, never!"
+
+"And yet it will be so. It must be so."
+
+"Oh, no, no! Neither now nor ever, because--because I love you, Robert."
+
+"Amy! wife!" he said, sternly, "there must never be a question of love
+between us, now. That--that is at an end, and must never be named again.
+I forgive you, but forget I never can," and then he left her, before she
+could say one word. Left her to her young heart's anguish and bitter
+despair, tenfold greater than the anguish he had depicted being hers
+long ago, because hopeless--hopeless of ever now winning back his love
+again. And what a love it had been! She began to see, to feel it all
+now, now that it had gone, left her for ever.
+
+"God help me!" she cried, "I never, never thought it would have come to
+this. God help me! I have no other help now, and forgive me if I have
+broken his heart."
+
+Then by-and-by she rose, and with wan, stricken face, went back to her
+boy.
+
+Mr. Blane was bending over Bertie, who was crying in feeble, childish
+accents, "Give me some water to drink. Please give me some water."
+
+"Presently, my little man; all in good time."
+
+"But I want it now--I must have it now."
+
+"My mistress, Mrs. Vavasour, sir," said Hannah, as Amy entered, and
+stood silently by his side, and looked anxiously into his face, as she
+returned his greeting.
+
+"Dr. Bernard usually attends at the Hall," she said; "but he lives so
+far away, and I was so anxious about my boy. Is there much the matter
+with him?"
+
+"Ahem," said Mr. Blane, clearing his throat, as most medical men do when
+disliking to tell an unpleasant truth, or considering how best to shape
+an answer least terrifying to the mother's heart. "No--no," he said
+hesitatingly. "The child is very hot and feverish."
+
+"I hope he isn't going to sicken for a fever, sir," said Hannah.
+
+"I fear he has sickened for it," he replied.
+
+"Not the scarlet fever?" said Amy, in a frightened voice.
+
+"No. There has been a nasty kind of fever going about, which I fear your
+boy has somehow taken. I have had two cases lately, and in both
+instances the symptoms were similar to this."
+
+"Is it a dangerous fever?" asked Amy.
+
+"The old lady, my first patient, is quite well again, in fact better
+than she has been for the last six months, as the fever cured the
+rheumatics, and from being almost a cripple, she now walks nearly as
+well as ever. And," he said, rising to leave, "I should advise no one's
+entering this room but those who are obliged to--the fewer the
+better--and by all means keep the other children away, as the sore
+throat is decidedly infectious. Good-bye, Sir; take your medicine like
+a little man, and then we'll soon have you well again," said he to
+Bertie.
+
+"My boy, my poor Bertie," said Amy, as she sat by his side, and held the
+cool, refreshing drink to his parched lips. Did she need this fresh
+trial coming upon her already stricken heart?
+
+"Don't let the boy see you crying, Ma'am," said Hannah, "or perhaps
+he'll be getting frightened, and I'm sure that'll be bad for him."
+
+"No," said Amy. But though no tears were in her eyes, the traces of them
+were weighing down the heavy swollen eyelids; but tears she had none to
+shed, she had wept so much.
+
+So she sat by the side of her sick child's little cot with aching heart,
+all alone and lonely, with no one but old faithful Hannah to sympathize
+and watch with her; he, her husband, she dared not think of, or if she
+thought at all, it was to almost wish he would not come; so stern and
+grave a face might frighten her boy.
+
+"Are you not going down to dinner, Ma'am?" said Nurse at last, in a
+whisper, for Bertie had dropped off into an uneasy slumber.
+
+"Dinner? Ah! yes. I forgot. No, I shall not go down to dinner to-day. I
+shall not leave my boy."
+
+"I can take care of him, Ma'am, and then shouldn't you tell the Master?
+Haven't you forgotten him? There's no use keeping the bad news from
+him."
+
+Forgotten him? How could she forget? Were not his words still fresh at
+her heart?
+
+But Nurse was right, he ought to be told; there was Mrs. Linchmore, too,
+she--all, ought to know about Bertie.
+
+So Amy rose and went away in search of her husband. Where was he? Should
+she find him in his room? She hesitated ere she knocked, but his heavy
+tread a moment after assured her he was there. She did not look up as
+the door opened, but said simply, "Bertie is ill, Robert, very ill. Mr.
+Blane has been to see him, and says he has caught some fever, but not a
+dangerous one."
+
+All traces of sternness and anger fled from his brow, as he listened and
+caught the expression of his wife's face. He wondered at the calmness
+with which she spoke. His boy ill, little Bertie, in whose life her very
+soul had seemed wrapt? and she could stand and speak of it so coldly, so
+calmly as this? He wondered, and saw nothing of the anguish within, or
+how the one terrible blow he had dealt her had for the time broken and
+crushed her spirit. Only a few hours ago, and she would have wept and
+clung round his neck for help, in this her one great hour of need. But
+that was past, could not be; he would not have it so, her love had been
+forbidden.
+
+"I will go and see the boy," he said, gently.
+
+She turned and went on her way downstairs to the drawing-room.
+
+"Good gracious, Mrs. Vavasour! what is the matter?" cried Frances, her
+heart beating savagely, as she looked at the poor face, so wan and
+still, telling its own tale of woe long before the lips did.
+
+Amy took no notice of Frances, but passed on to where Mrs. Linchmore sat
+with the children. It was Alice's birthday, and Bertie was to have come
+down too, and as Amy remembered it, her heart for the first time felt
+full; but she drove back the tears, and said--
+
+"My child is ill. He has caught some fever; but not a dangerous one."
+
+How fond she was of repeating this latter phrase, as if the very fact of
+saying that it was not a dangerous fever would ease and convince her
+frightened, timid heart.
+
+The words startled everyone.
+
+"I am extremely sorry," said Mrs. Linchmore, drawing Alice away. "I
+trust, I hope it is not infectious?"
+
+"I very much fear it is, at least, Mr. Blane thinks the sore throat is,
+and advises the children, by all means, being kept apart."
+
+"They must go away, shall go away the very first thing to-morrow
+morning. It is as well to be on the safe side. Don't you think so,
+Robert?" said Mrs. Linchmore.
+
+"Decidedly. They can go into the village for the time or to Grant's
+cottage."
+
+"There are cases of the same fever in the village," said Amy.
+
+"Then they must go away altogether," said Mrs. Linchmore, hurriedly. "We
+must send them to Standale."
+
+"I am so sorry for Bertie, he'll have such lots of nasty medicine," said
+Fanny; "but won't it be nice to be without Miss Barker?"
+
+"Be silent, child!" said her mother, "Miss Barker will of course go with
+you."
+
+"Oh! how horrid!" returned Fanny. Even Mrs. Linchmore's frown could not
+prevent her from saying that.
+
+Amy passed out again even as she had come, almost brushing Frances'
+dress, but without looking at her, although, had she raised her eyes,
+she must have been struck with the whiteness of her face, which
+equalled, if not exceeded, her own.
+
+"Master has been here, Ma'am," said Hannah, as Amy returned, "and bid me
+tell you he had gone to fetch Dr. Bernard."
+
+Again Amy sat by her boy watching and waiting. What else was there to be
+done? He still slept--slept uneasily, troubled with that short, dry
+cough.
+
+Later on in the evening, when Dr. Bernard--whose mild hopeful face and
+kind cheering voice inspiring her poor heart with courage,--had been,
+and when the hours were creeping on into night a knock sounded at the
+door.
+
+"Miss Strickland is outside, Ma'am, and wants to come in. Shall I let
+her?" asked Hannah.
+
+Amy went out and closed the door behind her, and looked with unmoved
+eyes on Frances' flushed and anxious face.
+
+"How is he? May I go in?" she asked, eagerly.
+
+"Never, with my permission," was the chilling reply.
+
+"Only for five minutes; I am not afraid of the fever, and my looking at
+him can do him no harm. I will promise not to stay longer than that."
+
+"No. You shall not go in for half a minute, even."
+
+"You cannot be so cruel," said Frances; "you cannot tell how frightened
+and anxious I am. Oh! do let me see him."
+
+"I will not," said Amy, angrily.
+
+"Cruel, hard-hearted mother," cried Frances. "I know he has asked for
+me. I know he has called for me!"
+
+"I thank God he has not," replied Amy, "for _that_ would break my
+heart."
+
+"Then he will ask for me; and if he does, you will send for me, won't
+you?"
+
+"Never!" said Amy, as she turned away.
+
+"Oh! Mrs. Vavasour, I love the boy; don't you see that my heart is
+breaking while you stand there so pitilessly."
+
+"Had you loved the boy," said Amy, "you would not have crushed the
+mother's heart. What had I done to you, Frances Strickland, that you
+should pursue me so cruelly, first as a girl, when I never injured you,
+and then--now you have taken my husband's love from me, and would take
+my boy's also? But I will stand between him and you, cruel girl, as long
+as I live."
+
+"Don't say so. Think--think--what if he should die?" said Frances,
+fearfully.
+
+"Ah! God help me!" said Amy; she could say no more. But Frances clung to
+her dress.
+
+"It is I who should say, God help me!" she cried; "don't you know I took
+Bertie to the cottage where he caught the fever? Oh! Mrs. Vavasour, you
+don't know half my agony and remorse, or what I suffered when I found
+out what I had done."
+
+"My boy's illness, my husband's scorn, broken hopes, and grieving heart,
+my crushed spirit, all--all I owe to you. May God forgive you, Miss
+Strickland."
+
+"Yes, yes; God forgive me. I deny nothing. But, oh! will not you forgive
+me, Mrs. Vavasour? I will try, I will, indeed, to make amends."
+
+This abject appeal from the proud Frances? But Amy scarcely heeded it.
+
+"You cannot make amends," she said, despairingly. "It is past
+atonement--this great wrong you have done."
+
+"Oh! do not be so harsh and cruel to me; your heart was soft enough
+once."
+
+"It was. You have changed it, and are the first to feel its hardness. I
+am no longer what I was; but for my boy I should turn into a stone, or
+die."
+
+"And I? What am I to do? If--if anything should happen to Bertie. Oh! I
+shall go mad," she cried. "Think of my grief then. I, who unwittingly
+gave him this fever; think what my heart would feel, what it even feels
+now; and be not so merciless."
+
+"No, not half so merciless as your bad heart has been. I can give you no
+greater punishment than your own guilty remorse, and frightened heart. I
+will remain no longer, Miss Strickland. You shall not see my boy!"
+
+And Amy left Frances weeping, perhaps the first _genuine_ repentant
+tears she had ever shed.
+
+Robert sat at his boy's bed-side all that night, cooling his burning
+forehead and heated head with the cold wet cloth dipped in vinegar and
+water, or holding him up in his arms while his poor parched lips feebly
+yet eagerly drank from the cup his mother held so tremblingly before
+him, while Frances alternately walked her room despairingly, or crouched
+away in the dark on the stairs near, her ear vainly trying to catch the
+words of those mournful watchers and nurses who stepped about so softly
+in the sick chamber beyond.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+A FADING FLOWER.
+
+ "The coldness from my heart is gone,
+ But still the weight is there,
+ And thoughts which I abhor will come,
+ And tempt me to despair.
+
+ "Those thoughts I constantly repel;
+ And all, methinks, might yet be well,
+ Could I but weep once more;
+ And with true tears of penitence
+ My dreadful state deplore."
+
+ SOUTHEY.
+
+
+The long hours of night wore away, and the morning broke, bright, fresh,
+and frosty. Then the long corridor and passages echoed with the sound of
+hasty footsteps hurrying through them, while the quick, sudden opening
+and shutting of doors betokened an unusual stir in the Hall. The
+children were preparing for their journey.
+
+Half an hour later all was silent and still, more so than it had been
+for days. The children were gone.
+
+Again we enter the sick room. Bertie is no better, but, if anything,
+worse; his little face more flushed and heated, his burning hands
+wandering restlessly about, to and fro, as he tosses and turns upon his
+little cot, his anxious eyes no longer looking mournfully, and as it
+were imploringly in his mother's face for help from his pain, for Bertie
+is delirious, and does not even recognise her; his thoughts ramble, and
+he talks incoherently and strangely.
+
+Mrs. Hopkins often came to see him, bringing, as was her wont, in cases
+of illness, broths and cooling drinks she had prepared with her own
+hand; but Bertie was too ill to heed them, and Amy could but look her
+thanks--words she had none.
+
+It was on returning from one of these visits, with cup and saucer in
+hand, that she met Frances Strickland.
+
+"Have you been to see Master Bertie?" she asked.
+
+"Yes, Miss," replied Mrs. Hopkins, with a sigh.
+
+"And how is he? Do you think he is any better this morning?"
+
+"No, Miss, I don't. It's my belief he couldn't well be worse; but the
+doctor'll know better than me. I suppose he'll be here presently."
+
+"What makes you think him so ill?"
+
+"I've been the mother of four, Miss, and lost them all, and none of them
+looked a bit worse than Master Bertie, poor, innocent lamb."
+
+"But you had not two doctors," returned Frances.
+
+"No, nor half the nurses to wait on mine; but I'd the same loving,
+craving mother's heart and the same God to look up to and hope in," and
+the housekeeper passed on, as the rebuke fell from her lips.
+
+"Oh! I wish I could hope, I wish I could pray," cried Frances, as she
+went once more into the solitude of her own room; not only did she
+grieve for Bertie, but the terror lest through her means he should die
+had at last brought repentance to her unfeeling heart; she had been so
+wicked, so relentlessly cruel to his mother, that perhaps the boy's
+death was to be her punishment; and she could think of, scarcely look
+forward to, anything else.
+
+Dr. Bernard stayed at the Park all that night; he whispered no decided
+hope to Amy's heart. There was only a very grave look on his face as
+after bending over Bertie and feeling the quick, sharp pulse beating so
+fiercely against his finger, he said, "While there is life there is
+hope," and Amy was obliged to content her poor heart with this, and
+repeat it over and over again to herself all through that long sad
+night; the second of Bertie's illness, and of her own and her husband's
+watch, for Robert scarcely ever left his boy, but remained through the
+weary hours of night patiently by his side; only old Hannah snatching
+every now and then a moment's sleep.
+
+Towards the morning Bertie grew more composed, the hands tossed about
+less restlessly, and the weary, anxious eyes closed in sleep: so calm
+and still he looked that Amy bent down her head to catch the faint
+breath.
+
+"It is not death?" she said to Dr. Bernard, who had been hastily
+aroused.
+
+"No. The crisis is past I hope. The fever has left him. It is weakness,
+excessive weakness," but he did not add that that was as much to be
+dreaded as the fever; while Amy only prayed that when he awoke he would
+recognise her, so long it seemed since his little lips had said "Mamma."
+
+Just before luncheon, Anne with her husband drove up to the Hall. She
+was rushing into the morning-room with her usual haste and merry laugh,
+when she was checked by Mrs. Linchmore's grave face.
+
+"Has anything happened, Isabella? How grave you look."
+
+Yes a great deal had happened; she had a great deal to hear, and Anne
+sat herself down to listen to it all patiently--or as patiently as she
+could to the end. As soon as it was told, she was rushing impetuously
+from the room.
+
+"Is the boy in the small red room?" she asked.
+
+"Yes. But Anne, the fever is infectious; you had better stay away. Mrs.
+Vavasour can come and see you here."
+
+"As if she would leave him?" she cried, "not a bit of it, I know her
+better, besides I am not afraid of anything. I shall go." Anne was
+right, there was very little indeed she was afraid of.
+
+"But Anne, think of your husband; he might not like it."
+
+"Ah! true; how tiresome it is sometimes to have a husband! I suppose I
+shall have to wait a whole hour before he thinks of coming back."
+
+"Did he drive in with you?"
+
+"Yes, and has gone on in the pony carriage to call at the Rectory. Isn't
+it provoking. I have a great mind not to wait for him."
+
+"It might have been a great deal worse; suppose he had not driven in
+with you?"
+
+"Then I should have braved his anger and been at the boy's bed-side long
+ago," and she walked to the window, and strained her eyes impatiently
+down the drive.
+
+"Have you seen the child today?" she asked presently.
+
+"No, not since his illness; but Dr. Bernard tells me the fever left him
+early this morning."
+
+"It did? Oh! then he'll soon get better."
+
+"But he is so excessively weak, that he holds out small hopes of his
+recovery."
+
+"Poor dear Amy, how sad for her. Ah! there's the carriage at last; how
+delightful! Mr. Russell could not have been at home." And away she flew
+down the stairs, and stood impatiently on the terrace.
+
+"My dear Thomas," she exclaimed, "how slowly you drive. I always tell
+you you indulge the pony fearfully when I am not with you."
+
+Mr. Hall looked in surprise at his wife's anxious face. "Why, Anne," he
+said, "I had no idea you were in such a desperate hurry to return home,
+or I might have driven a little quicker."
+
+"Return," she cried, "I am not thinking of such a thing. I want to stay
+for a week, if you will only let me, and Isabella does not object; you
+can go and arrange it with her presently," said she, in her impetuous
+way.
+
+"But I have yet to hear why I am to do all this," returned her husband.
+
+"Ah, I forgot! It's because poor Amy Vavasour's child, that little boy
+we saw when we were last here, is dying of some fever. They say it's
+infectious, but you will not mind that, will you? I am not a bit afraid,
+and I do so want to comfort Amy."
+
+Mr. Hall looked very grave.
+
+"Oh, don't consider about it," she said, "you can stay, too, you know;
+there is no reason why you should go home before Saturday."
+
+"It is not that," he replied, "but this fever is infectious, Anne, and
+you will be running a great risk."
+
+"Do not think about it, Tom. I shall fret myself into a worse fever at
+home, and besides, think of poor Amy. I do not believe you can be so
+hard-hearted as to refuse me."
+
+So in the end, much against his wish, Mr. Hall yielded, and while he
+went to propose the plan to Mrs. Linchmore Anne went off on her mission
+of mercy, and was repaid by the sad smile, and almost glad light in
+Amy's eyes as she greeted her.
+
+Anne was shocked at the change in the boy; shocked too, with the
+mother's wan, haggard look.
+
+"My Mistress hasn't been in bed for these two nights past, Miss," said
+Nurse, interpreting Anne's thoughts.
+
+Not for two nights? It was absolutely necessary she should have some
+repose; so Anne set herself to work to accomplish it.
+
+"Why not lie down, Amy, while your boy is asleep?"
+
+"Impossible!" was the firm reply, "I could not."
+
+"But you will wear yourself out, you cannot possibly be of any use while
+he sleeps. I will sit by him for you, and call you the moment he wakes."
+
+"No, I must be by him when he wakes, I could not bear to think he looked
+at anyone else first; he has not known me for so long, that my heart is
+craving for some sign to show that he recognises me."
+
+This was conclusive, and Anne urged no more, but Robert said, "I think
+Mrs. Hall is right, Amy, in advising you to rest."
+
+"But I cannot leave the room, indeed I cannot."
+
+"There is no occasion for your doing so, you can lie on Hannah's bed."
+
+Anne expected a fresh expostulation, but no, Amy moved away at once, and
+did as her husband wished.
+
+"Where can I find a shawl for Amy, Mr. Vavasour?" said Anne, presently,
+"she will be frozen over there, without some wrap."
+
+He went away, and returned a moment after with one, which he spread over
+Amy as she lay, but without, to Anne's astonishment, one loving word or
+even look.
+
+"Try and sleep," he said, gently, "I will call you in an hour."
+
+She thanked him, and closed her eyes.
+
+But long before the hour had passed away, she was at Bertie's bed-side,
+with the little head nestled in her bosom, and the soft, thin hand
+clasped in hers; he was too weak to say much, but he had named her, had
+recognised her; that was enough, he would not die now, without giving
+her one loving look. Die? Yes, she felt he would die, so thin and
+wasted, so hollow his cheeks, so weak, so utterly weak; and then the
+sorrowing faces of those around, the still graver one, and pitying words
+of the old doctor. Ah! there was no need to tell her; her boy, her
+beautiful boy, must die. Oh! the anguish of her heart, surely if a
+fervent prayer could save him, he would be saved yet.
+
+Anne stole away by and by to her husband, and found him busy unpacking a
+carpet bag.
+
+"I have been home and back again, Anne," he said, "and made Mary put
+together the few things she thought you might require. I hope you will
+find them all right."
+
+"Oh! Tom, I do believe you are the only devoted, kind husband in the
+whole world; how fortunate it was I married you when I did."
+
+"Why so?" he asked.
+
+"Because I see so many bad specimens of married life, that if I had
+waited until now, I would not have had you at any price."
+
+"Oh, yes, you would," he said.
+
+"Don't be so conceited," she replied, "remember you have never been
+drilled yet."
+
+"I have my wife to be conceited of," he said, fondly; "and now Anne,
+tell me what news of the child?" She was grave in a moment.
+
+"There is no hope. None whatever. Dr. Bernard gives none."
+
+"And the mother?"
+
+"She is very quiet, very submissive under it all."
+
+"She knows the worst, then?"
+
+"She guesses it, and bears up wonderfully. How it will be by-and-by,
+when the worst is over, I don't like, cannot bear to think of; you must
+come and talk to her then?"
+
+"I?" he said, "no, that will never do; she has her husband."
+
+"He's a wretch! I have no patience with him. As cold as an icicle."
+
+"My dear Anne," he said, reprovingly.
+
+"Oh! my dear Tom, I am so glad you are not like him," and then she burst
+out crying, a most unusual thing for her, "and I am so glad now I have
+no children: it must be dreadful to lose them. After this I will be the
+most contented little mortal going."
+
+And she went back again to Amy, leaving her husband somewhat surprised,
+and regretful that he should have consented to have allowed her to
+remain in a scene evidently too much for her.
+
+Bertie had roused again. "Where's Missy? I want Missy?" he said, feebly.
+
+The cry went like a sharp knife through the mother's heart. She brought
+him toys and pictures, telling him the history of each, and quieting him
+as well as she could. At first he was amused and interested, but he soon
+wearied, and said again, "I want Missy."
+
+"Is it Alice he is crying for?" whispered Anne, as Amy moved away, and
+sent Hannah to take her place by the bed.
+
+"No, not Alice. Oh! Anne, he will break my heart. I had so hoped he had
+forgotten her."
+
+Again the little fretful cry sounded. "Tell Missy to come."
+
+"I _must_ go," said Amy, "there is no help for it."
+
+Frances had thrown herself despairingly on the bed, shutting out Jane,
+her maid, who had tried to comfort her, and even Mrs. Linchmore. At one
+moment she would not believe there was no hope--would not,--the next she
+wept and moaned with the certainty that there could be none; as she saw
+Amy enter, she covered her face with her hands, and groaned aloud;
+thinking there was but one reason the mother could have in coming to see
+her, and that was to upbraid her for having caused the death of her boy.
+
+"Miss Strickland I said you should not see my boy, but I cannot refuse
+his,--" Amy faltered,--"perhaps last request. He is asking for you. Will
+you come?"
+
+"Come!" exclaimed Frances, springing from the bed, and tossing back the
+hair from off her throbbing temples, "do you think I could refuse
+him--you, anything? and oh! forgive me, Mrs. Vavasour, for having caused
+you all this utter misery."
+
+"It is a fearful punishment," said Amy, looking at the ravages grief and
+remorse had made in her beautiful face.
+
+"Fearful!" she replied, "it will haunt me through life. Think of that,
+and say one word of forgiveness, only one."
+
+"I cannot forgive you, Miss Strickland. For my poor Bertie's illness I
+do; that was an unintentional injury, but his mother's misery--broken
+heart, no; that you might have prevented, and--and, God help me, but I
+cannot forgive that."
+
+"How could I hope you would," said Frances despairingly, as she prepared
+to follow Amy.
+
+"You must control your grief, Miss Strickland; be calm and passionless
+as of old. My boy must see no tears."
+
+"I wonder I have any to shed," she replied, "and God knows how I shall
+bear to see him."
+
+Anne looked bewildered as the door opened and Amy returned with Frances,
+and still more so when she saw the child's face light up with pleasure,
+and he tried in his feeble way to clasp her neck.
+
+"I cannot bear to look at it," said Amy, as she softly left the room.
+
+"Naughty! naughty Missy," he said as he kissed her.
+
+Frances felt as if she could have died then, without one sigh of regret.
+For a moment after he released her she did not raise her head.
+
+"My dear,--dear Bertie," she said, struggling with her tears. Then
+presently she sat down and fondled and stroked his thin small hand,
+soothing and coaxing him as well as she was able. If her heart could
+have broken, surely it would have broken then.
+
+"Ah! he's thin enough now, Miss," observed Nurse, "even that sour
+stiff-backed lady would have a hard matter to call him fat. He's never
+been the same since she looked at him with those sharp ferret eyes of
+hers;" and then she moved away and went and seated herself by the fire,
+recounting the whole history to Anne, of not only her dislike for Miss
+Barker, but the reason of Bertie's apparent partiality for Frances;
+while the latter sat and listened to Bertie's talk, he wounding and
+opening her heart afresh at every word he uttered.
+
+"Naughty Missy not to come to Bertie!" he said; and Frances could not
+tell him why she had stayed away; she could only remain silent and so
+allow him to conclude she had been unkind.
+
+She took up some of the books Amy had left.
+
+"Here are pretty pictures," she said, "shall Missy tell you some of the
+nice stories?"
+
+"No, you mustn't. Mamma tells me them; I like her to, she tells them so
+pretty."
+
+"Is there nothing Missy can do for you? Shall she sing you a song?"
+
+"Mamma sings 'Gentle Jesus;' you don't know one so pretty do you?"
+
+"No, Bertie, I am sure I don't."
+
+Presently his little face brightened. "I should like you to get me
+kitty," he said.
+
+"Yes. Who is kitty though?"
+
+"That's what Master Bertie cried for the very day he was taken ill. It's
+the kitten he saw in the village, Miss," said Hannah.
+
+"Bertie shall have kitty," said Frances, decidedly. "Missy will fetch
+her."
+
+"Yes, she's big now, her mother won't cry," he said, as if not quite
+satisfied that she would not.
+
+It had come on to rain, since the morning but what cared Frances for
+that; she scarcely stayed to snatch her hat and cloak before she was
+hurrying through it. What cared she for the rain or anything else? Her
+whole soul was with Bertie--the child who through her means was dying,
+and yet had clasped her neck so lovingly as she bent over him dismayed
+and appalled at the ravages illness had made in his sweet face.
+
+There was only Matthew in the little parlour as she entered the cottage.
+
+"You'd better not come in, Miss," he said "no offence, Miss, but my
+sister-in-law's been ill with the fever these days past."
+
+"It can make no difference now," she said, bitterly, "that little boy I
+brought here only ten days ago is--is dying of the fever he caught
+here."
+
+"Lord save us! Miss, dying?" said Matthew regretfully.
+
+"He has just asked for the kitten he saw here. Will you let him have it?
+It may be," she said despairingly, seeing he hesitated, "only--only for
+a day, or for--a few hours, you would never have the heart to refuse a
+child's last wish." In days gone by she would have abused him for the
+hand he had had in causing poor Bertie's illness, and her misery. But it
+was different now.
+
+"No, Miss, you're right, I haven't the heart to. What's the kitten's
+life worth next to the young master's. Here take it and welcome; though
+what the Missus'll say when she finds it's gone, and the old un a
+howling about the place I don't know, but there, it can't be helped,"
+said Matthew philosophically, as Frances wrapped the kitten up carefully
+in her cloak, and hurried away.
+
+The evening had closed in by the time Frances reached the Park again.
+She hastily changed her wet things, and went at once to Bertie's room,
+but her heart misgave her, as, going down the long corridor, she saw
+Anne seated on the ledge of the large window, with the traces of tears
+on her face.
+
+"I am not too late?" she asked.
+
+"I don't know," replied Anne. "He is very, very weak. I could not bear
+to stay."
+
+Frances went on, Robert, as well as Amy, was in the room. He moved a
+little on one side to allow Frances to come near. "Bertie, my boy," he
+said, "Missy has brought you Kitty."
+
+Frances leant over, and placed it beside him.
+
+He opened his eyes feebly, then took the kitten so full of life, and
+nestled it to his side.
+
+"Bertie is very sick," he said, weakly, as he tried to murmur his
+thanks.
+
+This was the first time he had spoken of feeling ill. How pitifully his
+little childish words smote upon the hearts of his sad, sorrowing
+parents.
+
+"Bertie is very sick," he said again. "I think Bertie is going to die.
+Poor Bertie!"
+
+His mother's tears fell like rain. "God will take care of my boy for
+me," she said. "My boy, my precious Bertie!"
+
+"Yes; but you mustn't cry, you and Papa, and Hannah."
+
+Robert's face was wet with tears, while old Hannah sat away in a corner,
+with her face covered up in her apron, sobbing audibly; but she stifled
+her sobs upon this, his--might be--last request.
+
+"God bless you, Bertie," said Frances, in a broken voice, ere she went
+away.
+
+"Good night," he said. "You may have my top, for bringing me Kitty. Papa
+will get it for you."
+
+And then he turned his head away wearily, and begged his mother to hush
+him in her arms to sleep. Robert lifted him gently, and laid him close
+to Amy. She drew him near, nearer still to her poor breaking heart, but
+she dared not press her lips to his, lest she should draw away the
+feeble breath, already coming so faintly, growing fainter and fainter
+every moment.
+
+"Kitty must go back to her mother," he said. "Take care of Kitty--pretty
+Kitty."
+
+But soon he grew too weak to heed even Kitty, and could only murmur
+short broken sentences about Papa, Mamma, and sometimes Missy.
+
+Presently he roused again. "Don't cry, Papa, Mamma--Kiss
+Bertie--Bertie's very sick. Tell Hannah to bring a light--Bertie wants
+to see you."
+
+Alas! his eyes had grown dim. He could no longer distinguish those he
+loved best, those who could scarcely answer his cry for their tears.
+They brought a light, old faithful Hannah did.
+
+"Can you see me, my own darling?" asked Amy.
+
+"No--no," he murmured, and his eyes closed gently, his breathing became
+more gentle still; once more he said, lovingly, "Dear Papa,--Dear
+Mamma," and then--he slept.
+
+"Don't disturb him, Robert," sobbed Amy to her husband, who was kneeling
+near.
+
+But Bertie had gone to a sleep from which there was no awaking.
+
+Bertie, little loving Bertie, was dead.
+
+ "Softly thou'st sunk to sleep,
+ From trials rude and sore;
+ Now the good Shepherd, with His sheep
+ Shall guard thee evermore."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+JANE'S STORY.
+
+ "An old, old woman cometh forth, when she hears the people cry;
+ Her hair is white as silver, like horn her glazed eye.
+ 'Twas she that nursed him at her breast, that nursed him long ago.
+ She knows not whom they all lament, but soon she well shall know;
+ With one deep shriek she through doth break, when her ear receives
+ their wailing,
+ 'Let me kiss my Celin ere I die--Alas! alas for Celin!'"
+
+ LOCKHART'S SPANISH BALLADS.
+
+
+The news of the sad death at the park spread like wildfire through the
+quiet, little village, and soon reached the turnpike gate, where Jane
+was fast recovering from the fever that had proved so fatal to poor
+Bertie. She, like Frances, moaned and wept when she heard of it; like
+her, her heart cowered and shrank within her; and for three days she
+could scarcely be persuaded to eat or drink, or say a word to anyone.
+Day after day she lay in her bed with her face steadily turned away
+from her sister, who as usual, tried to worry her into a more reasonable
+frame of mind, but finding it useless, left her to herself, and called
+her sullen; but it was not so, Jane's heart had been touched and
+softened ever since the unfortunate day of Bertie's visit; he had done
+more towards bringing repentance to that guilty heart than years of
+suffering had been able to accomplish; for Jane had suffered, suffered
+from the weight of a secret, that at times well-nigh made her as crazy
+as Marks imagined her to be. It was this terrible secret that had made
+her so silent and strange, this that had driven her neighbours to look
+upon her as half-witted. But she wanted no one's pity, no one's
+consolation, had steeled and hardened her heart against it, and let her
+life pass on and wither in its lone coldness. As she had lived, so she
+might have died, smothering all remorse, driving back each repentant
+feeling as it swept past her; might have died--but for Bertie's visit.
+Since then, the firm will to resist the good had been shaken; she was
+not only weak from the effects of the fever, but inwardly weak; weak at
+heart, weak in spirit. She battled with the repentant feelings so
+foreign to her, fought against what she had been a stranger too for so
+long, but it was all in vain; she resisted with a will, but it was a
+feeble will, and in the end the good triumphed, and Jane was won.
+
+One morning, the fourth since Bertie died, Mrs. Marks took up Jane's
+breakfast as usual, and placed it on a chair by the bed-side.
+
+"Here's a nice fresh egg," said she, "what you don't often see, this
+time of the year, I wish it might strengthen your lips, as well as your
+stomach. I'm sick of seeing you lie there with never a word. I'd rather
+a deal have a bad one, than none at all," and she drew back the
+curtains, and stirred up the freshly-lit fire.
+
+"I'm ready and willing to speak," replied Jane, "though God forgive me,
+it's bad enough, as you say, what I have to tell."
+
+Mrs. Marks was startled, not only at Jane's addressing her after so long
+a silence, but at the changed voice, so different to the usual reserved,
+measured tone, and short answers given in monosyllables. But she took no
+notice, and merely said,--
+
+"What's the matter? Ain't the breakfast to your liking?"
+
+"It's better than I deserve," was the reply.
+
+Mrs. Marks was more amazed than before. "You don't feel so well this
+morning, Jane," said she, kindly, "the weakness is bad on you, like it
+was on me; but, please God, you'll get round fast enough, never fear.
+Here!" and she placed the tray on the bed, "take a sup of the tea, and
+I'll put a dash of brandy in it; that'll rouse you up a bit, I'll be
+bound."
+
+Jane made no resistance, but as Mrs. Marks put down the cup, she placed
+her hand on hers, and said, "You won't think me crazy, Anne, if I ask
+you to send and beg young Master Robert to come and see me?"
+
+"Don't you know he's been dead these four days past? There--there, lie
+still, and don't be a worriting yourself this way; your head ain't
+strong yet."
+
+"It's stronger and better than it's been many a long day. Anne, I must
+see Master Robert, not the dead child, but the young Squire. I've that
+to tell him that'll make his heart ache, as it has mine, only there's
+sin on mine--sin on mine," said she, sitting up in bed, and rocking
+herself about.
+
+"Then don't tell it. What's the use of making heart aches?"
+
+"I can't bear the weight of it any longer. I must tell. Ever since I saw
+that child I've been striving against it; but it's no good--no good. I
+can't keep the secret any longer, Anne. I dare not. If I do it'll drive
+me clean out of my mind."
+
+"Just you answer me one question, Jane. Is it right to tell it? Can any
+good come of it?"
+
+"Yes, so help me God. It can! It will!"
+
+"Then," replied Mrs. Marks, "I'll send Matthew at once; mother and I
+always thought there was something had driven you to be so strange when
+you left your place up at the Park fifteen years ago."
+
+Jane laid herself down and covered up her face, while with a troubled
+sigh Mrs. Marks went below to seek her husband.
+
+Matthew was surprised and confounded when bidden go up to the Hall and
+fetch the Squire.
+
+"What!" he said, "are yer gone clean crazy as well as Jane! It's likely
+I'll go and fetch the Squire at the bidding of a 'dafty.' How do I know,
+but what it's a fool's errand he'll come on?"
+
+But reason as he would, his words had no weight with Mrs. Marks, and
+Matthew had to go in the end, though with a more misgiving heart and
+rueful countenance than when he had gone to the young doctor's.
+
+There was little occasion for misgivings on Matthew's part, Mr.
+Linchmore received him kindly, and promised to call at the turnpike
+during the day.
+
+What setting to rights of the cottage there was when Marks returned with
+the news! It was always tidy and clean, but now for the especial honour
+of the Squire's visit all its corners were ransacked and everything
+turned topsy-turvy. Mrs. Marks was still unable to help much in the
+work, but she dusted and tidied the cups and saucers, and knick-knacks,
+although they had not seen a speck of dust for days, and certainly not
+since she had been downstairs again; Sarah's arms ached with the
+scrubbing and scouring she was made to do in a certain given time, while
+her mistress stood by, scolding and finding fault by turns. Nothing was
+done well, or as it ought to be done; but then, as the girl said, Mrs.
+Marks was so finicking, there was no pleasing her, she should be glad
+enough when she was able to do the work for herself, and she could go
+home to her mother.
+
+When Mr. Linchmore came, he scarcely rested in the newly swept parlour
+at all, but desired at once to be shown to the sick woman's room. With
+many apologies from Mrs. Marks at her sister's inability to rise and see
+him, she preceded him up stairs.
+
+Jane was sitting propped up in bed with pillows, her pale face looking
+paler and more emaciated than usual. Mr. Linchmore's heart was touched
+with pity as he noted the care-worn, prematurely old face, with its deep
+lines telling of sorrow or sin. Sin! Surely if this woman's life had
+been sinful, what had he, with his strict principles of right, to do
+with such as her? What had she--as Marks assured him--to tell, that
+nearly concerned himself? His heart reverted to his mother. Was it of
+her she would speak? of her whose ungovernable temper had driven his
+father to seek with his children that happiness abroad that had been
+denied him at home? But then his mother had been mad, at least he had
+been taught to think that the one excuse for her strange conduct. How
+severe and tyrannical she had been, not only to his brother and
+himself, but to that sweet, uncomplaining sister, whose life had been,
+he truly believed, shortened through her violence, and yet again, when
+the passion was over, how fiercely loving, how vehemently passionate in
+her cravings for her children's love, which she alienated from her more
+and more each day. No; others might love and reverence the name of
+mother, but Mr. Linchmore's heart was stirred with no such feelings;
+only a vague sense of fear, a nameless dread of evil came across him as
+he fancied it might be of her Jane had to speak.
+
+He drew near, and bent down kindly. "I fear you have been very ill," he
+said, "with the same fever that has wrought such desolation in my home."
+
+"Yes, sir, I have been ill--am ill; but now it's more from remorse; from
+the guilt of a wicked, cruel heart, than this same fever you speak of."
+
+There was a pause. Jane spoke with difficulty, her breath came quick
+and short, as though her heart laboured heavily under the load of sin
+she spoke of.
+
+"Turn more to the light," she said, "so that I may see your face.
+So--that is well. Still like your mother, strangely like, with none of
+her hard passions or cruel hate. Your love might be fierce, burning, and
+strong, but unlike her you would sacrifice your own happiness to secure
+the well being of the one you love. Had she done so, what misery to her,
+what misery to me might have been spared?"
+
+"Did you know my mother?" asked Mr. Linchmore.
+
+"Tell him, Anne," said Jane, as Mrs. Marks held some wine and water to
+her pale lips, that seemed too feeble to utter another word.
+
+"If you please, sir," said Mrs. Marks, dropping her deepest curtsey,
+"this is Tabitha, my sister 'Tabitha Jane,' who was brought up so kindly
+by your lady mother; but there, I don't wonder you don't remember her. I
+had a hard matter to myself, when I went over to Dean to fetch her,
+come four years ago this next Christmas."
+
+"Tabitha! This Tabitha! The pale, meek girl, who bore so uncomplainingly
+what we boys resented. Can this be Tabitha?"
+
+"Yes," replied Jane. "It can. It is. The weight of a guilty secret has
+ploughed my face with these deep furrows. Call me not meek; I was
+anything but that, I was a sinful, wicked woman. Oh! I have much to
+tell: much that has been locked up in my heart for more than thirty
+years. How I have suffered under the burden that at last has grown too
+heavy for me to bear, and I sink under its load, must divulge it; must
+have her forgiveness, ere I die!"
+
+"Your words fill me with a foreboding of evil," replied Mr. Linchmore.
+"Think well before you speak, Tabitha. Is it necessary that this secret,
+sinful as you say it is, should be divulged. Does it concern, does it
+benefit those living?"
+
+"If it did not, I would never speak it, but struggle on with its
+sorrow, till I died. No hard, and cruel as my mistress was, not from
+Tabitha should come the tale that will denounce her and her evil ways."
+
+"She was my mother, Tabitha," said Mr. Linchmore, as if reproaching her
+harshness.
+
+"True, she was. I do not forget it; still I must speak, must tell of her
+sin and mine, for it is sin, fearful sin. I would, for your sake, Master
+Robert, that it were otherwise; but when I tell of my wrong-doing, with
+mine must come hers. It must. Justice must be done. The mother's
+craving, broken heart must be healed."
+
+"God forbid that I should be the one to stand in the way. Speak,
+Tabitha! but be as merciful as you can; remember you speak of one whose
+memory ought to be dear to me. I will steel my heart to hear--and bear."
+
+"Do so," she said. "It is a long story. I must go back to the days when
+I was a child, and your mother, Miss Julia, took me away from my home to
+hers. She was of an imperious will and proud nature; her mother had
+died at giving her birth, and her father had never controlled her in any
+way. She was as wild and wayward as the trees that grew in the forest
+near here, when they were shaken by the wind. With her, to ask was to
+have, and when she brought me home and declared her intention of
+bringing me up, and making a companion and plaything of me, no objection
+was raised, and she petted and scolded me by turns, as it suited her
+haughty will. At first I disliked her, then feared, and at length loved,
+worshipped her, as some beautiful spirit. Her father died; but then it
+was too late to save his child, or let others teach her wild spirit
+lessons of meekness and obedience; then your grandmother came and took
+us both away to live in her own home. She was a widow, with two sons,
+the eldest not quite so old as Miss Julia.
+
+"A change came over your mother. She loved. Loved the eldest of the two,
+your father; loved as only she could love, with all the wild, impetuous
+passion of her nature. It would have been strange had he not loved her
+in return--so beautiful, so wayward, so bright a being as she was then.
+They were engaged to be married, and, I believe, had they married then
+all would have gone well, and perhaps the evil that followed been
+averted. But they did not marry, they tarried--tarried until another
+girl, a niece, was left desolate, and she too came to Brampton."
+
+Jane, or Tabitha, paused for a moment, then went on more slowly,
+
+"She was, I believe, an angel of goodness, as pure as she was fair, and
+as meek and gentle as your mother was ungovernable. From this time
+nothing went right. Your father and my mistress had words together
+oftener than formerly; but while she wept and lamented in secret, he
+would seek Miss Mary, and pour out his wounded heart to her. By degrees
+Miss Julia grew to learn it, and became jealous. Then, with the
+fierceness of her nature, she would storm and rave if she but saw Master
+Robert speaking to her; and yet, when the angry fit was over, be as
+humbly loving, as passionately sorry.
+
+"Things could not go on like this for ever. I believe her temper was
+fairly wearing out your father's love, and that he would gladly have
+turned over to Miss Mary if he could; but I, who was set as a watch and
+a spy over the poor young thing--she was eighteen years younger than
+your mother--saw that her heart was another's, even young Mr. Archer's,
+who was part tutor, part companion to your father's younger brother. How
+I hated her then--for I had dared to love him myself--and determined on
+her ruin! How I hid the secret that would have made Miss Julia so happy
+in the deepest recesses of my heart, and urged my mistress on to believe
+that Miss Mary loved Master Robert!"
+
+Again Jane paused, then continued as she turned her face away from Mr.
+Linchmore, who was listening intently to her,
+
+"One morning, I remember it well,--I had quietly wrought Miss Julia up
+to such a pitch of frenzy, that I believe she would have stopped at
+nothing to accomplish the removal of her hated rival,--the door was
+suddenly flung open by your father; his face was pale, and he was
+evidently labouring under strong excitement. 'Julia,' he said, 'do you
+still wish to be my wife?'
+
+"There was no need of a reply, could he not see the sudden light in her
+eyes, the quick bright flash that spread like wildfire over her face.
+
+"That day week they were married, and went away from Brampton for a
+time.
+
+"I remained behind with my enemy, watching and waiting; but I could do
+her no harm. Your grandmother loved her as the apple of her eye. I could
+see Miss Julia--now Mrs. Robert Linchmore,--was as nothing to her. Then
+I tried to cause a quarrel between her and young Mr. Archer; in vain;
+they loved too well, my arts were useless, my plans and wishes
+powerless.
+
+"Your parents returned. A year passed away, and then you were born; but
+I could see your father was not happy. He still loved Miss Mary, strive
+as he would against it, while your mother treated her like a dog.
+
+"Another year, and your sister was born; but things went worse. Your
+mother was no sooner up and about again than your uncle's health failed
+terribly, and he and Mr. Archer went abroad.
+
+"Six months passed, during which your mother grew more insanely jealous
+of Miss Mary, and more tyrannical. She bore it all uncomplainingly; but
+I saw that she worried and fretted in secret, and grew thinner and
+thinner every day.
+
+"One morning I went hastily into her room, and found her working a
+baby's cap, which she hurriedly thrust on one side as I entered; but my
+suspicions were aroused at her evident confusion, and glancing at her,
+her sin--if sin it was, became evident to my eyes, and I flew, rather
+than walked to my mistress's room. The scene that followed between her
+and Miss Mary I will not describe; but through it all--although she did
+not deny the imputation we cast on her,--she vowed she was innocent, and
+Mr. Archer's lawful wife. I believed her then. I know she told the truth
+now.
+
+"That night she fled from the Park, while your father left soon after to
+join his brother, declaring he would never live with his wife again
+until she had done Miss Mary justice. Your grandmother never recovered
+the shock of all these terrible doings, she took Miss Mary's sin to
+heart. I don't think she believed it: but she sorrowed, and refused to
+be comforted, and soon after died. Then news reached us of Mr. Archer's
+death."
+
+Jane stopped again, and lay back feebly against the pillows.
+
+"With the news of his death came a letter, addressed, in his
+handwriting, to Miss Mary. I recognised the writing, and kept the
+letter, mad as it made me to read those loving words of his written to
+another. She never had the letter, or her marriage lines, which were
+with it."
+
+"Wretched woman!" said Mr. Linchmore, sternly. "Had you no heart--no
+mercy?"
+
+"No, none. And now I must hasten to close, for I am weak and faint. I
+told no one of the letter, but tracked, by my mistress's order, Miss
+Mary. I found her at last. She had heard of her husband's death, for she
+wore widow's mourning, and looked heart-broken. She was poor, too, with
+only the small annuity old Mrs. Linchmore had been able to leave her;
+for her husband, Mr. Archer, had not, I believe, a farthing to give her
+at his death; but what cared I for that. I took away the one tie that
+bound her to this earth--I took her child."
+
+"That was not my mother's sin," said Mr. Linchmore, interrupting her.
+"Thank God for that!"
+
+"Stop! Don't interrupt me! I did it, because she bade me do it. I don't
+think then I should have done it else, because _he_ was dead, and my
+heart did not feel so hard as it had done, and I should have told my
+mistress how I had belied Miss Mary to her, had I dared summon the
+courage to do so; but I dreaded to think of her anger at being deceived.
+Well, enough, I took the child. He was a lovely, sweet infant, gentle
+and fair like his mother had been, and I could not find it in my heart
+to do the evil with him my mistress wished; for her heart could not but
+feel savage at the thought of his being her husband's child. So I kept
+him hid away till long after I had stolen him; then I carried him to Mr.
+Vavasour, a kind, mild looking, middle-aged gentleman, who had often
+visited the Park at one time; but now, ever since Mrs. Robert had been
+left in possession, never came.
+
+"Mr. Vavasour refused to take the child at first, but I pleaded so hard;
+I told him what the boy's fate would be if he turned a deaf ear to my
+entreaties; that the mother hated him as a love child, and that the
+knowledge of his birth would bring sin and shame upon her, and much more
+beside, and in the end he consented to adopt him,--and did. Four years
+after this, your father returned home, and things went on more smoothly;
+your brother Charles was born, and my mistress seemed at last happy, and
+her restless spirit satisfied; but her temper, at times, was as bad as
+ever, and I don't believe, at heart, she was happy with the weight of
+the sin she thought she had been guilty of, on her conscience. How Miss
+Mary came to guess we had aught to do with her boy, I know not. But
+about a year after your brother's birth she came and taxed us with the
+theft. How altered she was! Grief and the mother's sorrow had done their
+work surely, and I scarcely dared look on the wreck I had helped to
+make.
+
+"She told us that the loss of her child had driven her mad, and that for
+months she had been watched and looked after. She conjured
+us--implored--all in vain; my mistress denied our guilt, and defied her;
+but your father believed the poor, sorrowing, frantic creature, and
+never spoke to his wife after, but left her, taking his children with
+him.
+
+"He never saw your mother again.
+
+"My mistress bore up bravely after he was gone. None guessed of her
+desolated heart, or that it still loved so passionately. During the five
+years that followed, I scarce know how she lived; I could see her heart
+was fast breaking, and that all her hope in life was gone. She grew more
+tyrannical than ever; there was not one of the few servants we had but
+did not fear her and think her mad. She would go down the small
+staircase that led from her room out into the park, and roam for hours
+at night. As she grew weaker and weaker, and I felt she would die, my
+heart relented more and more. I could not bear to witness her misery.
+Then I owned the boy was alive, and begged and implored her to let us
+find him and restore him to his mother; I dared not say I knew where he
+was, or that he was not her husband's child; but she resisted my
+entreaties with violence, and made me swear I never would tell what we
+had done. She grew worse and worse; but struggled on, defying every
+thing and everyone. I had a hard matter to get her to see the young
+doctor even.
+
+"One night she was so weak she would lay on a mattress on the floor, not
+having the strength to get into bed; as I sat by her side and watched,
+she fell into a deep sleep. Soon after, I heard steps coming up the
+secret stairs; I needed no one to tell who that was--my heart whispered
+it was Miss Mary long before she stood before me. She never said a word,
+but sat away on the other side of my mistress. My heart shuddered as I
+looked at her; she was more altered than ever; her hair was quite grey,
+such lovely fair hair as it had been!--the softness of her face was
+gone; the sweet gentle look had gone too, and a painful frown contracted
+her forehead. While I gazed, I forgot Miss Mary, and could think of
+nothing but the angry, bereaved, half-crazed Mrs. Archer. I knew then,
+that those who had injured her had no mercy to expect at her hands, and
+I felt afraid of her, and yet I dared not bid her go, but wished my
+mistress would tell her the truth when she awoke from that death-like
+slumber. I prayed she might,--for what harm could that angry mother do
+to a dying woman? But my prayer was not answered. I forgot, when I
+breathed it, my own sinfulness,--forgot, even, that if vengeance came at
+all, it would fall on me; and, if I had thought of it, I would not have
+stayed the truth from being told then. I swear I would not. I was too
+miserable. God knows, I would have told, myself, but for the sake of my
+oath, and that angry look on Mrs. Archer's face; it tied my tongue.
+
+"When my mistress roused, I shall never forget her anger at seeing Mrs.
+Archer. She heaped a storm of abuse on her head, while Mrs. Archer
+prayed and wept by turns; promising even to bless those who had robbed
+her, if they would only give her back her lost treasure. 'Give me back
+my boy!' was the ever repeated, fervent, agonized cry of her heart."
+
+"She did not, could not plead in vain," cried Mr. Linchmore. "No, no, my
+mother was not so bad as that!"
+
+"Nerve your heart to bear the rest, it is soon told. Tears streamed from
+her eyes in vain. She pleaded in vain. My mistress was obdurate. 'I
+die,' she said, 'but I die with the knowledge that you, who have been
+the one stumbling-block of my life, and have made it miserable, and a
+curse to me, are even more wretched than myself, for I will never speak
+the word that will make you happy. The secret shall die with me.' When
+Mrs. Archer saw that all her pleading was vain, she grew frantic, and
+scarce knew what she said in her madness. My mistress grew even more
+angry than she. I strove to quiet her, to stay the torrent of words, but
+her whole frame shook with angry passion as she sat up unaided on the
+bed. I saw it was too much for her, tried to avert it, but, before she
+could utter a word, she fell back again. 'God have mercy upon me!' she
+cried, and with that one prayer on her lips she died. I know no more, I
+fell insensible, as Mrs. Archer, seeing her last hope gone, gave one
+terrible fearful cry of despair."
+
+Jane paused. "I have no more to tell," she said feebly, "I thank God I
+have told it; I never would, but for the sake of the curl. I daren't let
+it lie in my bosom else."
+
+It was many minutes before Mr. Linchmore could speak, and then his voice
+quavered and shook, and his hands trembled as he drew them from his
+face, and asked, "Where is the mother--the child?"
+
+"Mr. Vavasour, up at the Park now, is the child. Mrs. Archer, the
+mother, lives down in the wood, yonder. I have never seen her but once
+since I came here; I have fled the sight of her. You know her as Mrs.
+Grey. You will see her, tell her what I say; she will believe it fast
+enough."
+
+"Your sin has been fearful; God knows it has," said Mr. Linchmore,
+trying to speak composedly.
+
+"I have been a sinful woman; humbly I acknowledge it, but if my sin has
+been great, what has been its punishment? Look in my face, you will read
+the traces of suffering there; but my heart, you cannot read that; and
+that has suffered tenfold."
+
+"What proof have you of all you say?"
+
+"Mrs. Archer will need none," she said, "if you tell her Tabitha swears
+it's the truth. But here's the letter with her marriage lines," she
+added, taking one from under her pillow, "many's the time I've been
+tempted to destroy it, but somehow daren't do it; and here's another old
+Mr. Vavasour gave me to keep, stating when and how we had received the
+child; in it you'll find the beads he wore round his neck when I stole
+him."
+
+"Are these all the proofs you can give?"
+
+"No. I've a stronger one than this. The child had a dark mark on his
+arm, it could not have escaped his mother's eye; it can't have worn
+away, it must be there now, and that'll tell who he is plainer and
+better than any words of mine. "Are you going?" she asked, as Mr.
+Linchmore rose.
+
+"Yes, the sooner I tell the dreadful tale the better, if my heart does
+not break the while. Have you anything else to say? Would you wish to
+see Mrs. Archer?"
+
+"Oh! no! no!" she said, "don't send her; I know I've no mercy to expect
+at her hands, I showed her none. She'll hate and curse me, may be."
+
+"You have little mercy to expect from one you have so deeply injured,"
+replied Mr. Linchmore, "but I will see you again, or send another to
+speak with you. My thoughts are in a whirl, and I cannot--I feel
+incapable of talking to you today."
+
+"And must I be satisfied with this?" said Jane, "well, I submit; I have
+not deserved a kind word from you. Still I loved your mother."
+
+"She would have been better for your hate," he replied, moodily, "but in
+case I should not come again, I leave you my forgiveness for the evil
+you have helped to work, though it goes hard against my heart to give
+it; but you have a higher mercy to ask for than mine. I trust you have
+implored that already--humbly and sincerely."
+
+"God knows I have," replied Jane, feebly.
+
+Mr. Linchmore went slowly from the cottage, scarcely heeding Mrs. Marks'
+curtseys and parting words, and struck across the fields towards the
+wood.
+
+It was a sinful, grievous tale, the one he had just heard, and a bitter
+trial to him, not only to listen to it, but to know that from his lips
+must come the words to denounce his mother,--proclaim her guilt. It went
+bitterly against him, although he had no loving reverence for his
+parent; still, it must be done, his misery must make another's
+happiness, must restore the son to his mother. He hesitated not, but
+walked firmly on, perhaps angrily.
+
+At the corner of the wood he met Marks, but his heart was too full for
+words with any one, and he merely acknowledged the passing touch of his
+hat, as he turned off into one of the by-paths, a nearer cut to Mrs.
+Grey's cottage. Just as he was about to emerge again into the broad
+beaten path, scarcely a dozen yards from the cottage, he stopped for a
+moment to collect his thoughts. A slight rustle in the bushes near
+attracted his attention. He looked up, and saw a man, gun in hand,
+creeping cautiously out of the underwood.
+
+At another time Mr. Linchmore would have confronted him at once, but now
+he allowed him to pass on unmolested. The man crossed the path, reached
+the opposite side, and was about plunging again into the bushes, when
+Robert Vavasour's hand arrested his footsteps.
+
+"What do you here with that gun, my man?" he asked.
+
+It was growing dusk, almost twilight in the wood; still, as the man
+suddenly turned his face full on Vavasour, the latter exclaimed,
+
+"Ah! it is you, is it? You villain! you don't escape me this time."
+
+A short quick scuffle, a bright flash, a loud report, and Robert
+Vavasour dropped to the ground.
+
+With a great oath, the man sprang up, but ere he could stir one step,
+Mr. Linchmore's hand was upon him. A desperate struggle ensued; but a
+stronger arm, a more powerful frame, contended with him now, and in a
+few moments he lay prostrate, but still struggling, on the ground.
+
+"Could you be content with nothing less than murder?" asked a voice,
+sternly.
+
+Mr. Linchmore shuddered as he recognised "Goody Grey."
+
+"For God's sake, Mrs. Grey, go and seek help for the wounded man
+yonder."
+
+"Why should I?" she exclaimed, fiercely. "I will never stir a finger for
+you or yours. I have sworn it."
+
+"It is your son, your long-lost son! Tabitha bid me tell you so."
+
+Goody Grey,--or rather Mrs. Archer's,--whole frame trembled violently;
+she quivered and shook, and leant heavily on her staff, as though she
+would have fallen.
+
+"Fly!" he continued. "For God's sake, fly! Rouse yourself, Mrs. Archer,
+and aid your son."
+
+"My son!" she repeated, softly and tenderly, but as if doubting his
+words.
+
+Again Mr. Linchmore implored her, again she heard those words "It is
+your son!" which seemed to burn her brain. But the power of replying, of
+moving, seemed taken from her.
+
+A minute passed, and then the weakness passed away. Her eyes flashed,
+her face flushed, then blanched again, while with a mighty effort she
+drew up her tall figure to its utmost height, and proudly, but
+hurriedly, went over to where Robert lay.
+
+She staunched the blood flowing from the wound, and tenderly knelt by
+his side and lifted his head gently on her bosom.
+
+There was a slight break in the branches of the trees overhead, so that
+what little light there was, streamed through the gap full down on the
+spot where Mrs. Archer knelt.
+
+She raised his coat sleeve, and baring his arm, bent down her head over
+it.
+
+A moment after a wild cry rent the air, and rang through the wood.
+
+"Oh! help! help!" she cried; "Oh! my son! my son!"
+
+There was no need to cry for help; the sound of the gun had been heard,
+and the keepers came crowding to the spot, and with them, Marks.
+
+A litter was soon constructed for the wounded man, and once more he was
+mournfully and sorrowfully borne away towards the Hall.
+
+Marks drew near the captured poacher, now standing sullenly and silently
+near.
+
+"Ah!" said Marks, as he was being led away, "I thought no good had
+brought farmer Hodge down here, four years ago. You'll may be swing for
+this, my lad; and break your father's heart, as you did your mother's,
+not so long ago."
+
+With which consolatory remark, Marks went back to his cottage.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+DESPAIR!
+
+ "Ah! what have eyes to do with sleep,
+ That seek, and vainly seek to weep?
+ No dew on the dark lash appears,--
+ The heart is all too full for tears."
+
+ L. E. L.
+
+ "The world's a room of sickness, where each heart,
+ Knows its own anguish and unrest,
+ The truest wisdom there, and noblest art,
+ Is his, who skills of comfort best,
+ Whom by the softest step and gentlest tone,
+ Enfeebled spirits own,
+ And love to raise the languid eye,
+ Where, like an angel's wing, they feel him fleeting by."
+
+ CHRISTIAN YEAR.
+
+
+Anne sat in the solitude of her own thoughts; not alone, for her husband
+was at a table near, busy with his morrow's sermon; but Anne, for once,
+did not mind the silence, she had many things to think of, many things
+that made her sad. First, the little dead child lying now so cold and
+still; then his poor, sorrowing, heart-broken mother, whom she had
+tried, but ineffectually, to comfort; and then the father, who ought to
+be the one earthly stay on which the wife's heart might lean, and whose
+love should wean away the sad remembrance, or soften the blow. But Anne
+had found out that a great gulf lay between husband and wife, though
+what had separated them baffled her utmost skill to discover.
+
+Robert must love his wife passionately, else why had he lifted her so
+tenderly in his arms, as she lay insensible when the truth of her great
+loss broke upon her; why had he carried her away, and as he laid her on
+her own bed, bent so lovingly over her, murmuring, as he chafed her
+hands, "My poor, stricken darling. My own lost love;" and yet, when
+consciousness returned, how self possessed! how altered! kind and
+considerate as before, but the loving words, the loving looks were
+wanting. And Amy, who had seemed so happy only a month ago, surely more
+than grief for her boy had fixed that stony look on her face, and
+caused those tearless, woeful eyes.
+
+Anne's thoughts grew quite painful at last; the eternal scratch of her
+husband's pen irritated her.
+
+"Do put down your pen for a minute, Tom. I feel so miserable."
+
+"In half a moment," he said. "There--now I am ready to listen. What was
+it you said?"
+
+"That I was miserable."
+
+"I do not wonder at it, there has been enough to make us all feel
+sorrowful."
+
+"Yes, but it is more than the poor child's death makes me feel so."
+
+"What else?" he asked.
+
+"Why Amy herself, and then her husband."
+
+"Let us pick the wife to pieces first, Anne."
+
+"Oh! Tom, it is no scandal at all, but the plain truth. I wish it were
+otherwise," she said with a sigh.
+
+"Well, begin at the beginning, and let me judge."
+
+"You put it all out of my head. There is no beginning," she said
+crossly.
+
+"Then the end," he replied.
+
+"There is neither beginning nor end: you make me feel quite vexed, Tom."
+
+"Neither beginning nor end? Then there can be nothing to tell."
+
+"No, nothing. You had better go on with your sermon and make an end of
+that."
+
+"I have made an end of it," he said, laughing, "and now, joking aside,
+Anne, what have you to say about Mrs. Vavasour?"
+
+"If you are serious, Tom, I will tell you, but not else," she replied.
+
+"I am serious, Anne; quite serious."
+
+"Then tell me what is to be done with that poor bereaved Amy,--who has
+not shed a single tear since her child's death, four days ago now;--or
+her husband, who I verily believe worships her, and yet is as cold as a
+stone, and from no want of love on her part either, for I can see
+plainly by the way she follows him with her eyes sometimes, that she is
+as fond of him as--as--"
+
+"You are of me," he said.
+
+"Nonsense, Tom. They were so happy last time we came over to see them,
+that I cannot understand what has caused the change. Can you make any
+guess at all so as to help me? for oh! Tom, I would give the world to
+know."
+
+"Curiosity again, Anne?"
+
+"No, not so," she replied, "or if it is, it is in the right place this
+time; as I want to help them to make up the difference, whatever it is
+but do not see how I can manage it, when I am so totally in the dark.
+One thing I am certain of, Amy will die unless I can bring her to shed
+some tears, so as to remove that stony look."
+
+"She has _one_ hope, _one_ consolation. Surely I need not remind my wife
+to lead her heart and thoughts gradually and gently to that."
+
+"I have tried it, tried everything; but, Tom, there is no occasion
+whatever for preaching.
+
+"Anne! Anne!"
+
+"Yes, I know it's wrong to say so, but it is the truth notwithstanding;
+I feel something else should be tried. She is too submissive under the
+blow, too patient; not a murmur has escaped her lips, if there had, I
+should stand a better chance of seeing tears; but as it is there is no
+need of consolation. I verily believe she wants to die. And then that
+Frances, I sometimes think she has had something to do with it all; you
+know I always disliked that girl, and never thought she had a spark of
+feeling in her, until I saw her coming away from poor Bertie's room that
+sad evening, and a more woe-begone, remorseful face I never wish to see;
+and then see how distracted she has been since. Isabella tells me it is
+dreadful to be with her."
+
+"Poor girl, I pity her with all my heart, she feels she has been mainly
+instrumental in bringing all this misery upon Mrs. Vavasour."
+
+"I am sure," said Anne, more to herself than her husband, "she has a
+great deal more than Bertie's death to answer for; she nearly broke his
+mother's and Charley's heart four years ago, and I half believe she has
+had something to do with the husband's now."
+
+"Be more charitable, Anne, and do not lay so many sins to her charge.
+That last is a very grievous one."
+
+"Well," said his wife, rising, "after all my talk, Tom, you have not
+helped me one bit, I do believe I am going away more miserable than ever
+to that poor Amy."
+
+"Things do look dark indeed, Anne," said he as he kissed her, "but we
+must hope in God's mercy all will be better soon; may He help you in
+your work of love with the poor heart-sorrowing mother."
+
+As Anne went out she met Frances Strickland's maid, "If you please
+Ma'am, where shall I find Mr. Hall, my young mistress wishes to see
+him."
+
+"I will tell him myself," said Anne, and back she went.
+
+"Tom! Frances Strickland wishes to see you."
+
+"To see me!" he exclaimed. "I have promised to walk as far as the
+turnpike with Linchmore. That woman from whom the child caught the fever
+sent to beg he would call on her some time this morning; he named two
+o'clock, and it is close upon that now. Will not Miss Strickland be
+satisfied with you as my substitute?"
+
+"I never thought of asking, and, indeed, I should not like to. She might
+think I was jealous." Mr. Hall laughed outright.
+
+"You are in such a dreadfully teasing mood this morning, Tom; I have no
+patience with you! Perhaps Frances is going to clear up all this
+mystery? I told you a moment ago I suspected she had had something to do
+with it, and now her remorse may be greater than she can bear;
+repentance may have come with her grief for poor Bertie. I only hope, if
+it is so, that she is not too late to make amends."
+
+"Then I must make my excuses to Linchmore, and give up my walk," he
+said, with a sigh; "and go and hear what she has to say?"
+
+"Yes, do, Tom, that will be so good of you. I will wait here, but do not
+be long, as this is your last day with me, you know."
+
+As soon as Mr. Hall had gone, Anne half regretted that she had not done
+as he suggested, and seen Frances instead. Suppose she should try and
+sow dissension in his heart? Anne's face flushed hotly at the bare idea,
+then again she consoled herself with the thought that he would be sure
+to come and tell her if she did, for the sake of the love he bore for
+her; still Anne passed a fidgety, uncomfortable half hour ere he
+returned.
+
+Mr. Hall's face was grave; graver than Anne ever remembered to have seen
+it, and she waited for him to speak first, and checked the impatient
+question already on her lips.
+
+"It is worse than I thought, Anne, much worse. Your judgment did not
+lead you astray. She has separated husband and wife."
+
+"Then she has told you all, Tom. Oh! how glad I am, not only for Amy's
+sake but for her own; it would have been so dreadful for her to have
+lived on upholding the falsehoods she must have told to work her ends."
+
+"That is the worst part of the business, Anne, she has unfortunately
+told the truth, and, as far as I can see, the chance of reconciling
+those who ought to be heart and soul to each other is remote indeed.
+Time and the wife's love--you say she does love him--may, by God's
+grace, do much. I see nothing that you or I can do."
+
+"Wretched girl! What has she told?"
+
+"What Vavasour ought only to have heard from his wife's lips. Of her
+previous love for another and of their unfortunate meeting the day of
+her marriage."
+
+"I always hoped she had told him," said Anne, clasping her hands
+despairingly. "The concealment was no sin on Amy's part, only weakness.
+But as for Frances, there can be no excuse for her. She has been
+cruelly, shamefully unkind, and revengeful!"
+
+"She has; there is no denying it, but all through your friend's own
+fault; she nursed in her heart--which should have been as clear as day
+to her husband--a secret; and that one sin has brought in the end its
+own punishment, and while we blame Frances' culpable revenge, we must
+blame the wife's breach of faith and disloyalty."
+
+"Oh, Tom, what hard words!" cried Anne, "poor Amy's has not been a
+guilty secret."
+
+"No, but appearances are sadly against her, and we know nothing of what
+the husband thinks; even if he does believe her guiltless, he must
+naturally feel wounded at his wife's want of love and trust."
+
+"Yes," replied Anne, sadly, "what you say is very just and true. Can
+nothing then be done? Nothing at all?"
+
+"Frances is ready to make what atonement she can for her fault; it may
+help us a little, but very little, I fear. She has promised to tell
+Vavasour that her own jealousy and grief at being supplanted in
+another's love by his wife, determined her on being revenged; she
+cannot unsay what she has said, because it is the truth; but she who
+caused the breach may be allowed to plead for forgiveness for herself
+and the wife she has injured. The repentance is no secret, Anne; she
+desired me to tell you all, and beg you to plead for her with Mrs.
+Vavasour."
+
+"Do you think I shall plead in vain, or that she will with Mr.
+Vavasour?"
+
+"I trust not," he said, doubtfully; "the knowledge that his wife has not
+intentionally sinned, but only through fear of losing his love, and the
+conviction that she loves him may soften his heart."
+
+"May; but I see you think it will be a long time first, and in the
+meantime Amy will break her heart. Oh! Tom, I don't believe he can be so
+cruel if he loves her; just now, too, when she is so heart broken, so
+sadly bereaved. Do make Frances tell Mr. Vavasour at once."
+
+"I intended to have done so," he replied, "but Vavasour has gone out, so
+we must wait as patiently as we can until he returns. In the meantime,
+Anne, I will give you something to occupy your time and thoughts. I have
+promised Miss Strickland that you will ask Mrs. Vavasour's forgiveness
+for her. She says it is hopeless; but that cannot be," he said, as Anne
+thought, somewhat sternly; "you had better go at once and ask it; she
+who has sinned herself, and knows the repentant heart's craving for
+forgiveness, what hope can she have of pardon if she withholds hers from
+one who has sinned against her even seventy times seven."
+
+Anne said not a word, but with desponding heart prepared to go.
+
+"I have only an hour to spare," said Mr. Hall. "It is now three, and at
+four I must get ready to start home. I have ordered the pony-carriage at
+half-past."
+
+"I shall be with you long before that," replied Anne, as she closed the
+door.
+
+Amy sat just where Anne had left her only an hour ago; the same
+hopelessly despairing, fixed, death-like look on her face, which was as
+white as the shawl wrapped round her. As Anne looked, she wondered if
+Frances alone had wrought the sad change, while her heart sank within
+her at the apparently hopeless task her husband had imposed upon her,
+and she hesitated and faltered slightly ere she went at once, as was her
+wont, to the point in view. Her sister Julia would have brought the
+subject gradually round to Frances, but that was not Anne's way; she
+was, in fact, too impetuous, rushing headlong into a difficulty, facing
+the danger, and braving it with that strong, true heart.
+
+"My husband has been to see Frances Strickland to-day, Amy."
+
+There was no reply; Anne hardly expected any, but Amy raised her eyes,
+and looked hastily and inquiringly in her face. Anne took courage;
+perhaps the very fact of Amy's knowing another held her secret might
+open the floodgates of her heart.
+
+"She hid nothing from Tom; told him all, everything, and is desperately
+sorry, as well she may be, for all the misery she has caused you."
+
+"As well she may be," repeated Amy.
+
+"She is repentant--truly repentant, Amy."
+
+"I know it; have known it for days past," was the cold reply.
+
+"She begs your forgiveness most humbly."
+
+"I know that also, and have given it."
+
+"She says otherwise, Amy," said Anne, rather puzzled.
+
+"I have forgiven her for my darling's loss. But for the other; if she
+has dared tell you of it--of her cruelty, I never will. I have said so.
+Let us talk of something else."
+
+"No, Amy, I must talk of this--only of this. Does not the very fact of
+her having owned her fault show how sincerely sorry she is. Think of
+Frances, the proud Frances, sueing for forgiveness; think how miserable,
+utterly miserable, she must be to stoop to that. How, almost
+broken-hearted! Surely, Amy, for the sake of her prayers--all our
+prayers, for the sake of the love your poor Bertie had for her, you will
+forgive her."
+
+"No. Had my boy lived he would have avenged his mother's wrongs, and
+hated her, even as I do."
+
+"Alas, Amy! You hate her. Your heart never used to be so cruel as this."
+
+"No, it did not. She has made me what I am. Has she not pursued me with
+her revengeful cruelty for years? Has she not taken my only earthly hope
+from me, even my husband's love? And yet you wonder that I am
+changed--can ask me to forgive her."
+
+"No, Amy, not taken your husband's love; he loves you still."
+
+"If he did, I should not be sitting here, broken hearted and alone, with
+nothing but my own sorrowful thoughts, and--and you to comfort me."
+
+"He will forgive you, and take you to his heart in time, Amy."
+
+"Never! How can I convince him that I love him now? His very kindness
+chills me--so different to what it was; the changed tone of his voice
+tells me I have lost his love. He lives; yet is dead to me,--is mine,
+yet, how far off from me; and she who has wrought me all this misery,
+done all she has it in her power to do, now sues for forgiveness. Is it
+possible I can forgive, or clasp her hand in mine again?" The stony look
+was gradually relaxing, a slight, colour mantled her cheeks, and she
+concluded, almost passionately,--"No, Anne, I will not forgive her! Will
+not! Urge me no more. I cannot speak to her, much less see her again."
+
+"And yet think of her kindness to your boy. He remembered it, and gave
+her his top when he was dying."
+
+"You are cruel to remind me of it," said Amy, taking some fresh flowers
+off the table she was wreathing into a cross for Bertie; her last sad,
+mournful, but loving work.
+
+Anne drew near, and passed her arm lovingly round her waist.
+
+"This," said she, touching the cross, "is the emblem of your faith; and
+what does it not teach? It tells you that He who died on it to save us
+miserable sinners forgave even his murderers. 'Forgive them, Father, for
+they know not what they do.' Not only forgave them, but excused their
+faults, and interceded for them. Amy, if this is your belief, if you
+indeed take Him as your model, then forgive, even as he forgave; if not,
+never dare to lay this sweet white cross on your dead child's breast;
+would he not now, a pure and immortal spirit, sorrow at his mother's
+want of faith, and hardness of heart."
+
+Amy's head drooped; every particle of angry colour fled from her face,
+while the hard, unforgiving look gradually died away as Anne went on.
+
+"Spare me, Anne! Spare me!" she said.
+
+"No, Amy dear, I must not, although it is as cruel to me to speak to you
+so harshly as it is for you to listen, and believe me when I say that
+your child, your little Bertie, was never further off from you than
+now, when you forgive not another her trespasses, even as you hope your
+own will be forgiven. Oh, Amy! think--can you kneel night and morning,
+and repeat that one sentence in your prayers, knowing how utterly you
+reject it? Can you press a last loving kiss on your child's pure lips,
+knowing how you are hugging one darling sin at your heart? Amy, Amy!
+listen to my warning voice, and forgive even as you hope to be
+forgiven," and Anne bent forward and lovingly kissed her forehead.
+
+The spell was broken: as Anne gently withdrew her lips, tears welled up
+from the poor overcharged heart, and Amy wept,--wept an agony of tears.
+
+"Oh, Anne!" she said presently, "Stop! stop! You will crush my heart. I
+_will_ forgive her, for the sake of my boy, my darling Bertie."
+
+"God bless you, dear Amy," replied Anne, delighted at not only having
+gained her wish, but at the sight of the tears she was shedding. "These
+tears will do you good. My heart has ached to see, day after day, your
+cold, calm, listless face."
+
+Anne could have cried herself for very joy, to think how nicely things
+were coming round; as for Robert Vavasour, of course, with Frances to
+plead for forgiveness, and his wife to throw her arms round his neck,
+and vow she loved him better than all the world beside, his stubborn
+heart must give in; so Anne sat quite contented and happy by Amy's side,
+and let her weep on. Then, as her watch told her the hour for her
+husband's departure drew near, she soothed and comforted Amy's weak,
+quivering heart, as well as she was able, and went--for Amy would go at
+once--as far as Frances Strickland's room door with her, then flew,
+rather than walked, to her own. Mr. Hall, carpet-bag in hand, was just
+coming out, and nearly ran over her as she burst open the door.
+
+"Is it you, Anne?" he said, as he staggered back, "I thought, at least,
+it was a cannon ball coming."
+
+"It's only my head," she said, laughing, "I was in such a hurry. I felt
+I should be too late. I ought to have packed up your things before I
+went to Amy."
+
+"Ought is a very fine word, but it is generally a late one."
+
+"I am so sorry," said Anne in a repentant voice.
+
+"My next wife shall never say she is sorry," he said smiling.
+
+"What a hardened wretch she will be!"
+
+"Not so," he replied, "she shall be the most gentle, submissive creature
+in the world; everything shall be in its right place, and there shall be
+a right time for everything."
+
+"Yes, Tom, I know I do try you dreadfully; but, all the same, you will
+never get another little wife to love you better than I do."
+
+"True, Anne," he said, "or one that I could ever love as I love you."
+
+"And now, Tom, do put down that horrid carpet-bag, I hate to feel you
+are going to leave me here even for a few days all by myself; and for
+the first time too. I can't think what I shall do without you."
+
+"But it is more than half-past four," he replied.
+
+"But not railway time, only the poor old pony's, and I am sure he will
+not mind waiting just to oblige his mistress."
+
+Mr. Hall sat down, and placed her by his side. "And now, Anne," he said,
+"tell me what success you have had with Mrs. Vavasour? but do not make a
+long story of it, as I really must be away in another ten minutes."
+
+"I had a hard matter to persuade her, Tom, but I managed it at last, and
+she is with Frances now. I feel so happy, because I am sure all will be
+right; poor Amy! how she did cry."
+
+"She cried at last, then?"
+
+"Heartily; and I know it will do her a world of good; she looked far
+happier when I left her than she has done for days."
+
+"And now, Anne, I really must go and see after the pony, and settle the
+carpet bag, but I will come back once more, and say good-bye."
+
+Ten minutes, twenty, slipped by, and Anne began to fear her husband had
+forgotten his promise; she wondered at his delay, and looked round to
+see if he had forgotten anything. His sermon, blotting book, small
+ink-bottle, all had gone. She turned to the chest of drawers and was
+ransacking them hurriedly, when she heard him come back.
+
+"Why, Tom," she said, without turning round, "Here are all your
+handkerchiefs, every one of them! Don't talk of my carelessness after
+this," and she laughingly held them up as a trophy.
+
+But her husband's face was white, so very white, that Anne's heart
+turned sick, and almost stopped beating.
+
+With a faint cry she crept up to him, and with a timid, frightened look,
+gazed into his face.
+
+"What is it?" she whispered, "are you ill? Oh! tell me! Tell me!"
+
+"No, no. It's worse, Anne, worse," he murmured hoarsely.
+
+"Oh! for God's sake tell me, Tom! or I shall die."
+
+"It is Vavasour," he said, as he took her in his arms and held her to
+his heart. "Forgive me for having frightened you so, Anne. But Vavasour
+has been shot."
+
+"Thank God you are well?" said Anne, bursting into tears, "But, oh, Amy!
+my poor darling Amy!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE LAST OF LITTLE BERTIE.
+
+ "She put him on a snow-white shroud,
+ A chaplet on his head;
+ And gathered only primroses
+ To scatter o'er the dead.
+
+ She laid him in his little grave--
+ 'Twas hard to lay him there:
+ When spring was putting forth its flowers,
+ And everything was fair.
+
+ And down within the silent grave,
+ He laid his weary head;
+ And soon the early violets
+ Grew o'er his grassy bed.
+
+ The mother went her household ways,
+ Again she knelt in prayer;
+ And only asked of Heaven its aid
+ Her heavy lot to bear."
+
+ L. E. L.
+
+
+On leaving Frances Strickland, Amy went to poor Bertie's room to lay the
+fair white cross in his coffin, and was bending down over her lost
+darling in an agony of tears which old Hannah vainly attempted to check,
+when the sudden, hasty gallop of a horse away from the stables struck
+her ear. It was the groom going for Dr. Bernard.
+
+Amy's mind, already unnerved and unstrung, was easily alarmed.
+
+"Alas! Hannah," said she, drawing near the darkened window "has any
+accident happened that some-one rides so furiously?"
+
+"My dear Miss Amy," replied Hannah, forgetting in her tender pity Amy's
+new tie, and thinking of her only as the wee child she had so lovingly
+nursed on her knee, "you must not be frightening yourself this way. What
+should have happened? God knows you've had enough to worry you. There,
+don't tremble that way, but let go the blind, and come away from the
+window."
+
+But Hannah's persuasions and entreaties were alike useless. Amy, with
+fluttering anxious heart still looked out through the deepening shadows
+of the day, now fast drawing into evening.
+
+Her husband was away. Oh! how she wished she could see him or hear his
+firm, yet for the last few days mournful step. Her heart had taken a
+strange fear, which she could neither shake off, nor subdue; a trembling
+nervous dread of some fast-coming evil.
+
+Mr. Linchmore came up the drive, and for a moment a joyous thrill crept
+through her as she thought it was her husband; but no, he came nearer
+still, then disappeared up the terrace with Mr. Hall, and only the groom
+with the pony carriage was left, standing quietly as it had stood ever
+since she had so eagerly strained her eyes from the window.
+
+Then once again--as it had done long, long ago--that strange, dull tramp
+from without smote her ear.
+
+Meanwhile, Anne had nerved her heart as well as she could, and gone
+sorrowfully enough to break the sad news to Amy.
+
+Not finding her either in her own or Miss Strickland's room, she guessed
+she was in poor Bertie's: besides, she missed the white cross.
+
+"Oh! Tom!" she said, going back to her husband, "What can I do? She is
+with her poor dead child, surely I need not; and indeed I feel I cannot
+go there and tell her."
+
+"No," replied Mr. Hall, after a moment's consideration, "perhaps it will
+be best to try and get Vavasour into his room without her knowledge. I
+think with caution it might be done. Go and remain near the nursery
+door, Anne; they will not have to pass it on their way up, and I will go
+and enjoin silence and caution."
+
+Anne sped away, and took up the post assigned her, listening eagerly,
+yet fearfully for the sound of the muffled footsteps, and straining her
+ears in the direction of the stairs, so that Amy stood before her,
+almost ere she had heard the opening of the door.
+
+Anne saw at once Amy guessed at some disaster, for she gently but firmly
+resisted Anne's endeavours to arrest her footsteps, and said, while she
+trembled excessively,
+
+"My husband! Is he dead?"
+
+"No. Oh no! Amy darling."
+
+Then as Amy would have passed on, she whispered, in a voice she in vain
+attempted to steady,
+
+"Don't go there Amy! pray don't!"
+
+But Amy paid no heed, but went and stood at the head of the stairs on
+the landing.
+
+In vain Mr. Linchmore and Mr. Hall gently tried to induce her to leave;
+she was deaf to reason.
+
+"I must be here," she murmured, with pale compressed lips, "I must be
+here."
+
+There was no help for it; so they bore him up slowly past her on into
+his room, and laid him on the bed, and there left him.
+
+"Do you think he will die?" asked Amy, fearfully, as she grasped old Dr.
+Bernard's arm tightly, some time later as he sat by the fire.
+
+How he felt for her, that old man, she so young, and so full of sorrow.
+He drew her hand in his, and stroked it gently and kindly.
+
+"Trust in God, and hope," was the reply.
+
+"I do trust," she replied, firmly. "I _will_ try and hope. But, oh! I
+love him! I love him!" she said.
+
+And this was the one cry for ever, if not on her lips, at her heart.
+
+She sat by the pale insensible form day after day; she knew no fatigue,
+heeded not the lapse of time. Once only she stole away to imprint a last
+loving kiss on her dead Bertie's lips ere they bore away the little
+coffin to its last resting-place in the cold churchyard; then silently
+she went back to her old place by her husband's bed-side. Would he die
+without one word? without recognising his wife who loved him so
+entirely? Oh! surely he would speak one loving word if but one; give her
+one loving look as of old. She felt that her boy's death was as nothing
+in comparison to this.
+
+As the love deep and strong welled up in her heart, she felt half
+frightened at its intensity, while it crept with a great fear as she
+whispered over and over again, "He will die." If he would but speak; or
+say one word.
+
+Alas! the words came at last, but only incoherent murmurings, indistinct
+unmeaning words. His eyes opened, and wandered about without knowledge,
+and though they rested on her, knew her not. His burning hands returned
+not the soft pressure, the loving touch, of hers. Would he die thus, and
+never know the deep love she had for him; the tenderness, devotion of
+her heart? She groaned in utter anguish and misery; but patiently sat
+on.
+
+In vain they tried, those kind friends, to draw her away; or if they did
+succeed in persuading her to lie down on a mattress on the floor, her
+large mournful eyes never closed in sleep, but still kept watch on the
+one loved form; her heart ever fearing he would die--praying that he
+might not.
+
+And Mrs. Grey, or rather Mrs. Archer, the newly-made mother; where was
+she? She kept watch, too, over her long-lost son, but without being the
+slightest help to the poor heart-broken wife, having apparently no
+thoughts, no words, no looks for anyone but the son who had been lost to
+her for so long. Fear mingled with her joy; fear like the wife's lest he
+should die.
+
+Amy was told part of her story by Mr. Linchmore, and made no objection
+to the poor mother sharing her watch; she was her husband's mother, that
+was enough. What he loved, she would love.
+
+Very silent and motionless Mrs. Archer sat. Amy sometimes wandered about
+restlessly, or gave way to passionate weeping now; but very patiently,
+very sorrowfully, the mother sat. They exchanged no words with each
+other, those two mournful watchers; Mrs. Archer had been told the young
+girl's relationship to her son, and sometimes her eyes rested lovingly
+on the pale, beautiful face.
+
+When Amy went to take a last look at her boy, she took Mrs. Archer's
+hand, and drew her away with her, and together they had stood and gazed
+at the little white marble face. Amy said no word, but as Mrs. Archer
+moved away, she murmured,--
+
+"Better thus, than lost. Lost for years."
+
+The shock of all these events proved too much for Anne, and when her
+husband returned on the Tuesday morning he could not but notice how wan
+and pale she looked, and so excitable, that the least thing in the world
+upset her. Instead of the glad, but perhaps sober welcome he expected,
+she threw her arms round his neck, as she had done at parting, and burst
+into tears, which she had a hard matter to prevent ending in hysterics.
+Mr. Hall's soothing, gentle manner soon calmed her; but she was very
+nearly giving way again that same evening, when he urged her immediate
+return home.
+
+"What! leave Amy, Tom, in all her trouble? Oh, no, never!"
+
+"The worry and excitement is too much for you, Anne, I cannot shut my
+eyes to that fact, and must not allow you to sacrifice your health for
+the sake of your friend."
+
+"My dear, dear husband, do let me stay?"
+
+But the look on her husband's face convinced her that his resolution was
+taken, and inflexible. She ceased to coax and persuade, and bethought
+her what could be done. Frances Strickland was still weak and ill;
+besides, her companionship was not in any way to be desired for Amy.
+
+"Have I not heard you, Anne," said Mr. Hall, as if answering her
+thoughts, "speak of some kind old lady, a great friend of Mrs.
+Vavasour's mother? Surely her aid as a companion, though not as a nurse,
+might be called upon now."
+
+Of course. Why had not Anne thought of it?
+
+In a few moments, with her usual haste, she was speeding away in search
+of Mrs. Linchmore, to beg her permission, before she invited Mrs.
+Elrington. It was given, though with Anne thought anything but a good
+grace, and the letter written and despatched, and Anne tried to appear
+content and satisfied that she was leaving; and doing right; and that
+Amy might not think it unkind. As she packed her box, she was forced to
+confess she _was_ weak, and that it was perhaps as well she had a
+husband to look after her some times, and that Mr. Hall was right, as he
+always was, in wishing her to have rest.
+
+The next few days passed much as the former ones to Amy, being, so to
+speak, a misery of doubt and hope; but on the morning of the third there
+came a change--a change for the better. Robert Vavasour slept. Not that
+dull, insensible sleep, a hovering between life and death, such as it
+had been when Amy first watched by him, but a soft, natural sleep; the
+breathing came faint, but regular; the face wore none of its former set,
+rigid look, but gradually grew into the old, old expression she loved so
+well. Then Amy knew her husband was better; God had been very merciful;
+he would not die and leave her desolate and alone; she knew it long
+before old Dr. Bernard's anxious face wore that pleasant, cheery smile,
+or Mrs. Archer had thanked God so fervently on her knees.
+
+Robert Vavasour slept, slept for hours; and during that long sleep Amy
+and Mrs. Archer arranged their future plans; her husband must not be
+told of his mother's existence yet; in the first place, he was not
+strong enough to bear any excitement, and in the next, the poor, fond
+mother hoped to win a little of his kindly feeling, if not his love,
+before she held him to her heart.
+
+"I hope to win his love in time," she said quietly to Amy, "to feel he
+loves me before he knows he is bound to do so. I cannot hope now for the
+first strong love of his heart--that deep earnest love with which he
+loves his wife; but I feel nevertheless that I shall be satisfied with
+my son's love. His face is like his father's, and he must be as noble
+and as good, to have won such love as yours."
+
+Then Mrs. Archer went away to seek Mr. Linchmore, and hear the story of
+her wrongs, leaving Amy to watch sadly and alone for her husband's
+awaking. Sadly, for how would his eyes meet hers? Would they have the
+same stern, severe look that had shivered her heart for so long? Would
+he still think she loved him not? But she would tell him all by-and-by.
+She could not live as she had lived: he must hear and judge whether she
+was as guilty as he thought her.
+
+Robert awoke to consciousness: awoke to see the soft eyes of his wife,
+looking mournfully, doubtfully, but oh! how lovingly at him. As his eyes
+met hers, a tender light played in them; he even pressed the hand she
+held so tremblingly in hers; but only for a moment, the next, as she
+bent down and pressed her lips to his, he gave a deep sigh, and turned
+his face away wearily.
+
+"He has not forgotten!" murmured Amy mournfully, as she rose and went to
+seek Dr. Bernard, "He has not forgiven!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+THE CLOUDS CLEAR.
+
+ "Nor could he from his heart throw off
+ The consciousness of his state;
+ It was there with a dull, uneasy sense,
+ A coldness and a weight.
+
+ It was there when he lay down at night,
+ It was there when at morn he rose;
+ He feels it whatever he does,
+ It is with him wherever he goes.
+
+ No occupation from his mind
+ That constant sense can keep;
+ It is present in his waking hours,
+ It is present in his sleep."
+
+ SOUTHEY.
+
+
+Mrs. Elrington could not resist Anne's pleading letter, but decided on
+going at once to Brampton; her heart was too compassionate to refuse to
+aid those in distress, and especially one who had ever held, as Amy had,
+a high place in her esteem and love.
+
+As soon as Anne received the answer so favourable to her wishes, she
+prepared at once to return home, and went to Amy--not with the glad news
+of the now expected guest, that she decided had best not be
+mentioned--but to say good-bye, and a very sorrowful one she felt it.
+
+Amy was sitting working in her own room, once poor Bertie's; her mind as
+busily employed as her fingers, only more mournfully; when Anne burst
+open the door in her usual hasty way.
+
+"Here I am!" she said, "Did you expect to see me? Did you think I should
+come to say good-bye?"
+
+"How should I?" answered Amy, "I never knew you were going to-day, and I
+am sorry to see you cloaked for your journey."
+
+"And so am I; but Tom would not rest quiet without me any longer, so
+dear, I must go; the pony chaise will be round directly, and yet I
+should have liked to have sat with you for an hour or so before
+leaving."
+
+"Then why did you put off coming to see me until the last moment, Anne?"
+
+"I did not know I was going until half an hour ago. How is that wretched
+Frances? Will you say I had not time to stay and see her; I should so
+hate--although, mind, I pity her with all my heart,--giving her a
+sisterly embrace."
+
+"But," said Amy, "What occasion is there for such a warm farewell?"
+
+"Ah! thereby hangs a tale. The fact is I don't wish to see Frances
+Strickland."
+
+"Poor girl! She has suffered so much."
+
+"I wonder you can find it in your heart to pity her; but you were always
+an angel of goodness."
+
+"You are wrong, Anne," sighed Amy, "and I think you should go and see
+Miss Strickland."
+
+"You are evidently in the dark, Amy; I thought Julia would have written
+to you, and told you, as--she has me,--that she has been so stupid, so
+foolish, as to engage herself to cousin Alfred, Frances' brother. Is it
+not tiresome of her?"
+
+"But the marriage will scarcely affect you, Anne?"
+
+"Oh, but it will, though; for I had made up my mind Julia would be an
+old maid; she always said she would, and come some day and look after my
+children, if I ever have any," said Anne, blushing; "for I am sure I
+should puzzle to know how to dress them, much less understand how to
+manage them. Mamma says Aunt Mary--Mrs. Strickland--is very angry about
+the marriage, so I really do think Julia ought to give it up."
+
+"Why does your Aunt dislike it?"
+
+"Because Julia is penniless and a nobody; meaning, I suppose, that
+Alfred should marry some high born girl, who would, I have no doubt,
+snub him in the end. But then it would be so nice for Aunt to say, 'My
+daughter-in-law, Lady so-and-so-that was,' or the Earl of _somebody_,
+my son's father-in-law. Instead of which she will only have to recall
+the plain and _poor_ Miss Bennet, that was. Fancy Alfred coming to stay
+with us in our nutshell!"
+
+"I never thought Mr. Strickland gave himself airs," replied Amy.
+
+"Nor does he. But it is disagreeable to see a man sitting over the fire
+all day; or in summer time basking lazily in the sun."
+
+"But Julia will probably change all that laziness and inaction. She is
+full of life and work herself. I think _he_ has chosen well."
+
+"Of course _he_ has; but I consider Julia to have sacrificed herself.
+And now, do come down and see me off."
+
+Amy put down her work and went.
+
+"I shall see you again soon, Amy dear," said Anne, with tearful eyes, as
+together they stood on the terrace. "Tom has promised to drive me over
+some day next week, not entirely for his dear wife's sake though; but
+because he has taken a great interest in some dreadful sinner in this
+parish, and she as violent a liking to him. The old rector has given Tom
+permission to visit her whenever he likes, glad enough, I dare say, to
+be rid the trouble of it himself. Poor woman! she cannot live long--a
+breaking up of nature, or something of that sort; but Mrs. Archer knows
+more about it than I do."
+
+"Anne! Anne! What are you talking about?" asked her husband, catching a
+word here and there, of her rambling speech. "Come! jump in, the pony is
+quite impatient to be off."
+
+"And so is his master," laughed Anne; "we shall drive off in grand
+style, and then dilly-dally for half-an-hour, or more, at the turnpike,
+while he chats to his heart's content with Jane; that's the name of his
+new friend, dear. There, I really must say good-bye, or perhaps Tom may
+go without me." And almost smothering Amy with kisses she sprang down
+the steps and in another moment was seated by her husband, and they
+drove off.
+
+A few hours after, Mrs. Elrington arrived at the Hall; but as she had
+truly said, long ago, it was pain and grief to her to look on Mrs.
+Linchmore's face again; and she leant heavily on Mr. Linchmore's arm, as
+she passed from the carriage.
+
+She paused a moment, as he would have led her into the drawing-room to
+his wife; and pointing through the half-open door, said simply, "We meet
+as strangers."
+
+And so they did--the once adopted daughter and fondly-loved mother; but
+it cost them _both_ an effort; for while Mrs. Elrington's hand trembled
+and shook like an aspen on the top of the stick with which she steadied
+her footsteps, Mr. Linchmore thought he had never seen his wife look
+more proudly beautiful and magnificent.
+
+Anne's letter represented Amy as heart-broken, not only with the loss of
+her child, but sorrow stricken with the anxiety caused by the fresh
+trial of her husband's illness. Anne said not a word of the _living_
+grief consuming her heart, but Mrs. Elrington had not been many days at
+Brampton ere she suspected it; that pale, sweet anxious face, so thin
+and care-worn, told its own tale, with the faltering, uncertain step;
+the mournful yet loving way with which she tended her husband now
+rapidly approaching convalescence. How she anticipated his every wish.
+Yet there was a hesitation, an uncertainty about it, all too evident to
+a watchful eye; it seemed as though with her anxiety to please, there
+was an evident fear of displeasing. Surely the wife needed the most care
+and tenderness now: the first she had, but the latter, where was that?
+Where the nameless attentions and thousand loving words her husband
+might speak?
+
+Mrs. Elrington saw with sorrow the coldness, and estrangement, that had
+crept between the two. Was that fair young wife so recently
+afflicted--so loving, so doubly bereaved at heart--to blame? or Robert?
+
+Mrs. Elrington loved Amy, and could not sit silently by without risking
+something to mend matters, so one day, when she and Robert were alone,
+she spoke.
+
+"I trust you are feeling stronger this morning, Mr. Vavasour?"
+
+"Thank you. Yes, I am I believe, mending apace."
+
+"I am glad of it, as I think your wife needs change, she is looking far
+from well; the sooner you take her home the better."
+
+"Bertie's death was a bitter trial; and she felt it deeply."
+
+"Bitter, indeed, it must have been, to have changed her so utterly. She
+is greatly altered since her marriage."
+
+Robert Vavasour sighed.
+
+"You are right," he replied. "I myself see the change, but without the
+power to remedy it now."
+
+"How so?" she asked.
+
+"You say altered since her marriage. It is true; for when Amy married
+she wilfully shut out from her heart all hopes of happiness."
+
+"You speak in riddles, Mr. Vavasour, which I am totally unable to
+comprehend."
+
+"I am a rich man, Mrs. Elrington, and that alone might have tempted many
+a girl, or led her to fancy she loved me."
+
+Mrs. Elrington drew up her head proudly. "But not Amy Neville," she
+replied, "no amount of wealth would have tempted her to marry a man she
+did not care for."
+
+"Care for," he repeated bitterly, "caring is not loving."
+
+Mrs. Elrington had arrived at the bottom of the mystery now; he fancied
+Amy did not love him! Amy who was devoting herself to him day after day,
+never weary of, but only happy when she was in his sick room, nursing
+and tending him as few wives would, treated so coldly, giving him all
+the loving worship of her young heart; while he refused to believe in
+it, but gloomily hugged the morbid fancy to his heart that she loved him
+not.
+
+Mrs. Elrington could have smiled at the delusion, if Amy's happiness had
+not been at stake; as it was she replied gravely, "You are mistaken,
+Mr. Vavasour, wilfully blind to what is openly apparent to all others
+who ever see you and your wife together. Why I verily believe Amy
+worships the very ground you stand on; but I fear no words of mine will
+convince you of the fact, while the indifference with which you are
+treating her is well-nigh breaking her heart."
+
+No, Robert Vavasour was not convinced.
+
+"She did not love me when she married me; her oath was false, she--" but
+no, his pride refused to allow him to tell of her love for another.
+
+"I cannot listen to this," replied Mrs. Elrington, rising, "whatever her
+love may have been in the days you speak of, I am convinced Amy has
+never acted falsely towards you since you called her wife; neither do I
+believe there lives a man who _now_ claims or holds one thought of hers
+from you. I am an old woman, Mr. Vavasour, and have seen a great deal of
+sorrow, and one heart broken through the cruelty of another; let not
+your wife's be so taken from you, but believe in her, trust in her,
+watch over her as the apple of your eye, for indeed she needs and
+demands all your love and tenderness; crush not the love that is even
+now struggling in her heart, at your hardness and neglect, or take care
+lest you build up a wall that you will find it impossible hereafter to
+knock down, or when falling, will bury her you love beneath its ruins."
+
+Robert's heart was strangely ill at ease and stirred by these words of
+Mrs. Elrington's. Perhaps he began to fear that even if his wife loved
+him not, he _had_ been unnecessarily hard and severe, and pitiless, very
+pitiless and unloving. Might he not yet succeed in winning her love--the
+only thing in the wide world that he coveted? But then again, the
+thought that she had loved another, had cruelly deceived him, when he
+had loved and trusted her so entirely, was gall and wormwood to him, and
+turned his heart, when he thought of it, to stone. No; even allowing
+that she might love him, he could never love her so passionately again.
+So Vavasour thought, and so men and women have thought, and will think
+again, as long as the world lasts, and yet, do what they will, the old
+love _will_ come again, with all its old intensity, overthrowing all
+their wise and determined resolutions.
+
+Deep in thought, Vavasour sat, until the minutes crept into hours, and
+then Mrs. Archer came, looking very different from the Mrs. Grey of old.
+The frown had not, it is true, disappeared, but it had faded and given
+way to a mild, happy expression pervading every feature of her face.
+There was still a mournful look--how could it be otherwise?--the
+mournful remembrance of the past; but even that was growing dim beside
+the ever-living presence of her son, and of her love for him. She had
+gained her wish, too, for Robert loved his mother, and, I think, was
+somewhat proud of her. There was nothing to be ashamed of, nothing he
+need blush for; she was his mother, he her son, acknowledged to be so by
+all the world.
+
+She was dressed in black silk, and grey-coloured ribbons in her cap;
+her glossy, almost snow-white hair, still beautiful in its abundance,
+rolled round her head. She had grown quiet and gentle, and had none of
+the wild passions or fits of half-madness now. As Robert sat gazing at
+her, he thought she must have been very beautiful in her youth, when
+that mass of hair was golden.
+
+"Amy is not here," she said, looking round.
+
+"No. I am alone, and rather tired of my solitude, with a don't-care
+feeling of being left any longer by myself just creeping over me."
+
+"I thought Amy had been with you, or I should have been here before. Ah!
+I see she has been, by the fresh flowers on the table. She is always
+thinking of you, my son; her love always in her heart."
+
+Robert moved impatiently. Had every one combined together to din his
+wife's love into his ears? Was he the victim of a conspiracy? So he
+replied, touchily.
+
+"Amy is kind enough, and I dare say I am an ungrateful wretch."
+
+"Not ungrateful; but you might be a little, just a little, more loving
+to her sometimes. She is such a loving, sweet young wife."
+
+"You think she loves me?"
+
+Mrs. Archer laughed. "Are you in earnest, my son?" she asked.
+
+"Never more so in my life," was the reply.
+
+His mother looked at him almost reproachfully.
+
+"Can anyone doubt it?" she answered. "I believe her whole soul is wrapt
+up in you, and I thank God that it is so, my son."
+
+Robert was silent,
+
+"She is a fragile flower," continued Mrs. Archer, "one that the
+slightest cold breath might crush, yet withal strong in her deep love
+for you. It must be that, that has enabled her to bear up as she has,
+for she has had enough to try the strongest of us, and, I fear, looks
+more thin and shadowy every day."
+
+"Mother!" cried Robert, in alarm. "You do not think Amy really ill?"
+
+"I don't know what to think. She suffered an agony while she and I sat
+watching those dreadful weary hours by your bed-side; and I know Dr.
+Bernard has now prescribed a tonic; but she does not gain strength, and
+seems more feeble than ever. Forgive me, my son, but I sometimes fear
+there is a coldness, a nameless chill between you, which makes my heart
+tremble for the future of both. For hers--because she will die, loving
+you so intensely, and--" Mrs. Archer hesitated a moment, "and with
+little return; for yours--lest, when too late, you will see your error,
+and the remorse may break your heart. Oh! my son, if she has erred, it
+cannot have been wilfully, and surely she has been sufficiently
+punished. Think," she added, laying her hand on his, as she was leaving
+the room, "think well on my words, for I can have but one wish at my
+heart, and that is my son's happiness."
+
+And Robert did think--think deeply all the rest of that day. He seemed
+never tired of thinking, while his eyes rested oftener on his wife, and
+he watched her intensely.
+
+What if she did love him? Ah! if only she did. His heart leapt wildly at
+the thought, and his jealous hatred seemed to have no place there now,
+but to be a far-off dream; or if it did intrude, he set it aside as a
+bugbear, or felt less savagely inclined than heretofore.
+
+Could it be for him--she, his wife, brought fresh flowers for those
+already fading? How graceful she looked as she arranged them; not
+hurriedly, but slowly and tastefully--as though her heart was with the
+work,--in the glass. Was it for him she trod so softly over the room,
+while everything she touched assumed a different look, and slid quietly
+into its place, as though under the influence of a magic wand.
+
+Hard and cruel! How chill those words of Mrs. Elrington's fell, like a
+dead weight on his heart, and had been ringing in his ears ever since.
+If Frances Strickland had told him a lie, then he had been hard and
+cruel. But his wife had never denied the facts, hideous as they
+appeared; but had Frances exaggerated the story, and why had he refused
+to listen to Amy's explanation? Might she not have cleared away half its
+hideousness? His heart surged like the troubled waves by the sea-shore,
+and his breath came quick and hot, as he felt that he might have been
+mistaken in fancying his wife loved him not. If all this long time it
+had been so, then, indeed, he had been hard and cruel; and would she
+ever forgive him? or could he ever forgive himself? Tormented with
+doubts and fears, he watched and waited, and gave no sign to his wife
+that he did so, while she grew paler and paler, fading imperceptibly.
+
+The days crept on--three more slipped by, and found Robert still
+undecided, still undetermined. Again Amy brought fresh flowers, and
+stood at the table arranging them as before, and again her husband's
+eyes watched her, and had she only looked up as the last flower was
+being placed in the glass, her heart would have found its rest, for her
+eyes must have seen the love trembling in her husband's; but Amy never
+looked, but went and sat over by the fire, without a word. Then Robert
+spoke--
+
+"Those flowers are very beautiful, Amy."
+
+The words themselves were nothing, but the tone was the tender tone of
+old. Had he spoken coldly she could have answered at once, but the old,
+old loving tone, smote on her poor overcharged heart, and she could not
+answer a word, while the heavy tears gathered under her eyelids, and
+trembled as they fell. But her face was from her husband, and as yet he
+did not see them. Then some one came in, and they were interrupted. But
+the time Amy sighed for was not far distant, it was only delayed awhile.
+
+Again they were alone; and again Robert spoke.
+
+"Were the flowers gathered for me, Amy?"
+
+The words were even more tenderly spoken than before; still there was no
+reply, and Robert half raised himself, and stooped forward to look into
+his wife's face; but she kept it steadfastly hidden: she dared not look
+until she could control some of the emotion, which seemed as though it
+would suffocate her.
+
+They were both silent now. Robert grieved at her silence, while Amy sat
+striving and fighting with her sobs; yet so very still that none could
+have guessed the pent-up agony she was enduring.
+
+By-and-bye she grew more composed; had conquered and mastered her
+emotion, and turned her head towards her husband; but he was reading,
+and if he saw her, never raised his eyes from his book.
+
+Unconsciously her thoughts wandered, wandered away to the days at
+Somerton when she had been so happy. Ah! what a world of woe had
+overtaken her since then. Her boy dead, her only one; her husband worse
+than dead, his love estranged, perhaps gone for ever! and yet if he had
+only allowed her to speak,--not to attempt to palliate her fault, but
+only to tell how dearly she loved him! she felt she _had_ rightly
+forfeited some of his esteem, but scarcely deserved all the bitter
+misery his coldness had cost her.
+
+Would he ever trust her again? Ever believe her love? Yet if she died
+for it, she must tell it him; the weight of it was killing her, and she
+clasped her small white hands tightly over her knees as she thought that
+perhaps the time for her to speak had come. Only a few moments ago he
+had spoken almost tenderly to her, and more like his former self, and he
+was better, almost well now, and able to bear what she had to say. The
+excitement of her sad tale would not hurt him half so much as the
+telling it would grieve her.
+
+He was no longer weak, but gaining strength every day; there was
+scarcely any trace of his illness now, save that ugly scar near his
+temple, and that was gradually fading away.
+
+How should she begin? What should she say? As she essayed to think, the
+suffocating feeling arose again in her throat; again the large heavy
+tears dropped one by one; but her face was turned full on her husband
+now, his eyes on hers, yet she knew it not; knew not that his book had
+been laid down long ago, and that he was watching eagerly the various
+emotions flitting over face.
+
+As the tears sprung from her eyes, he said, hastily reaching out his
+hand,
+
+"Come here, Amy! Come nearer to me."
+
+She saw him _then_. Their eyes met, and that one glance told _him_ his
+wife's love was his; told _her_ she was trusted and forgiven. In another
+moment she had tottered forward and was gathered to his heart, her tears
+falling like rain on his breast.
+
+"Oh! Robert! Robert!" she wailed.
+
+But loving words poured impetuously in her ears, loving arms were round
+her.
+
+"My wife! my own! My darling Amy. Hush! hush, love!"
+
+But she could not hush; but lay weeping, weeping passionately, nestled
+close to him; clasped tightly in his arms, as though he feared to lose
+her.
+
+He thought those tears would never cease, and almost grew frightened at
+their intensity, but they stopped at last, subsiding into sobs; and
+presently they were gone altogether, and she rested gently and quietly
+in his arms while she told him the tale that had nearly broken her heart
+and his; and if he thought her to blame, as without doubt she was, he
+forgave her now from his heart, and bitterly accused himself of being
+hard and cruel indeed; and thanked God he had not been too late in
+breaking down the wall that had severed them, and nearly buried them
+both in its ruins.
+
+Mrs. Elrington came in, but was moving softly away again when Robert
+called her back.
+
+"She does indeed love me," he said proudly and humbly; while he resisted
+Amy's efforts to free herself from his grasp, "Your words, dear lady,
+were severe but well timed. I deserved them and can thank you for them
+now; while all my life long I will strive to make amends for what my
+wife has suffered."
+
+Amy looked up, her bright face flushing with smiles, but her husband
+covered her mouth laughingly with his hand as she attempted to speak;
+possibly he thought she would, like a true woman, strive to hide his
+fault by exposing her own. But she struggled to free herself and said,
+
+"I am more happy than I deserve to be, dear Mrs. Elrington, my one sin
+so bitterly repented of having taught me the value of my husband's love,
+and how dear, how very dear, he is to me."
+
+"Heed her not! heed her not!" cried Robert.
+
+"God bless you both, my children," said Mrs. Elrington fervently.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+SUNSHINE.
+
+ "Here may ye see, that women be
+ In love meke, kynd and stable:
+ Let never man reprove them then,
+ Or call them variable."
+
+ THE NUT BROWN MAID.
+
+ Then only doth the soul of woman know
+ Its proper strength when love and duty meet;
+ Invincible the heart wherein they have their seat.
+
+ SOUTHEY.
+
+
+Mrs. Elrington did not remain much longer at Brampton, she and Mrs.
+Linchmore parting as distantly as they had met, Mr. Linchmore grieving
+that the visit from which he had hoped so much had failed in reconciling
+those who had once been bound together by the strongest ties of
+affection. They were severed utterly and for ever: the remembrance of
+the old tie only bringing sorrow to the hearts of each.
+
+Mrs. Linchmore never once relaxed from her pride and haughtiness but
+seemed to her husband's sorrow to bear herself more proudly and stormily
+every day; whatever her inward sufferings,--and she did suffer
+acutely,--she gave no outward sign, deceiving her husband into the
+belief that she was the injured one, who would not make one step forward
+to mend matters or heal the old wound, lest it should be construed into
+an acknowledgment that she, having done the wrong was anxious to make
+atonement.
+
+Mrs. Linchmore knew did she implore or even plead for Mrs. Elrington's
+love, it would not be given: forgiveness unasked had been granted her in
+that letter received long ago; but love the old love, could never be
+hers again. The injury was too deep wherewith she had injured her; the
+deceit too cruel and wilful. Her son's broken heart could never be
+forgotten; how could she love her who had broken it? It was a lasting
+injury; one neither could forget. It had well-nigh broken the mother's
+heart as well as the son's, leaving broken hopes; lonely, sad, even
+painful recollections: it had changed Mrs. Linchmore more sadly still.
+
+Mrs. Elrington apparently gave no heed to the contemptuous indifference
+with which she was every day greeted, but behaved as a guest who now
+sees her hostess for the first time, and only to Amy did she ever
+say--and that but once,--how changed, how sadly altered she thought Mrs.
+Linchmore.
+
+Jane never recovered from the weakness consequent on the fever, but
+gradually grew more feeble every day, weaker each time Mr. Hall went to
+see her; her one sorrow being the misery she had in her wickedness
+caused others; her one fear lest so grievous a sin could never be atoned
+for or forgiven; but a visit from Mrs. Archer--which she had never dared
+hope for, although she had over and over again begged her forgiveness
+through Mr. Hall, and been assured of it from him--served to calm and
+tranquillise her troubled spirit, and led her to look--to hope for a
+higher forgiveness still. Jane died thoroughly, sincerely repentant; the
+last few days of her life being the only peaceful happy ones she had
+known for years. Mrs. Marks regained the use of her limbs, and stormed
+at Matthew, and held her own sway in the cottage as much as ever, if not
+more so; but Marks said he did not mind it now, and was right down glad
+to hear his old woman's tongue going at it harder and faster than ever;
+it was dead-alive work enough when she was ill, and as he had ceased to
+frequent the "Brampton Arms," and was satisfied with his wife, why
+should we find fault with either her or her tongue?
+
+Tom Hodge did not fulfil Marks' prophecy, either as to the hanging, or
+breaking his father's heart; William Hodge came down to Standale to see
+his son, and left it an altered, almost an aged man. Like his wife, he
+took his son's crime to heart, and although Mrs. Marks said, in a
+sympathising way, Tom was _only_ in jail awaiting his trial for an
+attempt to kill, yet Hodge could not shut his eyes to the fact that he
+might have been heavily ironed for murder, and the thought crushed him.
+A change imperceptibly crept over him from that time, and although he
+struggled with the shame he felt for his eldest son's evil doings, and
+held his head as high as ever, the old hearty good-humoured manner had
+fled, and not many months passed ere he gave up the smith's
+business,--that had once been his pride and pleasure,--to his other and
+younger son.
+
+Tom Hodge's crime was proved; his reason for shooting at Robert Vavasour
+the second time being, that the latter had recognised him as the man who
+had wounded him four years ago. The act was not premeditated, but the
+momentary impulse of the surprise and sudden recognition. He was
+sentenced to penal servitude for a lengthened term of years; let us hope
+he returned a wiser and a better man.
+
+Frances, anxious to make all the amends in her power, and atone for the
+fault that had cost her so much, begged--when strong enough, and
+recovered from her illness, which was more of the mind than body--to see
+Mr. Vavasour; but he was obdurate.
+
+"Tell her," he said, "that I believe in my wife's faith and love so
+entirely, I need no assurance of it from one who _tried_ to injure her
+so deeply, no explanation of what I ought never to have doubted."
+
+So Frances left Brampton, carrying with her the life-long remembrance of
+poor little Bertie's death, which she could not but be persuaded was
+mainly attributable to her, and sent as a warning and punishment for her
+pride and revengeful wickedness. Perhaps, had the child lived, her bad,
+passionate heart might never have been touched, and she might have lived
+on still in her sinful revenge, working, if it were possible, more and
+more misery; but Bertie's sad early death wrought the change, bringing
+to her stony, unfeeling heart both sorrow and remorse, while the end for
+which she had so wickedly striven she never attained, losing in time all
+interest, all kindly, cousinly feeling even, in the heart, to gain which
+she had wrought so much evil, and brought all the worst passions of her
+nature into play.
+
+And Charles Linchmore? What need to say anything of him? He has ceased,
+perhaps, to hold any place in my reader's interest; but in case some
+care to know of his well-being, I may mention that he recovered from
+his wound, and when last heard of was talking of returning home to
+England.
+
+Mrs. Archer's days glided peacefully on, calmly, happy at last in her
+son's love, in witnessing his and his wife's happiness; and when another
+little Bertie, almost rivalling the first in beauty and spirits--in all
+save his mother's heart--played about in the old house at Somerton, the
+frown had faded away more visibly still, though the remembrance of the
+anguish of mind and miserable days she had passed, consequent upon her
+deceit and one false step, could never be forgotten, or cease to be
+regretted. Her mind could scarcely ever be said to have entirely
+recovered from the shock it had sustained, though all angry fierceness
+and bitter fits of half madness had fled, never to return.
+
+The mysterious light that had so troubled Amy, and been a source of
+superstition to the servants and villagers, was fully accounted for, as
+Mrs. Archer, in touching upon her previous miserable life to her son,
+mentioned, that having a key of the door leading up the secret stairs
+into old Mrs. Linchmore's room, she had sometimes been seized with an
+uncontrollable desire to revisit the scene where with the closing of the
+life of one, had died out so she thought, her sole cherished hope, the
+hope of ever finding her son. She had never divested herself of the idea
+that old Mrs. Linchmore had stolen the child; through all her wild
+dreams she had held to that, and fancied that at Brampton only should
+she ever hear of him again; and when, on his wife's death, Robert
+Linchmore's father had searched for and found her, she would accept
+nothing at his hands, poor as she was, but the cottage which, at her own
+earnest request, he built for her, while the secret of her relationship
+with those at the Hall had, she hoped, died with him, she having asked
+him never to divulge it; and he who had loved her once, nay, loved her
+still, and had been the unwitting means, through his wife's mad
+jealousy, of causing her so much misery, granted, though unwillingly,
+even that. At his death Mrs. Archer changed her name, and came to
+Brampton, fearing no recognition from those still living. How could they
+recognise in that broken-hearted, wild-looking woman, the once fair,
+gentle Miss Mary of the Hall.
+
+Anne came to see Amy as she had promised, and spent the day at Brampton,
+her heart feeling really rejoiced at the happy change in her friend.
+There was still a shade of sadness on Amy's face, but the weariful look
+was gone, and she appeared almost as bright and youthful as on the day
+when Anne had first made her acquaintance; while as to Robert Vavasour?
+Anne wondered how she ever could have thought him an icicle or
+indifferent to his wife, so fond of her as he seemed now, so anxious
+that she should not over exert herself; for she was anything but strong
+or recovered from the shock of the severe trials she had gone through.
+
+"I do think," said Anne, as Amy was busy putting together a few last
+things--a work which she either did not wish, or would not trust her
+maid to do for her; "I do think your husband is a most devoted one,
+Amy; there is only one other that excels him, and that's--my own!"
+
+Amy laughed. "Are you quite satisfied with your husband, Anne?"
+
+"What a question!" answered Anne indignantly.
+
+"Opinions formed hastily easily change," replied her friend, "Did not
+you say you would only marry a man with fierce moustaches and whiskers!"
+
+"I did," said Anne consciously, "and--and--well you have not seen Tom
+lately, or you would not say _that_, because a beard does improve him so
+much; and between ourselves, dear, I am nearly fidgeting myself to
+death, lest he _should_ grow a moustaches, for I have changed my
+opinion, and don't like them!"
+
+"The carriage is at the door, Amy," said her husband, entering the room.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Vavasour! how sorry I am you are going to take Amy away. It may
+be years before we meet again, as I know Mrs. Vavasour will never come
+to this odious place if she can help it."
+
+"Brampton," replied Amy, sorrowfully, "will always hold one little spot
+of ground towards which my heart will often yearn. As the resting-place
+of my boy, Anne, I think I shall--must revisit Brampton."
+
+"True. I am always wrong, and speak, as Tom says, without considering in
+the least what I am going to say. Forgive me Amy, I quite forgot for the
+moment your grief."
+
+"I hope," said Robert, as he drew his wife away, "you and Mr. Hall will
+soon come and see us, at Somerton. Amy and I will give you a hearty
+welcome."
+
+"I accept the invitation with pleasure, that is," said she correcting
+herself, "if Tom can find anyone to do his duty during his absence."
+
+As Amy drove away with Mrs. Archer and her husband, Anne waved a tearful
+adieu until the carriage turned the drive, and was out of sight.
+
+As they drove through the park Amy sat very silent; her husband did not
+interrupt her thoughts, perhaps he guessed her heart was too full for
+words: but as they passed through the large gates her eyes looked
+wistfully towards the--churchyard, little Bertie's last resting place,
+and as she pictured to herself the small white marble cross, looking
+whiter still with the sun reflected on it, and the little mound almost
+green now, and covered with the early primroses she had strewed there
+that morning,--her eyes filled with tears, and she sighed involuntarily.
+
+Robert drew her gently, but fondly, towards him.
+
+"Our boy is happy, Amy, darling. And you?"
+
+"I?" she replied, smiling and struggling with her tears. "I, Robert, am
+happier than I deserve to be, with you to love and to take care of me."
+
+"Not so, Amy," he said. "We have been both to blame. Perhaps, had it
+been otherwise, we should never have found out how dear we are to each
+other. Is it not so, my own dear love?"
+
+Amy did not reply, save by the loving light in her eyes, as she nestled
+closer to his side.
+
+If she had been greatly tried, she had indeed found her safest and best
+earthly resting-place now and for ever!
+
+
+ THE END.
+
+
+ T. C. NEWBY, 30, Welbeck Street Cavendish Square, London.
+
+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
+
+ In 1 Vol. Price 12s.
+
+ ON CHANGE OF CLIMATE,
+
+ A GUIDE FOR TRAVELLERS IN PURSUIT OF HEALTH.
+
+ BY THOMAS MORE MADDEN, M.D., M.R.C.S. ENG.
+
+ Illustrative of the Advantages of the various localities resorted
+ to by Invalids, for the cure or alleviation of chronic diseases,
+ especially consumption. With Observations on Climate, and its
+ Influences on Health and Disease, the result of extensive personal
+ experience of many Southern Climes.
+
+ SPAIN, PORTUGAL, ALGERIA, MOROCCO, FRANCE, ITALY,
+ THE MEDITERRANEAN ISLANDS, EGYPT, &c.
+
+"Dr. Madden has been to most of the places he describes, and his book
+contains the advantage of a guide, with the personal experience of a
+traveller. To persons who have determined that they ought to have change
+of climate, we can recommend Dr. Madden as a guide."--_Athenaeum._
+
+"It contains much valuable information respecting various favorite
+places of resort, and is evidently the work of a well-informed
+physician."--_Lancet._
+
+"Dr. Madden's book deserves confidence--a most accurate and excellent
+work."--_Dublin Medical Review._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ THE
+
+ GENERAL FURNISHING
+
+ AND
+
+ UPHOLSTERY COMPANY
+
+ (LIMITED),
+
+ F. J. ACRES, MANAGER,
+
+ 24 and 25, Baker Street, W.
+
+
+ The Company are now Exhibiting all the most approved Novelties of the
+ Season in
+
+ CARPETS, CHINTZES,
+
+ MUSLIN CURTAINS,
+
+And every variety of textile fabric for Upholstery purposes constituting
+the most recherche selection in the trade.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ TEETH WITHOUT PAIN AND WITHOUT SPRINGS.
+
+ OSTEO EIDON FOR ARTIFICIAL TEETH,
+ EQUAL TO NATURE.
+
+
+ Complete Sets L4 4s., L7 7s., L10 10s., L15 15s., and L21.
+
+ SINGLE TEETH AND PARTIAL SETS AT PROPORTIONATELY MODERATE CHARGES.
+
+ A PERFECT FIT GUARANTEED.
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ London:
+ 27, HARLEY STREET, CAVENDISH SQUARE. W.
+ 134, DUKE STREET, LIVERPOOL.
+ 65, NEW STREET, BIRMINGHAM.
+
+ CITY ADDRESS:
+ 64, LUDGATE HILL, 64.
+ (4 doors from the Railway Bridge).
+
+ ONLY ONE VISIT REQUIRED FROM COUNTRY PATIENTS.
+
+Gabriel's Treatise on the Teeth, explaining their patented mode of
+supplying Teeth without Springs or Wires, may be had gratis on
+application, or free by post.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE TOILET.--A due attention to the gifts and graces of the person, and
+a becoming preservation of the advantages of nature, are of more value
+and importance with reference to our health and well-being, than many
+parties are inclined to suppose. Several of the most attractive portions
+of the human frame are delicate and fragile, in proportion as they are
+graceful and pleasing; and the due conservation of them is intimately
+associated with our health and comfort. The hair, for example, from the
+delicacy of its growth and texture, and its evident sympathy with the
+emotions of the mind; the skin, with its intimate relation to the most
+vital of our organs, as those of respiration, circulation and digestion,
+together with the delicacy and susceptibility of its own texture; and
+the teeth, also, from their peculiar structure, formed as they are, of
+bone or dentine, and cased with a fibrous investment of enamel; these
+admirable and highly essential portions of our frames, are all to be
+regarded not merely as objects of external beauty and display, but as
+having an intimate relation to our health, and the due discharge of the
+vital functions. The care of them ought never to be entrusted to
+ignorant or unskilful hands; and it is highly satisfactory to point out
+as protectors of these vital portions of our frame the preparations
+which have emanated from the laboratories of the Messrs. Rowlands, their
+unrivalled Macassar for the hair, their Kalydor for improving and
+beautifying the complexion, and their Odonto for the teeth and gums.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ NEW NOVELS IN THE PRESS.
+
+
+ In Three Vols.
+ THE MAITLANDS.
+
+
+ In Three Vols.
+ TREASON AT HOME.
+ By MRS. GREENOUGH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ BEDSTEADS, BEDDING, AND BED ROOM
+ FURNITURE.
+
+ HEAL & SON'S
+
+ Show Rooms contain a large assortment of Brass Bedsteads, suitable
+ both for home use and for Tropical Climates.
+
+Handsome Iron Bedsteads, with Brass Mountings, and elegantly Japanned.
+
+Plain Iron Bedsteads for Servants.
+
+Every description of Woodstead, in Mahogany, Birch, and Walnut Tree
+Woods, Polished Deal and Japanned, all fitted with Bedding and
+Furnitures complete.
+
+Also, every description of Bed Room Furniture, consisting of Wardrobes,
+Chests of Drawers, Washstands, Tables, Chairs, Sofas, Couches, and every
+article for the complete furnishing of a Bed Room.
+
+ AN
+
+ ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE,
+
+Containing Designs and Prices of 150 articles of Bed Room Furniture, as
+well as of 100 Bedsteads, and Prices of every description of Bedding.
+
+ Sent Free by Post.
+
+ HEAL & SON,
+
+ BEDSTEAD, BEDDING,
+
+ AND
+
+ BED ROOM FURNITURE MANUFACTURERS
+
+ 196, TOTTENHAM COURT ROAD,
+
+ LONDON. W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ J. W. BENSON,
+
+ WATCH AND CLOCK MAKER, BY WARRANT OF APPOINTMENT,
+ TO H.R.H. THE PRINCE OF WALES,
+
+
+Maker of the Great Clock for the Exhibition, 1862, and of the
+Chronograph Dial, by which was timed "The Derby" of 1862, 1863, and
+1864. Prize Medallist, Class XXXIII., and Honourable Mention, Class XV,
+begs respectfully to invite the attention of the nobility, gentry, and
+public to his establishment at
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL.
+
+Which, having recently been increased in size by the incorporation of
+the two houses in the rear, is now the most extensive and richly stocked
+in London. In
+
+ THE WATCH DEPARTMENT
+
+Will be found every description of Pocket Horological Machine, from the
+most expensive instruments of precision to the working man's substantial
+time-keeper. The stock comprises Watches, with every kind of case, gold
+and silver, plain, engine-turned, engraved, enamelled, chased, and
+jewelled, and with dials of enamel, silver, or gold, either neatly
+ornamented or richly embellished.
+
+ BENSON'S WATCHES.
+
+"The movements are of the finest quality which the art of horology is at
+present capable of producing."--_Illustrated London News_ 8th Nov.,
+1862.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ BENSON'S WATCHES.
+
+Adapted for every class, climate, and country. Wholesale and retail from
+200 guineas to 2-1/2 guineas each.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London
+
+
+ BENSON'S WATCHES.
+
+Chronometer, duplex, lever, horizontal, repeating, centre seconds,
+keyless, astronomical, reversible, chronograph, blind men's, Indian,
+presentation, and railway, to suit all classes.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ BENSON'S WATCHES.
+
+ London-made levers, gold from L10 10s., silver from L5 5s.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ BENSON'S WATCHES.
+
+ Swiss watches of guaranteed quality, gold from L5 5s.; silver from
+ L2 12s. 6d.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ Benson's Exact Watch.
+
+ Gold from L30; silver from L24.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ Benson's Indian Watch.
+
+ Gold, L23; silver, L11 11s.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ BENSON'S CLOCKS.
+
+"The clocks and watches were objects of great attraction, and well
+repaid the trouble of an inspection."--_Illustrated London News_, 8th
+November, 1862.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ BENSON'S CLOCKS.
+
+Suitable for the dining and drawing rooms, library, bedroom, hall,
+staircase, bracket, carriage, skeleton, chime, musical, night,
+astronomical, regulator, shop, warehouse, office, counting house, &c.,
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ BENSON'S CLOCKS.
+
+Drawing room clocks, richly gilt, and ornamented with fine enamels from
+the imperial manufactories of Sevres, from L200 to L2 2s.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ BENSON'S CLOCKS,
+
+For the dining room, in every shape, style, and variety of bronze--red,
+green, copper, Florentine, &c. A thousand can be selected from, from 100
+guineas to 2 guineas.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ BENSON'S CLOCKS,
+
+In the following marbles:--Black, rouge antique, Sienne, d'Egypte, rouge
+vert, malachite, white, rosee, serpentine, Brocatelle, porphyry, green
+griotte, d'Ecosse, alabaster, lapis lazul Algerian onyx, Californian.
+
+ 33, & 34, LUDGATE HILL, London.
+
+
+ THE HOUSE-CLOCK DEPARTMENT,
+
+For whose more convenient accommodation J. W. BENSON has opened spacious
+show rooms at Ludgate Hill, will be found to contain the largest and
+most varied stock of Clocks of every description, in gilt, bronze,
+marbles, porcelain, and woods of the choicest kinds.
+
+In this department is also included a very fine collection of
+
+ BRONZES D'ART,
+
+BENSON'S ILLUSTRATED PAMPHLET, free by post for three stamps, contains a
+short history of Horology, with prices and patterns of every description
+of watch and clock, and enables those who live in any part of the world
+to select a watch, and have it sent safe by post.
+
+ 33 & 34, LUDGATE HILL, E.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ NEW NOVELS IN THE PRESS.
+
+
+ In Three Vols. (In November.)
+
+ COMMON SENSE,
+
+ By Mrs. J. C. NEWBY,
+ Author of "Wondrous Strange," "Kate Kennedy," &c.
+
+
+ In Three Vols. (In November.)
+
+ MAGGIE LYNNE,
+
+ By ALTON CLYDE,
+ Author of "Tried and True," &c.
+
+
+ In Three Vols. (In November.)
+
+ A TROUBLED STREAM,
+
+ By C. HARDCASTLE,
+ Author of "The Cliffords of Oakley," "Constance Date."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ THE
+
+ GENERAL FURNISHING
+
+ AND
+
+ UPHOLSTERY COMPANY
+
+ (LIMITED),
+
+ F. J. ACRES, MANAGER,
+
+ 24 and 25, Baker Street, W.
+
+
+ The Company are now Exhibiting all the most approved Novelties of the
+ Season in
+
+ CARPETS, CHINTZES,
+ MUSLIN CURTAINS,
+
+And every variety of textile fabric for Upholstery purposes constituting
+the most recherche selection in the trade.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's It May Be True, Vol. III (of III), by Mrs. Wood
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IT MAY BE TRUE, VOL. III (OF III) ***
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