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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75876 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber’s Note
+ Italic text displayed as: _italic_
+
+
+
+
+ LUCIUS DAVOREN
+
+ OR
+
+ PUBLICANS AND SINNERS
+
+ A Novel
+
+ BY THE AUTHOR OF
+
+ ‘LADY AUDLEY’S SECRET’
+
+ ETC. ETC. ETC.
+
+ IN THREE VOLUMES
+
+ VOL. II.
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ LONDON
+
+ JOHN MAXWELL AND CO.
+
+ 4 SHOE LANE, FLEET STREET
+
+ 1873
+
+ [_All rights reserved_]
+
+
+
+
+ LONDON:
+ ROBSON AND SONS, PRINTERS, PANCRAS ROAD, N.W.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+ Book the First.
+
+ (_Continued_).
+
+ CHAP. PAGE
+
+ XIV. GEOFFREY LEARNS THE WORST 1
+
+ XV. THE BEGINNING OF A MYSTERY 20
+
+ XVI. AN UNPLEASANT DISCOVERY 41
+
+
+ Book the Second.
+
+ I. GEOFFREY BEGINS A VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY 64
+
+ II. LADY BAKER 82
+
+ III. LADY BAKER TELLS THE STORY OF THE PAST 91
+
+ IV. LUCIUS MAKES A CONFESSION 115
+
+
+ Book the Third.
+
+ I. A CHANGE CAME O’ER THE SPIRIT OF MY DREAM 132
+
+ II. LUCIUS IS PUZZLED 143
+
+ III. HOMER SIVEWRIGHT’S LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT 151
+
+ IV. WHAT LUCIUS SAW BETWIXT MIDNIGHT AND MORNING 171
+
+ V. LUCIUS AT FAULT 183
+
+ VI. THE PLUNDER OF THE MUNIMENT CHEST 191
+
+ VII. THE HIDDEN STAIRCASE 217
+
+ VIII. MR. OTRANTO PRONOUNCES AN OPINION 228
+
+ IX. THE MYSTERY OF LUCILLE’S PARENTAGE 237
+
+ X. MYSTIC MUSIC 256
+
+ XI. AT FAULT 264
+
+ XII. TROUBLES THICKEN 273
+
+
+
+
+LUCIUS DAVOREN
+
+
+
+
+Book the First.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+GEOFFREY LEARNS THE WORST.
+
+
+They had dined, and the letter was written. A week-old moon shone
+in the placid heaven; the tender night-stillness had descended upon
+the always quiet town; lights twinkled gaily from the casements of
+surrounding villas; like a string of jewels gleamed the lamps of the
+empty High-street. The slow river wound his sinuous course between the
+rushes and the willows with scarce a ripple. No sweeter air could have
+breathed among the leaves, no calmer sky could have o’er-canopied this
+earth on that night in Verona when young Romeo stole into Capulet’s
+garden under the midnight stars. It was a night made for lovers.
+
+The clock struck the half hour after nine as Geoffrey left the hotel,
+with his friend’s letter in his pocket; assuredly a strange hour in
+which to visit a lady who had forbidden him to visit her at all. But a
+man who feels that he is taking a desperate step will hardly stop to
+consider the details of time or place which may render it a little more
+or less desperate.
+
+To approach the woman he loved armed with a letter from another man; to
+bring a stranger’s influence to bear upon her who had been deaf to his
+most passionate pleading; to say to her, ‘I myself have failed to touch
+your heart, but here is my bosom friend’s prayer in my behalf: will you
+grant to his vicarious wooing the grace you have persistently denied to
+me?’—what could seem madder, more utterly desperate, than such a course
+as this?
+
+Yet women are doubtless strange creatures—a fact which those classic
+poets and satirists whose opinions it had been his pleasing task to
+study had taken pains to impress on Mr. Hossack’s mind. He remembered
+Mrs. Bertram’s agitation in that brief scene with Lucius, her exalted
+sense of gratitude. It was just possible that she really might regard
+him, even at this hour, as the preserver of her child’s life—second
+only to Providence in that time of trouble. And if she thought of him
+thus, his influence might have some weight.
+
+‘Dear old fellow!’ thought Geoffrey affectionately; ‘he wouldn’t let me
+see the letter. I daresay he has given me no end of a character,—like
+other written characters, which are generally of the florid
+order—praised me up to the skies. Will his eloquence move her to pity
+me, I wonder? I fear not. And I feel odiously caddish, going to deliver
+my own testimonials.’
+
+If he could have faced Lucius with any grace, it is possible that he
+would have turned back, even on the very threshold of Mrs. Bertram’s
+tiny garden. But after bringing his friend down from London, could he
+be so churlish as to reject his aid, let it be offered in what manner
+so ever?
+
+He plucked up his courage at sight of the lamp in her window—a gentle
+light. The upper half of the casement was open, and he heard the dreamy
+arpeggios of one of Mendelssohn’s Lieder played by the hand whose
+touch even his untutored ear knew so well. In another minute he was
+admitted by a neat little servant, who opened the door of the parlour
+unhesitatingly, and ushered him straightway in, assured that he had
+come to propose a new pupil, and regarding him as the harbinger of
+fortune.
+
+‘A gentleman, if you please ’m, to see you.’
+
+Mrs. Bertram rose from the piano, the graceful figure he knew so well,
+in the plain black dress, just as he had seen her the first time at the
+morning concert in Manchester-square—a certain lofty pose of the head,
+the dark eyes looking at him with a grave steady look, after just one
+briefest flash of glad surprise, just one faint quiver of the perfect
+lips.
+
+‘Mr. Hossack!’
+
+‘Yes, I know you have forbidden me to call upon you, and yet I dare to
+come, at this unseasonable hour, in defiance of your command. Forgive
+me, Mrs. Bertram, and for pity’s sake hear me. A man cannot go on
+living for ever betwixt earth and heaven. A time has come when I feel
+that I must either leave this place, and,’ with a faint tremble in his
+voice, ‘all that makes it dear to me, or remain to be happier than I
+am—happy, at least, in the possession of some sustaining hope. You
+remember my friend Davoren—’
+
+Remember him! Her cheek blanched even at the mention of his name.
+
+‘The doctor who came down to see your daughter?’
+
+‘Yes,’ she said, looking at him strangely; ‘I am not likely to forget
+Mr. Davoren.’
+
+‘You are too grateful for a trifling service. Well, Davoren, my dear
+old friend, the best and truest friend I have, is here again.’
+
+‘Here!’ she cried, looking towards the door as if she expected to see
+it open to admit him. ‘O, I should so like to see him again.’
+
+‘He will be only too proud to call upon you to-morrow; but in the mean
+time he—Mrs. Bertram, you must forgive me for what I am going to say.
+Remember, Davoren is my friend, as near and dear to me as ever brother
+was to brother. I have told him the story of my hopeless love—’
+
+‘O, pray, pray, not that subject!’ she said, with a little movement of
+her hand, half in warning, half entreaty.
+
+‘I have told him all,’ continued Geoffrey, undeterred by that
+deprecating gesture, ‘and he has written to you, believing that his
+influence might move you a little in my favour. You will not refuse
+to read his letter, will you, Mrs. Bertram, or feel offended by his
+interference?’
+
+‘No,’ she said, holding out her hand to receive the letter; ‘I can
+refuse him nothing.’
+
+She betrayed neither surprise nor anger, but read the letter, which was
+somewhat long, with deepest interest. Her countenance, as she read,
+watched closely by her lover, betrayed stronger emotion than he had
+ever yet seen in that inscrutable face. Tears gathered on her eyelids
+ere she had finished, and at the end a half-stifled sob burst from that
+proud bosom.
+
+‘_His_ eloquence has more power than mine,’ said Geoffrey, with
+kindling jealousy.
+
+‘He pleads well,’ she answered, with a slow sad smile—‘pleads as few
+men know how to plead for another. He urges me to be very frank with
+you, Mr. Hossack; bids me remember the priceless worth of a heart as
+true and noble as that you have offered me; entreats me, for the sake
+of my own happiness and of yours, to tell you the wretched story of
+my past life. And if, when all is told, wisdom or honour counsels you
+to leave me, why,’ with a faint broken laugh, ‘you have but to bid me
+good-bye, and go away, disenchanted and happy.’
+
+‘Happy without you! Never; nor do I believe your power to disenchant
+me.’
+
+‘Do not promise too much. My—this letter bids me do what, of my own
+free will, I never could have done—tell you the story of my life.
+Perhaps I had better write to you; yet no, it might be still more
+difficult. I will tell you all, at once. And then hate me or despise
+me, as you will. You must at least remember that I have never courted
+your love.’
+
+‘I know that you have been the most cruel among women, the most
+inexorable—’
+
+‘I was not so once, but rather the weakest. Hear my story, as briefly,
+as plainly as I can tell it. Years ago I was a guest at a great lady’s
+house—a visitor among people who were above me in rank, but who were
+pleased to take a fancy to me, as the phrase goes, because I had some
+little talent for music. I sang and played well enough to amuse them
+and their guests. The lady was an amateur, raved about music, and
+delighted in bringing musical people about her. Among her favourites
+when I visited her was one who had a rare genius—a man with whom
+music was a second nature, whose whole being seemed to be absorbed
+by his art. Violinist, pianist, organist, with a power of passionate
+expression that gave a new magic even to the most familiar melodies, he
+seemed the very genius of music. I heard him, and, like my patroness,
+was enchanted. She was amused to see my delight; threw us much
+together; wove a little romance out of our companionship; made us play
+and sing together; and in a word, with the most innocent and kindly
+intentions, prepared the way for my deepest misery.’
+
+‘You loved this man!’ cried Geoffrey, ready to hate him on that ground.
+
+‘Loved him! I thought so then. There are times when I believe I never
+really loved him, that the glamour which he cast around me was only the
+magic of his art. But for the time being my mind was utterly subjugated
+by his influence; I had no thought but of him, and, fascinated by his
+genius, deemed him worthy of a self-sacrificing love. He was a creature
+of mystery—a mere waif and stray, admitted to the house where I met him
+on no better recommendation than his genius. He had the manners and
+education of a gentleman, the eccentricities of an artist. He asked me
+to be his wife, disregarded my refusal, pursued me with an unwearying
+persistence, and, aided by the wondrous power of his genius, triumphed
+over every argument, conquered every opposition, wrung from me my
+consent to a secret union. It would be useless to repeat his specious
+statements—his pretended reasons for desiring a secret marriage. I was
+weak enough, wicked enough, to consent to the arrangement he proposed;
+but not until after many a bitter struggle.’
+
+‘Why pain yourself by these wretched memories?’ exclaimed Geoffrey.
+‘Tell me nothing except that you will be my wife. I will take all the
+rest upon trust. There is no such thing as truth or purity in woman if
+you are not worthy of an honest man’s love.’
+
+‘You shall hear me to the end,’ she answered quietly, ‘and then
+pronounce whether I am or not. The house in which we were visitors was
+only two miles from a cathedral city. He of whom I have been speaking—’
+
+‘Mr. Bertram.’
+
+‘I will call him Bertram, although I am bound to tell you that name is
+not the true one. Mr. Bertram proposed a marriage before the registrar
+in the cathedral town. We both had been long enough resident in the
+neighbourhood for the necessary notice. Indeed, that notice had been
+given some days before I gave my most reluctant consent. At the last,
+harassed by Mr. Bertram’s importunity, loving him with a girl’s first
+romantic fancy, and believing that I was the object of a most devoted
+love, without an adviser or friend at hand to whom I could appeal,
+conscious that I was guilty of ingratitude and disobedience towards the
+dearest and best of parents, I suffered myself to be hurried into this
+wretched union. We walked across the park early one morning, and went
+to the registrar’s office, where the brief form was gone through, and
+my lover told me I was his wife. I went home that very day, for the
+necessity of a fortnight’s notice to the registrar had deferred the
+marriage to the last day of my visit. I went back to the parents who
+loved and trusted me, weighed down by the burden of my guilty secret.’
+
+‘Was Mr. Bertram’s rank superior to yours? and was that his reason for
+secrecy?’ asked Geoffrey.
+
+‘He made me believe as much. He told me that he hazarded position and
+fortune by marrying me, and I believed him. I was not quite nineteen,
+and had been brought up in a small country town, brought up by people
+to whom falsehood was impossible. You may suppose that I was an easy
+dupe. Some time after my return he appeared in our little town. I
+implored him to tell my father and mother, or to let me tell them of
+our marriage. He refused, giving me his reasons for that refusal; using
+the same arguments he had employed before, and to which I was obliged
+to submit, reluctantly enough, Heaven knows. But when he claimed me as
+his wife, and reminded me that I was bound to follow his fortunes, I
+refused to obey. I told him that the marriage before the registrar had
+to me seemed no marriage at all, and that I would never leave home and
+kindred for his sake until I had stood before God’s altar by his side.
+This, which he called a mere school-girl prejudice, made him angry;
+but after a time he gave way, and told me that I should be satisfied.
+He would marry me in my father’s church, but our union must not the
+less remain a secret. He had a friend, a curate in a London parish, who
+would come down to perform the ceremony quietly one morning, without
+witnesses. The marriage before the registrar was ample for all legal
+purposes, he told me. This marriage in the church was to be only for
+the satisfaction of my conscience, and it mattered not how informal it
+might be. No witnesses would be wanted, no entry need be made in the
+Register.’
+
+‘Never shall I forget that day—the empty church wrapt in shadow, the
+rain beating against the great window over the altar, the face of the
+stranger who read the service, the dreary sense of loneliness and
+helplessness that crept about my heart as I stood by the side of him
+for whom I was now to forsake all I had loved. Never, surely, was there
+a more mournful wedding. I felt guilty, miserable, despairing, my heart
+at this last hour clinging most fondly to those from whom I was about
+to sever myself, perhaps for life. When the service ended, the stranger
+who had read it looked at me in a curious way and left the church,
+after a little whispered talk with my husband. When he had gone,
+Bertram went straight to the organ—that organ on which he had played
+for many an hour during the last few weeks—and struck the opening
+chords of the “Wedding March.”
+
+“Come, Janet,” he cried, “let us have our triumphal music, if we have
+no other item in the pageantry of a wedding.”
+
+‘He played, as he always played, like a man who, for the time being,
+lived only in music; but for my overburdened heart even that magic had
+no soothing influence. I left the organ-loft, and went down-stairs
+again. Here, in the dimly-lighted aisle, I almost stumbled against the
+stranger who had read the marriage-service.
+
+“I was anxious to see you,” he began, in a nervous hesitating way, and
+very slowly—“anxious to be assured that all was right. You have been
+already married before the registrar, your husband informs me, and
+this ceremonial of to-day is merely for the satisfaction of your own
+conscience; yet I am bound to inform you—”
+
+‘The last notes of the “Wedding March” had pealed out from the old
+organ before this, and I heard my husband’s footstep behind me as the
+stranger spoke. He came quickly to the spot where we stood, and put my
+arm through his.
+
+“I thought I told you, Leslie, that my wife has had the whole business
+fully explained to her,” he said.
+
+‘The stranger muttered something which sounded like an apology, bowed
+to me, wished my husband good-bye, and hurried away. If he had come
+back to the church to give me friendly counsel or timely warning, he
+quitted it with his intention unfulfilled.
+
+‘I left my father’s house secretly at daybreak next morning, half
+heartbroken. I have no excuse to plead for this wicked desertion of
+parents who had loved me only too well; or only the common excuse that
+I loved the man who tempted me away from them—loved him above duty,
+honour, self-respect. I left the dear old home where I had been so
+happy, conscious that I left it under a cloud. Only in the future could
+I see myself reestablished in the love and confidence of my father and
+mother; but Mr. Bertram assured me that future was not far off. Of the
+bitter time that followed, I will speak as briefly as possible. Mine
+was a wretched wandering life, linked with a man whom I discovered but
+too soon to be utterly wanting in honour or principle; a life spent
+with one whose only profession was to prey upon his fellow men; who
+knew no scruple where his own advantage was in question; whom I soon
+knew to be relentless, heartless, false to the very core. Heaven knows
+it is hard to say all this of one I had so deeply loved, for whom I
+had hazarded and lost so much. Enough that the day came when I could
+no longer endure the dishonour of association with him; when I felt
+that I would sooner go out into the bleak world of which I knew so
+little, and commit my own fate and my child’s to the mercy of God, than
+share the degradation of a life sustained by fraud. I told my husband
+as much: that finding all my endeavours to persuade him to alter his
+mode of life worse than useless, since they led only to bursts of
+scornful anger on his part, I had resolved to leave him, and live as I
+best might by my own industry, or, if God pleased, starve. He heard my
+decision with supreme indifference, and turning to me with the bitter
+smile I knew so well, said:
+
+“I congratulate you on having arrived at so wise a decision. The
+matrimonial fetters have galled us both. I thought you a clever woman,
+and a fitting helpmeet for a man who has to live by his wits. I find
+you a puling fool, with a mind cramped by the teaching of a country
+parsonage. Our union has been a mistake for both; but I am happy
+to inform you that it is not irrevocable. Our marriage before the
+registrar and our marriage in the church are alike null and void; for
+I had a wife living at the time, and, for aught I know, have still.”’
+
+‘The consummate scoundrel,’ cried Geoffrey, with a smothered curse;
+‘but why do you tell me these things? why torture yourself by recalling
+them? However wronged by this villain, in my eyes you are purest among
+the pure.’
+
+‘I have little more to tell. He took the initiative, and left me with
+my child in furnished lodgings in a garrison town, where he had found
+profitable society among the officers of the regiment then quartered
+there, and had distinguished himself by his skill at billiards. He left
+me penniless, and at the mercy of the lodging-house-keeper, to whom
+he owed a heavy bill. I will not trouble you with the details of my
+life from this point. Happily for me, the woman was merciful. I freely
+surrendered the few trinkets I possessed, and she suffered me to depart
+unmolested with my own and my child’s small stock of clothes. I removed
+to humbler lodgings, gave lessons in music and singing, struggled
+on, paid my way, and after some time left the town with my child and
+came straight to London, glad to be lost in that ocean of humanity.
+I had heard before this of the death of both my parents—heard with a
+remorseful grief which I shall continue to suffer till my dying day:
+the sin of ingratitude such as mine entails a lifelong punishment.
+I was therefore quite alone in the world. I think if it had not been
+for my little girl I could hardly have survived so much misery, hardly
+have faced a future so hopeless. But that one tie bound me to life—that
+sweet companionship made sorrow endurable—lent a brightness even to my
+darkest days. I have no more to tell; God has been very good to me. All
+my efforts have prospered.’
+
+‘I know not how to thank you for this confidence,’ said Geoffrey, ‘for
+to my mind it removes every barrier between us, if you only can return,
+in some small measure, the love I have given you, and which must be
+yours till the end of my life.’
+
+‘You forget,’ she said sadly, ‘he who is in my estimation my husband
+still lives; or, at least, I have had no evidence of his death.’
+
+‘What! you would hold yourself bound by a tie which he told you was
+worthless?’
+
+‘I swore before God’s altar, in my father’s church, to cleave to him
+till death should part us. If he perjured himself, there is no reason
+why I should break my vow. I left him because to live with him was to
+participate in a life of fraud and dishonour, but I hold him not the
+less my husband. If you have any doubt of the story I have told you,
+the books of the registrar at Tyrrelhurst, in Hampshire, will confirm
+my story.’
+
+‘If I doubt you!’ cried Geoffrey. ‘I am as incapable of doubting you
+as you are of falsehood. But for Heaven’s sake abandon this idea of
+holding by a marriage which was from first to last a lie!’
+
+Then followed passionate pleading, met by a resolution so calm, yet
+so inflexible, that in the end Geoffrey Hossack felt his prayers were
+idle, and farther persistence must needs degenerate into persecution.
+
+‘Be it so!’ he exclaimed at last, angry and despairing; ‘you have been
+consistently cruel from the first. Why did you suffer me to love you,
+only to break my heart? Since it must be so, I bid you farewell, and
+leave you to the satisfaction of remaining true to a scoundrel.’
+
+He hurried from the room and from the house, not trusting himself
+with a last look at the face which had wrought this fever in his
+brain; rushed away through the tranquil summer night, neither knowing
+nor caring where he went, but wandering on by the grassy banks that
+followed the sinuous river, by farm and homestead, lock and weir, under
+the shadow of hill and wood. It was nearly three hours after midnight
+when the sleepy Boots admitted Mr. Hossack to the respectable family
+hotel, and Lucius Davoren was waiting for him, full of anxiety and even
+fear.
+
+‘If I had known anything of this place, I should have come out in
+search of you, Geoffrey,’ he said. ‘It isn’t the kindest thing in the
+world to ask a man to come down here to see you, and then leave him
+for five mortal hours under the apprehension that you have come to an
+untimely end.’
+
+Geoffrey wiped the travel stains from his forehead with a long-drawn
+sigh.
+
+‘I was too downhearted to come straight home,’ he said, ‘so I went for
+a walk. I suppose I walked a little too far, but don’t be angry, old
+fellow. I’m as nearly broken-hearted as a man can be.’
+
+‘Did she tell you all?’
+
+‘Everything; a dismal story, but one that proves her to be all I have
+ever believed her—sinned against but sinless. And now, Lucius, can you
+explain how it was that your letter could influence her to do what she
+would have never done for my sake?’
+
+‘Easily. You have proved yourself a true-hearted fellow, Geoffrey, and
+I’ll trust you with a secret—Mrs. Bertram is my sister.’
+
+‘Your sister?’ cried Geoffrey, with supreme astonishment.
+
+‘Yes, the sister whose name I have not uttered for years, but whom I
+have never ceased to love. My sister Janet, who left her home eight
+years ago under a cloud of mystery, and whose wrongs I then swore to
+avenge.’
+
+‘How long have you known this—that my Mrs. Bertram and your sister were
+one and the same person?’
+
+‘Only since I came to Stillmington to see the little girl.’
+
+‘Then this explains her emotion that night. Thank God! Dear old
+Lucius—and now, as you love her, as you love me, your friend and
+companion in the days of our youth—use your influence with her,
+persuade her to abandon all memory of that villain, to blot him out of
+her life as if he had never been.’
+
+‘I have tried that already, and failed. I thought your love might
+accomplish what my arguments could not achieve. I fear the case is
+hopeless. But my duty as a brother remains, to find this man, if
+possible, and ascertain for myself whether the marriage was legal or
+not. He may have told Janet that story of another wife out of pure
+malice.’
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE BEGINNING OF A MYSTERY.
+
+
+Lucius had a long interview with Mrs. Bertram on the following morning,
+and he and Geoffrey left Stillmington together in the afternoon; to the
+despair of the proprietor of the family hotel, who had not had such a
+customer as Mr. Hossack for many years, not even during that halcyon
+period which he spoke of fondly as ‘our ’untin’ season.’ They travelled
+to London by the same express-train, having a long and friendly talk on
+the way, Geoffrey _en route_ for Christiana, with a view to shooting
+grouse among the Norwegian hills, and if it were possible in some
+measure to stifle the pangs of hopeless love in the keen joys of the
+sportsman; Lucius to return to the beaten round of a parish doctor’s
+life, brightened only by those happy hours which he spent in the old
+house with Lucille.
+
+It was too late to visit Cedar House on the evening of his return from
+Stillmington, so Lucius and Geoffrey dined, or supped, together at the
+Cosmopolitan, and had, what the latter called, ‘a gaudy night;’ a
+night of prolonged and confidential talk rather than of deep drinking,
+however; for Lucius was the most temperate of men, and with Geoffrey
+pleasure never meant dissipation. They talked of the future; and hope
+kindled in Geoffrey’s breast as they talked. Not always would Fate be
+inexorable; not always would the woman he loved be inaccessible to his
+prayers.
+
+‘I could hardly bear my life if it were not for one fond hope,’ he
+said; ‘and even that is, perhaps, a delusion. I believe that she loves
+me.’
+
+‘I know she does,’ replied Lucius; and the two men grasped hands across
+the table.
+
+‘She has told you!’ cried Geoffrey, rapture gleaming in his honest face.
+
+‘She has told me. Yes, Geoffrey, a love such as yours deserves some
+recompense. My sister confessed that you had made yourself only too
+dear to her; that but for the tie which she deems binding until death
+she would have been proud to become your wife.’
+
+‘God bless her! Yes, I have been buoyed up by the belief in her love,
+and that will sustain me still. Did she tell you nothing of that
+wretch—her husband—nothing that may serve as a clue for you to hunt him
+down?’
+
+‘Very little; or very little more than I already knew. She gave me a
+general description of the man; but she possesses no likeness of him,
+so even that poor clue is wanting. The name he bore was doubtless an
+assumed one, therefore that can help us little. But the strangest part
+of all this strange story is—’
+
+‘What, Lucius?’
+
+‘That the description of this man, Vandeleur—that was the name
+under which he married my sister—tallies in many respects with the
+description of another man, whose fate I have pledged myself to
+discover; a man who had the same genius for music, and was as complete
+a scoundrel.’
+
+Hereupon Lucius told his friend the story of his engagement to Lucille
+Sivewright, and the condition attached to its fulfilment, to which
+Geoffrey lent an attentive ear.
+
+‘You say this man sailed for Spanish America in the year ’53. Your
+sister was married in ’58. How, then, can you suppose that Lucille’s
+father and the man calling himself Vandeleur are one and the same
+person?’
+
+‘There would have been ample time for Sivewright to have grown tired of
+America between ’53 and ’58.’
+
+‘So there might. Yet it seems altogether gratuitous to suppose any
+identity between the two men. Musical genius is not so exceptional a
+quality; nor is scoundrelism the most uncommon of attributes to be
+found among the varieties of mankind.’
+
+They discussed the subject at length in all its bearings. It was a
+relief to Lucius to unburden his mind to the friend he loved and
+trusted; the chosen companion of so many adventures; the man whose
+shrewd sense he had never found wanting in the hour of difficulty.
+They talked long and late, and Lucius slept at the Cosmopolitan, and
+returned to the Shadrack district at an hour when the domestics of that
+popular hotel were only just opening their weary eyelids on the summer
+morning.
+
+He spent his day in the accustomed round of toil; had double work
+to do in consequence of his brief holiday; found the atmosphere
+of the Shadrack-road heavy and oppressive in the sultry noontide,
+after the clearer air and bluer skies of the hills and woods round
+Stillmington. And that all-pervading aspect of poverty which marked
+the streets and alleys of his parish struck him more keenly after
+the smug respectability and prosperous trimness of Stillmington’s
+dainty High-street and newly-erected villas. He travelled over the
+beaten track somewhat wearily, and felt ever so little inclined to
+envy Geoffrey, who was by this time hurrying across the face of the
+sun-dappled country-side, in the Hull express, on the first stage to
+Norway. But he was no whit less patient than usual in his attention to
+the parish invalids; and when the long day was done he turned homeward
+hopefully, to refresh himself after his labours before presenting
+himself at Cedar Lodge.
+
+It was dusk when Mrs. Wincher admitted him into the blossomless
+courtyard. Mr. Sivewright had retired for the night, but Lucille was at
+work in the parlour, Mrs. Wincher informed him, with her protecting air.
+
+‘You never come anigh us yesterday, nor yet the day before, Dr.
+Davory,’ she said, ‘and Mr. Sivewright was quite grumptious about
+it—said as he began to feel you was neglecting of him. “It serves me
+right,” he said, “for believin’ as any doctor would go on caring for
+his patient without the hope of a fee;” but I took him up sharp enough,
+and told him he ought to know you’d never looked at your attendance
+here from a fanatical pint of view.’
+
+‘Meaning financial, I suppose, Mrs. Wincher?’
+
+‘O lor, yes, if you like it better pernounced that way. I gave it him
+up-right and down-straight, you may be sure.’
+
+‘It was very good of you to defend the absent. Nothing but absolute
+necessity would have kept me away from this house even for two days.
+Has Miss Sivewright been quite well?’
+
+Mrs. Wincher hesitated before replying, and Lucius repeated his
+question anxiously.
+
+‘Well, yes; I can’t say as there’s been anythink amiss with her. Only
+yesterday evening,’ here Mrs. Wincher dropped her voice, and came very
+close to him, with a mysterious air, ‘between the lights—blind man’s
+holiday, as my good gentleman calls it in his jocose way—she gave me
+a bit of a turn. She’d been walking in the garden, and down by that
+blessed old wharf, where there’s nothink better than stagnant mud and
+strange cats for anybody to look at, and it might be just about as dark
+as it is now, when she came past the window of the boothouse, where I
+happened to be scouring my saucepans and such-like; for the work do get
+behindhand in this great barrack of a place. You know the boothouse,
+don’t you, Dr. Davory,—the little low building with the peaky roof,
+just beyond the laundry?’
+
+‘Yes, I know. Go on, pray.’
+
+‘Well, she came past the window, looking so pale and strange, with her
+hands clasped upon her forehead, as if she’d been struck all of a heap
+by somethink as had frightened her. I bounced out upon her sudding,
+and I suppose that scared her all the more; for she gave a little
+skreek, and seemed as if she’d have dropped on the ground. “Lor, Miss
+Lucille,” says I, “it’s only me. What in goodness name’s the matter?”
+But she turned it off in her quiet way, and said she’d only felt a
+little dull and lonesome-like without you. “Miss Lucille,” says I,
+“you look for all the world as if you’d seen a ghost.” And she looks
+at me with her quiet smile, and says, “People do see ghosts sometimes,
+Wincher; but I’ve seen none to-night;” and then all of a sudding she
+gives way, and busts out crying. “Astaricall,” says I; and I takes her
+into the parlour, and makes her lie down on the sofa, and biles up the
+kittle with half a bundle of wood, and makes her a cup of tea, and
+after that she comes round again all right. You mustn’t let out to her
+that I’ve told you about it, Dr. Davory; for she begged and prayed of
+me not to say a word, only I thought it my bonding duty to tell you.’
+
+‘And you were right, Mrs. Wincher. No, I’ll not betray you. This dismal
+old house is enough to blight any life. How I wish I could take her to
+a brighter home without delay!’
+
+‘I’m sure I wish you could,’ answered Mrs. Wincher heartily; ‘for I
+must say there never was a house that less repaid the trouble of
+cleaning, or weighed heavier on the spirits.’
+
+This little exchange of confidences had taken place in the forecourt,
+where Mrs. Wincher had detained Mr. Davoren while she disburdened her
+bosom of its weight.
+
+Lucius went straight to the parlour, where Lucille was seated before
+a formidable pile of household linen—table-cloths in the last stage
+of attenuation, sheets worn threadbare, which she was darning with a
+sublime patience. She looked up as Lucius entered the room, and a faint
+flush lighted up the pale face at sight of her lover. Yet, despite
+her pleasure at his return, he saw that she had changed for the worse
+during his brief absence. The transient glow faded from her cheek, and
+left her paler than of old; the hand Lucius held in both his own was
+burning with a slow fever.
+
+‘My dearest,’ he said anxiously, ‘has anything been amiss in my
+absence?’
+
+‘Was not your absence itself amiss?’ she asked, with the faintest
+possible smile. ‘I have been very dull and very sad without you; that
+is all.’
+
+‘And you have fretted yourself into a fever. O, Lucille, end all
+difficulties; make no impossible conditions, and let me take you
+away from this great lonely house very soon. I cannot give you the
+fair home we have talked about yet awhile—it may even be long before
+prosperity comes to us; but all that patience and courage can do to
+achieve fortune, I will do for your dear sake. I would not ask you to
+share debt or poverty, Lucille; I would not urge you to link your fate
+with mine if I did not see my way to a secure position, if I had not
+already the means of providing a decent home for my sweet young bride.’
+
+‘Do you think that the fear of poverty has ever influenced me? No,
+Lucius, you must know me better than that. But I will not let you
+burden yourself too soon with a wife. Believe me, I am more than
+content. I am very happy in my present life, for I see you nearly every
+day. And I would not leave my poor old grandfather in his declining
+years. Let us think of our marriage as something still a long way
+off—in that happy future which it is so sweet to talk and dream about.
+Only, Lucius,’ she went on in a faltering tone, and with a downward
+look in the eyes that were wont to meet his own so frankly, ‘you spoke
+just now of my having imposed too hard a condition upon you—you meant,
+of course, with regard to my father?’
+
+‘Yes, dear.’
+
+‘I have been thinking a great deal about this subject in your absence,
+and have come to see it in a new light. The condition was too
+difficult; forget that I ever imposed it. I am content to know no more
+of my father’s fate than I know already.’
+
+‘This change is very sudden, Lucille.’
+
+‘No, it is not sudden. I have had ample time for thought in these two
+long days. I had no right to ask so much of you. Let my father’s fate
+be what it may, neither you nor I could have power to alter it.’
+
+It happened somewhat strangely that this release was not altogether
+welcome to Lucius. He had thought his mistress unreasonable before; he
+thought her capricious now.
+
+‘I have no desire in this business except to obey you,’ he said
+somewhat coldly. ‘Am I to understand, then, that I am absolved from my
+promise? I am to make no farther effort to discover Mr. Sivewright’s
+fate.’
+
+‘No farther effort. I renounce altogether the idea of tracing out my
+father’s life.’
+
+‘You are content to remain in utter ignorance of his fate—not to know
+whether he is living or dead?’
+
+‘He is in God’s hands. What could my feeble help do for him?’
+
+‘And after cherishing the idea of finding him all these years, you
+abandon the notion at once and for ever?’
+
+‘Yes. You think me changeable—frivolous, perhaps?’ with a faint sigh.
+
+‘Forgive me, Lucille. I cannot help thinking you just a little
+capricious. I am naturally very glad to be released from the task you
+imposed upon me, which I felt was almost impossible. Yet I can but
+wonder that your opinions should undergo so complete a change. However,
+I do not question the wisdom of your present decision. I have placed
+the business in the hands of Mr. Otranto, the detective. You wish me to
+withdraw it—to forbid farther inquiries on his part.’
+
+‘Yes! It will be better so. He is not likely to discover the truth. He
+would only raise false hopes, to end in bitter disappointment.’
+
+‘His manner was certainly far from hopeful when I put the case before
+him. But these men have an extraordinary power of hunting up evidence.
+He might succeed.’
+
+‘No, no, Lucius. He would only lure you on to spend all your
+hardly-earned money, and fail at last. Tell him your inquiry is at an
+end. And now let us say no more about this painful subject. You are
+not angry with me Lucius, for having caused you so much trouble?’
+
+‘It is impossible for me to be angry with you, Lucille,’ answered the
+surgeon; and then followed the foolish lovers’ talk, at which Mrs.
+Wincher (presently appearing with the supper tray, whereon was set
+forth a banquet consisting of a plate of hard biscuits and a tumbler of
+London milk, for Lucille’s refreshment), assisted in her capacity of
+duenna and guardian angel, for half an hour of unalloyed bliss; after
+which she escorted Lucius to the grim old gate, like a state prisoner
+led across the garden of the Tower on his way to execution.
+
+‘I shall come early to-morrow to see your grandfather,’ said Lucius to
+Lucille at parting.
+
+He went home lighter-hearted than usual. It was a relief to be rid of
+that troublesome search for a man who seemed to have vanished utterly
+from human ken. He wrote to Mr. Otranto, the detective, that very
+night, bidding him abandon the inquiry about Ferdinand Sivewright.
+
+Mr. Sivewright received his medical attendant with a somewhat fretful
+air next morning, and Lucius was both shocked and surprised to discover
+that a change for the worse had occurred in his patient during his
+absence. There was a touch of fever that was new to the case—a nervous
+depression, such as he had not found in the invalid for some time past.
+But this change seemed the effect of mental excitement rather than of
+physical weakness.
+
+‘Why did you leave me so long?’ asked Mr. Sivewright peevishly. ‘But
+I am a fool to ask such a question. I pay you nothing, and it is not
+likely you would allow any consideration for my comfort to stand in the
+way of your pleasures.’
+
+‘I have not been taking pleasure,’ answered Lucius quietly, ‘nor
+could I give you more honest service than I do now were you to pay me
+five hundred a year for my attendance. Why are you always so ready to
+suspect me of sordid motives?’
+
+‘Because I have never found mankind governed by any other motives,’
+replied the old man. ‘However, I daresay I wrong you. I like you,
+and you have been very good to me; so good that I have come to lean
+upon you as if you were indeed that staff of my age which I ought to
+have found in a son. I am glad you have come back. Do you believe in
+sinister influences, in presentiments of approaching misfortune? Do you
+believe that Death casts a warning shadow across our path when he draws
+near us?’
+
+‘I believe that invalids are fanciful,’ answered Lucius lightly; ‘you
+have been thinking too much during my absence.’
+
+‘Fanciful!’ repeated Mr. Sivewright with a sigh, ‘yes, it may have
+been nothing more than a sick man’s fancy. Yet I have seemed to feel a
+shadowy presence in this house—the unseen presence of an enemy. There
+have been strange sounds too in the long sleepless night—not last
+night, all was quiet enough then—but on the previous night; sounds of
+doors opening and shutting; stealthily opened, stealthily closed, but
+not so quietly done as to cheat my wakeful ears. Once I could have
+sworn that I heard voices; yet when I questioned both the Winchers next
+morning they declared they had heard nothing.’
+
+‘Did you say anything to Lucille about these noises?’
+
+‘Not a word. Do you think I would scare that poor lonely child? No,
+the house is dreary enough. I won’t put the notion of ghosts or other
+midnight intruders into her head; girls’ brains are quick enough to
+grow fancies.’
+
+‘There was wisdom in that reserve,’ said Lucius; and then he went on
+thoughtfully, ‘The noises you heard were natural enough, I have no
+doubt. Old houses are fruitful of phantoms; doors loosely fastened,
+old locks that have lost their spring; given a strong wind, and you
+have a ghostly promenade.’
+
+‘But there was no wind the night before last. The air was hot and
+sultry. I had my window open all night.’
+
+‘And you may therefore have imagined the noises in yonder road to
+be sounds proceeding from the interior of this house. Nothing is so
+deceptive as the sense of hearing, especially in nervous subjects.’
+
+‘No, Davoren, I made no such mistake. Nothing you or any one else can
+say will convince me that I did not hear the shutting of the heavy
+outer door, a door in the back premises that opens upon the garden. I
+should, perhaps, have thought less of this fact, strange and alarming
+as it is in itself, were it not for my own feelings. From the hour
+in which I heard those sounds I have had an overpowering sense of
+approaching evil. I feel that something, or some influence inimical to
+myself, is near at hand, overshadowing and surrounding my life with its
+evil power. I feel almost as I felt twelve years ago, when I woke from
+my drugged sleep to find that my son had robbed me.’
+
+‘The delusion of an overwrought brain,’ said Lucius. ‘I must give you a
+sedative that will insure better sleep.’
+
+‘No, for pity’s sake,’ cried the old man eagerly, ‘no opiates. Let me
+retain my natural sense to the last. If there is danger at hand I need
+it all the more.’
+
+‘There can be no such thing as danger,’ said Lucius; ‘but I will
+examine the fastenings of that back door, and of all other external
+doors, and, if necessary, have the locks and bolts made more secure.’
+
+‘The locks and bolts are strong enough. You need waste no money on
+them. I used to fasten all the doors myself every night before my
+illness.’
+
+‘You have every reason to trust the Winchers, I suppose?’
+
+‘As much reason as I can have to trust any human being. They have
+served me upwards of five-and-twenty years, and I have never yet found
+them out in any attempt to cheat me. They may have been robbing me all
+the time, nevertheless, as my son robbed me, and may wind up by cutting
+my throat.’
+
+‘A crime that would hardly repay them for their trouble, I imagine,’
+said Lucius, with his thoughtful smile, ‘since you possess nothing but
+your collection, and the assassins could hardly dispose of that.’
+
+‘Perhaps not. But they may think that I am rich—in spite of all I have
+ever told them of my poverty—just as you may think that I am rich, and
+that the penniless girl you have chosen may turn out a prize by and by.’
+
+‘I have no such thought,’ answered Lucius, meeting his patient’s
+cunning look with the calm clear gaze of perfect truth; ‘wealth or
+poverty can make no difference in my love for your granddaughter. For
+her own sake I might wish that she were not altogether portionless; for
+mine I can have no such desire. I value no fortune but such as I can
+win for myself.’
+
+‘You speak like a proud man, and a foolish one into the bargain. To
+say you do not value money is about as wise as to say you do not value
+the air you breathe; for one is almost as necessary to existence as
+the other. What does it matter who makes the money, or how it is made,
+so long as it finds its way to your pocket? Will a sovereign buy less
+because it was scraped out of a gutter? Is wealth one whit the less
+powerful though a man crawls through the dirt to win it? Let him
+squeeze it from the sweat and toil of his fellow men, it carries no
+stain of their labour. Let him cheat for it, lie for it, betray his
+brother or abjure his God for it, his fellow men will honour him none
+the less, so long as he has enough of it. The gold won on a racecourse
+or at a gaming-table, though broken hearts and ruined homes went
+along with it, has as true a ring as your honourable independence, by
+whatever inspiration of genius or toil of brain you may earn it.’
+
+‘You speak bitterly, like a man who has been accustomed to contemplate
+humanity “the seamy side without,”’ said Lucius coldly; ‘but be assured
+I have never calculated on being enriched by the fruits of your
+industry.’
+
+‘Not even upon finding yourself the inheritor of my collection?’
+inquired Mr. Sivewright, his keen eyes peering into the surgeon’s face.
+
+‘I have not even aspired to that honour,’ replied Lucius, with a
+somewhat contemptuous glance at the outer shell of painted canvas,
+inscribed with hieroglyphics, which encased the defunct Pharaoh.
+
+‘So much the better,’ said the old man. ‘I should be sorry to think you
+might be disappointed by and by, when this shrunken form is clay, and
+you come to grope among my art treasures, thinking to find some hidden
+hoard—the miser’s hoard of slowly-gathered wealth which he loved too
+well to spend, and yet was obliged to leave behind him at the last.’
+
+Lucius looked at the speaker curiously. The old man’s pale gray eyes
+shone with a vivid light; his thin tremulous hands were spread above
+the bedclothes, as if they had been stretched over a pile of gold,
+protecting it from a possible assailant.
+
+‘Yes,’ thought Lucius, ‘I have often fancied this man must be a miser;
+I am sure of it now. Those words, that gesture, tell their own story.
+In spite of all his declarations to the contrary, he is rich, and these
+groundless fears spring from the thought of some concealed hoard which
+he feels himself powerless to protect.’
+
+He felt some pity, but more contempt, for the subject of these
+thoughts, and no elation at the idea that this hoarded wealth might
+possibly descend to him. He did his best to soothe the old man’s
+excited nerves, and succeeded tolerably well. He had taken up his hat,
+and was on the point of hurrying off to begin his daily round—delayed
+considerably by the length of this interview—when Mr. Sivewright called
+him back.
+
+‘Will it trouble you to return here after your day’s work?’ he asked.
+
+‘Trouble me? very far from it. I had counted on spending my evening
+with Lucille—and you, if you are well enough to be plagued with my
+company.’
+
+‘You know I always like your company. But to-night I have something to
+do; some papers that I want to look over, of no particular importance
+either to myself or those that come after me; old documents connected
+with my business career and what not. But I want to set my house in
+order before I leave it for a narrower one. Now, Davoren, I want you
+to hunt up some of these papers for me. I have sent that old fumbler,
+Jacob Wincher, to look for them, but the man is purblind, I suppose,
+for he did not succeed in finding them. They are in an old oak cabinet
+in a loft where I keep the dregs of my collection. Lucille will show
+you the place. Here is the key—the lock is a curious one—and the papers
+are stowed away in odd corners of the cabinet; inner drawers which
+brokers call secret, but which a child might discover at the first
+glance. Bring me all the papers you find there.’
+
+‘Do you wish me to make the search now, sir, or in the evening?’
+
+‘In the evening, of course. It is a business to be done at your
+leisure. But you must have daylight for it. Come back as early as you
+can, like a good fellow; I have a fancy for looking over those papers
+to-night. Heaven only knows how many days remain to me.’
+
+‘The same doubt hangs over the lives of all of us,’ answered Lucius.
+‘Your case is by no means alarming.’
+
+‘I don’t know that. I have a presentiment of evil, an instinctive
+apprehension of danger, like that which all nature feels before the
+coming of a storm.’
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+AN UNPLEASANT DISCOVERY.
+
+
+The thought of this conversation with Mr. Sivewright followed Lucius
+all through the day’s work. He meditated upon it in the intervals
+of his toil, and that meditation only tended to confirm him in his
+opinion as to the lonely old man. Soured and embittered by his son’s
+ingratitude, Homer Sivewright had consoled himself by the indulgence
+of that passion which is of all passions the most absorbing—the greed
+of gain. As he beheld his profits accumulate he became more and more
+parsimonious; surrendered without regret the pleasures for which he had
+no taste; and having learned in his poverty to live a life of hardship
+and deprivation, was contented to do without luxuries and even comforts
+which had never become necessary to his existence. Thus the sole
+delight of his days had been the accumulation of money, and who could
+tell how far the usurer’s exorbitant profits had gone to swell the
+tradesman’s honest gains? The art collection might have been little
+more than a cover for the money-lender’s less reputable commerce.
+
+Thus reasoned Lucius. He returned to Cedar House at about five in the
+afternoon, having dined hastily at a coffee-house in the Shadrack-road,
+in the midst of his day’s work.
+
+He found the table in the spacious old parlour laid for tea, and drawn
+into one of the open windows. Lucille had contrived, even with her
+small means, to give a look of grace to the humble meal. There were a
+few freshly-cut flowers in a Venetian goblet, and some fruit in an old
+Derby dish; the brown loaf and butter and glass jar of marmalade had a
+fresher and daintier look than anything Mrs. Babb the charwoman ever
+set before her master. Lucius thought of the fair surroundings that
+wealth could buy for the girl he loved; thought how easy their lives
+would be if he were only rich enough to give her the home he dreamed
+of, if there were no question of waiting and patience. True that he
+might give her some kind of home—a home in the Shadrack district—at
+once, but was it such a shelter as he would care to offer to his fair
+young bride? Would it not be a dreary beginning of wedded life?
+
+Yes, Mr. Sivewright’s hoarded wealth might give them much, but could
+he, Lucius, as an honest man, feel any satisfaction in the possession
+of a fortune gained in such crooked ways as the miser treads in his
+ruthless pursuit of gold? He tried to put all thought of that possible
+wealth out of his mind. That way lay temptation, perhaps dishonour; for
+in his mind it was impossible to disassociate the miser’s wealth from
+the means by which it had been amassed.
+
+Lucille had the same pale troubled look which had alarmed him on the
+previous evening, but this he ascribed to a natural anxiety about her
+grandfather. He did his best to cheer her, as they drank tea together
+at the little table by the open window, ministered to by the devoted
+Wincher, whose bonnet hovered about them throughout the simple meal.
+
+‘She’s fidgety about the old gentleman, poor child,’ said Mrs. Wincher.
+‘I’m sure she’s been up and down that blessed old staircase twenty
+times to-day, that restless she couldn’t settle to nothink. And he is
+a bit cranky I’ll allow, not knowing his own mind about anythink, and
+grumbling about as beautiful a basin of broth as was ever sent up to
+a ninvalid. But sickness is sickness, as I tell our missy, and she
+mustn’t be surprised if sick folks is contrairy.’
+
+When Mrs. Wincher had departed with the teatray, Lucius told Lucille
+of the search he had undertaken for Mr. Sivewright.
+
+‘My grandfather told me about it,’ she said. ‘I am to show you the
+cabinet in the loft. He would have sent me up to fetch the papers
+alone, he said, only there is so much lumber crowded together that he
+doubted if I should be able to get at the cabinet. We had better go at
+once before the light begins to fade, for it is rather dark up there.’
+
+‘I am ready, dear.’
+
+Lucille produced a great bunch of rusty keys from the desk at which
+Mr. Sivewright had been wont to transact the mysterious business of
+his retirement, and they went up the old staircase side by side in the
+afternoon sunlight, which had not yet begun to wane. The wide corridor
+which led to the invalid’s room, with the doors of other rooms on
+either side of it, was familiar enough to Lucius; but he had never yet
+ascended above this story, and Lucille had told him that the upper
+floor was a barren desert—the undisputed territory of mice and spiders.
+She unlocked a door which opened on a narrow flight of stairs—the steep
+steps worn by the tread of departed generations, and of various levels.
+This staircase brought them to the topmost story, above which rose the
+loft they had to explore. The ceiling of the landing on this upper
+floor was low, blotched and swollen here and there with the rain of
+many a winter, the dilapidated roof being in some parts little better
+than a filter. There were curious old panelled doors on either side of
+this landing, which was lighted by one melancholy window, across whose
+narrow panes the spider had woven her cloudy tapestries.
+
+‘Are all those rooms empty?’ asked Lucius, looking at the numerous
+doors.
+
+‘Yes,’ answered Lucille hurriedly. ‘My grandfather fancied the floors
+unsafe, and would put nothing into them. Besides, he had room enough
+down-stairs. The things he has stowed away in the roof are things upon
+which he sets no value—mere rubbish which almost any one else would
+have given away. Come, Lucius.’
+
+There was a steep little staircase leading up to the loft, only
+one degree better than a ladder. This they mounted cautiously in
+semi-darkness, and then Lucius found himself in a vast substantially
+floored chamber, just high enough in the clear to admit of his standing
+upright, and amidst a forest of massive beams leaning this way and
+that, evidently the roof of a house built to defy the grim destroyer
+Time.
+
+For some moments all was darkness; but while Lucius was striving to
+pierce the gloom, Lucille raised a sloping shutter in the centre of
+the roof, and let in a burst of western sunlight. Then he beheld the
+contents of the place—a chaos of ancient lumber, the wreck of time. It
+was like standing among the bruised and battered timbers of a sunken
+vessel at the bottom of the sea.
+
+The objects around him were evidently the merest waste and refuse of
+a large and varied collection—broken armchairs, dilapidated buffets,
+old oak-carving in every stage of decay, odd remnants of mildewed and
+moth-eaten tapestry, fragments of shattered plaster casts; the head
+of a Diana, crescent crowned, lying amidst the tattered remains of a
+damask curtain; an armless Apollo, leaning lopsided and despondent of
+aspect against an odd leaf of a Japanese screen; old pictures whose
+subjects had long become inscrutable to the eye of man; stray cushions
+covered with faded embroidery, which had once issued bright and
+glowing from the fair hands that wrought it—on every side the relics
+of perished splendour, the very dust and sweepings of goodly dwellings
+that had long been empty. A melancholy picture, suggestive of man’s
+decay.
+
+Lucille peered into the shadows which filled the angles of the loft, in
+quest of that oaken cabinet, of which she had but a faint remembrance.
+
+‘It used to stand in the back-parlour in Bond-street when I was a
+child,’ she said. ‘Yes, I remember, a curious old thing, with the
+figures of Adam and Eve, Cain and Abel. There are little folding-doors
+that open the gates of Eden, with the angel and his flaming sword.
+There are carvings on each side; on one side the expulsion from
+Paradise, on the other the death of Abel. See, there it is, behind that
+pile of pictures.’
+
+Lucius looked in the direction she indicated. In the extreme corner
+of the loft he saw a clumsy cabinet of the early Dutch school, much
+chipped and battered, with several old frameless canvases propped
+against it. He clambered over some of the more bulky objects which
+blockaded his way, cleared a path for Lucille, and after some minutes’
+labour they both reached the corner where the cabinet stood.
+
+The western light shone full upon this corner. The first task was to
+remove the pictures, which were thickly coated with dust, and by no
+means innocent of spiders. Lucille drew back with a shudder and a
+little girlish scream at the sight of a black and bloated specimen of
+that tribe.
+
+Lucius put aside the pictures one by one. They were of the dingiest
+school of art, old shopkeepers doubtless, for which Mr. Sivewright had
+vainly striven to find a customer. Here and there an arm or a head
+was faintly visible beneath the universal brown of the varnish, but
+the rest was blank. It was, therefore, with considerable surprise that
+Lucius perceived beneath this worthless lumber a picture in a frame,
+and, by the appearance of the canvas, evidently modern. He turned it
+gently to the light, and saw—What? The face of the man he killed in the
+pine forest.
+
+Happily for Lucius Davoren, he was kneeling on the ground, and with
+his back to Lucille, when he made this discovery. A cry of surprise,
+pleasure, terror, he knew not which, broke from her lips as he turned
+that portrait to the light; but from his there came no sound.
+
+For the moment the blow stunned him; he knelt there looking at the
+too-well-remembered face—the face that had haunted him sleeping and
+waking—the face that he would have given years of his life utterly to
+forget.
+
+It was the same face; on that point there could be no shadow of doubt.
+The same face in the pride of youth, the bloom and freshness of early
+manhood. The same keen eyes; the same hooked nose, with its suggestion
+of affinity to the hawk and vulture tribe; the unmistakable form of the
+low brow, with its strongly marked perceptives and deficiency in the
+organs of thought; the black hair, growing downward in a little peak;
+the somewhat angular brows.
+
+‘My father’s portrait,’ said Lucille, recovering quickly from that
+shock of surprise. ‘To think that my grandfather should have thrust it
+out of sight, here amongst all this worthless rubbish. How bitterly he
+must have hated his only son!’
+
+_‘Your father!’_ cried Lucius, letting the picture drop from his
+nerveless hands, and turning to Lucille with a face white as the
+plaster head of Diana. ‘Do you mean to tell me that man was your
+father?’
+
+‘My dear father,’ the girl answered sadly; ‘my father, whom I shall
+love to the end of my life, whom I love all the better for his
+misfortunes, whom I pity with all my heart for the ill fate that
+changed his father’s natural affection into a most unnatural hate.’
+
+She took up the portrait, and carried it to a clearer spot, where she
+laid it gently down upon an old curtain.
+
+‘I will find a better place for it by and by,’ she said. ‘It was too
+cruel of my grandfather to send it up here. And I have so often begged
+him to show me a picture of my father.’
+
+‘I wonder you can remember his face after so long an interval,’ said
+Lucius, who had in some measure regained his self-possession, though
+his brain seemed still full of strange confused thoughts, amidst which
+the one horrible fact stood forth with hideous distinctness.
+
+The man he had slain yonder was the father of the woman he loved. True
+that the act had been a sacrifice, and not a murder; the execution
+of ready-handed justice upon a criminal, and not an act of personal
+revenge. But would Lucille ever believe that? She who, in spite of
+all her grandfather’s dark hints and bitter speeches, still clung
+with a fond belief to the father she had loved. She must never know
+that fatal deed in the western wilderness; never learn what a wretch
+man becomes when necessity degrades him to the level of the very
+beasts against which he fights the desperate fight for life. Take from
+man civilisation and Christianity, and who shall say how far he is
+superior, either in the capacity to suffer or in kindliness of nature,
+to the tiger he hunts in the Indian jungle, or the wolf he shoots in
+the Canadian backwoods? And this was the man whose fate, until last
+night, he had stood pledged to discover; the man whose lost footsteps
+he was to have tracked through the wilderness of life. Little need of
+inquiry. This man’s troubled history had been brought to an abrupt
+ending, and by the seeker’s rash hand.
+
+‘Come,’ said Lucille anxiously; ‘we must find those papers for my
+grandfather. He will not rest unless he has them this evening.’
+
+Lucius began his task without another word; he could not trust himself
+to speak yet awhile. He unfastened the clumsy folding-doors of the
+cabinet, with a hand that trembled a little in spite of his effort to
+be calm, and opened the drawers one after another. They came out easily
+enough, and rattled loosely in their frames, so shrunken was the wood.
+Outer drawers and inner drawers, and papers in almost all of them—some
+were mere scrappy memoranda, scrawled on half sheets or quarter sheets
+of letter paper; other documents were in sealed envelopes; others were
+little packets of letters, two or three together, tied with faded red
+tape. Lucius examined all the drawers and minute cupboards, designed,
+one would suppose, with a special view to the accumulation of rubbish;
+emptied them of their contents, tied the papers all together in his
+handkerchief, and gave them into the custody of Lucille. The light had
+faded a little by the time this was done, and the corners of the loft
+were wrapped in deepening shadow—a gruesome ghostly place to be left
+alone in by this half-light. Lucille looked round her with a shudder as
+she turned to leave it.
+
+They were on the perilous staircase—Lucius in front, Lucille behind
+him, half supported by his uplifted arm, both obliged to stoop to avoid
+knocking their heads against the low sloping ceiling—when Lucius saw
+and heard something sufficiently startling.
+
+In the half dusk of the landing below them, he saw the door of one of
+those empty rooms which Lucille had declared to be locked opened—ever
+so little way—and then closed again quickly but softly, as if shut by a
+careful hand. He distinctly saw the opening of the door; he distinctly
+heard the noise of the lock.
+
+‘Lucille,’ he said, in an eager whisper, ‘you are wrong. There is some
+one in that room—the door exactly facing these stairs. Look.’
+
+He pointed, and her eyes followed the direction of his finger. For a
+few moments she stood speechless, looking at the door with a scared
+face, and leaning upon him more heavily than before.
+
+‘Nonsense, Lucius! you are dreaming. There can be no one there; the
+rooms are empty; the doors are all locked.’
+
+‘I am quite certain, dearest,’ he answered, still in a whisper, and
+with his eyes fixed upon the door that had opened, or seemed to open.
+‘Don’t be alarmed; it may be nothing wrong. It is only old Wincher
+prowling about this floor, I daresay, just as he prowls about the
+down-stair rooms. I’ll soon settle the question.’
+
+‘I tell you, Lucius, the doors are all locked,’ cried Lucille, in a
+tone far louder than her wonted accents—a voice of anger or of alarm.
+
+Lucius tried the door with a strong and resolute hand—shook it till it
+rattled in its time-worn frame. It was locked certainly, but locked on
+the inside. The keyhole was darkened by the key.
+
+‘It is locked on the inside, Lucille,’ he said; ‘there is some one in
+the room.’
+
+‘Impossible! Who should be there? No one ever comes up to this floor.
+There is nothing here to tempt a thief, even if thieves ever troubled
+this house. I keep the keys of all these rooms. Pray come down-stairs,
+Lucius. My grandfather will be impatient about those papers.’
+
+‘How can that door be locked on the inside if you have the key of it?’
+
+‘I have not the key of that particular door. There is a door of
+communication between that room and the next, and I keep one locked on
+the inside. It saves trouble.’
+
+‘Let me see the two rooms; let me satisfy myself that all is right,’ he
+said, stretching out his hand for the keys.
+
+‘I will not encourage any such folly,’ answered Lucille, moving quickly
+towards the staircase leading to the lower story. ‘Pray bring those
+papers, Lucius. I could not have imagined you were so weak-minded.’
+
+‘Do you call it weak-minded to trust my own senses? And I have a
+special reason for being anxious upon this point.’
+
+She was on her way down-stairs by this time. Lucius lingered to listen
+at the door, but no sound came from the room within. He tried all
+the doors one after another: they were all locked. He knelt down to
+look through the keyholes. Two of the rooms were darkened by closed
+shutters, only faint gleams of light filtering through the narrow
+spaces between them. One was lighter, and in this he saw an old
+bedstead and some pieces of dilapidated furniture. It looked a room
+which might have been used at some time for a servant’s bedroom.
+
+After all, that opening and shutting of the door had been, perhaps, a
+delusion of his overwrought mind. Only a few minutes before there had
+been a noise like the spinning of a hundred Manchester cotton-looms in
+his brain. The horror and anguish of that hideous discovery in the loft
+still possessed him as he descended those stairs: what more likely than
+that, in such a moment, his bewildered senses should cheat him?
+
+And could he doubt Lucille’s positive assurance as to the condition of
+those rooms? Could he doubt her whose truth was the sheet-anchor of his
+life? Or could he mistrust her judgment whose calm good sense was one
+of the finest qualities of her character?
+
+Had it not been for Homer Sivewright’s strange story of noises heard
+in the dead of the night, he could have dismissed the subject far more
+easily. As it was he lingered for some time; listening for the faintest
+sound that might reach his ear, and hearing nothing but the scamper of
+a mouse within the wainscot, the fall of a dead fly from a spider’s web.
+
+He found Lucille waiting for him in the corridor below, very pale, and
+with an anxious look, which she tried to disguise by a faint smile.
+
+‘Well,’ she asked, ‘you have kept me waiting long enough. Are you
+satisfied now?’
+
+‘Not quite. I should very much like to have the keys of yonder rooms.
+Such a house as this is the very place to harbour a scoundrel.’
+
+The girl shuddered, and drew back from him with a look of absolute
+terror.
+
+‘Don’t be frightened, Lucille. I daresay there is no one there; a
+strange cat, perhaps, at most; yet cats don’t open and shut locked
+doors. There may be no one; only in such a house as this, so poorly
+occupied by two helpless women and two feeble old men, one cannot be
+too careful. Some notion of your grandfather’s wealth may have arisen
+in the neighbourhood. His secluded eccentric life might suggest the
+idea that he is a miser, and that there is hoarded money in this
+house. I want to be assured that all is secure, Lucille; that no
+evil-intentioned wretch has crept under this roof. Give me your keys
+and let me search those rooms. It will only be the work of a few
+minutes.’
+
+‘Forgive me for refusing you anything, Lucius,’ she said; ‘but my
+grandfather told me never to part with those keys to any one. You
+know his curious fancies. I promised to obey him, and cannot break my
+promise.’
+
+‘Not even for me?’
+
+‘Not even for you. Especially as there is not the slightest cause for
+this fancy of yours. That staircase door is kept always locked, the
+keys locked up in my grandfather’s desk. It is impossible that any
+living creature could go up to that attic-floor without my knowledge.
+Nor is it possible for any one to get into the lower part of the house
+unseen by me or by the Winchers.’
+
+‘I don’t know about that. It would be easy enough for any one to get
+from the wharf to the garden. There are half-a-dozen doors at the back
+of the house, and more than a dozen places in the stables and outhouses
+where a man might lie hidden, so as to slip into the house at any
+convenient moment.’
+
+‘You forget how carefully Mrs. Wincher turns all the keys, and draws
+all the bolts at sunset. Pray be reasonable, Lucius, and dismiss this
+absurd fancy from your mind. And instead of standing here with that
+solemn face, arguing about impossibilities, come to my grandfather’s
+room with those papers.’
+
+Never had she spoken more lightly. Yet a minute ago her cheek had
+been blanched, her eye dilated by terror. Lucius gave a little sigh
+of resignation and followed her along the corridor. After all it was
+a very foolish thing that he had been doing; raising fears, perhaps
+groundless, in the breast of this lonely girl. Her grandfather had
+studiously refrained from any mention of his suspicions lest he should
+alarm Lucille. Yet he, the lover, had been so reckless as to suggest
+terrors which might give a new pain to her solitary life.
+
+Mr. Sivewright received the bundle of papers with evident satisfaction,
+and turned them over with hands that trembled in their eagerness.
+
+‘Documents of no moment,’ he said; ‘a few old records of my business
+life, put away in that disused piece of lumber up-stairs, and half
+forgotten. But when, at the gates of the tomb, a man reviews his past
+life, it is a satisfaction to be able to try back by means of such poor
+memorials as these. They serve to kindle the lamp of memory. He sees
+his own words, his own thoughts written years ago, and they seem to him
+like the thoughts and words of the dead.’
+
+He thrust the papers into a desk which was drawn close to his bedside.
+
+‘You have been better to-day, I hope?’ said Lucius, when Lucille had
+left the room in quest of the old man’s evening meal.
+
+‘No; not so well. I don’t like your new medicine.’
+
+‘My new medicine is the medicine you have been taking for the last five
+weeks—a mild tonic, as I told you. But you are tired of it, perhaps.
+I’ll change it for something else.’
+
+‘Do. I don’t like its effect upon me.’
+
+And then he went on to state symptoms which seemed to indicate
+increasing weakness, nausea, lassitude, and that unreasonable
+depression of mind which was worse than any physical ailment.
+
+‘It seems like a forecast of death,’ he said despondently.
+
+Lucius was puzzled. For some time past there had been a marked
+improvement, but this change boded no good. The thread of life had been
+worn thin; any violent shock might snap it. But Lucius had believed
+that in supreme rest and tranquillity lay the means of recovery.
+He could not vanquish organic disease; but he might fortify even a
+worn-out constitution, and make the sands of life drop somewhat slower
+through the glass.
+
+To the patient he made light of these symptoms, urged upon Mr.
+Sivewright the necessity of taking things quietly, and above all of not
+allowing himself to be worried by any groundless apprehensions.
+
+‘If you have a notion that there is anything going wrong in this house,
+let me sleep here for a few nights,’ said Lucius. ‘There are empty
+rooms enough to provide lodgings for a small regiment. Let me take up
+my quarters in one of them—the room next this one, for instance. I am
+a light sleeper; and if there should be foul play of any kind, my ear
+would be quick to discover the intruder.’
+
+‘No,’ said the old man. ‘It is kind of you to propose such a thing, but
+there’s no necessity. It was a nervous fancy of mine, I daresay; the
+effect of physical weakness. Say no more about it.’
+
+Lucius went home earlier than usual that evening, much to the amazement
+of Mrs. Wincher, who begged him to give them a ‘toon’ before departing.
+This request, however, was not supported by Lucille. She seemed anxious
+and restless, and Lucius blamed his own folly as the cause of her
+anxiety.
+
+‘My dearest,’ he said tenderly, retaining the icy-cold hand which she
+gave him at parting, ‘I fear those foolish suspicions of mine about
+the rooms up-stairs have alarmed you. I was an idiot to suggest any
+such idea. But if you have the faintest apprehension of danger, let me
+stay here to-night and keep guard. I will stay in this room, and make
+my round of the house at intervals all through the night. Let me stay,
+Lucille. Who has so good a right to protect you?’
+
+‘O no, no,’ she cried quickly, ‘on no account. There is not the
+slightest occasion for such a thing. Why should you suppose that I am
+frightened, Lucius?’
+
+‘Your own manner makes me think so, darling. This poor little hand is
+unnaturally cold, and you have not been yourself all this evening.’
+
+‘I am a little anxious about my grandfather.’
+
+‘All the more reason that I should remain here to-night. I can stay in
+his room if you like, so as to be on the spot should he by any chance
+grow suddenly worse, though I have no fear of that.’
+
+‘If you do not fear that, there is nothing to fear. As to your stopping
+here, that is out of the question. I know my grandfather wouldn’t like
+it.’
+
+Lucius could hardly dispute this, as Mr. Sivewright had actually
+refused his offer to remain. There was nothing for him to do but to
+take a lingering farewell of his betrothed, and depart, sorely troubled
+in spirit.
+
+He was not sorry when the old iron gate closed upon him. Never till
+to-night had he left the house that sheltered Lucille without a pang
+of regret, but to-night, after the discovery of the portrait in the
+loft, he felt in sore need of solitude. He wanted to look his situation
+straight in the face. This man—the man his hand had slain—was the
+father of his promised wife. The hand that he was to give to Lucille
+at the altar was red with her father’s blood. Most hideous thought,
+most bitter fatality which had brought that villain across his path
+out yonder in the trackless forest. Was this world so narrow that they
+two must needs meet—that no hand save his could be found to wreak God’s
+vengeance upon that relentless savage?
+
+Her father! And in the veins of that gentle girl, who in her innocent
+youth had seemed to him fair and pure as the snowdrop unfolding its
+white bells from out a bed of newly-fallen snow, there ran the blood
+of that most consummate scoundrel! All his old theories of hereditary
+instincts were at fault here. From such a sire so sinless a child! The
+thought tortured him. Could he ever look at that sweet pensive face
+again without conjuring up the vision of that wild haggard visage he
+had seen in the red glare of the pine-logs, those hungry savage eyes,
+gleaming athwart elf-locks of shaggy hair, and trying to find a strange
+distorted likeness between the two faces?
+
+And this horrible secret he must keep to his dying day. One hint, one
+whisper of the fatal truth, and he and Lucille would be sundered for
+ever. Did honour counsel him to confess that deed of his in the forest?
+Did honour oblige him to tell this girl that all her hopes of reunion
+with the father she had loved so dearly were vain; that his hand had
+made a sudden end of that guilty life, cut off the sinner in his
+prime, without pause for repentance, without time even to utter one
+wild appealing cry to his God? True that the man had declared himself
+an infidel, that he was steeped to the lips in brutish selfishness,
+grovelling, debased, hardened in sin. Who should dare say that
+repentance was impossible, even for a wretch so fallen? Far as the
+east is from the west are the ways of God from the ways of man, and
+in His infinite power there are infinite possibilities of mercy and
+forgiveness.
+
+‘I was mad when I did that deed,’ thought Lucius; ‘mad as in the time
+that followed when I lay raging in a brain fever; yet, Heaven knows,
+I believed it was but stern justice. There was no tribunal yonder. We
+were alone in the wilderness with God, and I deemed I did but right
+when I made myself the instrument of His wrath. All that followed that
+awful moment is darkness. Schanck never spoke of that villain’s fate,
+nor did I. We instinctively avoided the hideous subject, and conspired
+to hide the secret from Geoffrey. Poor, good-natured old Schanck!
+I wonder whether he has found his way back from the Californian
+gold-fields. If I had leisure for such a pilgrimage, I’d go down to
+Battersea and inquire. I doubt if a rough life among gold-diggers would
+suit him long.’
+
+
+
+
+Book the Second.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+GEOFFREY BEGINS A VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY.
+
+
+Not very far did Geoffrey Hossack proceed upon his Norwegian voyage.
+At Hull he discovered that—perusing his Bradshaw with a too rapid
+eye, and a somewhat disordered mind—he had mistaken the date of the
+steamer’s departure, and must waste two entire days in that prosperous
+port, waiting for the setting forth of that vessel. Even one day in
+that thriving commercial town seemed to him intolerably long. He
+perambulated King William-street and the market-place, Silver-street,
+Myton-gate, Low-gate, and all the gates; stared at the shipping; lost
+his way amidst a tangle of quays and dry docks and wet docks and
+store-houses and moving bridges, which were for ever barring his way;
+and exhausted the resources of Kingston-upon-Hull in the space of two
+hours. Then, in very despair, he took rail to Withernsea, and dined at
+a gigantic hotel, where he was ministered to by a London waiter, who
+provided him with the regulation fried sole and cutlet. Having washed
+down these too familiar viands with two or three glasses of Manzanilla,
+he set forth in quest of a solitude where to smoke his cigar in
+communion with that vast waste of waters—the German Ocean—and his own
+melancholy thoughts.
+
+Go to Norway; try to forget Janet Bertram amid those lonely hills,
+with no companions save the two faithful lads who carried his guns,
+and performed the rough services of life under canvas? Try to forget
+her amidst the solitude of nature? Vain hope! An hour’s contemplation
+of the subject on that lonely shore, remote from the parade and the
+band and all the holiday traffic of a popular watering-place, was
+enough to make a complete change in Mr. Hossack’s plans. He would not
+go to Norway. Why should he put the North Sea betwixt himself and his
+love? Who could tell what might happen in his absence, what changes
+might come to pass involving all his chances of happiness, and he,
+dolt and idiot, too far away to profit by their arising? No; he would
+stay in England, within easy reach of his idol. He might write her a
+little line now and then, just to remind her of the mere fact of his
+existence, and to acquaint her with his abode. She had not forbidden
+him to write. Decidedly, come what might, he would not leave England.
+
+This decision arrived at, after profound cogitation, he breathed more
+freely. He had been going forth like an exile—unwillingly, as if driven
+by Nemesis, that golden-winged goddess who made such hard lines for the
+Greeks. He had set forth in the first rush and tumult of his passion,
+deeming that in the wild land of the Norse gods he might stifle his
+grief, find a cure for his pain. He felt more at ease now that he had
+allowed love to gain the victory. ‘It is a privilege to inhabit the
+same country with her,’ he told himself.
+
+Not long did he linger in Hull. The next morning’s express carried him
+back to London, uncertain as to how he should spend his autumn; willing
+even to let his guns rust so that he need not drag himself too far away
+from Janet Bertram.
+
+‘Janet,’ he repeated fondly, ‘a prettier name than Jane; a name made
+for simplest tenderest verse. I’m glad I have learnt to think of her by
+it.’
+
+There were letters waiting for him at the Cosmopolitan, forwarded
+from Stillmington, nearly a week’s arrears of correspondence; letters
+feminine and masculine; the feminine bulky, ornamental as to
+stationery, be-monogramed, redolent of rose and frangipani; cousinly
+epistles which Geoffrey contemplated with a good-humoured indifference.
+
+He looked over the addresses eagerly, lest by remotest chance—yet he
+could not even hope so much—there might be a letter from Mrs. Bertram.
+There was none; so he opened one of the cousinly epistles with a
+profound sigh.
+
+Hillersdon Grange, Hampshire. _Her_ county and his. He and Lucius
+had been born and bred not twenty miles apart, and had begun their
+friendship at Winchester School. Mr. Hossack’s people lived in
+Hampshire, and were unwearying in their invitations, yet he had not
+revisited his native place since his return from America.
+
+‘I can’t understand why a man should be attached to the place where
+he was born,’ he used to say in his careless fashion when his cousins
+reproached him for his indifference. ‘In the first place, he doesn’t
+remember the event of his birth; and in the second, the locality is
+generally the most uninteresting in creation. Wherever you go, abroad
+or at home, you are always dragged about to see where particular
+people were born. You knock your head against the low timbers of
+Shakespeare’s birthplace at Stratford; you go puffing and panting up
+to a garret to see where Charlotte Corday was first admitted to the
+mystery of existence; you drive through Devonshire lanes to stare at
+the comfortable homestead where Kaleigh blinked at life’s morning sun;
+you mount a hill to admire the native home of Fox; you go stages out of
+your way to contemplate the cradle of Robespierre. And when all that
+a man loved in his boyhood lies under the sod, and the home where he
+spent his early life seems sadder than a mausoleum, people wonder that
+he is not fond of those empty rooms, haunted by the phantoms of his
+cherished dead, simply because he happened to be born in one of them.’
+
+Thus had argued Mr. Hossack when his cousins reproached him with his
+want of natural affection for the scenes of his childhood. Hillersdon
+Grange was within three miles of Homefield, where Geoffrey’s father had
+ended his quiet easy life about ten years ago, leaving his only son
+orphaned but remarkably well provided for. Squire Hossack of Hillersdon
+was the elder scion of the house, and owner of a handsome landed
+estate, and the Miss Hossacks were those two musically-disposed damsels
+whom it had been Geoffrey’s privilege to escort to various concerts and
+matinees in the winter season last past.
+
+The letter now in Geoffrey’s hand was from the elder of the damsels, a
+hard-riding good-looking young woman of four-and-twenty, who kept her
+father’s house, domineered over her younger sister, and would have had
+no objection to rule Geoffrey himself with the same wise sway.
+
+ Her letter was a new version of the oft-repeated invitation. ‘Papa
+ says, if you don’t come to us this year, he shall think you have quite
+ left off caring about your relations, and declares he really never
+ will ask you again,’ she wrote. ‘It does seem a hard thing, Geoffrey,
+ that you can go scampering about the world, and living in all manner
+ of outlandish places—Stillmington, for instance, a place which I am
+ told is abominably dull out of the hunting season, and what you can
+ have found to amuse you all these months in such a place, I can’t
+ imagine—and yet, excuse the long parenthesis, can’t find time to come
+ to us, although we are so near dear old Homefield, which you must be
+ attached to, unless your heart is much harder than I should like to
+ suppose it. The birds are plentiful this year, and papa says there are
+ some snipe in Dingley marsh. Altogether he can promise you excellent
+ sport after the first of next month.
+
+ ‘But if you want to oblige Jessie and me’ (Jessie was the younger
+ sister) ‘you will come at once, as there are to be grand doings at
+ Lady Baker’s next week; and eligible young men being scarce in this
+ neighbourhood, we should be glad to have a good-looking cousin to show
+ off. Papa escorts us, of course; but as he always contrives to get
+ among the old fogies who talk vestry and quarter-sessions, we might
+ almost as well be without any escort at all. So do come, dear Geoff,
+ and oblige your always affectionate cousin,
+
+ ARABELLA HOSSACK.
+
+ ‘P.S. Please call at Cramer’s, Chappell’s, and a few more of the
+ publishers before you come, and bring us down anything they may
+ recommend. Jessie wants some really good songs, and I should like
+ Kalbé’s fantasias upon the newest Christy melodies.’
+
+Lady Baker! Lucius had named this lady as one of the friends of his
+sister Janet; one of the county people whose notice had been the
+beginning of the fatal end. It was at Lady Baker’s house that Janet had
+met the villain who blighted her life.
+
+This was an all-sufficient reason for Geoffrey’s prompt acceptance
+of his cousin’s invitation. It was only by trying back that he could
+hope to discover the after-life of that man who had called himself
+Vandeleur, only by going back to the very beginning that he could
+hope to track his footsteps to the end. Could he but discover this
+scoundrel’s later history, and find it end in a grave, what happiness
+to carry the tidings of his discovery to Janet, and to say, ‘I bring
+you your freedom, and I claim you for my own by the right of my
+devotion!’
+
+He knew that she loved him. That knowledge had power to comfort and
+sustain him in all the pain of severance. True love can live for a long
+time upon such nutriment as this.
+
+He wrote to Lucius, telling him where he was going, and what he was
+going to do, and started for Hillersdon next morning, laden with a
+portmanteau full of new music for those daughters of the horseleech,
+his cousins.
+
+Hillersdon Grange was, as Geoffrey confessed with the placid approval
+of a kinsman, ‘not half a bad place’ for an autumn visit. The house
+was old, a fine specimen of domestic architecture in the days of the
+Plantagenets. It had been expanded for the accommodation of modern
+inhabitants; a ponderous and somewhat ugly annex added in the reign of
+William the Third; a cloister turned into a drawing-room at a later
+period—as the requirements of civilised people grew larger. The fine
+old hall, with its open roof, once the living room of the mansion,
+was now an armoury, in which casques that had been hacked at Cressy,
+and hauberks that had been battered in the Wars of the Roses, were
+diversified by antlers and stuffed stags’ heads, the trophies of the
+hunting field in more pacific ages.
+
+The Hossacks were not an old family. They could not boast that
+identity with the soil which constitutes rural aristocracy. They had
+been bankers and merchants in days gone by, and their younger sons
+were still merchants, or bankers. Geoffrey’s father, and the Squire
+of Hillersdon Grange, had succeeded, one to the patrimonial acres,
+acquired a few years before his birth; the other to the counting-house
+and its wider chances of wealth. Both had flourished. The Squire living
+the life that pleased him best, farming a little in a vastly expensive
+and vastly unprofitable fashion; writing a letter to the _Times_ now
+and then about the prospects of the harvest, or the last discovery in
+drainage; quoting Virgil, sitting at quarter-sessions, and laying down
+parochial law in the vestry. The younger making most money, working
+like a slave, and fancying himself the happier and the better man; to
+be cut off in his prime by heart-disease or an overworked brain, while
+Geoffrey was a lad at Winchester.
+
+The grounds at Hillersdon were simply perfection. The place was on
+the borders of the New Forest, and the Squire’s woods melted into that
+wider domain. A river wound through the park, and washed the border of
+the lawn; a river which had shadowy willow-sheltered bends where trout
+abounded, rushy coves and creeks famous for jack, a river delightful
+alike to the angler and to the landscape painter.
+
+‘Not half a bad place,’ said Geoffrey, yawning and looking at his watch
+on the first morning after his arrival; ‘and now, having breakfasted
+copiously upon your rustic fare—that dish of cutlets _à la Soubise_ was
+worthy of mention—may I ask what I am to do with myself? Just eleven!
+Three hours before luncheon! Do you do anything in the country when you
+are not eating or sleeping?’
+
+This inquiry was addressed to the sisters Belle and Jessie—good-looking
+young women, with fine complexions, ample figures, clear blue eyes,
+light brown hair, and the freshest of morning toilets, in the nautical
+style, as appropriate to the New Forest—wide blue collars flung back
+from full white throats, straw hats bound with blue ribbon, blue serge
+petticoats festooned coquettishly above neat little buckled shoes, with
+honest thick soles for country walking; altogether damsels of the order
+called ‘nice,’ but in no manner calculated to storm the heart of man.
+Good daughters in the present, good wives and mothers, perhaps, in the
+future, but not of the syren tribe.
+
+‘I don’t suppose Hillersdon is much duller than the backwoods of
+America,’ said Arabella, the elder, with some dignity; ‘and I hope you
+may be able to endure life until the 1st with no better company than
+ours.’
+
+‘My dearest Belle, if you and Jessie had paid me a visit on the banks
+of the Saskatchewan, I should have been unutterably happy, especially
+if you had brought me a monstrous hamper of provisions—a ham like that
+on the sideboard for instance, and a few trifles of that kind. I didn’t
+mean to depreciate Hillersdon; the hour and a half or so I spent at
+the breakfast table was positively delightful. But the worst of what
+people call the pleasures of the table is that other pleasures are apt
+to pall after them. Perhaps the best thing you could do would be to
+drive me gently about the park in your pony carriage till luncheon. I
+don’t suppose for a moment that I shall be able to eat any more at two
+o’clock; but the country air _might_ have a revivifying effect. One can
+but try.’
+
+‘You lazy creature! drive you indeed!’ exclaimed Jessie. ‘We’ll do
+nothing of the kind. But I tell you what you shall do if you like—and
+of course you will like—you shall be coxswain of our boat, and we’ll
+row you up to Dingley.’
+
+‘_You’ll_ row? Ah, I might have known those blue collars meant
+something rather desperate. However, steering a wherry isn’t wery hard
+labour, as the burlesque writers would say. I’ll come.’
+
+The sisters were delighted. A good-looking cousin to damsels in a rural
+district is like water-brooks in a dry land. In their inmost hearts
+these girls doated on Geoffrey, but artfully suppressed all outward
+token of their affection. Many a night during the comfortable leisure
+of hairbrushing, when their joint maid had been dismissed, had the
+sisters speculated on their cousin’s life, wondering why he didn’t
+marry, and whom he would marry, and so on; while the real consideration
+paramount in the mind of each was, ‘Will he ever marry _me_?’
+
+They strolled across the lawn (not a croquet lawn of a hundred and
+twenty feet square, after the manner of ‘grounds’ attached to suburban
+villas, but a wide undulating tract of greensward, shaded here and
+there by groups of picturesque old trees—maple and copper beech, and
+ancient hawthorns on which the berries were beginning to redden) to a
+Swiss boathouse with pointed gables and thatched roof, ample room for
+a small flotilla below, and a spacious apartment above—a room which,
+had young men been dominant in the household, would doubtless have been
+made a _tabagie_ or a billiard room, but which, under the gentler sway
+of young ladies, had been gaily decorated with light chintz draperies
+and fern cases, innocent-looking maple furniture, easels, piano, and
+workbaskets.
+
+That winding river reminded Geoffrey of the weedy ditch at Stillmington
+on which he had spent many a summer afternoon, pulling against the
+stream with disconsolate soul, thinking of his implacable divinity. He
+gave a little sigh, and wished himself back in Stillmington; to suffer,
+to hope, to despair—only to be near her.
+
+‘I must make an end of this misery somehow,’ he said to himself, ‘or it
+will make an end of me.’
+
+‘What a sigh, Geoffrey; and how thoughtful you look!’ exclaimed Jessie,
+who had an eye which marked every mote in the summer air.
+
+‘Did I sigh? I may have eaten too much breakfast. Look here, Belle,
+you’d better let me take a pair of sculls, while you and Jessie dabble
+your hands in the water and talk of your last new dresses. It isn’t
+good for a man to be idle. I shall have the blues if I sit still and
+steer.’
+
+‘What a strange young man you are!’ said Belle. ‘Ten minutes ago you
+wanted to loll in a pony carriage and be driven.’
+
+‘I might have endured the pony carriage, but I can’t endure the boat
+unless I make myself useful. There, get in please, and sit down. What
+a toyshop affair! and as broad as a house! I should think the man who
+built Noah’s Ark must have designed this.’
+
+The sisters exclaimed against this disparagement of their bark,
+which a local boatbuilder had adorned with all the devices of his
+art—cane-work, French polish and gilding, crimson damask-covered
+cushions, dainty cord and tassels—all those prettinesses which the
+Oxonian, who likes a boat that he can carry on his shoulder, regards
+with ineffable contempt.
+
+The stream was narrow but deep, and pleasantly sheltered, for the most
+part, with leafage; the banks clothed in beauty, and every turn of the
+river disclosing a new picture. But neither Geoffrey nor his companions
+gave themselves up to the contemplation of this ever-varying landscape.
+Geoffrey was thinking of Janet Bertram; the girls were wondering what
+made their cousin so silent.
+
+Mr. Hossack plied his sculls bravely, despite his abstraction, but
+even in this was actuated less by a desire to gratify his cousins
+than by a lurking design of his own. Six miles up this very stream
+lay Mardenholme, the mansion of the Bakers. Lady Baker’s famous
+gardens—gardens on which fabulous sums were annually lavished—sloped
+down to the brim of this very river. If he could row as far as
+Mardenholme, he might induce the girls to take him in to Lady Baker
+forthwith, and thus obtain the interview he sighed for. To hope for any
+confidential conversation with that lady on the day of a great garden
+party seemed foolish in the extreme; nor did it suit his impatient
+spirit to wait for the garden party.
+
+‘When are these high-jinks to come off at Lady Baker’s?’ he inquired
+presently, in his most careless manner.
+
+‘Next Tuesday. It’s to be such a swell party, Geoffrey—croquet,
+archery, a morning concert, a German tea, _tableaux vivants_, and a
+dance to wind up with.’
+
+‘_Tableaux vivants_,’ said Geoffrey with a yawn; ‘the Black Brunswicker
+and the Huguenot, I suppose. We have grown too æsthetic for the Juan
+and Haydee, and the Conrad and Medora of one’s youth. Are you two girls
+in the tableaux?’
+
+‘O dear no,’ exclaimed Belle, bridling a little. ‘We are not Lady
+Baker’s last mania. We are neighbours, and she always invites us to her
+large parties, and begs us to come to her Thursday kettledrum, and is
+monstrously civil; but in her heart of hearts she doesn’t care a straw
+for humdrum country people. She is always taking up artists and singers
+and actors, and that kind of thing. She positively raves about _them_.’
+
+‘Ah, I’ve heard something of that before,’ said Geoffrey thoughtfully.
+‘She’s musical, isn’t she?’
+
+‘She calls herself so—goes to the opera perpetually in the London
+season, and patronises all the local concerts, and gives musical
+parties—but nobody ever heard her play a note.’
+
+‘Ah,’ said Geoffrey, ‘I don’t think people with a real passion for
+music often do play. They look upon the murder of a fine sonata as a
+species of sacrilege, and wisely refrain from the attempt, but not the
+deed, which would confound them. By the way, talking of Lady Baker and
+her protégées, did you ever hear of a Miss Davoren, who was rather
+distinguished for her fine voice, some years ago?’
+
+‘Yes,’ said Belle, ‘I have heard Lady Baker rave about her. She was a
+clergyman’s daughter at Wykhamston. And I have heard other people say
+that Lady Baker’s patronage was the ruin of her, and that she left her
+home in some improper way, and broke her poor old father’s heart.’
+
+This little speech sent a sharp pang through another heart, the honest
+heart that loved the sinner so fondly.
+
+‘You never saw Miss Davoren, I suppose?’
+
+‘Of course not,’ cried Belle. ‘It was before I was out of the nursery.’
+
+‘But you were not blind when you were in the nursery; you might have
+seen her.’
+
+‘How could I? I didn’t go to Lady Baker’s parties before I was out, and
+papa doesn’t know many Wykhamston people.’
+
+‘Ah, then you never saw her. Was she pretty?’
+
+‘Perfectly lovely, according to Lady Baker; but all her geese are
+swans.’
+
+‘She must be a very enthusiastic person, this Lady Baker. Do you think
+you could contrive to introduce me to her?—to-day, for instance. I can
+row you down to Mardenholme by one o’clock.’
+
+‘It would be so dreadfully early to call,’ said Jessie, ‘and then, you
+see, Thursday is her day. But she’s always extremely kind, and pretends
+to be glad to see us.’
+
+‘Why pretends? She may be really glad.’
+
+‘O, she can’t possibly be glad to see half the county. There must be
+some make-believe about it. However, she gives herself up to that kind
+of thing, and I suppose she likes it. What do you think, Belle? Would
+it look very strange if we called with Geoffrey?’
+
+‘We might risk it,’ said Belle, anxious to indulge the prodigal. ‘She’s
+almost sure to be somewhere about the garden if she’s at home. She
+spends half her life in the garden at Mardenholme.’
+
+‘Then we’ll find her, and approach her without ceremony,’ replied
+Geoffrey, sending the boat swiftly through the clear water. ‘Depend
+upon it, _I_ shall make myself at home.’
+
+‘We’re not afraid of that,’ answered Belle, who was much more disturbed
+by the idea that this free-and-easy young man might forget the homage
+due to a county magnate such as Lady Baker—a personage who in a manner
+made the rain or fine weather in this part of Hampshire. A summer which
+her ladyship did not spend at Mardenholme was regarded as a bad and
+profitless season. People almost wondered that the harvest was not
+backward, that the clover and vetches came up pretty much the same as
+usual.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+LADY BAKER.
+
+
+It was hardly one o’clock when they beheld the terraced gardens
+of Mardenholme; gardens that were worth a day’s journey to see; a
+thoroughly Italian picture, set in a thoroughly English landscape;
+marble balustrades surmounting banks of flowers; tall spire-shaped
+conifers ranged at intervals, tier above tier; marble steps and marble
+basins, in every direction; and below this show-garden, sloping down
+to the river, a lawn of softest verdure, bordered by vast shrubberies,
+that to the stranger seemed pathless, yet where a fallen leaf could
+hardly have been found, so exquisite was the order of the grounds.
+
+Geoffrey tied his boat to the lower branch of a mighty willow which
+dipped its green tresses in the stream, leaped out and landed his
+cousins as coolly as if he had arrived at an hotel. No mortal was to
+be seen for the first moment, but Jessie’s sharp eyes beheld a white
+shirt-sleeve gleaming athwart a group of magnolias.
+
+‘There’s a gardener over there,’ she said: ‘we’d better ask him if Lady
+Baker is in the grounds.’
+
+They made for the gardener, who, with the slow and philosophic air of
+a man whose wages are not dependent on the amount of his labour, was
+decapitating daisies that had been impertinent enough to lift their
+vulgar heads in this patrician domain. This hireling informed them that
+he had seen her ladyship somewheres about not ten minutes agone. She
+was in the Chaney temple, perhaps, and he volunteered to show them the
+way.
+
+‘You needn’t trouble yourself,’ said Jessie. ‘I know the way.’
+
+‘What does he mean by the Chaney temple?’ asked Geoffrey, as they
+departed.
+
+‘It is a garden-house Lady Baker has had sent over from China,’
+answered Belle. ‘I know she’s fond of sitting there.’
+
+They entered a darksome alley in the shrubbery, which wound along the
+river-bank some little way, opening into a kind of wilderness; a very
+tame wilderness, inhabited by water-fowl of various tribes, which
+stretched out their necks and screamed vindictively at the intruders.
+Here on the brink of the river was the garden-house, an edifice of
+bamboo and lattice-work, adorned with bells, very much open to all the
+winds of heaven, but a pleasant shelter on a sultry day in August. When
+the breeze shook them, the numerous bells rang ever so faintly, and the
+sound woke echoes on the farther bank of the stream.
+
+Lady Baker was reclining in a bamboo-chair, reading, with a young lady
+and gentleman, and a Japanese pug in attendance upon her.
+
+‘Dear Lady Baker,’ cried Belle, anxious to make the best of her
+unceremonious approach, ‘I hope you won’t think it very dreadful of us
+to come into the gardens this way like burglars; but my cousin Geoffrey
+was so anxious to be presented to you, that he insisted on rowing us
+here this morning.’
+
+‘I do think it extremely dreadful,’ replied the lady with a pleasant
+laugh. ‘And so this is the cousin of whom I have heard so much. Welcome
+to Mardenholme, Mr. Hossack. We ought to have known each other long
+before this, since we are such near neighbours.’
+
+‘I have the honour to possess a small estate not far from your
+ladyship’s,’ answered Geoffrey; ‘but, being hitherto unacquainted
+with the chief attraction of the neighbourhood in your person, I have
+ignorantly given a lease of my place to a retired sugar-broker.’
+
+‘That’s a pity, for I think we should have been good neighbours. Mr.
+Hossack, Mrs. Wimple; Mr. Wimple, Mr. Hossack,’ murmured Lady Baker
+in a parenthesis; at which introduction the young lady and the young
+gentleman, newly married, and indifferent to the external world,
+honoured Geoffrey with distant bows, and immediately withdrew to a
+trellised balcony overhanging the river, to gaze upon that limpid
+stream, or, in Geoffrey’s modern vocabulary, ‘to spoon.’ ‘You are a
+wonderful traveller, I understand,’ continued her ladyship.
+
+‘Hardly, in the modern sense of the word,’ said Geoffrey, with becoming
+modesty. ‘I have hunted the bighorn on the Rocky Mountains, and shot
+grouse in Norway; but I have neither discovered the source of a river,
+nor found an unknown waterfall; in short, as a traveller, I am a very
+insignificant individual. But as a rule I keep moving, locomotion being
+about the only employment open to a man to whom Providence has denied
+either talent or ambition.’
+
+‘You are at any rate more modest than the generality of lions, Mr.
+Hossack,’ Lady Baker replied graciously.
+
+She was a little woman, sallow and thin, with a face which in any one
+less than the mistress of Mardenholme would have been insignificant.
+But she had fine eyes and teeth, and dressed with the exquisite taste
+of a woman who studied the fitness of things and not the fashion-book.
+She had a manner that was at once stately and caressing, and could
+confer a favour with the air of a princess of the blood royal. She
+had spent all her life in society, and, except when she slept, knew
+not what it was to be alone. She could have had but scanty leisure
+for reading, yet she knew, or seemed to know, everything that society
+knew. Her detractors declared that she never read anything but the
+newspapers, and thus, by a zealous study of the _Times_ and the
+critical journals, kept herself far in advance of those stupid people
+who wade through books. She skimmed the cream of other people’s
+knowledge, shrugged her shoulders in mild depreciation of books she
+had never read, and wore the newest shades of opinion as she wore the
+newest colours. For the rest, she was of an uncertain age, had been in
+society for about a quarter of a century, and looked five-and-thirty.
+Her light-brown hair, which she wore with almost classic simplicity, as
+yet revealed no tell-tale streak of silver. Perhaps, like Mr. Mivers in
+_Kenelm Chillingly_, Lady Baker had begun her wig early.
+
+Sir Horatio Veering Baker, the husband of this distinguished personage,
+was rather an appanage of her state than an entity. She produced him
+on ceremonial occasions, just as her butler produced the parcel-gilt
+tankards and gigantic rosewater salvers on the buffet; and at other
+times he retired, like the moon on those dark nights when earth knows
+not her gentle splendour. He was a mild-faced old man, who devoted
+his days to various ologies, in which no one but himself and his old
+servant seemed to take the faintest interest—and the servant only
+pretended. He inhabited, for the most part, a distant wing of the
+mansion, where he had a vast area of glass cases for the display of
+those specimens which illustrated his ologies, and represented the
+labour of his life. Sometimes, but not always, he appeared at the
+bottom of his dinner table; and when, among her ladyship’s guests, a
+scientific man perchance appeared, Sir Horatio did him homage, and
+carried him off after dinner for an inspection of the specimens. Lady
+Baker was amiably tolerant of her husband’s hobbies. She received him
+with unvarying graciousness when he hobbled into her drawing-room in
+his dress-coat and antique tie, looking hardly less antediluvian than
+the petrified jawbone of a megatherium, which was one of the gems in
+his collection; and she was politely solicitous for his well-being when
+he pronounced himself ‘a little fagged,’ and preferred to dine in his
+study.
+
+Geoffrey soon found himself on the friendliest terms with the mistress
+of Mardenholme. Lady Baker liked good-looking young men who had no
+unpleasant consciousness of their good looks, and liked the modern easy
+manner of youth, provided the ease never degenerated into insolence.
+She took Geoffrey under her wing immediately, walked nearly a mile with
+him under the midday sun, protected by a huge, white silk umbrella,
+to show him the lions of Mardenholme; that profound hypocrite, Mr.
+Hossack, affecting an ardent admiration of ferneries and flower beds,
+in the hope that this perambulatory exhibition might presently procure
+him the opportunity for which his soul languished.
+
+‘Let me once find myself alone with this nice old party,’ he said to
+himself, ‘and I won’t let the chance slip. She shall tell me all she
+knows about the villain who wronged Janet Davoren.’
+
+To his infinite vexation, however, his cousins, who worshipped the
+mistress of Mardenholme, followed close upon her footsteps throughout
+the exposition, went into raptures with every novelty among the ferny
+tribes, and made themselves altogether a nuisance. Geoffrey was
+beginning to struggle with dreary yawns when the Mardenholme luncheon
+gong relieved the situation.
+
+‘And now that I’ve shown you my latest acquisition, let us go to
+luncheon,’ said Lady Baker, who was never happier than when feeding a
+new acquaintance. In fact, she liked her friends very much as she liked
+her orchids and ferns—for the sake of their novelty.
+
+Nobody ever refused an invitation from Lady Baker. It was almost the
+same thing as a royal command. Jessie and Belle murmured something
+about ‘papa,’ and the voice of duty which called them back to
+Hillersdon. But Lady Baker waived the objection with that regal air of
+hers, which implied that any one else’s inconvenience was a question of
+smallest moment when her pleasure was at stake.
+
+‘I should be positively unhappy if you went away,’ she said; ‘I have
+only that Mr. and Mrs. Wimple, whom you just now saw in the garden
+house. This is their first visit since their honeymoon, and their
+exhibition of mutual affection is almost unendurable. But as it is a
+match of my own making I am obliged to tolerate the infliction. They
+are my only visitors until to-morrow. So if you don’t stop, I shall be
+bored to death between this and dinner. I actually caught that absurd
+child, Florence Wimple, in the very act of spelling “YOU DARLING”
+in the deaf-and-dumb alphabet to that simpleton of a husband of hers
+across the breakfast table this morning.’
+
+Moved by this melancholy picture, Jessie and Belle consented to remain.
+Geoffrey had meant to stay from the outset. Indeed, he had landed on
+the greensward of Mardenholme determined to attain his object before he
+left.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+LADY BAKER TELLS THE STORY OF THE PAST.
+
+
+The luncheon party was gay enough, in spite of Mr. and Mrs. Wimple’s
+infatuation for each other, which rendered them, as it were,
+non-existing for the rest of the party. They gazed upon each other
+with rapt admiring eyes, and handed each other creams and jellies, and
+smiled at each other upon the smallest provocation. But to-day Lady
+Baker suffered them to amuse themselves after their own fashion, and
+gave all her attention to Geoffrey. If he was not distinguished in the
+realms of art, he was at least an agreeable young man, who knew how to
+flatter a lady of fashion on the wrong side of forty without indulging
+in that florid colouring which awakens doubts of the flatterer’s good
+faith. He improved his opportunities at luncheon to such good purpose,
+that when that meal was over, and the devoted Mr. Wimple had been
+carried off by his wife and the other two ladies to play croquet, Lady
+Baker volunteered to show Geoffrey the Mardenholme picture-gallery—a
+very fair collection of modern art, which had been acquired by her
+ladyship’s father, a great Manchester man; for it was commerce in soft
+goods which had created the wealth wherewith this lady had endowed
+Sir Horatio Veering Baker, and whence had arisen all the splendours
+of Mardenholme. This was the very thing Geoffrey desired, and for
+which he had been scheming, with the _finesse_ of a Jesuit, during the
+hospitable meal. He had affected an enthusiast’s love of art, declaring
+how, from his earliest youth, he had languished to behold the treasures
+of the Mardenholme gallery.
+
+Lady Baker was delighted.
+
+‘My father lived all his later life among artists,’ she said. ‘He made
+his fortune in commerce, as I daresay you have heard; but in heart he
+was an artist. I myself have painted a little.’ (What had Lady Baker
+not done a little?) ‘But music is my grand passion. The pictures were
+almost all bought off the easel—several of them inspired by my father’s
+suggestions. He was full of imagination. Come, Mr. Hossack, while those
+foolish people play croquet we will take a stroll in the gallery.’
+
+She led the way through the wide marble-paved hall, whence ascended a
+staircase of marble, like that noble one in the Duke of Buccleuch’s
+palace at Dalkeith, and thence to the gallery, a spacious apartment
+lighted from the roof. It was here Lady Baker gave her concerts and
+musical kettledrums, to which half the county came to sip black coffee
+and eat ices and stare at the pictures, while the lady’s latest
+discovery in the world of harmony charmed or excruciated their ears, as
+the case might be.
+
+To-day this apartment looked delightfully cool and quiet after the
+sunlit brightness of the other rooms. A striped canvas blind was drawn
+over the glass roof, gentle zephyrs floated in through invisible
+apertures, and a tender half-light prevailed which was pleasant for
+tired eyes, if not the best possible light for seeing pictures.
+
+‘I’ll have the blinds drawn up,’ said Lady Baker, ‘and you shall see
+my gems. There is an Etty yonder that I would not part with if a good
+fairy offered me five additional years of life in exchange for it.’
+
+‘With so long a lease of life still in hand, five years more or less
+can seem of no consequence,’ said Geoffrey gallantly; ‘but I think an
+octogenarian would accept even a smaller bid for the picture.’
+
+‘Flatterer!’ exclaimed Lady Baker. ‘If you wish to see pictures, you
+must be good enough to ring that bell, in order that we may get a
+little more light.’
+
+‘A moment, dear Lady Baker,’ pleaded Geoffrey; ‘this half-light
+is delightful, and my eyes are like a cat’s. I can see best in a
+demi-obscurity like this. Yes, the Etty is charming. What modelling,
+what chiaroscuro, what delicious colouring!’
+
+‘You are looking at a Frost,’ said Lady Baker, with offended dignity.
+
+‘A thousand pardons. I recognise the delicacy of his outlines, the
+purity of his colour. But forgive me, Lady Baker, when I tell you that
+my devotion to art is secondary to my desire to be alone with you!’
+
+Lady Baker looked at him with a startled expression. Was it possible
+that this young Oxonian had been seized with a sudden and desperate
+passion for a woman old enough to be his mother? Young men are so
+foolish; and Lady Baker was so accustomed to hear herself talked of
+as a divinity, that she could hardly suppose herself inferior in
+attractiveness to Cleopatra or Ninon de l’Enclos.
+
+‘What do you mean, Mr. Hossack?’
+
+‘Only that, presuming on your ladyship’s well-known nobility of
+soul and goodness of heart, I am about to appeal to both. Women of
+fashion have been called fickle, but I cannot think _you_ deserve that
+reproach.’
+
+‘I am not a woman of fashion,’ answered Lady Baker, still very much in
+the dark; ‘I have lived for art—art the all-sufficing, the eternal—not
+for the pretty frivolities which make up the sum of a London season.
+If I have lived in the midst of a crowd, it is because I have sought
+intellect and genius wherever they were to be found. I have striven to
+surround myself with great souls. If sometimes I have discovered only
+the empty husk where I had hoped to find the precious kernel, it is not
+my fault.’
+
+‘Would that the world could boast of more such women!’ exclaimed
+Geoffrey, feeling that he had cleared an avenue to the subject he
+wanted to arrive at. ‘Amongst your protégées of years gone by, Lady
+Baker, there was one in whose fate I am profoundly interested. She is
+the sister of my most valued friend. I speak of Janet Davoren.’
+
+Lady Baker started, and a cloud came over her face, as if that name had
+been suggestive of painful recollections.
+
+‘O, Mr. Hossack, why do you mention that unfortunate girl’s name? I
+have been so miserable about her—have even felt myself to blame for
+her flight, and all the trouble it brought on that good old man her
+father. He never would confess that she had run away from home; he
+spoke of her always in the same words: “She is staying with friends in
+London;” but every one knew there was some sad mystery connected with
+her disappearance, and I was only too well able to guess the nature of
+that mystery. But you speak of her as if you knew her—as if you could
+enlighten me as to her present position. If it is in your power to do
+that, I shall be beyond measure grateful to you; you will take a load
+from my mind.’
+
+‘I may be able to do that by and by,’ answered Geoffrey; ‘at present
+I can say very little, except that the lady lives, and that her
+brother is my friend. From you, Lady Baker, I venture to ask all the
+information you can give me as to those circumstances which led to Miss
+Davoren’s disappearance from Wykhamston.’
+
+Lady Baker sighed and paused before she responded to this inquiry.
+
+‘All I can tell you amounts to but little,’ she said; ‘and even that
+little is, for the greater part, conjecture or mere guess-work. But
+what I can tell shall be freely told, and if I can be of any service
+to that poor girl, either now or in the future, she may rely on my
+friendship; and, whatever the circumstances of her flight, she shall
+have my compassion.’
+
+‘Those circumstances reflect no shame upon her, Lady Baker,’ answered
+Geoffrey with warmth. ‘She was a victim, but not a sinner.’
+
+‘I am most thankful to hear that. And now sit down, Mr. Hossack,
+and you shall hear my story. I think I can guess the nature of your
+interest in this lady, in spite of your reserve; and if I can help you
+towards any good result, I shall be delighted to do so. There are few
+girls I ever met more worthy of admiration, and, I believe, of esteem,
+than Janet Davoren.’
+
+They sat down side by side in a recess at the end of the gallery; and
+here Lady Baker began her story.
+
+‘I first met Miss Davoren,’ she said, ‘at the Castle. The Marchioness
+had taken her up on account of her fine voice; although Lady Guildford
+had no more soul for music than a potato; but, like the rest of the
+world, she likes to have attractive people about her; and so she had
+taken up Miss Davoren. The dear girl was as beautiful as she was
+gifted.’
+
+‘She is so still!’ cried Geoffrey with enthusiasm.
+
+‘Ah, I thought I was right!’ said Lady Baker; at which Geoffrey blushed
+like a girl. ‘Yes, she was positively beautiful; and if she had sat
+like a statue to be looked at and admired, she would have been an
+attraction; but her talent and beauty together made her almost divine.
+My heart was drawn to her at once. I called at Wykhamston vicarage next
+day, and invited Mr. Davoren and his daughter to my next dinner-party;
+and then I asked Janet to spend a long day with me alone—not a creature
+to be allowed to disturb us—for, as I told her, I wanted really to know
+her. We spent that day together in my boudoir, giving ourselves up to
+the delight of music and intellectual conversation. I found Janet all
+soul; full of imagination and poetry, romantic, enthusiastic, a poet’s
+ideal heroine. I made her sing Mozart’s Masses to me until my soul was
+steeped in melody. In a word, we discovered that there was perfect
+sympathy between us, and I did not rest till I had persuaded Mr.
+Davoren to let his daughter come to stay with me. He was averse from
+this. He talked of the disparity in our modes of life, feared that the
+luxury and gaiety of Mardenholme would make the girl’s home seem poor
+and dull by comparison; but I overruled his objections, appealed to the
+mother’s pride in her child, hinted at the great things which might
+come of Janet’s introduction to society, and had my own way. Fatal
+persistence! How often have I looked back to that day and regretted my
+selfish pertinacity! But I really did think I might be the means of
+getting the dear girl a good husband.’
+
+‘And you succeeded in uniting her to a villain,’ said Geoffrey
+bitterly; then remembering himself he added hastily, ‘Pray pardon my
+impertinence, Lady Baker, but this is a subject upon which I feel
+strongly.’
+
+‘You foolish young man!’ exclaimed Lady Baker in her grand way, that
+air of calm superiority with which she had gone through the world, the
+proud serenity of mind which accompanies the possession of unlimited
+means. ‘Do you think if I had not read your secret at the very first
+that I should take the trouble to tell you all this? Well, the dear
+girl came to stay with me. I was charmed with her. Sir Horatio even
+liked her, although he rarely takes notice of any one unconnected
+with ologies. He showed her his specimens, recommended her to study
+geology—which he said would open her mind—and made himself remarkably
+pleasant whenever he found her with me.’
+
+Lady Baker paused, sighed thoughtfully, and then took up the thread of
+her recollections.
+
+‘How happy we were! I should weary you if I described our intercourse.
+We were like girls together, for Janet’s society made me younger.
+I felt I had discovered in this girl a mind equal to my own, and I
+was not too proud to place myself on a level with her. I had very
+few people with me when she first came, and we lived our own lives
+in perfect freedom, wandering about the grounds—it was in early
+summer—staying up till long after midnight listening to that dear
+girl’s singing, and thoroughly enjoying ourselves. One afternoon I
+drove Janet in my pony carriage to Hillsleigh, where I daresay you know
+there is a fine old Gothic church, and a still finer organ.’
+
+‘I can guess what is coming,’ said Geoffrey, frowning.
+
+‘Yes, it was at Hillsleigh we first met the man whose baneful influence
+destroyed that poor child’s life; and O, Mr. Hossack, I blame myself
+for this business. If it had not been for my folly, he could never have
+possessed himself of Janet’s mind as he did. I saw the evil when it was
+too late to undo what I had done.’
+
+‘Pray go on,’ said Geoffrey eagerly; ‘I want to know who and what that
+man was.’
+
+‘A mystery,’ answered Lady Baker. ‘And unhappily it was the mystery
+which surrounded him that made him most attractive to a romantic girl.
+Please let me tell the story my own way. How well I remember that June
+afternoon, the soft warm air, the birds singing in the old churchyard!
+We wandered about among the tombstones for a little while, reading the
+epitaphs, and, I am afraid, sometimes laughing at them, until all at
+once Janet caught hold of my arm and cried “Hark!” her face lighted up
+with rapture. Through the open windows of the church there came such a
+burst of melody, the opening of the _Agnus Dei_ in Mozart’s Twelfth,
+played by a master-hand. “O,” whispered Janet, with a gasp of delight,
+“isn’t that lovely?”’
+
+‘It was that scoundrel!’ cried Geoffrey.
+
+‘“I told you the Hillsleigh organ was worth hearing,” said I. “Yes,”
+said Janet, “but you did not tell me that the organist was one of
+the finest players in England. I’m sure that man must be.” “Why, my
+dear,” said I, “when I was last here the man played the usual droning
+voluntaries. This must be a new organist. Let’s go in and see him.”
+“No,” said Janet, stopping me, “let us stay here till he has done
+playing. He may leave off if we go in.” So we sat down upon one of the
+crumbling old tombstones and listened to our hearts’ content. The man
+played through a great part of the Mass, and then strayed off into
+something else; wild strange music, which might or might not be sacred,
+but which sounded to me like a musical version of the great Pandemonium
+scene in _Paradise Lost_. Altogether this lasted nearly an hour, and
+then we heard the church door open and saw the player come out.’
+
+‘Pray describe him.’
+
+‘He was tall and thin. I should think about five-and-thirty, with a
+face that was at once handsome and peculiar; a narrow oval face with a
+low forehead, an aquiline nose, a complexion pale to sallowness—like
+ivory that has yellowed with age—and the blackest eyes I ever saw.’
+
+‘And black hair that grew downward into a peak in the centre of the
+forehead,’ cried Geoffrey breathlessly.
+
+‘What, you know him, then?’ exclaimed Lady Baker.
+
+‘I believe I met with him in the backwoods of America; your description
+both of the man and of his style of music precisely fits the man I
+am thinking of. That peculiarity about the form of the hair upon the
+forehead seems too much for a coincidence. I wonder what became of that
+man?’ he added, thinking aloud.
+
+‘Let me finish my story, and then I will show you Mr. Vandeleur’s
+photograph,’ said Lady Baker.
+
+‘You have a photograph of him?’ cried Geoffrey; ‘how lucky!’
+
+‘Yes; and my possession of that portrait arises from the merest
+accident. I had a couple of photographers about the place at the time
+of Mr. Vandeleur’s visits, photographing the gardens and ferneries
+for me, and one afternoon I took it into my head to have my guests
+photographed. We had been drinking tea in the river-garden, and I sent
+for the men and told them to arrange us in a group for a photograph.
+They pulled us about and moved and fidgeted us till we were all half
+worn out; but they ultimately produced half-a-dozen very fair groups,
+in a modern Watteau style, and Janet and Mr. Vandeleur are striking
+figures in all the groups. But this is anticipating events. I’ll show
+you the photos by and by.’
+
+‘I await your ladyship’s pleasure,’ said Geoffrey, ‘and am calm as a
+statue of Patience; but I would bet even money that this Vandeleur is
+the self-same scoundrel Lucius Davoren and I fell in with in America.’
+
+‘Extraordinary coincidences hardly surprise me. My life has been made
+up of them,’ said Lady Baker. ‘Well, Mr. Hossack, enchanted with his
+playing, I was foolish enough to introduce myself to this stranger,
+whom I found a man of the world, and, as I believed, a gentleman. He
+was on a walking tour through the south-west of England, he told us,
+and having heard of the Hillsleigh church and the Hillsleigh organ, had
+come out of his way to spend a day or two in the quiet village to which
+the church belongs. His manners were conciliating and agreeable. I
+asked him to breakfast at Mardenholme on the following day, promising
+to show him my gardens and to let him hear some fine music. He came,
+heard Janet play and sing after breakfast, and, at my request, stayed
+all day. I daresay you would think me a very foolish woman if I were
+to attempt to describe the influence this man soon began to exercise
+over me. I knew nothing of him except what he chose to tell, and that
+was rather hinted than told. But he contrived to make me believe that
+he was the son of a man of position and of large wealth; that his
+passion for music, and his somewhat Bohemian tendencies, had made
+a breach between him and his father; and that he was determined to
+live in freedom and independence upon a small income which he had
+inherited from his mother rather than sacrifice his inclinations to the
+prejudices of a tyrannical old man who wanted his son to make a figure
+in the House of Commons.’
+
+‘You made no attempt to discover who and what the man really was?’
+
+‘No. It seemed painful to him to speak of his father; and I respected
+his reserve. At the risk of being thought very foolish, I must confess
+that I was fascinated by the air of romance, and even mystery, which
+surrounded him; perhaps also somewhat fascinated by the man himself,
+whose very eccentricities were attractive. He was so different from
+other people; followed in no way the conventional model by which most
+men shape themselves; took so little trouble to make himself agreeable.
+Again, he entered my house only as a passing stranger. His genius, and
+not the importance and respectability of his connections, gave him the
+right of admission to my circle. If I tried to lure a butterfly into my
+drawing-room for the sake of its brilliant colouring, I should hardly
+trouble myself about the butterfly’s parentage or antecedents. So with
+Mr. Vandeleur. I accepted him for what he was—an amateur musician of
+exceptional powers. I daresay, if he had been a professional artist, I
+should have taken more pains to find out who he was.’
+
+‘I daresay,’ retorted Geoffrey bitterly, ‘if he had confessed to
+getting his living by his talents, you would have been doubtful as to
+the safety of your plate. But a fine gentleman, strolling through the
+country for his own pleasure, is a different order of being.’
+
+‘Mr. Hossack, I fear you are a democrat! That dreadful Oxford is the
+cradle of advanced opinions. However,’ continued Lady Baker, ‘Mr.
+Vandeleur took up his quarters at our village inn, and spent the
+greater part of his time in this house. I take some credit to myself,
+being by nature sadly impulsive, for not having asked him to stay here
+altogether. For my own part, I had no doubt as to his respectability.
+Vandeleur was a good name. True, it might be assumed; but then the
+man himself had a superior air. I thought I could not be mistaken.
+Mardenholme filled with visitors soon after Mr. Vandeleur’s appearance
+among us. Every one seemed to like him. His genius astounded and
+charmed the women. The men liked his conversation, and admired, and
+even envied, him for his billiard playing, which I believe was _hors
+ligne_. “The time I have not given to music I have given to billiards,”
+he said when some one wondered at his skill. This must have been
+exaggeration, however, for he had read enormously, and could talk upon
+every possible subject.’
+
+‘Yes,’ said Geoffrey thoughtfully, ‘the description tallies in every
+detail—allowing for the difference between a man in the centre of
+civilisation, and the same man run wild and savaged by semi-starvation.
+I know this Vandeleur.’
+
+‘You know where he is, and what he is doing?’ asked Lady Baker eagerly.
+
+‘No. At a random guess I should think it probable that his skeleton
+is peacefully mouldering under the pine-trees somewhere between the
+Athabasca and the Pacific—unless he was as lucky as my party in falling
+across better furnished travellers.’
+
+Geoffrey had entertained her ladyship with a slight sketch of his
+American adventures during luncheon, so she understood this allusion.
+
+‘You must tell me all about your meeting with him by and by,’ she
+said. ‘I have very little more to say. Those two, Janet and Mr.
+Vandeleur, were brought very much together by their common genius. He
+accompanied her songs, taught her new forms of expression, showed her
+the mechanics of her art; and her improvement under this tuition, even
+in a little less than three weeks, was marvellous. They sang together,
+played concertante duets for violin and piano, and sometimes spent
+hours together alone in this room, preparing some new surprise for the
+evening. You will say that I ought to have considered the danger of
+such companionship for a romantic inexperienced girl. I should have
+done so, perhaps, had I not believed in this Mr. Vandeleur, and had
+there not been lurking in my mind a dim idea that a marriage between
+him and Janet would be the most natural thing in the world. True, that
+according to his own showing his resources were small in the present;
+yet there could be no doubt, I thought, that he would ultimately
+be reconciled to his father, and restored to his proper position.
+But remember, Mr. Hossack, this was only a vague notion, an idea of
+something that might happen in the remote future, when we should have
+become a great deal better acquainted with Mr. Vandeleur and his
+surroundings. Of present danger I had not a thought.’
+
+‘Strange blindness,’ said Geoffrey. ‘But then Fortune is blind, and in
+this instance you were Fortune.’
+
+‘Bear in mind,’ replied Lady Baker, ‘that this man was full fifteen
+years Janet’s senior, that she was immensely admired by men who were
+younger, and, in the ordinary sense of the word, far more attractive.
+Why should I think this man would exercise so fatal an influence over
+her? But towards the end of her visit my eyes were opened. I came into
+this room one morning and found Janet in tears by yonder piano, while
+Mr. Vandeleur bent over her, speaking in a low earnest voice. Both
+started guiltily at sight of me. This, and numerous other trifling
+indications, told me that there was mischief at work; and when Mr.
+Davoren wrote to me a few days afterwards, urging his daughter’s
+return, I was only too glad to let her go, believing that the end
+of her visit would be the end of all danger. When she was gone, I
+considered it my duty, as her friend, to ascertain the real state of
+the case. I told Mr. Vandeleur my suspicions, and assured him of my
+sympathy and my interest if he were, as I believed, anxious to win
+Janet for his wife. But to my utter astonishment and indignation he
+repudiated the idea; declared his profound esteem and admiration for
+Miss Davoren, and talked of “fetters” the nature of which he did not
+condescend to explain. “Yet I found you talking to that young lady in
+a manner which had moved her to tears,” I said doubtfully. “My dear
+madam, I had been telling her the troubles of my youth,” he answered
+with perfect self-possession, “and that gentle heart was moved to
+pity.” “A gentle heart, indeed,” I replied; “who would not hate the
+scoundrel who could wound it?” I was by no means satisfied with this
+conversation, and from that moment lowered my opinion of Mr. Vandeleur.
+He may have perceived the change in my feelings; in any case, he
+speedily announced his intention of travelling farther westward,
+thanked me for my friendly reception, and bade me good-bye. Only a few
+weeks after that I heard of Janet Davoren’s disappearance. You can
+imagine, perhaps, what I suffered, blaming my own blindness, my foolish
+neglect, as the primary cause of her ruin.’
+
+‘There is a fate in these things,’ said Geoffrey gloomily.
+
+‘I called upon Mr. Davoren, hinted at my fears, and entreated him to be
+candid with me. But he evaded my questions with a proud reserve, which
+I could but admire, and kept the secret of his daughter’s disgrace,
+even though it was breaking his heart. Thus repulsed, what could I do?
+And the claims upon my time are so incessant. Life is such a whirligig,
+Mr. Hossack. If I had had more leisure for thinking, I should have been
+perfectly miserable about that poor girl.’
+
+‘You never obtained any clue to her fate?’
+
+‘No. Yet at one moment the thread seemed almost in my hand, had I been
+but in time to follow it. Three years after that fatal summer, a cousin
+of Sir Horatio’s, a young lieutenant in the navy, who had been with us
+at the time of Miss Davoren’s visit, came here for the shooting. “What
+do you think, Lady Baker?” he drawled out at dinner the first day in
+his stupid haw-haw manner, “I met that fellow Vandeleur last Christmas,
+at Milford, in Dorsetshire. I was down there to look up my old uncle
+Timberly—you remember old Timberly, Sir Horatio, the man from whom I’m
+supposed to have expectations; revolting old fellow, who has gout in
+his stomach twice a year and never seems any the worse for it. Well,
+Lady Baker, I found a fellow I knew down at Milford, an ensign in the
+regiment quartered there, and he was dooced civil, and asked me to
+dine with him on their guest night, and there, large as life, I beheld
+our friend Vandeleur. He seemed uncommonly popular in the mess, but he
+wasn’t overpleased to see me; and my friend Lucas told me afterwards
+that in his opinion the man was no better than an adventurer, and the
+colonel was a fool to encourage him. He was always winning everybody’s
+money, and never seemed to lose any of his own; altogether there
+was something queer about him. There was an uncommonly pretty woman
+with him—his wife, I suppose—but she never went anywhere, or visited
+anybody, and she looked very unhappy, Lucas told me. I came back to
+London next day, and I had a letter from Lucas a week afterwards to say
+that there’d been an awful burst-up at Milford; that Vandeleur had been
+caught in the act of cheating at whist—the stakes high, and so on—and
+had been morally, if not physically, kicked out of the mess-room; after
+which he had bolted, leaving the poor little wife and no end of debts
+behind him.”’
+
+‘Did you act upon this information, Lady Baker?’ asked Geoffrey.
+
+‘I went to Milford next day, and with some difficulty found the house
+in which the Vandeleurs had lodged; but Mrs. Vandeleur had left the
+town within the last few weeks with her little girl, and no one could
+tell me what had become of her. She was very good, very honourable,
+very unhappy, the landlady told me; had lived in the humblest way, and
+supported herself by teaching music after her husband left her. I made
+the woman describe her to me, and the description exactly fitted Janet.’
+
+‘You have not heard a Mrs. Bertram, a singer who appeared at a good
+many concerts in London last winter?’
+
+‘No. I spent last winter in Paris. Do you mean to tell me that this
+Mrs. Bertram is Janet Davoren under an assumed name?’
+
+‘I hardly feel myself at liberty to tell you even as much as that
+without permission from the lady herself. But since you have been so
+very good to me, Lady Baker, I cannot be churlish enough to affect
+secrecy in anything that concerns myself alone. You have guessed
+rightly. I am attached to this lady, and my dearest hope is that I may
+win her for my wife; but to do this I must discover the fate of her
+infamous husband, since she refuses to repudiate a tie which I have
+strong reason to believe is illegal. And now, Lady Baker, pray show me
+those photographs, and let me see if the man who ruined Janet Davoren’s
+bright young life is really the man I met in the American backwoods.’
+
+‘Come to my room,’ said Lady Baker, ‘and you shall see them.’
+
+She led the way to a charming apartment on the upper story, and at
+one end of the house, spacious, luxurious, with windows commanding
+every angle of view—bow-windows overhanging the river on one side, an
+oriel commanding the distant hills on another, long French windows
+opening upon a broad balcony on the third. Here were scattered those
+periodicals with which Lady Baker fortified her mind, and supplied
+herself with the latest varieties in opinion; here were divers
+davenports and writing-tables at which Lady Baker penned those
+delightful epistles which were doubtless destined to form part of the
+light literature of the next generation, printed on thickest paper, and
+sumptuously bound, and adorned with portraits of her ladyship after
+different painters, and at various stages of her distinguished career.
+
+Here, on a massive stand, were numerous portfolios of photographs, one
+of which was labelled ‘Personal Friends.’
+
+‘You will find the groups in that, Mr. Hossack,’ she said, and looked
+over Geoffrey’s shoulder while he went slowly through the photographs.
+
+They came presently to a garden scene, a group of young men and women
+against a background of sunlit lawn and river; light rustic chairs
+scattered about, a framework of summer foliage, a tea table on one
+side, a Blenheim spaniel and a Maltese terrier in the foreground.
+
+Janet’s tall figure and noble face appeared conspicuously among figures
+less perfect, faces more commonplace, and by her side stood the man
+whom Geoffrey Hossack had seen in the flesh, wild, unkempt, haggard,
+famished, savage, amidst the awful solitude of the pine-forest.
+
+‘Yes,’ he said, ‘that is the man.’
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+LUCIUS MAKES A CONFESSION.
+
+
+It was nearly six o’clock when Geoffrey and his cousins left
+Mardenholme. On descending from Lady Baker’s apartments in quest of
+Belle and Jessie, Mr. Hossack had found those two damsels wandering
+among the shrubberies in the forlornest manner, vainly striving to
+stifle frequent yawns, so unentertaining had been the society of the
+devoted Mr. and Mrs. Wimple, ‘who scarcely did anything but whisper
+and titter to each other all the time we were with them,’ Belle said
+afterwards.
+
+‘I thought you were playing croquet,’ said Geoffrey, when he found this
+straggling party in a grove of arbutus and magnolia.
+
+‘We _have_ been playing croquet,’ answered Jessie, with some asperity;
+‘but one can’t play croquet for ever. There’s nothing in Dante’s
+infernal regions more dreadful than that would be. We played as long
+as we could; Mr. and Mrs. Wimple were tired ever so long before we
+finished.’
+
+‘No, indeed,’ exclaimed the Wimples simultaneously.
+
+‘What have you been doing all this time, Geoffrey?’ asked Belle.
+
+‘Lady Baker has been so kind as to show me her pictures.’
+
+‘Yes, of course; but you needn’t have been hours looking at them. We
+must get back directly, or we shall be late for dinner. Ah, there is
+Lady Baker,’ cried Belle, as her ladyship appeared on the terrace
+before the drawing-room windows. ‘Come and say good-bye, Jessie, and
+get the boat ready, Geoff. You’ll have to row us back in an hour.
+Nothing vexes papa so much as any one being late for dinner. I don’t
+think he would wait more than ten minutes for an archbishop.’
+
+‘I’ll row like old boots,’ answered Geoffrey; whereupon the young
+ladies ran off to take an affectionate leave of Lady Baker, while their
+cousin sauntered down to the weeping willow to whose lowest branch he
+had moored the wherry. In five minutes they had embarked, and the oars
+were dipping in the smooth water.
+
+They were at Hillersdon in time to dress, somewhat hurriedly, for
+the all-important eight-o’clock dinner, which went off pleasantly
+enough. All that evening cousin Geoffrey made himself particularly
+agreeable—listened to Belle’s breakneck fantasias and Jessie’s newest
+ballads with every appearance of rapture; played chess with Belle, and
+bézique with Jessie, and allowed himself to be beaten by both.
+
+‘What a delightful evening we have had!’ said Belle, as she wished him
+good-night. ‘Why don’t you come to us oftener, Geoffrey?’
+
+‘I mean to come very often in future,’ replied the impostor, hardly
+knowing what he said.
+
+At breakfast next morning there was no sign of Geoffrey; but just as
+Belle had seated herself before the urn, the butler appeared with a
+letter.
+
+‘Mr. Geoffrey left this for you, ma’am,’ said the domestic, ‘when he
+went away.’
+
+‘Went away! My cousin, Mr. Hossack, gone!’ cried Belle, aghast, while
+Jessie rushed to her sister’s side, and strove to possess herself of
+the letter.
+
+‘Yes, ma’am. Mr. Geoffrey left by the first train; Dawson drove him
+over in the dog-cart. The letter would explain, Mr. Geoffrey said.’
+
+‘Belle, read the letter, for goodness’ sake!’ cried Jessie impatiently;
+‘and don’t sit staring like a figure in a hairdresser’s window.’
+
+The butler lingered to give a finishing touch to the well-furnished
+sideboard, and to hear the contents of Geoffrey’s letter.
+
+It was brief, and, in the opinion of the sisters, unsatisfactory—the
+style spasmodic, as of one accustomed to communicate his ideas by
+electric telegraph, rather than in the more ornate form of a letter.
+
+ ‘Dearest Belle,—Most unfortunate. Have received telegram summoning me
+ to town. Most particular business. Must go. Regret much. Thought I
+ was in for no end of fun down here. Hope to return shortly. Make my
+ excuses to my uncle, and be lenient yourself towards your affectionate
+ cousin
+
+ ‘GEOFF.’
+
+‘Was there ever anything so annoying?’ cried Belle, ‘and after Lady
+Baker’s politeness to him yesterday! Particular business! What can he
+have to do with business?’
+
+‘I daresay it’s horse-racing or something dreadful,’ said Jessie. ‘I
+saw a great change in him. He has such a wild look sometimes, and
+hardly ever seems to know what one says to him.’
+
+‘Jessie,’ exclaimed Belle with solemnity, ‘I shouldn’t be surprised if
+Geoffrey were going to be married.’
+
+‘O, Belle,’ cried Jessie with a gasp, ‘you don’t think he’d be mean
+enough for that—to go and get engaged, and never say a word to us.’
+
+‘I don’t know,’ answered her sister gloomily. ‘Men are capable of any
+amount of meanness in that way.’
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Geoffrey Hossack went up to London as fast as the South-Western Railway
+would take him thither, and straightway upon his arrival transferred
+himself to a hansom, bidding the driver convey him at full speed to the
+Shadrack-road.
+
+He reached that melancholy district before noon, and found the
+shabby-genteel villa, with its fast-decaying stucco front, its rusty
+iron railings, in which his friend Lucius Davoren had begun his
+professional career. But, early as it was, Lucius had gone forth more
+than two hours.
+
+‘I must see him,’ said Geoffrey to the feeble little charwoman, whose
+spirits were fluttered by the appearance of this rampant stranger, his
+fiery impatience visible in his aspect. ‘Have you any idea where I can
+find him?’
+
+‘Lor, no, sir; he goes from place to place—in and out, and up and down.
+It wouldn’t be the least bit of good tryin’ to foller him. You might
+wait if you liked, on the chanc’t. He do sometimes come home betwigst
+one and two to take a mossel of bread-and-cheese and a glass of ale, if
+he’s going to make a extry long afternoon. But his general way is to
+come home to a tea-dinner betwigst five and six.’
+
+‘I’ll wait till two,’ said Geoffrey, ‘and if he’s not home by that
+time, I’ll leave a letter for him.’
+
+So Mr. Hossack dismissed the cab, and went into his friend’s small
+parlour—such a dreary sitting-room as it seemed to eyes accustomed only
+to brightness: furniture so sordid; walls so narrow; ceiling darkened
+by the smoke of gas that had burned late into the long winter nights.
+Geoffrey looked round with a shudder.
+
+‘And Lucius really lives here,’ he said to himself, ‘and is contented
+to work on, happy in the idea that he is a benefactor to his
+species—watching the measles of infancy, administering to the asthmas
+of old age. Thank God there are such men in the world,—and thank God I
+am not one of them!’
+
+He looked round the room in quest of that refuge of shallow minds,
+the day’s paper; but newspaper there was none—only that poor little
+collection of books on the rickety chiffonier: well-thumbed volumes,
+wherewith Lucius had so often solaced his loneliness.
+
+‘Shakespeare, Euripides, Montaigne, _Tristram Shandy_,’ muttered
+Geoffrey, running over the titles contemptuously. ‘Musty old buffers!
+Come out, old Shandy. I suppose you’re about the liveliest of the lot.’
+
+He tried to settle himself on the feeble old sofa, too short and too
+narrow for muscular young Oxford; stretched his legs this way and that;
+read a few pages; smiled at a line here and there; yawned a good deal,
+and then threw the book aside with an exclamation of impatience. Those
+exuberant energies asked not repose; he wanted to be up and doing. His
+mind was full of his interview with Lady Baker, full of anxious longing
+thoughts about the woman he loved.
+
+‘What became of that man we met in the forest?’ he asked of the
+unresponsive atmosphere. ‘If I could but track him to his miserable
+grave, and get a certificate of his death, what a happy fellow I should
+be.’
+
+He paced the little room, looked out of the window at the enlivening
+traffic of the Shadrack-road; huge wagons laden with petroleum casks,
+timber, iron, cotton bales, grinding slowly along the macadam; an
+organ droning drearily on the other side of the way; a costermonger
+crying whelks and hot eels, as appropriate refreshment in the sultry
+August noontide; upon everything that faded, burnt-up aspect which
+pervades London at the end of summer; a universal staleness, an odour
+of doubtful fish and rotten fruit.
+
+After the space of an hour and a half, which to Geoffrey’s weariness
+had seemed interminable, a light step sounded on the little stone-paved
+approach; a latchkey clicked in the door, and Lucius came into the
+parlour.
+
+There was surprise unbounded on the surgeon’s side.
+
+‘Why, Geoff, I thought you were in Norway!’ he exclaimed.
+
+‘I changed my mind about Norway,’ answered the other somewhat
+sheepishly. ‘How could I be such a selfish scoundrel as to go and enjoy
+myself shooting and fishing and so on, while she is lonely? No, Lucius,
+I feel somehow that it is my destiny to win her, and that it will be
+my own fault—_de mon tort_, as the lawyers say—if I lose my chance. So
+when I got as far as Hull I turned tail, and came back to town, where
+I found a letter from my cousin Belle Hossack offering me the very
+opportunity I wanted.’
+
+‘Your cousin Belle! the very opportunity! What do you mean? What could
+your cousin Belle have to do with my sister?’
+
+‘An introduction to Lady Baker. Don’t you see, Lucius? From Lady Baker
+I might find out all about that villain who called himself Vandeleur.
+Now, for heaven’s sake, old fellow, be calm and hear what I have to
+tell you. I’ve travelled up from Hampshire post haste on purpose to
+tell you all by word of mouth. I might have written, but I wanted to
+talk the matter over with you. You may be able to throw some light upon
+this business.’
+
+‘Upon what business?’ asked Lucius, mystified by this hurried and
+disjointed address.
+
+‘You may be able to tell me what became of that wild fellow who came
+in upon us in our log-hut out yonder—whether he is alive or dead. Why,
+good heavens, Lucius, you’ve turned as white as a sheet of paper!
+What’s the matter?’
+
+‘I’m tired,’ said the surgeon, dropping slowly into a chair by the
+table, and shading his face with his hand. ‘And your wild talk is
+enough to bewilder any man; especially one who has just come in from
+a harassing round amongst sickness and poverty. What do you mean? You
+speak one minute of my sister and Lady Baker, and in the next of that
+man we met yonder. What link can there be between subjects so wide
+apart?’
+
+‘A closer link than you could ever guess. The villain who married your
+sister and that man yonder—’
+
+‘Were one and the same!’ cried Lucius, almost with a shriek. ‘I
+suspected it; I suspected it out yonder in the forest, as I sat and
+watched that man’s face in the firelight. I have suspected it since
+then many a time; have dreamt it oftener than I can count; for half my
+dreams are haunted by the hateful shadow of that man. Was I right? For
+God’s sake speak out, Geoffrey. Is that the man?’
+
+‘It is.’
+
+‘You know it?’
+
+‘I have had indisputable proof of it. Lady Baker showed me a photograph
+of the man who stole your sister from her home, and the face in that
+photograph is the face of the man we let into our hut in the backwoods.’
+
+‘Mysterious are Thy ways,’ cried Lucius, ‘and Thy paths past finding
+out. Many a time have I fought against this idea. It seemed of all
+things the most improbable; too wild, too strange for belief. I dared
+not allow myself to think it. It was he, then. My hatred of him was a
+natural instinct; my abhorrence hardly needed the proof of his infamy.
+From the first moment in which our eyes met my soul cried aloud, “There
+is thy natural enemy.”’
+
+‘It is your turn to talk wildly now, Lucius,’ said Geoffrey, surprised
+by the other’s passion, ‘but you have not answered my question. While
+I lay delirious in the log-hut, not knowing anything that was going
+on round me, did nothing happen to throw a light upon the fate of the
+guide and that man Matchi, as we called him? They set out to try and
+find the track; did they never return?’
+
+‘The guide never returned,’ answered Lucius, looking downward with a
+gloomy countenance, in deep thought. ‘Now, I’ll ask you a question,
+Geoffrey. In all your talk with our German friend, Schanck, while _I_
+was ill and unconscious, did he tell you nothing, hint nothing, about
+that man?’
+
+‘Nothing,’ replied the other unhesitatingly. ‘He was as close as the
+grave. But had he anything to tell?’
+
+‘Yes, if he had chosen to betray. He might have told you that I, your
+friend—I, who had watched by your bed through those long dreary nights,
+Death staring me in the face as I watched—that I, whom you would have
+trusted in the direst extremity—was an assassin.’
+
+‘Lucius,’ cried Geoffrey, starting up with a look of horror, ‘are you
+mad?’
+
+‘No, Geoff. I am reasonable enough now, Heaven knows; whatever I might
+have been in that fatal time yonder. You want the truth, and you shall
+have it, though it will sicken you as it sickens me to think of it. I
+have kept the hideous secret from you; not because I had any fear of
+the consequences of my act—not because that I am not ready to defend
+the deed boldly before my fellow men—but because I thought the horrid
+story might part us. We have been fast friends for so many years,
+Geoff, and I could not bear to think your liking might be turned to
+loathing.’
+
+Tears, the agonising drops which intensest pain wrings from manhood,
+were in his eyes. He covered his face with his clasped hands; as if he
+would have shut out the very light which had witnessed that horror he
+shuddered to recall.
+
+‘Lucius,’ exclaimed Geoffrey, at once anxious and bewildered, ‘all this
+is madness! You have been overworking your brain.’
+
+‘Let me tell my story,’ said the other. ‘It will lighten my burden to
+share it—even if the revelation makes you hate me.’
+
+‘Even on your own showing I would not believe you guilty of any
+baseness,’ answered Geoffrey. ‘I would sooner think your mind
+distraught than that I had been mistaken in your character.’
+
+‘It was no deliberate baseness,’ said Lucius quietly. He had in some
+measure recovered his composure since that burst of passionate grief.
+‘I did what at the moment appeared to me only an act of justice. I took
+a life for a life.’
+
+‘You, Lucius!’ cried the other, his eyes opening wide with horror. ‘You
+took the life of a man—yonder—in America?’
+
+‘Yes, Geoffrey. I killed the man who blighted my sister’s life.’
+
+‘Good God! He is dead then—this scoundrel—and by your hand.’
+
+‘He is. And if ever man deserved to die by the act of his fellow man
+that man most fully merited his fate. But though in that awful hour,
+when the deed of horror which I had discovered was burnt into my brain,
+I took his life deliberately and advisedly, the memory of the act has
+been a torment to me ever since. But let me tell you the secret of that
+miserable time. It is not a long story, and I will tell it in as few
+words as possible.’
+
+Briefly, but with an unflinching truthfulness, he told of the night
+scene in the forest; the ruffian’s attempt to enter the hut; and the
+bullet which struck him down as he burst open the window.
+
+‘You lay there, Geoffrey, unconscious; sleeping that blessed sleep
+which Gods sends to those whose feet have trodden the border-land
+betwixt life and death. Even to awaken you roughly might have been to
+peril your chance of recovery. The firing of the gun might have done
+it. But my first thought was that he, the assassin and traitor who had
+slaughtered the faithful companion of our dangers and privation—that
+he, brutal and merciless as any savage in the worst island of the
+Pacific—should not be suffered to approach you in your helplessness.
+I had warned him that if he attempted to cross our threshold I would
+shoot him down with as little compunction as if he had been a mad dog.
+I kept my word.’
+
+‘But are you certain your bullet was fatal?’
+
+‘Of what followed the firing of that shot I know nothing; but I have
+never doubted its result. Even if the wound were not immediately fatal
+the man must have speedily perished. The last I saw was the loosening
+clutch of his lean hand as he dropped from the window; the last I heard
+was a howl of pain. My brain, which had been kept on the rack for many
+a dreary night of sleeplessness and fear, gave way all at once, and I
+fell to the ground like a log. I have every reason to believe that what
+I suffered at that moment was an apoplectic seizure, which might have
+been fatal, but for Schanck’s promptitude in bleeding me. After the
+shock came brain fever, from which, as you know, I was slow to recover.
+When my senses did return, I seemed to enter upon a new world. Thought
+and memory came back by degrees, and the vision of that scene in the
+forest shaped itself slowly out of the confusion of my brain until it
+became the vivid picture which has haunted me ever since.’
+
+‘Had you met the man who betrayed your sister, would you have killed
+him?’ asked Geoffrey.
+
+‘In fair fight, yes.’
+
+‘He who rules the destinies of us all decreed that you should meet him
+unawares. You were the instrument of God’s vengeance upon a villain.’
+
+‘“Vengeance is mine,”’ repeated Lucius thoughtfully. ‘Often, when
+reproaching myself for that rash act, I have almost deemed the deed
+a kind of blasphemy. What right had _I_ to forestall God’s day of
+reckoning? For every crime there is an appointed punishment. The
+assassin we hang to-day might pay a still heavier price for his sin
+were we to leave him in the hands of God, or might be permitted to
+repent and atone.’
+
+‘Lucius,’ said Geoffrey, stretching out his hand to his friend, ‘in
+my eyes you stand clear of all guilt. Was it not chiefly for my
+defence you fired that shot? and for my own part I can assure you that
+cold-blooded scoundrel would have had a short shrift had I been his
+executioner. So let us dismiss all thought of him, with the memory of
+the last murderer who swung at Newgate. One fact remains paramount—a
+fact that for me changes earth to Paradise; your sister is free.’
+
+Lucius started, and for the first time a look of absolute fear came
+into his face.
+
+‘What!’ he exclaimed. ‘You will tell her that her husband fell by my
+hand? You forget, Geoffrey, that my confession must be sacred. If I did
+not pledge you to secrecy, it was because I had so firm a faith in your
+honour that I needed no promise of your silence.’
+
+‘Let me tell her only of that man’s death.’
+
+‘She will hardly be satisfied with a statement unsupported by proof,’
+answered Lucius doubtfully.
+
+‘What, will she doubt my honour?’
+
+‘Love is apt to be desperate. The lover has a code of his own.’
+
+‘Not if he is an honest man,’ cried Geoffrey.
+
+‘But Janet has been once deceived, and will be slow to trust where she
+loves. Put her to the test. Tell her that you know this man is dead,
+and if she will believe you and if she will be your wife, there is no
+one, not even yourself, who will be gladder than I. God knows it is a
+grief for me to think of her lonely position, her lifelong penance for
+the error of her youth. I have entreated her to share my home, humble
+as it is, but she refuses. She is proud of her independence, and though
+I know she loves me, she prefers to live aloof from me, with no other
+society than her child’s.’
+
+They talked long, Geoffrey full of mingled hope and fear. He left his
+friend late in the afternoon, intending to go down to Stillmington by
+the mail train, to try his fortunes once more. Lucius had told him he
+was beloved; was not that sufficient ground for hope?
+
+‘She will not be too exacting,’ he said to himself. ‘She will not
+ask me for chapter and verse, for the doctor’s certificate, the
+undertaker’s bill. If I say to her, “Upon my honour your husband is
+dead,” she will surely believe me.’
+
+
+
+
+Book the Third.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+A CHANGE CAME O’ER THE SPIRIT OF MY DREAM.
+
+
+That calm delight which Lucius Davoren had hitherto felt in the society
+of his betrothed, and his happy expectation of a prosperous future to
+be shared with her, were now clouded over with new doubts and fears.
+His mind had been weighed down by the burden of a dreadful secret,
+from the moment of that discovery which had showed him that the man he
+had killed and the father of the girl who loved him were one and the
+same. Those calm clear eyes which looked at him so tenderly sometimes
+wounded him as keenly as the bitterest reproach. Had she but known the
+fatal truth—she who had always set the memory of her father above her
+affection for himself—could he doubt the result of that knowledge?
+Could he doubt that she would have turned from him with abhorrence,
+that she would have shrunk with loathing from the lightest touch of his
+blood-stained hand?
+
+Vain would have been all argument, all attempt to justify his act, with
+the daughter who clung with a romantic fondness to her lost father’s
+image.
+
+‘You killed him.’ She would have summed up all arguments in those three
+words. ‘You killed him. If he was wicked, you gave him no time for
+repentance; you cut him off in the midst of his sin. Who made you his
+judge: who made you his executioner? He was a sinner like yourself, and
+you thrust yourself between God and His infinite mercy. You did more
+than slay his body; you robbed him of redemption for his sin.’
+
+He could imagine that this girl, clinging with unreasonable love to
+that dead sinner’s memory, would argue somewhat in this wise; and he
+felt himself powerless to reply. These thoughts weighed him down, and
+haunted him even in the company of his beloved. Yet, strange to say,
+Lucille did not remark the difference in her lover, and it remained
+for Lucius to perceive a change in her. His own preoccupation had
+rendered him less observant than usual, and he was slow to mark this
+alteration in Lucille’s manner, but the time came when he awakened to
+the fact. There was a change, indefinable, indescribable, but a change
+which he felt vaguely, and which seemed to grow stronger day by day.
+The thought filled him with a sudden horror. Did she suspect? Had some
+circumstance, unnoticed by him, led the way to the discovery he most
+dreaded, to the revelation of that secret he hoped to hide from her for
+ever? Surely no. Her hand did not shrink from his, the kiss he pressed
+upon that pure young brow evoked no shudder. Whatever the trouble was
+that had wrought this change in her, paled the fair cheek and saddened
+the sweet eyes, the perplexity or the sorrow was in herself, and had no
+reference to him.
+
+‘Lucille,’ he said one evening, a few days after his interview with
+Geoffrey Hossack, as they paced the garden together in the dusk, ‘it
+seems to me that we are not quite so happy as we used to be. We do not
+talk so hopefully of the future; we have not such pleasant thoughts and
+fancies as we once had. Very often when I am speaking to you, I see
+your eyes fixed with a strange far-off look; as if you were thinking of
+something quite remote from the subject of our talk. Is there anything
+that troubles you, dear? Are you uneasy about your grandfather?’
+
+‘He does not seem so well as he did three weeks ago. He does not care
+about coming down-stairs now; the old weakness seems to have returned.
+And his appetite has fallen off again. I wish you would be a little
+more candid, Lucius,’ she said, looking at him earnestly. ‘You used to
+say he was improving steadily, and that you had great hopes of making
+him quite himself again before very long; now you hardly say anything,
+except to give me directions about diet.’
+
+‘Do you wish me to speak quite plainly, Lucille,’ asked Lucius
+seriously; ‘even if what I have to say should increase your anxiety?’
+
+‘Yes, yes; pray treat me like a woman, and not like a child. Remember
+what my life has been—how full of care and sorrow. I am not like a girl
+who has lived only in the sunshine. Tell me the plain truth, Lucius,
+however painful. You think my grandfather worse?’
+
+‘I do, Lucille, very much worse than I thought him three weeks ago. And
+what is more, I am obliged to confess myself puzzled by his present
+condition. I can find no cause for this backward progress, and yet I
+am watching the symptoms very closely. I have this case so deeply at
+heart, that I do not believe any one could do more with it than I.
+But if I do not see an improvement before many days are over, I shall
+seek advice from wider experience than my own. I will bring one of the
+greatest men in London to see your grandfather. A consultation may be
+unnecessary or useless, but it will be for our mutual satisfaction.’
+
+‘Yes,’ answered Lucille, ‘I have the strongest faith in your skill;
+but, as you say, it might be better to have farther advice. Poor
+grandpapa! It makes me wretched to see him suffer—to see him so weak
+and weary and restless, if not in absolute pain, and to be able to do
+so little for him.’
+
+‘You do all that love and watchfulness can do, dearest. By the way,
+you spoke of diet just now. That is a thing about which you cannot
+be too careful. We have to restore exhausted nature, to renovate a
+constitution almost worn out by hard usage. I should like to know
+all about the preparation of the broths and jellies you give your
+grandfather. Are they made by you, or by Mrs. Wincher?’
+
+‘Wincher makes the broth and beef-tea in an earthenware jar in the
+oven; I make the jellies with my own hands.’
+
+‘Are you quite sure of Wincher’s cleanliness and care?’
+
+‘Quite. I see her getting the jar ready every morning when I am in the
+kitchen attending to other little things. I am not afraid of working in
+the kitchen, you know, Lucius.’
+
+‘I know that you are the most domestic and skilful among women, and
+that you will make a model wife, darling,’ he answered tenderly.
+
+‘For a poor man, perhaps,’ she answered, with the smile that had been
+rare of late, ‘not for a rich one. I should not know how to spend
+money, or to give dinner-parties, or to dress fashionably.’
+
+‘That kind of knowledge would come with the occasion. When I am a
+famous doctor you shall be a lady of fashion. But to return to the diet
+question. You are assured that there is perfect cleanliness in the
+preparation of your grandfather’s food—no neglected copper saucepans
+used, for instance?’
+
+‘There is not such a thing as a copper saucepan in the house. What made
+you ask the question?’
+
+‘Mr. Sivewright has complained lately of occasional attacks of nausea,
+and I am unable to account for the symptom. That is what makes me
+anxious about the preparation of his food.’
+
+‘Would it be any satisfaction to you if I were to prepare everything
+myself?’
+
+‘A very great satisfaction.’
+
+‘Then I will do it, Lucius. Wincher may feel a little offended, but I
+will try and reconcile her to my interference. It was a great privilege
+to be allowed to make the jellies.’
+
+‘Never mind if she is vexed, darling; a few sweet words from you
+will soon smooth her ruffled feathers. I shall be glad to know that
+you prepare everything for the invalid. And I would not do it in the
+kitchen, where Wincher might interfere. Have a fire in the little
+dressing-room next your grandfather’s room, and have your saucepans and
+beef-tea and so on up there. By that means you will be able to give him
+what he wants at any moment, without delay.’
+
+‘I will do so, Lucius. But I fear you think my grandfather in danger.’
+
+‘Not exactly in danger, darling. But he is very ill, and I have been
+thinking it might be better for you to have a nurse. I don’t say that
+he requires any one to sit up at night with him. He is not ill enough
+for that. I am only afraid that the care he requires may be too much
+for you.’
+
+‘It is not too much for me, Lucius,’ answered the girl eagerly.
+‘I would not have a stranger about him for worlds. The sight of a
+sick nurse would kill him.’
+
+‘That is a foolish prejudice, Lucille.’
+
+‘It may be; and when you find I nurse him badly, or neglect him,
+you may bring a stranger. Till then I claim the right to wait upon
+him, with Jacob Wincher’s assistance. He has been my grandfather’s
+valet—giving the little help his master would ever accept—for the last
+twenty years.’
+
+‘And you have perfect confidence in Jacob Wincher?’
+
+‘Confidence!’ exclaimed Lucille, with a wondering look. ‘I have known
+him all my life, and seen his devotion to my grandfather. What reason
+could I have to doubt him?’
+
+‘Little apparent reason, I admit,’ answered Lucius thoughtfully. ‘Yet
+it is sometimes from those we least suspect we suffer the deepest
+wrongs. These Winchers may believe your grandfather to be very rich;
+they may suppose that he has left them a good deal of money; and
+might—mind, I am only suggesting a remote contingency—they _might_
+desire to shorten his life. O, my dearest,’ he cried, pained by
+Lucille’s whitening face, ‘remember I do not for a moment say that this
+is likely; but—as I told you a few moments ago—there are symptoms in
+the case that puzzle me, and we cannot be too careful.’
+
+Lucille leaned upon him, trembling like a leaf, with her white face
+turned towards him, a look of unspeakable horror in her eyes.
+
+‘You don’t mean—’ she faltered; ‘you cannot mean that you suspect, that
+you are afraid of my grandfather being poisoned?’
+
+‘Lucille,’ he said tenderly, sustaining the almost-fainting girl, ‘the
+truth is always best. You shall know all I can tell you. There are
+diseases which baffle even experience; there are symptoms which may
+mean one thing or another, may indicate such and such a state, or be
+the effect of a condition exactly opposite; there are symptoms which
+may arise alike from natural causes or from a slow and subtle poison.
+This is why so many a victim has been done to death under the very eye
+of his medical attendant, and only when too late the hideous truth has
+dawned upon the doctor’s mind, and he has asked himself with bitter
+self-reproach, “Why did I not make this discovery sooner?”’
+
+‘Whom could you suspect?’ cried Lucille. ‘I am confident as to the
+fidelity of Mr. and Mrs. Wincher. They have had it in their power to
+rob my grandfather at any moment, if gain could have tempted them to
+injure him. Why, after all these years of faithful servitude, should
+they attempt to murder him?’
+
+This was said in a low tremulous voice, terror still holding possession
+of the girl’s distracted mind.
+
+‘The thought is as horrible as it appears impossible,’ said Lucius,
+whose apprehensions had as yet assumed only the vaguest form. He had
+never meant to betray this shadowy fear, which had arisen only within
+the last twenty-four hours; but he had been led on to say more than he
+intended.
+
+‘Let us speak no more of it, dearest,’ he said soothingly. ‘You attach
+too much importance to my words. I have only suggested care; I have
+only told you a well-known fact, namely, that the symptoms of slow
+poisoning and of natural disease are sometimes exactly alike.’
+
+‘You have filled me with fear and horror!’ cried Lucille, shuddering.
+
+‘Let me bring a nurse into the house,’ pleaded Lucius, angry with
+himself for his imprudence. ‘Her presence would at least give you
+courage and confidence.’
+
+‘No; I will not have my grandfather frightened to death. He shall take
+nothing but what I prepare for him; no one shall go near him but I, or
+without my being present.’
+
+‘By the way,’ said Lucius thoughtfully, ‘you remember that noise I
+heard the evening we went up to the loft together?’
+
+‘I remember your fancy about a noise,’ Lucille answered carelessly.
+
+‘My fancy, then, if you like. I suppose nothing has ever happened
+since to throw a light upon that fancy of mine?’
+
+‘Nothing.’
+
+‘You are quite sure that no stranger could obtain admission to those
+up-stairs rooms, or to any part of this house?’
+
+‘Quite sure.’
+
+‘In that case we may rest assured that all is safe, and you need think
+no more of anything I have said.’
+
+He tried with every art he knew to soothe away the fears which his
+imprudent words had occasioned, but could not altogether succeed
+in tranquillising her, though he brought the Amati violin into
+requisition, and played some of his sweetest symphonies—melodies which,
+to quote Mrs. Wincher, ‘might have drawed tears out of a deal board.’
+
+Nothing could dispel the cloud which he had raised; and he left Cedar
+House full of trouble and self-reproach, beyond measure angry with
+himself for his folly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+LUCIUS IS PUZZLED.
+
+
+When Lucius made his early visit—now always the first duty of every
+day—to Cedar House on the following morning, he found that Lucille
+had already acted upon his advice. The dressing-room—a slip of a room
+communicating with Mr. Sivewright’s spacious chamber—had been furnished
+in a rough-and-ready manner with a chair and table, an old cabinet,
+brought down from the loft, to hold cups and glasses, medicine bottles,
+and other oddments; a little row of saucepans, neatly arranged in a
+cupboard by the small fireplace; and a narrow little iron bedstead in a
+corner of the room.
+
+‘I shall sleep here at night,’ said Lucille, as Lucius surveyed her
+preparations, ‘and if I keep that door ajar, I can hear every sound in
+the next room.’
+
+‘My darling, it will never do for you to be on the watch at night,’ he
+answered anxiously. ‘You will wear yourself out in a very short time.
+Anxiety by day and wakefulness by night will soon tell their tale.’
+
+‘Let me have my own way, Lucius,’ she pleaded. ‘You say yourself that
+my grandfather wants no attendance at night. He told me only this
+morning that he sleeps pretty well, and rarely wakes till the morning.
+But it will be a satisfaction to me if I feel that I am close at hand,
+ready to wake at his call. I am a very light sleeper.’
+
+‘Was Mrs. Wincher angry at your taking the work out of her hands?’
+
+‘She seemed vexed, just at first; but I gave her a kiss, and talked
+her over. “You’ll fag yourself to death, Miss Lucille,” she said; “but
+do as you please. It’ll leave me free for my cleaning.” You know,
+Lucius, what a passion she has for muddling about with a pail and a
+scrubbing-brush, and turning out odd corners. The cleaning never seems
+to make any difference in the look of that huge kitchen; but if it
+pleases her one cannot complain. O, Lucius,’ she went on, in an anxious
+whisper, ‘I was awake all the night thinking of your dreadful words. I
+trust in God you may find my grandfather better this morning.’
+
+‘I hope so, dearest; but, believe me, you attach far too much
+importance to my foolish words last night. If you can trust the
+Winchers there can be no possible ground for fear. What enemy could
+approach your grandfather here?’
+
+‘Enemy!’ repeated Lucille, as if struck by the word. ‘What enemies
+could he have—a poor harmless old man?’
+
+Lucius went into Mr. Sivewright’s room. He found his patient still
+suffering from that strange depression of spirits which had weighed
+him down lately; still complaining of the symptoms which had perplexed
+Lucius since his return from Stillmington.
+
+‘There are strange noises in the house,’ said the old man querulously,
+when the usual questions had been asked and answered. ‘I heard them
+again last night—stealthy footsteps creeping along the passage—doors
+opening and shutting—cautious, muffled steps, that had a secret guilty
+sound.’
+
+‘All movement in a house has that stealthy sound in the small hours,’
+said Lucius, sorely perplexed himself, yet anxious to reassure his
+patient. ‘Your housekeeper or her husband may have been up later than
+usual, and may have crept quietly up to bed.’
+
+‘I tell you this was in the middle of the night,’ answered Mr.
+Sivewright impatiently. ‘The Winchers are as methodical in their habits
+as the old clock in the hall. I asked Jacob this morning if he had
+been astir after midnight, and he told me he had not.’
+
+‘The fact is, my dear sir, you are nervous,’ said Lucius in a soothing
+tone. ‘You lie awake and fancy sounds which have no existence, or at
+any rate do not exist within the house.’
+
+‘I tell you this sound awoke me,’ replied the other still more
+impatiently. ‘I was sleeping tolerably when the sound of that hateful
+footstep startled me into perfect wakefulness. There was a nameless
+horror to my mind in that stealthy tread. It sounded like the step of
+an assassin.’
+
+‘Come, Mr. Sivewright,’ said Lucius in that practical tone which does
+much to tranquillise a nervous patient, ‘if this is, as I firmly
+believe it to be, a mere delusion of your senses, it will be easiest
+dispelled by investigation. Let us face the unknown foe, and make a
+speedy end of him. Suffer me to keep watch to-night in this room,
+unknown to all in the house except yourself, and I will answer for it
+the ghost shall be laid.’
+
+‘No,’ answered Mr. Sivewright doggedly. ‘I am not so childish or so
+weak-minded as to ask another man to corroborate the evidence of my own
+senses. I tell you, Davoren, the thing is. If I believed in ghosts the
+matter would trouble me little enough. All the phantoms that were ever
+supposed to make night hideous might range these passages, and glide
+up and down yonder staircase at their pleasure. But I do not believe
+in the supernatural; and the sounds that I have heard are distinctly
+human.’
+
+‘Let me hear them too.’
+
+‘No, I tell you,’ answered the patient with smothered anger; ‘I will
+have no one to play the spy upon my slumber. If this is the delusion of
+an enfeebled brain, I have sense enough left to find out the falsehood
+for myself. Besides, the intruder, if there be one, cannot do me any
+harm. Yonder door is securely locked every night.’
+
+‘Can you trust the lock?’
+
+‘Do you think I should have put a bad one to a room that contains
+such treasures? No, the lock is one I chose myself, and would baffle
+a practised burglar. There is the same kind of lock on yonder door,
+communicating with the dressing-room. I turn the key in both with my
+own hand every night after Wincher has left me. I am still strong
+enough to move about the room, though I feel my strength lessening day
+by day. God pity me when I lie helpless on yonder bed, as I must do
+soon.’
+
+‘Nay, my dear sir, let us hope for a favourable change ere long.’
+
+‘I have almost left off hoping,’ answered the old man wearily. ‘All
+the drugs in your surgery will not cure me. I am tired of trying first
+this medicine and then that. For some time, indeed, I believed that you
+understood my case; that your medicines were of some good to me. Within
+the last three weeks they have seemed only to aggravate my disorder.’
+
+Lucius took up a medicine bottle from the little table by the bed half
+absently. It was empty.
+
+‘When did you take your last dose?’ he asked.
+
+‘Half-an-hour ago.’
+
+‘I will try to find you a new tonic; something that shall not produce
+the nausea you have complained of lately. I cannot understand how this
+mixture should have had such an effect; but it is just possible you may
+have an antipathy to quinine. I will give you a medicine without any
+quinine.’
+
+Mr. Sivewright gave an impatient sigh, expressive of non-belief in the
+whole faculty of medicine.
+
+‘Do what you please with me,’ he said. ‘If you do not succeed in
+lengthening my life, I suppose I may depend upon your not shortening
+it. And as you charge me nothing for your services, I have no right to
+complain if their value corresponds with the rate of your recompense.’
+
+‘I am sorry to see you have lost confidence in me, sir,’ said Lucius,
+somewhat wounded, yet willing to forgive a sick man’s petulance.
+
+‘I have not lost confidence in you individually. It is the science of
+medicine which I disbelieve in. Here am I, after four months’ patient
+observance of your regimen, eating, drinking, sleeping, ay, almost
+thinking according to your advice, and yet I am no better at the end of
+it all, but feel myself growing daily worse. If all your endeavours to
+patch up a broken constitution have resulted only in failure, why do
+you not tell me so without farther parley? I told you at the beginning
+that I was stoic enough to receive my death-warrant without a pang.’
+
+‘And I tell you again, as I told you then, that I have no sentence of
+death to pronounce. I confess that your symptoms during the last three
+weeks have somewhat puzzled me. If they continue to do so, I shall ask
+your permission to consult a medical man of wider experience than my
+own.’
+
+‘No,’ answered the old man captiously, ‘I will see no strangers. I will
+be experimentalised upon by no new hand. If you can’t cure me, put me
+down as incurable. And now you had better go to your other patients; I
+have kept you later than usual. You will come back in the evening, I
+suppose?’
+
+‘Most certainly.’
+
+‘Very well, then, devote your evening to me, for once in a way, instead
+of to Lucille. You will have plenty of her society by and by, when she
+is your wife. I want to talk seriously with you. The time has come when
+there must be no more concealment between you and me. There are secrets
+which a man may do wisely to keep through life, but which it is fatal
+to carry to the grave. Give me your hand, Lucius,’ he said, stretching
+out his wasted fingers to meet the strong grasp of the surgeon; ‘we
+have not known each other long, yet as much as I can trust anybody I
+trust you; as much as I can love anybody—since my son turned my milk of
+human kindness to gall—I love you. Come back to me this evening, and I
+will prove to you that this is no idle protestation.’
+
+The thin hand trembled in Lucius Davoren’s grasp. There was more
+emotion in these words of Homer Sivewright’s than Lucius had supposed
+the old man capable of feeling.
+
+‘Whatever service you may require of me, whatever trust you may confide
+in me,’ said the surgeon with warmth, ‘be assured that the service
+shall be faithfully performed, the trust held sacred.’ And thus they
+parted.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+HOMER SIVEWRIGHT’S LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT.
+
+
+It was nearly dusk that evening when Lucius returned to Cedar House.
+His daily round had occupied more time than usual, and however full
+his mind might be of that strange old man, or of the woman he loved,
+he did not shorten a visit or neglect the smallest detail of his duty.
+The lamp was lighted in Mr. Sivewright’s room, though it was not yet
+dark outside—only the sultry dusk of a late summer day. The day had
+been oppressive, and the Shadrack district had a prostrate air in its
+parched dustiness, like a camel in the desert panting for distant
+waterpools. The low leaden sky had threatened a storm since noon,
+and the denizens of the Shadrack-road, more especially the feminine
+population, had been so fluttered and disturbed by the expectation
+of the coming tempest as to be unable, in their own language, ‘to
+set to anything,’ all day long. Work at the washtub had progressed
+slowly, wringing had hung on hand, and the very mangles of Shadrack
+had turned listlessly under the influence of the weather. It was the
+cholera season, too—a period which set in as regularly in this district
+as the gambling season or the water-drinking season at Homburg or
+Baden, or the bathing season at Ostend or Biarritz. Stone-fruit was
+selling cheaply on the hawkers’ barrows, cucumbers were at a discount,
+vegetable marrows met with no inquiry, conger eel and mackerel were
+unpopular, and even salmon was not a stranger to the barrows. All the
+wealth of the vanishing summer—luxuries which a few short weeks ago
+had been counted amongst the delicacies of the season, and paid for
+accordingly—had drifted this way on the strong tide of time, and lay as
+it were at the feet of the Shadrackites. Upon which the Shadrackites,
+looking askant at the costermongers’ barrows, remarked that cholera was
+about.
+
+Mr. Davoren found his patient seated before a writing-table, which he
+had never until now seen opened. It was that kind of writing-table
+which is called a _bonheur du jour_, a small table provided with
+numerous drawers; an ebony table, inlaid with brass and tortoiseshell,
+with brass mounts; a table which, according to Mr. Sivewright, had been
+made by no lesser hands than those of Francis Boule. The lamp stood on
+this table, all the drawers were open and brimming over with papers,
+and before it, wrapped in his ancient dressing-gown of faded damask,
+sat the old man.
+
+‘I beg your pardon, sir,’ said Lucius, about to withdraw, for he knew
+that his patient had strange secret ways about his papers. ‘You are
+not ready for me, perhaps. I’ll go down and talk to Lucille for a few
+minutes.’
+
+‘Do nothing of the kind; I am quite ready for you. These papers have
+much to do with what I am going to say. Come in, and lock the door.
+I have locked the other door myself. I want to be secure from the
+possibility of interruption. And now sit down by my side.’
+
+Lucius obeyed without a word.
+
+‘Now,’ said Mr. Sivewright, with the old keen look and sharp tone, the
+natural energy in the man dominating even the prostration of sickness,
+‘give me a straight answer to a straight question. You have had the run
+of this house for a long time; have seen everything, have had time to
+form your judgment: which do you think me now—a poor man or a miser?’
+
+‘You will not be offended by my candour?’ inquired Lucius.
+
+‘Certainly not. Have I not enjoined you to be candid?’
+
+‘Then,’ replied the other, with a grave smile, ‘I admit that, in spite
+of your protestations of poverty, I have thought you rich. Until a
+short time ago, indeed, I was inclined to believe your statement; I
+really thought that you had sunk all your money in the purchase of
+these things,’ with that half-contemptuous glance at the art-treasures
+which Mr. Sivewright had before observed; ‘but when you spoke the other
+day of a possible intruder in this house with so much alarm, I told
+myself that if you had nothing to lose—or nothing more portable than
+yonder mummy or this desk—you could hardly cherish the suspicion of
+foul play.’
+
+‘Fairly reasoned. Then you thought, because I was alarmed by the idea
+of a secret visitant prowling about my house in the dead of the night,
+that I must needs have some secret hoard, some hidden treasure for
+whose safety I feared?’
+
+‘That was almost my thought.’
+
+‘There you were wrong; but only so far were you wrong,’ answered Mr.
+Sivewright, with unwonted energy. ‘I am not such a baby as to hoard my
+guineas in an old muniment chest, for the babyish pleasure of gloating
+over my treasure in the stillness of the night—letting the golden
+coins run like glittering yellow water through my fingers; counting and
+recounting; stacking the gold into little piles, twenties, fifties,
+hundreds. No. I am a miser—granted; but I am not a fool. There is
+nothing in this house but the objects which you have seen; but those
+are worth a fortune. This very table at which I am now sitting, and
+which to your uneducated eye doubtless seems a trumpery gimcrack thing,
+was sold at Christie’s three years ago for a hundred and twenty pounds,
+and will sell a year hence for half as much again. The value of money
+is diminishing year by year; the number of wealthy buyers is increasing
+year by year; and these treasures and relics of the past—specimens
+of manufactures that have perished, of arts that are forgotten, the
+handiwork of genius which has left no inheritors—these cannot multiply.
+The capital these represent is large, and whenever they are put up
+to auction in Christie and Manson’s sale-rooms, that capital will be
+quadrupled. I do not speak at random, Davoren; I know my trade. After
+the apprenticeship of a lifetime I can venture to speak boldly. I have
+spent something like ten thousand pounds upon the treasures of this
+house, and I consider that ten thousand of sunk capital to represent
+between forty and fifty thousand in the future.’
+
+Lucius looked at the speaker mute with astonishment. Was this utter
+madness? The hallucination of a mind which had become distorted by
+constant dwelling upon one subject? The wild dream of an art fanatic?
+Homer Sivewright’s calm and serious air—the business-like manner of his
+statement—forbade the idea. He might deceive himself as to the value of
+his possessions; but there was no madness here.
+
+‘You do not believe me,’ said Mr. Sivewright, taking the surgeon’s
+wondering silence as the indication of his incredulity. ‘You think I
+am a doting old fool; that I must be stark mad when I tell you that I,
+who have lived as poorly as an anchorite, have been content to sink ten
+thousand pounds—representing at five per cent five hundred a year—in
+the purchase of things which, to your untutored judgment, may perhaps
+appear so much second-hand trumpery.’
+
+‘No,’ answered Lucius slowly, like a man awakening from a dream; ‘I can
+appreciate the value and the beauty of many among your treasures. But
+ten thousand pounds—the sum seems prodigious.’
+
+‘A mere bagatelle compared with the sums that have been sunk in the
+same kind of property. But I have never bought unless I could buy a
+bargain. I am an old hand—cautious as a fox. I have not disputed the
+possession of a Sèvres tea-cup or a Dresden snuff-box with wealthy
+amateurs. I have waited my chance, and bought gems which the common
+herd were too ignorant to appreciate. I have picked up my treasures
+in odd nooks and corners; have travelled half over Europe in quest of
+spoil. Thus my ten thousand pounds represent thirty thousand of another
+man’s money.’
+
+‘And you have given up your declining years to constant labour; you
+have racked your brains with never-ending calculations; and you have
+lived, as you say, like an anchorite—for what result? Only to amass
+this heap of things—as useless for any of the practical needs of life
+as they are artistically beautiful. You have pinched and scraped and
+toiled—shortened your own life, and robbed your grandchild of every
+joy that makes youth worth having. Good heavens,’ exclaimed Lucius,
+indignant at the thought of that joyless existence to which this old
+man had condemned Lucille, ‘was there ever such folly! Nay, it is worse
+than folly, it is a crime—a sin against yourself, whom you have robbed
+of natural rest, and all the comforts to which men look forward as the
+solace of age—a still greater sin against that unselfish girl whose
+life you have filled with care and trouble.’
+
+This reproach struck home. The old man sighed heavily, his head
+drooped upon his breast, and he covered his face with his thin hand.
+
+‘Why have you made this insensate use of your money?’ exclaimed Lucius.
+‘What madness possessed you?’
+
+‘The madness men call revenge,’ cried Mr. Sivewright, uncovering his
+face and lifting his head proudly. ‘Listen, Lucius Davoren, and when
+you have heard my story, call me a madman if you will. You will at
+least perceive that there has been a fixed purpose in all I did. When
+my false ungrateful son—whom I had loved with all the weak indulgent
+affection of the solitary man who concentrates all his store of feeling
+upon one object, his only child—when my wicked son left me, he left me
+impoverished by his theft, and, as he doubtless believed, ruined for
+life. He shook the dust of my house from his feet, and went out into
+the world, never intending to recross my threshold. I had nothing more
+that could tempt him. My stock had been diminishing daily under his
+dishonest hands; the sacrifice I had made to secure the new premises
+shrunk it to a vanishing point. Thus he left me, to all intents and
+purposes a beggar. It was the old story of the squeezed orange. He had
+no compunction in flinging away the rind.’
+
+‘He used you hardly,’ said Lucius, ‘like a villain as he was.’
+
+‘On the night after he left me, I sat alone by my miserable hearth, in
+that room which had never witnessed one hour of domestic peace! I sat
+alone, and brooded over my wrongs. Then it seemed to me almost as if
+that very devil who came to Dr. Faustus in his study came and stood
+behind my chair, and whispered in my ear. “Come,” said the fiend, “love
+is worn out, but there is one thing left you still—revenge. Grow rich,
+and this base son, who leaves you to perish like a maimed lion in his
+den, will come back and fawn upon you for your money. Grow rich again;
+show him what might have been his reward had he behaved decently to
+you. Let him lie at your door and starve, and beg as Dives begged for a
+drop of water, and be refused. Then it will be your turn to laugh, as
+he no doubt is now laughing at you.”’
+
+‘A strange suggestion, and worthy to come from the spirit of evil,’
+said Lucius.
+
+‘I cared not if it came straight from Lucifer,’ answered the other
+passionately. ‘From that hour I lived only to make money. I had lived
+for little else before, you will say, perhaps; but I worked harder
+now. Fortune seemed to favour me, just as the Fates seem now and then
+to favour the desperate gamester. I made some lucky sales with the
+shrunken remnant of my stock. I found gems in queer out-of-the-way
+places; for at this time I was endowed with an almost superhuman
+activity, and travelled many miles every day. I roamed the Continent,
+and brought home wonders of art. I acquired a reputation for finding
+objects of rarest merit, and celebrated collectors paid me my price
+without a murmur. So I worked on, until the expiry of my lease found me
+with a large stock and some thousands in hand. Then the idea suddenly
+occurred to me that my best chance of dying a rich man—or of doubling,
+tripling, or quadrupling my capital before I died—was to let my stock
+lie fallow. I surrendered my premises rather than pay the enormous rent
+which the landlord demanded for them. I might have sold my stock, and
+retired with a comfortable income; but I determined to keep it, and die
+worth fifty thousand pounds. I found this old house—roomy and secluded;
+I brought my wealth here. There are cases of rare old china stowed
+away in some of the rooms which you have not even seen. Since I came
+here, I went on buying, so long as my funds would admit; and since the
+exhaustion of my capital, I have done a good deal of business in the
+way of barter—weeding out objects of lesser value from my collection,
+and making many a good bargain with dealers who only half know their
+trade. Thus even after my funds were gone I managed to enrich my
+collection.’
+
+‘And now, I conclude,’ said Lucius, ‘that your chief pleasure is the
+idea of giving your name to a museum—of leaving behind you a memorial
+which shall survive for generations to come?’
+
+‘I have no such thought,’ answered the other. ‘My talk of leaving these
+things to the nation was but an idle threat. No, Lucius, my dream and
+my hope from the time of my son’s desertion have been the realisation
+of a large fortune—you understand, a fortune—a fortune to be left away
+from that base boy—a fortune which he should hear of, whose full extent
+should be known to him; wealth that he should hunger for, while he lay
+in the gutter. I have made the fortune, Lucius, and I leave it all to
+you. That is my revenge.’
+
+‘To _me_!’ cried Lucius, aghast.
+
+‘To you. But mind, not a sixpence, not a halfpenny, to that man, should
+he come whining to you; not a crust of bread to ward off the pangs of
+starvation.’
+
+‘You have left everything to me,’ said Lucius, with undiminished
+surprise, ‘to me! You pass over your granddaughter, your own flesh and
+blood, to make me your heir!’
+
+‘What does it matter whether it goes to you or Lucille?’ asked Mr.
+Sivewright impatiently. ‘You love her?’
+
+‘With all the strength of my heart.’
+
+‘And she is to be your wife. She will have the full benefit of all I
+leave you. Were it left to her—settled upon her ever so tightly, for
+her sole use and benefit, and so on, as the lawyers have it—you would
+have the advantage all the same. She would surrender all her rights
+to you. But she would do something worse than that. She has a foolish
+sentimental idea about that infamous father of hers; she would let him
+share the money. That is why I bequeath everything to you.’
+
+‘The precaution is needless, sir,’ replied Lucius gravely. ‘I have
+reason to know that your son no longer lives to trouble you or his
+daughter.’
+
+‘You have reason to know!’ cried the old man angrily. ‘What do you know
+about my son? And why have you withheld your knowledge from me until
+this moment?’
+
+‘Because it is only within the last few weeks that I have discovered
+your son’s identity with a man I met in America, and I did not care to
+disturb you by any allusion to an agitating subject.’
+
+‘Who was this man?’
+
+‘You will not speak of this to Lucille? She knows nothing—she must know
+nothing of—of her father’s death,’ said Lucius, with painful eagerness.
+
+He had spoken rashly, and found himself, as it were, caught in the
+meshes of his own ill-advised admission.
+
+‘She shall know nothing, if you insist upon it. For God’s sake, don’t
+trifle with me. Is my son dead?’
+
+He asked the question with as agonising an anxiety as if the son he had
+long ago renounced were at this moment the idol of his heart.
+
+‘I have good reason to believe that he is dead.’
+
+‘That is no answer. Give me details, particulars—time, place, the
+manner of his death.’
+
+‘I—I can only tell you what I know,’ answered Lucius, pale to the lips.
+‘There was a portrait amongst the lumber in your loft—the portrait of a
+young man with dark hair and eyes.’
+
+‘There was but one portrait there,’ answered the old man quickly—‘my
+son’s.’
+
+‘That picture resembles a man I once met in America, who, I afterwards
+heard, was shot.’
+
+‘How? by whom?’
+
+‘That I cannot tell you. You must accept the evidence for what it is
+worth.’
+
+‘I reject it as worthless. What, you see a picture among the lumber
+in the loft which reminds you of a face you saw in America—the face
+of some man who may or may not have been killed in some gold-diggers’
+fray, I suppose—and you jump at the conclusion that my son is dead;
+that the order of nature has been reversed, and the green tree has
+fallen before the disabled trunk! You tell me, on no better evidence
+than this, that my dream of revenge has been vain; that my ungrateful
+son will never hear, with all the pangs of baffled avarice, of his dead
+father’s wealth—of wealth that might have been his had he been simply
+honest.’
+
+‘Say that I am mistaken, then,’ replied Lucius, infinitely relieved by
+the old man’s incredulity. How could he have answered if Mr. Sivewright
+had questioned him closely? He was not schooled in falsehood. The
+horrible truth might have been wrung from him in spite of himself.
+‘Say that your son still lives,’ he went on. ‘I accept your trust, and
+thank you for your confidence in me. I shall receive your wealth, and
+may it be long ere it falls to my hands—rather as a trustee than an
+inheritor—for to my mind it will always belong to Lucille, and not to
+me.’
+
+‘And you swear that my wicked son shall never profit by my hard-earned
+gains?’
+
+‘I swear it,’ said Lucius.
+
+‘Then I am satisfied. My will is straight and simple, and leaves all to
+you without reserve. It has been duly witnessed, and lies in this inner
+drawer.’ He lifted the flap of the table, and showed Lucius a concealed
+drawer at the back. ‘You will remember?’
+
+‘Yes,’ answered the surgeon, ‘but I trust in God that it may be long
+ere that document is needed.’
+
+‘That is a polite speech common to heirs,’ answered Mr. Sivewright,
+with a touch of bitterness. ‘But you have been very good to me,’ he
+added in a softer tone; ‘and I like you. Nay, could I believe in the
+existence of friendship, I should be induced to think that you return
+my liking.’
+
+‘I do, sir, with all my heart,’ returned Lucius. ‘Your eccentricities
+kept us asunder for some time; but since you have treated me with
+confidence—since you have bared your heart to me, with its heavy burden
+of past wrongs and sorrows—you have drawn me very near to you. I
+deplore the mistaken principle which has guided your later life; but I
+cannot but acknowledge the magnitude of the wrong which inspired that
+dream of revenge. Yet, while I accept the trust which you are generous
+enough to confide in me, I regret that I should profit by your anger
+against another. If I did not think your son was dead—that all hope
+of earthly atonement for his wrong-doing is over—I should refuse to
+subscribe to the conditions of your bequest.’
+
+‘Say no more about his death,’ exclaimed the old man, ‘or you will
+make me angry. Now one more word about business. If, immediately
+after my death, you want money, sell my collection at once. You will
+find a catalogue, and detached instructions as to the manner of the
+sale, in this desk. If, on the other hand, you can afford to wait for
+your fortune—if you want the present value of those things to double
+itself—wait twenty years, and sell them before your eldest child comes
+of age. In that case, you will have a fortune large enough to make your
+sons great merchants—to dower half-a-dozen daughters.’
+
+‘I shall not be too eager to turn your treasures into money, believe
+me, sir,’ answered Lucius.
+
+‘Good,’ said Mr. Sivewright. ‘I bought those things to sell
+again—speculated in them as a broker speculates in shares. Yet it gives
+me a sharp pang to think of their being scattered. They represent all
+the experience of my life, my youthful worship of art, the knowledge
+of my later years. I have looked at them, and handled them, till they
+seem to me like sentient things.’
+
+‘Even Pharaoh yonder,’ said Lucius with a smile, anxious to turn the
+current of his patient’s thoughts, which had been dwelling too long
+upon painful themes, ‘though he seems scarcely a lively object to adorn
+a bedchamber.’
+
+‘Pharaoh was a bargain,’ answered Mr. Sivewright, ‘or I shouldn’t have
+bought him. The manufacture of mummies is one of the extinct arts, and
+the article must rise in market value with the lapse of years. New
+towns spring up; provincial museums multiply—each must have its mummy.’
+
+‘Come, Mr. Sivewright, you have been talking rather more than is good
+for an invalid. May I unlock those doors, and ring for your supper?’
+
+‘Yes, if you forbid further talk, but I have something more, another
+matter, and one of some importance, to discuss with you.’
+
+‘Let that stand over till to-morrow. You have fatigued and excited
+yourself too much already. I will be with you at the same time
+to-morrow evening, if you like.’
+
+‘Do, there is something I am anxious to speak about; not quite so
+important as the subject of our conversation to-night, but yet
+something that ought to be spoken of. Come to-morrow evening at the
+same time. Yes, you are right, I have tired myself already.’
+
+Mr. Sivewright flung himself back in his chair exhausted. Lucius
+reproached himself for having suffered his patient to talk so much, and
+upon so agitating a topic. He stayed while the old man sipped a cup of
+beef-tea, which he finished with a painful effort; Lucille standing
+by, and looking on anxiously all the while. She had brought the little
+supper-tray from the adjoining room with her own hands.
+
+‘Do try to eat it, dear grandpapa,’ she said, as Mr. Sivewright trifled
+with his spoon, and looked despondently at the half-filled cup. ‘I made
+it myself, on purpose that it should be good and strong.’
+
+‘It is good enough, child, if you could give me the inclination to
+eat,’ answered the old man, pushing away the cup with a sigh; ‘and now
+good-night to you both. I am tired, and shall go to bed at once.’
+
+‘Don’t lock the dressing-room door to-night, grandpapa,’ said Lucille.
+‘I am going to sleep there in future, so that I may be close at hand if
+you should want anything in the night.’
+
+‘I never want anything in the night,’ answered Mr. Sivewright
+impatiently. ‘You may just as well sleep in your own room.’
+
+‘But I like to be near you, grandpapa, and Lucius says you ought to
+take a little beef-tea very early in the morning. Please leave the door
+unlocked.’
+
+‘Very well; but, in that case, mind you lock the outer door.’
+
+‘I will be careful to do so, grandpapa.’
+
+‘Be sure of that. This change of rooms is a foolish fancy: but I am too
+feeble to dispute the point. Good-night.’
+
+He dismissed them both with a wave of his hand—the grandchild who
+represented the sum-total of his kindred, and the man to whom he had
+bequeathed his fortune.
+
+Lucille and Lucius went down-stairs together, but both were curiously
+silent.
+
+The surgeon’s mind was full of that strange conversation with Homer
+Sivewright; the girl had a preoccupied air.
+
+In the dimly-lighted hall she paused, by the open door of the
+sitting-room, where Mrs. Wincher had just put down the little tray with
+her young mistress’s meagre supper.
+
+‘Will you come into the parlour for a little while, Lucius?’ she asked,
+as her lover lingered on the threshold with an undecided air. Something
+unfamiliar in the tone of her voice jarred upon his ear.
+
+‘You ask the question almost as if you wished me to say no, Lucille,’
+he said.
+
+‘I am rather tired,’ she answered faintly, ‘and I am sure you must
+be tired too, you have been so long up-stairs with grandpapa. It has
+struck ten.’
+
+‘That sounds like my dismissal,’ said Lucius, scrutinising the pale
+face, in which there was a troubled expression that he had never seen
+there until of late; ‘so I will say good-night, though I had something
+to tell you, had you been inclined to listen.’
+
+‘Tell me all to-morrow, Lucius.’
+
+‘It shall be to-morrow then, dearest. Good-night.’
+
+And thus with one tender kiss he left her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+WHAT LUCIUS SAW BETWIXT MIDNIGHT AND MORNING.
+
+
+The sky was starless above the Shadrack-road, and the air hardly less
+oppressive than it had been in the sultry noontide. That low sky
+seemed to shut in the Shadrack district like an iron roof, and the
+Shadrackites lounging against their doorposts, or conversing at street
+corners, or congregating in small clusters outside public-houses,
+bemoaned themselves that the storm had not yet come.
+
+Lucius left Cedar House heavy-hearted, in spite of the knowledge that
+he, who yesterday knew not of a creature in this universe likely to
+leave him a five-pound note, was to-night heir to a handsome fortune.
+The thought of Mr. Sivewright’s generosity in no manner elated him. Had
+his mind been free to contemplate this fact he would, no doubt, have
+rejoiced in the new sense of security which such a prospect must have
+inspired; he would have rejoiced not alone for himself, but for the
+sake of the woman who was to be his wife. Through the thick tangle of
+his troubled thoughts no gleam of light could penetrate. He saw himself
+the centre of perplexities. It seemed almost as if the avenging shade
+of the man he had slain were hunting him down—tempting him to entangle
+himself by some foolish confession, urging him to some folly that must
+bring about his own destruction. He thought of Orestes pursued by the
+Eumenides—tortured by the burden of a crime which, at the hour of its
+commission, he had deemed an act of justice.
+
+Instead of turning homewards as usual, he paused for a minute or so
+outside the iron gate, and then took the opposite direction, setting
+his face towards the distant country. It was only a fancy, perhaps, but
+it seemed to him that the atmosphere was a shade less oppressive when
+he turned his back upon Shadrack Basin and the steam factories which
+encompassed it. No rain came to cool the fever-parched city, nor had
+the first low note of the impending storm sounded in distant thunder.
+Yet that coming storm was no less a certainty.
+
+There was a strange bewilderment in the surgeon’s mind. That promise of
+wealth, ease, security, a more speedily-won renown, all the benefits
+which go hand-in-hand with the possession of ample means, had excited
+his brain, although it had not elated his spirits. He saw all the
+scheme of his future altered. No longer need he toil in this wretched
+district. He might at once establish himself amongst the most famous
+of his fellow workers; make known his new theories, his discoveries in
+the vast world of medical science; do good on a scale infinitely larger
+than that afforded by his present surroundings. It was not that he
+wanted to turn his back upon the suffering poor. His brightest hopes,
+his fondest dreams, were of the good he was to do for these. He only
+desired that his light might not be for ever hidden under a bushel.
+Strong in the belief that he could serve the whole race of man, he
+languished to shake off those fetters, forged by necessity, which kept
+him chained to this obscure corner of the earth.
+
+With the thought of his improved prospects, and all the hopes that
+went along with that thought, there mingled that ever-brooding care
+about the past. He had perceived a curious change in Lucille’s manner
+to-night. Could she have discovered anything? How anxious she had been
+to get rid of him! She had not seemed exactly cold or unkind, but her
+manner had been hurried, excited; as if her mind were occupied with
+some all-absorbing thought in which he had no part.
+
+‘If, by some fatal chance, she had discovered the true story of her
+father’s fate,’ he told himself, ‘she would hardly have concealed
+her knowledge; she would have surely told me the truth at once, and
+dismissed me for ever. I cannot imagine her acting in any double or
+underhanded manner. Yet to-night it seemed as if she had something to
+hide from me.’
+
+This fancy troubled him; and in spite of his endeavours to dismiss
+the suspicion as groundless, the thought recurred to him every now
+and then. He walked far along the Shadrack-road, farther than he had
+penetrated for many a day; walked on, meditative, and hardly conscious
+where he went, until he came to a region of deserted building-ground,
+upon which a few skeleton houses lifted their roofless walls to the
+blank sky, as if demanding of the gods wherefore the speculative
+builder—long since stranded on the reefy shore of the bankruptcy
+court—came not to finish them.
+
+This arid plain, which had erst been pleasant meadow-land, and where
+the shorn remnant of a once-beauteous hawthorn hedge still languished
+here and there under a cloud of lime dust, was the nearest approach to
+a rustic landscape within reach of the Shadrackites. Its beauty did not
+tempt the pedestrian.
+
+Lucius halted at sight of the skeleton houses, and having in some
+measure walked down his excitement, turned back. He did not, however,
+take exactly the same way by which he had come. The prospect of the
+Shadrack-road, in all its dreary length, may have appalled him, or it
+may have been mere vagrant fancy which led him to return by a long
+narrow street, straggling and poverty-stricken, yet boasting here and
+there some good old red-brick mansion, which had once been the country
+seat of a prosperous City merchant, but which now, shorn of its garden,
+and defaced by neglect and decay, was let off in divers tenements to
+the struggling poor.
+
+This street, with all its byways, was familiar to Lucius, who had
+plenty of patients in those squalid houses, down those narrow side
+streets, courts, and alleys. He knew every turn of the place, and
+wandered on to-night, not troubling himself which way he went, so long
+as he kept in a general manner the homeward direction. It had struck
+twelve when he emerged from a darksome alley on to the wharf which
+formed one side of the narrow creek whereon Mr. Sivewright’s garden
+abutted.
+
+There were the dingy barges moored side by side upon the stagnant
+water; and there above them, dark against the sky, loomed the outline
+of the house that sheltered all Lucius Davoren most fondly loved. He
+had wandered to this spot almost unawares.
+
+ ‘I arise from dreams of thee,
+ And a spirit in my feet
+ Has led me—who knows how?
+ To thy chamber-window, sweet!’
+
+murmured the lover, as he looked up at those blank windows.
+
+There was a faint light in one, the little dressing-room next Mr.
+Sivewright’s bedchamber, the room now occupied by Lucille. Yes, and
+there was one more light—the yellow flame of a candle in one of the
+upper windows, a window in that topmost story, which Lucille had
+declared to be utterly uninhabited.
+
+The sight struck Lucius with a vague suspicion—a feeling almost of
+alarm.
+
+How should there be a light up yonder in one of those unoccupied rooms?
+Could it be Jacob Wincher, prowling about after midnight, to inspect
+the treasures of which he was guardian. It was just possible there
+might be some part of the bric-à-brac merchant’s collection in one
+of those upper rooms. Yet Lucille had declared that they were quite
+empty—and his own inspection through the keyholes had revealed nothing
+worth speaking of within. And again, how foreign to Jacob Wincher’s
+orderly habits to be roaming about with a candle at such an hour!
+
+The gleam of that solitary candle amidst all those dark upper windows
+mystified Lucius beyond measure.
+
+‘If it is old Wincher who has carried the light up yonder, it will move
+presently,’ thought Lucius; ‘he would not stay there long at such a
+late hour. I’ll wait and see the end of the business.’
+
+The first note of the storm sounded as he made this resolve, a rumble
+of distant thunder, and then came the heavy patter of big rain-drops,
+shedding coolness upon the thunder-charged air. There was an open shed
+close at hand, and Lucius withdrew to its shelter without losing sight
+of the dark old house opposite, with its two lighted windows.
+
+The water and the barges lay between him and Cedar House, the
+wharf—used at this time as a repository for spelter—being built upon a
+narrow creek, or inlet from the river.
+
+He stood and watched for nearly half an hour, while the rain came down
+heavily and the lightning flashed across his face every now and then;
+but still the light burnt steadily. What could Wincher or anybody
+else be doing in yonder room at such an hour? Or could it be Homer
+Sivewright himself, roaming the house like an unquiet spirit?
+
+‘No,’ Lucius thought, ‘he has not strength enough to mount those steep
+stairs without help. It cannot be Sivewright.’
+
+Did the circumstance—trivial enough in itself, perhaps, but painfully
+perplexing to that anxious watcher—mean any harm? That was the
+question. Did it denote any peril to Lucille? Ought he to go round to
+the front of the house, and try to arouse the sleeping household, in
+order to warn them of some unknown danger? That seemed a desperate
+thing to do, when the circumstance, after all, might be of no moment.
+It was most likely Jacob Wincher. He might have eccentricities that
+Lucius had never heard of; and to sit up late into the night was
+perhaps one of his failings.
+
+Yet that mysterious light, taken in conjunction with Mr. Sivewright’s
+fancy about strange footsteps in the dead of the night, was not a fact
+to be dismissed carelessly.
+
+‘If there were any way of getting into the house without ringing people
+up and frightening my patient, I would get in somehow, and find the
+solution of this enigma,’ thought Lucius; ‘but I daresay the doors and
+windows at the back are firmly fastened.’
+
+A distant clock chimed the quarter before one, while Lucius was
+standing irresolute under the spelter shed. While the third slow
+chime was still vibrating in the silent night, the blue glare of a
+lightning-flash showed that eager watcher a figure upon one of the
+barges.
+
+Until this moment he had believed them utterly empty, save of their
+cargo; nor did this figure belong to either of those darksome vessels.
+It was the figure of a man, tall and lithe, who moved quickly along,
+bending his body as he crept from one barge to the other, as if
+shrinking from the pelting rain—a stealthy figure, upon which Lucius at
+once concentrated his attention.
+
+He had not long to remain in doubt. The man lifted his head presently,
+and looked up towards the lighted window; then, with the agility of
+some wild animal, sprang from the barge to the garden-wall. There
+Lucius lost him in the darkness.
+
+Presently there came a long whistle—long but not loud; then a light
+appeared in the lower part of the house—a light from an open door,
+evidently. Lucius saw the light appear and vanish, and heard the
+closing of a heavy door.
+
+Some one had admitted that man to the house, but who was that some one?
+There was foul play of some kind; but what the nature of the mystery
+was a question he could not answer.
+
+What should he do? Go round to the front gate, ring, and alarm the
+household? By that means only could he solve the mystery, and prove
+to Lucille that these Winchers, whose fidelity she believed in, were
+deceiving her. Yet to do that might be to imperil his patient, in whose
+weak state any violent shock might be well-nigh fatal.
+
+Reflection convinced him that whatever mischief was at work in that
+house was of a subtle character. It could only mean plunder; for
+after all, to suppose that it involved any evil design against Homer
+Sivewright’s life seemed too improbable a notion to be entertained for
+a moment. The plot, whatever its nature, must mean plunder, and these
+Winchers, the trusted servants, in whom long service seemed a pledge of
+honesty, must be the moving spirits of the treason. What more likely
+than that Jacob Wincher, who knew the value of his master’s treasures,
+was gradually plundering the collection of its richest gems, and that
+this stealthy intruder, who entered the house thus secretly under cover
+of night, was his accomplice, employed to carry away and dispose of the
+booty?
+
+Arguing thus, Lucius decided that it would be a foolish thing to
+disturb the evildoers in the midst of their work. His wiser course
+would be to lie in wait, watch the house till daybreak, and surprise
+the accomplice in the act of carrying off the plunder. As the man had
+gone in, so he must surely come out before morning. If, owing to the
+darkness of the night, he should escape the watcher’s keen gaze on this
+occasion, Lucius determined that he would set one of the minions of Mr.
+Otranto, the private detective, to watch to-morrow night.
+
+Lucius waited patiently, though those hours in the dead of the night
+went by with leaden pace, and every limb of the watcher became a
+burden to him from very weariness. He seated himself upon an empty
+cask in an angle of the shed, leaned his back against the wall, and
+waited; never relaxing his watch upon those quiet barges and the low
+garden-wall beyond them, never ceasing to listen intently for the least
+sound from that direction. The storm abated, heaven’s floodgates were
+closed again; the lightning faded to fainter flashes and then ceased
+altogether; a distant rumble of thunder, like the sound of a door
+shutting after the exit of a disagreeable visitor, marked the end of
+the tempest. Peace descended once more upon earth, and coolness; a
+pleasant air crept along the narrow creek; even the odour of the damp
+earth was sweet after the heat and dryness of yesterday.
+
+Morning came, and the aching of Lucius Davoren’s bones increased, but
+there was no sign from the barges or the garden-wall. The watcher was
+thoroughly wearied. His eyes had been striving to pierce the darkness,
+his ears had been strained to listen for the lightest sound during four
+long hours. At five o’clock he departed, not wishing to be surprised by
+early labourers coming his way, or by the traffic of the wharf, which
+might begin he knew not how soon. He went away, vexed and disquieted;
+thinking that it was just possible the man might have escaped him after
+all in the darkness.
+
+‘I shouldn’t have seen him in the first instance without the aid of
+that lightning-flash,’ he said to himself; ‘I may very easily have
+missed him afterwards. I’ll go home and get two or three hours’ sleep
+if I can, and then go straight to Cedar House and try to solve this
+mystery.’
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+LUCIUS AT FAULT.
+
+
+At nine o’clock Lucius stood before the tall iron gate waiting for
+admittance to Mr. Sivewright’s dwelling. In spite of his weariness, he
+had slept but little in the interval. The fever of his brain was not to
+be beguiled into slumber. He could only go over the same ground again
+and again, trying to convince himself that the mystery of that secret
+entrance to Cedar House was a very simple matter and would be made
+clear after a little trouble.
+
+He scrutinised Mrs. Wincher keenly, as she unlocked the gate and
+conducted him across the forecourt; but nothing in the aspect of
+Mr. Wincher’s good lady indicated agitation or emotion of any kind
+whatsoever. If this woman were involved in some nightly act of
+wrong-doing against her master, she was evidently hardened in iniquity.
+Her face, not altogether free from the traces of a blacklead brush,
+with which she may perchance have brushed aside an importunate fly, was
+placidity itself.
+
+‘You’re more than usual early this morning, Dr. Davory,’ she said with
+her friendly air; ‘you did ought to give yourself a little more rest.’
+
+‘I couldn’t rest this morning, Mrs. Wincher,’ answered Lucius
+thoughtfully; ‘I was too anxious.’
+
+‘Not about the old gentleman, I hope?’
+
+‘Well, partly on his account, and partly upon other grounds. I have an
+idea that this house is not quite so safe as it might be.’
+
+‘Lord bless you, sir, not safe, when I bolts every blessed door,
+and puts up every blessed bar, just as if it was chock full of
+state prisoners! And what is there for any one to steal except the
+bricklebrack, and nobody in these parts would know the vally o’ that.
+I’m sure I’ve lived among it five-and-twenty year myself, and can’t see
+no use in it, nor no beauty in it neither. Depend upon it, nobody would
+ever come arter bricklebrack.’
+
+‘I don’t know, Mrs. Wincher,’ answered Lucius; ‘people will come after
+anything, as long as it’s worth money.’
+
+‘Let ’em come, then,’ exclaimed the matron contemptuously; ‘I give ’em
+leave to get into this house after dark if they can.’
+
+‘How if some one were to be obliging, though, and let them in?’
+
+‘Who is there to do that, unless it was me or my good gentleman,’
+cried Mrs. Wincher, blushing indignantly through the blacklead,
+‘and I suppose you’re not going to suspect us, Dr. Davory, after
+five-and-twenty years’ faithful service? Let any one in, indeed, to
+make away with the bricklebrack! Why, my good gentleman would fret
+hisself to fiddle-strings if he was to crack a tea-cup.’
+
+Indignation lent shrillness to the voice of Mrs. Wincher, and this
+conversation, which took place in the hall, made itself audible in
+the parlour. The door was opened quickly, and Lucille appeared on the
+threshold, very pale, and with that troubled look in her face which
+Lucius had seen at parting with her the night before.
+
+‘What is the matter?’ she asked anxiously, ‘what are you talking so
+loud about, Wincher?’ She took Lucius’s offered hand absently, hardly
+looking at him, and evidently disturbed by some apprehension of evil.
+
+‘Nothink pertiklar, Miss Lucille,’ replied Mrs. Wincher, tossing
+her head; ‘only I’m not a stone, and when people throws out their
+insinuventions at me I feels it. As if me or my good gentleman was
+capable of making away with the bricklebrack.’
+
+‘What do you mean, Wincher?’
+
+‘Ask him,’ said Mrs. Wincher, pointing to Lucius; ‘I suppose he knows
+what he means hisself, but I’m sure I don’t;’ with which remark the
+matron withdrew to the back premises to resume her blacklead brush.
+
+‘What have you been saying to offend Mrs. Wincher, Lucius?’ asked
+Lucille.
+
+‘Not much, dearest, but if you’ll listen to me for a few minutes I’ll
+endeavour to explain.’
+
+He followed her into the parlour and shut the door.
+
+‘Why, Lucille,’ he said, drawing her towards the window, and looking at
+the pale thoughtful face, ‘how ill you look!’
+
+‘I am anxious about my grandfather,’ she said hurriedly. ‘Never mind my
+looks, Lucius; only contrive to cure him, and I daresay I shall soon be
+quite well again.’
+
+‘But you have no right to be anxious, Lucille,’ he answered; ‘can you
+not trust me? Do you not believe that I shall do all that care and
+skill can do, and that, if at any moment I see reason to doubt my own
+power to deal with this case, I shall call in some famous doctor to aid
+me?’
+
+‘I believe you will do all that is wise and right; but still I cannot
+help feeling anxious. Do not take any notice of me. I pray Heaven that
+all may come right in time.’
+
+She said this with a weary air, as if almost worn out with care. It
+seemed cruel to trouble her at such a time, and yet Lucius could not
+refrain from some endeavour to solve the mystery of that scene last
+night.
+
+‘Lucille,’ he began seriously, ‘you must promise not to be angry with
+me, nor to be alarmed by anything I may say.’
+
+‘I can’t promise that,’ she said, with a shade of impatience; not
+quite the old sweetness that had charmed and won him; ‘you are full
+of strange fancies and terrors. What was that you were saying to Mrs.
+Wincher just now?’
+
+‘I was only hinting at a suspicion that has become almost a certainty.
+There is something wrong going on in this house, Lucille.’
+
+She started, and the pale face grew a shade paler.
+
+‘What do you mean? What can be wrong?’
+
+‘There is foul play of some kind, a design against the property
+contained in this house. No doubt the report of its value has spread
+by this time; the house is known to be almost unoccupied. What more
+likely than that some one should attempt to plunder your grandfather’s
+possessions? What more easy, above all, if any one inside the house
+turned traitor and opened the door, in the dead of the night, to the
+intruder?’
+
+‘Lucius!’
+
+The name broke from her lips almost in a scream, and it seemed as if
+Lucille would have dropped to the ground but for her lover’s supporting
+arm.
+
+‘Lucille, is it worthy of you to be so terrorstricken? If there is
+danger to be met, can we not meet it together? Only trust me, darling,
+and all your fears will vanish. Believe me, I am strong enough to
+face any peril, if I have but your confidence. Accident has put me in
+possession of a secret connected with this house. Heaven knows what
+might have happened but for that providential discovery. But knowledge
+is power, and once aware of the danger, I shall find out how to cope
+with it.’
+
+‘A discovery!’ she repeated with the same terrorstricken look. ‘What
+discovery?’
+
+‘First, that the people you trust, these Winchers, whose fidelity
+has stood the test of five-and-twenty-years’ service, are improving
+their first opportunity to cheat. They are taking advantage of your
+grandfather’s helplessness. A man was admitted into this house secretly
+at one o’clock this morning.’
+
+‘What folly!’ cried Lucille with a faint laugh. ‘What could have put
+such a delusion into your head? A man admitted to this house at one
+o’clock this morning! Even if such a thing could have happened, which
+of course is impossible, who could have informed you of the fact?’
+
+‘My own eyes, which saw him clamber from the barges to the garden-wall,
+saw the gleam of a candle as a door was opened to admit him, saw a
+light burning in one of the upper windows—evidently a signal.’
+
+‘_You_ saw?’ cried Lucille with widely-opened eyes. ‘How could you see?
+What could have taken you to the back of this house in the middle of
+the night?’
+
+‘Accident,’ answered Lucius, ‘or say rather Providence. I was out of
+spirits when I left you last night—your own manner, so unlike its usual
+kindness, disturbed me, and I had other agitating thoughts. I walked a
+long way down the Shadrack-road, and then returned by a back way, which
+brought me to the spelter-wharf opposite the garden. There the light in
+the upper story attracted my attention. I had heard from you that those
+upper rooms were never occupied. I waited, watched, and saw what I have
+just described.’
+
+‘I would sooner believe it a delusion of your senses than the Winchers
+could be capable of treachery,’ said Lucille.
+
+‘Do not talk any more about my senses deceiving me,’ replied Lucius
+decisively. ‘You told me I was the fool of my own senses when I saw
+some one open the door of one of the upper rooms, and then hurriedly
+shut it. Now I am certain that I was not deceived—there was some one
+hidden in that room. Remember, Lucille, I say again there is no cause
+for fear. But there is foul play of some kind, and it is our business
+to fathom it. We are not children, to leave ourselves at the mercy of
+any scoundrel who chooses to plunder or assail us. I shall bring a
+policeman to watch in this house to-night, and set another to watch the
+outside.’
+
+The slender figure which his arm had until now sustained slipped
+suddenly from his hold, and Lucille sank unconscious to the ground.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE PLUNDER OF THE MUNIMENT CHEST.
+
+
+The sight of the girl he fondly loved lying senseless at his feet, with
+a white face and closed eyelids, filled Lucius Davoren with unspeakable
+agony and remorse. How little had he calculated the effect of his words
+upon this too-sensitive nature! To him the danger involved in the plot
+which he suspected was but a small thing—a difficulty to be met and
+grappled with. That was all. But to this inexperienced girl the thought
+of a midnight intruder, of a stranger’s secret entrance into the house,
+with the connivance of its treacherous inmates, was doubtless appalling.
+
+Could he despise his betrothed for her want of courage? No! His first
+thought was professional. This sudden fainting fit was no doubt the
+evidence of weakened health. Days of patient attendance upon the
+invalid, nights rendered sleepless by anxiety, had done their work.
+Lucille’s strength had given way—that change in her appearance and
+manner which had so much disturbed him was but one of the indications
+of broken health. And he, who loved her better than life itself, felt
+himself guilty of cruel neglect in not having ere this discovered
+the truth. That gentle self-sacrificing spirit was stronger than the
+fragile frame which was its earthly temple.
+
+He lifted her from the ground, placed her in Mr. Sivewright’s
+easy-chair by the open window, and then rang the bell loudly.
+
+Mrs. Wincher came, but entered the room with head flung back, and a
+lofty air, which might have become Queen Eleanor in the presence of
+Fair Rosamond. At sight of her unconscious mistress, however, Mrs.
+Wincher gave a piteous scream, and flew to her side.
+
+‘Whatever have you been and gone and said to this poor dear,’ she
+exclaimed indignantly, flinging a scornful glance at Lucius, ‘to make
+her faint dead off like that? I suppose you’ve been accusing _her_ of
+robbing her grandfather. I’m sure it wouldn’t surprise me if you had.’
+
+‘Don’t be angry, Mrs. Wincher,’ said Lucius; ‘but bring me some cold
+water directly, and a little brandy.’
+
+Mrs. Wincher, alarmed for the safety of her mistress, flew to fetch
+these restoratives, but obeyed Mr. Davoren as it were, under protest,
+in his professional capacity.
+
+A little care restored Lucille to consciousness, but even after she had
+recovered from her swoon, she seemed strangely shaken, and looked at
+her lover with an expression full of vague fear.
+
+He began to reproach her, with infinite tenderness, for her neglect of
+her own health.
+
+‘You have been doing too much, darling,’ he said, kissing the pale
+forehead that rested on his shoulder, ‘and I have been guilty of
+shameful neglect in allowing you to endanger your health. And now,
+dear, you must obey orders. You must go straight up to your room and
+let Wincher help you to bed, and lie there quietly all day long, and
+be fed with beef-tea and good old port until the colour comes back to
+those poor pale cheeks.’
+
+Lucille persistently refused compliance with these injunctions.
+
+‘Indeed, indeed, Lucius, there is nothing the matter with me,’ she said
+earnestly.
+
+‘Nothing the matter when you fainted just now—a sure sign of extreme
+weakness—especially in one not accustomed to fainting?’
+
+‘O, that was nothing. You frightened me so with your suggestions of
+danger.’
+
+‘Do not be afraid any longer, dearest; there is no danger that can
+assail you, except the danger of your ruining your health by refusing
+to be guided by my advice. You want rest, and ought to endeavour to get
+several hours’ good sleep.’
+
+‘It wouldn’t be the least use for me to try to go to sleep before
+night,’ she said; ‘my mind is much too active for that. I’ll obey you
+in anything else you like, Lucius, but don’t ask me to lie down in my
+room to-day. I should worry myself into a fever.’
+
+‘Very well,’ replied Lucius, with a sigh; ‘I won’t insist upon anything
+you object to. You can rest in this room. If I find your grandfather no
+better this morning I shall bring in a nurse.’
+
+‘O, please don’t.’
+
+‘Nonsense, Lucille. I am not going to allow your life to be sacrificed
+to your mistaken notion of duty. Some one must nurse Mr. Sivewright,
+and that some one must not be you.’
+
+‘Let it be Mrs. Wincher, then.’
+
+‘No; I have not too high an opinion of these faithful Winchers. I shall
+bring in a woman upon whom I can rely.’
+
+Lucille looked at him with that strange scared expression he had seen
+so often of late, and then said with some bitterness:
+
+‘It seems to me that you are master in this house, Lucius, so I suppose
+you must do as you please.’
+
+‘I only constitute myself master here when I see peril,’ he replied
+calmly; ‘and now, Lucille, try to obey me in some small measure at
+least. Let Mrs. Wincher bring a sofa of some kind to this room, and lie
+down and try to sleep. I will send you a tonic as soon as I get home.
+Good-bye.’
+
+He bent down to kiss her as she sat in the armchair, where he had
+placed her, too weak to rise.
+
+‘Shall you come here again this evening?’ she asked.
+
+‘Yes; your grandfather wants to talk to me about something, and I
+daresay I shall be an hour or so with him in the evening. After that I
+shall have something to tell you, Lucille, if you are well enough to
+hear it. Something pleasant.’
+
+‘You are not going to frighten me any more, I hope,’ she said.
+
+‘No, darling, I will never again frighten you.’
+
+‘I daresay you despise me for my cowardice.’
+
+‘Despise you, Lucille? No, I only regard this nervous terror as a sign
+of weakened health. I am very sure it is not natural to you to be
+wanting in courage.’
+
+‘No,’ she answered, with a faint sigh, ‘it is not natural to me.’
+
+She turned her face away from him, and tears fell slowly from the
+sad eyes, as she faltered a faint good-bye in response to his tender
+leave-taking.
+
+‘O, merciful God,’ she ejaculated, when the door had closed behind her
+lover, ‘Thou who knowest the weight of my burden, help me to bear it
+patiently.’
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lucius found no improvement in his patient—retrogression rather. But
+this might be fairly accounted for by Mr. Sivewright’s excitement of
+the night before.
+
+‘I did very wrong to let you talk so much,’ said Lucius; ‘you are more
+feverish than usual this morning.’
+
+‘I am altogether worse,’ answered the old man fretfully.
+
+Then came a detailed account of his aches and pains. There were
+symptoms that puzzled the surgeon, despite his wide experience, and
+much wider study.
+
+‘Let me bring a physician to see you this afternoon,’ said Lucius;
+‘there is something in this case which I hardly feel myself strong
+enough to cope with.’
+
+‘No,’ answered the patient doggedly; ‘I told you I would have no
+stranger come to stare at me. Cure me if you can, and if you can’t,
+leave it alone. I have little faith in medicine. I contrived to live
+sixty-five years without it, and the experience I have had of it in the
+sixty-sixth year has not been calculated to strengthen my belief in its
+efficacy.’
+
+‘Did you finish that last bottle of medicine?’
+
+‘No, there is a dose left.’
+
+‘Then I’ll take the bottle home with me,’ said Lucius, selecting the
+bottle from among two or three empty phials on the mantelshelf, ‘and
+make another change in your medicine.’
+
+‘It seems to me that you chop and change a good deal,’ said the patient
+testily. ‘But why take that bottle? You must know what you gave me.’
+
+‘I am not quite clear about it,’ answered Lucius, after a moment’s
+hesitation; ‘I may as well put the bottle in my pocket.’
+
+‘Do as you like. But don’t forget that I want an hour’s talk with you
+this evening.’
+
+‘You had better defer that till you are stronger.
+
+‘That time may never come. No, I will defer nothing. What I have to say
+to you is of no small importance. It concerns your own interests, and I
+recommend you to hear it to-night.’
+
+‘I cannot consent to discuss any subject which may agitate you as you
+were agitated last night,’ said Lucius firmly.
+
+‘This other subject will not agitate me. I can promise that.’
+
+‘On that condition I will hear whatever you may have to say.’
+
+‘Good. You will find it to your own advantage to obey me. Be with me at
+the same hour as you were last night.’
+
+‘I will. But as you are a trifle weaker to-day than you were yesterday,
+I should recommend you not to get up, except for an hour in the middle
+of the day, while your bed is being made.’
+
+‘Very well.’
+
+Lucius left him, and in the corridor found himself face to face with
+Mrs. Wincher.
+
+‘She has been listening, I daresay,’ he thought, having made up his
+mind that these Winchers were of the scorpion breed, and their long
+years of fidelity only a sham. ‘After all, dishonesty is only a matter
+of opportunity, and the domestic traitor must bide his time to betray.’
+
+Mrs. Wincher’s manner and bearing were curiously changed since Lucius
+had last seen her. She no longer flung her head aloft; she no longer
+regarded him with looks of scorn. Her present air was that of extreme
+meekness; he thought he beheld traces of shame and contrition in her
+visage.
+
+‘How do you find master this morning, sir?’ she asked.
+
+‘Worse,’ Lucius answered shortly.
+
+‘Dear, dear! that’s bad! And I’m sure it isn’t for want of care. I’m
+sure the beef-tea that I gave him used to be a jelly—that firm as you
+could cut it with a knife—though Miss Lucille did take the making of it
+out of my hands.’
+
+‘Miss Sivewright is naturally anxious about her grandfather,’ answered
+Lucius coldly, ‘and I am very anxious too.’
+
+He was about to pass Mrs. Wincher, without farther parley, when she
+stopped him.
+
+‘O, if you please, Dr. Davory,’ she said meekly, ‘would you be kind
+enough to let my good gentleman have a few words with you? The fact is,
+he’s got somethink on his mind, and he’d feel more comfortable if he
+ast your advice. I didn’t know nothink about it till five minutes ago,
+though I could see at breakfast-time as he was low-spirited and had no
+happetite for his resher; but I thought that was along of master being
+so bad. Howsumdever, five minutes ago he ups and tells me all about
+it, and says he, “If I tell Dr. Davory, I shall feel more comfortable
+like,” he says. So I says I’d ast you to have a few words with him.’
+
+‘Where is he?’ asked Lucius, his suspicions increased by this singular
+application.
+
+‘In the room where the bricklebrack is kep’,’ answered Mrs. Wincher.
+‘He’s been dustin’ as usual, and he said he’d take the liberty to wait
+there for you.’
+
+‘Very well; I’ll go and hear what he has to say.’
+
+Lucius went down-stairs to the large room with its multifarious
+contents—the room which held the chief part of Mr. Sivewright’s
+collection.
+
+Here he found Mr. Wincher, moving about feebly with a dusting brush in
+his hand.
+
+‘Well, Mr. Wincher, what’s the matter with you this morning?’ asked
+Lucius. ‘Do you want to consult me professionally?’
+
+‘No, sir. It isn’t anything that way,’ answered the old man, who was
+somewhat his wife’s superior in education, but infinitely less able
+to hold his own conversationally, such intellectual powers as he may
+have originally possessed having run to seed during his long dull life,
+and the only remaining brightness being that feeble glimmer which
+still illumined the regions of art. He would swear to an old master’s
+handling—could tell a Memling from a Van Eyck—or an Ostade from a
+Jan Steen—knew every mark to be found on old china or delf, from the
+earliest specimens of Rouen ware to the latest marvels of Sèvres, from
+the clumsiest example of Battersea to the richest purple and gilding of
+Worcester. But beyond the realms of art the flame of Jacob Wincher’s
+intellect was dim as a farthing rushlight.
+
+‘I’ve had a shock this morning, sir,’ he said.
+
+‘Some kind of fit, do you mean?’ asked Lucius. ‘You said you didn’t
+want to consult me professionally.’
+
+‘No more I do, sir. The shock I’m talking about wasn’t bodily, but
+mental. I’ve made a dreadful discovery, Mr. Davoren. This house has
+been robbed.’
+
+‘I’m not surprised to hear it,’ said Lucius sternly.
+
+He thought he saw which way matters were drifting. This old man was
+cunning enough to be the first to give the alarm. Lucius’s incautious
+remarks to Mrs. Wincher had put her husband upon his guard, and he was
+now going to play the comedy of innocence.
+
+‘Not surprised to hear it, sir?’ he echoed, staring aghast at Lucius.
+
+‘No, Mr. Wincher. And I am sure that no one knows more about it than
+you do.’
+
+‘Lord save us, sir! what do you mean?’
+
+‘Let me hear your story, sir,’ answered Lucius, ‘and then I’ll tell you
+what I mean.’
+
+‘But for Heaven’s sake, Mr. Davoren, tell me you don’t suspect me of
+any hand in the robbery!’ cried the old man piteously—‘I, that have
+lived five-and-twenty years with Mr. Sivewright, and had the care of
+everything that belonged to him all that time!’
+
+‘A man may wait five-and-twenty years for a good opportunity,’ said
+Lucius coolly. ‘Don’t trouble yourself to be tragical, Mr. Wincher, but
+say what you have to say, and be quick about it. I tell you again that
+I am in no manner surprised to hear this house has been robbed. It was
+no doubt robbed last night, and perhaps many nights before. But I tell
+you frankly, that I intend to take measures to prevent this house being
+robbed again; even if those measures should include putting you and
+your good lady upon the outside of it.’
+
+‘Lord have mercy upon us!’ cried Jacob Wincher, wringing his hands.
+‘You are a great deal too hard upon me, sir. You’ll be sorry for it
+when you find out how unjust you’ve been.’
+
+‘I promise to be sorry,’ answered Lucius, ‘when I _do_ make that
+discovery. Now, Mr. Wincher, be explicit, if you please.’
+
+But Jacob Wincher declared that he was all of a tremble, and had to sit
+down upon an ancient choirstall, and wipe the perspiration from his
+forehead before he was able to proceed.
+
+Lucius waited patiently for the old man to recover his self-possession,
+but in no manner relaxed the severity of his countenance. In all this
+agitation, in this pretended desire to confide in him, he saw only a
+clever piece of acting.
+
+‘Well, Mr. Wincher,’ he said, as the old servant mopped his forehead
+with a blue cotton handkerchief, ‘how about this robbery?’
+
+‘I’m coming to it, sir. But you’ve given me such a turn with what you
+said just now. God knows how cruel and how uncalled for those words of
+yours were.’
+
+‘Pray proceed, Mr. Wincher.’
+
+‘Well, sir, you must know there’s a deal of property about this place,
+perhaps a good deal more than you’ve ever seen, though our old master
+seemed to take to you from the first, and has been more confidential
+with you than he ever was with any one else. Now there’s a good deal of
+the property that isn’t portable, and there’s some that is—china, for
+instance; little bits of tea-cups and saucers that are worth more than
+you’d be willing to believe; and silver—’
+
+‘Silver!’ exclaimed Lucius, astonished.
+
+‘Yes, sir. You didn’t know of that, perhaps. Among the things master
+collected after he retired from business—and he was always collecting
+something, as long as he could get about among the brokers, and in all
+the courts and alleys in London—there was a good bit of old silver.
+Five Queen Anne teapots; three Oliver Cromwell tankards, not very much
+to look at unless you were up to that sort of thing, but worth their
+weight in gold, Mr. Sivewright used to say to me. “I wish I was rich
+enough to do more in old silver,” he has said many a time. “There’s
+nothing like it. Collectors are waking up to the value of it, and
+before many years are over old silver will be almost as precious as
+diamonds.” He picked up a good many nice little bits first and last,
+through rummaging about among old chaps that dealt in second-hand
+stuff of that sort, and didn’t trouble to ask any awkward questions
+of the people that brought ’em the goods; picked up things that would
+have gone into the melting-pot very likely, if his eye hadn’t been
+quick enough to see their value. One day he’d bring home a set of
+spindle-legged saltcellars; another time a battered old rosewater dish.
+Once he bought a “monstrance” which had been used upon some cathedral
+altar, once upon a time—solid gold set with rubies and emeralds. “The
+fool that I bought it from took it for ormolu,” he said.’
+
+‘And these are the things that are gone, I suppose,’ said Lucius,
+somewhat puzzled by the old man’s loquacity. Why should Wincher inform
+him of the existence of these things if he were an accomplice of the
+thief? Yet this seeming candour was doubtless a part of the traitor’s
+scheme.
+
+‘Every one of ’em, sir. There’s been a clean sweep made of ’em. But
+how any thief could find out where they were kept is more than I can
+fathom. It’s too much for my poor old brains.’
+
+‘The thief was well informed, depend upon it, Mr. Wincher,’ answered
+Lucius. ‘And pray, whereabouts did you keep this old silver?’
+
+‘Would you like to see, sir?’
+
+‘I should.’
+
+‘I’ll show you the place, then.’
+
+Jacob Wincher led the way to the extreme end of the repository, where
+behind a tall screen of old oak panelling there was a massive muniment
+chest furnished with a lock which seemed calculated to defy the whole
+race of burglars and pick-locks.
+
+The old servant took a key from his pocket—a small key, for the lock
+was of modern make—unlocked and opened the chest. There was nothing in
+it except an old damask curtain.
+
+‘The silver was rolled up in that curtain,’ said Jacob Wincher, taking
+up the curtain and shaking it vigorously, as if with some faint hope
+that the Queen Anne teapots would fall out of its folds, like the
+rabbits or live pigeons in a conjurer’s trick. ‘The iron safe was a
+landlord’s fixture in Bond-street, and we were obliged to leave it
+behind us, so this chest was the safest place I could find to put the
+silver in; in fact, master told me to put it there.’
+
+‘I see,’ thought Lucius; ‘the old scoundrel is telling me this story in
+advance of the time when his master will inevitably ask for the silver.
+This seeming candour is the depth of hypocrisy.’
+
+Jacob Wincher stood staring at the empty chest in apathetic
+hopelessness, feebly rubbing his chin, whereon some grizzled tufts
+lingered.
+
+‘Do you mean to tell me,’ said Lucius, ‘that this chest was locked, and
+that you had the key of it in your pocket, at the time of the robbery?’
+
+‘Yes, sir. The chest has never been left unlocked for five minutes
+since that silver has been in my care; and I have never slept without
+this key being under my pillow.’
+
+‘And you would have me believe that a stranger could hit upon the
+precise spot where the silver was kept, amidst this inextricable tangle
+of property, open the box without doing any damage to the lock, and
+walk off with his booty without your knowing anything of his entrance
+or exit?’
+
+‘It seems strange, doesn’t it, Mr. Davoren?’
+
+‘It seems more than strange, Mr. Wincher. It seems—and it
+is—incredible.’
+
+‘And yet, sir, the thing has been done. The question is, was it done by
+a stranger?’
+
+‘Yes, Mr. Wincher, that is the question; and it is a question which, to
+my mind, suggests only one answer.’
+
+‘You mean that I am telling you lies, sir? that it was my hand which
+stole those things?’ cried the old man.
+
+‘To be plain with you, that is precisely my idea.’
+
+‘You are doing me a great wrong, sir. I have served my master
+faithfully for so many years that I ought to be above suspicion. I have
+not much longer to remain in this world, and I would rather die of want
+to-morrow than lengthen my days by a dishonest action. However, if you
+choose to suspect me, there is an end of the matter, and it is useless
+for me to say any more.’
+
+There was a quiet dignity about the old man’s air as he said this that
+impressed Lucius. Was it not just possible that he had done wrong in
+jumping at conclusions about these Winchers? The police, who are apt to
+jump at conclusions, are just as apt to be wrong. But if these people
+were not guilty, who else could have opened the door to that midnight
+intruder? There was no one else.
+
+‘Come, Mr. Wincher,’ he said, ‘I have good reason for my suspicion. I
+saw a man admitted into this house, by one of the back doors, between
+one and two o’clock this morning. You, or your wife, must have opened
+the door to that man.’
+
+‘As there is a heaven above us, sir, I never stirred from my bed after
+half-past eleven o’clock last night.’
+
+‘Your wife must have admitted him, then.’
+
+‘Impossible, sir!’
+
+‘I tell you I saw the man creep from the barges to the garden; I saw
+the door opened,’ said Lucius; and then went on to describe that
+midnight watch of his minutely.
+
+The old man stared at him in sheer bewilderment.
+
+‘A stranger admitted!’ he repeated. ‘But by whom? by whom?’
+
+‘Had I not seen the light as the door opened, I might have thought
+that the man opened the door for himself,’ said Lucius.
+
+‘That would have been equally impossible. I looked to all the
+fastenings myself the last thing. The doors were locked and barred, and
+those old-fashioned iron bars are no trifling defence.’
+
+Lucius, too, was bewildered. Could Mr. Sivewright himself have disposed
+of this property? In so eccentric a man nothing need be surprising.
+Could he have crept down-stairs in the dead of the night to admit
+some dealer, disposed of his property, dismissed the man, and crept
+stealthily back to his bed? No, that was too wild a fancy. Despite of
+his eccentricities, Mr. Sivewright had plenty of common sense, and such
+a proceeding as that would have been the act of a madman.
+
+‘Supposing any stranger to have obtained admittance to the house,’ said
+Lucius, after an interval of perplexed thought, ‘how could he have
+opened that chest without your key?’
+
+‘A stranger could not possibly have done it,’ said Wincher, with a
+stress upon the word ‘stranger.’
+
+‘Who else, then?’
+
+‘There is one who could have opened that chest easy enough, or any
+other lock in the place, supposing him to be alive; but I make no
+doubt he’s dead and gone ever so long ago.’
+
+‘Whom do you mean?’
+
+‘Mr. Ferdinand, my master’s son.’
+
+Lucius gave a slight start at the sound of that unwelcome name, of all
+sounds the most hateful to his ear. ‘Then he—Ferdinand Sivewright—had a
+duplicate key, I suppose?’
+
+‘Yes, of most things about the place in Bond-street, except the iron
+safe: he never could get at that till he drugged his father, and stole
+the key out of his pocket while he was asleep. But other things, that
+were pretty easy to get at, he did get at, and robbed his father up
+hill and down dale, as the saying is. O, he was a thorough-paced
+scoundrel, though I’m sorry to say it, as he was our young missy’s
+father.’
+
+‘He had a duplicate key to that chest, you say?’
+
+‘Yes. He was that artful there was no being up to him. We used to
+keep old china in that chest—Battersea and Chelsea and Worcester and
+Derby—valuable little bits of the English school, which fetch higher
+prices than anything foreign nowadays. All of a sudden, soon after he
+came to be partner with his father—for the old man doated upon him,
+and would have made any sacrifice to please him—I found out that the
+specimens in the muniment chest were dwindling somehow. One day I
+missed a cup and saucer, and another day a soup-basin and cover, and so
+on. At first I thought I must be mistaken—my own catalogue was wrong,
+perhaps—but by and by I saw the things visibly melting, as you may say,
+and I told my master. He told Mr. Ferdinand about it; but bless your
+heart, Mr. Ferdinand brings out the day-book with the sale of those
+very goods entered as neatly as possible, some under one date, and some
+under another. “I never remember taking the money for those things,
+Ferdinand,” said my master; but Mr. Ferdinand stood him out that he’d
+had the money all correct, and master believed him, or pretended to
+believe him, I hardly know which. And so things went on. Sometimes it
+was in small things, sometimes in large; but in every way that a son
+could plunder his father, Ferdinand Sivewright plundered my master.
+It was quite by accident I found out about his having the duplicate
+key. He came to the desk where I was writing one day and asked me to
+give him change for a sovereign, and in taking the money out of his
+waistcoat-pocket in his quick impatient way he tumbles out a lot of
+other things—a pencil-case, a penknife, and a key. I knew that key at
+a glance; it’s a peculiar-looking one, as you see. “That’s a curious
+little key, Mr. Ferdinand,” said I, picking it up and looking at it
+before he could stop me. “Yes,” he said, taking it out of my hand
+before I’d had time to examine it very closely, and putting it back in
+his pocket, “it’s a key that belonged to my poor mother’s jewel-case.
+No use to me; but I keep it for her sake.” Well, sir, I told Mr.
+Sivewright about that key, but he only sighed in that downhearted
+way which was common enough with him in those days. He didn’t seem
+surprised, and indeed I think he’d come to know his son’s ways pretty
+well by this time. “Say nothing about it, Wincher,” he said to me,
+“you may be mistaken after all. In any case you needn’t keep anything
+valuable in the chest in future. If my only son is a thief, we won’t
+put temptation in his way.”’
+
+‘Hard upon the father,’ said Lucius. ‘But this throws no light upon the
+disappearance of those things. What do you consider their value?’
+
+‘As old silver the plate may be worth about forty pounds, as specimens
+of art at least three hundred. The monstrance is worth much more.’
+
+‘Humph, and I suppose a thief would be likely to sell them immediately
+as old silver.’
+
+‘Yes; unless he were a very artful dodger, and knew where to find a
+good market for them, he’d be likely to sell them without an hour’s
+delay to be melted down.’
+
+‘When did you last see the things safe in that chest?’ asked Lucius.
+
+‘About ten days ago. I haven’t much to do, you see, sir, except grub
+about amongst the collection; and I’m in the habit of looking over the
+things pretty often, and comparing them with my catalogue, to see that
+all’s right.’
+
+‘And you never missed anything before?’
+
+‘Never so much as a cracked tea-cup among what I call the rubbishing
+lots. Heaven only knows how that chest could have been emptied. Even if
+Ferdinand Sivewright were in the land of the living, which is hardly
+likely—for if he’d been alive he’d have come and tried to get money
+out of his poor old father before this—he couldn’t get into this house
+unless some one let him in.’
+
+‘No, not unless some one let him in,’ repeated Lucius thoughtfully. He
+had begun to think Jacob Wincher was perhaps, after all, an honest man.
+But to believe this was to make the mystery darker than the darkest
+night. His ideas were all at sea, drifting which way he knew not.
+
+‘Ferdinand Sivewright is dead,’ he said presently. ‘He will never
+trouble his father again.’
+
+‘How do you know that, sir?’ asked Wincher eagerly.
+
+‘Never mind how. I do know it, and that is enough. Now, Wincher,
+there’s no use in talking of this business any more, except in a
+practical manner. If you’re as innocent of any hand in the robbery as
+you pretend to be, you won’t shrink from inquiry.’
+
+‘I do not shrink from inquiry, sir. If I did I shouldn’t have told you
+of the robbery.’
+
+‘That might be a profound artifice, since the disappearance of these
+things must have been found out sooner or later.’
+
+‘If I had been the thief I should have tried to stave off the discovery
+as long as I could,’ answered Jacob Wincher. ‘However, I don’t want to
+argue; the truth is the truth, that is enough for me.’
+
+‘Very well, Mr. Wincher. What we have to do is to try and recover these
+missing articles. Unless the silver is melted down it ought to be
+easily traced. And the monstrance would be still more easily traced, I
+should think.’
+
+‘That would depend upon circumstances, sir. Depend upon it, if the
+things were taken by a thief who knows their value, and knows the best
+market for them, he’ll send them abroad.’
+
+‘They may be traced even abroad. What we have to do is to put the
+case at once into the best hands. I shall go straight from here to a
+detective officer, whom I’ve had some dealings with already, and get
+his advice. Now, is there much more property amongst the collection
+valuable enough to tempt a thief, and sufficiently portable for him to
+carry away?’
+
+‘There is a great deal of china, small pieces, quite as valuable as the
+silver—not, perhaps, quite so easy to carry, but very nearly so.’
+
+‘Then we must have the inside of this house guarded to-night.’
+
+‘I can sit up here all night and keep watch.’
+
+‘You would be no match for the thief, even if he came alone, which
+we are not certain he would. No, my dear Mr. Wincher, I will engage
+a properly qualified watchman; but remember, not one word of this to
+Miss Sivewright—or to your wife, who might be tempted to tell her young
+mistress.’
+
+‘Very well, sir. I know how to hold my tongue. I’d be the last to go
+and frighten missy. But how about my old master? Is he to know?’
+
+‘Not on any account. In his present weak state any violent agitation
+might be fatal, and we know that collecting these things has been the
+ruling passion of his life. To tell him that he is being robbed of
+these things might be to give him his death-blow.’
+
+‘Very well, sir. I’ll obey orders.’
+
+‘Good; and if I have wronged you, Mr. Wincher, by a groundless
+suspicion, you must pardon me. You will allow that appearances are
+somewhat against you.’
+
+‘They are, sir, they are!’ answered the old man despondently.
+
+‘However, time will show. I will send my watchman in at dusk. You could
+let him in at the back door, couldn’t you, without Miss Sivewright
+knowing anything about it?’
+
+‘I could, sir. There’s a little door opening into the brewhouse, which
+opens out of the boothouse, as you may know.’
+
+‘No, indeed! I know there are a lot of outbuildings, room enough to
+lodge a regiment; but I have never taken any particular notice of them.’
+
+‘It’s a curious old place, Mr. Davoren, and goodness knows what it
+could have been used for in days gone by, unless it was for hiding
+folks away for no good. Perhaps you’d like to see the door I mean.’
+
+‘I should,’ replied Lucius, ‘in order that I may explain its situation
+to the policeman.’
+
+‘Come along with me then, sir, and I’ll show it you.’
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE HIDDEN STAIRCASE.
+
+
+Lucius had a keen desire to explore those premises at the back of Cedar
+House, with a vague notion that his examination of them might throw
+some light upon the mystery which now filled his mind.
+
+If these Winchers were indeed innocent, which the old man’s manner and
+conduct inclined him to believe they must be, who was the guilty one?
+In that house—with the exception of its master, who in his feebleness
+counted for nothing—there were but three persons, Mr. and Mrs. Wincher
+and Lucille. One of those three must have opened the door last night;
+one of those three must have placed that candle in the upper window—the
+candle which was evidently meant for a signal.
+
+Lucille! Was reason deserting him? Was this perplexity of mind verging
+upon madness, when _her_ name would suggest itself in connection with
+that secret admittance of the stranger, and that theft which was no
+doubt its direct consequence? Lucille, that gentle and innocent girl!
+What had she to do with the solution of this dark enigma?
+
+The mere thought of her in connection with this nefarious business
+tortured him. Yet the idea, once having occurred to him, was not easily
+to be dismissed.
+
+He remembered all the stories of secret crime that he had heard and
+read of, some stories involving creatures as seemingly innocent and
+as fair as Lucille Sivewright. He recalled his own professional
+experience, which had shown him much of life’s darker side. He
+remembered with a shudder the infinite hypocrisy, the hidden sins, of
+women in all outward semblance as pure and womanly as the girl he loved.
+
+What if Lucille inherited the fatal taint of her father’s infamy? What
+if in this fair young girl there lurked some hidden drops of that
+poison which corrupted the parent’s soul? Could an evil tree produce
+good fruit? Could grapes come of thistles? The very Scripture was
+against his fond belief in Lucille Sivewright’s goodness. Could such a
+father give life to a pure and innocent child?
+
+This doubt, once having entered into his mind, lingered there in spite
+of him. His heart was racked by the odious thought, yet he could not
+dismiss it. He followed Mr. Wincher to inspect the back part of the
+house in a very absent-minded condition; but the practical side of his
+character soon got the upper hand as the investigation proceeded, and
+he was alert to make any discovery that might be made from the position
+of doors and windows.
+
+In his evening walks with Lucille in the barren old garden he had
+always come out of the house by a glass door opening out of a
+long-disused back parlour, in which there were only a few wooden cases,
+which might for aught Lucius knew be full or empty. Jacob Wincher now
+led him into the kitchen, a spacious chamber, with a barn-like roof
+open to the rafters, showing the massive timbers with which the house
+was built. From the kitchen they descended three shallow steps into a
+vault-like scullery, out of which, ghastly in their dark emptiness,
+opened various cellars. Lucius peered into one of them, and saw that a
+flight of steep stairs led down into a black abyss.
+
+‘Bring a light,’ he said; ‘the man may be hiding in one of these
+cellars. We’d better explore them all. But first let us lock the doors,
+and cut off his chances of escape.’
+
+He suited the action to the word, and locked the door leading to the
+kitchen, and thence to the interior of the house.
+
+‘Where do you and your wife sleep?’ he asked Mr. Wincher.
+
+‘In a little room off the kitchen. It was built for a storeroom, I
+believe, and there’s shelves all round. My good lady keeps our Sunday
+clothes on them, and our little bit of tea and sugar and such-like, for
+we board ourselves.’
+
+‘One would think you must hear any one passing through the kitchen at
+night, when the house is quiet,’ said Lucius meditatively.
+
+‘I don’t feel so sure of that, sir. We’re pretty hard sleepers both of
+us; we’re on the trot all day, you see, and are very near worn out by
+the time we get to bed.’
+
+‘Strange,’ said Lucius. ‘I should have thought you must have heard
+footsteps in the next room to that you sleep in.’
+
+Jacob Wincher made no farther attempt to justify his hard sleeping,
+but led the way to the boothouse, a small and darksome chamber,
+chiefly tenanted by members of the beetle tribe, who apparently
+found sufficient aliment in the loose plaster that fell from the
+mildew-stained walls. Thence they proceeded to the brewery, which was
+almost as large as the kitchen, and boasted a huge copper, and a still
+huger chimney-shaft open to the sky. There were three doors in this
+place—one narrow and low, opening to an obscure corner of the garden;
+a second belonging to a spacious cupboard, which may have been used
+for wood in days gone by; and the third a mysterious little door in an
+angle.
+
+‘What does that belong to?’ asked Lucius, pointing to this unknown
+door, after examining the one leading to the garden, which was securely
+locked and barred, and, according to Mr. Wincher’s account, was very
+rarely unfastened. ‘That door yonder in the corner,’ he asked again, as
+the old man hesitated. ‘Where does that lead?’
+
+‘I can’t say as I know very well,’ answered Jacob Wincher dubiously.
+‘There’s a kind of a staircase leads up somewhere—to a loft, I suppose.’
+
+‘Why, man alive,’ cried Lucius, ‘do you mean to tell me that you have
+lived all these years in this house and that there is a staircase in it
+which leads you don’t know where?’
+
+‘You can’t hardly call it a staircase, sir,’ answered the other
+apologetically; ‘it’s very little more than a ladder.’
+
+‘Ladder or staircase, you mean to say you don’t know where it leads?’
+
+‘No, sir. I’m not particular strong in my legs, and there’s a great
+deal more room than we want in this house without poking into holes and
+corners; so I never troubled about it.’
+
+‘Indeed, Mr. Wincher; now I am more curious than you, and I propose
+that before examining the cellars we find out where this staircase
+leads.’
+
+‘I’m agreeable, sir.’
+
+‘You talk about a loft; but the roof of this brewhouse shows that there
+can be nothing above it.’
+
+‘Very true, sir.’
+
+‘And the kitchen is built in the same way?’
+
+‘Yes, sir. But there’s the boothouse. I took it for granted that
+staircase led to a loft or a garret over that.’
+
+‘Can you see nothing from outside?’
+
+‘Nothing, except the sloping roof.’
+
+Lucius opened the door in the angle, and beheld a curious cramped
+little staircase, which, as Jacob Wincher had told him, was verily
+little better than a ladder. It was by no means an inviting staircase,
+bearing upon it the dust and cobwebs of ages, and leading to profound
+darkness. To the timid mind it was eminently suggestive of vermin and
+noxious insects. But Lucius, who was determined to discover the ins
+and outs of this curious old house, ascended the feeble creaking steps
+boldly enough.
+
+The stairs were steep, but not many. On reaching the topmost, Lucius
+found himself, not in a room as he had expected, but in a passage so
+narrow that his coatsleeves brushed against the wall on either side.
+This passage was perfectly dark, and had a damp mouldy odour. It was
+low, for he could touch the roughly-plastered ceiling with his hand.
+He went on, treading cautiously, lest he should come to a gap in the
+rotten flooring, which might precipitate him incontinently to the
+lowest depth of some dark cellar. The passage was long; he stumbled
+presently against a step, mounted three or four stairs, and went on
+some few yards farther on the higher level, and then found himself
+at the foot of another staircase, which, unlike the one below, wound
+upwards in spiral fashion, and demanded extreme caution from the
+stranger who trod its precipitous steps.
+
+This Lucius mounted slowly, feeling his way. After the first step
+or two he saw a faint glimmer of light, which seemed to creep in at
+some chink above. This got stronger as he ascended, and presently he
+perceived that it came from a crack in a panelled wall. Another step
+brought him to a small chamber, not much larger than a roomy closet.
+He felt the wall that faced him, and discovered bolts, which seemed to
+fasten a door, or it might be a sliding panel in the wall.
+
+Scarcely had he done this when he was startled by a sound which was
+very familiar to him—Mr. Sivewright’s sharp short cough.
+
+He drew back amazed. This secret staircase—or if not exactly a
+secret staircase, at least one which nobody had taken the trouble to
+explore—had led him directly to Mr. Sivewright’s room.
+
+He waited for a few minutes, heard the old man sigh as he turned
+wearily in his bed, heard the crackle of a newspaper presently as he
+turned the leaf, and convinced himself of the fact that this closet
+communicated with Homer Sivewright’s room. Whether its existence were
+known to Mr. Sivewright or not was a question which he must settle for
+himself as best he might.
+
+He went back as noiselessly as he had come, and found Jacob Wincher
+waiting in the brewhouse, patiently seated upon a three-legged stool.
+
+‘Well, sir, you didn’t find much, I suppose, to compensate for having
+made such a figure of your coat with plaster and cobwebs—only rubbish
+and such-like, I suppose?’
+
+‘My good Mr. Wincher, I found positively nothing,’ answered Lucius.
+‘But I extended my knowledge of the topography of this queer old house,
+and in doing that recompensed myself for my trouble. Yes,’ he added,
+glancing disconsolately at his coat, ‘the whitewash has not improved my
+appearance; and the cost of a coat is still a matter of importance to
+me. Now for the cellars. You are sure all means of exit are cut off?’
+
+‘Quite sure, sir.’
+
+‘Then we may find our thief snugly stowed away underground perhaps,
+with the booty upon him. Come along.’
+
+They groped their way into the various cellars by the light of a
+candle, and examined their emptiness. Two out of the four had contained
+coals, but were now disused. The small quantities of coal which Mr.
+Sivewright afforded for his household were accommodated in a roomy
+closet in the kitchen. The remaining two had contained wine, and a
+regiment of empty bottles still remained, the fragile memorials of
+departed plenty. They found beetles and spiders in profusion, and
+crossed the pathway of a rat; but they discovered no trace of the thief.
+
+This exploration and the previous conversation with Jacob Wincher
+occupied nearly two hours. Lucius left the house without again seeing
+Lucille. He would have been unable to account for his occupation during
+those two hours without giving her fresh cause for alarm. But before
+going he contrived to see Mrs. Wincher, and from that matron, now
+perfectly placable, he received the pleasing intelligence that Lucille
+was fast asleep on a sofa in the parlour.
+
+‘I brought her in a ramshackle old sofy belonging to the bricklebrack,’
+said Mrs. Wincher; ‘Lewis Katorse, my good gentleman calls it. And she
+laid down when I persuaded her, and went off just like a child that’s
+worn out with being on the trot all day. But she does look so sad and
+worried-like in her sleep, poor dear, it goes to my heart to see her.’
+
+‘Sad and worried,’ thought Lucius; and he had added to her anxieties
+by arousing her childish fears of an unknown danger. And then at the
+very time when she was broken down altogether by trouble and grief,
+had taken it into his head to suspect her. He hated himself for those
+shameful doubts which had tortured him a little while before.
+
+‘Come what may,’ he said to himself, ‘let events take what shape they
+will, I will never again suspect her. Though I had forged the chain of
+evidence link by link, and it led straight to her, I would believe that
+facts were lies rather than think her guilty.’
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+MR. OTRANTO PRONOUNCES AN OPINION.
+
+
+From Cedar House Lucius went straight to Mr. Otranto’s office. It was
+still early, not yet noon, and he would have time for his daily round
+after he had settled this business, which was uppermost in his mind.
+
+‘Well,’ he said, after a brief good-morning to the detective, ‘any news
+from Rio?’
+
+‘Some, but not much,’ answered Mr. Otranto, looking up from the desk,
+at which he had been copying some document into a note-book. ‘The
+mail’s just in. I was going to write you a letter in the course of
+to-day or to-morrow. This Mr. Ferdinand Sivewright seems to have been
+altogether a bad lot—card-sharper, swindler, anything you like. He soon
+made Rio too hot to hold him, and after managing to rub on there about
+six months, went on to Mexico. My agent hunted up any information about
+him that was to be got in Mexico; but it’s a long time ago, you see,
+since he was there. He seems to have behaved pretty much the same in
+Mexico as he did in Rio, and that’s about all my agent could hear. The
+impression was that he had left Mexico on the quiet—taken French leave,
+as you may say—and come back to England; but he couldn’t find out the
+name of the vessel he sailed in.’
+
+‘You needn’t take any farther trouble about the matter, Mr. Otranto,’
+said Lucius. ‘I believe I have found the missing links in the man’s
+history. My business to-day is of a different kind.’
+
+He went on to explain the state of affairs at Cedar House. Mr. Otranto
+shook his head doubtfully.
+
+‘I think you ought to put this into the hands of the regular police,’
+he said; ‘my line is private inquiry. This is rather out of my way.’
+
+‘But it isn’t out of your old way, Mr. Otranto, when you belonged to
+the regular police. If I were to go to the police-station they’d send
+a loud-talking noisy man to examine the premises, and frighten the
+invalid gentleman I’ve been telling you about. I want the property
+recovered, if possible, and the place closely watched; but I want the
+thing done quietly, and I’d rather trust it in your hands than make a
+police-case of it.’
+
+‘Very well, sir; I’ll do my best. I’ll send a quiet hand round to Cedar
+House at nine o’clock to-night.’
+
+‘Good; but he must come in at the back. I’ll have some one on the watch
+for him at nine. I’d better write my directions as to the way he must
+come. The young lady’s sitting-room is in the front of the house; so he
+mustn’t come in that way, for fear she should see him.’
+
+Lucius wrote his instructions for the detective. He was to come from
+the barges to the garden, as the thief had come, and he would see a
+door ajar, and a light burning in one of the outbuildings. This was the
+door by which he was to enter.
+
+‘And now, sir, for a description of the property,’ said Mr. Otranto,
+‘if you want me to trace it.’
+
+‘A description?’
+
+‘Yes to be sure. I can do nothing without that.’
+
+‘I never thought of that,’ replied Lucius, feeling himself a poor
+creature when face to face with this practical far-seeing detective;
+‘you will want a description of course. I only know that there are
+Queen Anne teapots, Cromwell tankards—’
+
+‘Queen Anne be hanged!’ exclaimed the detective contemptuously.
+
+‘Some curious old saltcellars, and a monstrance.’
+
+‘What in the name of wonder is that?’ cried the detective. ‘I’ll tell
+you what it is, sir, I must have a detailed description before I can
+move a peg. I daresay the property is out of the country by this time,
+if it isn’t in the melting-pot.’
+
+‘A thief who took the trouble to rob Mr. Sivewright would most likely
+have some idea what he was stealing,’ answered Lucius, ‘and would
+hardly take rare old silver to the melting-pot. I’ll tell you what I’ll
+do, Mr. Otranto; I’ll bring the old servant round here this afternoon,
+and you shall have the description from him. In cross-questioning him
+about the robbery you might, perhaps, arrive at some conclusion as to
+whether he had any hand in it.’
+
+‘I might, perhaps,’ retorted Mr. Otranto, with ineffable contempt;
+‘let me have half-a-dozen words with the man and I’ll soon settle that
+question. I never saw the man yet that was made of such opaque stuff
+that I couldn’t see through him.’
+
+‘So much the better,’ said Lucius. ‘I want to find out whether this old
+man is a consummate hypocrite or an honest fellow. Shall you be at home
+at four o’clock this afternoon?’
+
+‘I shall.’
+
+‘Then I’ll bring him to you at that hour.’
+
+Lucius went about his day’s work, and got through it by half-past
+three, when he took a hansom cab, a rare extravagance for him, and
+drove to Cedar House.
+
+He asked at once to see Mrs. Wincher’s good gentleman, whereupon Jacob
+Wincher emerged from his retreat briskly enough, and came to the
+garden-gate where Lucius waited.
+
+‘You haven’t heard anything of the property?’ he asked eagerly.
+
+‘No. But I want you to come along with me to give a description of it.’
+
+‘To the police-station, sir?’ asked Wincher, without any appearance of
+alarm or unwillingness.
+
+‘Never mind where. You’ll find out all about it when you get there,’
+answered Lucius, in whose mind yet lurked suspicions as to the old
+servant’s honesty.
+
+The cab bore them speedily to Mr. Otranto’s office, and was there
+dismissed. Wincher entered that cave of mystery as calmly as a lamb
+going to the slaughter, or indeed much more calmly than the generality
+of those gentle victims, which seem to have some foreboding of the doom
+that awaits them within.
+
+Mr. Otranto looked up from his desk, and contemplated the old man with
+a critical glance, keen, swift, searching, the glance of a connoisseur
+in that walk of art; as if Mr. Wincher had been a picture, and he, Mr.
+Otranto, were called upon to decide whether he were an original or a
+fraudulent copy. After that brief survey, the detective gave a somewhat
+contemptuous sniff; and then proceeded to elicit a description of the
+lost property, which Mr. Wincher gave ramblingly, and in a feebly
+nervous manner. To Lucius it seemed very much the manner of guilt.
+
+Mr. Otranto asked a great many questions about the robbery, some of
+which seemed to Lucius puerile or even absurd. But he deferred to the
+superior wisdom of the trained detective.
+
+In the course of this inquiry Mr. Otranto made himself acquainted with
+the numerous ins and outs of Cedar House.
+
+‘A house built especially for the accommodation of burglars, one would
+suppose,’ he said; ‘there must be hiding-places enough for half the
+cracksmen in London. However, I think if there is any one still on the
+premises—or if the visitor of last night pays any farther visits—we
+shall catch them. I shall put on two men to-night, Mr. Davoren, instead
+of one—one to keep guard in the room that contains the property, the
+other to watch the back premises. This business will cost money,
+remember—but, by Jove, we’ll succeed in trapping the scoundrel!’
+
+‘Your services shall be paid for,’ said Lucius, not without a pang,
+remembering the tenpound-note he had already given Mr. Otranto on
+account of the Rio inquiry, and of which there remained no balance in
+his favour—nay, there was more likely a balance against him.
+
+‘You can go, Mr.—Mr. What’s-your-name,’ said the detective carelessly;
+and Jacob Wincher, thus dismissed, hobbled feebly forth to wend his
+way back to Cedar House; so rare a visitant to this outer world that
+the clamour of the City seemed to him like the howling of fiends in
+Pandemonium.
+
+‘Well,’ said Lucius, directly the old servant had departed, ‘what do
+you think of that man?’
+
+‘He isn’t up to it,’ answered Mr. Otranto contemptuously.
+
+‘Isn’t up to what?’
+
+‘To having act or part in that robbery. He isn’t up to it,’ repeated
+the detective, snapping his fingers with increasing contempt. ‘It isn’t
+in him. Lor bless you, Mr. Davoren, I know ’em when I see ’em. There’s
+a brightness about their eye, a firmness about their mouth, a nerve
+about ’em altogether, that there’s no mistaking.’
+
+‘About a thief, I suppose you mean?’ inquired Lucius.
+
+‘Yes, sir. I know ’em fast enough when I see ’em. There’s the stamp of
+intellect upon ’em, sir—with very few exceptions there’s talent in ’em
+to back ’em up through everything. You don’t catch _them_ stammering
+and stuttering like that poor old chap just now. Not a bit of it.
+They’re as clear as crystal. They’ve got their story ready, and they
+tell it short and sharp and decisive, if they’re first-raters; a little
+too wordy, perhaps, if they’re new to their work.’
+
+Mr. Otranto dwelt on the talent of the criminal classes with an evident
+satisfaction.
+
+‘As for that poor old chap,’ he said decisively, ‘there isn’t genius
+enough or pluck enough in him even for the kinchin lay.’
+
+Lucius did not pause to inquire about this particular branch of the
+art, whereof he was profoundly ignorant.
+
+‘He might not have pluck enough to attempt the robbery unaided,’ he
+said, still persisting in the idea that Jacob Wincher must be guilty,
+‘yet he might be capable of opening the door to an accomplice.’
+
+‘He didn’t do it, sir,’ answered the detective decisively. ‘I’d have
+had it out of him if he had, before you could have known what I was
+leading up to. I laid every trap for him that could be laid, and if
+he had done it he must have walked into one of ’em. I should have
+caught him tripping, depend upon it. But taking the question from a
+pischological point of view,’ continued Mr. Otranto, who sometimes got
+hold of a fine word, and gave his own version of it, ‘I tell you it
+isn’t in his composition to do such a thing.’
+
+‘I’m glad to hear it,’ said Lucius, somewhat dejectedly.
+
+He left Mr. Otranto’s office only in time to take a hasty dinner at a
+city eating-house, where huge rounds of boiled beef were dealt out to
+hungry customers in a somewhat rough-and-ready fashion. He had very
+little appetite for the ample and economical repast, but ate a little
+nevertheless, being fully aware of the evil effects of long fasting on
+an overworked mind and body. This brief collation dispatched, he went
+straight to Cedar House, to keep his appointment with Mr. Sivewright.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE MYSTERY OF LUCILLE’S PARENTAGE.
+
+
+Lucius paused in the gray old hall, where twilight came sooner than in
+any other part of the house. He longed to see Lucille, to clasp the
+dear hand, to hear the low gentle voice; for the excitement of those
+few busy hours seemed to have lengthened the interval since he had
+last seen her. Yet he shrank with a strange nervous terror from the
+idea of meeting her just yet, while his mind was still agitated, still
+perplexed, by the mystery of last night. It was a relief to him when
+Mrs. Wincher told him that ‘Missy’ was still lying down in the parlour.
+
+‘She’s been up and down stairs to give her grandpa his beef-tea, and
+such-like, but has laid down betwigst and betweens,’ said Mrs. Wincher.
+‘She don’t seem to have strength to keep up, poor child. I should think
+some steel-wine, now, or as much quinine-powder as would lie on a
+sixpence, would do her a world of good.’
+
+‘We won’t dose her with nauseous medicines, Mrs. Wincher,’ answered
+Lucius; ‘she wants rest, and change of air and scene. If we could get
+her away from this melancholy old house, now!’
+
+He was thinking what a relief it would be to him to withdraw her from
+that abode of perplexity, where danger, in some as-yet-intangible form,
+seemed to lurk in every shadow. If he could send her down to his sister
+at Stillmington! He was sure that Janet would be kind to her, and that
+those two would love each other. If he could but induce Lucille to go
+down there for a little while!
+
+‘Well, Dr. Davory, the house is melancholic, I will not deny,’ said
+Mrs. Wincher, with a philosophical air. ‘My sperits are not what they
+was when I came here. Bond-street was so gay; and if it was but a
+back-kitchen I lived in, I could hear the rumbling of carriage-wheels
+going all day very lively. Of course this house is dull for a young
+person like Missy; but as to gettin’ her away while her grandpa’s ill,
+it’s more nor you, nor all the king’s hosses and all the king’s men,
+would do, Dr. Davory.’
+
+‘I’m afraid you’re right,’ replied Lucius, with a sigh.
+
+He went up to Mr. Sivewright’s room, and found his patient waiting for
+him, and in a somewhat restless and anxious condition. The blinds were
+drawn, and the heavy old-fashioned shutters half-closed, excluding
+every ray of the afternoon sunlight. This had been Lucille’s careful
+work, while the old man slept.
+
+‘Open those shutters and draw up the blinds!’ exclaimed Mr. Sivewright
+impatiently. ‘I don’t want the darkness of the grave before my time.’
+
+‘I thought you were never coming!’ he added presently, with an
+aggrieved air, as Lucius admitted the sunshine.
+
+‘And yet I am an hour earlier than I was yesterday.’
+
+‘The day has seemed longer than yesterday. Every day is longer than the
+last,’ complained the old man; ‘my snatches of sleep are shorter, my
+limbs more weary; the burden of life grows heavier as I near the end of
+my journey.’
+
+‘Nay, sir,’ remonstrated Lucius, in a cheery tone, ‘there is no need
+for such despondent talk as that. You are ill, and suffer the weariness
+of a prolonged illness, but you are in no immediate danger.’
+
+‘No immediate danger!’ repeated the patient contemptuously. ‘You will
+not admit that I am in immediate danger till you hear the death-rattle
+in my throat. I feel that I am on my death-bed, and desire to do all
+that a dying man should do to square his account with the world he is
+about to leave.’
+
+‘And I hope, sir, you have some thought about that better world to
+which you are going,’ answered Lucius seriously.
+
+Homer Sivewright sighed, and was silent for some moments ere he replied
+to this remark.
+
+‘Let me settle my affairs in this world first,’ he said, ‘and then you
+may try to enlighten me about the next if you can. I have found this
+life so hard that it is scarcely strange if I have little hope in the
+life that is to come after it. But you can preach to me about that by
+and by. I want to talk to you about the girl who is to be your wife.’
+
+‘There is no subject so near to my heart.’
+
+‘I suppose not,’ answered Mr. Sivewright, groping with a slow feeble
+hand under his pillow, from beneath which he presently produced a key.
+‘Take this key and open yonder desk, the _bonheur du jour_, and look in
+the third drawer on the left side.’
+
+Lucius obeyed.
+
+‘What do you see there?’
+
+‘A packet of letters tied with green ferret, and a miniature in a
+morocco-case,’ answered Lucius.
+
+‘Good! Now, those letters and that miniature contain the whole mystery
+of Lucille’s birth. I have tried many times to read the riddle, but in
+vain. Your sharper wits may perchance find the solution of the problem.’
+
+‘You mean as regards the identity of Lucille’s mother?’ asked Lucius.
+
+‘I mean as regards the identity of her father and her mother,’ answered
+the old man. ‘There have been times when I have doubted whether Lucille
+is a Sivewright at all—whether the girl I have called my grandchild is
+the daughter of my son Ferdinand.’
+
+Lucius Davoren’s heart gave a great leap. Good heavens, what a relief
+if it were thus—if this girl whom he so fondly loved were free from
+the taint of that villain’s blood! For some moments he was dumb. The
+thought of this possible release overcame him utterly. God grant that
+this were but true—that the man he had slain bore no kindred to the
+woman who was to be his wife!
+
+He opened the morocco-case, and looked at it with eager eyes, as if in
+the lifeless images it contained he might find the clue to the mystery.
+
+The case was double, and contained two miniatures: one of a man with a
+weak but patrician face, the nose an elongated aquiline, the lips thin,
+the chin feeble, the forehead high and pale, the eyes a light blue;
+the countenance of some last scion of a worn-out race; not without an
+expression of nobility, but utterly without force of character. The
+second miniature was a woman’s face—pensive, tender, lovable; a face
+with soft black eyes, a thoughtful mouth, a low broad forehead, in
+which there were ample indications of intellect. The olive complexion,
+the darkness of the lustrous eyes, gave a foreign look to this
+countenance. The original might have been either French or Italian,
+Lucius thought, but she could hardly have been an Englishwoman.
+
+‘What reason have you to doubt Lucille’s parentage?’ he asked the old
+man, after a prolonged examination of those two miniatures.
+
+‘My only reasons are contained in that packet of letters,’ answered Mr.
+Sivewright. ‘Those letters are the broken links in a chain which you
+may be able to piece together. I have puzzled over them many a time, as
+I told you just now, but have been able to make nothing of them.’
+
+‘Am I to read them?’
+
+‘Yes, read them aloud to me; I may be able to furnish you with an
+occasional commentary on the text.’
+
+‘First, tell me how they came into your possession.’
+
+‘That is easily done. When my son left Bond-street for the last time,
+after plundering my iron safe, he did not burden himself with luggage.
+He left all his worldly goods behind him, in the shape of a dilapidated
+leathern portmanteau full of old clothes. Amongst these I found that
+packet of letters and that miniature case, both of which he had
+doubtless forgotten. Now you know just as much about them as I do.’
+
+Lucius untied the string. There were about a dozen letters; some in a
+woman’s hand, fine, delicate, and essentially un-English; the others in
+a masculine caligraphy, by no means too legible. The first was directed
+to Ferdinand Sivewright, at a post-office in Oxford-street, but bore
+neither the date nor the address of the writer. This was in the man’s
+hand, written upon the paper of a fashionable club, and ran thus:
+
+ ‘Thanks, my dear Sivewright, for your last. You are indeed a friend,
+ and worth all my aristocratic acquaintance, who pretend the warmest
+ friendship, but would not go half-a-dozen paces out of their way to
+ save me from hanging. You, by your prompt assistance, have rescued me
+ from the greatest difficulty in which my imprudence—and I have always
+ been the most imprudent of men—ever involved me. Thank Heaven and
+ your tact, the danger is over, and I think I now stand secure of the
+ old gentleman’s favour. Did he know the truth, or but a scintillation
+ of the truth, I should inevitably lose all chance of that future
+ prosperity which will, I trust, enable me a few years hence to give
+ you some substantial proof of my gratitude.
+
+ ‘By the way, you talk of being hard up in the present. I regret to
+ say, my dear fellow, that at this moment it is out of my power to help
+ you with a stiver. Not that I for an instant ignore the obligation
+ to provide for your small charge, but because just now I am entirely
+ cleaned out. A few weeks hence I shall be no doubt able to send you
+ a cheque. In the mean time your household is a prosperous one, and
+ the cost your kindness to me may occasion is one that can scarcely
+ be felt. You understand. How fares your little girl? I shall always
+ be glad to hear. Madame D—— writes to me for news; so pray keep me
+ _au courant_, that I may set her anxious mind at rest. O, Sivewright,
+ how I languish for an end of all my secrets and perplexities, and
+ for a happy union with her I love! This waiting for dead men’s
+ shoes is a weary business, and makes me feel the most despicable of
+ mankind.—Yours ever,
+
+ H. G.’
+
+‘What do you make of that letter?’ asked Mr. Sivewright.
+
+‘I can hardly tell what to make of it at present. Your son must have
+been of some vital service to the writer, but what the nature of that
+friendly act is more than I can guess.’
+
+‘You will understand it better when you have read the rest of the
+letters. Now, I have sometimes thought that the writer of those lines
+was the father of Lucille.’
+
+‘On what ground?’ asked Lucius. ‘He distinctly says, “How fares _your_
+little girl?”’
+
+‘That might be inspired by caution. Do you observe what he says about
+Madame D—— and her anxiety to hear of the child’s welfare? Rely upon
+it that Madame D—— was the mother. Then there is the mention of a
+happy union with the woman he loves, deferred until the death of some
+wealthy relation. Then what do you make of the lines in which he avows
+his obligation to provide for “your small charge”? That small charge
+was the child, and on whom would there be such an obligation except
+upon the father? This is how I have sometimes been inclined to read the
+riddle.’
+
+‘You think, then, that Lucille was the child of some secret marriage?’
+said Lucius; ‘or of an intrigue?’ he added reluctantly.
+
+‘Of a secret marriage most likely,’ answered the old man. ‘Had it been
+only an intrigue, there would hardly have been need for such excessive
+caution. You will see in one of the later letters how this man who
+signs himself “H. G.” speaks of his total ruin should his secret
+be discovered. But go on, the letters are numbered. I arranged and
+numbered them with a good deal of care. Go on to number 2.’
+
+Lucius obeyed. The second epistle was in the same hand as the first,
+but the formation of the characters showed that it had been written in
+haste and profound agitation:
+
+ ‘Dear Sivewright,—I enclose a cheque for 50_l._ It leaves me a beggar;
+ but anything is better than the alternative. Your threat to trade upon
+ my secret has thrown me into an agony of apprehension. O, Sivewright,
+ you could surely never be such a villain! You who pretended to be my
+ bosom friend—you who have so often enriched yourself at my expense,
+ when fortune and your superior skill favoured your chances at the
+ card-table—could never be so base as to betray me! When you took upon
+ yourself the charge which you now assert perpetually as a claim,
+ pressing and harassing me to death with your demands for money, I
+ deemed that friendship alone actuated you. Is it possible that you
+ looked at the matter from the first with a trader’s spirit, and only
+ considered how much you might be able to make out of me?
+
+ ‘As you claim to be a gentleman, I conjure you to write and assure
+ me that your threat of communicating with my uncle was only an idle
+ menace; that you will keep my secret, as a gentleman should keep the
+ secret of his friend.
+
+ ‘Bear in mind that to betray me would be to ruin me most completely,
+ and to destroy your own chance of future benefit from my fortune.
+
+ ‘How is the little girl? Why do you not write to me at length about
+ her? Why do your letters contain only demands for money? Madame D—— is
+ full of anxiety, and I can say so little to satisfy her. How is the
+ little thing? Is she well—is she happy? Does she pine for her last
+ home, and the people who nursed her? For heaven’s sake reply, and
+ fully.—Yours,
+
+ H. G.’
+
+‘Are those like a man’s inquiries about another man’s child?’ asked Mr.
+Sivewright.
+
+‘Scarcely,’ replied Lucius. ‘I believe you are right, and that Lucille
+is of no kin to your son.’
+
+‘And of no kin to me. You are glad of that, I suppose,’ said the old
+man with a touch of bitterness.
+
+‘Forgive me if I confess that I shall be glad if I find she is not the
+child of your son.’
+
+‘You are right. Can an evil tree bear good fruit? That seems a hard
+saying, but I can’t wonder you shrink from the idea of owning Ferdinand
+Sivewright for your children’s grandfather. Yet this H. G. may have
+been no better man.’
+
+‘I can hardly think that. There is some indication of good feeling in
+his letters. He was most likely the dupe and victim—’
+
+‘Of my son? Yes, I can believe that. Go on, Lucius. The third letter is
+from the lady, who, you will see, signs herself by her Christian name
+only, but gives her full address.’
+
+‘That must afford some clue to the mystery,’ said Lucius.
+
+‘Yes, for any one who will take the trouble to follow so slight a clue.
+I have never attempted the task. To accomplish it might have been to
+lose the only creature that loved me. You will call this selfish
+policy, no doubt. Lucille’s interests ought to have weighed with me
+more than my own. I can only answer, that old age is selfish. When a
+man has but a few years between him and the grave, he may well shrink
+from the idea of making those years desolate.’
+
+‘I do not wonder that you feared to lose her,’ said Lucius.
+
+He opened the letter numbered 3. It was in that delicate foreign hand,
+on thin paper.
+
+ ‘Rue Jeanne d’Arques, numéro 17, Rouen.
+
+ ‘Dear Sir,—Not having received a satisfactory response from Mr. G.,
+ I venture to address you, believing that you will compassionate my
+ anxieties. I wish to hear more of your charge. Is she well? is she
+ happy? O, sir, have pity upon the heart which pines for her—to which
+ this enforced separation is a living death! Does she grow? does she
+ remember me, and ask for me? Yet, considering her tender age at the
+ time of our parting, that is hardly possible. I ought to be thankful
+ that it is so—that she will not suffer any of the pangs which rend my
+ sorrowful heart. But in spite of that thought, it grieves me to know
+ that she will lose all memory of my face, all love for me. It is a
+ hard trial; and it may last for years. Heaven knows if I shall live to
+ see the end of it.
+
+ ‘I entreat you, sir, to pity one who is most grateful for your
+ friendly help at a time when it was needed, and to let me have a full
+ account of the little girl.
+
+ ‘I am quite content to submit to Mr. G.’s desire that, for the next
+ few years of her life, she shall have no friends but those she has
+ in your house; yet I can but think that, at her age, residence in a
+ London house, and above all a house of business, must be harmful. I
+ should be very glad could you make some arrangement for her to live,
+ at least part of the year, a little way out of town, with people you
+ could fully trust.
+
+ ‘Do not doubt that, should God spare me to enjoy the fortune to which
+ Mr. G. looks forward, I shall most liberally reward your goodness to
+ one born under an evil star.
+
+ ‘I have the honour to remain, yours,
+ ‘FELICIE G.
+
+ ‘P.S. My name here is Madame Dumarques.’
+
+‘That,’ exclaimed Lucius, ‘must surely be the letter of a mother!’
+
+‘Yes; and not a letter from a wife to her husband. The Mr. G. spoken of
+in the letter is evidently the husband of the writer.’
+
+‘Strange that the care of a beloved child should have been intrusted to
+such a man as your son.’
+
+‘Men of pleasure have few friends,’ answered Mr. Sivewright. ‘I daresay
+this Mr. G. had no one save the companion of the gaming-table to whom
+he could appeal in his difficulty.’
+
+‘Do you consider there is sufficient evidence here to show that Lucille
+was the child alluded to?’
+
+‘No other child ever came to Bond-street.’
+
+‘True. Then the case seems clear enough. She was not your son’s
+daughter, but the child of these people, and committed to his care.’
+
+‘Read on, and you will discover farther details of the affair.’
+
+The fourth letter was from ‘H. G.’ It was evidently written in answer
+to a letter of complaint or remonstrance from Ferdinand Sivewright. It
+ran thus:
+
+ ‘My dear Fellow,—Your reproaches are most unjust. I always send money
+ when I have it; but I have not acquired the art of coiner, nor am I
+ clever enough to accomplish a successful forgery. In a word, you
+ can’t get blood out of a stone. You have had some hundreds since you
+ first took charge of the little one; and in any other home I had
+ found for her, she would not have cost me a third of the money. I do
+ not forget that you helped me out of a diabolical difficulty, and
+ that if you had not happened to be our visitor when the old gentleman
+ surprised me in our Devonian cottage, and if you had not with sublime
+ tact assumed _my_ responsibilities, I should have been irretrievably
+ ruined. Never shall I forget that midsummer morning when I had to
+ leave all I loved in your care, and to turn my back upon that dear
+ little home, to accompany my uncle to London, assuming the careless
+ gaiety of a bachelor, while my heart was racked with anguish for those
+ I left behind. However, we played the comedy well, and, please God,
+ the future will compensate Felicie and me for all we have suffered in
+ the past and suffer in the present. Be as reasonable, dear old fellow,
+ as you have been useful, and rely upon it I shall by and by amply
+ reward your fidelity.—Yours,
+
+ H. G.’
+
+‘We get a clearer glimpse of the story in this,’ said Lucius, as he
+finished the fourth letter. ‘It seems easy enough now to read the
+riddle. A young man, with large expectations from an uncle who, at
+any moment, may disinherit him, has secretly married; perhaps a woman
+beneath him in station. At any rate, his choice is one which his
+uncle would inevitably disapprove. He hides his young wife in some
+quiet Devonshire village, where his friend, your son, visits him.
+There, during your son’s visit, the old man appears. By some means or
+other he has tracked his nephew to this retreat. One mode of escape
+only suggests itself. Ferdinand Sivewright assumes the character of
+the husband and father, while the delinquent leaves the place at
+his uncle’s desire, and accompanies him back to London. Out of this
+incident arises the rest. Ferdinand Sivewright takes charge of the
+child, the wife retires to her native country, where she has, no doubt,
+friends who can give her a home. The whole business is thus, as it
+were, dissolved. The husband is free to play the part of a bachelor
+till his kinsman’s death. That is my reading of the story.’
+
+‘I do not think you can be far out,’ answered Mr. Sivewright. ‘You
+can look over the rest of the letters at your leisure. They are less
+important than those you have read, but may contain some stray scraps
+of information which you can piece together. There is one letter in
+which Madame Dumarques speaks of the miniature. She sends it in order
+that the little girl may learn to know her mother’s features; and in
+this, as in other letters from this lady, there appears a foreboding
+of early death. “We may never meet on earth,” she writes. “I like to
+think that she will know my face if ever I am so blest as to meet her
+in heaven.”’
+
+‘You think, then, that this poor mother died young?’ inquired Lucius.
+
+‘That is my idea. The husband speaks of her failing health in one of
+his letters. He has been to Rouen to see her, and has found her sadly
+changed. “You would hardly know that lovely face, Sivewright, could you
+see it now,” he writes.’
+
+Lucius folded and tied up the letters with a careful hand.
+
+‘May I have these to keep?’ he asked.
+
+‘You may. They are the only dower which your wife will receive from her
+parents.’
+
+‘I don’t know that,’ answered Lucius; ‘her father may still live, and
+if he does, he shall at least give her his name.’
+
+‘What, you mean to seek out this nameless father?’
+
+‘I do. The task may be long and difficult, but I am determined to
+unravel this tangled skein.’
+
+‘Do what you like, so long as you and Lucille do not leave me to die
+alone,’ said the old man sadly.
+
+‘Have no fear of that,’ replied Lucius. ‘This investigation can wait.
+I will not desert my post in your sick room, until you are on the
+highroad to recovery.’
+
+‘You are a good fellow!’ exclaimed Mr. Sivewright, with unusual warmth;
+‘and I do not regret having trusted you.’
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+MYSTIC MUSIC.
+
+
+It was now nearly dark, and Lucius was anxious to obtain a speedy
+release from the sick room, lest the time should creep on towards the
+hour at which Mr. Otranto’s minions were to seek for admittance at the
+little back door. He made some excuse therefore for bidding his patient
+‘good-night’ soon after this. There would be time for him to see that
+the coast was clear, and to keep watch for the coming of the two men.
+
+He met Lucille in the corridor, coming up-stairs for the night, at
+least two hours earlier than usual—a most opportune retirement.
+
+She gave a little start at meeting him, and her look was more of
+surprise than pleasure.
+
+‘You here, Lucius!’ she exclaimed.
+
+‘Yes, dear; I have been with your grandfather. I heard you were lying
+down, and would not disturb you. I hope you feel refreshed by that long
+rest.’
+
+‘As much refreshed as I can be while I have such cause for anxiety. I
+am going to my room early, so as to be near my grandfather.’
+
+‘That is wise; only remember you must try to sleep. You must not be
+watching and listening all night. If Mr. Sivewright wants anything he
+will call you. Good-night, my dearest.’
+
+He folded her in his arms, and pressed a tender kiss upon the sad
+lips; but her only response to his caress was a weary sigh. There was
+something amiss here; what, he knew not; but he felt she had some
+sorrow which she refused to share with him, and the thought wounded him
+to the quick. He left her perplexed and unhappy.
+
+The old clock on the staircase struck eight as Lucius passed it. He
+had an hour to wait before the arrival of the detectives. What to do
+with himself during that time, he knew not. The lower part of the house
+was wrapped in darkness, save for the feeble glimmer of a candle in
+the great kitchen, where Mr. and Mrs. Wincher were seated at their
+frugal supper. Lucius looked and beheld them regaling themselves on
+a stony-looking Dutch cheese and an overgrown lettuce—a gigantic
+vegetable, which they liberally soused with vinegar.
+
+From Mrs. Wincher, Lucius obtained a candle, which he carried to the
+parlour—a room that looked empty and desolate without Lucille. There
+was the sofa upon which she had rested; there her book; there her
+work-basket.
+
+He sat down amidst these tokens of her presence, and stared at the
+flame of the candle, sorely troubled in mind. What was this gulf
+between them, this feeling of severance that was so strange to his
+heart? Why was it that there returned to him ever and anon a suspicion
+formless, inexplicable, but which troubled him beyond measure? He
+strove to escape from gloomy thoughts by the aid of an old enchanter.
+He took his violin from its hiding-place, and began to play a tender
+_sotto-voce_ strain, which soothed his troubled mind. His thoughts
+drifted into a smoother channel. He thought of that grand discovery
+made to-night—a discovery which, at another time, he would have deemed
+all-sufficient for happiness: Lucille was not the child of the wretch
+his hand had slain. The comfort of that thought was measureless.
+
+Could he do wrong in accepting the evidence of those letters—in giving
+them this interpretation? Surely not. They seemed to point but to one
+conclusion. They told a story in which there were few missing links. It
+remained for him to trace the father who had thus abandoned his child.
+It would be a more pleasing task than that which Lucille had imposed
+upon him when she bade him seek for Ferdinand Sivewright.
+
+But why had this father—who from the tone of his letters seemed to have
+been fond of his child—abandoned her entirely to her fate, and made no
+effort to reclaim her in after years? That question might be answered
+in two ways. The father might have died years ago, carrying his secret
+with him to the grave. Or it is just possible that this man, in whom
+weakness might be near akin to wickedness, had made some advantageous
+alliance after the death of Lucille’s mother, and had deemed it wise to
+be silent as to his first marriage, even at the cost of his daughter’s
+love.
+
+Thus reasoned Lucius as he played a slow pensive melody, always _sotto
+voce_.
+
+Thought and music together had beguiled him into forgetfulness of time.
+The clock struck nine while he was still playing.
+
+He put down his violin immediately, left the lighted candle on the
+table, and went out to the back door. Mr. Wincher was there before him,
+the door open, and two men standing on the threshold.
+
+‘We’ve got our orders from Mr. Otranto, sir,’ said the elder of the
+two. ‘I’m to stop all night in the room that contains the vallibles,
+and my mate is to be in and out and keep a hi upon the back premises.
+But if you have anything you’d like to suggest, sir, we’re at your
+service.’
+
+‘No,’ said Lucius; ‘I’ve no doubt Mr. Otranto knows his business a
+great deal better than I do. Come with me, Mr.—’
+
+‘Simcox, sir. My mate is Joe Cleaver.’
+
+‘Come with me then, Mr. Simcox, and I’ll show you the room that needs
+watching. Mr. Cleaver can stay in the kitchen. I daresay he can make
+himself comfortable there.’
+
+‘Purvided he isn’t timid of beadles,’ interjected Mrs. Wincher; ‘which
+the crickets are that tame they plays about the table while we’re at
+supper.’
+
+Mr. Cleaver pronounced himself indifferent as to beetles or crickets.
+
+‘They won’t hurt me,’ he said; ‘I’ve had to deal with worse than
+black-beadles in my time.’
+
+Mr. Simcox followed Lucius to the room that contained the Sivewright
+collection—that curious chaos of relics and fragments which represented
+the knowledge and labour of a lifetime. The detective surveyed these
+works of art with a disparaging eye.
+
+‘There doesn’t seem to be much for the melting-pot here!’ he exclaimed;
+‘or much portable property of any kind.’
+
+‘There’s a good deal of curious old china,’ answered Lucius, ‘which is,
+I believe, more valuable than silver. The thief who stole the old plate
+might return for that.’
+
+‘He might,’ answered Mr. Simcox with a sceptical air; ‘but he must be a
+cut above the common run of thieves if he knows much about old chaney;
+the sterling metal is what most of ’em go in for. However, here I am,
+sir, and I know my duty. I’m ready to watch as many nights as you
+please.’
+
+‘Very good,’ said Lucius; ‘then I’ll wish you good-night, Mr. Simcox;
+and if you want a mattress and a blanket, I daresay Mr. Wincher—the old
+man who opened the door to you—will give you them. I don’t live in the
+house, but I shall be here early to-morrow morning to learn the result
+of your watch. Good-night.’
+
+He had his hand upon the door, when a sound from the other side of the
+hall—low, but still sufficiently audible—startled him as if it had been
+the fall of a thunderbolt. It was his own violin, played softly—a wild
+minor strain, dirge-like and unearthly. Scarcely had he heard the notes
+when they died away. It was almost as if he had dreamed them. There was
+not time for him to utter an exclamation before all was dumb. Then came
+a muffled sound, like the cautious closing of a heavy door; but that
+strange strain of melody possessed the soul and ears of Lucius, and he
+did not hear that stealthy closing of the hall-door.
+
+‘Did you hear that?’ he asked the detective eagerly.
+
+‘Hear what, sir?’
+
+‘A violin played in the opposite room.’
+
+‘Well, no, sir, I can’t say as I did. Yet I fancy I did hear somethink
+in the way of music—a barrel-organ, perhaps, outside.’
+
+‘Strange!’ muttered Lucius; ‘my senses must be growing confused. I have
+been too long without sleep, or I have thought too much. My brain has
+been unceasingly on the rack; no wonder it should fail. Yet I could
+have sworn I heard a wild unearthly strain—like—like other music I
+heard once.’
+
+It was a foolish thing, he felt, to be disturbed by such a trifle. A
+mere fancy, doubtless, but he was disturbed by it nevertheless. He
+hurried across to the parlour where he had left his violin. There it
+lay, just as he had put it down. The room was empty.
+
+‘What if my violin were enchanted now, and could play of itself?’ he
+thought idly. ‘Or what if the furies who torment me with the slow
+tortures of remorse had invented a new agony, that I should hear
+ghostly strains—mere phantasmal sounds—reminding me of the music I
+heard in the American forest?’
+
+He put the violin back into its case, locked it, and put the key in his
+waistcoat-pocket. The lock was a Chubb.
+
+‘Neither mortals nor fiends shall play upon you any more to-night, my
+little Amati,’ he said.
+
+He was glad to escape from the house presently, having no further
+business there. He felt that Lucille and the old man were securely
+guarded for that night at least. To-morrow might furnish a clue to the
+mystery—to-morrow might reveal the thief.
+
+The thought set his brain on fire. Who opened that door? Who admitted
+the midnight plunderer? Would to-morrow’s light bring with it the
+answer to that question?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+AT FAULT.
+
+
+Geoffrey Hossack rushed down to Stillmington as fast as a
+recklessly-driven hansom and an express train could take him. His heart
+seemed to sing aloud as he went, ‘I am coming, my love, I am coming;
+and we will part no more.’
+
+How sweet, how rustic, how peaceful, the little uncommercial town
+seemed to him to-day in its verdant setting; the low hills, on whose
+grassy slopes tall chestnuts spread their wide branches, and the dark
+foliage of the beech gleamed silvery as the warm breezes ruffled it;
+fertile pastures where the aftermath grew deep, green tinged with
+russet—over all the land late summer’s vanishing glory.
+
+‘I could live here with her for ever,’ he thought; ‘ay, in the humblest
+cottage half hidden among those green lanes, which seem to lead
+nowhere. I could live all my life with her, cut off from all the rest
+of the world, and never languish for its hollow pleasures, and never
+sigh for change. God grant I may find her reasonable! God grant that
+she may accept my simple assurance of her release, and make me happy!’
+
+On the very threshold of Mrs. Bertram’s modest dwelling a sudden fear
+seized him. Something in the aspect of the house to-day struck him as
+unfamiliar. The window was shut—an unusual circumstance, for Janet
+loved air. The flowers in the little rustic stand that screened the
+window had a neglected look. There were dead leaves on the geraniums,
+which were wont to be so carefully tended. The care of those flowers
+had been Janet’s early morning task. How often had he walked this way
+before breakfast, for the sake of catching one chance glimpse of the
+noble face bending over those flowers!
+
+‘Good Heavens, can she be ill?’ he thought with agonising fear. He
+knocked softly, lest she should be indeed lying ill up-stairs and the
+sound of the knocker disturb her.
+
+The maid who opened the door had come straight from the washtub,
+breathless, with bare steaming arms.
+
+‘Is Mrs. Bertram at home—and—and well?’ asked Geoffrey eagerly.
+
+‘Mrs. Bertram, sir? O dear, no; she left us three days ago, and the
+apartments are to let. Missus doesn’t put up any bill, because she says
+it gives such a low look; but there’s a card at the grocer’s.’
+
+‘Mrs. Bertram has moved!’ said Geoffrey, his heart beating very fast.
+‘Where has she gone?’
+
+It might be to the next street only. She had found the rooms small
+perhaps, as her pupils increased. Yet even a few minutes’ delay dashed
+his high hopes. It seemed hard to meet any kind of hindrance at the
+outset.
+
+‘She didn’t leave no address,’ answered the girl; ‘she’s left
+Stillmington for some time. She said the air was relackshing at this
+time of year, and the little girl didn’t seem quite well. So she went.
+She means to come back in the winter, she told us, and go on with her
+pupils; but she was going somewheres by the sea.’
+
+‘But surely she must have left some address with your mistress, in
+order that letters might be forwarded to her?’
+
+‘No, she didn’t, sir. I heared missus ast her that very question
+about the letters, and she says to missus that it didn’t matter—there
+wouldn’t be no letters for her, not of no consequence, as she would
+write and tell her friends her new address. She didn’t exactly know
+where she was going, she says.’
+
+‘When did she leave?’ asked Geoffrey in despair. How could the Fates
+treat him so hardly?
+
+‘Three days ago—last Wednesday.’
+
+The very day of his journey down to Hampshire. She had lost no time
+in taking flight. She had gone almost immediately after he left
+Stillmington. Could he doubt that her motive had been to avoid him—to
+flee temptation? For did he not know that she loved him?
+
+‘Mrs. Bertram left very suddenly, did she not?’ he asked of the
+maid-of-all-work, who was breathing hard with impatience to be gone,
+knowing that her mistress awaited her in the washhouse, and would
+assuredly lecture her for gossiping.
+
+‘Yes, sir, it was quite suddent. She gave missus a week’s rent instead
+of the reglar notice.’
+
+‘And you have really no idea where she went when she left you?’
+
+‘No, sir. She went away by the London train. That’s all I can tell you.’
+
+‘Thanks,’ said Geoffrey with a sigh.
+
+He rewarded the girl with a half-crown, almost mechanically, and
+departed heartsore. How could she be so cruel as to hide herself
+from him—to put a new barrier between them! Was she afraid of his
+importunity—afraid that she would lack strength to resist his pleading?
+
+By the sea! She had gone to the sea-side. That was information of the
+vaguest character.
+
+‘If I have to scour the English coast, I will find her,’ he said to
+himself desperately.
+
+But it was just possible she might leave England—that she might hide
+herself in some obscure village in Normandy or Brittany, where the
+cockney-tourist had not yet penetrated. The field was wide, to say the
+least of it.
+
+‘She will surely let her brother know where she is?’ he thought
+presently; and with that thought came a brief moment of hopefulness,
+which quickly changed again to despair. If she wanted to avoid him,
+Geoffrey, she would scarcely trust her secret to his bosom friend
+Lucius.
+
+There was that ever-ready medium—that universal go-between—the second
+column of the _Times_. He might advertise. He wrote a long appeal, so
+worded that, to the stranger, it was an absolute hieroglyphic, telling
+her that she was free—the only barrier that could divide them had been
+long removed—and entreating her to communicate with him immediately.
+This appeal he headed ‘_Voi che sapéte_’—the opening words of her
+favourite song. She could hardly fail to understand.
+
+But what if she did not see the _Times_? And if she were out of
+England, or even buried deep in some remote English watering-place,
+the chances against her seeing it were as ten to one. He sent the same
+advertisement to Galignani, and to a dozen provincial newspapers,
+chosen almost at random, but covering a wide area. He sent cheques
+to pay for a month’s insertions in every paper. He felt himself
+transformed into a man of business, and went to work as actively as if
+he had been advertising a new cocoa or a new hair-dye.
+
+This done, and there being nothing to detain him at Stillmington, he
+went back to Hillersdon, much to the delight of his cousins Belle and
+Jessie, who had in no wise expected this prompt return of the deserter.
+There was some comfort to him in the idea of being amidst the scenes of
+Janet’s youth. He went over to Tyrrelhurst, the cathedral town, saw the
+Registrar of Births, Deaths, and Marriages, and found the entry of that
+fatal union which stood between him and happiness.
+
+Yes, there it was: ‘Frederick Vandeleur, gentleman, &c. &c., to Janet
+Davoren.’ The ceremony had been legal enough. Nothing but some previous
+contract could invalidate such a marriage; and was it not very probable
+that this villain’s assertion of a previous marriage was but a lie,
+invented to release him from a union that had become troublesome to
+him?
+
+‘I wish to Heaven I had as good a certificate of the scoundrel’s
+death,’ thought Geoffrey; ‘but even if I find her and tell her that he
+is dead, I doubt if my bare assertion will satisfy her scruples.’
+
+He made a pilgrimage to Wykhamston, prowled about the gray old church,
+talked to the sexton, who had been an old man twenty years ago, and
+who calmly survived all changes, like a being over whom Time had no
+power. From him Geoffrey heard a great deal about the old rector and
+his beautiful daughter, who had played the organ, and how a stranger
+had come to Wykhamston, who took a great fancy to playing the organ,
+and played wonderful; and how Miss Davoren used oftentimes to be in the
+church practising when the stranger came in; and how not long after she
+ran away from home, as some folks said, and he, the sexton, was afraid
+no good had come of those meetings in the church.
+
+To this Geoffrey listened silently, wounded, as he always was, by the
+thought that she whom he loved so dearly had left her home under a
+cloud, were it but the lightest breath of suspicion.
+
+Even to this sexton he must needs defend his idol.
+
+‘I have reason to know that Miss Davoren was married to that gentleman
+before he came to Wykhamston,’ he said. ‘It was a secret marriage, and
+she was foolish enough to leave her home without informing her parents
+of the step she had taken; but she was that man’s wife, and no shadow
+of dishonour can tarnish her name.’
+
+‘Deary me!’ exclaimed the sexton; ‘and our poor dear rector took it
+so to heart. Some folks think it was that as killed him, though the
+doctors called it heart-disease of long standing.’
+
+Geoffrey went from the church to the rectory, an overgrown thatched
+cottage, quaint and old, with plastered walls and big chimney-stacks;
+the garden all abloom with late roses—the new incumbent evidently a
+prosperous gentleman.
+
+He loitered by the tall privet-hedge a little while, gathered a rose
+from a bush that grew within reach—a rose which he put carefully in his
+pocket-book—frail memorial of her he loved.
+
+This pilgrimage occupied an entire day; for the young man lingered
+about Wykhamston as if loth to leave the spot where Janet had once
+lived—as if he almost hoped to meet the phantom of her girlhood in one
+of those low water meadows where he wandered listlessly by the reedy
+trout streams.
+
+Belle and Jessie pouted a little at this desertion, yet would not
+complain. Were they not fortunate in dear Geoffrey’s return? And if
+they questioned or teased him he might take flight again.
+
+‘I hope you are not going to desert us to-morrow,’ said Belle, on the
+evening of his return from Wykhamston.
+
+‘Why do you lay such a tremendous stress upon to-morrow?’ asked
+Geoffrey, with a comfortable yawn. He was stretched on a rustic bench
+outside the drawing-room windows smoking, while these damsels conversed
+with him from within.
+
+‘Have you forgotten?’
+
+‘Forgotten what?’ with another yawn. ‘How sleepy this country air makes
+one!’
+
+‘Yes, and how stupid sometimes!’ exclaimed Jessie. ‘You might have
+remembered that to-morrow is the day for Lady Baker’s _fête_.’
+
+‘Ah, to be sure! She’s a very nice old party, that Lady Baker of yours.
+I shall make a point of being in attendance upon you.’
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+TROUBLES THICKEN.
+
+
+There was plenty of work for Lucius in his surgery when he went home,
+after inducting Mr. Otranto’s men in their duties at Cedar House. There
+were the medicines to be made up, and to be taken round to the patients
+that night, by the sleepy boy, who looked unutterable reproaches at his
+master for this unwonted neglect of duty.
+
+‘Some of the places will be shut, I should think,’ he said with an
+injured air, as he ground some nauseous drug furiously with a stone
+pestle; ‘and some of the folks gone to bed. We’ve never been so late
+before.’
+
+‘I don’t think our neighbours hereabouts are renowned for their early
+habits,’ answered Lucius, unabashed by this reproof. ‘If you find
+people are gone to bed, you can bring the medicines home, and take them
+out again early to-morrow morning. You needn’t go on knocking and
+ringing if you don’t get answered quickly.’
+
+‘Very well, sir,’ murmured the boy with a yawn. ‘They’ll be up at all
+the publics of course: there’s the liniment for Mrs. Purdew’s sprained
+wrist, and the lotion for Mr. Tweaker’s black eye; and they’ll be
+up at the butcher’s, and at the general round the corner, where the
+children’s down with measles, I daresay. But I expect to find the
+private gentlefolks gone to bed.’
+
+‘Give me that rhubarb, and hold your tongue,’ said Lucius.
+
+His medicines were soon made up and dispatched; and he was on the point
+of leaving his surgery for the night, when he put his hand in his
+pocket in search of a key, and found the bottle he had taken from Mr.
+Sivewright’s bedside.
+
+‘Good heavens!’ he exclaimed; ‘are mind and memory failing me
+altogether that I could forget this?’
+
+He held the bottle between him and the flame of the gas. The liquid,
+which had been clear enough when he sent it out of his surgery, had now
+a slightly clouded look.
+
+‘I wonder whether I have such a thing as a bit of copper gauze?’ he
+thought, as he put down the bottle.
+
+He looked in several small drawers in the table on which he made up his
+medicines, and finally found the object he sought for. He poured the
+medicine into a glass vessel and applied his test.
+
+The experiment showed him that there was arsenic in the medicine. The
+quantity was of the smallest, but the poison was there. He repeated
+his experiment, to make assurance doubly sure. Yes, there could be no
+shadow of doubt. Arsenic had been introduced into the medicine since it
+had left his hands yesterday afternoon.
+
+Whose was the guilty hand which had done this thing? His vague
+suspicion arose before him all at once in the shape of an awful fact,
+and the horror of it almost paralysed thought. Who could have seemed
+more secure than this harmless old man, lying on his sick bed, tenderly
+watched by loving eyes, ministered to by dutiful hands—guarded, it
+would seem, from the possibility of danger? Yet even there a murderer
+had penetrated; and by slow steps, by means so gradual as almost to
+defy suspicion, that feeble life was assailed.
+
+Who could the assassin be but that old servant in whose fidelity
+Homer Sivewright trusted from the mere force of habit? Yes; the case
+seemed clear enough, looked at by the light of this new discovery.
+Jacob Wincher, who knew the full value of the collection, had begun a
+systematic course of plunder—who could tell how long it had gone on?
+perhaps ever since Mr. Sivewright had taken to his bed—and, in order to
+escape the detection which must have been inevitable on the old man’s
+recovery, he had taken measures to make his master’s illness mortal.
+
+‘Perhaps he argues that by dropping a pinch of arsenic into his
+master’s medicine now and then he only assists the progress of the
+disease, and that his crime is something less than murder,’ thought
+Lucius bitterly.
+
+He was angry with himself, because this very day—after suspecting
+Jacob Wincher, nay, after feeling convinced of his guilt—he had
+suffered himself to be hoodwinked, and had believed the old servant to
+be an honest man. He remembered Mr. Otranto’s dictum, so absolutely
+expressed, and smiled at the fatuity of a man whom the world deemed
+possessed of almost superhuman powers.
+
+‘Yes, the scheme is transparent. He has admitted the man I saw night
+after night, and has doubtless made away with all that is most
+valuable in the collection. He knows that his master’s recovery would
+be his ruin, and he means to prevent that recovery. His apparent
+candour this morning was a profound stroke of policy. He took alarm
+from what I said to his wife—guessed that I had seen the entrance of
+his accomplice, and played his cards accordingly. Not clever enough for
+a thief, did you say, Mr. Otranto? Why, here is a man clever enough to
+carry on simultaneous robbery and murder, and yet to wear the semblance
+of most consummate innocence. This is evidently a development of
+intellectual power among the dangerous classes for which your previous
+experience has not prepared you.’
+
+Lucius laughed the laugh of scorn at the thought of Mr. Otranto’s
+shortsightedness.
+
+But what was he, Lucius, to do? That was the question. How was he to
+avert the danger from his patient, and yet avoid alarming him? To alarm
+him might be fatal. To tell a man almost at Death’s door that he had
+been brought to this pass by a slow poisoner in his own household,
+would surely be to complete the murder. Where was the sick man with
+nerves strong enough to endure such a revelation?
+
+‘I must get rid of these Winchers, yet not tell Mr. Sivewright the
+cause of their dismissal,’ thought Lucius. ‘I can invent some plausible
+excuse for their disappearance. And when they are gone—Stay, might
+it not be better to let them stop, and to keep watch over my patient
+myself—so close a watch, that if foul play were attempted I must
+discover the delinquent?’
+
+He meditated upon this question for some time; now leaning one way, now
+the other.
+
+‘No,’ he decided at last; ‘murder shall no longer lurk within the
+shadow of those walls! At any cost I will get rid of those wretches,
+with their pretence of long service and fidelity.’
+
+He thought of Mrs. Wincher, whom he had a little while ago considered
+one of the most well-meaning of women, completely devoted to her young
+mistress, faithful, affectionate.
+
+‘She may not know the extent of her husband’s iniquity,’ he thought;
+for it was painful to him to believe that the woman who had hovered
+about Love’s rosy pathway like a protecting angel was among the vilest
+of her sex.
+
+‘What about this night?’ he asked himself with painful anxiety. He
+had left a guard upon the house and its treasures, but what guard had
+he set upon that old man’s life? The doors of the sick room might be
+locked ever so securely, and yet the assassin might enter. Wincher and
+his accomplice might know of that secret staircase, in spite of the
+old servant’s affectation of entire ignorance; and between the secret
+staircase and the sick chamber there was only a sliding panel.
+
+‘I’ll go back to-night,’ said Lucius. ‘I should be a dastard if, with
+my present knowledge, I left that old man unprotected. I’ll go back,
+and get into the garden from the creek. I shall find the detective
+on his beat at the back, no doubt. I’ll warn him about the secret
+staircase; so that no one shall get to Mr. Sivewright’s room that way,
+at any rate.’
+
+He lost no time in putting his resolve into execution. It was a few
+minutes past eleven, and the distance to Cedar House was about half an
+hour’s walk. Before midnight he would be there.
+
+Fortune favoured him. The night was dark, and there was no one to
+observe his trespass as he walked along the deserted wharf and stepped
+lightly across the untenanted barges. From one of these it was easy to
+get upon the low wall of Mr. Sivewright’s garden. He saw a light in the
+brewhouse, where he had found the entrance to the secret stair. The
+door was open, and the detective was lounging against the door-post,
+smoking his pipe and enjoying the night air.
+
+‘Who’s there?’ he demanded in cautious tones, as Lucius’s light
+footstep sounded on the weedy gravel.
+
+‘A friend—Davoren,’ answered Lucius, and then told the man the reason
+of his return.
+
+‘This is a worse case than even I thought it,’ he said. ‘There has been
+an attempt to poison the old gentleman up-stairs, as well as to rob
+him.’
+
+The man looked incredulous. Lucius briefly stated his grounds for this
+statement.
+
+‘There has been nothing stirring here?’ he asked.
+
+‘Nothing, except the beadles. They’re on short rations, and it seems to
+make ’em active. I’ve been in and out ever since you left.’
+
+‘Has Wincher gone to bed?’
+
+‘Two hours ago.’
+
+‘And you are sure he has never stirred since?’
+
+‘Quite sure. I’ve been past his door about every ten minutes or so,
+and have heard him and his wife snoring as peaceable as a pair of
+turtle-doves.’
+
+‘Well, I’ve come to share your watch till morning, if you’ve no
+objection. After the discovery I’ve just told you about, I couldn’t
+rest.’
+
+‘No objections, sir. If you’d brought a casebottle with a trifle of
+spirit it might have been welcome.’
+
+‘I am sorry that I omitted to provide myself with such a thing,’
+answered Lucius politely.
+
+He showed the detective the door opening upon the secret staircase, and
+told him not to leave the brewhouse while he, Lucius, went up-stairs to
+see that all was right on the upper floor.
+
+‘If the man who came last night should come again to-night, he will try
+to enter by that door,’ said Lucius, pointing to the door by which he
+had just come in. ‘Leave it open, and your light burning just where it
+is. He’ll take that to mean that all’s right, most likely. But be sure
+you keep in the background yourself till he’s fairly inside.’
+
+‘I hope I know my business, sir,’ replied the detective with dignity.
+
+Lucius went through the back premises to the hall. The doors in the
+interior of the house had been left open for the convenience of the
+watchers. His footsteps, cautiously as he trod, resounded on the
+stone-paved floor; so at the foot of the staircase he drew off his
+boots, and went up-stairs noiselessly in his stockings. He thought
+of Mr. Sivewright’s complaint of that mysterious foot-fall which had
+disturbed his slumbers in the deep of night,—the footstep of the secret
+assassin. To-night he was surely guarded. From the lower part of the
+house no one could approach him without the knowledge of the watcher
+lying in wait below.
+
+But how about those upper rooms, in one of whose windows he had seen
+the light burning last night? Was there not some mystery there? He
+determined to explore that topmost story, now, in the darkness of the
+night even, rather than leave his doubts unsatisfied.
+
+Vain determination! The door of communication between the corridor and
+the upper staircase was locked. He tried it with a cautious hand, and
+found it firmly secured against him. Then he remembered how Lucille
+had locked that door and put the key in her pocket after they came
+down-stairs from the loft.
+
+If that door had been locked and the key in Lucille’s possession last
+night, how came the light in the upper window? That was a new problem
+for him to solve.
+
+He crept along the passage, and listened at the old man’s door. He
+could hear his patient’s breathing, laboured but regular. There was no
+other sound in the room.
+
+He waited here for some time, listening; but there was nothing save
+the old man’s breathing to disturb the stillness, nothing until from
+Lucille’s room there came the sound of a long deep sigh—a sigh from a
+heart sorely oppressed.
+
+That sound smote his own heart with unspeakable pain. It betrayed such
+deep unhappiness—a sorrow which could only find vent in the dead of the
+night, in deep heartbroken sighs.
+
+‘Is it her grandfather’s danger that makes her so unhappy?’ he
+wondered. ‘Strange; for the old man has never been particularly kind to
+her—has always kept her at arm’s length, as it were. Yet, I daresay,
+to her tender nature the thought of approaching death is too terrible.
+She cannot face the inevitable doom; she lies awake and broods upon the
+approaching calamity. Poor child! if she but knew how baseless has been
+her dream of a father’s love, how vainly her tenderest feelings have
+been wasted on a wretch who has not even the poor claim of kindred to
+her love!’
+
+For more than an hour he waited, sometimes outside his patient’s door,
+sometimes by Lucille’s; but nothing happened to alarm him throughout
+his watch, and he knew the approach to the secret staircase was
+securely guarded. No intruder could reach Mr. Sivewright’s room that
+night, at any rate.
+
+Lucius went down-stairs at last, and smoked a cigar in the brewhouse
+while the detective took his round through all the lower rooms. Thus
+the night wore away, and in the gray dawn Lucius once more mounted the
+stairs, and paced the corridor. Again all was silence. This time he
+heard no sigh from Lucille. His heart was relieved by the thought that
+she was sleeping peacefully.
+
+With the dawn—Aurora the rosy-fingered showing poorly at this east-end
+of London—he made his way back by the garden-wall, the barges, and the
+wharf, and returned to his own abode, which looked sordid and cheerless
+enough beneath the pale light of newborn day—cold and dreary and poor,
+lacking the picturesqueness of a lodge in the primeval forest, and
+but slightly surpassing it in luxury. He laid himself down and tried
+his hardest to sleep; but the thought of old Homer Sivewright and his
+hidden enemy, the domestic poisoner, drove away slumber.
+
+‘I shall sleep no more till I have fathomed this mystery,’ he said to
+himself wearily.
+
+But at last, when the sun was shining through the poor screen afforded
+by a calico blind, he did fall into a kind of sleep, or rather that
+feverish condition which is neither sleeping nor waking. From this
+state he woke with a start—that kind of shock which jars the nerves of
+the dreamer when his vision ends on the brink of a precipice, whence he
+feels himself descending to fathomless depths below. His forehead was
+damp with a nameless horror; he trembled as he rose in his bed.
+
+It was as if a voice had spoken in his ear as he slept.
+
+‘What if Lucille were the poisoner?’
+
+Great Heaven! how could so vile a thought shape itself in his mind? Yet
+with the thought there arose before him, as if it had been shown to
+him upon the open pages of a book, all those circumstances which might
+seem to point to this hideous conclusion. Who else, in that lonely old
+house, had the same power to approach the patient? In whom else would
+Homer Sivewright trust as blindly?
+
+He remembered Lucille’s agitation when he first hinted the possibility
+of poison—that whitening cheek, that sudden look of horror. Might not
+guilt look thus?
+
+And then her emotion yesterday morning, when she had dropped lifeless
+at his feet? Could anything _but_ guilt be thus stricken?
+
+‘O God,’ he cried, ‘I am surely going mad! Or how else could such
+horrible thoughts enter my mind? Do I not know her to be good and
+pure, loving, unselfish, compassionate? And with the conviction of her
+goodness firmly rooted in my heart, can I for one moment fear,—ay,
+even though circumstances should weave a web of proof around her,
+leaving not one loophole for escape?’
+
+He wrenched his thoughts away from the facts which seemed to condemn
+the woman he so deeply loved, and by a great effort of will dismissed a
+fancy which seemed the most cruel treason against love.
+
+‘Does the evil one inspire our dreams sometimes?’ he wondered. ‘So vile
+a thought could never have entered my head if a voice had not whispered
+the hateful suggestion into my sleeping ear. But there shall be an end
+at once of suspicion and of mystery. I will no longer treat Lucille as
+a child. I frightened her more by my hints and suggestions than I could
+have done had I told her the plain facts. I will trust to her firmness
+and fortitude, and tell her all without reserve—the discovery of the
+attempted poisoning, the robbery, the secret entrance of the man I
+watched the night before last. I will trust her most fully.’
+
+This resolve gave extreme relief to his mind. He dressed hurriedly,
+took a brief breakfast of his own preparation, Mrs. Babb the charwoman
+not yet having left her domestic circle to minister to his wants, and
+at half-past eight o’clock found himself once more outside the iron
+gate which shut in the chief object of his love. Mrs. Wincher admitted
+him with a solemn and mournful visage.
+
+‘Is there anything amiss?’ asked Lucius anxiously.
+
+‘I don’t believe there’ll ever be anything more in this blessed
+house that isn’t amiss,’ answered Mrs. Wincher obscurely, but with a
+despondent air that augered ill.
+
+‘Mr. Sivewright is worse, I suppose,’ said Lucius.
+
+‘Mr. Sivewright is much as usual, grumble, grumble—this here don’t
+agree with him, and that there turns sour on his stomach, and so
+on—enough to worrit folks into early graves. But there’s a deal more
+the matter than that this morning.’
+
+‘For Heaven’s sake, speak plainly,’ cried Lucius impatiently.
+
+‘Our missy is in a burning fever. She was heavy and lollopy-like all
+yesterday afternoon, and her cheeks, that have been as white as a
+chaney tea-plate latterly, was red and hot-looking, and she slept heavy
+and breathed short in her sleep, for I stood and watched her; and she
+moved about in a languid way that wasn’t a bit like her quick light
+ways when she’s well. But I thought it was nothink more than what you
+says yourself yesterday morning—want of rest. I should ’ave thought you
+might ’ave knowed she was sickening for a fever,’ added Mrs. Wincher
+reproachfully.
+
+‘Misfortune does not always declare itself so plainly. I could see that
+she was ill, and that was all. God grant the fever may not be very
+much, after all!’
+
+‘Not very much!’ exclaimed Mrs. Wincher. ‘Why, when I took her a hearly
+cup of tea at half-past seven this morning, which was as soon as I
+could get my kittle boiled, she was raving like a lunatic—going on
+about her father, and such-like—in a dreadful way, and didn’t recognise
+me no more nor if I’d been a stranger out of the street.’
+
+This was a bad hearing; but Lucius bore the shock calmly enough.
+Troubles and perplexities had rained thickly upon him of late, and
+there is a kind of stoicism which grows out of familiarity with sorrow.
+
+‘Take me to Miss Sivewright’s room,’ he said quietly, ‘and let me see
+what is the matter.’
+
+‘I’ve moved her out of the little dressing-room into her own room,’
+said Mrs. Wincher; ‘me and my good gentleman carried the bed with her
+on it while she was asleep. I thought as how it wouldn’t do for her
+grandpa to hear her carrying on that wild.’
+
+‘You were right enough there. Yet she was a faithful guardian, and
+your master is now in the power of his foes.’
+
+‘Foes, sir? What foes can he have in this house?’
+
+‘The same people who found their way to the plate in the muniment chest
+might find their way to Mr. Sivewright’s room,’ said Lucius.
+
+‘Lor, sir, how you do frighten one! But what harm could even thieves
+and robbers want to do to a harmless old man, unless he stood between
+’em and the property?’
+
+‘I won’t stop to discuss that question with you now, Mrs. Wincher. I
+shall have something to say to you and your husband presently. Have the
+detectives gone?’
+
+‘Yes, sir; but they’re coming back the same time to-night. One of ’em
+left a bit of a note for you. It’s on the kitchen chimleypiece. I’ll
+run and fetch it if you like.’
+
+‘Not till you have taken me to Miss Sivewright’s room. Is she alone all
+this time?’
+
+‘Yes, sir; but she was asleep when I left her. She dozes off every now
+and then.’
+
+‘She must have a nurse to watch her, sleeping or waking.’
+
+Mrs. Wincher led the way up-stairs, and to one of the doors in the
+corridor out of which Mr. Sivewright’s room opened. For the first time
+Lucius found himself in Lucille’s room—a spacious airy apartment, with
+three windows deep set in the solid walls, and provided with broad
+oak window-seats. A scantily furnished chamber, yet with that grace
+and prettiness of aspect which a girl’s taste can give to the poorest
+surroundings. There were books, a few water-coloured sketches on the
+walls, a few oddments of old china tastefully disposed on the high oak
+chimneypiece, white muslin curtains to the windows, a well-worn Persian
+carpet in the centre of the dark oak floor—everywhere the most perfect
+neatness, cleanliness the most scrupulous.
+
+Lucille was sleeping when Lucius and Mrs. Wincher entered; but at the
+sound of her lover’s footsteps, lightly as he trod, she started, opened
+her eyes, and looked at him.
+
+O, how sad to see those sweet eyes looking at him thus, without
+recognition! how sad to mark that dreamy unconscious stare in eyes that
+yesterday had been full of meaning! Lucius sank into a chair by the
+bed, fairly overcome. It was some moments before he was sufficiently
+master of himself to approach the case professionally, to go through
+the usual formula, with an aching heart.
+
+She was very ill, with such an illness as might have been easily
+induced by long-continued anxiety and want of rest—anxious days,
+sleepless nights. The gravest feature in the case was the delirium—the
+inability to recognise familiar faces.
+
+‘Lucille,’ he said, in a low tender voice, ‘don’t you know me?’
+
+She did not answer him. Her head moved wearily on the pillow from side
+to side, while her lips murmured faintly. Lucius bent over her to catch
+the words.
+
+‘You shouldn’t have come here, father,’ she said, ‘if you couldn’t
+forgive him. But no, no, you could not do him any harm—you could
+not be so vile as that. I have loved you so dearly. Papa, don’t you
+remember—the violin—our happy evenings?’
+
+Thus the parched lips went on, in low broken murmurs, which were
+sometimes quite unintelligible.
+
+‘It’s been all her father since she was took that way,’ said Mrs.
+Wincher.
+
+‘Strange that her mind should brood thus upon that one memory,’ thought
+Lucius—‘the one tender remembrance of her childhood.’
+
+He lingered for some time by the bedside, listening to those indistinct
+murmurs in which the name of ‘father’ was so often repeated. Then he
+began to consider what he must do to secure the safety of this beloved
+sufferer.
+
+To leave her in the custody of people whom he believed guilty of the
+deepest iniquity was not to be dreamed of. He must get rid of these
+Winchers at any hazard, bring in a sick nurse upon whose fidelity
+he could rely, and, so far as it was possible, keep watch upon the
+premises himself by day and night.
+
+Get rid of the Winchers? How was that to be done? He had no authority
+for their dismissal.
+
+There was one way, he thought, hazardous perhaps for his patient, but
+tolerably certain of immediate success. He must inform Mr. Sivewright
+of the robbery, and state on whom his suspicions fell. There was little
+doubt that on learning he had been robbed the _bric-à-brac_ dealer
+would dismiss his old servants. The first thing to be done was to get
+the sick nurse and secure Lucille’s safety, come what might.
+
+He told Mrs. Wincher that he would return in half an hour or so to see
+her master, and left the house without giving her any farther hint as
+to his intention. He knew of a nurse in the immediate neighbourhood, a
+woman of the comfortable motherly order, of whose ministrations among
+his patients he had had ample experience, and he hailed the first cab
+that hove in sight, and drove off in quest of this honest matron.
+Fortune favoured him. Mrs. Milderson, the nurse—like Mrs. Gamp, sick
+and monthly—had just returned from an interesting case in the West
+India-road.
+
+On this worthy woman Lucius descended like a whirlwind: would hardly
+give her time to rummage up an apron or two and a clean print gown, let
+alone her brush and comb—as she said plaintively—ere he whisked her
+into the devouring jaws of the hansom, which swallowed her up, bundle
+and all, and conveyed her with almost electric speed to Cedar House.
+
+Mrs. Wincher stared amain at this interloper, and would fain have kept
+her on the outer side of the iron gate.
+
+‘And pray, Dr. Davory, what may this good lady want?’ she asked,
+surveying the nurse and bundle with looks of withering scorn.
+
+‘This good lady’s name is Milderson; she is an honest and trustworthy
+person, and she has come to nurse Miss Sivewright.’
+
+‘May I ask, Dr. Davory, by whose orders?’
+
+‘By mine, the young lady’s medical attendant and her future husband,’
+answered Lucius. ‘This way, if you please, Milderson. I’ll talk to you
+presently, Mrs. Wincher.’
+
+He passed that astonished female, who stood agape, staring after him
+with bewildered looks, and then raising her eyes aloft to outraged
+Heaven—
+
+‘And me not thought good enough to nurse our missy!’ she ejaculated.
+‘Me, that took her through the measles, and had her on my lap three
+blessed days and nights with the chicken-pox. I couldn’t have thought
+it of you, Dr. Davory. And a stranger brought into this house without
+by your leave nor with your leave! Who’s to be respounceable for the
+safety of the bricklebrack after this, I should like to know!’
+
+Having propounded this question to the unresponsive sky, Mrs. Wincher
+uttered a loud groan, as if disappointed at receiving no answer, and
+then slowly dragged her weary way to the house, sliding one slippered
+foot after the other in deepest dejection. She walked up-stairs with
+the same slipshod step, and waited in the corridor outside Lucille’s
+room with folded arms and a countenance in which a blank stare had
+succeeded to the workings of indignation.
+
+This stony visage confronted Lucius when he emerged from the sick room,
+after about a quarter of an hour employed in giving directions to Mrs.
+Milderson.
+
+‘Do you mean to say, Dr. Davory, that I’m not to nurse my young
+missy?’ asked Mrs. Wincher, stifled emotion trembling in every accent.
+
+‘That is my intention, Mrs. Wincher,’ answered Lucius severely. ‘First
+and foremost, you are not an experienced nurse; and secondly, I cannot
+trust you.’
+
+‘Not experienced, after taking that blessed dear through the
+chicken-pox—which she had it worse than ever chicken-pox was knowed
+within the memory of the chemist round the corner, in Condick-street,
+where I got the gray powders as I gave her—and after walking about with
+her in the measles till I was ready to drop! Not to be trusted after
+five-and-twenty years’ faithful service! O, Dr. Davory, I couldn’t have
+thought it of you!’
+
+‘Five-and-twenty years’ service is a poor certificate if the service
+ends in robbery and attempted murder,’ answered Lucius quietly.
+
+‘Attempted murder!’ echoed Mrs. Wincher, aghast.
+
+‘Yes, that’s a terrible word, Mrs. Wincher, isn’t it? And this is
+the worst of all murders—domestic murder—the slow and secret work of
+the poisoner, whose stealthy hand introduces death into the medicine
+that should heal, the food that should nourish. Of all forms of
+assassination there can be none so vile as that.’
+
+Mrs. Wincher uttered no syllable of reply. She could only gaze at the
+speaker in dumb wonderment. She began to fear that this young man was
+going mad.
+
+‘He’s been eggziting and werrying of hisself till he’s on the high road
+to a lunacy asylum,’ she said to herself presently, when Lucius had
+passed her and gone into Mr. Sivewright’s room.
+
+‘You took away my medicine yesterday morning,’ said the invalid in his
+most querulous tone, ‘and sent me none to replace it. However, as I
+feel much better without it, your physic was no loss.’
+
+‘Pardon my inattention,’ said Lucius. ‘And you really feel better
+without the medicine? Those troublesome symptoms have abated, eh?’
+
+They had abated, Mr. Sivewright said, and he went on to describe his
+condition, in which there was positive improvement.
+
+‘I’m glad to find you so much better,’ Lucius said, ‘for you will be
+able to hear some rather disagreeable intelligence. You have been
+robbed.’
+
+‘Robbed!’ cried the old man, starting up in his bed as if moved by
+a galvanic battery. ‘Robbed! Yes, I thought as much when I heard
+those footsteps. Robbed! My collection rifled of its gems, I suppose.
+The Capo di Monte—the Copenhagen—the old Roman medals in the ebony
+cabinet—the Boucher tapestry!’ he exclaimed, running over the catalogue
+of his treasures breathlessly.
+
+‘These are safe, for anything I know to the contrary. You had a
+monstrance in silver-gilt?’
+
+‘Gold!’ cried the old man; ‘twenty-carat gold! I had it assayed. I gave
+thirty pounds for that monstrance to an old scoundrel who was going to
+break it up for the sake of the gems, and who believed it was lacquer.
+It had been stolen from some foreign church, no doubt. The emeralds
+alone are worth two hundred pounds. You don’t mean to tell me I’ve been
+robbed of that?’
+
+‘I’m sorry to say that and some pieces of old silver are missing; but I
+hope to recover them.’
+
+‘Recover the dead from the bottom of the sea and bring them to life
+again!’ cried Mr. Sivewright vehemently. ‘You might do that as easily
+as the other. Why, those things were in the muniment chest, and Wincher
+had the key. He has kept that key for the last twenty years.’
+
+‘Some one has found his way to the chest in spite of Mr. Wincher’s
+care,’ answered Lucius gravely.
+
+He went on to relate the particulars of the robbery. The old man got
+out of bed while he was talking, and began to drag on his clothes with
+trembling hands.
+
+‘I will not lie here to be plundered,’ he exclaimed, profoundly
+agitated.
+
+‘Now, that is what I feared,’ cried Lucius. ‘If you do not obey me
+implicitly, I shall repent having told you the truth. You must remain
+in this room till you are strong enough to leave it. You can surely
+trust me to protect the property in which your generous confidence has
+given me the strongest interest.’
+
+‘True, you are as much interested as I am,’ muttered the old man; ‘nay,
+more so, for life is before you, and is nearly over with me. _My_
+interest in these things is a vanishing one; yet I doubt if there would
+be rest for me in the grave if those fruits of my life’s labour were in
+jeopardy.’
+
+‘Will you trust me to take care of this house and all it contains?’
+asked Lucius anxiously. ‘Will you give me authority to dismiss these
+Winchers, whom I cannot but suspect of complicity with the thief,
+whoever he may be?’
+
+‘Yes, dismiss them. They have robbed me, no doubt. I was a fool to
+trust old Wincher with the key of that chest; but he has served me so
+long, and I thought there was a dog-like fidelity in his nature, that
+he would be content to grub on to the end of his days, asking nothing
+more than food and shelter. I thought it was against his interests to
+rob me. At his age a man should cling to his home as a mussel sticks to
+his rock. The fellow is as sober as an anchorite. One would suppose he
+could have no motive for dishonesty. But you had better dismiss him.’
+
+‘I have your permission to do so?’
+
+‘Yes.’
+
+‘Thank you, sir. It seems a hard thing, but I am convinced it is the
+right course. I will get your house taken good care of, depend upon it.’
+
+‘I trust you implicitly,’ answered the old man, with a faint sigh,
+half fatigue, half despondency. ‘You are the only friend I have upon
+earth—except Lucille. Why has she not been to me this morning?’
+
+‘She is not very well. Anxiety and want of rest have prostrated her for
+a little while.’
+
+‘Ill!’ said Mr. Sivewright anxiously; ‘that is bad. Poor little
+Lucille!’
+
+‘Pray don’t be uneasy about her; be assured I shall be watchful.’
+
+‘Yes, I am sure of that.’
+
+‘I have brought in a nurse—now, you mustn’t be angry with me, though in
+this matter I have disobeyed you—a thoroughly honest, competent woman,
+who will attend to you and Lucille too.’
+
+‘I detest strangers,’ said Mr. Sivewright; ‘but I suppose I must submit
+to the inevitable.’
+
+‘Now, I want your permission to remain in the house for a night or
+two. I would stay altogether, were it not for the possibility of night
+patients. I can occupy the little room next this, and shall be at hand
+to attend you. Lucille has returned to her own room.’
+
+‘Do as you please,’ answered Mr. Sivewright with wonderful resignation,
+‘so long as you protect me from robbery.’
+
+‘With God’s help I will protect you from every peril. By the way, since
+you say my medicine has done you no good, you shall take no more. Your
+food shall be prepared according to my directions, and brought you by
+Mrs. Milderson, the nurse. I told you some time ago that yours was a
+case in which I attached more importance to diet than to drugs. And now
+I’ll go and settle matters with Mr. and Mrs. Wincher.’
+
+He had not far to go. Mrs. Wincher was still in the corridor, waiting
+for him with stony visage and folded arms.
+
+‘I should be glad to see your husband, Mrs. Wincher,’ said Lucius.
+
+‘My good gentleman is down-stairs, sir, and will be happy to wait upon
+you direckly minute.’
+
+Lucius went down to the hall with Mrs. Wincher. Her good gentleman was
+pottering about among his master’s treasures, with a dusting-brush.
+
+‘Mr. Wincher,’ said Lucius without preamble, ‘I have come to the
+determination that, under the very unpleasant circumstances which
+have arisen in this house, plain sailing is the wisest course. I have
+therefore informed Mr. Sivewright of the robbery.’
+
+‘Indeed, sir! I should have thought you’d hardly have ventured that
+while he’s so ill. And how did he take it?’
+
+‘Better than I expected: but he agreed with me as to the necessity of a
+step which I proposed to him.’
+
+‘What might that be, sir?’
+
+‘That you and Mrs. Wincher should immediately leave this house.’
+
+The old man, who was feeble and somewhat bowed with age and hard work,
+drew himself up with an offended dignity that might have become a
+prince of the blood-royal.
+
+‘If that is my master’s decision I am ready to go, sir,’ he said,
+without a quaver in his weak old voice. ‘If that is my master’s
+decision after five-and-twenty years’ faithful service, I cannot go
+too soon. Deborah, get our bits of things together, my dear, as fast as
+you conveniently can, while I go out and look about me for a room.’
+
+‘Lemaître, at his best, was not a finer actor than this old man,’
+thought Lucius. ‘It is the perfection of art.’
+
+Mrs. Wincher only stared and breathed hard. In her, indignation had
+paralysed the power of speech.
+
+‘If it were a mere question of the robbery,’ said Lucius, ‘I should not
+have counselled your dismissal. It would have gone hard with me if,
+once put upon my guard, I could not have protected the property in this
+house. But there is one thing more valuable than a man’s property, and
+more difficult to protect, and that is his life. The reason of your
+dismissal, Mr. Wincher, is that there has been an attempt made by some
+one in this house—and you best know how many it contains—to poison your
+old master.’
+
+‘Poison!’ echoed Jacob Wincher helplessly.
+
+‘Yes, I discovered arsenic last night in a half-filled medicine bottle
+which I took from your master’s room. Some one had introduced arsenic
+into the medicine since it left my hands. Mr. Sivewright’s symptoms of
+late have been those of arsenical poisoning. Under such circumstances
+you can hardly wonder that I wish to bring about a change of occupants
+in this house.’
+
+‘No, sir,’ answered the old man, ‘I don’t wonder. Poison!—a poisoner
+at work in this house where we have watched so faithfully! It is too
+horrible. It is a mystery beyond my power to fathom. There have been
+only three of us in the house—my wife, and Miss Lucille, and me. And
+you think it was I or my wife that put poison into that bottle. Well, I
+can’t wonder at that. It couldn’t be Miss Lucille, so it lies between
+my wife and me. We’re best out of the house, sir, after that. This
+house is no place for us. I hope you’ll contrive to take good care of
+my master when we’re gone, and I pray God that it may please Him in His
+good time to enlighten your mind about us, and to show, somehow, that
+neither I nor my good lady have tried to murder the master we’ve served
+faithfully for a quarter of a century.’
+
+‘If you are innocent, Mr. Wincher, I trust that fact may be speedily
+demonstrated. In the mean time you can hardly wonder that I think this
+house a safer place without your presence in it.’
+
+‘No, sir, that’s natural enough. Deborah, my good soul, will you get
+together those things of ours? The sooner the better.’
+
+‘I’ll do what I can,’ answered Mrs. Wincher, with a gasp; ‘but I don’t
+feel as if I had the proper use of my limbs.’
+
+‘There’s the catalogue, sir,’ suggested Jacob Wincher. ‘Hadn’t we
+better go through that before I leave, and see what is right and what
+isn’t? It’ll take some time, but it will be for the satisfaction of
+both parties. I’ve one catalogue, sir, and Mr. Sivewright another.’
+
+‘You are vastly conscientious, sir,’ said Lucius; ‘but as it would
+take at least a day to go through these things, and as my ignorance
+unfits me for the task, I think I will take my chance, and not oppose
+any hindrance to your prompt departure. I’ll wait hereabouts till Mrs.
+Wincher is ready.’
+
+‘As you please, sir. In that case I’ll go off at once and look about me
+for a room.’
+
+‘Stay, Mr. Wincher,’ cried Lucius, as the old man shuffled off towards
+the door; ‘I should be sorry for you to leave this house penniless.
+Here are a couple of sovereigns, which will enable you to live for a
+week or so while you look for a new service.’
+
+‘A new service, sir!’ echoed Jacob Wincher bitterly. ‘Do you think that
+at my age situations are plentiful? No, sir, thank you; I couldn’t
+take money from you, not if it was to save me from starvation. I shall
+seek no new service. Mr. Sivewright was never a very liberal paymaster,
+and since we came to this house he has given us no wages except a small
+allowance for our food. But our wants are few, and we contrived to save
+the best part of our wages while we were in Bond-street. No, sir, I am
+not afraid to face the world, hard as it is to the old. I shall get
+a few odd jobs to do among the poor folks, I daresay, even without a
+character, and I shall be able to rub along somehow.’
+
+Thus refusing Lucius’s proffered aid, Jacob Wincher put on his hat and
+went out. Lucius went into the room which contained the chief part of
+Mr. Sivewright’s collection, and waited there with the door open until
+Mr. Wincher’s good lady should make her appearance, ready for departure.
+
+He looked round at the chaotic mass of property wonderingly. How much
+had been plundered? The shabby old glass cases of china seemed full
+enough, yet who could tell how they had been thinned by the dexterous
+hand of one who knew the exact value of each separate object? It seemed
+hard that the fruit of Homer Sivewright’s toil should have been thus
+lessened; it seemed strange that he, who was a professed cynic, should
+have so entirely trusted his old servant, only to be victimised by him
+at last.
+
+Mrs. Wincher made her appearance, after an interval of about half an
+hour, laden with three bundles of various shapes and sizes, but all
+of the limpest description, two bandboxes, an ancient and dilapidated
+umbrella, a small collection of hardware in a hamper without a lid,
+a faded Paisley shawl across her arm, a bottle-green cloth cloak of
+antediluvian shape and style, and sundry small oddments in the way of
+pattens, a brown-crockery teapot, a paste-board, and a pepperbox.
+
+‘They’re our few little comforts, sir,’ she said apologetically, as
+divers of these minor objects slid from her grasp and rolled upon
+the stone floor of the hall. ‘I suppose if we was sent to Newgate as
+pisoners we shouldn’t be allowed to have ’em; but as there’s no crime
+brought against us _yet_’—with profoundest irony—‘I’ve took the liberty
+to bring ’em. Perhaps you’d like to look through my bundles, Dr.
+Davory, to make sure as there’s none of the bricklebrack hidden amongst
+my good gentleman’s wardrobe.’
+
+‘No, thank you, Mrs. Wincher. I won’t trouble you to open your
+bundles,’ answered Lucius, whose keen eye had taken note of the manner
+of goods contained in those flabby envelopes.
+
+Thus absolved from the necessity of exhibiting these treasures, Mrs.
+Wincher built them up in a neat pyramid by the side of the hall-door,
+with infinite pains, as if the monument were intended to be permanent,
+and then seated herself meekly on the lowest step of the staircase.
+
+‘I suppose as there’s no objections to my resting my pore feet a bit,
+Dr. Davory,’ she said plaintively, ‘though me and my good gentleman is
+dismissed.’
+
+‘You are quite at liberty to rest yourself, Mrs. Wincher,’ replied
+Lucius. ‘But I don’t mean to take my eye off you till you’re out of
+this house,’ he added mentally.
+
+He paced the hall and the room adjoining till the bell at the outer
+gate announced Jacob Wincher’s return. Mrs. Wincher went to admit
+her lord and master, who presently appeared with a small truck or
+hand-barrow, in which, aided by his wife, he deposited the pyramid of
+goods and chattels, which process involved a good deal more careful
+fitting-in of curiously-shaped objects into odd corners. Everything,
+however, having been finally adjusted to the satisfaction of both
+parties, Mr. Wincher reëntered the house for the last time, while Mrs.
+Wincher waited on the steps, and delivered the keys to Lucius. Every
+key was neatly labelled with a slip of parchment, whereon was inscribed
+its number in Homer Sivewright’s crabbed penmanship.
+
+‘Those are all the keys, sir, just as my master gave them to me when
+we first came here,’ said Jacob Wincher. ‘I’ve got a bit of a lodging.
+Perhaps you’d be kind enough to take down the address, as I should be
+glad to learn if ever you find out the real party that took the silver
+out of the chest, and likewise tampered with the medicine.’
+
+‘If ever I find any evidence of your innocence you shall hear of it,
+Mr. Wincher,’ answered Lucius gravely. ‘What is the address?’
+
+‘Mrs. Hickett’s, Crown-and-Anchor-alley, Bridge-street, sir; not a
+quarter of an hour’s walk from here.’
+
+Lucius wrote the address in his pocket-book without another word.
+
+This last duty performed the Winchers departed, and Lucius felt that he
+had taken the one step most likely to insure the safety of his patient.
+
+‘If not they, who else?’ he said to himself, thinking of the arsenic in
+the medicine bottle.
+
+He went once more to Lucille’s room, but hardly crossed the threshold.
+The sick girl was sleeping, and the nurse gave a very fair account of
+her. He told Mrs. Milderson her duties—how she was to attend to Mr.
+Sivewright as well as to his granddaughter, and told her furthermore
+how he had just dismissed the old servants.
+
+‘I am going in search of some one to take their place,’ he said, having
+made up his mind upon that point some time ago.
+
+He went round the lower part of the house, tried all the keys, saw
+that all the doors were secured—those opening on the garden bolted and
+barred as firmly as if they had belonged to a besieged citadel. He
+looked through all the labels, but found no key to the staircase door
+up-stairs; a circumstance that annoyed him, as he had a particular
+desire to examine those rooms on the top story. Then, having made all
+safe, he went out, locking the hall-door and the iron gate after him,
+and proceeded straightway to Mr. Otranto’s office.
+
+Here he told that functionary exactly what he had done. Mr. Otranto
+chewed the end of his pen, and smiled upon his client with the calm
+smile of intellectual superiority.
+
+‘Now, I daresay you think you’ve been and gone and done a very clever
+thing,’ he said, when Lucius had unbosomed himself; ‘but I can just
+tell you you’re on the wrong tack—a good hundred knots out of your
+course. That old party isn’t in the robbery; and as to the pison,
+it’s not for me to argue with a professional gent like you; no sorter
+should alter his crepidam, as we say in the Classics; but I wouldn’t
+mind laying even money that the pison is only your fancy. You’ve been
+worriting yourself about this blessed business till you’ve got nervous,
+so you goes and sniffs at the physic, and jumps at the conclusion that
+it’s poisoned.’
+
+‘I have not jumped at any conclusion,’ replied Lucius. ‘My opinion is
+supported by an infallible test.’
+
+He told Mr. Otranto that he wanted to find a thoroughly honest man and
+woman, who would take the place of the Winchers at Cedar House—a man
+who would act as night watchman, and a woman who would perform such
+trifling domestic duties as were needed. Mr. Otranto, who had minions
+of all kinds at his beck and call, did know of just such a couple—an
+ex-policeman, who had left the force on account of an accident that had
+lamed him, and a tidy body, the ex-policeman’s wife. If Mr. Davoren
+wished, they should be at Cedar House in two hours’ time.
+
+‘Let them meet me at the gate at three o’clock,’ said Lucius. ‘I must
+go round among my patients in the mean while.’
+
+His day’s work still waited to be done, and it was long past
+twelve—dinner-time in the Shadrack district. He had to endure
+reproachful looks from some of his patients, but bore all with perfect
+good-temper, and did his very best for all. Happily the people believed
+in him, and were grateful for all the good he had done among them.
+
+At three o’clock he was at the iron gate, where he found Mr. Magsby,
+the ex-policeman, and his wife—a comfortable-looking young woman with
+a bundle and a baby, for which latter encumbrance Lucius had not
+bargained, and for which Mrs. Magsby duly apologised.
+
+‘Which Mr. Otranter may not have told you, sir, as I couldn’t leave the
+baby behind, but she’s as good a little dear as ever drew breath, and
+never cries, and in a large house will be no ill-convenience.’
+
+‘Perhaps not, if she never cries,’ said Lucius, ‘but if she does cry,
+you must smother her, rather than let her voice be heard up-stairs.’
+And then he touched the small cheek kindly with his finger, and smiled
+upon the little one, after a fashion which at once won Mrs. Magsby’s
+heart.
+
+Mr. Magsby’s lameness was little more than a halt in his walk,
+and, although sufficient to disable him as a public servant, was no
+hindrance to him as a night-watchman. Altogether Lucius decided that
+the Magsbys would do. He inducted them in the gloomy old kitchen
+and the room with the presses, where Mr. and Mrs. Wincher’s turn-up
+bedstead yawned disconsolate and empty, and where there were such bits
+of humble furniture as would suffice for the absolute needs of life.
+
+Mrs. Magsby pronounced the apartments roomy and commodious, but
+somewhat wanting in cheerfulness. ‘But me and Magsby have took care of
+all manner of houses,’ she added with resignation, ‘and we can make
+ourselves comfortable amost anywheres, purvided we’ve a bit o’ firing
+to bile the kettle for our cup o’ tea and a mouthful of victuals.’
+
+Lucius showed Mr. Magsby the premises—the door opening upon the hidden
+staircase, all the ins and outs of the place—and told him what was
+expected of him.
+
+After this induction of the Magsbys, he went up-stairs and saw Lucille.
+She was awake, but her mind still wandered. She looked at him with a
+far-off unrecognising gaze that went to his heart, and murmured some
+broken sentence, in which the name of ‘father’ was the only word he
+could distinctly hear.
+
+‘Pray to our Father in heaven, dearest,’ said Lucius, tenderly
+supporting the weary head, which moved so restlessly upon the pillow.
+‘He is the only Father who never wrongs His children; in whose love and
+wisdom we can believe, come weal, come woe.’
+
+He stayed by the bedside a little while, gave his instructions to Mrs.
+Milderson, and then went to the other sick room.
+
+Here he found Mr. Sivewright, fretful and impatient, but decidedly
+improved since the suspension of the medicine; a fact which that
+gentleman dwelt upon in a somewhat cynical spirit.
+
+‘You may remember that at the beginning of our acquaintance I
+professed myself a sceptic with regard to medical science,’ he said
+with his harsh laugh, ‘and I cannot say that my experience even of
+your skill has been calculated to conquer my prejudices. You are a
+very good fellow, Lucius, but the only effect of your medicines for
+the last month or so has been to make me feel nearer death than ever
+I felt before. I seem to be twice the man I was since I left off that
+confounded tonic of yours.’
+
+‘I am very glad to hear it—not glad that the tonic has failed, but that
+you are better. Try to believe in me a little, however, in spite of
+this.’
+
+‘Have you sent away those thieves?’
+
+‘Mr. and Mrs. Wincher? Yes, they are gone.’
+
+‘So ends five-and-twenty years’ service! And I thought them faithful!’
+said Mr. Sivewright with a sigh. ‘And by what models of honesty have
+you replaced these traitors?’
+
+Lucius explained his arrangements, to which Mr. Sivewright gave but
+doubtful approval.
+
+He inquired anxiously about Lucille, and seemed grieved to find that
+she was too ill to come to him as usual.
+
+‘Though for these many years past I have doubted the existence of any
+relationship between us, she has made herself dear to me somehow,
+in spite of myself. God knows I have tried to shut my heart against
+her. When my son abandoned me, I swore never to care for any living
+creature—never again to subject myself to the anguish that an ingrate
+can inflict.’
+
+
+END OF VOL. II.
+
+
+ LONDON:
+ ROBSON AND SONS, PRINTERS, PANCRAS ROAD, N.W.
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber’s Notes
+
+ pg 8 Changed: You loved this mam!
+ to: You loved this man!
+
+ pg 152 Changed: conger eel and mackarel were unpopular
+ to: conger eel and mackerel were unpopular
+
+ pg 263 Changed: having no farther business there
+ to: having no further business there
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75876 ***
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+ <meta charset="UTF-8">
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+ Lucius Davoren Volume 2 | Project Gutenberg
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+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75876 ***</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 85%">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" data-role="presentation">
+</div>
+
+
+<h1>LUCIUS DAVOREN</h1>
+
+<p class="center no-indent fs80">OR</p>
+
+<p class="center no-indent fs120 wsp">PUBLICANS AND SINNERS</p>
+<br>
+<p class="center no-indent bold wsp">A Novel</p>
+<br>
+<p class="center no-indent fs90 wsp">BY THE AUTHOR OF</p>
+
+<p class="center no-indent wsp">‘LADY AUDLEY’S SECRET’</p>
+
+<p class="center no-indent fs80 wsp">ETC. ETC. ETC.</p>
+<br>
+<p class="center no-indent fs90 wsp">IN THREE VOLUMES</p>
+
+<p class="center no-indent fs120 wsp">VOL. II.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp15" id="titlr" style="max-width: 9.375em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/titlr.jpg" alt="" data-role="presentation">
+</figure>
+<br>
+<p class="center no-indent wsp">LONDON<br>
+<span class="fs120">JOHN MAXWELL AND CO.</span><br>
+<span class="fs80">4 SHOE LANE, FLEET STREET<br>
+1873<br>
+[<em>All rights reserved</em>]</span></p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center no-indent fs80">
+LONDON:<br>
+ROBSON AND SONS, PRINTERS, PANCRAS ROAD, N.W.<br>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_iii">[Pg iii]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS_OF_VOL_II">CONTENTS OF VOL. II.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp15" id="a003_deco" style="max-width: 19em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/a003_deco.jpg" alt="" data-role="presentation">
+</figure>
+<br>
+
+<table class="autotable lh">
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc bold" colspan="3">Book the First.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc fs80" colspan="3">(<em>Continued</em>).</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr fs70">CHAP.</td>
+<td class="tdl"></td>
+<td class="tdr fs70">PAGE</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XIV.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Geoffrey learns the Worst</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XV.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Beginning of a Mystery</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_20">20</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XVI.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">An unpleasant Discovery</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_41">41</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc bold" colspan="3"><br>Book the Second.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">I.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Geoffrey begins a Voyage of Discovery</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_64">64</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">II.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Lady Baker</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_82">82</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">III.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Lady Baker tells the Story of the Past</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_91">91</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">IV.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Lucius makes a Confession</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc bold" colspan="3"><br>Book the Third.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">I.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Change came o’er the Spirit of my Dream</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_132">132</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">II.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Lucius is puzzled</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_143">143</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">III.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Homer Sivewright’s last Will and Testament</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_151">151</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">IV.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">What Lucius saw betwixt Midnight and Morning</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_171">171</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_iv">[Pg iv]</span></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">V.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Lucius at Fault</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_183">183</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">VI.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Plunder of the Muniment Chest</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_191">191</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">VII.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The hidden Staircase</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">VIII.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Mr. Otranto pronounces an Opinion</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_228">228</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">IX.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Mystery of Lucille’s Parentage</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_237">237</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">X.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Mystic Music</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_256">256</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XI.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">At Fault</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_264">264</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XII.</span></td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Troubles thicken</span></td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_273">273</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
+
+<p class="center no-indent fs200 wsp bold">LUCIUS DAVOREN</p>
+</div>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp10" id="p001_deco" style="max-width: 19em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p001_deco.jpg" alt="" data-role="presentation">
+</figure>
+<br>
+
+<p class="center no-indent bold wsp">Book the First.</p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.<br>
+<span class="fs70">GEOFFREY LEARNS THE WORST.</span></h2>
+
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">They</span> had dined, and the letter was written. A week-old
+moon shone in the placid heaven; the tender
+night-stillness had descended upon the always quiet
+town; lights twinkled gaily from the casements of
+surrounding villas; like a string of jewels gleamed
+the lamps of the empty High-street. The slow river
+wound his sinuous course between the rushes and
+the willows with scarce a ripple. No sweeter air
+could have breathed among the leaves, no calmer
+sky could have o’er-canopied this earth on that night
+in Verona when young Romeo stole into Capulet’s
+garden under the midnight stars. It was a night
+made for lovers.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</span></p>
+
+<p>The clock struck the half hour after nine as
+Geoffrey left the hotel, with his friend’s letter in his
+pocket; assuredly a strange hour in which to visit a
+lady who had forbidden him to visit her at all. But
+a man who feels that he is taking a desperate step
+will hardly stop to consider the details of time or
+place which may render it a little more or less desperate.</p>
+
+<p>To approach the woman he loved armed with a
+letter from another man; to bring a stranger’s influence
+to bear upon her who had been deaf to his most
+passionate pleading; to say to her, ‘I myself have
+failed to touch your heart, but here is my bosom
+friend’s prayer in my behalf: will you grant to his
+vicarious wooing the grace you have persistently
+denied to me?’—what could seem madder, more
+utterly desperate, than such a course as this?</p>
+
+<p>Yet women are doubtless strange creatures—a
+fact which those classic poets and satirists whose
+opinions it had been his pleasing task to study had
+taken pains to impress on Mr. Hossack’s mind. He
+remembered Mrs. Bertram’s agitation in that brief
+scene with Lucius, her exalted sense of gratitude.
+It was just possible that she really might regard him,
+even at this hour, as the preserver of her child’s life—second
+only to Providence in that time of trouble.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</span>
+And if she thought of him thus, his influence might
+have some weight.</p>
+
+<p>‘Dear old fellow!’ thought Geoffrey affectionately;
+‘he wouldn’t let me see the letter. I daresay he has
+given me no end of a character,—like other written
+characters, which are generally of the florid order—praised
+me up to the skies. Will his eloquence
+move her to pity me, I wonder? I fear not. And I
+feel odiously caddish, going to deliver my own testimonials.’</p>
+
+<p>If he could have faced Lucius with any grace, it
+is possible that he would have turned back, even on
+the very threshold of Mrs. Bertram’s tiny garden.
+But after bringing his friend down from London,
+could he be so churlish as to reject his aid, let it be
+offered in what manner so ever?</p>
+
+<p>He plucked up his courage at sight of the lamp
+in her window—a gentle light. The upper half of
+the casement was open, and he heard the dreamy
+arpeggios of one of Mendelssohn’s Lieder played by
+the hand whose touch even his untutored ear knew
+so well. In another minute he was admitted by a
+neat little servant, who opened the door of the parlour
+unhesitatingly, and ushered him straightway in,
+assured that he had come to propose a new pupil,
+and regarding him as the harbinger of fortune.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘A gentleman, if you please ’m, to see you.’</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bertram rose from the piano, the graceful
+figure he knew so well, in the plain black dress, just
+as he had seen her the first time at the morning
+concert in Manchester-square—a certain lofty pose of
+the head, the dark eyes looking at him with a grave
+steady look, after just one briefest flash of glad surprise,
+just one faint quiver of the perfect lips.</p>
+
+<p>‘Mr. Hossack!’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, I know you have forbidden me to call upon
+you, and yet I dare to come, at this unseasonable
+hour, in defiance of your command. Forgive me,
+Mrs. Bertram, and for pity’s sake hear me. A man
+cannot go on living for ever betwixt earth and heaven.
+A time has come when I feel that I must either leave
+this place, and,’ with a faint tremble in his voice, ‘all
+that makes it dear to me, or remain to be happier
+than I am—happy, at least, in the possession of
+some sustaining hope. You remember my friend
+Davoren—’</p>
+
+<p>Remember him! Her cheek blanched even at
+the mention of his name.</p>
+
+<p>‘The doctor who came down to see your
+daughter?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes,’ she said, looking at him strangely; ‘I
+am not likely to forget Mr. Davoren.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘You are too grateful for a trifling service. Well,
+Davoren, my dear old friend, the best and truest
+friend I have, is here again.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Here!’ she cried, looking towards the door as if
+she expected to see it open to admit him. ‘O, I
+should so like to see him again.’</p>
+
+<p>‘He will be only too proud to call upon you to-morrow;
+but in the mean time he—Mrs. Bertram,
+you must forgive me for what I am going to say.
+Remember, Davoren is my friend, as near and dear
+to me as ever brother was to brother. I have told
+him the story of my hopeless love—’</p>
+
+<p>‘O, pray, pray, not that subject!’ she said, with
+a little movement of her hand, half in warning, half
+entreaty.</p>
+
+<p>‘I have told him all,’ continued Geoffrey, undeterred
+by that deprecating gesture, ‘and he has
+written to you, believing that his influence might
+move you a little in my favour. You will not refuse
+to read his letter, will you, Mrs. Bertram, or feel
+offended by his interference?’</p>
+
+<p>‘No,’ she said, holding out her hand to receive
+the letter; ‘I can refuse him nothing.’</p>
+
+<p>She betrayed neither surprise nor anger, but read
+the letter, which was somewhat long, with deepest
+interest. Her countenance, as she read, watched<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span>
+closely by her lover, betrayed stronger emotion than
+he had ever yet seen in that inscrutable face. Tears
+gathered on her eyelids ere she had finished, and at
+the end a half-stifled sob burst from that proud
+bosom.</p>
+
+<p>‘<em>His</em> eloquence has more power than mine,’ said
+Geoffrey, with kindling jealousy.</p>
+
+<p>‘He pleads well,’ she answered, with a slow sad
+smile—‘pleads as few men know how to plead for
+another. He urges me to be very frank with you,
+Mr. Hossack; bids me remember the priceless worth
+of a heart as true and noble as that you have offered
+me; entreats me, for the sake of my own happiness
+and of yours, to tell you the wretched story of my
+past life. And if, when all is told, wisdom or honour
+counsels you to leave me, why,’ with a faint broken
+laugh, ‘you have but to bid me good-bye, and go
+away, disenchanted and happy.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Happy without you! Never; nor do I believe
+your power to disenchant me.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Do not promise too much. My—this letter bids
+me do what, of my own free will, I never could have
+done—tell you the story of my life. Perhaps I had
+better write to you; yet no, it might be still more
+difficult. I will tell you all, at once. And then hate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span>
+me or despise me, as you will. You must at least
+remember that I have never courted your love.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I know that you have been the most cruel among
+women, the most inexorable—’</p>
+
+<p>‘I was not so once, but rather the weakest. Hear
+my story, as briefly, as plainly as I can tell it. Years
+ago I was a guest at a great lady’s house—a visitor
+among people who were above me in rank, but who
+were pleased to take a fancy to me, as the phrase
+goes, because I had some little talent for music. I
+sang and played well enough to amuse them and their
+guests. The lady was an amateur, raved about
+music, and delighted in bringing musical people
+about her. Among her favourites when I visited her
+was one who had a rare genius—a man with whom
+music was a second nature, whose whole being seemed
+to be absorbed by his art. Violinist, pianist, organist,
+with a power of passionate expression that gave a
+new magic even to the most familiar melodies, he
+seemed the very genius of music. I heard him, and,
+like my patroness, was enchanted. She was amused
+to see my delight; threw us much together; wove a
+little romance out of our companionship; made us
+play and sing together; and in a word, with the
+most innocent and kindly intentions, prepared the
+way for my deepest misery.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘You loved this man!’ cried Geoffrey, ready to
+hate him on that ground.</p>
+
+<p>‘Loved him! I thought so then. There are times
+when I believe I never really loved him, that the
+glamour which he cast around me was only the
+magic of his art. But for the time being my mind
+was utterly subjugated by his influence; I had no
+thought but of him, and, fascinated by his genius,
+deemed him worthy of a self-sacrificing love. He
+was a creature of mystery—a mere waif and stray,
+admitted to the house where I met him on no better
+recommendation than his genius. He had the manners and
+education of a gentleman, the eccentricities
+of an artist. He asked me to be his wife, disregarded
+my refusal, pursued me with an unwearying persistence,
+and, aided by the wondrous power of his
+genius, triumphed over every argument, conquered
+every opposition, wrung from me my consent to a
+secret union. It would be useless to repeat his
+specious statements—his pretended reasons for desiring
+a secret marriage. I was weak enough, wicked
+enough, to consent to the arrangement he proposed;
+but not until after many a bitter struggle.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Why pain yourself by these wretched memories?’
+exclaimed Geoffrey. ‘Tell me nothing except that
+you will be my wife. I will take all the rest upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span>
+trust. There is no such thing as truth or purity in
+woman if you are not worthy of an honest man’s
+love.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You shall hear me to the end,’ she answered
+quietly, ‘and then pronounce whether I am or not.
+The house in which we were visitors was only two
+miles from a cathedral city. He of whom I have
+been speaking—’</p>
+
+<p>‘Mr. Bertram.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I will call him Bertram, although I am bound
+to tell you that name is not the true one. Mr. Bertram
+proposed a marriage before the registrar in the
+cathedral town. We both had been long enough
+resident in the neighbourhood for the necessary
+notice. Indeed, that notice had been given some
+days before I gave my most reluctant consent. At
+the last, harassed by Mr. Bertram’s importunity,
+loving him with a girl’s first romantic fancy, and
+believing that I was the object of a most devoted love,
+without an adviser or friend at hand to whom I could
+appeal, conscious that I was guilty of ingratitude
+and disobedience towards the dearest and best of
+parents, I suffered myself to be hurried into this
+wretched union. We walked across the park early
+one morning, and went to the registrar’s office, where
+the brief form was gone through, and my lover told<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span>
+me I was his wife. I went home that very day, for
+the necessity of a fortnight’s notice to the registrar
+had deferred the marriage to the last day of my visit.
+I went back to the parents who loved and trusted
+me, weighed down by the burden of my guilty secret.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Was Mr. Bertram’s rank superior to yours? and
+was that his reason for secrecy?’ asked Geoffrey.</p>
+
+<p>‘He made me believe as much. He told me that
+he hazarded position and fortune by marrying me,
+and I believed him. I was not quite nineteen, and
+had been brought up in a small country town, brought
+up by people to whom falsehood was impossible.
+You may suppose that I was an easy dupe. Some
+time after my return he appeared in our little town.
+I implored him to tell my father and mother, or to let
+me tell them of our marriage. He refused, giving
+me his reasons for that refusal; using the same arguments
+he had employed before, and to which I was
+obliged to submit, reluctantly enough, Heaven knows.
+But when he claimed me as his wife, and reminded
+me that I was bound to follow his fortunes, I refused
+to obey. I told him that the marriage before the
+registrar had to me seemed no marriage at all, and
+that I would never leave home and kindred for his sake
+until I had stood before God’s altar by his side.
+This, which he called a mere school-girl prejudice,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>
+made him angry; but after a time he gave way, and
+told me that I should be satisfied. He would marry
+me in my father’s church, but our union must not
+the less remain a secret. He had a friend, a curate
+in a London parish, who would come down to perform
+the ceremony quietly one morning, without witnesses.
+The marriage before the registrar was ample for all
+legal purposes, he told me. This marriage in the
+church was to be only for the satisfaction of my conscience,
+and it mattered not how informal it might
+be. No witnesses would be wanted, no entry need be
+made in the Register.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Never shall I forget that day—the empty church
+wrapt in shadow, the rain beating against the great
+window over the altar, the face of the stranger who
+read the service, the dreary sense of loneliness and
+helplessness that crept about my heart as I stood by
+the side of him for whom I was now to forsake all I
+had loved. Never, surely, was there a more mournful
+wedding. I felt guilty, miserable, despairing, my
+heart at this last hour clinging most fondly to those
+from whom I was about to sever myself, perhaps for
+life. When the service ended, the stranger who had
+read it looked at me in a curious way and left the
+church, after a little whispered talk with my husband.
+When he had gone, Bertram went straight to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span>
+organ—that organ on which he had played for many
+an hour during the last few weeks—and struck the
+opening chords of the “Wedding March.”</p>
+
+<p>“Come, Janet,” he cried, “let us have our triumphal
+music, if we have no other item in the
+pageantry of a wedding.”</p>
+
+<p>‘He played, as he always played, like a man who,
+for the time being, lived only in music; but for my
+overburdened heart even that magic had no soothing
+influence. I left the organ-loft, and went down-stairs
+again. Here, in the dimly-lighted aisle, I almost
+stumbled against the stranger who had read the marriage-service.</p>
+
+<p>“I was anxious to see you,” he began, in a
+nervous hesitating way, and very slowly—“anxious
+to be assured that all was right. You have been
+already married before the registrar, your husband
+informs me, and this ceremonial of to-day is merely
+for the satisfaction of your own conscience; yet I am
+bound to inform you—”</p>
+
+<p>‘The last notes of the “Wedding March” had
+pealed out from the old organ before this, and I
+heard my husband’s footstep behind me as the
+stranger spoke. He came quickly to the spot
+where we stood, and put my arm through his.</p>
+
+<p>“I thought I told you, Leslie, that my wife has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span>
+had the whole business fully explained to her,” he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>‘The stranger muttered something which sounded
+like an apology, bowed to me, wished my husband
+good-bye, and hurried away. If he had come back
+to the church to give me friendly counsel or timely
+warning, he quitted it with his intention unfulfilled.</p>
+
+<p>‘I left my father’s house secretly at daybreak
+next morning, half heartbroken. I have no excuse
+to plead for this wicked desertion of parents who had
+loved me only too well; or only the common excuse
+that I loved the man who tempted me away from
+them—loved him above duty, honour, self-respect.
+I left the dear old home where I had been so happy,
+conscious that I left it under a cloud. Only in the
+future could I see myself reestablished in the love
+and confidence of my father and mother; but Mr.
+Bertram assured me that future was not far off. Of
+the bitter time that followed, I will speak as briefly
+as possible. Mine was a wretched wandering life,
+linked with a man whom I discovered but too soon
+to be utterly wanting in honour or principle; a life
+spent with one whose only profession was to prey
+upon his fellow men; who knew no scruple where
+his own advantage was in question; whom I soon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>
+knew to be relentless, heartless, false to the very
+core. Heaven knows it is hard to say all this of
+one I had so deeply loved, for whom I had hazarded
+and lost so much. Enough that the day came when
+I could no longer endure the dishonour of association
+with him; when I felt that I would sooner go out
+into the bleak world of which I knew so little, and
+commit my own fate and my child’s to the mercy of
+God, than share the degradation of a life sustained
+by fraud. I told my husband as much: that finding
+all my endeavours to persuade him to alter his mode
+of life worse than useless, since they led only to
+bursts of scornful anger on his part, I had resolved
+to leave him, and live as I best might by my own
+industry, or, if God pleased, starve. He heard my
+decision with supreme indifference, and turning to
+me with the bitter smile I knew so well, said:</p>
+
+<p>“I congratulate you on having arrived at so wise
+a decision. The matrimonial fetters have galled us
+both. I thought you a clever woman, and a fitting
+helpmeet for a man who has to live by his wits. I
+find you a puling fool, with a mind cramped by the
+teaching of a country parsonage. Our union has
+been a mistake for both; but I am happy to inform
+you that it is not irrevocable. Our marriage before
+the registrar and our marriage in the church are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>
+alike null and void; for I had a wife living at the
+time, and, for aught I know, have still.”’</p>
+
+<p>‘The consummate scoundrel,’ cried Geoffrey, with
+a smothered curse; ‘but why do you tell me these
+things? why torture yourself by recalling them?
+However wronged by this villain, in my eyes you
+are purest among the pure.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I have little more to tell. He took the initiative,
+and left me with my child in furnished lodgings in a
+garrison town, where he had found profitable society
+among the officers of the regiment then quartered
+there, and had distinguished himself by his skill at
+billiards. He left me penniless, and at the mercy of
+the lodging-house-keeper, to whom he owed a heavy
+bill. I will not trouble you with the details of my
+life from this point. Happily for me, the woman
+was merciful. I freely surrendered the few trinkets I
+possessed, and she suffered me to depart unmolested
+with my own and my child’s small stock of clothes.
+I removed to humbler lodgings, gave lessons in music
+and singing, struggled on, paid my way, and after
+some time left the town with my child and came
+straight to London, glad to be lost in that ocean of
+humanity. I had heard before this of the death of
+both my parents—heard with a remorseful grief which
+I shall continue to suffer till my dying day: the sin<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span>
+of ingratitude such as mine entails a lifelong punishment.
+I was therefore quite alone in the world. I
+think if it had not been for my little girl I could
+hardly have survived so much misery, hardly have
+faced a future so hopeless. But that one tie bound
+me to life—that sweet companionship made sorrow
+endurable—lent a brightness even to my darkest
+days. I have no more to tell; God has been very
+good to me. All my efforts have prospered.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I know not how to thank you for this confidence,’
+said Geoffrey, ‘for to my mind it removes
+every barrier between us, if you only can return, in
+some small measure, the love I have given you, and
+which must be yours till the end of my life.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You forget,’ she said sadly, ‘he who is in my
+estimation my husband still lives; or, at least, I
+have had no evidence of his death.’</p>
+
+<p>‘What! you would hold yourself bound by a tie
+which he told you was worthless?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I swore before God’s altar, in my father’s church,
+to cleave to him till death should part us. If he perjured
+himself, there is no reason why I should break
+my vow. I left him because to live with him was to
+participate in a life of fraud and dishonour, but I
+hold him not the less my husband. If you have any
+doubt of the story I have told you, the books of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span>
+registrar at Tyrrelhurst, in Hampshire, will confirm
+my story.’</p>
+
+<p>‘If I doubt you!’ cried Geoffrey. ‘I am as incapable
+of doubting you as you are of falsehood.
+But for Heaven’s sake abandon this idea of holding
+by a marriage which was from first to last a lie!’</p>
+
+<p>Then followed passionate pleading, met by a resolution
+so calm, yet so inflexible, that in the end
+Geoffrey Hossack felt his prayers were idle, and
+farther persistence must needs degenerate into persecution.</p>
+
+<p>‘Be it so!’ he exclaimed at last, angry and despairing;
+‘you have been consistently cruel from the
+first. Why did you suffer me to love you, only to
+break my heart? Since it must be so, I bid you
+farewell, and leave you to the satisfaction of remaining
+true to a scoundrel.’</p>
+
+<p>He hurried from the room and from the house,
+not trusting himself with a last look at the face
+which had wrought this fever in his brain; rushed
+away through the tranquil summer night, neither
+knowing nor caring where he went, but wandering
+on by the grassy banks that followed the sinuous
+river, by farm and homestead, lock and weir, under
+the shadow of hill and wood. It was nearly three
+hours after midnight when the sleepy Boots admitted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span>
+Mr. Hossack to the respectable family hotel, and
+Lucius Davoren was waiting for him, full of anxiety
+and even fear.</p>
+
+<p>‘If I had known anything of this place, I should
+have come out in search of you, Geoffrey,’ he said.
+‘It isn’t the kindest thing in the world to ask a man
+to come down here to see you, and then leave him for
+five mortal hours under the apprehension that you
+have come to an untimely end.’</p>
+
+<p>Geoffrey wiped the travel stains from his forehead
+with a long-drawn sigh.</p>
+
+<p>‘I was too downhearted to come straight home,’
+he said, ‘so I went for a walk. I suppose I walked
+a little too far, but don’t be angry, old fellow. I’m
+as nearly broken-hearted as a man can be.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Did she tell you all?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Everything; a dismal story, but one that proves
+her to be all I have ever believed her—sinned against
+but sinless. And now, Lucius, can you explain how
+it was that your letter could influence her to do what
+she would have never done for my sake?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Easily. You have proved yourself a true-hearted
+fellow, Geoffrey, and I’ll trust you with a secret—Mrs.
+Bertram is my sister.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Your sister?’ cried Geoffrey, with supreme astonishment.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, the sister whose name I have not uttered
+for years, but whom I have never ceased to love.
+My sister Janet, who left her home eight years ago
+under a cloud of mystery, and whose wrongs I then
+swore to avenge.’</p>
+
+<p>‘How long have you known this—that my Mrs.
+Bertram and your sister were one and the same
+person?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Only since I came to Stillmington to see the
+little girl.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Then this explains her emotion that night.
+Thank God! Dear old Lucius—and now, as you
+love her, as you love me, your friend and companion
+in the days of our youth—use your influence with
+her, persuade her to abandon all memory of that
+villain, to blot him out of her life as if he had never
+been.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I have tried that already, and failed. I thought
+your love might accomplish what my arguments could
+not achieve. I fear the case is hopeless. But my
+duty as a brother remains, to find this man, if possible,
+and ascertain for myself whether the marriage
+was legal or not. He may have told Janet that story
+of another wife out of pure malice.’</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.<br>
+<span class="fs70">THE BEGINNING OF A MYSTERY.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">Lucius</span> had a long interview with Mrs. Bertram on
+the following morning, and he and Geoffrey left Stillmington
+together in the afternoon; to the despair of
+the proprietor of the family hotel, who had not had
+such a customer as Mr. Hossack for many years, not
+even during that halcyon period which he spoke of
+fondly as ‘our ’untin’ season.’ They travelled to
+London by the same express-train, having a long and
+friendly talk on the way, Geoffrey <em>en route</em> for Christiana,
+with a view to shooting grouse among the
+Norwegian hills, and if it were possible in some
+measure to stifle the pangs of hopeless love in the
+keen joys of the sportsman; Lucius to return to the
+beaten round of a parish doctor’s life, brightened
+only by those happy hours which he spent in the
+old house with Lucille.</p>
+
+<p>It was too late to visit Cedar House on the evening
+of his return from Stillmington, so Lucius and
+Geoffrey dined, or supped, together at the Cosmopolitan,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span>
+and had, what the latter called, ‘a gaudy
+night;’ a night of prolonged and confidential talk
+rather than of deep drinking, however; for Lucius
+was the most temperate of men, and with Geoffrey
+pleasure never meant dissipation. They talked of
+the future; and hope kindled in Geoffrey’s breast as
+they talked. Not always would Fate be inexorable;
+not always would the woman he loved be inaccessible
+to his prayers.</p>
+
+<p>‘I could hardly bear my life if it were not for one
+fond hope,’ he said; ‘and even that is, perhaps, a delusion.
+I believe that she loves me.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I know she does,’ replied Lucius; and the two
+men grasped hands across the table.</p>
+
+<p>‘She has told you!’ cried Geoffrey, rapture gleaming
+in his honest face.</p>
+
+<p>‘She has told me. Yes, Geoffrey, a love such as
+yours deserves some recompense. My sister confessed
+that you had made yourself only too dear to her; that
+but for the tie which she deems binding until death
+she would have been proud to become your wife.’</p>
+
+<p>‘God bless her! Yes, I have been buoyed up by
+the belief in her love, and that will sustain me still.
+Did she tell you nothing of that wretch—her husband—nothing
+that may serve as a clue for you to hunt
+him down?’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Very little; or very little more than I already
+knew. She gave me a general description of the
+man; but she possesses no likeness of him, so even
+that poor clue is wanting. The name he bore was
+doubtless an assumed one, therefore that can help us
+little. But the strangest part of all this strange story
+is—’</p>
+
+<p>‘What, Lucius?’</p>
+
+<p>‘That the description of this man, Vandeleur—that
+was the name under which he married my sister—tallies
+in many respects with the description of another
+man, whose fate I have pledged myself to discover;
+a man who had the same genius for music,
+and was as complete a scoundrel.’</p>
+
+<p>Hereupon Lucius told his friend the story of his
+engagement to Lucille Sivewright, and the condition
+attached to its fulfilment, to which Geoffrey lent an
+attentive ear.</p>
+
+<p>‘You say this man sailed for Spanish America in
+the year ’53. Your sister was married in ’58. How,
+then, can you suppose that Lucille’s father and the
+man calling himself Vandeleur are one and the same
+person?’</p>
+
+<p>‘There would have been ample time for Sivewright
+to have grown tired of America between ’53 and
+’58.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘So there might. Yet it seems altogether gratuitous
+to suppose any identity between the two men.
+Musical genius is not so exceptional a quality; nor
+is scoundrelism the most uncommon of attributes to
+be found among the varieties of mankind.’</p>
+
+<p>They discussed the subject at length in all its
+bearings. It was a relief to Lucius to unburden his
+mind to the friend he loved and trusted; the chosen
+companion of so many adventures; the man whose
+shrewd sense he had never found wanting in the hour
+of difficulty. They talked long and late, and Lucius
+slept at the Cosmopolitan, and returned to the Shadrack
+district at an hour when the domestics of that
+popular hotel were only just opening their weary eyelids
+on the summer morning.</p>
+
+<p>He spent his day in the accustomed round of toil;
+had double work to do in consequence of his brief
+holiday; found the atmosphere of the Shadrack-road
+heavy and oppressive in the sultry noontide, after the
+clearer air and bluer skies of the hills and woods round
+Stillmington. And that all-pervading aspect of
+poverty which marked the streets and alleys of his
+parish struck him more keenly after the smug respectability
+and prosperous trimness of Stillmington’s
+dainty High-street and newly-erected villas. He travelled
+over the beaten track somewhat wearily, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>
+felt ever so little inclined to envy Geoffrey, who was
+by this time hurrying across the face of the sun-dappled
+country-side, in the Hull express, on the first stage
+to Norway. But he was no whit less patient than
+usual in his attention to the parish invalids; and
+when the long day was done he turned homeward
+hopefully, to refresh himself after his labours before
+presenting himself at Cedar Lodge.</p>
+
+<p>It was dusk when Mrs. Wincher admitted him
+into the blossomless courtyard. Mr. Sivewright had
+retired for the night, but Lucille was at work in the
+parlour, Mrs. Wincher informed him, with her protecting
+air.</p>
+
+<p>‘You never come anigh us yesterday, nor yet the
+day before, Dr. Davory,’ she said, ‘and Mr. Sivewright
+was quite grumptious about it—said as he began
+to feel you was neglecting of him. “It serves me
+right,” he said, “for believin’ as any doctor would go
+on caring for his patient without the hope of a fee;”
+but I took him up sharp enough, and told him he
+ought to know you’d never looked at your attendance
+here from a fanatical pint of view.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Meaning financial, I suppose, Mrs. Wincher?’</p>
+
+<p>‘O lor, yes, if you like it better pernounced that
+way. I gave it him up-right and down-straight, you
+may be sure.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘It was very good of you to defend the absent.
+Nothing but absolute necessity would have kept me
+away from this house even for two days. Has Miss
+Sivewright been quite well?’</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Wincher hesitated before replying, and Lucius
+repeated his question anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>‘Well, yes; I can’t say as there’s been anythink
+amiss with her. Only yesterday evening,’ here Mrs.
+Wincher dropped her voice, and came very close to
+him, with a mysterious air, ‘between the lights—blind
+man’s holiday, as my good gentleman calls it
+in his jocose way—she gave me a bit of a turn. She’d
+been walking in the garden, and down by that blessed
+old wharf, where there’s nothink better than stagnant
+mud and strange cats for anybody to look at, and it
+might be just about as dark as it is now, when she
+came past the window of the boothouse, where I happened
+to be scouring my saucepans and such-like;
+for the work do get behindhand in this great barrack
+of a place. You know the boothouse, don’t you, Dr.
+Davory,—the little low building with the peaky roof,
+just beyond the laundry?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, I know. Go on, pray.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Well, she came past the window, looking so pale
+and strange, with her hands clasped upon her forehead,
+as if she’d been struck all of a heap by somethink<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>
+as had frightened her. I bounced out upon her sudding,
+and I suppose that scared her all the more; for
+she gave a little skreek, and seemed as if she’d have
+dropped on the ground. “Lor, Miss Lucille,” says
+I, “it’s only me. What in goodness name’s the matter?”
+But she turned it off in her quiet way, and said
+she’d only felt a little dull and lonesome-like without
+you. “Miss Lucille,” says I, “you look for all the
+world as if you’d seen a ghost.” And she looks at me
+with her quiet smile, and says, “People do see ghosts
+sometimes, Wincher; but I’ve seen none to-night;”
+and then all of a sudding she gives way, and busts
+out crying. “Astaricall,” says I; and I takes her
+into the parlour, and makes her lie down on the sofa,
+and biles up the kittle with half a bundle of wood, and
+makes her a cup of tea, and after that she comes round
+again all right. You mustn’t let out to her that I’ve
+told you about it, Dr. Davory; for she begged and
+prayed of me not to say a word, only I thought it
+my bonding duty to tell you.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And you were right, Mrs. Wincher. No, I’ll
+not betray you. This dismal old house is enough
+to blight any life. How I wish I could take her to
+a brighter home without delay!’</p>
+
+<p>‘I’m sure I wish you could,’ answered Mrs.
+Wincher heartily; ‘for I must say there never was a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span>
+house that less repaid the trouble of cleaning, or
+weighed heavier on the spirits.’</p>
+
+<p>This little exchange of confidences had taken
+place in the forecourt, where Mrs. Wincher had detained
+Mr. Davoren while she disburdened her bosom
+of its weight.</p>
+
+<p>Lucius went straight to the parlour, where Lucille
+was seated before a formidable pile of household
+linen—table-cloths in the last stage of attenuation,
+sheets worn threadbare, which she was darning with
+a sublime patience. She looked up as Lucius entered
+the room, and a faint flush lighted up the pale
+face at sight of her lover. Yet, despite her pleasure
+at his return, he saw that she had changed for the
+worse during his brief absence. The transient glow
+faded from her cheek, and left her paler than of old;
+the hand Lucius held in both his own was burning
+with a slow fever.</p>
+
+<p>‘My dearest,’ he said anxiously, ‘has anything
+been amiss in my absence?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Was not your absence itself amiss?’ she asked,
+with the faintest possible smile. ‘I have been very
+dull and very sad without you; that is all.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And you have fretted yourself into a fever. O,
+Lucille, end all difficulties; make no impossible conditions,
+and let me take you away from this great<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>
+lonely house very soon. I cannot give you the fair
+home we have talked about yet awhile—it may even
+be long before prosperity comes to us; but all that
+patience and courage can do to achieve fortune, I will
+do for your dear sake. I would not ask you to share
+debt or poverty, Lucille; I would not urge you to
+link your fate with mine if I did not see my way to
+a secure position, if I had not already the means
+of providing a decent home for my sweet young
+bride.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Do you think that the fear of poverty has ever
+influenced me? No, Lucius, you must know me
+better than that. But I will not let you burden
+yourself too soon with a wife. Believe me, I am more
+than content. I am very happy in my present life,
+for I see you nearly every day. And I would not
+leave my poor old grandfather in his declining years.
+Let us think of our marriage as something still a
+long way off—in that happy future which it is so
+sweet to talk and dream about. Only, Lucius,’ she
+went on in a faltering tone, and with a downward look
+in the eyes that were wont to meet his own so frankly,
+‘you spoke just now of my having imposed too hard
+a condition upon you—you meant, of course, with regard
+to my father?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, dear.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘I have been thinking a great deal about this
+subject in your absence, and have come to see it in
+a new light. The condition was too difficult; forget
+that I ever imposed it. I am content to know no
+more of my father’s fate than I know already.’</p>
+
+<p>‘This change is very sudden, Lucille.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No, it is not sudden. I have had ample time
+for thought in these two long days. I had no right
+to ask so much of you. Let my father’s fate be
+what it may, neither you nor I could have power to
+alter it.’</p>
+
+<p>It happened somewhat strangely that this release
+was not altogether welcome to Lucius. He had
+thought his mistress unreasonable before; he thought
+her capricious now.</p>
+
+<p>‘I have no desire in this business except to obey
+you,’ he said somewhat coldly. ‘Am I to understand,
+then, that I am absolved from my promise? I am
+to make no farther effort to discover Mr. Sivewright’s
+fate.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No farther effort. I renounce altogether the idea
+of tracing out my father’s life.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You are content to remain in utter ignorance of
+his fate—not to know whether he is living or dead?’</p>
+
+<p>‘He is in God’s hands. What could my feeble
+help do for him?’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘And after cherishing the idea of finding him all
+these years, you abandon the notion at once and for
+ever?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes. You think me changeable—frivolous, perhaps?’
+with a faint sigh.</p>
+
+<p>‘Forgive me, Lucille. I cannot help thinking
+you just a little capricious. I am naturally very glad
+to be released from the task you imposed upon me,
+which I felt was almost impossible. Yet I can but
+wonder that your opinions should undergo so complete
+a change. However, I do not question the
+wisdom of your present decision. I have placed the
+business in the hands of Mr. Otranto, the detective.
+You wish me to withdraw it—to forbid farther inquiries
+on his part.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes! It will be better so. He is not likely to
+discover the truth. He would only raise false hopes,
+to end in bitter disappointment.’</p>
+
+<p>‘His manner was certainly far from hopeful when
+I put the case before him. But these men have an
+extraordinary power of hunting up evidence. He
+might succeed.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No, no, Lucius. He would only lure you on to
+spend all your hardly-earned money, and fail at last.
+Tell him your inquiry is at an end. And now let us
+say no more about this painful subject. You are not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span>
+angry with me Lucius, for having caused you so
+much trouble?’</p>
+
+<p>‘It is impossible for me to be angry with you,
+Lucille,’ answered the surgeon; and then followed the
+foolish lovers’ talk, at which Mrs. Wincher (presently
+appearing with the supper tray, whereon was set forth
+a banquet consisting of a plate of hard biscuits and a
+tumbler of London milk, for Lucille’s refreshment),
+assisted in her capacity of duenna and guardian angel,
+for half an hour of unalloyed bliss; after which she
+escorted Lucius to the grim old gate, like a state
+prisoner led across the garden of the Tower on his
+way to execution.</p>
+
+<p>‘I shall come early to-morrow to see your grandfather,’
+said Lucius to Lucille at parting.</p>
+
+<p>He went home lighter-hearted than usual. It was
+a relief to be rid of that troublesome search for a man
+who seemed to have vanished utterly from human
+ken. He wrote to Mr. Otranto, the detective, that
+very night, bidding him abandon the inquiry about
+Ferdinand Sivewright.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Sivewright received his medical attendant
+with a somewhat fretful air next morning, and Lucius
+was both shocked and surprised to discover that
+a change for the worse had occurred in his patient
+during his absence. There was a touch of fever that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>
+was new to the case—a nervous depression, such as
+he had not found in the invalid for some time past.
+But this change seemed the effect of mental excitement
+rather than of physical weakness.</p>
+
+<p>‘Why did you leave me so long?’ asked Mr. Sivewright
+peevishly. ‘But I am a fool to ask such a
+question. I pay you nothing, and it is not likely you
+would allow any consideration for my comfort to stand
+in the way of your pleasures.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I have not been taking pleasure,’ answered Lucius
+quietly, ‘nor could I give you more honest service
+than I do now were you to pay me five hundred a year
+for my attendance. Why are you always so ready to
+suspect me of sordid motives?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Because I have never found mankind governed
+by any other motives,’ replied the old man. ‘However,
+I daresay I wrong you. I like you, and you
+have been very good to me; so good that I have
+come to lean upon you as if you were indeed that
+staff of my age which I ought to have found in a
+son. I am glad you have come back. Do you believe
+in sinister influences, in presentiments of approaching
+misfortune? Do you believe that Death casts
+a warning shadow across our path when he draws
+near us?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I believe that invalids are fanciful,’ answered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span>
+Lucius lightly; ‘you have been thinking too much
+during my absence.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Fanciful!’ repeated Mr. Sivewright with a sigh,
+‘yes, it may have been nothing more than a sick
+man’s fancy. Yet I have seemed to feel a shadowy
+presence in this house—the unseen presence of an
+enemy. There have been strange sounds too in the
+long sleepless night—not last night, all was quiet
+enough then—but on the previous night; sounds
+of doors opening and shutting; stealthily opened,
+stealthily closed, but not so quietly done as to cheat
+my wakeful ears. Once I could have sworn that I
+heard voices; yet when I questioned both the Winchers
+next morning they declared they had heard
+nothing.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Did you say anything to Lucille about these
+noises?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Not a word. Do you think I would scare that
+poor lonely child? No, the house is dreary enough.
+I won’t put the notion of ghosts or other midnight
+intruders into her head; girls’ brains are quick
+enough to grow fancies.’</p>
+
+<p>‘There was wisdom in that reserve,’ said Lucius;
+and then he went on thoughtfully, ‘The noises you
+heard were natural enough, I have no doubt. Old
+houses are fruitful of phantoms; doors loosely fastened,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>
+old locks that have lost their spring; given a
+strong wind, and you have a ghostly promenade.’</p>
+
+<p>‘But there was no wind the night before last.
+The air was hot and sultry. I had my window open
+all night.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And you may therefore have imagined the noises
+in yonder road to be sounds proceeding from the interior
+of this house. Nothing is so deceptive as the
+sense of hearing, especially in nervous subjects.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No, Davoren, I made no such mistake. Nothing
+you or any one else can say will convince me that I
+did not hear the shutting of the heavy outer door, a
+door in the back premises that opens upon the garden.
+I should, perhaps, have thought less of this
+fact, strange and alarming as it is in itself, were it
+not for my own feelings. From the hour in which
+I heard those sounds I have had an overpowering
+sense of approaching evil. I feel that something,
+or some influence inimical to myself, is near at
+hand, overshadowing and surrounding my life with
+its evil power. I feel almost as I felt twelve years
+ago, when I woke from my drugged sleep to find that
+my son had robbed me.’</p>
+
+<p>‘The delusion of an overwrought brain,’ said
+Lucius. ‘I must give you a sedative that will insure
+better sleep.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘No, for pity’s sake,’ cried the old man eagerly,
+‘no opiates. Let me retain my natural sense to the
+last. If there is danger at hand I need it all the
+more.’</p>
+
+<p>‘There can be no such thing as danger,’ said
+Lucius; ‘but I will examine the fastenings of that
+back door, and of all other external doors, and, if
+necessary, have the locks and bolts made more
+secure.’</p>
+
+<p>‘The locks and bolts are strong enough. You
+need waste no money on them. I used to fasten all
+the doors myself every night before my illness.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You have every reason to trust the Winchers, I
+suppose?’</p>
+
+<p>‘As much reason as I can have to trust any
+human being. They have served me upwards of five-and-twenty
+years, and I have never yet found them
+out in any attempt to cheat me. They may have
+been robbing me all the time, nevertheless, as my
+son robbed me, and may wind up by cutting my
+throat.’</p>
+
+<p>‘A crime that would hardly repay them for their
+trouble, I imagine,’ said Lucius, with his thoughtful
+smile, ‘since you possess nothing but your collection,
+and the assassins could hardly dispose of that.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Perhaps not. But they may think that I am<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span>
+rich—in spite of all I have ever told them of my
+poverty—just as you may think that I am rich, and
+that the penniless girl you have chosen may turn out
+a prize by and by.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I have no such thought,’ answered Lucius, meeting
+his patient’s cunning look with the calm clear
+gaze of perfect truth; ‘wealth or poverty can make
+no difference in my love for your granddaughter. For
+her own sake I might wish that she were not altogether
+portionless; for mine I can have no such
+desire. I value no fortune but such as I can win for
+myself.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You speak like a proud man, and a foolish one
+into the bargain. To say you do not value money is
+about as wise as to say you do not value the air you
+breathe; for one is almost as necessary to existence
+as the other. What does it matter who makes the
+money, or how it is made, so long as it finds its way
+to your pocket? Will a sovereign buy less because
+it was scraped out of a gutter? Is wealth one whit
+the less powerful though a man crawls through the
+dirt to win it? Let him squeeze it from the sweat
+and toil of his fellow men, it carries no stain of their
+labour. Let him cheat for it, lie for it, betray his
+brother or abjure his God for it, his fellow men will
+honour him none the less, so long as he has enough<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span>
+of it. The gold won on a racecourse or at a gaming-table,
+though broken hearts and ruined homes went
+along with it, has as true a ring as your honourable
+independence, by whatever inspiration of genius or
+toil of brain you may earn it.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You speak bitterly, like a man who has been accustomed
+to contemplate humanity “the seamy side
+without,”’ said Lucius coldly; ‘but be assured I
+have never calculated on being enriched by the fruits
+of your industry.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Not even upon finding yourself the inheritor of
+my collection?’ inquired Mr. Sivewright, his keen
+eyes peering into the surgeon’s face.</p>
+
+<p>‘I have not even aspired to that honour,’ replied
+Lucius, with a somewhat contemptuous glance at the
+outer shell of painted canvas, inscribed with hieroglyphics,
+which encased the defunct Pharaoh.</p>
+
+<p>‘So much the better,’ said the old man. ‘I
+should be sorry to think you might be disappointed
+by and by, when this shrunken form is clay, and you
+come to grope among my art treasures, thinking to
+find some hidden hoard—the miser’s hoard of slowly-gathered
+wealth which he loved too well to spend,
+and yet was obliged to leave behind him at the last.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius looked at the speaker curiously. The old
+man’s pale gray eyes shone with a vivid light; his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span>
+thin tremulous hands were spread above the bedclothes,
+as if they had been stretched over a pile of
+gold, protecting it from a possible assailant.</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes,’ thought Lucius, ‘I have often fancied this
+man must be a miser; I am sure of it now. Those
+words, that gesture, tell their own story. In spite
+of all his declarations to the contrary, he is rich, and
+these groundless fears spring from the thought of
+some concealed hoard which he feels himself powerless
+to protect.’</p>
+
+<p>He felt some pity, but more contempt, for the subject
+of these thoughts, and no elation at the idea that
+this hoarded wealth might possibly descend to him.
+He did his best to soothe the old man’s excited nerves,
+and succeeded tolerably well. He had taken up his
+hat, and was on the point of hurrying off to begin his
+daily round—delayed considerably by the length of
+this interview—when Mr. Sivewright called him
+back.</p>
+
+<p>‘Will it trouble you to return here after your
+day’s work?’ he asked.</p>
+
+<p>‘Trouble me? very far from it. I had counted
+on spending my evening with Lucille—and you, if
+you are well enough to be plagued with my company.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You know I always like your company. But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>
+to-night I have something to do; some papers that
+I want to look over, of no particular importance
+either to myself or those that come after me; old
+documents connected with my business career and
+what not. But I want to set my house in order
+before I leave it for a narrower one. Now, Davoren,
+I want you to hunt up some of these papers for me.
+I have sent that old fumbler, Jacob Wincher, to look
+for them, but the man is purblind, I suppose, for he
+did not succeed in finding them. They are in an old
+oak cabinet in a loft where I keep the dregs of my
+collection. Lucille will show you the place. Here is
+the key—the lock is a curious one—and the papers
+are stowed away in odd corners of the cabinet; inner
+drawers which brokers call secret, but which a child
+might discover at the first glance. Bring me all the
+papers you find there.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Do you wish me to make the search now, sir, or
+in the evening?’</p>
+
+<p>‘In the evening, of course. It is a business to be
+done at your leisure. But you must have daylight
+for it. Come back as early as you can, like a good
+fellow; I have a fancy for looking over those papers
+to-night. Heaven only knows how many days remain
+to me.’</p>
+
+<p>‘The same doubt hangs over the lives of all of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span>
+us,’ answered Lucius. ‘Your case is by no means
+alarming.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I don’t know that. I have a presentiment of
+evil, an instinctive apprehension of danger, like that
+which all nature feels before the coming of a storm.’</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.<br>
+<span class="fs70">AN UNPLEASANT DISCOVERY.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">The</span> thought of this conversation with Mr. Sivewright
+followed Lucius all through the day’s work. He
+meditated upon it in the intervals of his toil, and
+that meditation only tended to confirm him in his
+opinion as to the lonely old man. Soured and embittered
+by his son’s ingratitude, Homer Sivewright
+had consoled himself by the indulgence of that passion
+which is of all passions the most absorbing—the
+greed of gain. As he beheld his profits accumulate
+he became more and more parsimonious; surrendered
+without regret the pleasures for which he had no
+taste; and having learned in his poverty to live a life
+of hardship and deprivation, was contented to do
+without luxuries and even comforts which had never
+become necessary to his existence. Thus the sole
+delight of his days had been the accumulation of
+money, and who could tell how far the usurer’s exorbitant
+profits had gone to swell the tradesman’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span>
+honest gains? The art collection might have been
+little more than a cover for the money-lender’s less
+reputable commerce.</p>
+
+<p>Thus reasoned Lucius. He returned to Cedar
+House at about five in the afternoon, having dined
+hastily at a coffee-house in the Shadrack-road, in the
+midst of his day’s work.</p>
+
+<p>He found the table in the spacious old parlour
+laid for tea, and drawn into one of the open windows.
+Lucille had contrived, even with her small means, to
+give a look of grace to the humble meal. There were
+a few freshly-cut flowers in a Venetian goblet, and
+some fruit in an old Derby dish; the brown loaf and
+butter and glass jar of marmalade had a fresher and
+daintier look than anything Mrs. Babb the charwoman
+ever set before her master. Lucius thought
+of the fair surroundings that wealth could buy for the
+girl he loved; thought how easy their lives would be
+if he were only rich enough to give her the home he
+dreamed of, if there were no question of waiting and
+patience. True that he might give her some kind of
+home—a home in the Shadrack district—at once, but
+was it such a shelter as he would care to offer to his
+fair young bride? Would it not be a dreary beginning
+of wedded life?</p>
+
+<p>Yes, Mr. Sivewright’s hoarded wealth might give<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>
+them much, but could he, Lucius, as an honest man,
+feel any satisfaction in the possession of a fortune
+gained in such crooked ways as the miser treads in
+his ruthless pursuit of gold? He tried to put all
+thought of that possible wealth out of his mind.
+That way lay temptation, perhaps dishonour; for in
+his mind it was impossible to disassociate the miser’s
+wealth from the means by which it had been amassed.</p>
+
+<p>Lucille had the same pale troubled look which
+had alarmed him on the previous evening, but this he
+ascribed to a natural anxiety about her grandfather.
+He did his best to cheer her, as they drank tea together
+at the little table by the open window, ministered
+to by the devoted Wincher, whose bonnet
+hovered about them throughout the simple meal.</p>
+
+<p>‘She’s fidgety about the old gentleman, poor
+child,’ said Mrs. Wincher. ‘I’m sure she’s been up
+and down that blessed old staircase twenty times to-day,
+that restless she couldn’t settle to nothink.
+And he is a bit cranky I’ll allow, not knowing his
+own mind about anythink, and grumbling about as
+beautiful a basin of broth as was ever sent up to a
+ninvalid. But sickness is sickness, as I tell our
+missy, and she mustn’t be surprised if sick folks is
+contrairy.’</p>
+
+<p>When Mrs. Wincher had departed with the teatray,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span>
+Lucius told Lucille of the search he had undertaken
+for Mr. Sivewright.</p>
+
+<p>‘My grandfather told me about it,’ she said. ‘I
+am to show you the cabinet in the loft. He would
+have sent me up to fetch the papers alone, he said,
+only there is so much lumber crowded together that
+he doubted if I should be able to get at the cabinet.
+We had better go at once before the light begins to
+fade, for it is rather dark up there.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I am ready, dear.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucille produced a great bunch of rusty keys
+from the desk at which Mr. Sivewright had been
+wont to transact the mysterious business of his retirement,
+and they went up the old staircase side by side
+in the afternoon sunlight, which had not yet begun
+to wane. The wide corridor which led to the invalid’s
+room, with the doors of other rooms on either
+side of it, was familiar enough to Lucius; but he had
+never yet ascended above this story, and Lucille had
+told him that the upper floor was a barren desert—the
+undisputed territory of mice and spiders. She
+unlocked a door which opened on a narrow flight of
+stairs—the steep steps worn by the tread of departed
+generations, and of various levels. This staircase
+brought them to the topmost story, above which rose
+the loft they had to explore. The ceiling of the landing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>
+on this upper floor was low, blotched and swollen
+here and there with the rain of many a winter, the
+dilapidated roof being in some parts little better than
+a filter. There were curious old panelled doors on
+either side of this landing, which was lighted by one
+melancholy window, across whose narrow panes the
+spider had woven her cloudy tapestries.</p>
+
+<p>‘Are all those rooms empty?’ asked Lucius, looking
+at the numerous doors.</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes,’ answered Lucille hurriedly. ‘My grandfather
+fancied the floors unsafe, and would put nothing
+into them. Besides, he had room enough
+down-stairs. The things he has stowed away in the
+roof are things upon which he sets no value—mere
+rubbish which almost any one else would have given
+away. Come, Lucius.’</p>
+
+<p>There was a steep little staircase leading up to
+the loft, only one degree better than a ladder. This
+they mounted cautiously in semi-darkness, and then
+Lucius found himself in a vast substantially floored
+chamber, just high enough in the clear to admit of
+his standing upright, and amidst a forest of massive
+beams leaning this way and that, evidently the roof
+of a house built to defy the grim destroyer Time.</p>
+
+<p>For some moments all was darkness; but while
+Lucius was striving to pierce the gloom, Lucille<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span>
+raised a sloping shutter in the centre of the roof, and
+let in a burst of western sunlight. Then he beheld
+the contents of the place—a chaos of ancient lumber,
+the wreck of time. It was like standing among the
+bruised and battered timbers of a sunken vessel at
+the bottom of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>The objects around him were evidently the merest
+waste and refuse of a large and varied collection—broken
+armchairs, dilapidated buffets, old oak-carving
+in every stage of decay, odd remnants of mildewed
+and moth-eaten tapestry, fragments of shattered
+plaster casts; the head of a Diana, crescent crowned,
+lying amidst the tattered remains of a damask curtain;
+an armless Apollo, leaning lopsided and despondent
+of aspect against an odd leaf of a Japanese
+screen; old pictures whose subjects had long become
+inscrutable to the eye of man; stray cushions covered
+with faded embroidery, which had once issued bright
+and glowing from the fair hands that wrought it—on
+every side the relics of perished splendour, the very
+dust and sweepings of goodly dwellings that had
+long been empty. A melancholy picture, suggestive
+of man’s decay.</p>
+
+<p>Lucille peered into the shadows which filled the
+angles of the loft, in quest of that oaken cabinet, of
+which she had but a faint remembrance.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘It used to stand in the back-parlour in Bond-street
+when I was a child,’ she said. ‘Yes, I remember,
+a curious old thing, with the figures of Adam
+and Eve, Cain and Abel. There are little folding-doors
+that open the gates of Eden, with the angel
+and his flaming sword. There are carvings on each
+side; on one side the expulsion from Paradise, on
+the other the death of Abel. See, there it is, behind
+that pile of pictures.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius looked in the direction she indicated. In
+the extreme corner of the loft he saw a clumsy cabinet
+of the early Dutch school, much chipped and battered,
+with several old frameless canvases propped
+against it. He clambered over some of the more
+bulky objects which blockaded his way, cleared a
+path for Lucille, and after some minutes’ labour they
+both reached the corner where the cabinet stood.</p>
+
+<p>The western light shone full upon this corner.
+The first task was to remove the pictures, which
+were thickly coated with dust, and by no means innocent
+of spiders. Lucille drew back with a shudder
+and a little girlish scream at the sight of a black
+and bloated specimen of that tribe.</p>
+
+<p>Lucius put aside the pictures one by one. They
+were of the dingiest school of art, old shopkeepers
+doubtless, for which Mr. Sivewright had vainly striven<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span>
+to find a customer. Here and there an arm or a
+head was faintly visible beneath the universal brown
+of the varnish, but the rest was blank. It was, therefore,
+with considerable surprise that Lucius perceived
+beneath this worthless lumber a picture in a frame,
+and, by the appearance of the canvas, evidently
+modern. He turned it gently to the light, and saw—What?
+The face of the man he killed in the pine
+forest.</p>
+
+<p>Happily for Lucius Davoren, he was kneeling on
+the ground, and with his back to Lucille, when he
+made this discovery. A cry of surprise, pleasure,
+terror, he knew not which, broke from her lips as he
+turned that portrait to the light; but from his there
+came no sound.</p>
+
+<p>For the moment the blow stunned him; he knelt
+there looking at the too-well-remembered face—the
+face that had haunted him sleeping and waking—the
+face that he would have given years of his life
+utterly to forget.</p>
+
+<p>It was the same face; on that point there could
+be no shadow of doubt. The same face in the pride
+of youth, the bloom and freshness of early manhood.
+The same keen eyes; the same hooked nose, with its
+suggestion of affinity to the hawk and vulture tribe;
+the unmistakable form of the low brow, with its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span>
+strongly marked perceptives and deficiency in the
+organs of thought; the black hair, growing downward
+in a little peak; the somewhat angular brows.</p>
+
+<p>‘My father’s portrait,’ said Lucille, recovering
+quickly from that shock of surprise. ‘To think that
+my grandfather should have thrust it out of sight,
+here amongst all this worthless rubbish. How bitterly
+he must have hated his only son!’</p>
+
+<p><em>‘Your father!’</em> cried Lucius, letting the picture
+drop from his nerveless hands, and turning to Lucille
+with a face white as the plaster head of Diana.
+‘Do you mean to tell me that man was your father?’</p>
+
+<p>‘My dear father,’ the girl answered sadly; ‘my
+father, whom I shall love to the end of my life, whom
+I love all the better for his misfortunes, whom I pity
+with all my heart for the ill fate that changed his
+father’s natural affection into a most unnatural
+hate.’</p>
+
+<p>She took up the portrait, and carried it to a
+clearer spot, where she laid it gently down upon an
+old curtain.</p>
+
+<p>‘I will find a better place for it by and by,’ she
+said. ‘It was too cruel of my grandfather to send it
+up here. And I have so often begged him to show
+me a picture of my father.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I wonder you can remember his face after so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>
+long an interval,’ said Lucius, who had in some
+measure regained his self-possession, though his
+brain seemed still full of strange confused thoughts,
+amidst which the one horrible fact stood forth with
+hideous distinctness.</p>
+
+<p>The man he had slain yonder was the father of
+the woman he loved. True that the act had been a
+sacrifice, and not a murder; the execution of ready-handed
+justice upon a criminal, and not an act of
+personal revenge. But would Lucille ever believe
+that? She who, in spite of all her grandfather’s
+dark hints and bitter speeches, still clung with a
+fond belief to the father she had loved. She must
+never know that fatal deed in the western wilderness;
+never learn what a wretch man becomes when necessity
+degrades him to the level of the very beasts
+against which he fights the desperate fight for life.
+Take from man civilisation and Christianity, and
+who shall say how far he is superior, either in the
+capacity to suffer or in kindliness of nature, to the
+tiger he hunts in the Indian jungle, or the wolf he
+shoots in the Canadian backwoods? And this was
+the man whose fate, until last night, he had stood
+pledged to discover; the man whose lost footsteps he
+was to have tracked through the wilderness of life.
+Little need of inquiry. This man’s troubled history<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>
+had been brought to an abrupt ending, and by the
+seeker’s rash hand.</p>
+
+<p>‘Come,’ said Lucille anxiously; ‘we must find
+those papers for my grandfather. He will not rest
+unless he has them this evening.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius began his task without another word; he
+could not trust himself to speak yet awhile. He unfastened
+the clumsy folding-doors of the cabinet,
+with a hand that trembled a little in spite of his
+effort to be calm, and opened the drawers one after
+another. They came out easily enough, and rattled
+loosely in their frames, so shrunken was the wood.
+Outer drawers and inner drawers, and papers in
+almost all of them—some were mere scrappy memoranda,
+scrawled on half sheets or quarter sheets of
+letter paper; other documents were in sealed envelopes;
+others were little packets of letters, two or
+three together, tied with faded red tape. Lucius
+examined all the drawers and minute cupboards,
+designed, one would suppose, with a special view to
+the accumulation of rubbish; emptied them of their
+contents, tied the papers all together in his handkerchief,
+and gave them into the custody of Lucille.
+The light had faded a little by the time this was
+done, and the corners of the loft were wrapped in
+deepening shadow—a gruesome ghostly place to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>
+left alone in by this half-light. Lucille looked round
+her with a shudder as she turned to leave it.</p>
+
+<p>They were on the perilous staircase—Lucius in
+front, Lucille behind him, half supported by his uplifted
+arm, both obliged to stoop to avoid knocking
+their heads against the low sloping ceiling—when
+Lucius saw and heard something sufficiently startling.</p>
+
+<p>In the half dusk of the landing below them, he
+saw the door of one of those empty rooms which Lucille
+had declared to be locked opened—ever so little
+way—and then closed again quickly but softly, as if
+shut by a careful hand. He distinctly saw the opening
+of the door; he distinctly heard the noise of the
+lock.</p>
+
+<p>‘Lucille,’ he said, in an eager whisper, ‘you are
+wrong. There is some one in that room—the door
+exactly facing these stairs. Look.’</p>
+
+<p>He pointed, and her eyes followed the direction of
+his finger. For a few moments she stood speechless,
+looking at the door with a scared face, and leaning
+upon him more heavily than before.</p>
+
+<p>‘Nonsense, Lucius! you are dreaming. There
+can be no one there; the rooms are empty; the
+doors are all locked.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I am quite certain, dearest,’ he answered, still
+in a whisper, and with his eyes fixed upon the door<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>
+that had opened, or seemed to open. ‘Don’t be
+alarmed; it may be nothing wrong. It is only old
+Wincher prowling about this floor, I daresay, just as
+he prowls about the down-stair rooms. I’ll soon
+settle the question.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I tell you, Lucius, the doors are all locked,’
+cried Lucille, in a tone far louder than her wonted
+accents—a voice of anger or of alarm.</p>
+
+<p>Lucius tried the door with a strong and resolute
+hand—shook it till it rattled in its time-worn frame.
+It was locked certainly, but locked on the inside.
+The keyhole was darkened by the key.</p>
+
+<p>‘It is locked on the inside, Lucille,’ he said;
+‘there is some one in the room.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Impossible! Who should be there? No one
+ever comes up to this floor. There is nothing here
+to tempt a thief, even if thieves ever troubled this
+house. I keep the keys of all these rooms. Pray
+come down-stairs, Lucius. My grandfather will be
+impatient about those papers.’</p>
+
+<p>‘How can that door be locked on the inside if
+you have the key of it?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I have not the key of that particular door.
+There is a door of communication between that room
+and the next, and I keep one locked on the inside.
+It saves trouble.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Let me see the two rooms; let me satisfy myself
+that all is right,’ he said, stretching out his hand
+for the keys.</p>
+
+<p>‘I will not encourage any such folly,’ answered
+Lucille, moving quickly towards the staircase leading
+to the lower story. ‘Pray bring those papers, Lucius.
+I could not have imagined you were so weak-minded.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Do you call it weak-minded to trust my own
+senses? And I have a special reason for being anxious
+upon this point.’</p>
+
+<p>She was on her way down-stairs by this time.
+Lucius lingered to listen at the door, but no sound
+came from the room within. He tried all the doors
+one after another: they were all locked. He knelt
+down to look through the keyholes. Two of the
+rooms were darkened by closed shutters, only faint
+gleams of light filtering through the narrow spaces
+between them. One was lighter, and in this he saw
+an old bedstead and some pieces of dilapidated furniture.
+It looked a room which might have been used
+at some time for a servant’s bedroom.</p>
+
+<p>After all, that opening and shutting of the door
+had been, perhaps, a delusion of his overwrought
+mind. Only a few minutes before there had been a
+noise like the spinning of a hundred Manchester cotton-looms<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span>
+in his brain. The horror and anguish of
+that hideous discovery in the loft still possessed him
+as he descended those stairs: what more likely than
+that, in such a moment, his bewildered senses should
+cheat him?</p>
+
+<p>And could he doubt Lucille’s positive assurance
+as to the condition of those rooms? Could he doubt
+her whose truth was the sheet-anchor of his life? Or
+could he mistrust her judgment whose calm good
+sense was one of the finest qualities of her character?</p>
+
+<p>Had it not been for Homer Sivewright’s strange
+story of noises heard in the dead of the night, he
+could have dismissed the subject far more easily. As
+it was he lingered for some time; listening for the
+faintest sound that might reach his ear, and hearing
+nothing but the scamper of a mouse within the wainscot,
+the fall of a dead fly from a spider’s web.</p>
+
+<p>He found Lucille waiting for him in the corridor
+below, very pale, and with an anxious look, which
+she tried to disguise by a faint smile.</p>
+
+<p>‘Well,’ she asked, ‘you have kept me waiting
+long enough. Are you satisfied now?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Not quite. I should very much like to have the
+keys of yonder rooms. Such a house as this is the
+very place to harbour a scoundrel.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span></p>
+
+<p>The girl shuddered, and drew back from him
+with a look of absolute terror.</p>
+
+<p>‘Don’t be frightened, Lucille. I daresay there is
+no one there; a strange cat, perhaps, at most; yet
+cats don’t open and shut locked doors. There may
+be no one; only in such a house as this, so poorly
+occupied by two helpless women and two feeble old
+men, one cannot be too careful. Some notion of
+your grandfather’s wealth may have arisen in the
+neighbourhood. His secluded eccentric life might
+suggest the idea that he is a miser, and that there is
+hoarded money in this house. I want to be assured
+that all is secure, Lucille; that no evil-intentioned
+wretch has crept under this roof. Give me your keys
+and let me search those rooms. It will only be the
+work of a few minutes.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Forgive me for refusing you anything, Lucius,’
+she said; ‘but my grandfather told me never to part
+with those keys to any one. You know his curious
+fancies. I promised to obey him, and cannot break
+my promise.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Not even for me?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Not even for you. Especially as there is not the
+slightest cause for this fancy of yours. That staircase
+door is kept always locked, the keys locked up in
+my grandfather’s desk. It is impossible that any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span>
+living creature could go up to that attic-floor without
+my knowledge. Nor is it possible for any one to get
+into the lower part of the house unseen by me or by
+the Winchers.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I don’t know about that. It would be easy
+enough for any one to get from the wharf to the
+garden. There are half-a-dozen doors at the back of
+the house, and more than a dozen places in the
+stables and outhouses where a man might lie hidden,
+so as to slip into the house at any convenient moment.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You forget how carefully Mrs. Wincher turns
+all the keys, and draws all the bolts at sunset. Pray
+be reasonable, Lucius, and dismiss this absurd fancy
+from your mind. And instead of standing here with
+that solemn face, arguing about impossibilities, come
+to my grandfather’s room with those papers.’</p>
+
+<p>Never had she spoken more lightly. Yet a minute
+ago her cheek had been blanched, her eye dilated
+by terror. Lucius gave a little sigh of resignation
+and followed her along the corridor. After all it was
+a very foolish thing that he had been doing; raising
+fears, perhaps groundless, in the breast of this lonely
+girl. Her grandfather had studiously refrained from
+any mention of his suspicions lest he should alarm
+Lucille. Yet he, the lover, had been so reckless as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>
+to suggest terrors which might give a new pain to her
+solitary life.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Sivewright received the bundle of papers with
+evident satisfaction, and turned them over with hands
+that trembled in their eagerness.</p>
+
+<p>‘Documents of no moment,’ he said; ‘a few old
+records of my business life, put away in that disused
+piece of lumber up-stairs, and half forgotten. But
+when, at the gates of the tomb, a man reviews his
+past life, it is a satisfaction to be able to try back
+by means of such poor memorials as these. They
+serve to kindle the lamp of memory. He sees his
+own words, his own thoughts written years ago, and
+they seem to him like the thoughts and words of the
+dead.’</p>
+
+<p>He thrust the papers into a desk which was drawn
+close to his bedside.</p>
+
+<p>‘You have been better to-day, I hope?’ said
+Lucius, when Lucille had left the room in quest of
+the old man’s evening meal.</p>
+
+<p>‘No; not so well. I don’t like your new medicine.’</p>
+
+<p>‘My new medicine is the medicine you have been
+taking for the last five weeks—a mild tonic, as I told
+you. But you are tired of it, perhaps. I’ll change
+it for something else.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Do. I don’t like its effect upon me.’</p>
+
+<p>And then he went on to state symptoms which
+seemed to indicate increasing weakness, nausea, lassitude,
+and that unreasonable depression of mind
+which was worse than any physical ailment.</p>
+
+<p>‘It seems like a forecast of death,’ he said despondently.</p>
+
+<p>Lucius was puzzled. For some time past there
+had been a marked improvement, but this change
+boded no good. The thread of life had been worn
+thin; any violent shock might snap it. But Lucius
+had believed that in supreme rest and tranquillity lay
+the means of recovery. He could not vanquish organic
+disease; but he might fortify even a worn-out
+constitution, and make the sands of life drop somewhat
+slower through the glass.</p>
+
+<p>To the patient he made light of these symptoms,
+urged upon Mr. Sivewright the necessity of taking
+things quietly, and above all of not allowing himself
+to be worried by any groundless apprehensions.</p>
+
+<p>‘If you have a notion that there is anything
+going wrong in this house, let me sleep here for a
+few nights,’ said Lucius. ‘There are empty rooms
+enough to provide lodgings for a small regiment. Let
+me take up my quarters in one of them—the room
+next this one, for instance. I am a light sleeper;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>
+and if there should be foul play of any kind, my ear
+would be quick to discover the intruder.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No,’ said the old man. ‘It is kind of you to
+propose such a thing, but there’s no necessity. It
+was a nervous fancy of mine, I daresay; the effect of
+physical weakness. Say no more about it.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius went home earlier than usual that evening,
+much to the amazement of Mrs. Wincher, who
+begged him to give them a ‘toon’ before departing.
+This request, however, was not supported by Lucille.
+She seemed anxious and restless, and Lucius blamed
+his own folly as the cause of her anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>‘My dearest,’ he said tenderly, retaining the icy-cold
+hand which she gave him at parting, ‘I fear
+those foolish suspicions of mine about the rooms up-stairs
+have alarmed you. I was an idiot to suggest
+any such idea. But if you have the faintest apprehension
+of danger, let me stay here to-night and
+keep guard. I will stay in this room, and make my
+round of the house at intervals all through the night.
+Let me stay, Lucille. Who has so good a right to
+protect you?’</p>
+
+<p>‘O no, no,’ she cried quickly, ‘on no account.
+There is not the slightest occasion for such a thing.
+Why should you suppose that I am frightened, Lucius?’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Your own manner makes me think so, darling.
+This poor little hand is unnaturally cold, and you
+have not been yourself all this evening.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I am a little anxious about my grandfather.’</p>
+
+<p>‘All the more reason that I should remain here
+to-night. I can stay in his room if you like, so as to
+be on the spot should he by any chance grow suddenly
+worse, though I have no fear of that.’</p>
+
+<p>‘If you do not fear that, there is nothing to fear.
+As to your stopping here, that is out of the question.
+I know my grandfather wouldn’t like it.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius could hardly dispute this, as Mr. Sivewright
+had actually refused his offer to remain.
+There was nothing for him to do but to take a lingering
+farewell of his betrothed, and depart, sorely
+troubled in spirit.</p>
+
+<p>He was not sorry when the old iron gate closed
+upon him. Never till to-night had he left the house
+that sheltered Lucille without a pang of regret, but
+to-night, after the discovery of the portrait in the loft,
+he felt in sore need of solitude. He wanted to look
+his situation straight in the face. This man—the
+man his hand had slain—was the father of his promised
+wife. The hand that he was to give to Lucille
+at the altar was red with her father’s blood. Most
+hideous thought, most bitter fatality which had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>
+brought that villain across his path out yonder in the
+trackless forest. Was this world so narrow that they
+two must needs meet—that no hand save his could
+be found to wreak God’s vengeance upon that relentless
+savage?</p>
+
+<p>Her father! And in the veins of that gentle girl,
+who in her innocent youth had seemed to him fair
+and pure as the snowdrop unfolding its white bells
+from out a bed of newly-fallen snow, there ran the
+blood of that most consummate scoundrel! All his
+old theories of hereditary instincts were at fault here.
+From such a sire so sinless a child! The thought
+tortured him. Could he ever look at that sweet pensive
+face again without conjuring up the vision of
+that wild haggard visage he had seen in the red glare
+of the pine-logs, those hungry savage eyes, gleaming
+athwart elf-locks of shaggy hair, and trying to find
+a strange distorted likeness between the two faces?</p>
+
+<p>And this horrible secret he must keep to his
+dying day. One hint, one whisper of the fatal truth,
+and he and Lucille would be sundered for ever. Did
+honour counsel him to confess that deed of his in
+the forest? Did honour oblige him to tell this
+girl that all her hopes of reunion with the father she
+had loved so dearly were vain; that his hand had
+made a sudden end of that guilty life, cut off the sinner<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span>
+in his prime, without pause for repentance, without
+time even to utter one wild appealing cry to his
+God? True that the man had declared himself an
+infidel, that he was steeped to the lips in brutish
+selfishness, grovelling, debased, hardened in sin.
+Who should dare say that repentance was impossible,
+even for a wretch so fallen? Far as the east is
+from the west are the ways of God from the ways of
+man, and in His infinite power there are infinite
+possibilities of mercy and forgiveness.</p>
+
+<p>‘I was mad when I did that deed,’ thought Lucius;
+‘mad as in the time that followed when I lay
+raging in a brain fever; yet, Heaven knows, I believed
+it was but stern justice. There was no tribunal yonder.
+We were alone in the wilderness with God, and
+I deemed I did but right when I made myself the
+instrument of His wrath. All that followed that
+awful moment is darkness. Schanck never spoke of
+that villain’s fate, nor did I. We instinctively avoided
+the hideous subject, and conspired to hide the secret
+from Geoffrey. Poor, good-natured old Schanck! I
+wonder whether he has found his way back from the
+Californian gold-fields. If I had leisure for such a
+pilgrimage, I’d go down to Battersea and inquire. I
+doubt if a rough life among gold-diggers would suit
+him long.’</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span></p>
+
+<p class="center no-indent fs120 bold wsp">Book the Second.</p>
+
+<hr class="r5">
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.<br>
+<span class="fs70">GEOFFREY BEGINS A VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">Not</span> very far did Geoffrey Hossack proceed upon his
+Norwegian voyage. At Hull he discovered that—perusing
+his Bradshaw with a too rapid eye, and a
+somewhat disordered mind—he had mistaken the
+date of the steamer’s departure, and must waste two
+entire days in that prosperous port, waiting for the
+setting forth of that vessel. Even one day in that
+thriving commercial town seemed to him intolerably
+long. He perambulated King William-street and the
+market-place, Silver-street, Myton-gate, Low-gate,
+and all the gates; stared at the shipping; lost his
+way amidst a tangle of quays and dry docks and wet
+docks and store-houses and moving bridges, which
+were for ever barring his way; and exhausted the
+resources of Kingston-upon-Hull in the space of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>
+two hours. Then, in very despair, he took rail to
+Withernsea, and dined at a gigantic hotel, where he
+was ministered to by a London waiter, who provided
+him with the regulation fried sole and cutlet. Having
+washed down these too familiar viands with two
+or three glasses of Manzanilla, he set forth in quest
+of a solitude where to smoke his cigar in communion
+with that vast waste of waters—the German Ocean—and
+his own melancholy thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>Go to Norway; try to forget Janet Bertram amid
+those lonely hills, with no companions save the two
+faithful lads who carried his guns, and performed
+the rough services of life under canvas? Try to forget
+her amidst the solitude of nature? Vain hope!
+An hour’s contemplation of the subject on that lonely
+shore, remote from the parade and the band and all
+the holiday traffic of a popular watering-place, was
+enough to make a complete change in Mr. Hossack’s
+plans. He would not go to Norway. Why should
+he put the North Sea betwixt himself and his love?
+Who could tell what might happen in his absence,
+what changes might come to pass involving all his
+chances of happiness, and he, dolt and idiot, too far
+away to profit by their arising? No; he would stay
+in England, within easy reach of his idol. He might
+write her a little line now and then, just to remind<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span>
+her of the mere fact of his existence, and to acquaint
+her with his abode. She had not forbidden him to
+write. Decidedly, come what might, he would not
+leave England.</p>
+
+<p>This decision arrived at, after profound cogitation,
+he breathed more freely. He had been going
+forth like an exile—unwillingly, as if driven by
+Nemesis, that golden-winged goddess who made such
+hard lines for the Greeks. He had set forth in the
+first rush and tumult of his passion, deeming that
+in the wild land of the Norse gods he might stifle
+his grief, find a cure for his pain. He felt more at
+ease now that he had allowed love to gain the victory.
+‘It is a privilege to inhabit the same country with
+her,’ he told himself.</p>
+
+<p>Not long did he linger in Hull. The next morning’s
+express carried him back to London, uncertain
+as to how he should spend his autumn; willing even
+to let his guns rust so that he need not drag himself
+too far away from Janet Bertram.</p>
+
+<p>‘Janet,’ he repeated fondly, ‘a prettier name
+than Jane; a name made for simplest tenderest verse.
+I’m glad I have learnt to think of her by it.’</p>
+
+<p>There were letters waiting for him at the Cosmopolitan,
+forwarded from Stillmington, nearly a
+week’s arrears of correspondence; letters feminine<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span>
+and masculine; the feminine bulky, ornamental as
+to stationery, be-monogramed, redolent of rose and
+frangipani; cousinly epistles which Geoffrey contemplated
+with a good-humoured indifference.</p>
+
+<p>He looked over the addresses eagerly, lest by remotest
+chance—yet he could not even hope so much—there
+might be a letter from Mrs. Bertram.
+There was none; so he opened one of the cousinly
+epistles with a profound sigh.</p>
+
+<p>Hillersdon Grange, Hampshire. <em>Her</em> county and
+his. He and Lucius had been born and bred not
+twenty miles apart, and had begun their friendship
+at Winchester School. Mr. Hossack’s people lived
+in Hampshire, and were unwearying in their invitations,
+yet he had not revisited his native place since
+his return from America.</p>
+
+<p>‘I can’t understand why a man should be attached
+to the place where he was born,’ he used to say in his
+careless fashion when his cousins reproached him for
+his indifference. ‘In the first place, he doesn’t remember
+the event of his birth; and in the second,
+the locality is generally the most uninteresting in
+creation. Wherever you go, abroad or at home, you
+are always dragged about to see where particular
+people were born. You knock your head against
+the low timbers of Shakespeare’s birthplace at Stratford;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span>
+you go puffing and panting up to a garret to
+see where Charlotte Corday was first admitted to the
+mystery of existence; you drive through Devonshire
+lanes to stare at the comfortable homestead where
+Kaleigh blinked at life’s morning sun; you mount a
+hill to admire the native home of Fox; you go stages
+out of your way to contemplate the cradle of Robespierre.
+And when all that a man loved in his boyhood
+lies under the sod, and the home where he spent
+his early life seems sadder than a mausoleum, people
+wonder that he is not fond of those empty rooms,
+haunted by the phantoms of his cherished dead,
+simply because he happened to be born in one of
+them.’</p>
+
+<p>Thus had argued Mr. Hossack when his cousins
+reproached him with his want of natural affection for
+the scenes of his childhood. Hillersdon Grange was
+within three miles of Homefield, where Geoffrey’s
+father had ended his quiet easy life about ten years
+ago, leaving his only son orphaned but remarkably
+well provided for. Squire Hossack of Hillersdon was
+the elder scion of the house, and owner of a handsome
+landed estate, and the Miss Hossacks were
+those two musically-disposed damsels whom it had
+been Geoffrey’s privilege to escort to various concerts
+and matinees in the winter season last past.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span></p>
+
+<p>The letter now in Geoffrey’s hand was from the
+elder of the damsels, a hard-riding good-looking
+young woman of four-and-twenty, who kept her
+father’s house, domineered over her younger sister,
+and would have had no objection to rule Geoffrey
+himself with the same wise sway.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>Her letter was a new version of the oft-repeated
+invitation. ‘Papa says, if you don’t come to
+us this year, he shall think you have quite left off
+caring about your relations, and declares he really
+never will ask you again,’ she wrote. ‘It does seem
+a hard thing, Geoffrey, that you can go scampering
+about the world, and living in all manner of outlandish
+places—Stillmington, for instance, a place
+which I am told is abominably dull out of the hunting
+season, and what you can have found to amuse you
+all these months in such a place, I can’t imagine—and
+yet, excuse the long parenthesis, can’t find time
+to come to us, although we are so near dear old
+Homefield, which you must be attached to, unless
+your heart is much harder than I should like to suppose
+it. The birds are plentiful this year, and papa
+says there are some snipe in Dingley marsh. Altogether
+he can promise you excellent sport after the
+first of next month.</p>
+
+<p>‘But if you want to oblige Jessie and me’ (Jessie<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>
+was the younger sister) ‘you will come at once, as
+there are to be grand doings at Lady Baker’s next
+week; and eligible young men being scarce in this
+neighbourhood, we should be glad to have a good-looking
+cousin to show off. Papa escorts us, of
+course; but as he always contrives to get among the
+old fogies who talk vestry and quarter-sessions, we
+might almost as well be without any escort at all. So
+do come, dear Geoff, and oblige your always affectionate
+cousin,</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">Arabella Hossack</span>.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p>‘P.S. Please call at Cramer’s, Chappell’s, and a
+few more of the publishers before you come, and
+bring us down anything they may recommend. Jessie
+wants some really good songs, and I should like
+Kalbé’s fantasias upon the newest Christy melodies.’</p>
+</div>
+<br>
+
+<p>Lady Baker! Lucius had named this lady as
+one of the friends of his sister Janet; one of the
+county people whose notice had been the beginning
+of the fatal end. It was at Lady Baker’s house that
+Janet had met the villain who blighted her life.</p>
+
+<p>This was an all-sufficient reason for Geoffrey’s
+prompt acceptance of his cousin’s invitation. It was
+only by trying back that he could hope to discover
+the after-life of that man who had called himself Vandeleur,
+only by going back to the very beginning that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span>
+he could hope to track his footsteps to the end.
+Could he but discover this scoundrel’s later history,
+and find it end in a grave, what happiness to carry
+the tidings of his discovery to Janet, and to say, ‘I
+bring you your freedom, and I claim you for my own
+by the right of my devotion!’</p>
+
+<p>He knew that she loved him. That knowledge
+had power to comfort and sustain him in all the pain
+of severance. True love can live for a long time upon
+such nutriment as this.</p>
+
+<p>He wrote to Lucius, telling him where he was
+going, and what he was going to do, and started for
+Hillersdon next morning, laden with a portmanteau
+full of new music for those daughters of the horseleech,
+his cousins.</p>
+
+<p>Hillersdon Grange was, as Geoffrey confessed
+with the placid approval of a kinsman, ‘not half a
+bad place’ for an autumn visit. The house was old,
+a fine specimen of domestic architecture in the days
+of the Plantagenets. It had been expanded for the
+accommodation of modern inhabitants; a ponderous
+and somewhat ugly annex added in the reign of
+William the Third; a cloister turned into a drawing-room
+at a later period—as the requirements of civilised
+people grew larger. The fine old hall, with its
+open roof, once the living room of the mansion, was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span>
+now an armoury, in which casques that had been
+hacked at Cressy, and hauberks that had been battered
+in the Wars of the Roses, were diversified by
+antlers and stuffed stags’ heads, the trophies of the
+hunting field in more pacific ages.</p>
+
+<p>The Hossacks were not an old family. They could
+not boast that identity with the soil which constitutes
+rural aristocracy. They had been bankers and
+merchants in days gone by, and their younger sons
+were still merchants, or bankers. Geoffrey’s father,
+and the Squire of Hillersdon Grange, had succeeded,
+one to the patrimonial acres, acquired a few years
+before his birth; the other to the counting-house
+and its wider chances of wealth. Both had flourished.
+The Squire living the life that pleased him best,
+farming a little in a vastly expensive and vastly unprofitable
+fashion; writing a letter to the <cite>Times</cite> now
+and then about the prospects of the harvest, or the
+last discovery in drainage; quoting Virgil, sitting at
+quarter-sessions, and laying down parochial law in
+the vestry. The younger making most money, working
+like a slave, and fancying himself the happier and
+the better man; to be cut off in his prime by heart-disease
+or an overworked brain, while Geoffrey was
+a lad at Winchester.</p>
+
+<p>The grounds at Hillersdon were simply perfection.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span>
+The place was on the borders of the New
+Forest, and the Squire’s woods melted into that
+wider domain. A river wound through the park, and
+washed the border of the lawn; a river which had
+shadowy willow-sheltered bends where trout abounded,
+rushy coves and creeks famous for jack, a river delightful
+alike to the angler and to the landscape
+painter.</p>
+
+<p>‘Not half a bad place,’ said Geoffrey, yawning
+and looking at his watch on the first morning after
+his arrival; ‘and now, having breakfasted copiously
+upon your rustic fare—that dish of cutlets <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à la Soubise</i>
+was worthy of mention—may I ask what I am to
+do with myself? Just eleven! Three hours before
+luncheon! Do you do anything in the country when
+you are not eating or sleeping?’</p>
+
+<p>This inquiry was addressed to the sisters Belle and
+Jessie—good-looking young women, with fine complexions,
+ample figures, clear blue eyes, light brown
+hair, and the freshest of morning toilets, in the nautical
+style, as appropriate to the New Forest—wide
+blue collars flung back from full white throats, straw
+hats bound with blue ribbon, blue serge petticoats
+festooned coquettishly above neat little buckled shoes,
+with honest thick soles for country walking; altogether
+damsels of the order called ‘nice,’ but in no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>
+manner calculated to storm the heart of man. Good
+daughters in the present, good wives and mothers,
+perhaps, in the future, but not of the syren tribe.</p>
+
+<p>‘I don’t suppose Hillersdon is much duller than
+the backwoods of America,’ said Arabella, the elder,
+with some dignity; ‘and I hope you may be able to
+endure life until the 1st with no better company than
+ours.’</p>
+
+<p>‘My dearest Belle, if you and Jessie had paid me
+a visit on the banks of the Saskatchewan, I should
+have been unutterably happy, especially if you had
+brought me a monstrous hamper of provisions—a
+ham like that on the sideboard for instance, and a
+few trifles of that kind. I didn’t mean to depreciate
+Hillersdon; the hour and a half or so I spent at
+the breakfast table was positively delightful. But
+the worst of what people call the pleasures of the
+table is that other pleasures are apt to pall after
+them. Perhaps the best thing you could do would
+be to drive me gently about the park in your pony
+carriage till luncheon. I don’t suppose for a moment
+that I shall be able to eat any more at two o’clock;
+but the country air <em>might</em> have a revivifying effect.
+One can but try.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You lazy creature! drive you indeed!’ exclaimed
+Jessie. ‘We’ll do nothing of the kind. But I tell<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span>
+you what you shall do if you like—and of course you
+will like—you shall be coxswain of our boat, and we’ll
+row you up to Dingley.’</p>
+
+<p>‘<em>You’ll</em> row? Ah, I might have known those blue
+collars meant something rather desperate. However,
+steering a wherry isn’t wery hard labour, as the burlesque
+writers would say. I’ll come.’</p>
+
+<p>The sisters were delighted. A good-looking cousin
+to damsels in a rural district is like water-brooks in
+a dry land. In their inmost hearts these girls doated
+on Geoffrey, but artfully suppressed all outward token
+of their affection. Many a night during the comfortable
+leisure of hairbrushing, when their joint maid
+had been dismissed, had the sisters speculated on
+their cousin’s life, wondering why he didn’t marry,
+and whom he would marry, and so on; while the real
+consideration paramount in the mind of each was,
+‘Will he ever marry <em>me</em>?’</p>
+
+<p>They strolled across the lawn (not a croquet lawn
+of a hundred and twenty feet square, after the manner
+of ‘grounds’ attached to suburban villas, but a wide
+undulating tract of greensward, shaded here and there
+by groups of picturesque old trees—maple and copper
+beech, and ancient hawthorns on which the berries
+were beginning to redden) to a Swiss boathouse with
+pointed gables and thatched roof, ample room for a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span>
+small flotilla below, and a spacious apartment above—a
+room which, had young men been dominant in the
+household, would doubtless have been made a <em>tabagie</em>
+or a billiard room, but which, under the gentler sway
+of young ladies, had been gaily decorated with light
+chintz draperies and fern cases, innocent-looking
+maple furniture, easels, piano, and workbaskets.</p>
+
+<p>That winding river reminded Geoffrey of the weedy
+ditch at Stillmington on which he had spent many a
+summer afternoon, pulling against the stream with
+disconsolate soul, thinking of his implacable divinity.
+He gave a little sigh, and wished himself back in Stillmington;
+to suffer, to hope, to despair—only to be
+near her.</p>
+
+<p>‘I must make an end of this misery somehow,’
+he said to himself, ‘or it will make an end of me.’</p>
+
+<p>‘What a sigh, Geoffrey; and how thoughtful you
+look!’ exclaimed Jessie, who had an eye which marked
+every mote in the summer air.</p>
+
+<p>‘Did I sigh? I may have eaten too much breakfast.
+Look here, Belle, you’d better let me take a
+pair of sculls, while you and Jessie dabble your hands
+in the water and talk of your last new dresses. It
+isn’t good for a man to be idle. I shall have the
+blues if I sit still and steer.’</p>
+
+<p>‘What a strange young man you are!’ said Belle.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span>
+‘Ten minutes ago you wanted to loll in a pony carriage
+and be driven.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I might have endured the pony carriage, but I
+can’t endure the boat unless I make myself useful.
+There, get in please, and sit down. What a toyshop
+affair! and as broad as a house! I should think the
+man who built Noah’s Ark must have designed this.’</p>
+
+<p>The sisters exclaimed against this disparagement
+of their bark, which a local boatbuilder had adorned
+with all the devices of his art—cane-work, French
+polish and gilding, crimson damask-covered cushions,
+dainty cord and tassels—all those prettinesses which
+the Oxonian, who likes a boat that he can carry on
+his shoulder, regards with ineffable contempt.</p>
+
+<p>The stream was narrow but deep, and pleasantly
+sheltered, for the most part, with leafage; the banks
+clothed in beauty, and every turn of the river disclosing
+a new picture. But neither Geoffrey nor his
+companions gave themselves up to the contemplation
+of this ever-varying landscape. Geoffrey was thinking
+of Janet Bertram; the girls were wondering what
+made their cousin so silent.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hossack plied his sculls bravely, despite his
+abstraction, but even in this was actuated less by a
+desire to gratify his cousins than by a lurking design
+of his own. Six miles up this very stream lay Mardenholme,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>
+the mansion of the Bakers. Lady Baker’s
+famous gardens—gardens on which fabulous sums
+were annually lavished—sloped down to the brim of
+this very river. If he could row as far as Mardenholme,
+he might induce the girls to take him in to
+Lady Baker forthwith, and thus obtain the interview
+he sighed for. To hope for any confidential conversation
+with that lady on the day of a great garden
+party seemed foolish in the extreme; nor did it suit
+his impatient spirit to wait for the garden party.</p>
+
+<p>‘When are these high-jinks to come off at Lady
+Baker’s?’ he inquired presently, in his most careless
+manner.</p>
+
+<p>‘Next Tuesday. It’s to be such a swell party,
+Geoffrey—croquet, archery, a morning concert, a
+German tea, <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tableaux vivants</i>, and a dance to wind up
+with.’</p>
+
+<p>‘<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Tableaux vivants</i>,’ said Geoffrey with a yawn;
+‘the Black Brunswicker and the Huguenot, I suppose.
+We have grown too æsthetic for the Juan and
+Haydee, and the Conrad and Medora of one’s youth.
+Are you two girls in the tableaux?’</p>
+
+<p>‘O dear no,’ exclaimed Belle, bridling a little.
+‘We are not Lady Baker’s last mania. We are neighbours,
+and she always invites us to her large parties,
+and begs us to come to her Thursday kettledrum, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span>
+is monstrously civil; but in her heart of hearts she
+doesn’t care a straw for humdrum country people.
+She is always taking up artists and singers and
+actors, and that kind of thing. She positively raves
+about <em>them</em>.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Ah, I’ve heard something of that before,’ said
+Geoffrey thoughtfully. ‘She’s musical, isn’t she?’</p>
+
+<p>‘She calls herself so—goes to the opera perpetually
+in the London season, and patronises all the
+local concerts, and gives musical parties—but nobody
+ever heard her play a note.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Ah,’ said Geoffrey, ‘I don’t think people with
+a real passion for music often do play. They look
+upon the murder of a fine sonata as a species of
+sacrilege, and wisely refrain from the attempt, but
+not the deed, which would confound them. By the
+way, talking of Lady Baker and her protégées, did
+you ever hear of a Miss Davoren, who was rather
+distinguished for her fine voice, some years ago?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes,’ said Belle, ‘I have heard Lady Baker
+rave about her. She was a clergyman’s daughter at
+Wykhamston. And I have heard other people say
+that Lady Baker’s patronage was the ruin of her,
+and that she left her home in some improper way,
+and broke her poor old father’s heart.’</p>
+
+<p>This little speech sent a sharp pang through another<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span>
+heart, the honest heart that loved the sinner
+so fondly.</p>
+
+<p>‘You never saw Miss Davoren, I suppose?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Of course not,’ cried Belle. ‘It was before I was
+out of the nursery.’</p>
+
+<p>‘But you were not blind when you were in the
+nursery; you might have seen her.’</p>
+
+<p>‘How could I? I didn’t go to Lady Baker’s
+parties before I was out, and papa doesn’t know many
+Wykhamston people.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Ah, then you never saw her. Was she pretty?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Perfectly lovely, according to Lady Baker; but
+all her geese are swans.’</p>
+
+<p>‘She must be a very enthusiastic person, this
+Lady Baker. Do you think you could contrive to introduce
+me to her?—to-day, for instance. I can
+row you down to Mardenholme by one o’clock.’</p>
+
+<p>‘It would be so dreadfully early to call,’ said Jessie,
+‘and then, you see, Thursday is her day. But
+she’s always extremely kind, and pretends to be glad
+to see us.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Why pretends? She may be really glad.’</p>
+
+<p>‘O, she can’t possibly be glad to see half the
+county. There must be some make-believe about it.
+However, she gives herself up to that kind of thing,
+and I suppose she likes it. What do you think,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span>
+Belle? Would it look very strange if we called with
+Geoffrey?’</p>
+
+<p>‘We might risk it,’ said Belle, anxious to indulge
+the prodigal. ‘She’s almost sure to be somewhere
+about the garden if she’s at home. She spends half
+her life in the garden at Mardenholme.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Then we’ll find her, and approach her without
+ceremony,’ replied Geoffrey, sending the boat swiftly
+through the clear water. ‘Depend upon it, <em>I</em> shall
+make myself at home.’</p>
+
+<p>‘We’re not afraid of that,’ answered Belle, who
+was much more disturbed by the idea that this free-and-easy
+young man might forget the homage due to
+a county magnate such as Lady Baker—a personage
+who in a manner made the rain or fine weather in this
+part of Hampshire. A summer which her ladyship
+did not spend at Mardenholme was regarded as a bad
+and profitless season. People almost wondered that
+the harvest was not backward, that the clover and
+vetches came up pretty much the same as usual.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.<br>
+<span class="fs70">LADY BAKER.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">It</span> was hardly one o’clock when they beheld the terraced
+gardens of Mardenholme; gardens that were
+worth a day’s journey to see; a thoroughly Italian
+picture, set in a thoroughly English landscape; marble
+balustrades surmounting banks of flowers; tall
+spire-shaped conifers ranged at intervals, tier above
+tier; marble steps and marble basins, in every direction;
+and below this show-garden, sloping down to
+the river, a lawn of softest verdure, bordered by vast
+shrubberies, that to the stranger seemed pathless,
+yet where a fallen leaf could hardly have been found,
+so exquisite was the order of the grounds.</p>
+
+<p>Geoffrey tied his boat to the lower branch of a
+mighty willow which dipped its green tresses in the
+stream, leaped out and landed his cousins as coolly
+as if he had arrived at an hotel. No mortal was to
+be seen for the first moment, but Jessie’s sharp eyes
+beheld a white shirt-sleeve gleaming athwart a group
+of magnolias.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘There’s a gardener over there,’ she said: ‘we’d
+better ask him if Lady Baker is in the grounds.’</p>
+
+<p>They made for the gardener, who, with the slow
+and philosophic air of a man whose wages are not dependent
+on the amount of his labour, was decapitating
+daisies that had been impertinent enough to lift their
+vulgar heads in this patrician domain. This hireling
+informed them that he had seen her ladyship somewheres
+about not ten minutes agone. She was in the
+Chaney temple, perhaps, and he volunteered to show
+them the way.</p>
+
+<p>‘You needn’t trouble yourself,’ said Jessie. ‘I
+know the way.’</p>
+
+<p>‘What does he mean by the Chaney temple?’
+asked Geoffrey, as they departed.</p>
+
+<p>‘It is a garden-house Lady Baker has had sent
+over from China,’ answered Belle. ‘I know she’s
+fond of sitting there.’</p>
+
+<p>They entered a darksome alley in the shrubbery,
+which wound along the river-bank some little way,
+opening into a kind of wilderness; a very tame
+wilderness, inhabited by water-fowl of various tribes,
+which stretched out their necks and screamed vindictively
+at the intruders. Here on the brink of the
+river was the garden-house, an edifice of bamboo and
+lattice-work, adorned with bells, very much open to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>
+all the winds of heaven, but a pleasant shelter on a
+sultry day in August. When the breeze shook them,
+the numerous bells rang ever so faintly, and the
+sound woke echoes on the farther bank of the stream.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Baker was reclining in a bamboo-chair,
+reading, with a young lady and gentleman, and a
+Japanese pug in attendance upon her.</p>
+
+<p>‘Dear Lady Baker,’ cried Belle, anxious to make
+the best of her unceremonious approach, ‘I hope you
+won’t think it very dreadful of us to come into the
+gardens this way like burglars; but my cousin Geoffrey
+was so anxious to be presented to you, that he
+insisted on rowing us here this morning.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I do think it extremely dreadful,’ replied the
+lady with a pleasant laugh. ‘And so this is the
+cousin of whom I have heard so much. Welcome
+to Mardenholme, Mr. Hossack. We ought to have
+known each other long before this, since we are such
+near neighbours.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I have the honour to possess a small estate not
+far from your ladyship’s,’ answered Geoffrey; ‘but,
+being hitherto unacquainted with the chief attraction
+of the neighbourhood in your person, I have ignorantly
+given a lease of my place to a retired sugar-broker.’</p>
+
+<p>‘That’s a pity, for I think we should have been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span>
+good neighbours. Mr. Hossack, Mrs. Wimple; Mr.
+Wimple, Mr. Hossack,’ murmured Lady Baker in a
+parenthesis; at which introduction the young lady
+and the young gentleman, newly married, and indifferent
+to the external world, honoured Geoffrey
+with distant bows, and immediately withdrew to a
+trellised balcony overhanging the river, to gaze upon
+that limpid stream, or, in Geoffrey’s modern vocabulary,
+‘to spoon.’ ‘You are a wonderful traveller,
+I understand,’ continued her ladyship.</p>
+
+<p>‘Hardly, in the modern sense of the word,’ said
+Geoffrey, with becoming modesty. ‘I have hunted
+the bighorn on the Rocky Mountains, and shot grouse
+in Norway; but I have neither discovered the source
+of a river, nor found an unknown waterfall; in short,
+as a traveller, I am a very insignificant individual.
+But as a rule I keep moving, locomotion being about
+the only employment open to a man to whom Providence
+has denied either talent or ambition.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You are at any rate more modest than the
+generality of lions, Mr. Hossack,’ Lady Baker replied
+graciously.</p>
+
+<p>She was a little woman, sallow and thin, with a
+face which in any one less than the mistress of Mardenholme
+would have been insignificant. But she
+had fine eyes and teeth, and dressed with the exquisite<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>
+taste of a woman who studied the fitness of
+things and not the fashion-book. She had a manner
+that was at once stately and caressing, and could
+confer a favour with the air of a princess of the
+blood royal. She had spent all her life in society,
+and, except when she slept, knew not what it was
+to be alone. She could have had but scanty leisure
+for reading, yet she knew, or seemed to know, everything
+that society knew. Her detractors declared
+that she never read anything but the newspapers,
+and thus, by a zealous study of the <cite>Times</cite> and the
+critical journals, kept herself far in advance of those
+stupid people who wade through books. She skimmed
+the cream of other people’s knowledge, shrugged her
+shoulders in mild depreciation of books she had never
+read, and wore the newest shades of opinion as she
+wore the newest colours. For the rest, she was of
+an uncertain age, had been in society for about a
+quarter of a century, and looked five-and-thirty. Her
+light-brown hair, which she wore with almost classic
+simplicity, as yet revealed no tell-tale streak of silver.
+Perhaps, like Mr. Mivers in <em>Kenelm Chillingly</em>, Lady
+Baker had begun her wig early.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Horatio Veering Baker, the husband of this
+distinguished personage, was rather an appanage of
+her state than an entity. She produced him on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span>
+ceremonial occasions, just as her butler produced the
+parcel-gilt tankards and gigantic rosewater salvers on
+the buffet; and at other times he retired, like the
+moon on those dark nights when earth knows not
+her gentle splendour. He was a mild-faced old man,
+who devoted his days to various ologies, in which no
+one but himself and his old servant seemed to take
+the faintest interest—and the servant only pretended.
+He inhabited, for the most part, a distant wing of
+the mansion, where he had a vast area of glass cases
+for the display of those specimens which illustrated
+his ologies, and represented the labour of his life.
+Sometimes, but not always, he appeared at the bottom
+of his dinner table; and when, among her ladyship’s
+guests, a scientific man perchance appeared,
+Sir Horatio did him homage, and carried him off
+after dinner for an inspection of the specimens.
+Lady Baker was amiably tolerant of her husband’s
+hobbies. She received him with unvarying graciousness
+when he hobbled into her drawing-room in his
+dress-coat and antique tie, looking hardly less antediluvian
+than the petrified jawbone of a megatherium,
+which was one of the gems in his collection; and she
+was politely solicitous for his well-being when he pronounced
+himself ‘a little fagged,’ and preferred to
+dine in his study.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span></p>
+
+<p>Geoffrey soon found himself on the friendliest
+terms with the mistress of Mardenholme. Lady
+Baker liked good-looking young men who had no
+unpleasant consciousness of their good looks, and
+liked the modern easy manner of youth, provided
+the ease never degenerated into insolence. She took
+Geoffrey under her wing immediately, walked nearly
+a mile with him under the midday sun, protected by
+a huge, white silk umbrella, to show him the lions of
+Mardenholme; that profound hypocrite, Mr. Hossack,
+affecting an ardent admiration of ferneries and flower
+beds, in the hope that this perambulatory exhibition
+might presently procure him the opportunity for which
+his soul languished.</p>
+
+<p>‘Let me once find myself alone with this nice
+old party,’ he said to himself, ‘and I won’t let the
+chance slip. She shall tell me all she knows about
+the villain who wronged Janet Davoren.’</p>
+
+<p>To his infinite vexation, however, his cousins,
+who worshipped the mistress of Mardenholme, followed
+close upon her footsteps throughout the exposition,
+went into raptures with every novelty among
+the ferny tribes, and made themselves altogether a
+nuisance. Geoffrey was beginning to struggle with
+dreary yawns when the Mardenholme luncheon gong
+relieved the situation.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘And now that I’ve shown you my latest acquisition,
+let us go to luncheon,’ said Lady Baker, who
+was never happier than when feeding a new acquaintance.
+In fact, she liked her friends very much as
+she liked her orchids and ferns—for the sake of their
+novelty.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody ever refused an invitation from Lady
+Baker. It was almost the same thing as a royal
+command. Jessie and Belle murmured something
+about ‘papa,’ and the voice of duty which called
+them back to Hillersdon. But Lady Baker waived
+the objection with that regal air of hers, which implied
+that any one else’s inconvenience was a question
+of smallest moment when her pleasure was at
+stake.</p>
+
+<p>‘I should be positively unhappy if you went
+away,’ she said; ‘I have only that Mr. and Mrs.
+Wimple, whom you just now saw in the garden
+house. This is their first visit since their honeymoon,
+and their exhibition of mutual affection is
+almost unendurable. But as it is a match of my
+own making I am obliged to tolerate the infliction.
+They are my only visitors until to-morrow. So if
+you don’t stop, I shall be bored to death between
+this and dinner. I actually caught that absurd child,
+Florence Wimple, in the very act of spelling “<span class="allsmcap">YOU<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span>
+DARLING</span>” in the deaf-and-dumb alphabet to that
+simpleton of a husband of hers across the breakfast
+table this morning.’</p>
+
+<p>Moved by this melancholy picture, Jessie and
+Belle consented to remain. Geoffrey had meant to
+stay from the outset. Indeed, he had landed on the
+greensward of Mardenholme determined to attain his
+object before he left.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.<br>
+<span class="fs70">LADY BAKER TELLS THE STORY OF THE PAST.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">The</span> luncheon party was gay enough, in spite of Mr.
+and Mrs. Wimple’s infatuation for each other, which
+rendered them, as it were, non-existing for the rest
+of the party. They gazed upon each other with rapt
+admiring eyes, and handed each other creams and
+jellies, and smiled at each other upon the smallest
+provocation. But to-day Lady Baker suffered them to
+amuse themselves after their own fashion, and gave
+all her attention to Geoffrey. If he was not distinguished
+in the realms of art, he was at least an agreeable
+young man, who knew how to flatter a lady of
+fashion on the wrong side of forty without indulging
+in that florid colouring which awakens doubts of the
+flatterer’s good faith. He improved his opportunities
+at luncheon to such good purpose, that when that
+meal was over, and the devoted Mr. Wimple had been
+carried off by his wife and the other two ladies to play
+croquet, Lady Baker volunteered to show Geoffrey the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span>
+Mardenholme picture-gallery—a very fair collection
+of modern art, which had been acquired by her ladyship’s
+father, a great Manchester man; for it was
+commerce in soft goods which had created the wealth
+wherewith this lady had endowed Sir Horatio Veering
+Baker, and whence had arisen all the splendours of
+Mardenholme. This was the very thing Geoffrey desired,
+and for which he had been scheming, with the
+<em>finesse</em> of a Jesuit, during the hospitable meal. He
+had affected an enthusiast’s love of art, declaring how,
+from his earliest youth, he had languished to behold
+the treasures of the Mardenholme gallery.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Baker was delighted.</p>
+
+<p>‘My father lived all his later life among artists,’
+she said. ‘He made his fortune in commerce, as I
+daresay you have heard; but in heart he was an artist.
+I myself have painted a little.’ (What had
+Lady Baker not done a little?) ‘But music is my
+grand passion. The pictures were almost all bought
+off the easel—several of them inspired by my father’s
+suggestions. He was full of imagination. Come,
+Mr. Hossack, while those foolish people play croquet
+we will take a stroll in the gallery.’</p>
+
+<p>She led the way through the wide marble-paved
+hall, whence ascended a staircase of marble, like that
+noble one in the Duke of Buccleuch’s palace at Dalkeith,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span>
+and thence to the gallery, a spacious apartment
+lighted from the roof. It was here Lady Baker gave
+her concerts and musical kettledrums, to which half
+the county came to sip black coffee and eat ices and
+stare at the pictures, while the lady’s latest discovery
+in the world of harmony charmed or excruciated their
+ears, as the case might be.</p>
+
+<p>To-day this apartment looked delightfully cool and
+quiet after the sunlit brightness of the other rooms.
+A striped canvas blind was drawn over the glass roof,
+gentle zephyrs floated in through invisible apertures,
+and a tender half-light prevailed which was pleasant
+for tired eyes, if not the best possible light for seeing
+pictures.</p>
+
+<p>‘I’ll have the blinds drawn up,’ said Lady Baker,
+‘and you shall see my gems. There is an Etty yonder
+that I would not part with if a good fairy offered me
+five additional years of life in exchange for it.’</p>
+
+<p>‘With so long a lease of life still in hand, five
+years more or less can seem of no consequence,’ said
+Geoffrey gallantly; ‘but I think an octogenarian would
+accept even a smaller bid for the picture.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Flatterer!’ exclaimed Lady Baker. ‘If you wish
+to see pictures, you must be good enough to ring that
+bell, in order that we may get a little more light.’</p>
+
+<p>‘A moment, dear Lady Baker,’ pleaded Geoffrey;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span>
+‘this half-light is delightful, and my eyes are like a
+cat’s. I can see best in a demi-obscurity like this.
+Yes, the Etty is charming. What modelling, what
+chiaroscuro, what delicious colouring!’</p>
+
+<p>‘You are looking at a Frost,’ said Lady Baker,
+with offended dignity.</p>
+
+<p>‘A thousand pardons. I recognise the delicacy
+of his outlines, the purity of his colour. But forgive
+me, Lady Baker, when I tell you that my devotion to
+art is secondary to my desire to be alone with you!’</p>
+
+<p>Lady Baker looked at him with a startled expression.
+Was it possible that this young Oxonian had
+been seized with a sudden and desperate passion for
+a woman old enough to be his mother? Young men
+are so foolish; and Lady Baker was so accustomed
+to hear herself talked of as a divinity, that she could
+hardly suppose herself inferior in attractiveness to
+Cleopatra or Ninon de l’Enclos.</p>
+
+<p>‘What do you mean, Mr. Hossack?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Only that, presuming on your ladyship’s well-known
+nobility of soul and goodness of heart, I am
+about to appeal to both. Women of fashion have
+been called fickle, but I cannot think <em>you</em> deserve that
+reproach.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I am not a woman of fashion,’ answered Lady
+Baker, still very much in the dark; ‘I have lived for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>
+art—art the all-sufficing, the eternal—not for the
+pretty frivolities which make up the sum of a London
+season. If I have lived in the midst of a crowd,
+it is because I have sought intellect and genius wherever
+they were to be found. I have striven to surround
+myself with great souls. If sometimes I have
+discovered only the empty husk where I had hoped to
+find the precious kernel, it is not my fault.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Would that the world could boast of more such
+women!’ exclaimed Geoffrey, feeling that he had
+cleared an avenue to the subject he wanted to arrive
+at. ‘Amongst your protégées of years gone by, Lady
+Baker, there was one in whose fate I am profoundly
+interested. She is the sister of my most valued friend.
+I speak of Janet Davoren.’</p>
+
+<p>Lady Baker started, and a cloud came over her
+face, as if that name had been suggestive of painful
+recollections.</p>
+
+<p>‘O, Mr. Hossack, why do you mention that unfortunate
+girl’s name? I have been so miserable
+about her—have even felt myself to blame for her
+flight, and all the trouble it brought on that good old
+man her father. He never would confess that she
+had run away from home; he spoke of her always in
+the same words: “She is staying with friends in
+London;” but every one knew there was some sad<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>
+mystery connected with her disappearance, and I was
+only too well able to guess the nature of that mystery.
+But you speak of her as if you knew her—as if you
+could enlighten me as to her present position. If it
+is in your power to do that, I shall be beyond measure
+grateful to you; you will take a load from my
+mind.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I may be able to do that by and by,’ answered
+Geoffrey; ‘at present I can say very little, except
+that the lady lives, and that her brother is my friend.
+From you, Lady Baker, I venture to ask all the information
+you can give me as to those circumstances
+which led to Miss Davoren’s disappearance from
+Wykhamston.’</p>
+
+<p>Lady Baker sighed and paused before she responded
+to this inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>‘All I can tell you amounts to but little,’ she
+said; ‘and even that little is, for the greater part,
+conjecture or mere guess-work. But what I can tell
+shall be freely told, and if I can be of any service to
+that poor girl, either now or in the future, she may
+rely on my friendship; and, whatever the circumstances
+of her flight, she shall have my compassion.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Those circumstances reflect no shame upon her,
+Lady Baker,’ answered Geoffrey with warmth. ‘She
+was a victim, but not a sinner.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘I am most thankful to hear that. And now sit
+down, Mr. Hossack, and you shall hear my story.
+I think I can guess the nature of your interest in
+this lady, in spite of your reserve; and if I can help
+you towards any good result, I shall be delighted to
+do so. There are few girls I ever met more worthy
+of admiration, and, I believe, of esteem, than Janet
+Davoren.’</p>
+
+<p>They sat down side by side in a recess at the end
+of the gallery; and here Lady Baker began her story.</p>
+
+<p>‘I first met Miss Davoren,’ she said, ‘at the Castle.
+The Marchioness had taken her up on account of her
+fine voice; although Lady Guildford had no more
+soul for music than a potato; but, like the rest of
+the world, she likes to have attractive people about
+her; and so she had taken up Miss Davoren. The
+dear girl was as beautiful as she was gifted.’</p>
+
+<p>‘She is so still!’ cried Geoffrey with enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>‘Ah, I thought I was right!’ said Lady Baker;
+at which Geoffrey blushed like a girl. ‘Yes, she was
+positively beautiful; and if she had sat like a statue
+to be looked at and admired, she would have been an
+attraction; but her talent and beauty together made
+her almost divine. My heart was drawn to her at
+once. I called at Wykhamston vicarage next day,
+and invited Mr. Davoren and his daughter to my next<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>
+dinner-party; and then I asked Janet to spend a long
+day with me alone—not a creature to be allowed to
+disturb us—for, as I told her, I wanted really to
+know her. We spent that day together in my boudoir,
+giving ourselves up to the delight of music and intellectual
+conversation. I found Janet all soul; full
+of imagination and poetry, romantic, enthusiastic, a
+poet’s ideal heroine. I made her sing Mozart’s
+Masses to me until my soul was steeped in melody.
+In a word, we discovered that there was perfect sympathy
+between us, and I did not rest till I had persuaded
+Mr. Davoren to let his daughter come to stay
+with me. He was averse from this. He talked of
+the disparity in our modes of life, feared that the
+luxury and gaiety of Mardenholme would make the
+girl’s home seem poor and dull by comparison; but I
+overruled his objections, appealed to the mother’s
+pride in her child, hinted at the great things which
+might come of Janet’s introduction to society, and
+had my own way. Fatal persistence! How often
+have I looked back to that day and regretted my
+selfish pertinacity! But I really did think I might
+be the means of getting the dear girl a good husband.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And you succeeded in uniting her to a villain,’
+said Geoffrey bitterly; then remembering himself he
+added hastily, ‘Pray pardon my impertinence, Lady<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span>
+Baker, but this is a subject upon which I feel
+strongly.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You foolish young man!’ exclaimed Lady Baker
+in her grand way, that air of calm superiority with
+which she had gone through the world, the proud
+serenity of mind which accompanies the possession
+of unlimited means. ‘Do you think if I had not
+read your secret at the very first that I should take
+the trouble to tell you all this? Well, the dear girl
+came to stay with me. I was charmed with her.
+Sir Horatio even liked her, although he rarely takes
+notice of any one unconnected with ologies. He
+showed her his specimens, recommended her to study
+geology—which he said would open her mind—and
+made himself remarkably pleasant whenever he found
+her with me.’</p>
+
+<p>Lady Baker paused, sighed thoughtfully, and then
+took up the thread of her recollections.</p>
+
+<p>‘How happy we were! I should weary you if I
+described our intercourse. We were like girls together,
+for Janet’s society made me younger. I
+felt I had discovered in this girl a mind equal to my
+own, and I was not too proud to place myself on a
+level with her. I had very few people with me when
+she first came, and we lived our own lives in perfect
+freedom, wandering about the grounds—it was in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span>
+early summer—staying up till long after midnight
+listening to that dear girl’s singing, and thoroughly
+enjoying ourselves. One afternoon I drove Janet in
+my pony carriage to Hillsleigh, where I daresay you
+know there is a fine old Gothic church, and a still
+finer organ.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I can guess what is coming,’ said Geoffrey,
+frowning.</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, it was at Hillsleigh we first met the man
+whose baneful influence destroyed that poor child’s
+life; and O, Mr. Hossack, I blame myself for this
+business. If it had not been for my folly, he could
+never have possessed himself of Janet’s mind as he
+did. I saw the evil when it was too late to undo
+what I had done.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Pray go on,’ said Geoffrey eagerly; ‘I want to
+know who and what that man was.’</p>
+
+<p>‘A mystery,’ answered Lady Baker. ‘And unhappily
+it was the mystery which surrounded him
+that made him most attractive to a romantic girl.
+Please let me tell the story my own way. How well
+I remember that June afternoon, the soft warm air,
+the birds singing in the old churchyard! We wandered
+about among the tombstones for a little while,
+reading the epitaphs, and, I am afraid, sometimes
+laughing at them, until all at once Janet caught<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>
+hold of my arm and cried “Hark!” her face lighted
+up with rapture. Through the open windows of the
+church there came such a burst of melody, the opening
+of the <em>Agnus Dei</em> in Mozart’s Twelfth, played by
+a master-hand. “O,” whispered Janet, with a gasp of
+delight, “isn’t that lovely?”’</p>
+
+<p>‘It was that scoundrel!’ cried Geoffrey.</p>
+
+<p>‘“I told you the Hillsleigh organ was worth
+hearing,” said I. “Yes,” said Janet, “but you did
+not tell me that the organist was one of the finest
+players in England. I’m sure that man must be.”
+“Why, my dear,” said I, “when I was last here the
+man played the usual droning voluntaries. This
+must be a new organist. Let’s go in and see him.”
+“No,” said Janet, stopping me, “let us stay here
+till he has done playing. He may leave off if we go
+in.” So we sat down upon one of the crumbling old
+tombstones and listened to our hearts’ content. The
+man played through a great part of the Mass, and
+then strayed off into something else; wild strange
+music, which might or might not be sacred, but
+which sounded to me like a musical version of the
+great Pandemonium scene in <em>Paradise Lost</em>. Altogether
+this lasted nearly an hour, and then we heard
+the church door open and saw the player come out.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Pray describe him.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘He was tall and thin. I should think about
+five-and-thirty, with a face that was at once handsome
+and peculiar; a narrow oval face with a low
+forehead, an aquiline nose, a complexion pale to
+sallowness—like ivory that has yellowed with age—and
+the blackest eyes I ever saw.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And black hair that grew downward into a peak
+in the centre of the forehead,’ cried Geoffrey breathlessly.</p>
+
+<p>‘What, you know him, then?’ exclaimed Lady
+Baker.</p>
+
+<p>‘I believe I met with him in the backwoods of
+America; your description both of the man and of
+his style of music precisely fits the man I am thinking
+of. That peculiarity about the form of the hair
+upon the forehead seems too much for a coincidence.
+I wonder what became of that man?’ he added, thinking
+aloud.</p>
+
+<p>‘Let me finish my story, and then I will show
+you Mr. Vandeleur’s photograph,’ said Lady Baker.</p>
+
+<p>‘You have a photograph of him?’ cried Geoffrey;
+‘how lucky!’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes; and my possession of that portrait arises
+from the merest accident. I had a couple of photographers
+about the place at the time of Mr. Vandeleur’s
+visits, photographing the gardens and ferneries for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>
+me, and one afternoon I took it into my head to have
+my guests photographed. We had been drinking tea
+in the river-garden, and I sent for the men and told
+them to arrange us in a group for a photograph.
+They pulled us about and moved and fidgeted us till
+we were all half worn out; but they ultimately produced
+half-a-dozen very fair groups, in a modern
+Watteau style, and Janet and Mr. Vandeleur are
+striking figures in all the groups. But this is anticipating
+events. I’ll show you the photos by and by.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I await your ladyship’s pleasure,’ said Geoffrey,
+‘and am calm as a statue of Patience; but I would
+bet even money that this Vandeleur is the self-same
+scoundrel Lucius Davoren and I fell in with in
+America.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Extraordinary coincidences hardly surprise me.
+My life has been made up of them,’ said Lady Baker.
+‘Well, Mr. Hossack, enchanted with his playing, I
+was foolish enough to introduce myself to this stranger,
+whom I found a man of the world, and, as I believed,
+a gentleman. He was on a walking tour through
+the south-west of England, he told us, and having
+heard of the Hillsleigh church and the Hillsleigh
+organ, had come out of his way to spend a day or
+two in the quiet village to which the church belongs.
+His manners were conciliating and agreeable. I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span>
+asked him to breakfast at Mardenholme on the following
+day, promising to show him my gardens and
+to let him hear some fine music. He came, heard
+Janet play and sing after breakfast, and, at my
+request, stayed all day. I daresay you would think
+me a very foolish woman if I were to attempt to
+describe the influence this man soon began to exercise
+over me. I knew nothing of him except what he
+chose to tell, and that was rather hinted than told.
+But he contrived to make me believe that he was the
+son of a man of position and of large wealth; that
+his passion for music, and his somewhat Bohemian
+tendencies, had made a breach between him and his
+father; and that he was determined to live in freedom
+and independence upon a small income which he had
+inherited from his mother rather than sacrifice his
+inclinations to the prejudices of a tyrannical old man
+who wanted his son to make a figure in the House of
+Commons.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You made no attempt to discover who and what
+the man really was?’</p>
+
+<p>‘No. It seemed painful to him to speak of his
+father; and I respected his reserve. At the risk of
+being thought very foolish, I must confess that I was
+fascinated by the air of romance, and even mystery,
+which surrounded him; perhaps also somewhat fascinated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span>
+by the man himself, whose very eccentricities
+were attractive. He was so different from other
+people; followed in no way the conventional model
+by which most men shape themselves; took so little
+trouble to make himself agreeable. Again, he entered
+my house only as a passing stranger. His genius,
+and not the importance and respectability of his connections,
+gave him the right of admission to my
+circle. If I tried to lure a butterfly into my drawing-room
+for the sake of its brilliant colouring, I should
+hardly trouble myself about the butterfly’s parentage
+or antecedents. So with Mr. Vandeleur. I accepted
+him for what he was—an amateur musician of exceptional
+powers. I daresay, if he had been a professional
+artist, I should have taken more pains to find out who
+he was.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I daresay,’ retorted Geoffrey bitterly, ‘if he had
+confessed to getting his living by his talents, you
+would have been doubtful as to the safety of your
+plate. But a fine gentleman, strolling through the
+country for his own pleasure, is a different order of
+being.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Mr. Hossack, I fear you are a democrat! That
+dreadful Oxford is the cradle of advanced opinions.
+However,’ continued Lady Baker, ‘Mr. Vandeleur
+took up his quarters at our village inn, and spent the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span>
+greater part of his time in this house. I take some
+credit to myself, being by nature sadly impulsive, for
+not having asked him to stay here altogether. For
+my own part, I had no doubt as to his respectability.
+Vandeleur was a good name. True, it might be assumed;
+but then the man himself had a superior
+air. I thought I could not be mistaken. Mardenholme
+filled with visitors soon after Mr. Vandeleur’s
+appearance among us. Every one seemed to like
+him. His genius astounded and charmed the women.
+The men liked his conversation, and admired, and
+even envied, him for his billiard playing, which I
+believe was <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">hors ligne</i>. “The time I have not given
+to music I have given to billiards,” he said when
+some one wondered at his skill. This must have
+been exaggeration, however, for he had read enormously,
+and could talk upon every possible subject.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes,’ said Geoffrey thoughtfully, ‘the description
+tallies in every detail—allowing for the difference between
+a man in the centre of civilisation, and the same
+man run wild and savaged by semi-starvation. I know
+this Vandeleur.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You know where he is, and what he is doing?’
+asked Lady Baker eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>‘No. At a random guess I should think it probable
+that his skeleton is peacefully mouldering<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span>
+under the pine-trees somewhere between the Athabasca
+and the Pacific—unless he was as lucky as my
+party in falling across better furnished travellers.’</p>
+
+<p>Geoffrey had entertained her ladyship with a
+slight sketch of his American adventures during
+luncheon, so she understood this allusion.</p>
+
+<p>‘You must tell me all about your meeting with
+him by and by,’ she said. ‘I have very little more
+to say. Those two, Janet and Mr. Vandeleur, were
+brought very much together by their common genius.
+He accompanied her songs, taught her new forms of
+expression, showed her the mechanics of her art;
+and her improvement under this tuition, even in a
+little less than three weeks, was marvellous. They
+sang together, played concertante duets for violin
+and piano, and sometimes spent hours together alone
+in this room, preparing some new surprise for the
+evening. You will say that I ought to have considered
+the danger of such companionship for a
+romantic inexperienced girl. I should have done
+so, perhaps, had I not believed in this Mr. Vandeleur,
+and had there not been lurking in my mind
+a dim idea that a marriage between him and Janet
+would be the most natural thing in the world. True,
+that according to his own showing his resources were
+small in the present; yet there could be no doubt, I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span>
+thought, that he would ultimately be reconciled to
+his father, and restored to his proper position. But
+remember, Mr. Hossack, this was only a vague notion,
+an idea of something that might happen in the remote
+future, when we should have become a great deal better
+acquainted with Mr. Vandeleur and his surroundings.
+Of present danger I had not a thought.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Strange blindness,’ said Geoffrey. ‘But then
+Fortune is blind, and in this instance you were
+Fortune.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Bear in mind,’ replied Lady Baker, ‘that this
+man was full fifteen years Janet’s senior, that she
+was immensely admired by men who were younger,
+and, in the ordinary sense of the word, far more
+attractive. Why should I think this man would
+exercise so fatal an influence over her? But towards
+the end of her visit my eyes were opened.
+I came into this room one morning and found Janet
+in tears by yonder piano, while Mr. Vandeleur bent
+over her, speaking in a low earnest voice. Both
+started guiltily at sight of me. This, and numerous
+other trifling indications, told me that there was
+mischief at work; and when Mr. Davoren wrote to
+me a few days afterwards, urging his daughter’s return,
+I was only too glad to let her go, believing that
+the end of her visit would be the end of all danger.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span>
+When she was gone, I considered it my duty, as her
+friend, to ascertain the real state of the case. I told
+Mr. Vandeleur my suspicions, and assured him of
+my sympathy and my interest if he were, as I believed,
+anxious to win Janet for his wife. But to my
+utter astonishment and indignation he repudiated
+the idea; declared his profound esteem and admiration
+for Miss Davoren, and talked of “fetters” the
+nature of which he did not condescend to explain.
+“Yet I found you talking to that young lady in a
+manner which had moved her to tears,” I said doubtfully.
+“My dear madam, I had been telling her the
+troubles of my youth,” he answered with perfect self-possession,
+“and that gentle heart was moved to
+pity.” “A gentle heart, indeed,” I replied; “who
+would not hate the scoundrel who could wound it?”
+I was by no means satisfied with this conversation,
+and from that moment lowered my opinion of Mr.
+Vandeleur. He may have perceived the change in
+my feelings; in any case, he speedily announced his
+intention of travelling farther westward, thanked me
+for my friendly reception, and bade me good-bye.
+Only a few weeks after that I heard of Janet Davoren’s
+disappearance. You can imagine, perhaps,
+what I suffered, blaming my own blindness, my foolish
+neglect, as the primary cause of her ruin.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘There is a fate in these things,’ said Geoffrey
+gloomily.</p>
+
+<p>‘I called upon Mr. Davoren, hinted at my fears,
+and entreated him to be candid with me. But he
+evaded my questions with a proud reserve, which I
+could but admire, and kept the secret of his daughter’s
+disgrace, even though it was breaking his heart.
+Thus repulsed, what could I do? And the claims
+upon my time are so incessant. Life is such a whirligig,
+Mr. Hossack. If I had had more leisure for
+thinking, I should have been perfectly miserable
+about that poor girl.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You never obtained any clue to her fate?’</p>
+
+<p>‘No. Yet at one moment the thread seemed almost
+in my hand, had I been but in time to follow
+it. Three years after that fatal summer, a cousin of
+Sir Horatio’s, a young lieutenant in the navy, who
+had been with us at the time of Miss Davoren’s visit,
+came here for the shooting. “What do you think,
+Lady Baker?” he drawled out at dinner the first day
+in his stupid haw-haw manner, “I met that fellow
+Vandeleur last Christmas, at Milford, in Dorsetshire.
+I was down there to look up my old uncle Timberly—you
+remember old Timberly, Sir Horatio, the man
+from whom I’m supposed to have expectations; revolting
+old fellow, who has gout in his stomach twice<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span>
+a year and never seems any the worse for it. Well,
+Lady Baker, I found a fellow I knew down at Milford,
+an ensign in the regiment quartered there, and
+he was dooced civil, and asked me to dine with him
+on their guest night, and there, large as life, I beheld
+our friend Vandeleur. He seemed uncommonly popular
+in the mess, but he wasn’t overpleased to see me;
+and my friend Lucas told me afterwards that in his
+opinion the man was no better than an adventurer,
+and the colonel was a fool to encourage him. He was
+always winning everybody’s money, and never seemed
+to lose any of his own; altogether there was something
+queer about him. There was an uncommonly
+pretty woman with him—his wife, I suppose—but
+she never went anywhere, or visited anybody, and she
+looked very unhappy, Lucas told me. I came back to
+London next day, and I had a letter from Lucas a
+week afterwards to say that there’d been an awful
+burst-up at Milford; that Vandeleur had been caught
+in the act of cheating at whist—the stakes high, and
+so on—and had been morally, if not physically, kicked
+out of the mess-room; after which he had bolted,
+leaving the poor little wife and no end of debts behind
+him.”’</p>
+
+<p>‘Did you act upon this information, Lady Baker?’
+asked Geoffrey.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘I went to Milford next day, and with some difficulty
+found the house in which the Vandeleurs had
+lodged; but Mrs. Vandeleur had left the town within
+the last few weeks with her little girl, and no one
+could tell me what had become of her. She was very
+good, very honourable, very unhappy, the landlady
+told me; had lived in the humblest way, and supported
+herself by teaching music after her husband
+left her. I made the woman describe her to me, and
+the description exactly fitted Janet.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You have not heard a Mrs. Bertram, a singer
+who appeared at a good many concerts in London
+last winter?’</p>
+
+<p>‘No. I spent last winter in Paris. Do you mean
+to tell me that this Mrs. Bertram is Janet Davoren
+under an assumed name?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I hardly feel myself at liberty to tell you even as
+much as that without permission from the lady herself.
+But since you have been so very good to me,
+Lady Baker, I cannot be churlish enough to affect
+secrecy in anything that concerns myself alone. You
+have guessed rightly. I am attached to this lady,
+and my dearest hope is that I may win her for my
+wife; but to do this I must discover the fate of her
+infamous husband, since she refuses to repudiate a
+tie which I have strong reason to believe is illegal.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span>
+And now, Lady Baker, pray show me those photographs,
+and let me see if the man who ruined Janet
+Davoren’s bright young life is really the man I met
+in the American backwoods.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Come to my room,’ said Lady Baker, ‘and you
+shall see them.’</p>
+
+<p>She led the way to a charming apartment on the
+upper story, and at one end of the house, spacious,
+luxurious, with windows commanding every angle of
+view—bow-windows overhanging the river on one
+side, an oriel commanding the distant hills on another,
+long French windows opening upon a broad
+balcony on the third. Here were scattered those periodicals
+with which Lady Baker fortified her mind,
+and supplied herself with the latest varieties in
+opinion; here were divers davenports and writing-tables
+at which Lady Baker penned those delightful
+epistles which were doubtless destined to form part
+of the light literature of the next generation, printed
+on thickest paper, and sumptuously bound, and
+adorned with portraits of her ladyship after different
+painters, and at various stages of her distinguished
+career.</p>
+
+<p>Here, on a massive stand, were numerous portfolios
+of photographs, one of which was labelled ‘Personal
+Friends.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘You will find the groups in that, Mr. Hossack,’
+she said, and looked over Geoffrey’s shoulder while he
+went slowly through the photographs.</p>
+
+<p>They came presently to a garden scene, a group
+of young men and women against a background of
+sunlit lawn and river; light rustic chairs scattered
+about, a framework of summer foliage, a tea table on
+one side, a Blenheim spaniel and a Maltese terrier in
+the foreground.</p>
+
+<p>Janet’s tall figure and noble face appeared conspicuously
+among figures less perfect, faces more
+commonplace, and by her side stood the man whom
+Geoffrey Hossack had seen in the flesh, wild, unkempt,
+haggard, famished, savage, amidst the awful
+solitude of the pine-forest.</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes,’ he said, ‘that is the man.’</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.<br>
+<span class="fs70">LUCIUS MAKES A CONFESSION.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">It</span> was nearly six o’clock when Geoffrey and his cousins
+left Mardenholme. On descending from Lady
+Baker’s apartments in quest of Belle and Jessie, Mr.
+Hossack had found those two damsels wandering
+among the shrubberies in the forlornest manner,
+vainly striving to stifle frequent yawns, so unentertaining
+had been the society of the devoted Mr. and
+Mrs. Wimple, ‘who scarcely did anything but whisper
+and titter to each other all the time we were with
+them,’ Belle said afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>‘I thought you were playing croquet,’ said Geoffrey,
+when he found this straggling party in a grove
+of arbutus and magnolia.</p>
+
+<p>‘We <em>have</em> been playing croquet,’ answered Jessie,
+with some asperity; ‘but one can’t play croquet for
+ever. There’s nothing in Dante’s infernal regions
+more dreadful than that would be. We played as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span>
+long as we could; Mr. and Mrs. Wimple were tired
+ever so long before we finished.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No, indeed,’ exclaimed the Wimples simultaneously.</p>
+
+<p>‘What have you been doing all this time, Geoffrey?’
+asked Belle.</p>
+
+<p>‘Lady Baker has been so kind as to show me her
+pictures.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, of course; but you needn’t have been hours
+looking at them. We must get back directly, or we
+shall be late for dinner. Ah, there is Lady Baker,’
+cried Belle, as her ladyship appeared on the terrace
+before the drawing-room windows. ‘Come and say
+good-bye, Jessie, and get the boat ready, Geoff. You’ll
+have to row us back in an hour. Nothing vexes papa
+so much as any one being late for dinner. I don’t
+think he would wait more than ten minutes for an
+archbishop.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I’ll row like old boots,’ answered Geoffrey;
+whereupon the young ladies ran off to take an affectionate
+leave of Lady Baker, while their cousin sauntered
+down to the weeping willow to whose lowest
+branch he had moored the wherry. In five minutes
+they had embarked, and the oars were dipping in the
+smooth water.</p>
+
+<p>They were at Hillersdon in time to dress, somewhat<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span>
+hurriedly, for the all-important eight-o’clock
+dinner, which went off pleasantly enough. All that
+evening cousin Geoffrey made himself particularly
+agreeable—listened to Belle’s breakneck fantasias
+and Jessie’s newest ballads with every appearance of
+rapture; played chess with Belle, and bézique with
+Jessie, and allowed himself to be beaten by both.</p>
+
+<p>‘What a delightful evening we have had!’ said
+Belle, as she wished him good-night. ‘Why don’t
+you come to us oftener, Geoffrey?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I mean to come very often in future,’ replied the
+impostor, hardly knowing what he said.</p>
+
+<p>At breakfast next morning there was no sign of
+Geoffrey; but just as Belle had seated herself before
+the urn, the butler appeared with a letter.</p>
+
+<p>‘Mr. Geoffrey left this for you, ma’am,’ said the
+domestic, ‘when he went away.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Went away! My cousin, Mr. Hossack, gone!’
+cried Belle, aghast, while Jessie rushed to her sister’s
+side, and strove to possess herself of the letter.</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, ma’am. Mr. Geoffrey left by the first train;
+Dawson drove him over in the dog-cart. The letter
+would explain, Mr. Geoffrey said.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Belle, read the letter, for goodness’ sake!’ cried
+Jessie impatiently; ‘and don’t sit staring like a figure
+in a hairdresser’s window.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span></p>
+
+<p>The butler lingered to give a finishing touch to
+the well-furnished sideboard, and to hear the contents
+of Geoffrey’s letter.</p>
+
+<p>It was brief, and, in the opinion of the sisters,
+unsatisfactory—the style spasmodic, as of one accustomed
+to communicate his ideas by electric telegraph,
+rather than in the more ornate form of a letter.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>‘Dearest Belle,—Most unfortunate. Have received
+telegram summoning me to town. Most particular
+business. Must go. Regret much. Thought I was
+in for no end of fun down here. Hope to return
+shortly. Make my excuses to my uncle, and be lenient
+yourself towards your affectionate cousin</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+‘<span class="smcap">Geoff</span>.’<br>
+</p>
+</div>
+<br>
+
+<p>‘Was there ever anything so annoying?’ cried
+Belle, ‘and after Lady Baker’s politeness to him
+yesterday! Particular business! What can he have to
+do with business?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I daresay it’s horse-racing or something dreadful,’
+said Jessie. ‘I saw a great change in him. He
+has such a wild look sometimes, and hardly ever
+seems to know what one says to him.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Jessie,’ exclaimed Belle with solemnity, ‘I
+shouldn’t be surprised if Geoffrey were going to be
+married.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘O, Belle,’ cried Jessie with a gasp, ‘you don’t
+think he’d be mean enough for that—to go and get
+engaged, and never say a word to us.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I don’t know,’ answered her sister gloomily. ‘Men
+are capable of any amount of meanness in that way.’</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Geoffrey Hossack went up to London as fast as
+the South-Western Railway would take him thither,
+and straightway upon his arrival transferred himself
+to a hansom, bidding the driver convey him at full
+speed to the Shadrack-road.</p>
+
+<p>He reached that melancholy district before noon,
+and found the shabby-genteel villa, with its fast-decaying
+stucco front, its rusty iron railings, in which
+his friend Lucius Davoren had begun his professional
+career. But, early as it was, Lucius had gone
+forth more than two hours.</p>
+
+<p>‘I must see him,’ said Geoffrey to the feeble little
+charwoman, whose spirits were fluttered by the appearance
+of this rampant stranger, his fiery impatience
+visible in his aspect. ‘Have you any idea
+where I can find him?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Lor, no, sir; he goes from place to place—in
+and out, and up and down. It wouldn’t be the least
+bit of good tryin’ to foller him. You might wait if
+you liked, on the chanc’t. He do sometimes come<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span>
+home betwigst one and two to take a mossel of bread-and-cheese
+and a glass of ale, if he’s going to make
+a extry long afternoon. But his general way is to
+come home to a tea-dinner betwigst five and six.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I’ll wait till two,’ said Geoffrey, ‘and if he’s not
+home by that time, I’ll leave a letter for him.’</p>
+
+<p>So Mr. Hossack dismissed the cab, and went into
+his friend’s small parlour—such a dreary sitting-room
+as it seemed to eyes accustomed only to brightness:
+furniture so sordid; walls so narrow; ceiling
+darkened by the smoke of gas that had burned late
+into the long winter nights. Geoffrey looked round
+with a shudder.</p>
+
+<p>‘And Lucius really lives here,’ he said to himself,
+‘and is contented to work on, happy in the idea
+that he is a benefactor to his species—watching the
+measles of infancy, administering to the asthmas of
+old age. Thank God there are such men in the
+world,—and thank God I am not one of them!’</p>
+
+<p>He looked round the room in quest of that refuge
+of shallow minds, the day’s paper; but newspaper
+there was none—only that poor little collection of
+books on the rickety chiffonier: well-thumbed
+volumes, wherewith Lucius had so often solaced his
+loneliness.</p>
+
+<p>‘Shakespeare, Euripides, Montaigne, <em>Tristram<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span>
+Shandy</em>,’ muttered Geoffrey, running over the titles
+contemptuously. ‘Musty old buffers! Come out, old
+Shandy. I suppose you’re about the liveliest of the lot.’</p>
+
+<p>He tried to settle himself on the feeble old sofa,
+too short and too narrow for muscular young Oxford;
+stretched his legs this way and that; read a few
+pages; smiled at a line here and there; yawned a
+good deal, and then threw the book aside with an
+exclamation of impatience. Those exuberant energies
+asked not repose; he wanted to be up and doing.
+His mind was full of his interview with Lady Baker,
+full of anxious longing thoughts about the woman he
+loved.</p>
+
+<p>‘What became of that man we met in the forest?’
+he asked of the unresponsive atmosphere. ‘If I
+could but track him to his miserable grave, and get
+a certificate of his death, what a happy fellow I should
+be.’</p>
+
+<p>He paced the little room, looked out of the window
+at the enlivening traffic of the Shadrack-road;
+huge wagons laden with petroleum casks, timber,
+iron, cotton bales, grinding slowly along the macadam;
+an organ droning drearily on the other side of
+the way; a costermonger crying whelks and hot eels,
+as appropriate refreshment in the sultry August
+noontide; upon everything that faded, burnt-up aspect<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>
+which pervades London at the end of summer;
+a universal staleness, an odour of doubtful fish and
+rotten fruit.</p>
+
+<p>After the space of an hour and a half, which to
+Geoffrey’s weariness had seemed interminable, a light
+step sounded on the little stone-paved approach; a
+latchkey clicked in the door, and Lucius came into
+the parlour.</p>
+
+<p>There was surprise unbounded on the surgeon’s
+side.</p>
+
+<p>‘Why, Geoff, I thought you were in Norway!’ he
+exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>‘I changed my mind about Norway,’ answered
+the other somewhat sheepishly. ‘How could I be
+such a selfish scoundrel as to go and enjoy myself
+shooting and fishing and so on, while she is lonely?
+No, Lucius, I feel somehow that it is my destiny to
+win her, and that it will be my own fault—<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">de mon
+tort</i>, as the lawyers say—if I lose my chance. So
+when I got as far as Hull I turned tail, and came
+back to town, where I found a letter from my cousin
+Belle Hossack offering me the very opportunity I
+wanted.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Your cousin Belle! the very opportunity! What
+do you mean? What could your cousin Belle have
+to do with my sister?’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘An introduction to Lady Baker. Don’t you see,
+Lucius? From Lady Baker I might find out all
+about that villain who called himself Vandeleur.
+Now, for heaven’s sake, old fellow, be calm and hear
+what I have to tell you. I’ve travelled up from
+Hampshire post haste on purpose to tell you all by
+word of mouth. I might have written, but I wanted
+to talk the matter over with you. You may be able
+to throw some light upon this business.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Upon what business?’ asked Lucius, mystified
+by this hurried and disjointed address.</p>
+
+<p>‘You may be able to tell me what became of that
+wild fellow who came in upon us in our log-hut out
+yonder—whether he is alive or dead. Why, good
+heavens, Lucius, you’ve turned as white as a sheet of
+paper! What’s the matter?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I’m tired,’ said the surgeon, dropping slowly into
+a chair by the table, and shading his face with his
+hand. ‘And your wild talk is enough to bewilder
+any man; especially one who has just come in from
+a harassing round amongst sickness and poverty.
+What do you mean? You speak one minute of my
+sister and Lady Baker, and in the next of that man
+we met yonder. What link can there be between
+subjects so wide apart?’</p>
+
+<p>‘A closer link than you could ever guess. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span>
+villain who married your sister and that man
+yonder—’</p>
+
+<p>‘Were one and the same!’ cried Lucius, almost
+with a shriek. ‘I suspected it; I suspected it out
+yonder in the forest, as I sat and watched that man’s
+face in the firelight. I have suspected it since then
+many a time; have dreamt it oftener than I can
+count; for half my dreams are haunted by the hateful
+shadow of that man. Was I right? For God’s sake
+speak out, Geoffrey. Is that the man?’</p>
+
+<p>‘It is.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You know it?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I have had indisputable proof of it. Lady
+Baker showed me a photograph of the man who stole
+your sister from her home, and the face in that
+photograph is the face of the man we let into our
+hut in the backwoods.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Mysterious are Thy ways,’ cried Lucius, ‘and Thy
+paths past finding out. Many a time have I fought
+against this idea. It seemed of all things the most
+improbable; too wild, too strange for belief. I dared
+not allow myself to think it. It was he, then. My
+hatred of him was a natural instinct; my abhorrence
+hardly needed the proof of his infamy. From
+the first moment in which our eyes met my soul
+cried aloud, “There is thy natural enemy.”’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘It is your turn to talk wildly now, Lucius,’ said
+Geoffrey, surprised by the other’s passion, ‘but you
+have not answered my question. While I lay delirious
+in the log-hut, not knowing anything that was
+going on round me, did nothing happen to throw a
+light upon the fate of the guide and that man Matchi,
+as we called him? They set out to try and find the
+track; did they never return?’</p>
+
+<p>‘The guide never returned,’ answered Lucius,
+looking downward with a gloomy countenance, in
+deep thought. ‘Now, I’ll ask you a question, Geoffrey.
+In all your talk with our German friend,
+Schanck, while <em>I</em> was ill and unconscious, did he tell
+you nothing, hint nothing, about that man?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Nothing,’ replied the other unhesitatingly. ‘He
+was as close as the grave. But had he anything to
+tell?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, if he had chosen to betray. He might
+have told you that I, your friend—I, who had watched
+by your bed through those long dreary nights, Death
+staring me in the face as I watched—that I, whom
+you would have trusted in the direst extremity—was
+an assassin.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Lucius,’ cried Geoffrey, starting up with a look
+of horror, ‘are you mad?’</p>
+
+<p>‘No, Geoff. I am reasonable enough now,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span>
+Heaven knows; whatever I might have been in that
+fatal time yonder. You want the truth, and you
+shall have it, though it will sicken you as it sickens
+me to think of it. I have kept the hideous secret
+from you; not because I had any fear of the consequences
+of my act—not because that I am not ready
+to defend the deed boldly before my fellow men—but
+because I thought the horrid story might part
+us. We have been fast friends for so many years,
+Geoff, and I could not bear to think your liking
+might be turned to loathing.’</p>
+
+<p>Tears, the agonising drops which intensest pain
+wrings from manhood, were in his eyes. He covered
+his face with his clasped hands; as if he would have
+shut out the very light which had witnessed that
+horror he shuddered to recall.</p>
+
+<p>‘Lucius,’ exclaimed Geoffrey, at once anxious and
+bewildered, ‘all this is madness! You have been
+overworking your brain.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Let me tell my story,’ said the other. ‘It will
+lighten my burden to share it—even if the revelation
+makes you hate me.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Even on your own showing I would not believe
+you guilty of any baseness,’ answered Geoffrey. ‘I
+would sooner think your mind distraught than that
+I had been mistaken in your character.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘It was no deliberate baseness,’ said Lucius
+quietly. He had in some measure recovered his composure
+since that burst of passionate grief. ‘I did
+what at the moment appeared to me only an act of
+justice. I took a life for a life.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You, Lucius!’ cried the other, his eyes opening
+wide with horror. ‘You took the life of a man—yonder—in
+America?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, Geoffrey. I killed the man who blighted
+my sister’s life.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Good God! He is dead then—this scoundrel—and
+by your hand.’</p>
+
+<p>‘He is. And if ever man deserved to die by the
+act of his fellow man that man most fully merited his
+fate. But though in that awful hour, when the deed
+of horror which I had discovered was burnt into my
+brain, I took his life deliberately and advisedly, the
+memory of the act has been a torment to me ever
+since. But let me tell you the secret of that miserable
+time. It is not a long story, and I will tell it in
+as few words as possible.’</p>
+
+<p>Briefly, but with an unflinching truthfulness, he
+told of the night scene in the forest; the ruffian’s attempt
+to enter the hut; and the bullet which struck
+him down as he burst open the window.</p>
+
+<p>‘You lay there, Geoffrey, unconscious; sleeping<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span>
+that blessed sleep which Gods sends to those whose
+feet have trodden the border-land betwixt life and
+death. Even to awaken you roughly might have been
+to peril your chance of recovery. The firing of the
+gun might have done it. But my first thought was
+that he, the assassin and traitor who had slaughtered
+the faithful companion of our dangers and privation—that
+he, brutal and merciless as any savage in the
+worst island of the Pacific—should not be suffered to
+approach you in your helplessness. I had warned
+him that if he attempted to cross our threshold I
+would shoot him down with as little compunction as
+if he had been a mad dog. I kept my word.’</p>
+
+<p>‘But are you certain your bullet was fatal?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Of what followed the firing of that shot I know
+nothing; but I have never doubted its result. Even
+if the wound were not immediately fatal the man must
+have speedily perished. The last I saw was the loosening
+clutch of his lean hand as he dropped from the
+window; the last I heard was a howl of pain. My
+brain, which had been kept on the rack for many a
+dreary night of sleeplessness and fear, gave way all at
+once, and I fell to the ground like a log. I have
+every reason to believe that what I suffered at that
+moment was an apoplectic seizure, which might have
+been fatal, but for Schanck’s promptitude in bleeding<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span>
+me. After the shock came brain fever, from which,
+as you know, I was slow to recover. When my senses
+did return, I seemed to enter upon a new world.
+Thought and memory came back by degrees, and the
+vision of that scene in the forest shaped itself slowly
+out of the confusion of my brain until it became the
+vivid picture which has haunted me ever since.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Had you met the man who betrayed your sister,
+would you have killed him?’ asked Geoffrey.</p>
+
+<p>‘In fair fight, yes.’</p>
+
+<p>‘He who rules the destinies of us all decreed that
+you should meet him unawares. You were the instrument
+of God’s vengeance upon a villain.’</p>
+
+<p>‘“Vengeance is mine,”’ repeated Lucius thoughtfully.
+‘Often, when reproaching myself for that rash
+act, I have almost deemed the deed a kind of blasphemy.
+What right had <em>I</em> to forestall God’s day of
+reckoning? For every crime there is an appointed
+punishment. The assassin we hang to-day might
+pay a still heavier price for his sin were we to leave
+him in the hands of God, or might be permitted to
+repent and atone.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Lucius,’ said Geoffrey, stretching out his hand
+to his friend, ‘in my eyes you stand clear of all guilt.
+Was it not chiefly for my defence you fired that shot?
+and for my own part I can assure you that cold-blooded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span>
+scoundrel would have had a short shrift had I been
+his executioner. So let us dismiss all thought of him,
+with the memory of the last murderer who swung at
+Newgate. One fact remains paramount—a fact that
+for me changes earth to Paradise; your sister is
+free.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius started, and for the first time a look of absolute
+fear came into his face.</p>
+
+<p>‘What!’ he exclaimed. ‘You will tell her that her
+husband fell by my hand? You forget, Geoffrey, that
+my confession must be sacred. If I did not pledge
+you to secrecy, it was because I had so firm a faith in
+your honour that I needed no promise of your silence.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Let me tell her only of that man’s death.’</p>
+
+<p>‘She will hardly be satisfied with a statement unsupported
+by proof,’ answered Lucius doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>‘What, will she doubt my honour?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Love is apt to be desperate. The lover has a
+code of his own.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Not if he is an honest man,’ cried Geoffrey.</p>
+
+<p>‘But Janet has been once deceived, and will be
+slow to trust where she loves. Put her to the test.
+Tell her that you know this man is dead, and if she
+will believe you and if she will be your wife, there is
+no one, not even yourself, who will be gladder than I.
+God knows it is a grief for me to think of her lonely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span>
+position, her lifelong penance for the error of her
+youth. I have entreated her to share my home,
+humble as it is, but she refuses. She is proud of her
+independence, and though I know she loves me, she
+prefers to live aloof from me, with no other society
+than her child’s.’</p>
+
+<p>They talked long, Geoffrey full of mingled hope
+and fear. He left his friend late in the afternoon, intending
+to go down to Stillmington by the mail train,
+to try his fortunes once more. Lucius had told him
+he was beloved; was not that sufficient ground for
+hope?</p>
+
+<p>‘She will not be too exacting,’ he said to himself.
+‘She will not ask me for chapter and verse, for the
+doctor’s certificate, the undertaker’s bill. If I say to
+her, “Upon my honour your husband is dead,” she
+will surely believe me.’</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span></p>
+
+<p class="center no-indent bold">Book the Third.</p>
+
+<hr class="r5">
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_Ia">CHAPTER I.<br>
+<span class="fs70">A CHANGE CAME O’ER THE SPIRIT OF MY DREAM.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">That</span> calm delight which Lucius Davoren had hitherto
+felt in the society of his betrothed, and his happy
+expectation of a prosperous future to be shared with
+her, were now clouded over with new doubts and fears.
+His mind had been weighed down by the burden of a
+dreadful secret, from the moment of that discovery
+which had showed him that the man he had killed and
+the father of the girl who loved him were one and
+the same. Those calm clear eyes which looked at him
+so tenderly sometimes wounded him as keenly as the
+bitterest reproach. Had she but known the fatal
+truth—she who had always set the memory of her
+father above her affection for himself—could he doubt
+the result of that knowledge? Could he doubt that
+she would have turned from him with abhorrence,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span>
+that she would have shrunk with loathing from the
+lightest touch of his blood-stained hand?</p>
+
+<p>Vain would have been all argument, all attempt
+to justify his act, with the daughter who clung with
+a romantic fondness to her lost father’s image.</p>
+
+<p>‘You killed him.’ She would have summed up
+all arguments in those three words. ‘You killed
+him. If he was wicked, you gave him no time for
+repentance; you cut him off in the midst of his sin.
+Who made you his judge: who made you his executioner?
+He was a sinner like yourself, and you thrust
+yourself between God and His infinite mercy. You
+did more than slay his body; you robbed him of redemption
+for his sin.’</p>
+
+<p>He could imagine that this girl, clinging with unreasonable
+love to that dead sinner’s memory, would
+argue somewhat in this wise; and he felt himself
+powerless to reply. These thoughts weighed him
+down, and haunted him even in the company of his
+beloved. Yet, strange to say, Lucille did not remark
+the difference in her lover, and it remained for Lucius
+to perceive a change in her. His own preoccupation
+had rendered him less observant than usual, and he
+was slow to mark this alteration in Lucille’s manner,
+but the time came when he awakened to the fact.
+There was a change, indefinable, indescribable, but a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span>
+change which he felt vaguely, and which seemed to
+grow stronger day by day. The thought filled him
+with a sudden horror. Did she suspect? Had some
+circumstance, unnoticed by him, led the way to the
+discovery he most dreaded, to the revelation of that
+secret he hoped to hide from her for ever? Surely
+no. Her hand did not shrink from his, the kiss he
+pressed upon that pure young brow evoked no shudder.
+Whatever the trouble was that had wrought
+this change in her, paled the fair cheek and saddened
+the sweet eyes, the perplexity or the sorrow was in
+herself, and had no reference to him.</p>
+
+<p>‘Lucille,’ he said one evening, a few days after his
+interview with Geoffrey Hossack, as they paced the
+garden together in the dusk, ‘it seems to me that we
+are not quite so happy as we used to be. We do not
+talk so hopefully of the future; we have not such
+pleasant thoughts and fancies as we once had. Very
+often when I am speaking to you, I see your eyes
+fixed with a strange far-off look; as if you were thinking
+of something quite remote from the subject of our
+talk. Is there anything that troubles you, dear?
+Are you uneasy about your grandfather?’</p>
+
+<p>‘He does not seem so well as he did three weeks
+ago. He does not care about coming down-stairs now;
+the old weakness seems to have returned. And his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span>
+appetite has fallen off again. I wish you would be
+a little more candid, Lucius,’ she said, looking at
+him earnestly. ‘You used to say he was improving
+steadily, and that you had great hopes of making him
+quite himself again before very long; now you hardly
+say anything, except to give me directions about
+diet.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Do you wish me to speak quite plainly, Lucille,’
+asked Lucius seriously; ‘even if what I have to say
+should increase your anxiety?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, yes; pray treat me like a woman, and not
+like a child. Remember what my life has been—how
+full of care and sorrow. I am not like a girl
+who has lived only in the sunshine. Tell me the
+plain truth, Lucius, however painful. You think
+my grandfather worse?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I do, Lucille, very much worse than I thought
+him three weeks ago. And what is more, I am
+obliged to confess myself puzzled by his present
+condition. I can find no cause for this backward
+progress, and yet I am watching the symptoms very
+closely. I have this case so deeply at heart, that I
+do not believe any one could do more with it than
+I. But if I do not see an improvement before many
+days are over, I shall seek advice from wider experience
+than my own. I will bring one of the greatest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span>
+men in London to see your grandfather. A consultation
+may be unnecessary or useless, but it will be
+for our mutual satisfaction.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes,’ answered Lucille, ‘I have the strongest
+faith in your skill; but, as you say, it might be
+better to have farther advice. Poor grandpapa! It
+makes me wretched to see him suffer—to see him so
+weak and weary and restless, if not in absolute pain,
+and to be able to do so little for him.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You do all that love and watchfulness can do,
+dearest. By the way, you spoke of diet just now.
+That is a thing about which you cannot be too careful.
+We have to restore exhausted nature, to renovate
+a constitution almost worn out by hard usage.
+I should like to know all about the preparation of
+the broths and jellies you give your grandfather. Are
+they made by you, or by Mrs. Wincher?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Wincher makes the broth and beef-tea in an
+earthenware jar in the oven; I make the jellies
+with my own hands.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Are you quite sure of Wincher’s cleanliness and
+care?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Quite. I see her getting the jar ready every
+morning when I am in the kitchen attending to
+other little things. I am not afraid of working in
+the kitchen, you know, Lucius.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘I know that you are the most domestic and skilful
+among women, and that you will make a model
+wife, darling,’ he answered tenderly.</p>
+
+<p>‘For a poor man, perhaps,’ she answered, with
+the smile that had been rare of late, ‘not for a rich
+one. I should not know how to spend money, or to
+give dinner-parties, or to dress fashionably.’</p>
+
+<p>‘That kind of knowledge would come with the
+occasion. When I am a famous doctor you shall be
+a lady of fashion. But to return to the diet question.
+You are assured that there is perfect cleanliness in
+the preparation of your grandfather’s food—no neglected
+copper saucepans used, for instance?’</p>
+
+<p>‘There is not such a thing as a copper saucepan
+in the house. What made you ask the question?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Mr. Sivewright has complained lately of occasional
+attacks of nausea, and I am unable to account
+for the symptom. That is what makes me anxious
+about the preparation of his food.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Would it be any satisfaction to you if I were to
+prepare everything myself?’</p>
+
+<p>‘A very great satisfaction.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Then I will do it, Lucius. Wincher may feel
+a little offended, but I will try and reconcile her to
+my interference. It was a great privilege to be allowed
+to make the jellies.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Never mind if she is vexed, darling; a few sweet
+words from you will soon smooth her ruffled feathers.
+I shall be glad to know that you prepare everything
+for the invalid. And I would not do it in the kitchen,
+where Wincher might interfere. Have a fire in the
+little dressing-room next your grandfather’s room,
+and have your saucepans and beef-tea and so on up
+there. By that means you will be able to give him
+what he wants at any moment, without delay.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I will do so, Lucius. But I fear you think my
+grandfather in danger.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Not exactly in danger, darling. But he is very
+ill, and I have been thinking it might be better for
+you to have a nurse. I don’t say that he requires
+any one to sit up at night with him. He is not ill
+enough for that. I am only afraid that the care he
+requires may be too much for you.’</p>
+
+<p>‘It is not too much for me, Lucius,’ answered
+the girl eagerly. ‘I would not have a stranger about
+him for worlds. The sight of a sick nurse would
+kill him.’</p>
+
+<p>‘That is a foolish prejudice, Lucille.’</p>
+
+<p>‘It may be; and when you find I nurse him
+badly, or neglect him, you may bring a stranger.
+Till then I claim the right to wait upon him, with
+Jacob Wincher’s assistance. He has been my grandfather’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span>
+valet—giving the little help his master would
+ever accept—for the last twenty years.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And you have perfect confidence in Jacob Wincher?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Confidence!’ exclaimed Lucille, with a wondering
+look. ‘I have known him all my life, and seen
+his devotion to my grandfather. What reason could
+I have to doubt him?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Little apparent reason, I admit,’ answered Lucius
+thoughtfully. ‘Yet it is sometimes from those
+we least suspect we suffer the deepest wrongs. These
+Winchers may believe your grandfather to be very
+rich; they may suppose that he has left them a good
+deal of money; and might—mind, I am only suggesting
+a remote contingency—they <em>might</em> desire to
+shorten his life. O, my dearest,’ he cried, pained by
+Lucille’s whitening face, ‘remember I do not for a
+moment say that this is likely; but—as I told you a
+few moments ago—there are symptoms in the case
+that puzzle me, and we cannot be too careful.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucille leaned upon him, trembling like a leaf,
+with her white face turned towards him, a look of
+unspeakable horror in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>‘You don’t mean—’ she faltered; ‘you cannot
+mean that you suspect, that you are afraid of my
+grandfather being poisoned?’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Lucille,’ he said tenderly, sustaining the almost-fainting
+girl, ‘the truth is always best. You shall
+know all I can tell you. There are diseases which
+baffle even experience; there are symptoms which
+may mean one thing or another, may indicate such
+and such a state, or be the effect of a condition
+exactly opposite; there are symptoms which may
+arise alike from natural causes or from a slow and
+subtle poison. This is why so many a victim has
+been done to death under the very eye of his medical
+attendant, and only when too late the hideous truth
+has dawned upon the doctor’s mind, and he has
+asked himself with bitter self-reproach, “Why did
+I not make this discovery sooner?”’</p>
+
+<p>‘Whom could you suspect?’ cried Lucille. ‘I
+am confident as to the fidelity of Mr. and Mrs.
+Wincher. They have had it in their power to rob
+my grandfather at any moment, if gain could have
+tempted them to injure him. Why, after all these
+years of faithful servitude, should they attempt to
+murder him?’</p>
+
+<p>This was said in a low tremulous voice, terror
+still holding possession of the girl’s distracted mind.</p>
+
+<p>‘The thought is as horrible as it appears impossible,’
+said Lucius, whose apprehensions had as
+yet assumed only the vaguest form. He had never<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span>
+meant to betray this shadowy fear, which had arisen
+only within the last twenty-four hours; but he had
+been led on to say more than he intended.</p>
+
+<p>‘Let us speak no more of it, dearest,’ he said
+soothingly. ‘You attach too much importance to
+my words. I have only suggested care; I have only
+told you a well-known fact, namely, that the symptoms
+of slow poisoning and of natural disease are sometimes
+exactly alike.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You have filled me with fear and horror!’ cried
+Lucille, shuddering.</p>
+
+<p>‘Let me bring a nurse into the house,’ pleaded
+Lucius, angry with himself for his imprudence. ‘Her
+presence would at least give you courage and confidence.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No; I will not have my grandfather frightened
+to death. He shall take nothing but what I prepare
+for him; no one shall go near him but I, or without
+my being present.’</p>
+
+<p>‘By the way,’ said Lucius thoughtfully, ‘you
+remember that noise I heard the evening we went up
+to the loft together?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I remember your fancy about a noise,’ Lucille
+answered carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>‘My fancy, then, if you like. I suppose nothing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span>
+has ever happened since to throw a light upon that
+fancy of mine?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Nothing.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You are quite sure that no stranger could obtain
+admission to those up-stairs rooms, or to any part of
+this house?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Quite sure.’</p>
+
+<p>‘In that case we may rest assured that all is safe,
+and you need think no more of anything I have
+said.’</p>
+
+<p>He tried with every art he knew to soothe away
+the fears which his imprudent words had occasioned,
+but could not altogether succeed in tranquillising
+her, though he brought the Amati violin into requisition,
+and played some of his sweetest symphonies—melodies
+which, to quote Mrs. Wincher, ‘might have
+drawed tears out of a deal board.’</p>
+
+<p>Nothing could dispel the cloud which he had
+raised; and he left Cedar House full of trouble and
+self-reproach, beyond measure angry with himself for
+his folly.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IIa">CHAPTER II.<br>
+<span class="fs70">LUCIUS IS PUZZLED.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">When</span> Lucius made his early visit—now always the
+first duty of every day—to Cedar House on the following
+morning, he found that Lucille had already
+acted upon his advice. The dressing-room—a slip of
+a room communicating with Mr. Sivewright’s spacious
+chamber—had been furnished in a rough-and-ready
+manner with a chair and table, an old cabinet, brought
+down from the loft, to hold cups and glasses, medicine
+bottles, and other oddments; a little row of saucepans,
+neatly arranged in a cupboard by the small
+fireplace; and a narrow little iron bedstead in a
+corner of the room.</p>
+
+<p>‘I shall sleep here at night,’ said Lucille, as
+Lucius surveyed her preparations, ‘and if I keep that
+door ajar, I can hear every sound in the next room.’</p>
+
+<p>‘My darling, it will never do for you to be on the
+watch at night,’ he answered anxiously. ‘You will
+wear yourself out in a very short time. Anxiety by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span>
+day and wakefulness by night will soon tell their
+tale.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Let me have my own way, Lucius,’ she pleaded.
+‘You say yourself that my grandfather wants no
+attendance at night. He told me only this morning
+that he sleeps pretty well, and rarely wakes till the
+morning. But it will be a satisfaction to me if I feel
+that I am close at hand, ready to wake at his call.
+I am a very light sleeper.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Was Mrs. Wincher angry at your taking the
+work out of her hands?’</p>
+
+<p>‘She seemed vexed, just at first; but I gave her
+a kiss, and talked her over. “You’ll fag yourself to
+death, Miss Lucille,” she said; “but do as you
+please. It’ll leave me free for my cleaning.” You
+know, Lucius, what a passion she has for muddling
+about with a pail and a scrubbing-brush, and turning
+out odd corners. The cleaning never seems to make
+any difference in the look of that huge kitchen; but
+if it pleases her one cannot complain. O, Lucius,’
+she went on, in an anxious whisper, ‘I was awake
+all the night thinking of your dreadful words. I
+trust in God you may find my grandfather better
+this morning.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I hope so, dearest; but, believe me, you attach
+far too much importance to my foolish words last<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span>
+night. If you can trust the Winchers there can be
+no possible ground for fear. What enemy could
+approach your grandfather here?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Enemy!’ repeated Lucille, as if struck by the
+word. ‘What enemies could he have—a poor harmless
+old man?’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius went into Mr. Sivewright’s room. He
+found his patient still suffering from that strange depression
+of spirits which had weighed him down
+lately; still complaining of the symptoms which had
+perplexed Lucius since his return from Stillmington.</p>
+
+<p>‘There are strange noises in the house,’ said the
+old man querulously, when the usual questions had
+been asked and answered. ‘I heard them again
+last night—stealthy footsteps creeping along the
+passage—doors opening and shutting—cautious, muffled
+steps, that had a secret guilty sound.’</p>
+
+<p>‘All movement in a house has that stealthy sound
+in the small hours,’ said Lucius, sorely perplexed
+himself, yet anxious to reassure his patient. ‘Your
+housekeeper or her husband may have been up later
+than usual, and may have crept quietly up to bed.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I tell you this was in the middle of the night,’
+answered Mr. Sivewright impatiently. ‘The Winchers
+are as methodical in their habits as the old
+clock in the hall. I asked Jacob this morning if he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span>
+had been astir after midnight, and he told me he had
+not.’</p>
+
+<p>‘The fact is, my dear sir, you are nervous,’ said
+Lucius in a soothing tone. ‘You lie awake and
+fancy sounds which have no existence, or at any rate
+do not exist within the house.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I tell you this sound awoke me,’ replied the
+other still more impatiently. ‘I was sleeping tolerably
+when the sound of that hateful footstep startled
+me into perfect wakefulness. There was a nameless
+horror to my mind in that stealthy tread. It sounded
+like the step of an assassin.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Come, Mr. Sivewright,’ said Lucius in that
+practical tone which does much to tranquillise a
+nervous patient, ‘if this is, as I firmly believe it to
+be, a mere delusion of your senses, it will be easiest
+dispelled by investigation. Let us face the unknown
+foe, and make a speedy end of him. Suffer me to
+keep watch to-night in this room, unknown to all in
+the house except yourself, and I will answer for it
+the ghost shall be laid.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No,’ answered Mr. Sivewright doggedly. ‘I am
+not so childish or so weak-minded as to ask another
+man to corroborate the evidence of my own senses.
+I tell you, Davoren, the thing is. If I believed in
+ghosts the matter would trouble me little enough.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span>
+All the phantoms that were ever supposed to make
+night hideous might range these passages, and glide
+up and down yonder staircase at their pleasure. But
+I do not believe in the supernatural; and the sounds
+that I have heard are distinctly human.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Let me hear them too.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No, I tell you,’ answered the patient with
+smothered anger; ‘I will have no one to play the
+spy upon my slumber. If this is the delusion of an
+enfeebled brain, I have sense enough left to find out
+the falsehood for myself. Besides, the intruder, if
+there be one, cannot do me any harm. Yonder door
+is securely locked every night.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Can you trust the lock?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Do you think I should have put a bad one to a
+room that contains such treasures? No, the lock is
+one I chose myself, and would baffle a practised
+burglar. There is the same kind of lock on yonder
+door, communicating with the dressing-room. I turn
+the key in both with my own hand every night after
+Wincher has left me. I am still strong enough to
+move about the room, though I feel my strength
+lessening day by day. God pity me when I lie helpless
+on yonder bed, as I must do soon.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Nay, my dear sir, let us hope for a favourable
+change ere long.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘I have almost left off hoping,’ answered the old
+man wearily. ‘All the drugs in your surgery will
+not cure me. I am tired of trying first this medicine
+and then that. For some time, indeed, I believed
+that you understood my case; that your medicines
+were of some good to me. Within the last three
+weeks they have seemed only to aggravate my disorder.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius took up a medicine bottle from the little
+table by the bed half absently. It was empty.</p>
+
+<p>‘When did you take your last dose?’ he asked.</p>
+
+<p>‘Half-an-hour ago.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I will try to find you a new tonic; something
+that shall not produce the nausea you have complained
+of lately. I cannot understand how this
+mixture should have had such an effect; but it is
+just possible you may have an antipathy to quinine.
+I will give you a medicine without any quinine.’</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Sivewright gave an impatient sigh, expressive
+of non-belief in the whole faculty of medicine.</p>
+
+<p>‘Do what you please with me,’ he said. ‘If you
+do not succeed in lengthening my life, I suppose I
+may depend upon your not shortening it. And as
+you charge me nothing for your services, I have no
+right to complain if their value corresponds with the
+rate of your recompense.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘I am sorry to see you have lost confidence in me,
+sir,’ said Lucius, somewhat wounded, yet willing to
+forgive a sick man’s petulance.</p>
+
+<p>‘I have not lost confidence in you individually.
+It is the science of medicine which I disbelieve in.
+Here am I, after four months’ patient observance of
+your regimen, eating, drinking, sleeping, ay, almost
+thinking according to your advice, and yet I am no
+better at the end of it all, but feel myself growing
+daily worse. If all your endeavours to patch up a
+broken constitution have resulted only in failure,
+why do you not tell me so without farther parley?
+I told you at the beginning that I was stoic enough
+to receive my death-warrant without a pang.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And I tell you again, as I told you then, that I
+have no sentence of death to pronounce. I confess
+that your symptoms during the last three weeks have
+somewhat puzzled me. If they continue to do so, I
+shall ask your permission to consult a medical man
+of wider experience than my own.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No,’ answered the old man captiously, ‘I will
+see no strangers. I will be experimentalised upon
+by no new hand. If you can’t cure me, put me down
+as incurable. And now you had better go to your
+other patients; I have kept you later than usual.
+You will come back in the evening, I suppose?’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Most certainly.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Very well, then, devote your evening to me, for
+once in a way, instead of to Lucille. You will have
+plenty of her society by and by, when she is your
+wife. I want to talk seriously with you. The time
+has come when there must be no more concealment
+between you and me. There are secrets which a man
+may do wisely to keep through life, but which it is
+fatal to carry to the grave. Give me your hand,
+Lucius,’ he said, stretching out his wasted fingers to
+meet the strong grasp of the surgeon; ‘we have not
+known each other long, yet as much as I can trust
+anybody I trust you; as much as I can love anybody—since
+my son turned my milk of human kindness
+to gall—I love you. Come back to me this evening,
+and I will prove to you that this is no idle protestation.’</p>
+
+<p>The thin hand trembled in Lucius Davoren’s
+grasp. There was more emotion in these words of
+Homer Sivewright’s than Lucius had supposed the
+old man capable of feeling.</p>
+
+<p>‘Whatever service you may require of me, whatever
+trust you may confide in me,’ said the surgeon
+with warmth, ‘be assured that the service shall be
+faithfully performed, the trust held sacred.’ And
+thus they parted.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IIIa">CHAPTER III.<br>
+<span class="fs70">HOMER SIVEWRIGHT’S LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">It</span> was nearly dusk that evening when Lucius returned
+to Cedar House. His daily round had
+occupied more time than usual, and however full
+his mind might be of that strange old man, or of
+the woman he loved, he did not shorten a visit or
+neglect the smallest detail of his duty. The lamp
+was lighted in Mr. Sivewright’s room, though it
+was not yet dark outside—only the sultry dusk of
+a late summer day. The day had been oppressive,
+and the Shadrack district had a prostrate air in its
+parched dustiness, like a camel in the desert panting
+for distant waterpools. The low leaden sky had
+threatened a storm since noon, and the denizens of
+the Shadrack-road, more especially the feminine
+population, had been so fluttered and disturbed by
+the expectation of the coming tempest as to be unable,
+in their own language, ‘to set to anything,’
+all day long. Work at the washtub had progressed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span>
+slowly, wringing had hung on hand, and the very
+mangles of Shadrack had turned listlessly under the
+influence of the weather. It was the cholera season,
+too—a period which set in as regularly in this district
+as the gambling season or the water-drinking
+season at Homburg or Baden, or the bathing season
+at Ostend or Biarritz. Stone-fruit was selling cheaply
+on the hawkers’ barrows, cucumbers were at a discount,
+vegetable marrows met with no inquiry, conger
+eel and mackerel were unpopular, and even salmon
+was not a stranger to the barrows. All the wealth
+of the vanishing summer—luxuries which a few short
+weeks ago had been counted amongst the delicacies
+of the season, and paid for accordingly—had drifted
+this way on the strong tide of time, and lay as it
+were at the feet of the Shadrackites. Upon which
+the Shadrackites, looking askant at the costermongers’
+barrows, remarked that cholera was about.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Davoren found his patient seated before a
+writing-table, which he had never until now seen
+opened. It was that kind of writing-table which is
+called a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bonheur du jour</i>, a small table provided with
+numerous drawers; an ebony table, inlaid with brass
+and tortoiseshell, with brass mounts; a table which,
+according to Mr. Sivewright, had been made by no
+lesser hands than those of Francis Boule. The lamp<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span>
+stood on this table, all the drawers were open and
+brimming over with papers, and before it, wrapped
+in his ancient dressing-gown of faded damask, sat
+the old man.</p>
+
+<p>‘I beg your pardon, sir,’ said Lucius, about to
+withdraw, for he knew that his patient had strange
+secret ways about his papers. ‘You are not ready
+for me, perhaps. I’ll go down and talk to Lucille
+for a few minutes.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Do nothing of the kind; I am quite ready for
+you. These papers have much to do with what I am
+going to say. Come in, and lock the door. I have
+locked the other door myself. I want to be secure
+from the possibility of interruption. And now sit
+down by my side.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius obeyed without a word.</p>
+
+<p>‘Now,’ said Mr. Sivewright, with the old keen
+look and sharp tone, the natural energy in the man
+dominating even the prostration of sickness, ‘give
+me a straight answer to a straight question. You
+have had the run of this house for a long time; have
+seen everything, have had time to form your judgment:
+which do you think me now—a poor man or
+a miser?’</p>
+
+<p>‘You will not be offended by my candour?’ inquired
+Lucius.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Certainly not. Have I not enjoined you to be
+candid?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Then,’ replied the other, with a grave smile, ‘I
+admit that, in spite of your protestations of poverty,
+I have thought you rich. Until a short time ago,
+indeed, I was inclined to believe your statement; I
+really thought that you had sunk all your money in
+the purchase of these things,’ with that half-contemptuous
+glance at the art-treasures which Mr.
+Sivewright had before observed; ‘but when you
+spoke the other day of a possible intruder in this
+house with so much alarm, I told myself that if you
+had nothing to lose—or nothing more portable than
+yonder mummy or this desk—you could hardly
+cherish the suspicion of foul play.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Fairly reasoned. Then you thought, because I
+was alarmed by the idea of a secret visitant prowling
+about my house in the dead of the night, that I must
+needs have some secret hoard, some hidden treasure
+for whose safety I feared?’</p>
+
+<p>‘That was almost my thought.’</p>
+
+<p>‘There you were wrong; but only so far were you
+wrong,’ answered Mr. Sivewright, with unwonted
+energy. ‘I am not such a baby as to hoard my
+guineas in an old muniment chest, for the babyish
+pleasure of gloating over my treasure in the stillness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span>
+of the night—letting the golden coins run like glittering
+yellow water through my fingers; counting
+and recounting; stacking the gold into little piles,
+twenties, fifties, hundreds. No. I am a miser—granted;
+but I am not a fool. There is nothing in
+this house but the objects which you have seen; but
+those are worth a fortune. This very table at which
+I am now sitting, and which to your uneducated eye
+doubtless seems a trumpery gimcrack thing, was sold
+at Christie’s three years ago for a hundred and twenty
+pounds, and will sell a year hence for half as much
+again. The value of money is diminishing year by
+year; the number of wealthy buyers is increasing
+year by year; and these treasures and relics of the
+past—specimens of manufactures that have perished,
+of arts that are forgotten, the handiwork of genius
+which has left no inheritors—these cannot multiply.
+The capital these represent is large, and whenever
+they are put up to auction in Christie and Manson’s
+sale-rooms, that capital will be quadrupled. I do not
+speak at random, Davoren; I know my trade. After
+the apprenticeship of a lifetime I can venture to
+speak boldly. I have spent something like ten thousand
+pounds upon the treasures of this house, and I
+consider that ten thousand of sunk capital to represent
+between forty and fifty thousand in the future.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span></p>
+
+<p>Lucius looked at the speaker mute with astonishment.
+Was this utter madness? The hallucination
+of a mind which had become distorted by constant
+dwelling upon one subject? The wild dream of an
+art fanatic? Homer Sivewright’s calm and serious
+air—the business-like manner of his statement—forbade
+the idea. He might deceive himself as to
+the value of his possessions; but there was no madness
+here.</p>
+
+<p>‘You do not believe me,’ said Mr. Sivewright,
+taking the surgeon’s wondering silence as the indication
+of his incredulity. ‘You think I am a doting
+old fool; that I must be stark mad when I tell you
+that I, who have lived as poorly as an anchorite, have
+been content to sink ten thousand pounds—representing
+at five per cent five hundred a year—in the purchase
+of things which, to your untutored judgment,
+may perhaps appear so much second-hand trumpery.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No,’ answered Lucius slowly, like a man awakening
+from a dream; ‘I can appreciate the value and
+the beauty of many among your treasures. But ten
+thousand pounds—the sum seems prodigious.’</p>
+
+<p>‘A mere bagatelle compared with the sums that
+have been sunk in the same kind of property. But I
+have never bought unless I could buy a bargain. I
+am an old hand—cautious as a fox. I have not disputed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span>
+the possession of a Sèvres tea-cup or a Dresden
+snuff-box with wealthy amateurs. I have waited my
+chance, and bought gems which the common herd
+were too ignorant to appreciate. I have picked up
+my treasures in odd nooks and corners; have travelled
+half over Europe in quest of spoil. Thus my
+ten thousand pounds represent thirty thousand of
+another man’s money.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And you have given up your declining years to
+constant labour; you have racked your brains with
+never-ending calculations; and you have lived, as
+you say, like an anchorite—for what result? Only to
+amass this heap of things—as useless for any of
+the practical needs of life as they are artistically
+beautiful. You have pinched and scraped and toiled—shortened
+your own life, and robbed your grandchild
+of every joy that makes youth worth having. Good
+heavens,’ exclaimed Lucius, indignant at the thought
+of that joyless existence to which this old man had
+condemned Lucille, ‘was there ever such folly! Nay,
+it is worse than folly, it is a crime—a sin against yourself,
+whom you have robbed of natural rest, and all
+the comforts to which men look forward as the solace
+of age—a still greater sin against that unselfish girl
+whose life you have filled with care and trouble.’</p>
+
+<p>This reproach struck home. The old man sighed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span>
+heavily, his head drooped upon his breast, and he
+covered his face with his thin hand.</p>
+
+<p>‘Why have you made this insensate use of your
+money?’ exclaimed Lucius. ‘What madness possessed
+you?’</p>
+
+<p>‘The madness men call revenge,’ cried Mr. Sivewright,
+uncovering his face and lifting his head
+proudly. ‘Listen, Lucius Davoren, and when you
+have heard my story, call me a madman if you will.
+You will at least perceive that there has been a fixed
+purpose in all I did. When my false ungrateful son—whom
+I had loved with all the weak indulgent
+affection of the solitary man who concentrates all his
+store of feeling upon one object, his only child—when
+my wicked son left me, he left me impoverished
+by his theft, and, as he doubtless believed, ruined
+for life. He shook the dust of my house from his
+feet, and went out into the world, never intending to
+recross my threshold. I had nothing more that could
+tempt him. My stock had been diminishing daily
+under his dishonest hands; the sacrifice I had made
+to secure the new premises shrunk it to a vanishing
+point. Thus he left me, to all intents and purposes
+a beggar. It was the old story of the squeezed
+orange. He had no compunction in flinging away
+the rind.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘He used you hardly,’ said Lucius, ‘like a villain
+as he was.’</p>
+
+<p>‘On the night after he left me, I sat alone by my
+miserable hearth, in that room which had never witnessed
+one hour of domestic peace! I sat alone, and
+brooded over my wrongs. Then it seemed to me
+almost as if that very devil who came to Dr. Faustus
+in his study came and stood behind my chair, and
+whispered in my ear. “Come,” said the fiend, “love
+is worn out, but there is one thing left you still—revenge.
+Grow rich, and this base son, who leaves
+you to perish like a maimed lion in his den, will
+come back and fawn upon you for your money. Grow
+rich again; show him what might have been his
+reward had he behaved decently to you. Let him lie
+at your door and starve, and beg as Dives begged for
+a drop of water, and be refused. Then it will be
+your turn to laugh, as he no doubt is now laughing
+at you.”’</p>
+
+<p>‘A strange suggestion, and worthy to come from
+the spirit of evil,’ said Lucius.</p>
+
+<p>‘I cared not if it came straight from Lucifer,’
+answered the other passionately. ‘From that hour
+I lived only to make money. I had lived for little
+else before, you will say, perhaps; but I worked
+harder now. Fortune seemed to favour me, just as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span>
+the Fates seem now and then to favour the desperate
+gamester. I made some lucky sales with the
+shrunken remnant of my stock. I found gems in
+queer out-of-the-way places; for at this time I was
+endowed with an almost superhuman activity, and
+travelled many miles every day. I roamed the Continent,
+and brought home wonders of art. I acquired
+a reputation for finding objects of rarest merit, and
+celebrated collectors paid me my price without a murmur.
+So I worked on, until the expiry of my lease
+found me with a large stock and some thousands in
+hand. Then the idea suddenly occurred to me that
+my best chance of dying a rich man—or of doubling,
+tripling, or quadrupling my capital before I died—was
+to let my stock lie fallow. I surrendered my
+premises rather than pay the enormous rent which
+the landlord demanded for them. I might have
+sold my stock, and retired with a comfortable income;
+but I determined to keep it, and die worth
+fifty thousand pounds. I found this old house—roomy
+and secluded; I brought my wealth here.
+There are cases of rare old china stowed away in some
+of the rooms which you have not even seen. Since
+I came here, I went on buying, so long as my funds
+would admit; and since the exhaustion of my capital,
+I have done a good deal of business in the way of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span>
+barter—weeding out objects of lesser value from my
+collection, and making many a good bargain with
+dealers who only half know their trade. Thus even
+after my funds were gone I managed to enrich my
+collection.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And now, I conclude,’ said Lucius, ‘that your
+chief pleasure is the idea of giving your name to a
+museum—of leaving behind you a memorial which
+shall survive for generations to come?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I have no such thought,’ answered the other.
+‘My talk of leaving these things to the nation was
+but an idle threat. No, Lucius, my dream and my
+hope from the time of my son’s desertion have been
+the realisation of a large fortune—you understand, a
+fortune—a fortune to be left away from that base boy—a
+fortune which he should hear of, whose full extent
+should be known to him; wealth that he should
+hunger for, while he lay in the gutter. I have made
+the fortune, Lucius, and I leave it all to you. That
+is my revenge.’</p>
+
+<p>‘To <em>me</em>!’ cried Lucius, aghast.</p>
+
+<p>‘To you. But mind, not a sixpence, not a halfpenny,
+to that man, should he come whining to you;
+not a crust of bread to ward off the pangs of starvation.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You have left everything to me,’ said Lucius,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span>
+with undiminished surprise, ‘to me! You pass over
+your granddaughter, your own flesh and blood, to
+make me your heir!’</p>
+
+<p>‘What does it matter whether it goes to you or
+Lucille?’ asked Mr. Sivewright impatiently. ‘You
+love her?’</p>
+
+<p>‘With all the strength of my heart.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And she is to be your wife. She will have the
+full benefit of all I leave you. Were it left to her—settled
+upon her ever so tightly, for her sole use and
+benefit, and so on, as the lawyers have it—you would
+have the advantage all the same. She would surrender
+all her rights to you. But she would do something
+worse than that. She has a foolish sentimental
+idea about that infamous father of hers; she
+would let him share the money. That is why I bequeath
+everything to you.’</p>
+
+<p>‘The precaution is needless, sir,’ replied Lucius
+gravely. ‘I have reason to know that your son no
+longer lives to trouble you or his daughter.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You have reason to know!’ cried the old man
+angrily. ‘What do you know about my son? And
+why have you withheld your knowledge from me until
+this moment?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Because it is only within the last few weeks that
+I have discovered your son’s identity with a man I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span>
+met in America, and I did not care to disturb you
+by any allusion to an agitating subject.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Who was this man?’</p>
+
+<p>‘You will not speak of this to Lucille? She
+knows nothing—she must know nothing of—of her
+father’s death,’ said Lucius, with painful eagerness.</p>
+
+<p>He had spoken rashly, and found himself, as it
+were, caught in the meshes of his own ill-advised
+admission.</p>
+
+<p>‘She shall know nothing, if you insist upon it.
+For God’s sake, don’t trifle with me. Is my son
+dead?’</p>
+
+<p>He asked the question with as agonising an
+anxiety as if the son he had long ago renounced
+were at this moment the idol of his heart.</p>
+
+<p>‘I have good reason to believe that he is dead.’</p>
+
+<p>‘That is no answer. Give me details, particulars—time,
+place, the manner of his death.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I—I can only tell you what I know,’ answered
+Lucius, pale to the lips. ‘There was a portrait
+amongst the lumber in your loft—the portrait of a
+young man with dark hair and eyes.’</p>
+
+<p>‘There was but one portrait there,’ answered the
+old man quickly—‘my son’s.’</p>
+
+<p>‘That picture resembles a man I once met in
+America, who, I afterwards heard, was shot.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘How? by whom?’</p>
+
+<p>‘That I cannot tell you. You must accept the
+evidence for what it is worth.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I reject it as worthless. What, you see a picture
+among the lumber in the loft which reminds
+you of a face you saw in America—the face of some
+man who may or may not have been killed in some
+gold-diggers’ fray, I suppose—and you jump at the
+conclusion that my son is dead; that the order of
+nature has been reversed, and the green tree has
+fallen before the disabled trunk! You tell me, on no
+better evidence than this, that my dream of revenge
+has been vain; that my ungrateful son will never
+hear, with all the pangs of baffled avarice, of his dead
+father’s wealth—of wealth that might have been his
+had he been simply honest.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Say that I am mistaken, then,’ replied Lucius,
+infinitely relieved by the old man’s incredulity. How
+could he have answered if Mr. Sivewright had questioned
+him closely? He was not schooled in falsehood.
+The horrible truth might have been wrung
+from him in spite of himself. ‘Say that your son
+still lives,’ he went on. ‘I accept your trust, and
+thank you for your confidence in me. I shall receive
+your wealth, and may it be long ere it falls to my
+hands—rather as a trustee than an inheritor—for to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span>
+my mind it will always belong to Lucille, and not to
+me.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And you swear that my wicked son shall never
+profit by my hard-earned gains?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I swear it,’ said Lucius.</p>
+
+<p>‘Then I am satisfied. My will is straight and
+simple, and leaves all to you without reserve. It has
+been duly witnessed, and lies in this inner drawer.’
+He lifted the flap of the table, and showed Lucius a
+concealed drawer at the back. ‘You will remember?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes,’ answered the surgeon, ‘but I trust in God
+that it may be long ere that document is needed.’</p>
+
+<p>‘That is a polite speech common to heirs,’ answered
+Mr. Sivewright, with a touch of bitterness.
+‘But you have been very good to me,’ he added in a
+softer tone; ‘and I like you. Nay, could I believe in
+the existence of friendship, I should be induced to
+think that you return my liking.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I do, sir, with all my heart,’ returned Lucius.
+‘Your eccentricities kept us asunder for some time;
+but since you have treated me with confidence—since
+you have bared your heart to me, with its heavy burden
+of past wrongs and sorrows—you have drawn me
+very near to you. I deplore the mistaken principle
+which has guided your later life; but I cannot but
+acknowledge the magnitude of the wrong which inspired<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span>
+that dream of revenge. Yet, while I accept
+the trust which you are generous enough to confide
+in me, I regret that I should profit by your anger
+against another. If I did not think your son was
+dead—that all hope of earthly atonement for his
+wrong-doing is over—I should refuse to subscribe to
+the conditions of your bequest.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Say no more about his death,’ exclaimed the old
+man, ‘or you will make me angry. Now one more
+word about business. If, immediately after my death,
+you want money, sell my collection at once. You will
+find a catalogue, and detached instructions as to the
+manner of the sale, in this desk. If, on the other
+hand, you can afford to wait for your fortune—if you
+want the present value of those things to double itself—wait
+twenty years, and sell them before your
+eldest child comes of age. In that case, you will have
+a fortune large enough to make your sons great merchants—to
+dower half-a-dozen daughters.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I shall not be too eager to turn your treasures
+into money, believe me, sir,’ answered Lucius.</p>
+
+<p>‘Good,’ said Mr. Sivewright. ‘I bought those
+things to sell again—speculated in them as a broker
+speculates in shares. Yet it gives me a sharp pang
+to think of their being scattered. They represent all
+the experience of my life, my youthful worship of art,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span>
+the knowledge of my later years. I have looked at
+them, and handled them, till they seem to me like
+sentient things.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Even Pharaoh yonder,’ said Lucius with a smile,
+anxious to turn the current of his patient’s thoughts,
+which had been dwelling too long upon painful
+themes, ‘though he seems scarcely a lively object to
+adorn a bedchamber.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Pharaoh was a bargain,’ answered Mr. Sivewright,
+‘or I shouldn’t have bought him. The manufacture
+of mummies is one of the extinct arts, and
+the article must rise in market value with the lapse
+of years. New towns spring up; provincial museums
+multiply—each must have its mummy.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Come, Mr. Sivewright, you have been talking
+rather more than is good for an invalid. May I unlock
+those doors, and ring for your supper?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, if you forbid further talk, but I have something
+more, another matter, and one of some importance,
+to discuss with you.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Let that stand over till to-morrow. You have
+fatigued and excited yourself too much already. I
+will be with you at the same time to-morrow evening,
+if you like.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Do, there is something I am anxious to speak
+about; not quite so important as the subject of our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span>
+conversation to-night, but yet something that ought
+to be spoken of. Come to-morrow evening at the
+same time. Yes, you are right, I have tired myself
+already.’</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Sivewright flung himself back in his chair
+exhausted. Lucius reproached himself for having
+suffered his patient to talk so much, and upon so agitating
+a topic. He stayed while the old man sipped
+a cup of beef-tea, which he finished with a painful
+effort; Lucille standing by, and looking on anxiously
+all the while. She had brought the little supper-tray
+from the adjoining room with her own hands.</p>
+
+<p>‘Do try to eat it, dear grandpapa,’ she said, as
+Mr. Sivewright trifled with his spoon, and looked
+despondently at the half-filled cup. ‘I made it
+myself, on purpose that it should be good and
+strong.’</p>
+
+<p>‘It is good enough, child, if you could give me
+the inclination to eat,’ answered the old man, pushing
+away the cup with a sigh; ‘and now good-night
+to you both. I am tired, and shall go to bed at
+once.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Don’t lock the dressing-room door to-night, grandpapa,’
+said Lucille. ‘I am going to sleep there in
+future, so that I may be close at hand if you should
+want anything in the night.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘I never want anything in the night,’ answered
+Mr. Sivewright impatiently. ‘You may just as well
+sleep in your own room.’</p>
+
+<p>‘But I like to be near you, grandpapa, and Lucius
+says you ought to take a little beef-tea very
+early in the morning. Please leave the door unlocked.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Very well; but, in that case, mind you lock the
+outer door.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I will be careful to do so, grandpapa.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Be sure of that. This change of rooms is a foolish
+fancy: but I am too feeble to dispute the point.
+Good-night.’</p>
+
+<p>He dismissed them both with a wave of his hand—the
+grandchild who represented the sum-total of his
+kindred, and the man to whom he had bequeathed
+his fortune.</p>
+
+<p>Lucille and Lucius went down-stairs together, but
+both were curiously silent.</p>
+
+<p>The surgeon’s mind was full of that strange conversation
+with Homer Sivewright; the girl had a preoccupied
+air.</p>
+
+<p>In the dimly-lighted hall she paused, by the open
+door of the sitting-room, where Mrs. Wincher had
+just put down the little tray with her young mistress’s
+meagre supper.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Will you come into the parlour for a little while,
+Lucius?’ she asked, as her lover lingered on the
+threshold with an undecided air. Something unfamiliar
+in the tone of her voice jarred upon his
+ear.</p>
+
+<p>‘You ask the question almost as if you wished me
+to say no, Lucille,’ he said.</p>
+
+<p>‘I am rather tired,’ she answered faintly, ‘and I
+am sure you must be tired too, you have been so long
+up-stairs with grandpapa. It has struck ten.’</p>
+
+<p>‘That sounds like my dismissal,’ said Lucius,
+scrutinising the pale face, in which there was a troubled
+expression that he had never seen there until of
+late; ‘so I will say good-night, though I had something
+to tell you, had you been inclined to listen.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Tell me all to-morrow, Lucius.’</p>
+
+<p>‘It shall be to-morrow then, dearest. Good-night.’</p>
+
+<p>And thus with one tender kiss he left her.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IVa">CHAPTER IV.<br>
+<span class="fs70">WHAT LUCIUS SAW BETWIXT MIDNIGHT AND MORNING.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">The</span> sky was starless above the Shadrack-road, and
+the air hardly less oppressive than it had been in the
+sultry noontide. That low sky seemed to shut in
+the Shadrack district like an iron roof, and the Shadrackites
+lounging against their doorposts, or conversing
+at street corners, or congregating in small clusters
+outside public-houses, bemoaned themselves that the
+storm had not yet come.</p>
+
+<p>Lucius left Cedar House heavy-hearted, in spite
+of the knowledge that he, who yesterday knew not of
+a creature in this universe likely to leave him a five-pound
+note, was to-night heir to a handsome fortune.
+The thought of Mr. Sivewright’s generosity in no manner
+elated him. Had his mind been free to contemplate
+this fact he would, no doubt, have rejoiced in the
+new sense of security which such a prospect must
+have inspired; he would have rejoiced not alone for
+himself, but for the sake of the woman who was to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span>
+his wife. Through the thick tangle of his troubled
+thoughts no gleam of light could penetrate. He saw
+himself the centre of perplexities. It seemed almost
+as if the avenging shade of the man he had slain were
+hunting him down—tempting him to entangle himself
+by some foolish confession, urging him to some
+folly that must bring about his own destruction. He
+thought of Orestes pursued by the Eumenides—tortured
+by the burden of a crime which, at the hour of
+its commission, he had deemed an act of justice.</p>
+
+<p>Instead of turning homewards as usual, he paused
+for a minute or so outside the iron gate, and then took
+the opposite direction, setting his face towards the
+distant country. It was only a fancy, perhaps, but it
+seemed to him that the atmosphere was a shade less
+oppressive when he turned his back upon Shadrack
+Basin and the steam factories which encompassed it.
+No rain came to cool the fever-parched city, nor had
+the first low note of the impending storm sounded in
+distant thunder. Yet that coming storm was no less
+a certainty.</p>
+
+<p>There was a strange bewilderment in the surgeon’s
+mind. That promise of wealth, ease, security, a more
+speedily-won renown, all the benefits which go hand-in-hand
+with the possession of ample means, had excited
+his brain, although it had not elated his spirits.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span>
+He saw all the scheme of his future altered. No
+longer need he toil in this wretched district. He
+might at once establish himself amongst the most famous
+of his fellow workers; make known his new theories,
+his discoveries in the vast world of medical science;
+do good on a scale infinitely larger than that afforded
+by his present surroundings. It was not that he
+wanted to turn his back upon the suffering poor. His
+brightest hopes, his fondest dreams, were of the good
+he was to do for these. He only desired that his
+light might not be for ever hidden under a bushel.
+Strong in the belief that he could serve the whole
+race of man, he languished to shake off those fetters,
+forged by necessity, which kept him chained to this
+obscure corner of the earth.</p>
+
+<p>With the thought of his improved prospects, and
+all the hopes that went along with that thought,
+there mingled that ever-brooding care about the past.
+He had perceived a curious change in Lucille’s manner
+to-night. Could she have discovered anything?
+How anxious she had been to get rid of him! She
+had not seemed exactly cold or unkind, but her manner
+had been hurried, excited; as if her mind were
+occupied with some all-absorbing thought in which
+he had no part.</p>
+
+<p>‘If, by some fatal chance, she had discovered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span>
+the true story of her father’s fate,’ he told himself,
+‘she would hardly have concealed her knowledge;
+she would have surely told me the truth at once,
+and dismissed me for ever. I cannot imagine her
+acting in any double or underhanded manner. Yet
+to-night it seemed as if she had something to hide
+from me.’</p>
+
+<p>This fancy troubled him; and in spite of his
+endeavours to dismiss the suspicion as groundless,
+the thought recurred to him every now and then.
+He walked far along the Shadrack-road, farther than
+he had penetrated for many a day; walked on, meditative,
+and hardly conscious where he went, until he
+came to a region of deserted building-ground, upon
+which a few skeleton houses lifted their roofless walls
+to the blank sky, as if demanding of the gods wherefore
+the speculative builder—long since stranded on
+the reefy shore of the bankruptcy court—came not to
+finish them.</p>
+
+<p>This arid plain, which had erst been pleasant
+meadow-land, and where the shorn remnant of a
+once-beauteous hawthorn hedge still languished here
+and there under a cloud of lime dust, was the nearest
+approach to a rustic landscape within reach of the
+Shadrackites. Its beauty did not tempt the pedestrian.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span></p>
+
+<p>Lucius halted at sight of the skeleton houses,
+and having in some measure walked down his excitement,
+turned back. He did not, however, take
+exactly the same way by which he had come. The
+prospect of the Shadrack-road, in all its dreary
+length, may have appalled him, or it may have been
+mere vagrant fancy which led him to return by a
+long narrow street, straggling and poverty-stricken,
+yet boasting here and there some good old red-brick
+mansion, which had once been the country seat of
+a prosperous City merchant, but which now, shorn
+of its garden, and defaced by neglect and decay,
+was let off in divers tenements to the struggling
+poor.</p>
+
+<p>This street, with all its byways, was familiar to
+Lucius, who had plenty of patients in those squalid
+houses, down those narrow side streets, courts, and
+alleys. He knew every turn of the place, and wandered
+on to-night, not troubling himself which way
+he went, so long as he kept in a general manner the
+homeward direction. It had struck twelve when he
+emerged from a darksome alley on to the wharf
+which formed one side of the narrow creek whereon
+Mr. Sivewright’s garden abutted.</p>
+
+<p>There were the dingy barges moored side by side
+upon the stagnant water; and there above them, dark<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span>
+against the sky, loomed the outline of the house that
+sheltered all Lucius Davoren most fondly loved. He
+had wandered to this spot almost unawares.</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">‘I arise from dreams of thee,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">And a spirit in my feet</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Has led me—who knows how?</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">To thy chamber-window, sweet!’</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent">murmured the lover, as he looked up at those blank
+windows.</p>
+
+<p>There was a faint light in one, the little dressing-room
+next Mr. Sivewright’s bedchamber, the room
+now occupied by Lucille. Yes, and there was one
+more light—the yellow flame of a candle in one of
+the upper windows, a window in that topmost story,
+which Lucille had declared to be utterly uninhabited.</p>
+
+<p>The sight struck Lucius with a vague suspicion—a
+feeling almost of alarm.</p>
+
+<p>How should there be a light up yonder in one of
+those unoccupied rooms? Could it be Jacob Wincher,
+prowling about after midnight, to inspect the
+treasures of which he was guardian. It was just
+possible there might be some part of the bric-à-brac
+merchant’s collection in one of those upper rooms.
+Yet Lucille had declared that they were quite empty—and
+his own inspection through the keyholes had
+revealed nothing worth speaking of within. And<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span>
+again, how foreign to Jacob Wincher’s orderly habits
+to be roaming about with a candle at such an hour!</p>
+
+<p>The gleam of that solitary candle amidst all those
+dark upper windows mystified Lucius beyond measure.</p>
+
+<p>‘If it is old Wincher who has carried the light
+up yonder, it will move presently,’ thought Lucius;
+‘he would not stay there long at such a late hour.
+I’ll wait and see the end of the business.’</p>
+
+<p>The first note of the storm sounded as he made
+this resolve, a rumble of distant thunder, and then
+came the heavy patter of big rain-drops, shedding
+coolness upon the thunder-charged air. There was
+an open shed close at hand, and Lucius withdrew to
+its shelter without losing sight of the dark old house
+opposite, with its two lighted windows.</p>
+
+<p>The water and the barges lay between him and
+Cedar House, the wharf—used at this time as a repository
+for spelter—being built upon a narrow creek,
+or inlet from the river.</p>
+
+<p>He stood and watched for nearly half an hour,
+while the rain came down heavily and the lightning
+flashed across his face every now and then; but still
+the light burnt steadily. What could Wincher or
+anybody else be doing in yonder room at such an
+hour? Or could it be Homer Sivewright himself,
+roaming the house like an unquiet spirit?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘No,’ Lucius thought, ‘he has not strength
+enough to mount those steep stairs without help. It
+cannot be Sivewright.’</p>
+
+<p>Did the circumstance—trivial enough in itself,
+perhaps, but painfully perplexing to that anxious
+watcher—mean any harm? That was the question.
+Did it denote any peril to Lucille? Ought he to go
+round to the front of the house, and try to arouse the
+sleeping household, in order to warn them of some
+unknown danger? That seemed a desperate thing
+to do, when the circumstance, after all, might be of
+no moment. It was most likely Jacob Wincher.
+He might have eccentricities that Lucius had never
+heard of; and to sit up late into the night was perhaps
+one of his failings.</p>
+
+<p>Yet that mysterious light, taken in conjunction
+with Mr. Sivewright’s fancy about strange footsteps
+in the dead of the night, was not a fact to be dismissed
+carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>‘If there were any way of getting into the house
+without ringing people up and frightening my patient,
+I would get in somehow, and find the solution of this
+enigma,’ thought Lucius; ‘but I daresay the doors
+and windows at the back are firmly fastened.’</p>
+
+<p>A distant clock chimed the quarter before one,
+while Lucius was standing irresolute under the spelter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span>
+shed. While the third slow chime was still vibrating
+in the silent night, the blue glare of a lightning-flash
+showed that eager watcher a figure upon
+one of the barges.</p>
+
+<p>Until this moment he had believed them utterly
+empty, save of their cargo; nor did this figure belong
+to either of those darksome vessels. It was the
+figure of a man, tall and lithe, who moved quickly
+along, bending his body as he crept from one barge
+to the other, as if shrinking from the pelting rain—a
+stealthy figure, upon which Lucius at once concentrated
+his attention.</p>
+
+<p>He had not long to remain in doubt. The man
+lifted his head presently, and looked up towards the
+lighted window; then, with the agility of some wild
+animal, sprang from the barge to the garden-wall.
+There Lucius lost him in the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>Presently there came a long whistle—long but
+not loud; then a light appeared in the lower part of
+the house—a light from an open door, evidently.
+Lucius saw the light appear and vanish, and heard
+the closing of a heavy door.</p>
+
+<p>Some one had admitted that man to the house,
+but who was that some one? There was foul play of
+some kind; but what the nature of the mystery was
+a question he could not answer.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span></p>
+
+<p>What should he do? Go round to the front gate,
+ring, and alarm the household? By that means only
+could he solve the mystery, and prove to Lucille that
+these Winchers, whose fidelity she believed in, were
+deceiving her. Yet to do that might be to imperil
+his patient, in whose weak state any violent shock
+might be well-nigh fatal.</p>
+
+<p>Reflection convinced him that whatever mischief
+was at work in that house was of a subtle character.
+It could only mean plunder; for after all, to suppose
+that it involved any evil design against Homer Sivewright’s
+life seemed too improbable a notion to be
+entertained for a moment. The plot, whatever its
+nature, must mean plunder, and these Winchers,
+the trusted servants, in whom long service seemed
+a pledge of honesty, must be the moving spirits of
+the treason. What more likely than that Jacob
+Wincher, who knew the value of his master’s treasures,
+was gradually plundering the collection of its
+richest gems, and that this stealthy intruder, who
+entered the house thus secretly under cover of night,
+was his accomplice, employed to carry away and dispose
+of the booty?</p>
+
+<p>Arguing thus, Lucius decided that it would be a
+foolish thing to disturb the evildoers in the midst of
+their work. His wiser course would be to lie in wait,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span>
+watch the house till daybreak, and surprise the accomplice
+in the act of carrying off the plunder. As
+the man had gone in, so he must surely come out
+before morning. If, owing to the darkness of the
+night, he should escape the watcher’s keen gaze on
+this occasion, Lucius determined that he would set
+one of the minions of Mr. Otranto, the private detective,
+to watch to-morrow night.</p>
+
+<p>Lucius waited patiently, though those hours in
+the dead of the night went by with leaden pace, and
+every limb of the watcher became a burden to him
+from very weariness. He seated himself upon an
+empty cask in an angle of the shed, leaned his back
+against the wall, and waited; never relaxing his watch
+upon those quiet barges and the low garden-wall beyond
+them, never ceasing to listen intently for the
+least sound from that direction. The storm abated,
+heaven’s floodgates were closed again; the lightning
+faded to fainter flashes and then ceased altogether;
+a distant rumble of thunder, like the sound of a door
+shutting after the exit of a disagreeable visitor, marked
+the end of the tempest. Peace descended once more
+upon earth, and coolness; a pleasant air crept along
+the narrow creek; even the odour of the damp earth
+was sweet after the heat and dryness of yesterday.</p>
+
+<p>Morning came, and the aching of Lucius Davoren’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span>
+bones increased, but there was no sign from the
+barges or the garden-wall. The watcher was thoroughly
+wearied. His eyes had been striving to pierce
+the darkness, his ears had been strained to listen for
+the lightest sound during four long hours. At five
+o’clock he departed, not wishing to be surprised by
+early labourers coming his way, or by the traffic of
+the wharf, which might begin he knew not how soon.
+He went away, vexed and disquieted; thinking that
+it was just possible the man might have escaped him
+after all in the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>‘I shouldn’t have seen him in the first instance
+without the aid of that lightning-flash,’ he said to
+himself; ‘I may very easily have missed him afterwards.
+I’ll go home and get two or three hours’
+sleep if I can, and then go straight to Cedar House
+and try to solve this mystery.’</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.<br>
+<span class="fs70">LUCIUS AT FAULT.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">At</span> nine o’clock Lucius stood before the tall iron gate
+waiting for admittance to Mr. Sivewright’s dwelling.
+In spite of his weariness, he had slept but little in
+the interval. The fever of his brain was not to be
+beguiled into slumber. He could only go over the
+same ground again and again, trying to convince
+himself that the mystery of that secret entrance to
+Cedar House was a very simple matter and would be
+made clear after a little trouble.</p>
+
+<p>He scrutinised Mrs. Wincher keenly, as she unlocked
+the gate and conducted him across the forecourt;
+but nothing in the aspect of Mr. Wincher’s
+good lady indicated agitation or emotion of any kind
+whatsoever. If this woman were involved in some
+nightly act of wrong-doing against her master, she
+was evidently hardened in iniquity. Her face, not
+altogether free from the traces of a blacklead brush,
+with which she may perchance have brushed aside an
+importunate fly, was placidity itself.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘You’re more than usual early this morning, Dr.
+Davory,’ she said with her friendly air; ‘you did
+ought to give yourself a little more rest.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I couldn’t rest this morning, Mrs. Wincher,’
+answered Lucius thoughtfully; ‘I was too anxious.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Not about the old gentleman, I hope?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Well, partly on his account, and partly upon
+other grounds. I have an idea that this house is not
+quite so safe as it might be.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Lord bless you, sir, not safe, when I bolts every
+blessed door, and puts up every blessed bar, just as
+if it was chock full of state prisoners! And what is
+there for any one to steal except the bricklebrack,
+and nobody in these parts would know the vally o’
+that. I’m sure I’ve lived among it five-and-twenty
+year myself, and can’t see no use in it, nor no beauty
+in it neither. Depend upon it, nobody would ever
+come arter bricklebrack.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I don’t know, Mrs. Wincher,’ answered Lucius;
+‘people will come after anything, as long as it’s worth
+money.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Let ’em come, then,’ exclaimed the matron contemptuously;
+‘I give ’em leave to get into this house
+after dark if they can.’</p>
+
+<p>‘How if some one were to be obliging, though,
+and let them in?’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Who is there to do that, unless it was me or my
+good gentleman,’ cried Mrs. Wincher, blushing indignantly
+through the blacklead, ‘and I suppose you’re
+not going to suspect us, Dr. Davory, after five-and-twenty
+years’ faithful service? Let any one in, indeed,
+to make away with the bricklebrack! Why,
+my good gentleman would fret hisself to fiddle-strings
+if he was to crack a tea-cup.’</p>
+
+<p>Indignation lent shrillness to the voice of Mrs.
+Wincher, and this conversation, which took place in
+the hall, made itself audible in the parlour. The
+door was opened quickly, and Lucille appeared on the
+threshold, very pale, and with that troubled look in
+her face which Lucius had seen at parting with her
+the night before.</p>
+
+<p>‘What is the matter?’ she asked anxiously,
+‘what are you talking so loud about, Wincher?’ She
+took Lucius’s offered hand absently, hardly looking at
+him, and evidently disturbed by some apprehension of
+evil.</p>
+
+<p>‘Nothink pertiklar, Miss Lucille,’ replied Mrs.
+Wincher, tossing her head; ‘only I’m not a stone,
+and when people throws out their insinuventions at
+me I feels it. As if me or my good gentleman was
+capable of making away with the bricklebrack.’</p>
+
+<p>‘What do you mean, Wincher?’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Ask him,’ said Mrs. Wincher, pointing to Lucius;
+‘I suppose he knows what he means hisself,
+but I’m sure I don’t;’ with which remark the matron
+withdrew to the back premises to resume her blacklead
+brush.</p>
+
+<p>‘What have you been saying to offend Mrs. Wincher,
+Lucius?’ asked Lucille.</p>
+
+<p>‘Not much, dearest, but if you’ll listen to me for
+a few minutes I’ll endeavour to explain.’</p>
+
+<p>He followed her into the parlour and shut the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>‘Why, Lucille,’ he said, drawing her towards the
+window, and looking at the pale thoughtful face, ‘how
+ill you look!’</p>
+
+<p>‘I am anxious about my grandfather,’ she said
+hurriedly. ‘Never mind my looks, Lucius; only
+contrive to cure him, and I daresay I shall soon be
+quite well again.’</p>
+
+<p>‘But you have no right to be anxious, Lucille,’
+he answered; ‘can you not trust me? Do you not
+believe that I shall do all that care and skill can do,
+and that, if at any moment I see reason to doubt my
+own power to deal with this case, I shall call in some
+famous doctor to aid me?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I believe you will do all that is wise and right;
+but still I cannot help feeling anxious. Do not take<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span>
+any notice of me. I pray Heaven that all may come
+right in time.’</p>
+
+<p>She said this with a weary air, as if almost worn
+out with care. It seemed cruel to trouble her at
+such a time, and yet Lucius could not refrain from
+some endeavour to solve the mystery of that scene
+last night.</p>
+
+<p>‘Lucille,’ he began seriously, ‘you must promise
+not to be angry with me, nor to be alarmed by anything
+I may say.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I can’t promise that,’ she said, with a shade of
+impatience; not quite the old sweetness that had
+charmed and won him; ‘you are full of strange fancies
+and terrors. What was that you were saying to Mrs.
+Wincher just now?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I was only hinting at a suspicion that has become
+almost a certainty. There is something wrong
+going on in this house, Lucille.’</p>
+
+<p>She started, and the pale face grew a shade paler.</p>
+
+<p>‘What do you mean? What can be wrong?’</p>
+
+<p>‘There is foul play of some kind, a design against
+the property contained in this house. No doubt the
+report of its value has spread by this time; the house
+is known to be almost unoccupied. What more likely
+than that some one should attempt to plunder your
+grandfather’s possessions? What more easy, above<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span>
+all, if any one inside the house turned traitor and
+opened the door, in the dead of the night, to the intruder?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Lucius!’</p>
+
+<p>The name broke from her lips almost in a scream,
+and it seemed as if Lucille would have dropped to the
+ground but for her lover’s supporting arm.</p>
+
+<p>‘Lucille, is it worthy of you to be so terrorstricken?
+If there is danger to be met, can we not
+meet it together? Only trust me, darling, and all
+your fears will vanish. Believe me, I am strong
+enough to face any peril, if I have but your confidence.
+Accident has put me in possession of a
+secret connected with this house. Heaven knows
+what might have happened but for that providential
+discovery. But knowledge is power, and once aware
+of the danger, I shall find out how to cope with it.’</p>
+
+<p>‘A discovery!’ she repeated with the same terrorstricken
+look. ‘What discovery?’</p>
+
+<p>‘First, that the people you trust, these Winchers,
+whose fidelity has stood the test of five-and-twenty-years’
+service, are improving their first opportunity
+to cheat. They are taking advantage of your grandfather’s
+helplessness. A man was admitted into this
+house secretly at one o’clock this morning.’</p>
+
+<p>‘What folly!’ cried Lucille with a faint laugh.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span>
+‘What could have put such a delusion into your
+head? A man admitted to this house at one o’clock
+this morning! Even if such a thing could have happened,
+which of course is impossible, who could have
+informed you of the fact?’</p>
+
+<p>‘My own eyes, which saw him clamber from the
+barges to the garden-wall, saw the gleam of a candle
+as a door was opened to admit him, saw a light burning
+in one of the upper windows—evidently a signal.’</p>
+
+<p>‘<em>You</em> saw?’ cried Lucille with widely-opened eyes.
+‘How could you see? What could have taken you
+to the back of this house in the middle of the night?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Accident,’ answered Lucius, ‘or say rather Providence.
+I was out of spirits when I left you last
+night—your own manner, so unlike its usual kindness,
+disturbed me, and I had other agitating thoughts.
+I walked a long way down the Shadrack-road, and
+then returned by a back way, which brought me to
+the spelter-wharf opposite the garden. There the
+light in the upper story attracted my attention. I
+had heard from you that those upper rooms were
+never occupied. I waited, watched, and saw what I
+have just described.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I would sooner believe it a delusion of your
+senses than the Winchers could be capable of treachery,’
+said Lucille.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Do not talk any more about my senses deceiving
+me,’ replied Lucius decisively. ‘You told me
+I was the fool of my own senses when I saw some
+one open the door of one of the upper rooms, and
+then hurriedly shut it. Now I am certain that I
+was not deceived—there was some one hidden in
+that room. Remember, Lucille, I say again there
+is no cause for fear. But there is foul play of some
+kind, and it is our business to fathom it. We are
+not children, to leave ourselves at the mercy of any
+scoundrel who chooses to plunder or assail us. I
+shall bring a policeman to watch in this house to-night,
+and set another to watch the outside.’</p>
+
+<p>The slender figure which his arm had until now
+sustained slipped suddenly from his hold, and Lucille
+sank unconscious to the ground.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.<br>
+<span class="fs70">THE PLUNDER OF THE MUNIMENT CHEST.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">The</span> sight of the girl he fondly loved lying senseless
+at his feet, with a white face and closed eyelids, filled
+Lucius Davoren with unspeakable agony and remorse.
+How little had he calculated the effect of his words
+upon this too-sensitive nature! To him the danger
+involved in the plot which he suspected was but a
+small thing—a difficulty to be met and grappled with.
+That was all. But to this inexperienced girl the
+thought of a midnight intruder, of a stranger’s secret
+entrance into the house, with the connivance of its
+treacherous inmates, was doubtless appalling.</p>
+
+<p>Could he despise his betrothed for her want of
+courage? No! His first thought was professional.
+This sudden fainting fit was no doubt the evidence
+of weakened health. Days of patient attendance upon
+the invalid, nights rendered sleepless by anxiety, had
+done their work. Lucille’s strength had given way—that
+change in her appearance and manner which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span>
+had so much disturbed him was but one of the indications
+of broken health. And he, who loved her
+better than life itself, felt himself guilty of cruel
+neglect in not having ere this discovered the truth.
+That gentle self-sacrificing spirit was stronger than
+the fragile frame which was its earthly temple.</p>
+
+<p>He lifted her from the ground, placed her in Mr.
+Sivewright’s easy-chair by the open window, and then
+rang the bell loudly.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Wincher came, but entered the room with
+head flung back, and a lofty air, which might have
+become Queen Eleanor in the presence of Fair Rosamond.
+At sight of her unconscious mistress, however,
+Mrs. Wincher gave a piteous scream, and flew
+to her side.</p>
+
+<p>‘Whatever have you been and gone and said to
+this poor dear,’ she exclaimed indignantly, flinging a
+scornful glance at Lucius, ‘to make her faint dead
+off like that? I suppose you’ve been accusing <em>her</em>
+of robbing her grandfather. I’m sure it wouldn’t
+surprise me if you had.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Don’t be angry, Mrs. Wincher,’ said Lucius;
+‘but bring me some cold water directly, and a little
+brandy.’</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Wincher, alarmed for the safety of her mistress,
+flew to fetch these restoratives, but obeyed Mr.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span>
+Davoren as it were, under protest, in his professional
+capacity.</p>
+
+<p>A little care restored Lucille to consciousness,
+but even after she had recovered from her swoon,
+she seemed strangely shaken, and looked at her
+lover with an expression full of vague fear.</p>
+
+<p>He began to reproach her, with infinite tenderness,
+for her neglect of her own health.</p>
+
+<p>‘You have been doing too much, darling,’ he
+said, kissing the pale forehead that rested on his
+shoulder, ‘and I have been guilty of shameful neglect
+in allowing you to endanger your health. And
+now, dear, you must obey orders. You must go
+straight up to your room and let Wincher help you
+to bed, and lie there quietly all day long, and be
+fed with beef-tea and good old port until the colour
+comes back to those poor pale cheeks.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucille persistently refused compliance with these
+injunctions.</p>
+
+<p>‘Indeed, indeed, Lucius, there is nothing the
+matter with me,’ she said earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>‘Nothing the matter when you fainted just now—a
+sure sign of extreme weakness—especially in one
+not accustomed to fainting?’</p>
+
+<p>‘O, that was nothing. You frightened me so
+with your suggestions of danger.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Do not be afraid any longer, dearest; there is
+no danger that can assail you, except the danger of
+your ruining your health by refusing to be guided by
+my advice. You want rest, and ought to endeavour
+to get several hours’ good sleep.’</p>
+
+<p>‘It wouldn’t be the least use for me to try to go
+to sleep before night,’ she said; ‘my mind is much
+too active for that. I’ll obey you in anything else
+you like, Lucius, but don’t ask me to lie down in my
+room to-day. I should worry myself into a fever.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Very well,’ replied Lucius, with a sigh; ‘I won’t
+insist upon anything you object to. You can rest in
+this room. If I find your grandfather no better this
+morning I shall bring in a nurse.’</p>
+
+<p>‘O, please don’t.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Nonsense, Lucille. I am not going to allow your
+life to be sacrificed to your mistaken notion of duty.
+Some one must nurse Mr. Sivewright, and that some
+one must not be you.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Let it be Mrs. Wincher, then.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No; I have not too high an opinion of these
+faithful Winchers. I shall bring in a woman upon
+whom I can rely.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucille looked at him with that strange scared
+expression he had seen so often of late, and then said
+with some bitterness:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘It seems to me that you are master in this
+house, Lucius, so I suppose you must do as you
+please.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I only constitute myself master here when I see
+peril,’ he replied calmly; ‘and now, Lucille, try to
+obey me in some small measure at least. Let Mrs.
+Wincher bring a sofa of some kind to this room, and
+lie down and try to sleep. I will send you a tonic as
+soon as I get home. Good-bye.’</p>
+
+<p>He bent down to kiss her as she sat in the armchair,
+where he had placed her, too weak to rise.</p>
+
+<p>‘Shall you come here again this evening?’ she
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes; your grandfather wants to talk to me
+about something, and I daresay I shall be an hour or
+so with him in the evening. After that I shall have
+something to tell you, Lucille, if you are well enough
+to hear it. Something pleasant.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You are not going to frighten me any more, I
+hope,’ she said.</p>
+
+<p>‘No, darling, I will never again frighten you.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I daresay you despise me for my cowardice.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Despise you, Lucille? No, I only regard this
+nervous terror as a sign of weakened health. I am
+very sure it is not natural to you to be wanting in
+courage.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘No,’ she answered, with a faint sigh, ‘it is not
+natural to me.’</p>
+
+<p>She turned her face away from him, and tears fell
+slowly from the sad eyes, as she faltered a faint good-bye
+in response to his tender leave-taking.</p>
+
+<p>‘O, merciful God,’ she ejaculated, when the door
+had closed behind her lover, ‘Thou who knowest the
+weight of my burden, help me to bear it patiently.’</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Lucius found no improvement in his patient—retrogression
+rather. But this might be fairly accounted
+for by Mr. Sivewright’s excitement of the
+night before.</p>
+
+<p>‘I did very wrong to let you talk so much,’ said
+Lucius; ‘you are more feverish than usual this morning.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I am altogether worse,’ answered the old man
+fretfully.</p>
+
+<p>Then came a detailed account of his aches and
+pains. There were symptoms that puzzled the surgeon,
+despite his wide experience, and much wider
+study.</p>
+
+<p>‘Let me bring a physician to see you this afternoon,’
+said Lucius; ‘there is something in this case
+which I hardly feel myself strong enough to cope
+with.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘No,’ answered the patient doggedly; ‘I told you
+I would have no stranger come to stare at me. Cure
+me if you can, and if you can’t, leave it alone. I
+have little faith in medicine. I contrived to live sixty-five
+years without it, and the experience I have had
+of it in the sixty-sixth year has not been calculated to
+strengthen my belief in its efficacy.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Did you finish that last bottle of medicine?’</p>
+
+<p>‘No, there is a dose left.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Then I’ll take the bottle home with me,’ said
+Lucius, selecting the bottle from among two or three
+empty phials on the mantelshelf, ‘and make another
+change in your medicine.’</p>
+
+<p>‘It seems to me that you chop and change a good
+deal,’ said the patient testily. ‘But why take that
+bottle? You must know what you gave me.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I am not quite clear about it,’ answered Lucius,
+after a moment’s hesitation; ‘I may as well put the
+bottle in my pocket.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Do as you like. But don’t forget that I want an
+hour’s talk with you this evening.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You had better defer that till you are stronger.</p>
+
+<p>‘That time may never come. No, I will defer nothing.
+What I have to say to you is of no small
+importance. It concerns your own interests, and I
+recommend you to hear it to-night.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘I cannot consent to discuss any subject which
+may agitate you as you were agitated last night,’ said
+Lucius firmly.</p>
+
+<p>‘This other subject will not agitate me. I can
+promise that.’</p>
+
+<p>‘On that condition I will hear whatever you may
+have to say.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Good. You will find it to your own advantage
+to obey me. Be with me at the same hour as you
+were last night.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I will. But as you are a trifle weaker to-day
+than you were yesterday, I should recommend you
+not to get up, except for an hour in the middle of
+the day, while your bed is being made.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Very well.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius left him, and in the corridor found himself
+face to face with Mrs. Wincher.</p>
+
+<p>‘She has been listening, I daresay,’ he thought,
+having made up his mind that these Winchers were
+of the scorpion breed, and their long years of fidelity
+only a sham. ‘After all, dishonesty is only a matter
+of opportunity, and the domestic traitor must bide
+his time to betray.’</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Wincher’s manner and bearing were curiously
+changed since Lucius had last seen her. She
+no longer flung her head aloft; she no longer regarded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span>
+him with looks of scorn. Her present air
+was that of extreme meekness; he thought he beheld
+traces of shame and contrition in her visage.</p>
+
+<p>‘How do you find master this morning, sir?’ she
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>‘Worse,’ Lucius answered shortly.</p>
+
+<p>‘Dear, dear! that’s bad! And I’m sure it isn’t
+for want of care. I’m sure the beef-tea that I gave
+him used to be a jelly—that firm as you could cut
+it with a knife—though Miss Lucille did take the
+making of it out of my hands.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Miss Sivewright is naturally anxious about her
+grandfather,’ answered Lucius coldly, ‘and I am
+very anxious too.’</p>
+
+<p>He was about to pass Mrs. Wincher, without
+farther parley, when she stopped him.</p>
+
+<p>‘O, if you please, Dr. Davory,’ she said meekly,
+‘would you be kind enough to let my good gentleman
+have a few words with you? The fact is, he’s
+got somethink on his mind, and he’d feel more comfortable
+if he ast your advice. I didn’t know nothink
+about it till five minutes ago, though I could see at
+breakfast-time as he was low-spirited and had no
+happetite for his resher; but I thought that was
+along of master being so bad. Howsumdever, five
+minutes ago he ups and tells me all about it, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span>
+says he, “If I tell Dr. Davory, I shall feel more
+comfortable like,” he says. So I says I’d ast you
+to have a few words with him.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Where is he?’ asked Lucius, his suspicions increased
+by this singular application.</p>
+
+<p>‘In the room where the bricklebrack is kep’,’
+answered Mrs. Wincher. ‘He’s been dustin’ as
+usual, and he said he’d take the liberty to wait there
+for you.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Very well; I’ll go and hear what he has to
+say.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius went down-stairs to the large room with
+its multifarious contents—the room which held the
+chief part of Mr. Sivewright’s collection.</p>
+
+<p>Here he found Mr. Wincher, moving about feebly
+with a dusting brush in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>‘Well, Mr. Wincher, what’s the matter with you
+this morning?’ asked Lucius. ‘Do you want to consult
+me professionally?’</p>
+
+<p>‘No, sir. It isn’t anything that way,’ answered
+the old man, who was somewhat his wife’s superior
+in education, but infinitely less able to hold his own
+conversationally, such intellectual powers as he may
+have originally possessed having run to seed during
+his long dull life, and the only remaining brightness
+being that feeble glimmer which still illumined the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span>
+regions of art. He would swear to an old master’s
+handling—could tell a Memling from a Van Eyck—or
+an Ostade from a Jan Steen—knew every mark to
+be found on old china or delf, from the earliest specimens
+of Rouen ware to the latest marvels of Sèvres,
+from the clumsiest example of Battersea to the richest
+purple and gilding of Worcester. But beyond the
+realms of art the flame of Jacob Wincher’s intellect
+was dim as a farthing rushlight.</p>
+
+<p>‘I’ve had a shock this morning, sir,’ he said.</p>
+
+<p>‘Some kind of fit, do you mean?’ asked Lucius.
+‘You said you didn’t want to consult me professionally.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No more I do, sir. The shock I’m talking
+about wasn’t bodily, but mental. I’ve made a dreadful
+discovery, Mr. Davoren. This house has been
+robbed.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I’m not surprised to hear it,’ said Lucius sternly.</p>
+
+<p>He thought he saw which way matters were drifting.
+This old man was cunning enough to be the
+first to give the alarm. Lucius’s incautious remarks
+to Mrs. Wincher had put her husband upon his guard,
+and he was now going to play the comedy of innocence.</p>
+
+<p>‘Not surprised to hear it, sir?’ he echoed, staring
+aghast at Lucius.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘No, Mr. Wincher. And I am sure that no one
+knows more about it than you do.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Lord save us, sir! what do you mean?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Let me hear your story, sir,’ answered Lucius,
+‘and then I’ll tell you what I mean.’</p>
+
+<p>‘But for Heaven’s sake, Mr. Davoren, tell me you
+don’t suspect me of any hand in the robbery!’ cried
+the old man piteously—‘I, that have lived five-and-twenty
+years with Mr. Sivewright, and had the care
+of everything that belonged to him all that time!’</p>
+
+<p>‘A man may wait five-and-twenty years for a good
+opportunity,’ said Lucius coolly. ‘Don’t trouble
+yourself to be tragical, Mr. Wincher, but say what
+you have to say, and be quick about it. I tell you
+again that I am in no manner surprised to hear this
+house has been robbed. It was no doubt robbed last
+night, and perhaps many nights before. But I tell you
+frankly, that I intend to take measures to prevent
+this house being robbed again; even if those measures
+should include putting you and your good lady
+upon the outside of it.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Lord have mercy upon us!’ cried Jacob Wincher,
+wringing his hands. ‘You are a great deal too hard
+upon me, sir. You’ll be sorry for it when you find
+out how unjust you’ve been.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I promise to be sorry,’ answered Lucius, ‘when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span>
+I <em>do</em> make that discovery. Now, Mr. Wincher, be
+explicit, if you please.’</p>
+
+<p>But Jacob Wincher declared that he was all of a
+tremble, and had to sit down upon an ancient choirstall,
+and wipe the perspiration from his forehead
+before he was able to proceed.</p>
+
+<p>Lucius waited patiently for the old man to recover
+his self-possession, but in no manner relaxed the severity
+of his countenance. In all this agitation, in
+this pretended desire to confide in him, he saw only
+a clever piece of acting.</p>
+
+<p>‘Well, Mr. Wincher,’ he said, as the old servant
+mopped his forehead with a blue cotton handkerchief,
+‘how about this robbery?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I’m coming to it, sir. But you’ve given me
+such a turn with what you said just now. God knows
+how cruel and how uncalled for those words of yours
+were.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Pray proceed, Mr. Wincher.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Well, sir, you must know there’s a deal of property
+about this place, perhaps a good deal more than
+you’ve ever seen, though our old master seemed to
+take to you from the first, and has been more confidential
+with you than he ever was with any one else.
+Now there’s a good deal of the property that isn’t
+portable, and there’s some that is—china, for instance;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span>
+little bits of tea-cups and saucers that are worth
+more than you’d be willing to believe; and silver—’</p>
+
+<p>‘Silver!’ exclaimed Lucius, astonished.</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, sir. You didn’t know of that, perhaps.
+Among the things master collected after he retired
+from business—and he was always collecting something,
+as long as he could get about among the brokers,
+and in all the courts and alleys in London—there was
+a good bit of old silver. Five Queen Anne teapots;
+three Oliver Cromwell tankards, not very much to look
+at unless you were up to that sort of thing, but worth
+their weight in gold, Mr. Sivewright used to say to
+me. “I wish I was rich enough to do more in old
+silver,” he has said many a time. “There’s nothing
+like it. Collectors are waking up to the value of it,
+and before many years are over old silver will be almost
+as precious as diamonds.” He picked up a good
+many nice little bits first and last, through rummaging
+about among old chaps that dealt in second-hand
+stuff of that sort, and didn’t trouble to ask any awkward
+questions of the people that brought ’em the
+goods; picked up things that would have gone into
+the melting-pot very likely, if his eye hadn’t been
+quick enough to see their value. One day he’d bring
+home a set of spindle-legged saltcellars; another
+time a battered old rosewater dish. Once he bought<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span>
+a “monstrance” which had been used upon some cathedral
+altar, once upon a time—solid gold set with
+rubies and emeralds. “The fool that I bought it
+from took it for ormolu,” he said.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And these are the things that are gone, I suppose,’
+said Lucius, somewhat puzzled by the old man’s loquacity.
+Why should Wincher inform him of the existence
+of these things if he were an accomplice of
+the thief? Yet this seeming candour was doubtless
+a part of the traitor’s scheme.</p>
+
+<p>‘Every one of ’em, sir. There’s been a clean
+sweep made of ’em. But how any thief could find
+out where they were kept is more than I can fathom.
+It’s too much for my poor old brains.’</p>
+
+<p>‘The thief was well informed, depend upon it, Mr.
+Wincher,’ answered Lucius. ‘And pray, whereabouts
+did you keep this old silver?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Would you like to see, sir?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I should.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I’ll show you the place, then.’</p>
+
+<p>Jacob Wincher led the way to the extreme end
+of the repository, where behind a tall screen of old
+oak panelling there was a massive muniment chest
+furnished with a lock which seemed calculated to
+defy the whole race of burglars and pick-locks.</p>
+
+<p>The old servant took a key from his pocket—a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span>
+small key, for the lock was of modern make—unlocked
+and opened the chest. There was nothing
+in it except an old damask curtain.</p>
+
+<p>‘The silver was rolled up in that curtain,’ said
+Jacob Wincher, taking up the curtain and shaking
+it vigorously, as if with some faint hope that the
+Queen Anne teapots would fall out of its folds, like
+the rabbits or live pigeons in a conjurer’s trick.
+‘The iron safe was a landlord’s fixture in Bond-street,
+and we were obliged to leave it behind us, so
+this chest was the safest place I could find to put
+the silver in; in fact, master told me to put it there.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I see,’ thought Lucius; ‘the old scoundrel is
+telling me this story in advance of the time when
+his master will inevitably ask for the silver. This
+seeming candour is the depth of hypocrisy.’</p>
+
+<p>Jacob Wincher stood staring at the empty chest
+in apathetic hopelessness, feebly rubbing his chin,
+whereon some grizzled tufts lingered.</p>
+
+<p>‘Do you mean to tell me,’ said Lucius, ‘that this
+chest was locked, and that you had the key of it in
+your pocket, at the time of the robbery?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, sir. The chest has never been left unlocked
+for five minutes since that silver has been
+in my care; and I have never slept without this key
+being under my pillow.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘And you would have me believe that a stranger
+could hit upon the precise spot where the silver was
+kept, amidst this inextricable tangle of property, open
+the box without doing any damage to the lock, and
+walk off with his booty without your knowing anything
+of his entrance or exit?’</p>
+
+<p>‘It seems strange, doesn’t it, Mr. Davoren?’</p>
+
+<p>‘It seems more than strange, Mr. Wincher. It
+seems—and it is—incredible.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And yet, sir, the thing has been done. The
+question is, was it done by a stranger?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, Mr. Wincher, that is the question; and
+it is a question which, to my mind, suggests only
+one answer.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You mean that I am telling you lies, sir? that
+it was my hand which stole those things?’ cried the
+old man.</p>
+
+<p>‘To be plain with you, that is precisely my idea.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You are doing me a great wrong, sir. I have
+served my master faithfully for so many years that
+I ought to be above suspicion. I have not much
+longer to remain in this world, and I would rather
+die of want to-morrow than lengthen my days by a
+dishonest action. However, if you choose to suspect
+me, there is an end of the matter, and it is useless
+for me to say any more.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span></p>
+
+<p>There was a quiet dignity about the old man’s air
+as he said this that impressed Lucius. Was it not
+just possible that he had done wrong in jumping at
+conclusions about these Winchers? The police, who
+are apt to jump at conclusions, are just as apt to be
+wrong. But if these people were not guilty, who
+else could have opened the door to that midnight
+intruder? There was no one else.</p>
+
+<p>‘Come, Mr. Wincher,’ he said, ‘I have good
+reason for my suspicion. I saw a man admitted
+into this house, by one of the back doors, between
+one and two o’clock this morning. You, or your
+wife, must have opened the door to that man.’</p>
+
+<p>‘As there is a heaven above us, sir, I never
+stirred from my bed after half-past eleven o’clock
+last night.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Your wife must have admitted him, then.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Impossible, sir!’</p>
+
+<p>‘I tell you I saw the man creep from the barges
+to the garden; I saw the door opened,’ said Lucius;
+and then went on to describe that midnight watch of
+his minutely.</p>
+
+<p>The old man stared at him in sheer bewilderment.</p>
+
+<p>‘A stranger admitted!’ he repeated. ‘But by
+whom? by whom?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Had I not seen the light as the door opened, I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span>
+might have thought that the man opened the door
+for himself,’ said Lucius.</p>
+
+<p>‘That would have been equally impossible. I
+looked to all the fastenings myself the last thing.
+The doors were locked and barred, and those old-fashioned
+iron bars are no trifling defence.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius, too, was bewildered. Could Mr. Sivewright
+himself have disposed of this property? In
+so eccentric a man nothing need be surprising. Could
+he have crept down-stairs in the dead of the night to
+admit some dealer, disposed of his property, dismissed
+the man, and crept stealthily back to his bed?
+No, that was too wild a fancy. Despite of his eccentricities,
+Mr. Sivewright had plenty of common sense,
+and such a proceeding as that would have been the
+act of a madman.</p>
+
+<p>‘Supposing any stranger to have obtained admittance
+to the house,’ said Lucius, after an interval of
+perplexed thought, ‘how could he have opened that
+chest without your key?’</p>
+
+<p>‘A stranger could not possibly have done it,’ said
+Wincher, with a stress upon the word ‘stranger.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Who else, then?’</p>
+
+<p>‘There is one who could have opened that chest
+easy enough, or any other lock in the place, supposing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span>
+him to be alive; but I make no doubt he’s dead
+and gone ever so long ago.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Whom do you mean?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Mr. Ferdinand, my master’s son.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius gave a slight start at the sound of that
+unwelcome name, of all sounds the most hateful to
+his ear. ‘Then he—Ferdinand Sivewright—had a
+duplicate key, I suppose?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, of most things about the place in Bond-street,
+except the iron safe: he never could get at
+that till he drugged his father, and stole the key out
+of his pocket while he was asleep. But other things,
+that were pretty easy to get at, he did get at, and
+robbed his father up hill and down dale, as the saying
+is. O, he was a thorough-paced scoundrel,
+though I’m sorry to say it, as he was our young
+missy’s father.’</p>
+
+<p>‘He had a duplicate key to that chest, you say?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes. He was that artful there was no being up
+to him. We used to keep old china in that chest—Battersea
+and Chelsea and Worcester and Derby—valuable
+little bits of the English school, which fetch
+higher prices than anything foreign nowadays. All
+of a sudden, soon after he came to be partner with
+his father—for the old man doated upon him, and
+would have made any sacrifice to please him—I found<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span>
+out that the specimens in the muniment chest were
+dwindling somehow. One day I missed a cup and
+saucer, and another day a soup-basin and cover,
+and so on. At first I thought I must be mistaken—my
+own catalogue was wrong, perhaps—but
+by and by I saw the things visibly melting, as you
+may say, and I told my master. He told Mr. Ferdinand
+about it; but bless your heart, Mr. Ferdinand
+brings out the day-book with the sale of those very
+goods entered as neatly as possible, some under one
+date, and some under another. “I never remember
+taking the money for those things, Ferdinand,” said
+my master; but Mr. Ferdinand stood him out that
+he’d had the money all correct, and master believed
+him, or pretended to believe him, I hardly know
+which. And so things went on. Sometimes it was
+in small things, sometimes in large; but in every
+way that a son could plunder his father, Ferdinand
+Sivewright plundered my master. It was quite by
+accident I found out about his having the duplicate
+key. He came to the desk where I was writing one
+day and asked me to give him change for a sovereign,
+and in taking the money out of his waistcoat-pocket
+in his quick impatient way he tumbles out a lot of
+other things—a pencil-case, a penknife, and a key.
+I knew that key at a glance; it’s a peculiar-looking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span>
+one, as you see. “That’s a curious little key, Mr.
+Ferdinand,” said I, picking it up and looking at it
+before he could stop me. “Yes,” he said, taking it
+out of my hand before I’d had time to examine it very
+closely, and putting it back in his pocket, “it’s a key
+that belonged to my poor mother’s jewel-case. No
+use to me; but I keep it for her sake.” Well, sir, I
+told Mr. Sivewright about that key, but he only sighed
+in that downhearted way which was common enough
+with him in those days. He didn’t seem surprised,
+and indeed I think he’d come to know his son’s ways
+pretty well by this time. “Say nothing about it,
+Wincher,” he said to me, “you may be mistaken after
+all. In any case you needn’t keep anything valuable
+in the chest in future. If my only son is a thief, we
+won’t put temptation in his way.”’</p>
+
+<p>‘Hard upon the father,’ said Lucius. ‘But this
+throws no light upon the disappearance of those things.
+What do you consider their value?’</p>
+
+<p>‘As old silver the plate may be worth about forty
+pounds, as specimens of art at least three hundred.
+The monstrance is worth much more.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Humph, and I suppose a thief would be likely to
+sell them immediately as old silver.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes; unless he were a very artful dodger, and
+knew where to find a good market for them, he’d be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span>
+likely to sell them without an hour’s delay to be
+melted down.’</p>
+
+<p>‘When did you last see the things safe in that
+chest?’ asked Lucius.</p>
+
+<p>‘About ten days ago. I haven’t much to do, you
+see, sir, except grub about amongst the collection;
+and I’m in the habit of looking over the things pretty
+often, and comparing them with my catalogue, to see
+that all’s right.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And you never missed anything before?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Never so much as a cracked tea-cup among what
+I call the rubbishing lots. Heaven only knows how
+that chest could have been emptied. Even if Ferdinand
+Sivewright were in the land of the living, which
+is hardly likely—for if he’d been alive he’d have come
+and tried to get money out of his poor old father before
+this—he couldn’t get into this house unless some
+one let him in.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No, not unless some one let him in,’ repeated
+Lucius thoughtfully. He had begun to think Jacob
+Wincher was perhaps, after all, an honest man. But
+to believe this was to make the mystery darker than
+the darkest night. His ideas were all at sea, drifting
+which way he knew not.</p>
+
+<p>‘Ferdinand Sivewright is dead,’ he said presently.
+‘He will never trouble his father again.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘How do you know that, sir?’ asked Wincher
+eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>‘Never mind how. I do know it, and that is
+enough. Now, Wincher, there’s no use in talking of
+this business any more, except in a practical manner.
+If you’re as innocent of any hand in the robbery as
+you pretend to be, you won’t shrink from inquiry.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I do not shrink from inquiry, sir. If I did I
+shouldn’t have told you of the robbery.’</p>
+
+<p>‘That might be a profound artifice, since the disappearance
+of these things must have been found out
+sooner or later.’</p>
+
+<p>‘If I had been the thief I should have tried to
+stave off the discovery as long as I could,’ answered
+Jacob Wincher. ‘However, I don’t want to argue;
+the truth is the truth, that is enough for me.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Very well, Mr. Wincher. What we have to do is
+to try and recover these missing articles. Unless the
+silver is melted down it ought to be easily traced.
+And the monstrance would be still more easily traced,
+I should think.’</p>
+
+<p>‘That would depend upon circumstances, sir. Depend
+upon it, if the things were taken by a thief who
+knows their value, and knows the best market for
+them, he’ll send them abroad.’</p>
+
+<p>‘They may be traced even abroad. What we have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span>
+to do is to put the case at once into the best hands.
+I shall go straight from here to a detective officer,
+whom I’ve had some dealings with already, and get
+his advice. Now, is there much more property amongst
+the collection valuable enough to tempt a thief, and
+sufficiently portable for him to carry away?’</p>
+
+<p>‘There is a great deal of china, small pieces, quite
+as valuable as the silver—not, perhaps, quite so easy
+to carry, but very nearly so.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Then we must have the inside of this house
+guarded to-night.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I can sit up here all night and keep watch.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You would be no match for the thief, even if he
+came alone, which we are not certain he would. No,
+my dear Mr. Wincher, I will engage a properly qualified
+watchman; but remember, not one word of this
+to Miss Sivewright—or to your wife, who might be
+tempted to tell her young mistress.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Very well, sir. I know how to hold my tongue.
+I’d be the last to go and frighten missy. But how
+about my old master? Is he to know?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Not on any account. In his present weak state
+any violent agitation might be fatal, and we know that
+collecting these things has been the ruling passion of
+his life. To tell him that he is being robbed of these
+things might be to give him his death-blow.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Very well, sir. I’ll obey orders.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Good; and if I have wronged you, Mr. Wincher,
+by a groundless suspicion, you must pardon me.
+You will allow that appearances are somewhat against
+you.’</p>
+
+<p>‘They are, sir, they are!’ answered the old man
+despondently.</p>
+
+<p>‘However, time will show. I will send my watchman
+in at dusk. You could let him in at the back
+door, couldn’t you, without Miss Sivewright knowing
+anything about it?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I could, sir. There’s a little door opening into
+the brewhouse, which opens out of the boothouse, as
+you may know.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No, indeed! I know there are a lot of outbuildings,
+room enough to lodge a regiment; but I have
+never taken any particular notice of them.’</p>
+
+<p>‘It’s a curious old place, Mr. Davoren, and goodness
+knows what it could have been used for in days
+gone by, unless it was for hiding folks away for no
+good. Perhaps you’d like to see the door I mean.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I should,’ replied Lucius, ‘in order that I may
+explain its situation to the policeman.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Come along with me then, sir, and I’ll show it
+you.’</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.<br>
+<span class="fs70">THE HIDDEN STAIRCASE.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">Lucius</span> had a keen desire to explore those premises
+at the back of Cedar House, with a vague notion that
+his examination of them might throw some light
+upon the mystery which now filled his mind.</p>
+
+<p>If these Winchers were indeed innocent, which
+the old man’s manner and conduct inclined him to
+believe they must be, who was the guilty one? In
+that house—with the exception of its master, who in
+his feebleness counted for nothing—there were but
+three persons, Mr. and Mrs. Wincher and Lucille.
+One of those three must have opened the door last
+night; one of those three must have placed that
+candle in the upper window—the candle which was
+evidently meant for a signal.</p>
+
+<p>Lucille! Was reason deserting him? Was this
+perplexity of mind verging upon madness, when <em>her</em>
+name would suggest itself in connection with that
+secret admittance of the stranger, and that theft<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</span>
+which was no doubt its direct consequence? Lucille,
+that gentle and innocent girl! What had she
+to do with the solution of this dark enigma?</p>
+
+<p>The mere thought of her in connection with this
+nefarious business tortured him. Yet the idea, once
+having occurred to him, was not easily to be dismissed.</p>
+
+<p>He remembered all the stories of secret crime
+that he had heard and read of, some stories involving
+creatures as seemingly innocent and as fair as
+Lucille Sivewright. He recalled his own professional
+experience, which had shown him much of
+life’s darker side. He remembered with a shudder
+the infinite hypocrisy, the hidden sins, of women in
+all outward semblance as pure and womanly as the
+girl he loved.</p>
+
+<p>What if Lucille inherited the fatal taint of her
+father’s infamy? What if in this fair young girl
+there lurked some hidden drops of that poison which
+corrupted the parent’s soul? Could an evil tree
+produce good fruit? Could grapes come of thistles?
+The very Scripture was against his fond belief in
+Lucille Sivewright’s goodness. Could such a father
+give life to a pure and innocent child?</p>
+
+<p>This doubt, once having entered into his mind,
+lingered there in spite of him. His heart was racked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</span>
+by the odious thought, yet he could not dismiss it.
+He followed Mr. Wincher to inspect the back part
+of the house in a very absent-minded condition; but
+the practical side of his character soon got the upper
+hand as the investigation proceeded, and he was alert
+to make any discovery that might be made from the
+position of doors and windows.</p>
+
+<p>In his evening walks with Lucille in the barren
+old garden he had always come out of the house by
+a glass door opening out of a long-disused back parlour,
+in which there were only a few wooden cases,
+which might for aught Lucius knew be full or empty.
+Jacob Wincher now led him into the kitchen, a spacious
+chamber, with a barn-like roof open to the rafters,
+showing the massive timbers with which the house
+was built. From the kitchen they descended three
+shallow steps into a vault-like scullery, out of which,
+ghastly in their dark emptiness, opened various cellars.
+Lucius peered into one of them, and saw
+that a flight of steep stairs led down into a black
+abyss.</p>
+
+<p>‘Bring a light,’ he said; ‘the man may be hiding
+in one of these cellars. We’d better explore
+them all. But first let us lock the doors, and cut
+off his chances of escape.’</p>
+
+<p>He suited the action to the word, and locked the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</span>
+door leading to the kitchen, and thence to the interior
+of the house.</p>
+
+<p>‘Where do you and your wife sleep?’ he asked
+Mr. Wincher.</p>
+
+<p>‘In a little room off the kitchen. It was built
+for a storeroom, I believe, and there’s shelves all
+round. My good lady keeps our Sunday clothes on
+them, and our little bit of tea and sugar and such-like,
+for we board ourselves.’</p>
+
+<p>‘One would think you must hear any one passing
+through the kitchen at night, when the house is
+quiet,’ said Lucius meditatively.</p>
+
+<p>‘I don’t feel so sure of that, sir. We’re pretty
+hard sleepers both of us; we’re on the trot all day,
+you see, and are very near worn out by the time we
+get to bed.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Strange,’ said Lucius. ‘I should have thought
+you must have heard footsteps in the next room to
+that you sleep in.’</p>
+
+<p>Jacob Wincher made no farther attempt to justify
+his hard sleeping, but led the way to the boothouse,
+a small and darksome chamber, chiefly tenanted by
+members of the beetle tribe, who apparently found
+sufficient aliment in the loose plaster that fell from
+the mildew-stained walls. Thence they proceeded to
+the brewery, which was almost as large as the kitchen,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span>
+and boasted a huge copper, and a still huger chimney-shaft
+open to the sky. There were three doors in this
+place—one narrow and low, opening to an obscure
+corner of the garden; a second belonging to a spacious
+cupboard, which may have been used for wood
+in days gone by; and the third a mysterious little
+door in an angle.</p>
+
+<p>‘What does that belong to?’ asked Lucius,
+pointing to this unknown door, after examining the
+one leading to the garden, which was securely locked
+and barred, and, according to Mr. Wincher’s account,
+was very rarely unfastened. ‘That door yonder in
+the corner,’ he asked again, as the old man hesitated.
+‘Where does that lead?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I can’t say as I know very well,’ answered Jacob
+Wincher dubiously. ‘There’s a kind of a staircase
+leads up somewhere—to a loft, I suppose.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Why, man alive,’ cried Lucius, ‘do you mean
+to tell me that you have lived all these years in this
+house and that there is a staircase in it which leads
+you don’t know where?’</p>
+
+<p>‘You can’t hardly call it a staircase, sir,’ answered
+the other apologetically; ‘it’s very little more
+than a ladder.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Ladder or staircase, you mean to say you don’t
+know where it leads?’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘No, sir. I’m not particular strong in my legs,
+and there’s a great deal more room than we want in
+this house without poking into holes and corners;
+so I never troubled about it.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Indeed, Mr. Wincher; now I am more curious
+than you, and I propose that before examining the
+cellars we find out where this staircase leads.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I’m agreeable, sir.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You talk about a loft; but the roof of this
+brewhouse shows that there can be nothing above
+it.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Very true, sir.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And the kitchen is built in the same way?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, sir. But there’s the boothouse. I took
+it for granted that staircase led to a loft or a garret
+over that.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Can you see nothing from outside?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Nothing, except the sloping roof.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius opened the door in the angle, and beheld
+a curious cramped little staircase, which, as Jacob
+Wincher had told him, was verily little better than
+a ladder. It was by no means an inviting staircase,
+bearing upon it the dust and cobwebs of ages, and
+leading to profound darkness. To the timid mind it
+was eminently suggestive of vermin and noxious insects.
+But Lucius, who was determined to discover<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span>
+the ins and outs of this curious old house, ascended
+the feeble creaking steps boldly enough.</p>
+
+<p>The stairs were steep, but not many. On reaching
+the topmost, Lucius found himself, not in a room
+as he had expected, but in a passage so narrow that
+his coatsleeves brushed against the wall on either
+side. This passage was perfectly dark, and had a
+damp mouldy odour. It was low, for he could touch
+the roughly-plastered ceiling with his hand. He
+went on, treading cautiously, lest he should come
+to a gap in the rotten flooring, which might precipitate
+him incontinently to the lowest depth of
+some dark cellar. The passage was long; he stumbled
+presently against a step, mounted three or four
+stairs, and went on some few yards farther on the
+higher level, and then found himself at the foot of
+another staircase, which, unlike the one below, wound
+upwards in spiral fashion, and demanded extreme
+caution from the stranger who trod its precipitous
+steps.</p>
+
+<p>This Lucius mounted slowly, feeling his way.
+After the first step or two he saw a faint glimmer
+of light, which seemed to creep in at some chink
+above. This got stronger as he ascended, and presently
+he perceived that it came from a crack in a
+panelled wall. Another step brought him to a small<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span>
+chamber, not much larger than a roomy closet. He
+felt the wall that faced him, and discovered bolts,
+which seemed to fasten a door, or it might be a sliding
+panel in the wall.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely had he done this when he was startled
+by a sound which was very familiar to him—Mr.
+Sivewright’s sharp short cough.</p>
+
+<p>He drew back amazed. This secret staircase—or
+if not exactly a secret staircase, at least one which
+nobody had taken the trouble to explore—had led
+him directly to Mr. Sivewright’s room.</p>
+
+<p>He waited for a few minutes, heard the old man
+sigh as he turned wearily in his bed, heard the
+crackle of a newspaper presently as he turned the
+leaf, and convinced himself of the fact that this
+closet communicated with Homer Sivewright’s room.
+Whether its existence were known to Mr. Sivewright
+or not was a question which he must settle for himself
+as best he might.</p>
+
+<p>He went back as noiselessly as he had come, and
+found Jacob Wincher waiting in the brewhouse, patiently
+seated upon a three-legged stool.</p>
+
+<p>‘Well, sir, you didn’t find much, I suppose, to
+compensate for having made such a figure of your
+coat with plaster and cobwebs—only rubbish and
+such-like, I suppose?’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘My good Mr. Wincher, I found positively nothing,’
+answered Lucius. ‘But I extended my knowledge
+of the topography of this queer old house, and
+in doing that recompensed myself for my trouble.
+Yes,’ he added, glancing disconsolately at his coat,
+‘the whitewash has not improved my appearance;
+and the cost of a coat is still a matter of importance
+to me. Now for the cellars. You are sure all means
+of exit are cut off?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Quite sure, sir.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Then we may find our thief snugly stowed away
+underground perhaps, with the booty upon him.
+Come along.’</p>
+
+<p>They groped their way into the various cellars
+by the light of a candle, and examined their emptiness.
+Two out of the four had contained coals, but
+were now disused. The small quantities of coal
+which Mr. Sivewright afforded for his household
+were accommodated in a roomy closet in the kitchen.
+The remaining two had contained wine, and a regiment
+of empty bottles still remained, the fragile
+memorials of departed plenty. They found beetles
+and spiders in profusion, and crossed the pathway
+of a rat; but they discovered no trace of the
+thief.</p>
+
+<p>This exploration and the previous conversation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</span>
+with Jacob Wincher occupied nearly two hours. Lucius
+left the house without again seeing Lucille.
+He would have been unable to account for his occupation
+during those two hours without giving her
+fresh cause for alarm. But before going he contrived
+to see Mrs. Wincher, and from that matron, now
+perfectly placable, he received the pleasing intelligence
+that Lucille was fast asleep on a sofa in the
+parlour.</p>
+
+<p>‘I brought her in a ramshackle old sofy belonging
+to the bricklebrack,’ said Mrs. Wincher; ‘Lewis
+Katorse, my good gentleman calls it. And she laid
+down when I persuaded her, and went off just like
+a child that’s worn out with being on the trot all
+day. But she does look so sad and worried-like
+in her sleep, poor dear, it goes to my heart to see
+her.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Sad and worried,’ thought Lucius; and he had
+added to her anxieties by arousing her childish fears
+of an unknown danger. And then at the very time
+when she was broken down altogether by trouble and
+grief, had taken it into his head to suspect her. He
+hated himself for those shameful doubts which had
+tortured him a little while before.</p>
+
+<p>‘Come what may,’ he said to himself, ‘let events
+take what shape they will, I will never again suspect<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span>
+her. Though I had forged the chain of evidence
+link by link, and it led straight to her, I would
+believe that facts were lies rather than think her
+guilty.’</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.<br>
+<span class="fs70">MR. OTRANTO PRONOUNCES AN OPINION.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">From</span> Cedar House Lucius went straight to Mr.
+Otranto’s office. It was still early, not yet noon,
+and he would have time for his daily round after he
+had settled this business, which was uppermost in
+his mind.</p>
+
+<p>‘Well,’ he said, after a brief good-morning to the
+detective, ‘any news from Rio?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Some, but not much,’ answered Mr. Otranto,
+looking up from the desk, at which he had been
+copying some document into a note-book. ‘The
+mail’s just in. I was going to write you a letter in
+the course of to-day or to-morrow. This Mr. Ferdinand
+Sivewright seems to have been altogether a
+bad lot—card-sharper, swindler, anything you like.
+He soon made Rio too hot to hold him, and after
+managing to rub on there about six months, went on
+to Mexico. My agent hunted up any information
+about him that was to be got in Mexico; but it’s a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span>
+long time ago, you see, since he was there. He
+seems to have behaved pretty much the same in
+Mexico as he did in Rio, and that’s about all my
+agent could hear. The impression was that he had
+left Mexico on the quiet—taken French leave, as
+you may say—and come back to England; but he
+couldn’t find out the name of the vessel he sailed in.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You needn’t take any farther trouble about
+the matter, Mr. Otranto,’ said Lucius. ‘I believe
+I have found the missing links in the man’s history.
+My business to-day is of a different kind.’</p>
+
+<p>He went on to explain the state of affairs at
+Cedar House. Mr. Otranto shook his head doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>‘I think you ought to put this into the hands of
+the regular police,’ he said; ‘my line is private inquiry.
+This is rather out of my way.’</p>
+
+<p>‘But it isn’t out of your old way, Mr. Otranto,
+when you belonged to the regular police. If I were
+to go to the police-station they’d send a loud-talking
+noisy man to examine the premises, and frighten
+the invalid gentleman I’ve been telling you about.
+I want the property recovered, if possible, and the
+place closely watched; but I want the thing done
+quietly, and I’d rather trust it in your hands than
+make a police-case of it.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Very well, sir; I’ll do my best. I’ll send a
+quiet hand round to Cedar House at nine o’clock to-night.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Good; but he must come in at the back. I’ll
+have some one on the watch for him at nine. I’d
+better write my directions as to the way he must
+come. The young lady’s sitting-room is in the front
+of the house; so he mustn’t come in that way, for
+fear she should see him.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius wrote his instructions for the detective.
+He was to come from the barges to the garden, as
+the thief had come, and he would see a door ajar,
+and a light burning in one of the outbuildings. This
+was the door by which he was to enter.</p>
+
+<p>‘And now, sir, for a description of the property,’
+said Mr. Otranto, ‘if you want me to trace it.’</p>
+
+<p>‘A description?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes to be sure. I can do nothing without that.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I never thought of that,’ replied Lucius, feeling
+himself a poor creature when face to face with this
+practical far-seeing detective; ‘you will want a description
+of course. I only know that there are
+Queen Anne teapots, Cromwell tankards—’</p>
+
+<p>‘Queen Anne be hanged!’ exclaimed the detective
+contemptuously.</p>
+
+<p>‘Some curious old saltcellars, and a monstrance.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘What in the name of wonder is that?’ cried the
+detective. ‘I’ll tell you what it is, sir, I must have
+a detailed description before I can move a peg. I
+daresay the property is out of the country by this
+time, if it isn’t in the melting-pot.’</p>
+
+<p>‘A thief who took the trouble to rob Mr. Sivewright
+would most likely have some idea what he
+was stealing,’ answered Lucius, ‘and would hardly
+take rare old silver to the melting-pot. I’ll tell you
+what I’ll do, Mr. Otranto; I’ll bring the old servant
+round here this afternoon, and you shall have the
+description from him. In cross-questioning him
+about the robbery you might, perhaps, arrive at some
+conclusion as to whether he had any hand in it.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I might, perhaps,’ retorted Mr. Otranto, with
+ineffable contempt; ‘let me have half-a-dozen words
+with the man and I’ll soon settle that question. I
+never saw the man yet that was made of such opaque
+stuff that I couldn’t see through him.’</p>
+
+<p>‘So much the better,’ said Lucius. ‘I want to find
+out whether this old man is a consummate hypocrite
+or an honest fellow. Shall you be at home at four
+o’clock this afternoon?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I shall.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Then I’ll bring him to you at that hour.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius went about his day’s work, and got<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span>
+through it by half-past three, when he took a hansom
+cab, a rare extravagance for him, and drove to Cedar
+House.</p>
+
+<p>He asked at once to see Mrs. Wincher’s good
+gentleman, whereupon Jacob Wincher emerged from
+his retreat briskly enough, and came to the garden-gate
+where Lucius waited.</p>
+
+<p>‘You haven’t heard anything of the property?’
+he asked eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>‘No. But I want you to come along with me to
+give a description of it.’</p>
+
+<p>‘To the police-station, sir?’ asked Wincher, without
+any appearance of alarm or unwillingness.</p>
+
+<p>‘Never mind where. You’ll find out all about it
+when you get there,’ answered Lucius, in whose
+mind yet lurked suspicions as to the old servant’s
+honesty.</p>
+
+<p>The cab bore them speedily to Mr. Otranto’s
+office, and was there dismissed. Wincher entered
+that cave of mystery as calmly as a lamb going to the
+slaughter, or indeed much more calmly than the
+generality of those gentle victims, which seem to
+have some foreboding of the doom that awaits them
+within.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Otranto looked up from his desk, and contemplated
+the old man with a critical glance, keen, swift,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</span>
+searching, the glance of a connoisseur in that walk of
+art; as if Mr. Wincher had been a picture, and he,
+Mr. Otranto, were called upon to decide whether he
+were an original or a fraudulent copy. After that
+brief survey, the detective gave a somewhat contemptuous
+sniff; and then proceeded to elicit a description
+of the lost property, which Mr. Wincher
+gave ramblingly, and in a feebly nervous manner.
+To Lucius it seemed very much the manner of
+guilt.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Otranto asked a great many questions about
+the robbery, some of which seemed to Lucius puerile
+or even absurd. But he deferred to the superior wisdom
+of the trained detective.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of this inquiry Mr. Otranto made
+himself acquainted with the numerous ins and outs
+of Cedar House.</p>
+
+<p>‘A house built especially for the accommodation
+of burglars, one would suppose,’ he said; ‘there
+must be hiding-places enough for half the cracksmen
+in London. However, I think if there is any one
+still on the premises—or if the visitor of last night
+pays any farther visits—we shall catch them. I shall
+put on two men to-night, Mr. Davoren, instead of
+one—one to keep guard in the room that contains
+the property, the other to watch the back premises.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</span>
+This business will cost money, remember—but, by
+Jove, we’ll succeed in trapping the scoundrel!’</p>
+
+<p>‘Your services shall be paid for,’ said Lucius, not
+without a pang, remembering the tenpound-note he
+had already given Mr. Otranto on account of the Rio
+inquiry, and of which there remained no balance in
+his favour—nay, there was more likely a balance
+against him.</p>
+
+<p>‘You can go, Mr.—Mr. What’s-your-name,’ said
+the detective carelessly; and Jacob Wincher, thus dismissed,
+hobbled feebly forth to wend his way back to
+Cedar House; so rare a visitant to this outer world
+that the clamour of the City seemed to him like the
+howling of fiends in Pandemonium.</p>
+
+<p>‘Well,’ said Lucius, directly the old servant had
+departed, ‘what do you think of that man?’</p>
+
+<p>‘He isn’t up to it,’ answered Mr. Otranto contemptuously.</p>
+
+<p>‘Isn’t up to what?’</p>
+
+<p>‘To having act or part in that robbery. He isn’t
+up to it,’ repeated the detective, snapping his fingers
+with increasing contempt. ‘It isn’t in him. Lor
+bless you, Mr. Davoren, I know ’em when I see ’em.
+There’s a brightness about their eye, a firmness about
+their mouth, a nerve about ’em altogether, that there’s
+no mistaking.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘About a thief, I suppose you mean?’ inquired
+Lucius.</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, sir. I know ’em fast enough when I see
+’em. There’s the stamp of intellect upon ’em, sir—with
+very few exceptions there’s talent in ’em to back
+’em up through everything. You don’t catch <em>them</em>
+stammering and stuttering like that poor old chap
+just now. Not a bit of it. They’re as clear as crystal.
+They’ve got their story ready, and they tell it
+short and sharp and decisive, if they’re first-raters;
+a little too wordy, perhaps, if they’re new to their
+work.’</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Otranto dwelt on the talent of the criminal
+classes with an evident satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>‘As for that poor old chap,’ he said decisively,
+‘there isn’t genius enough or pluck enough in him
+even for the kinchin lay.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius did not pause to inquire about this particular
+branch of the art, whereof he was profoundly
+ignorant.</p>
+
+<p>‘He might not have pluck enough to attempt the
+robbery unaided,’ he said, still persisting in the idea
+that Jacob Wincher must be guilty, ‘yet he might be
+capable of opening the door to an accomplice.’</p>
+
+<p>‘He didn’t do it, sir,’ answered the detective decisively.
+‘I’d have had it out of him if he had, before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</span>
+you could have known what I was leading up to. I
+laid every trap for him that could be laid, and if he
+had done it he must have walked into one of ’em. I
+should have caught him tripping, depend upon it.
+But taking the question from a pischological point
+of view,’ continued Mr. Otranto, who sometimes got
+hold of a fine word, and gave his own version of it,
+‘I tell you it isn’t in his composition to do such a
+thing.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I’m glad to hear it,’ said Lucius, somewhat dejectedly.</p>
+
+<p>He left Mr. Otranto’s office only in time to take
+a hasty dinner at a city eating-house, where huge
+rounds of boiled beef were dealt out to hungry customers
+in a somewhat rough-and-ready fashion. He
+had very little appetite for the ample and economical
+repast, but ate a little nevertheless, being fully aware
+of the evil effects of long fasting on an overworked
+mind and body. This brief collation dispatched, he
+went straight to Cedar House, to keep his appointment
+with Mr. Sivewright.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.<br>
+<span class="fs70">THE MYSTERY OF LUCILLE’S PARENTAGE.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">Lucius</span> paused in the gray old hall, where twilight
+came sooner than in any other part of the house. He
+longed to see Lucille, to clasp the dear hand, to
+hear the low gentle voice; for the excitement of those
+few busy hours seemed to have lengthened the interval
+since he had last seen her. Yet he shrank with
+a strange nervous terror from the idea of meeting
+her just yet, while his mind was still agitated, still
+perplexed, by the mystery of last night. It was a
+relief to him when Mrs. Wincher told him that
+‘Missy’ was still lying down in the parlour.</p>
+
+<p>‘She’s been up and down stairs to give her
+grandpa his beef-tea, and such-like, but has laid
+down betwigst and betweens,’ said Mrs. Wincher.
+‘She don’t seem to have strength to keep up, poor
+child. I should think some steel-wine, now, or
+as much quinine-powder as would lie on a sixpence,
+would do her a world of good.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘We won’t dose her with nauseous medicines,
+Mrs. Wincher,’ answered Lucius; ‘she wants rest,
+and change of air and scene. If we could get her
+away from this melancholy old house, now!’</p>
+
+<p>He was thinking what a relief it would be to him
+to withdraw her from that abode of perplexity, where
+danger, in some as-yet-intangible form, seemed to lurk
+in every shadow. If he could send her down to his
+sister at Stillmington! He was sure that Janet would
+be kind to her, and that those two would love each
+other. If he could but induce Lucille to go down
+there for a little while!</p>
+
+<p>‘Well, Dr. Davory, the house is melancholic, I
+will not deny,’ said Mrs. Wincher, with a philosophical
+air. ‘My sperits are not what they was when
+I came here. Bond-street was so gay; and if it was
+but a back-kitchen I lived in, I could hear the rumbling
+of carriage-wheels going all day very lively. Of
+course this house is dull for a young person like
+Missy; but as to gettin’ her away while her grandpa’s
+ill, it’s more nor you, nor all the king’s hosses and all
+the king’s men, would do, Dr. Davory.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I’m afraid you’re right,’ replied Lucius, with a
+sigh.</p>
+
+<p>He went up to Mr. Sivewright’s room, and found
+his patient waiting for him, and in a somewhat restless<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</span>
+and anxious condition. The blinds were drawn,
+and the heavy old-fashioned shutters half-closed, excluding
+every ray of the afternoon sunlight. This
+had been Lucille’s careful work, while the old man
+slept.</p>
+
+<p>‘Open those shutters and draw up the blinds!’
+exclaimed Mr. Sivewright impatiently. ‘I don’t want
+the darkness of the grave before my time.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I thought you were never coming!’ he added
+presently, with an aggrieved air, as Lucius admitted
+the sunshine.</p>
+
+<p>‘And yet I am an hour earlier than I was yesterday.’</p>
+
+<p>‘The day has seemed longer than yesterday.
+Every day is longer than the last,’ complained the
+old man; ‘my snatches of sleep are shorter, my limbs
+more weary; the burden of life grows heavier as I
+near the end of my journey.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Nay, sir,’ remonstrated Lucius, in a cheery tone,
+‘there is no need for such despondent talk as that.
+You are ill, and suffer the weariness of a prolonged
+illness, but you are in no immediate danger.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No immediate danger!’ repeated the patient
+contemptuously. ‘You will not admit that I am in
+immediate danger till you hear the death-rattle in
+my throat. I feel that I am on my death-bed, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</span>
+desire to do all that a dying man should do to square
+his account with the world he is about to leave.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And I hope, sir, you have some thought about
+that better world to which you are going,’ answered
+Lucius seriously.</p>
+
+<p>Homer Sivewright sighed, and was silent for some
+moments ere he replied to this remark.</p>
+
+<p>‘Let me settle my affairs in this world first,’ he
+said, ‘and then you may try to enlighten me about
+the next if you can. I have found this life so hard
+that it is scarcely strange if I have little hope in the
+life that is to come after it. But you can preach to
+me about that by and by. I want to talk to you
+about the girl who is to be your wife.’</p>
+
+<p>‘There is no subject so near to my heart.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I suppose not,’ answered Mr. Sivewright, groping
+with a slow feeble hand under his pillow, from
+beneath which he presently produced a key. ‘Take
+this key and open yonder desk, the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bonheur du jour</i>,
+and look in the third drawer on the left side.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius obeyed.</p>
+
+<p>‘What do you see there?’</p>
+
+<p>‘A packet of letters tied with green ferret, and a
+miniature in a morocco-case,’ answered Lucius.</p>
+
+<p>‘Good! Now, those letters and that miniature
+contain the whole mystery of Lucille’s birth. I have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</span>
+tried many times to read the riddle, but in vain.
+Your sharper wits may perchance find the solution
+of the problem.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You mean as regards the identity of Lucille’s
+mother?’ asked Lucius.</p>
+
+<p>‘I mean as regards the identity of her father and
+her mother,’ answered the old man. ‘There have
+been times when I have doubted whether Lucille is
+a Sivewright at all—whether the girl I have called
+my grandchild is the daughter of my son Ferdinand.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius Davoren’s heart gave a great leap. Good
+heavens, what a relief if it were thus—if this girl
+whom he so fondly loved were free from the taint
+of that villain’s blood! For some moments he was
+dumb. The thought of this possible release overcame
+him utterly. God grant that this were but
+true—that the man he had slain bore no kindred
+to the woman who was to be his wife!</p>
+
+<p>He opened the morocco-case, and looked at it
+with eager eyes, as if in the lifeless images it contained
+he might find the clue to the mystery.</p>
+
+<p>The case was double, and contained two miniatures:
+one of a man with a weak but patrician face,
+the nose an elongated aquiline, the lips thin, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</span>
+chin feeble, the forehead high and pale, the eyes a
+light blue; the countenance of some last scion of a
+worn-out race; not without an expression of nobility,
+but utterly without force of character. The second
+miniature was a woman’s face—pensive, tender,
+lovable; a face with soft black eyes, a thoughtful
+mouth, a low broad forehead, in which there
+were ample indications of intellect. The olive complexion,
+the darkness of the lustrous eyes, gave a
+foreign look to this countenance. The original
+might have been either French or Italian, Lucius
+thought, but she could hardly have been an Englishwoman.</p>
+
+<p>‘What reason have you to doubt Lucille’s parentage?’
+he asked the old man, after a prolonged examination
+of those two miniatures.</p>
+
+<p>‘My only reasons are contained in that packet of
+letters,’ answered Mr. Sivewright. ‘Those letters are
+the broken links in a chain which you may be able
+to piece together. I have puzzled over them many
+a time, as I told you just now, but have been able
+to make nothing of them.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Am I to read them?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, read them aloud to me; I may be able to
+furnish you with an occasional commentary on the
+text.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘First, tell me how they came into your possession.’</p>
+
+<p>‘That is easily done. When my son left Bond-street
+for the last time, after plundering my iron
+safe, he did not burden himself with luggage. He
+left all his worldly goods behind him, in the shape
+of a dilapidated leathern portmanteau full of old
+clothes. Amongst these I found that packet of
+letters and that miniature case, both of which he
+had doubtless forgotten. Now you know just as much
+about them as I do.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius untied the string. There were about a
+dozen letters; some in a woman’s hand, fine, delicate,
+and essentially un-English; the others in a
+masculine caligraphy, by no means too legible. The
+first was directed to Ferdinand Sivewright, at a post-office
+in Oxford-street, but bore neither the date nor
+the address of the writer. This was in the man’s
+hand, written upon the paper of a fashionable club,
+and ran thus:</p>
+<br>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>‘Thanks, my dear Sivewright, for your last.
+You are indeed a friend, and worth all my aristocratic
+acquaintance, who pretend the warmest friendship,
+but would not go half-a-dozen paces out of
+their way to save me from hanging. You, by your<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</span>
+prompt assistance, have rescued me from the greatest
+difficulty in which my imprudence—and I have
+always been the most imprudent of men—ever
+involved me. Thank Heaven and your tact, the
+danger is over, and I think I now stand secure of
+the old gentleman’s favour. Did he know the truth,
+or but a scintillation of the truth, I should inevitably
+lose all chance of that future prosperity which
+will, I trust, enable me a few years hence to give
+you some substantial proof of my gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>‘By the way, you talk of being hard up in the
+present. I regret to say, my dear fellow, that at
+this moment it is out of my power to help you with
+a stiver. Not that I for an instant ignore the
+obligation to provide for your small charge, but because
+just now I am entirely cleaned out. A few
+weeks hence I shall be no doubt able to send you a
+cheque. In the mean time your household is a prosperous
+one, and the cost your kindness to me may
+occasion is one that can scarcely be felt. You
+understand. How fares your little girl? I shall
+always be glad to hear. Madame D—— writes to
+me for news; so pray keep me <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">au courant</i>, that I
+may set her anxious mind at rest. O, Sivewright,
+how I languish for an end of all my secrets and
+perplexities, and for a happy union with her I love!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</span>
+This waiting for dead men’s shoes is a weary business,
+and makes me feel the most despicable of
+mankind.—Yours ever,</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+H. G.’<br>
+</p>
+</div>
+<br>
+
+<p>‘What do you make of that letter?’ asked Mr.
+Sivewright.</p>
+
+<p>‘I can hardly tell what to make of it at present.
+Your son must have been of some vital
+service to the writer, but what the nature of that
+friendly act is more than I can guess.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You will understand it better when you have
+read the rest of the letters. Now, I have sometimes
+thought that the writer of those lines was the father
+of Lucille.’</p>
+
+<p>‘On what ground?’ asked Lucius. ‘He distinctly
+says, “How fares <em>your</em> little girl?”’</p>
+
+<p>‘That might be inspired by caution. Do you
+observe what he says about Madame D—— and her
+anxiety to hear of the child’s welfare? Rely upon
+it that Madame D—— was the mother. Then
+there is the mention of a happy union with the
+woman he loves, deferred until the death of some
+wealthy relation. Then what do you make of the
+lines in which he avows his obligation to provide
+for “your small charge”? That small charge was
+the child, and on whom would there be such an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</span>
+obligation except upon the father? This is how I
+have sometimes been inclined to read the riddle.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You think, then, that Lucille was the child of
+some secret marriage?’ said Lucius; ‘or of an intrigue?’
+he added reluctantly.</p>
+
+<p>‘Of a secret marriage most likely,’ answered the
+old man. ‘Had it been only an intrigue, there would
+hardly have been need for such excessive caution.
+You will see in one of the later letters how this man
+who signs himself “H. G.” speaks of his total ruin
+should his secret be discovered. But go on, the
+letters are numbered. I arranged and numbered
+them with a good deal of care. Go on to number
+2.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius obeyed. The second epistle was in the
+same hand as the first, but the formation of the
+characters showed that it had been written in haste
+and profound agitation:</p>
+<br>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>‘Dear Sivewright,—I enclose a cheque for 50<em>l.</em>
+It leaves me a beggar; but anything is better than
+the alternative. Your threat to trade upon my secret
+has thrown me into an agony of apprehension. O,
+Sivewright, you could surely never be such a villain!
+You who pretended to be my bosom friend—you who
+have so often enriched yourself at my expense, when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</span>
+fortune and your superior skill favoured your chances
+at the card-table—could never be so base as to betray
+me! When you took upon yourself the charge
+which you now assert perpetually as a claim, pressing
+and harassing me to death with your demands for
+money, I deemed that friendship alone actuated you.
+Is it possible that you looked at the matter from
+the first with a trader’s spirit, and only considered
+how much you might be able to make out of me?</p>
+
+<p>‘As you claim to be a gentleman, I conjure you
+to write and assure me that your threat of communicating
+with my uncle was only an idle menace; that
+you will keep my secret, as a gentleman should keep
+the secret of his friend.</p>
+
+<p>‘Bear in mind that to betray me would be to
+ruin me most completely, and to destroy your own
+chance of future benefit from my fortune.</p>
+
+<p>‘How is the little girl? Why do you not write
+to me at length about her? Why do your letters
+contain only demands for money? Madame D——
+is full of anxiety, and I can say so little to satisfy
+her. How is the little thing? Is she well—is she
+happy? Does she pine for her last home, and the
+people who nursed her? For heaven’s sake reply,
+and fully.—Yours,</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+H. G.’<br>
+</p>
+</div>
+<br>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Are those like a man’s inquiries about another
+man’s child?’ asked Mr. Sivewright.</p>
+
+<p>‘Scarcely,’ replied Lucius. ‘I believe you are
+right, and that Lucille is of no kin to your son.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And of no kin to me. You are glad of that, I
+suppose,’ said the old man with a touch of bitterness.</p>
+
+<p>‘Forgive me if I confess that I shall be glad if
+I find she is not the child of your son.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You are right. Can an evil tree bear good
+fruit? That seems a hard saying, but I can’t wonder
+you shrink from the idea of owning Ferdinand
+Sivewright for your children’s grandfather. Yet this
+H. G. may have been no better man.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I can hardly think that. There is some indication
+of good feeling in his letters. He was most
+likely the dupe and victim—’</p>
+
+<p>‘Of my son? Yes, I can believe that. Go on,
+Lucius. The third letter is from the lady, who, you
+will see, signs herself by her Christian name only,
+but gives her full address.’</p>
+
+<p>‘That must afford some clue to the mystery,’ said
+Lucius.</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, for any one who will take the trouble to
+follow so slight a clue. I have never attempted the
+task. To accomplish it might have been to lose the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</span>
+only creature that loved me. You will call this
+selfish policy, no doubt. Lucille’s interests ought
+to have weighed with me more than my own. I can
+only answer, that old age is selfish. When a man
+has but a few years between him and the grave, he
+may well shrink from the idea of making those years
+desolate.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I do not wonder that you feared to lose her,’
+said Lucius.</p>
+
+<p>He opened the letter numbered 3. It was in that
+delicate foreign hand, on thin paper.</p>
+<br>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right fs90">
+‘Rue Jeanne d’Arques, numéro 17, Rouen.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p>‘Dear Sir,—Not having received a satisfactory
+response from Mr. G., I venture to address you, believing
+that you will compassionate my anxieties. I
+wish to hear more of your charge. Is she well? is
+she happy? O, sir, have pity upon the heart which
+pines for her—to which this enforced separation is a
+living death! Does she grow? does she remember
+me, and ask for me? Yet, considering her tender
+age at the time of our parting, that is hardly possible.
+I ought to be thankful that it is so—that she will
+not suffer any of the pangs which rend my sorrowful
+heart. But in spite of that thought, it grieves me to
+know that she will lose all memory of my face, all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</span>
+love for me. It is a hard trial; and it may last for
+years. Heaven knows if I shall live to see the end
+of it.</p>
+
+<p>‘I entreat you, sir, to pity one who is most grateful
+for your friendly help at a time when it was
+needed, and to let me have a full account of the little
+girl.</p>
+
+<p>‘I am quite content to submit to Mr. G.’s desire
+that, for the next few years of her life, she shall have
+no friends but those she has in your house; yet I can
+but think that, at her age, residence in a London
+house, and above all a house of business, must be
+harmful. I should be very glad could you make
+some arrangement for her to live, at least part of the
+year, a little way out of town, with people you could
+fully trust.</p>
+
+<p>‘Do not doubt that, should God spare me to enjoy
+the fortune to which Mr. G. looks forward, I
+shall most liberally reward your goodness to one
+born under an evil star.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span style="padding-right: 3em">‘I have the honour to remain, yours,</span><br>
+‘<span class="smcap">Felicie G.</span><br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">‘P.S. My name here is Madame Dumarques.’</p>
+</div>
+<br>
+
+<p>‘That,’ exclaimed Lucius, ‘must surely be the
+letter of a mother!’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Yes; and not a letter from a wife to her husband.
+The Mr. G. spoken of in the letter is evidently
+the husband of the writer.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Strange that the care of a beloved child should
+have been intrusted to such a man as your son.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Men of pleasure have few friends,’ answered Mr.
+Sivewright. ‘I daresay this Mr. G. had no one save
+the companion of the gaming-table to whom he could
+appeal in his difficulty.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Do you consider there is sufficient evidence here
+to show that Lucille was the child alluded to?’</p>
+
+<p>‘No other child ever came to Bond-street.’</p>
+
+<p>‘True. Then the case seems clear enough. She
+was not your son’s daughter, but the child of these
+people, and committed to his care.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Read on, and you will discover farther details of
+the affair.’</p>
+
+<p>The fourth letter was from ‘H. G.’ It was evidently
+written in answer to a letter of complaint or
+remonstrance from Ferdinand Sivewright. It ran
+thus:</p>
+<br>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>‘My dear Fellow,—Your reproaches are most unjust.
+I always send money when I have it; but I
+have not acquired the art of coiner, nor am I clever
+enough to accomplish a successful forgery. In a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</span>
+word, you can’t get blood out of a stone. You have
+had some hundreds since you first took charge of the
+little one; and in any other home I had found for her,
+she would not have cost me a third of the money. I
+do not forget that you helped me out of a diabolical
+difficulty, and that if you had not happened to be our
+visitor when the old gentleman surprised me in our
+Devonian cottage, and if you had not with sublime
+tact assumed <em>my</em> responsibilities, I should have been
+irretrievably ruined. Never shall I forget that midsummer
+morning when I had to leave all I loved in
+your care, and to turn my back upon that dear little
+home, to accompany my uncle to London, assuming
+the careless gaiety of a bachelor, while my heart was
+racked with anguish for those I left behind. However,
+we played the comedy well, and, please God,
+the future will compensate Felicie and me for all we
+have suffered in the past and suffer in the present.
+Be as reasonable, dear old fellow, as you have been
+useful, and rely upon it I shall by and by amply reward
+your fidelity.—Yours,</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+H. G.’<br>
+</p>
+</div>
+<br>
+
+<p>‘We get a clearer glimpse of the story in this,’
+said Lucius, as he finished the fourth letter. ‘It
+seems easy enough now to read the riddle. A young
+man, with large expectations from an uncle who, at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</span>
+any moment, may disinherit him, has secretly married;
+perhaps a woman beneath him in station. At
+any rate, his choice is one which his uncle would inevitably
+disapprove. He hides his young wife in
+some quiet Devonshire village, where his friend,
+your son, visits him. There, during your son’s visit,
+the old man appears. By some means or other he
+has tracked his nephew to this retreat. One mode
+of escape only suggests itself. Ferdinand Sivewright
+assumes the character of the husband and father,
+while the delinquent leaves the place at his uncle’s
+desire, and accompanies him back to London. Out
+of this incident arises the rest. Ferdinand Sivewright
+takes charge of the child, the wife retires to
+her native country, where she has, no doubt, friends
+who can give her a home. The whole business is
+thus, as it were, dissolved. The husband is free to
+play the part of a bachelor till his kinsman’s death.
+That is my reading of the story.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I do not think you can be far out,’ answered Mr.
+Sivewright. ‘You can look over the rest of the letters
+at your leisure. They are less important than
+those you have read, but may contain some stray
+scraps of information which you can piece together.
+There is one letter in which Madame Dumarques
+speaks of the miniature. She sends it in order that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</span>
+the little girl may learn to know her mother’s features;
+and in this, as in other letters from this lady,
+there appears a foreboding of early death. “We may
+never meet on earth,” she writes. “I like to think
+that she will know my face if ever I am so blest as
+to meet her in heaven.”’</p>
+
+<p>‘You think, then, that this poor mother died
+young?’ inquired Lucius.</p>
+
+<p>‘That is my idea. The husband speaks of her
+failing health in one of his letters. He has been to
+Rouen to see her, and has found her sadly changed.
+“You would hardly know that lovely face, Sivewright,
+could you see it now,” he writes.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius folded and tied up the letters with a careful
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>‘May I have these to keep?’ he asked.</p>
+
+<p>‘You may. They are the only dower which your
+wife will receive from her parents.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I don’t know that,’ answered Lucius; ‘her father
+may still live, and if he does, he shall at least
+give her his name.’</p>
+
+<p>‘What, you mean to seek out this nameless
+father?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I do. The task may be long and difficult, but
+I am determined to unravel this tangled skein.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Do what you like, so long as you and Lucille<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</span>
+do not leave me to die alone,’ said the old man
+sadly.</p>
+
+<p>‘Have no fear of that,’ replied Lucius. ‘This investigation
+can wait. I will not desert my post in
+your sick room, until you are on the highroad to
+recovery.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You are a good fellow!’ exclaimed Mr. Sivewright,
+with unusual warmth; ‘and I do not regret
+having trusted you.’</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.<br>
+<span class="fs70">MYSTIC MUSIC.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">It</span> was now nearly dark, and Lucius was anxious to
+obtain a speedy release from the sick room, lest the
+time should creep on towards the hour at which Mr.
+Otranto’s minions were to seek for admittance at the
+little back door. He made some excuse therefore for
+bidding his patient ‘good-night’ soon after this.
+There would be time for him to see that the coast
+was clear, and to keep watch for the coming of the
+two men.</p>
+
+<p>He met Lucille in the corridor, coming up-stairs
+for the night, at least two hours earlier than usual—a
+most opportune retirement.</p>
+
+<p>She gave a little start at meeting him, and her
+look was more of surprise than pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>‘You here, Lucius!’ she exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, dear; I have been with your grandfather.
+I heard you were lying down, and would not disturb
+you. I hope you feel refreshed by that long rest.’</p>
+
+<p>‘As much refreshed as I can be while I have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</span>
+such cause for anxiety. I am going to my room
+early, so as to be near my grandfather.’</p>
+
+<p>‘That is wise; only remember you must try to
+sleep. You must not be watching and listening all
+night. If Mr. Sivewright wants anything he will
+call you. Good-night, my dearest.’</p>
+
+<p>He folded her in his arms, and pressed a tender
+kiss upon the sad lips; but her only response to his
+caress was a weary sigh. There was something amiss
+here; what, he knew not; but he felt she had some
+sorrow which she refused to share with him, and the
+thought wounded him to the quick. He left her
+perplexed and unhappy.</p>
+
+<p>The old clock on the staircase struck eight as
+Lucius passed it. He had an hour to wait before
+the arrival of the detectives. What to do with himself
+during that time, he knew not. The lower part
+of the house was wrapped in darkness, save for the
+feeble glimmer of a candle in the great kitchen,
+where Mr. and Mrs. Wincher were seated at their
+frugal supper. Lucius looked and beheld them regaling
+themselves on a stony-looking Dutch cheese
+and an overgrown lettuce—a gigantic vegetable, which
+they liberally soused with vinegar.</p>
+
+<p>From Mrs. Wincher, Lucius obtained a candle,
+which he carried to the parlour—a room that looked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</span>
+empty and desolate without Lucille. There was the
+sofa upon which she had rested; there her book;
+there her work-basket.</p>
+
+<p>He sat down amidst these tokens of her presence,
+and stared at the flame of the candle, sorely troubled
+in mind. What was this gulf between them, this
+feeling of severance that was so strange to his heart?
+Why was it that there returned to him ever and anon
+a suspicion formless, inexplicable, but which troubled
+him beyond measure? He strove to escape from
+gloomy thoughts by the aid of an old enchanter. He
+took his violin from its hiding-place, and began to
+play a tender <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">sotto-voce</i> strain, which soothed his
+troubled mind. His thoughts drifted into a smoother
+channel. He thought of that grand discovery made
+to-night—a discovery which, at another time, he
+would have deemed all-sufficient for happiness: Lucille
+was not the child of the wretch his hand had
+slain. The comfort of that thought was measureless.</p>
+
+<p>Could he do wrong in accepting the evidence of
+those letters—in giving them this interpretation?
+Surely not. They seemed to point but to one conclusion.
+They told a story in which there were few
+missing links. It remained for him to trace the father
+who had thus abandoned his child. It would
+be a more pleasing task than that which Lucille had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</span>
+imposed upon him when she bade him seek for Ferdinand
+Sivewright.</p>
+
+<p>But why had this father—who from the tone of
+his letters seemed to have been fond of his child—abandoned
+her entirely to her fate, and made no effort
+to reclaim her in after years? That question might
+be answered in two ways. The father might have died
+years ago, carrying his secret with him to the grave.
+Or it is just possible that this man, in whom weakness
+might be near akin to wickedness, had made
+some advantageous alliance after the death of Lucille’s
+mother, and had deemed it wise to be silent
+as to his first marriage, even at the cost of his
+daughter’s love.</p>
+
+<p>Thus reasoned Lucius as he played a slow pensive
+melody, always <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">sotto voce</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Thought and music together had beguiled him
+into forgetfulness of time. The clock struck nine
+while he was still playing.</p>
+
+<p>He put down his violin immediately, left the
+lighted candle on the table, and went out to the back
+door. Mr. Wincher was there before him, the door
+open, and two men standing on the threshold.</p>
+
+<p>‘We’ve got our orders from Mr. Otranto, sir,’
+said the elder of the two. ‘I’m to stop all night in
+the room that contains the vallibles, and my mate is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</span>
+to be in and out and keep a hi upon the back premises.
+But if you have anything you’d like to suggest,
+sir, we’re at your service.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No,’ said Lucius; ‘I’ve no doubt Mr. Otranto
+knows his business a great deal better than I do.
+Come with me, Mr.—’</p>
+
+<p>‘Simcox, sir. My mate is Joe Cleaver.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Come with me then, Mr. Simcox, and I’ll show
+you the room that needs watching. Mr. Cleaver can
+stay in the kitchen. I daresay he can make himself
+comfortable there.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Purvided he isn’t timid of beadles,’ interjected
+Mrs. Wincher; ‘which the crickets are that tame they
+plays about the table while we’re at supper.’</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cleaver pronounced himself indifferent as to
+beetles or crickets.</p>
+
+<p>‘They won’t hurt me,’ he said; ‘I’ve had to deal
+with worse than black-beadles in my time.’</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Simcox followed Lucius to the room that
+contained the Sivewright collection—that curious
+chaos of relics and fragments which represented the
+knowledge and labour of a lifetime. The detective
+surveyed these works of art with a disparaging eye.</p>
+
+<p>‘There doesn’t seem to be much for the melting-pot
+here!’ he exclaimed; ‘or much portable property
+of any kind.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘There’s a good deal of curious old china,’ answered
+Lucius, ‘which is, I believe, more valuable
+than silver. The thief who stole the old plate might
+return for that.’</p>
+
+<p>‘He might,’ answered Mr. Simcox with a sceptical
+air; ‘but he must be a cut above the common run
+of thieves if he knows much about old chaney; the
+sterling metal is what most of ’em go in for. However,
+here I am, sir, and I know my duty. I’m ready
+to watch as many nights as you please.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Very good,’ said Lucius; ‘then I’ll wish you
+good-night, Mr. Simcox; and if you want a mattress
+and a blanket, I daresay Mr. Wincher—the old man
+who opened the door to you—will give you them. I
+don’t live in the house, but I shall be here early to-morrow
+morning to learn the result of your watch.
+Good-night.’</p>
+
+<p>He had his hand upon the door, when a sound
+from the other side of the hall—low, but still sufficiently
+audible—startled him as if it had been the
+fall of a thunderbolt. It was his own violin, played
+softly—a wild minor strain, dirge-like and unearthly.
+Scarcely had he heard the notes when they died
+away. It was almost as if he had dreamed them.
+There was not time for him to utter an exclamation
+before all was dumb. Then came a muffled sound,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</span>
+like the cautious closing of a heavy door; but that
+strange strain of melody possessed the soul and ears
+of Lucius, and he did not hear that stealthy closing
+of the hall-door.</p>
+
+<p>‘Did you hear that?’ he asked the detective
+eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>‘Hear what, sir?’</p>
+
+<p>‘A violin played in the opposite room.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Well, no, sir, I can’t say as I did. Yet I fancy
+I did hear somethink in the way of music—a barrel-organ,
+perhaps, outside.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Strange!’ muttered Lucius; ‘my senses must
+be growing confused. I have been too long without
+sleep, or I have thought too much. My brain has
+been unceasingly on the rack; no wonder it should
+fail. Yet I could have sworn I heard a wild unearthly
+strain—like—like other music I heard once.’</p>
+
+<p>It was a foolish thing, he felt, to be disturbed by
+such a trifle. A mere fancy, doubtless, but he was
+disturbed by it nevertheless. He hurried across to
+the parlour where he had left his violin. There it
+lay, just as he had put it down. The room was
+empty.</p>
+
+<p>‘What if my violin were enchanted now, and
+could play of itself?’ he thought idly. ‘Or what if
+the furies who torment me with the slow tortures of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</span>
+remorse had invented a new agony, that I should
+hear ghostly strains—mere phantasmal sounds—reminding
+me of the music I heard in the American
+forest?’</p>
+
+<p>He put the violin back into its case, locked it,
+and put the key in his waistcoat-pocket. The lock
+was a Chubb.</p>
+
+<p>‘Neither mortals nor fiends shall play upon you
+any more to-night, my little Amati,’ he said.</p>
+
+<p>He was glad to escape from the house presently,
+having no further business there. He felt that
+Lucille and the old man were securely guarded for
+that night at least. To-morrow might furnish a
+clue to the mystery—to-morrow might reveal the
+thief.</p>
+
+<p>The thought set his brain on fire. Who opened
+that door? Who admitted the midnight plunderer?
+Would to-morrow’s light bring with it the answer to
+that question?</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.<br>
+<span class="fs70">AT FAULT.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">Geoffrey Hossack</span> rushed down to Stillmington as
+fast as a recklessly-driven hansom and an express
+train could take him. His heart seemed to sing
+aloud as he went, ‘I am coming, my love, I am coming;
+and we will part no more.’</p>
+
+<p>How sweet, how rustic, how peaceful, the little
+uncommercial town seemed to him to-day in its verdant
+setting; the low hills, on whose grassy slopes tall
+chestnuts spread their wide branches, and the dark
+foliage of the beech gleamed silvery as the warm
+breezes ruffled it; fertile pastures where the aftermath
+grew deep, green tinged with russet—over all
+the land late summer’s vanishing glory.</p>
+
+<p>‘I could live here with her for ever,’ he thought;
+‘ay, in the humblest cottage half hidden among
+those green lanes, which seem to lead nowhere. I
+could live all my life with her, cut off from all the
+rest of the world, and never languish for its hollow<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</span>
+pleasures, and never sigh for change. God grant I
+may find her reasonable! God grant that she may
+accept my simple assurance of her release, and make
+me happy!’</p>
+
+<p>On the very threshold of Mrs. Bertram’s modest
+dwelling a sudden fear seized him. Something in
+the aspect of the house to-day struck him as unfamiliar.
+The window was shut—an unusual circumstance,
+for Janet loved air. The flowers in the little
+rustic stand that screened the window had a neglected
+look. There were dead leaves on the geraniums,
+which were wont to be so carefully tended.
+The care of those flowers had been Janet’s early morning
+task. How often had he walked this way before
+breakfast, for the sake of catching one chance glimpse
+of the noble face bending over those flowers!</p>
+
+<p>‘Good Heavens, can she be ill?’ he thought with
+agonising fear. He knocked softly, lest she should
+be indeed lying ill up-stairs and the sound of the
+knocker disturb her.</p>
+
+<p>The maid who opened the door had come straight
+from the washtub, breathless, with bare steaming
+arms.</p>
+
+<p>‘Is Mrs. Bertram at home—and—and well?’
+asked Geoffrey eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>‘Mrs. Bertram, sir? O dear, no; she left us<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</span>
+three days ago, and the apartments are to let. Missus
+doesn’t put up any bill, because she says it gives
+such a low look; but there’s a card at the grocer’s.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Mrs. Bertram has moved!’ said Geoffrey, his
+heart beating very fast. ‘Where has she gone?’</p>
+
+<p>It might be to the next street only. She had
+found the rooms small perhaps, as her pupils increased.
+Yet even a few minutes’ delay dashed his
+high hopes. It seemed hard to meet any kind of
+hindrance at the outset.</p>
+
+<p>‘She didn’t leave no address,’ answered the girl;
+‘she’s left Stillmington for some time. She said
+the air was relackshing at this time of year, and the
+little girl didn’t seem quite well. So she went. She
+means to come back in the winter, she told us, and
+go on with her pupils; but she was going somewheres
+by the sea.’</p>
+
+<p>‘But surely she must have left some address
+with your mistress, in order that letters might be
+forwarded to her?’</p>
+
+<p>‘No, she didn’t, sir. I heared missus ast her
+that very question about the letters, and she says to
+missus that it didn’t matter—there wouldn’t be no
+letters for her, not of no consequence, as she would
+write and tell her friends her new address. She
+didn’t exactly know where she was going, she says.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘When did she leave?’ asked Geoffrey in despair.
+How could the Fates treat him so hardly?</p>
+
+<p>‘Three days ago—last Wednesday.’</p>
+
+<p>The very day of his journey down to Hampshire.
+She had lost no time in taking flight. She had gone
+almost immediately after he left Stillmington. Could
+he doubt that her motive had been to avoid him—to
+flee temptation? For did he not know that she
+loved him?</p>
+
+<p>‘Mrs. Bertram left very suddenly, did she not?’
+he asked of the maid-of-all-work, who was breathing
+hard with impatience to be gone, knowing that her
+mistress awaited her in the washhouse, and would
+assuredly lecture her for gossiping.</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, sir, it was quite suddent. She gave missus
+a week’s rent instead of the reglar notice.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And you have really no idea where she went
+when she left you?’</p>
+
+<p>‘No, sir. She went away by the London train.
+That’s all I can tell you.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Thanks,’ said Geoffrey with a sigh.</p>
+
+<p>He rewarded the girl with a half-crown, almost
+mechanically, and departed heartsore. How could
+she be so cruel as to hide herself from him—to put
+a new barrier between them! Was she afraid of his
+importunity—afraid that she would lack strength to
+resist his pleading?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</span></p>
+
+<p>By the sea! She had gone to the sea-side. That
+was information of the vaguest character.</p>
+
+<p>‘If I have to scour the English coast, I will find
+her,’ he said to himself desperately.</p>
+
+<p>But it was just possible she might leave England—that
+she might hide herself in some obscure
+village in Normandy or Brittany, where the cockney-tourist
+had not yet penetrated. The field was wide,
+to say the least of it.</p>
+
+<p>‘She will surely let her brother know where she
+is?’ he thought presently; and with that thought
+came a brief moment of hopefulness, which quickly
+changed again to despair. If she wanted to avoid
+him, Geoffrey, she would scarcely trust her secret to
+his bosom friend Lucius.</p>
+
+<p>There was that ever-ready medium—that universal
+go-between—the second column of the <cite>Times</cite>.
+He might advertise. He wrote a long appeal, so
+worded that, to the stranger, it was an absolute
+hieroglyphic, telling her that she was free—the only
+barrier that could divide them had been long removed—and
+entreating her to communicate with him
+immediately. This appeal he headed ‘<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Voi che sapéte</i>’—the
+opening words of her favourite song. She
+could hardly fail to understand.</p>
+
+<p>But what if she did not see the <cite>Times</cite>? And if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</span>
+she were out of England, or even buried deep in
+some remote English watering-place, the chances
+against her seeing it were as ten to one. He sent
+the same advertisement to Galignani, and to a dozen
+provincial newspapers, chosen almost at random, but
+covering a wide area. He sent cheques to pay for
+a month’s insertions in every paper. He felt himself
+transformed into a man of business, and went
+to work as actively as if he had been advertising a
+new cocoa or a new hair-dye.</p>
+
+<p>This done, and there being nothing to detain
+him at Stillmington, he went back to Hillersdon,
+much to the delight of his cousins Belle and Jessie,
+who had in no wise expected this prompt return of
+the deserter. There was some comfort to him in
+the idea of being amidst the scenes of Janet’s youth.
+He went over to Tyrrelhurst, the cathedral town, saw
+the Registrar of Births, Deaths, and Marriages, and
+found the entry of that fatal union which stood between
+him and happiness.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, there it was: ‘Frederick Vandeleur, gentleman,
+&amp;c. &amp;c., to Janet Davoren.’ The ceremony had
+been legal enough. Nothing but some previous contract
+could invalidate such a marriage; and was it
+not very probable that this villain’s assertion of a
+previous marriage was but a lie, invented to release<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</span>
+him from a union that had become troublesome
+to him?</p>
+
+<p>‘I wish to Heaven I had as good a certificate of
+the scoundrel’s death,’ thought Geoffrey; ‘but even
+if I find her and tell her that he is dead, I doubt if
+my bare assertion will satisfy her scruples.’</p>
+
+<p>He made a pilgrimage to Wykhamston, prowled
+about the gray old church, talked to the sexton, who
+had been an old man twenty years ago, and who
+calmly survived all changes, like a being over whom
+Time had no power. From him Geoffrey heard a
+great deal about the old rector and his beautiful
+daughter, who had played the organ, and how a
+stranger had come to Wykhamston, who took a great
+fancy to playing the organ, and played wonderful;
+and how Miss Davoren used oftentimes to be in the
+church practising when the stranger came in; and
+how not long after she ran away from home, as some
+folks said, and he, the sexton, was afraid no good had
+come of those meetings in the church.</p>
+
+<p>To this Geoffrey listened silently, wounded, as he
+always was, by the thought that she whom he loved
+so dearly had left her home under a cloud, were it
+but the lightest breath of suspicion.</p>
+
+<p>Even to this sexton he must needs defend his
+idol.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘I have reason to know that Miss Davoren was
+married to that gentleman before he came to Wykhamston,’
+he said. ‘It was a secret marriage, and she
+was foolish enough to leave her home without informing
+her parents of the step she had taken; but she
+was that man’s wife, and no shadow of dishonour can
+tarnish her name.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Deary me!’ exclaimed the sexton; ‘and our poor
+dear rector took it so to heart. Some folks think it
+was that as killed him, though the doctors called it
+heart-disease of long standing.’</p>
+
+<p>Geoffrey went from the church to the rectory, an
+overgrown thatched cottage, quaint and old, with
+plastered walls and big chimney-stacks; the garden
+all abloom with late roses—the new incumbent evidently
+a prosperous gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>He loitered by the tall privet-hedge a little while,
+gathered a rose from a bush that grew within reach—a
+rose which he put carefully in his pocket-book—frail
+memorial of her he loved.</p>
+
+<p>This pilgrimage occupied an entire day; for the
+young man lingered about Wykhamston as if loth
+to leave the spot where Janet had once lived—as if
+he almost hoped to meet the phantom of her girlhood
+in one of those low water meadows where he wandered
+listlessly by the reedy trout streams.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</span></p>
+
+<p>Belle and Jessie pouted a little at this desertion,
+yet would not complain. Were they not fortunate in
+dear Geoffrey’s return? And if they questioned or
+teased him he might take flight again.</p>
+
+<p>‘I hope you are not going to desert us to-morrow,’
+said Belle, on the evening of his return from
+Wykhamston.</p>
+
+<p>‘Why do you lay such a tremendous stress upon
+to-morrow?’ asked Geoffrey, with a comfortable yawn.
+He was stretched on a rustic bench outside the drawing-room
+windows smoking, while these damsels conversed
+with him from within.</p>
+
+<p>‘Have you forgotten?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Forgotten what?’ with another yawn. ‘How
+sleepy this country air makes one!’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, and how stupid sometimes!’ exclaimed
+Jessie. ‘You might have remembered that to-morrow
+is the day for Lady Baker’s <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fête</i>.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Ah, to be sure! She’s a very nice old party,
+that Lady Baker of yours. I shall make a point of
+being in attendance upon you.’</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.<br>
+<span class="fs70">TROUBLES THICKEN.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">There</span> was plenty of work for Lucius in his surgery
+when he went home, after inducting Mr. Otranto’s
+men in their duties at Cedar House. There were the
+medicines to be made up, and to be taken round to
+the patients that night, by the sleepy boy, who looked
+unutterable reproaches at his master for this unwonted
+neglect of duty.</p>
+
+<p>‘Some of the places will be shut, I should think,’
+he said with an injured air, as he ground some nauseous
+drug furiously with a stone pestle; ‘and some
+of the folks gone to bed. We’ve never been so late
+before.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I don’t think our neighbours hereabouts are renowned
+for their early habits,’ answered Lucius, unabashed
+by this reproof. ‘If you find people are
+gone to bed, you can bring the medicines home, and
+take them out again early to-morrow morning. You<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</span>
+needn’t go on knocking and ringing if you don’t get
+answered quickly.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Very well, sir,’ murmured the boy with a yawn.
+‘They’ll be up at all the publics of course: there’s
+the liniment for Mrs. Purdew’s sprained wrist, and
+the lotion for Mr. Tweaker’s black eye; and they’ll
+be up at the butcher’s, and at the general round the
+corner, where the children’s down with measles, I
+daresay. But I expect to find the private gentlefolks
+gone to bed.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Give me that rhubarb, and hold your tongue,’
+said Lucius.</p>
+
+<p>His medicines were soon made up and dispatched;
+and he was on the point of leaving his surgery for
+the night, when he put his hand in his pocket in
+search of a key, and found the bottle he had taken
+from Mr. Sivewright’s bedside.</p>
+
+<p>‘Good heavens!’ he exclaimed; ‘are mind and
+memory failing me altogether that I could forget
+this?’</p>
+
+<p>He held the bottle between him and the flame of
+the gas. The liquid, which had been clear enough
+when he sent it out of his surgery, had now a slightly
+clouded look.</p>
+
+<p>‘I wonder whether I have such a thing as a bit<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</span>
+of copper gauze?’ he thought, as he put down the
+bottle.</p>
+
+<p>He looked in several small drawers in the table on
+which he made up his medicines, and finally found
+the object he sought for. He poured the medicine
+into a glass vessel and applied his test.</p>
+
+<p>The experiment showed him that there was arsenic
+in the medicine. The quantity was of the
+smallest, but the poison was there. He repeated his
+experiment, to make assurance doubly sure. Yes,
+there could be no shadow of doubt. Arsenic had been
+introduced into the medicine since it had left his
+hands yesterday afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>Whose was the guilty hand which had done this
+thing? His vague suspicion arose before him all at
+once in the shape of an awful fact, and the horror of
+it almost paralysed thought. Who could have seemed
+more secure than this harmless old man, lying on
+his sick bed, tenderly watched by loving eyes, ministered
+to by dutiful hands—guarded, it would seem,
+from the possibility of danger? Yet even there a
+murderer had penetrated; and by slow steps, by
+means so gradual as almost to defy suspicion, that
+feeble life was assailed.</p>
+
+<p>Who could the assassin be but that old servant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</span>
+in whose fidelity Homer Sivewright trusted from the
+mere force of habit? Yes; the case seemed clear
+enough, looked at by the light of this new discovery.
+Jacob Wincher, who knew the full value of the collection,
+had begun a systematic course of plunder—who
+could tell how long it had gone on? perhaps
+ever since Mr. Sivewright had taken to his bed—and,
+in order to escape the detection which must have
+been inevitable on the old man’s recovery, he had
+taken measures to make his master’s illness mortal.</p>
+
+<p>‘Perhaps he argues that by dropping a pinch of
+arsenic into his master’s medicine now and then he
+only assists the progress of the disease, and that his
+crime is something less than murder,’ thought Lucius
+bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>He was angry with himself, because this very day—after
+suspecting Jacob Wincher, nay, after feeling
+convinced of his guilt—he had suffered himself to be
+hoodwinked, and had believed the old servant to be
+an honest man. He remembered Mr. Otranto’s dictum,
+so absolutely expressed, and smiled at the fatuity
+of a man whom the world deemed possessed of almost
+superhuman powers.</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, the scheme is transparent. He has admitted
+the man I saw night after night, and has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</span>
+doubtless made away with all that is most valuable in
+the collection. He knows that his master’s recovery
+would be his ruin, and he means to prevent that recovery.
+His apparent candour this morning was a
+profound stroke of policy. He took alarm from what
+I said to his wife—guessed that I had seen the entrance
+of his accomplice, and played his cards accordingly.
+Not clever enough for a thief, did you say,
+Mr. Otranto? Why, here is a man clever enough to
+carry on simultaneous robbery and murder, and yet
+to wear the semblance of most consummate innocence.
+This is evidently a development of intellectual
+power among the dangerous classes for which your
+previous experience has not prepared you.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius laughed the laugh of scorn at the thought
+of Mr. Otranto’s shortsightedness.</p>
+
+<p>But what was he, Lucius, to do? That was the
+question. How was he to avert the danger from his
+patient, and yet avoid alarming him? To alarm
+him might be fatal. To tell a man almost at Death’s
+door that he had been brought to this pass by a slow
+poisoner in his own household, would surely be to
+complete the murder. Where was the sick man
+with nerves strong enough to endure such a revelation?</p>
+
+<p>‘I must get rid of these Winchers, yet not tell<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</span>
+Mr. Sivewright the cause of their dismissal,’ thought
+Lucius. ‘I can invent some plausible excuse for
+their disappearance. And when they are gone—Stay,
+might it not be better to let them stop, and to keep
+watch over my patient myself—so close a watch, that
+if foul play were attempted I must discover the delinquent?’</p>
+
+<p>He meditated upon this question for some time;
+now leaning one way, now the other.</p>
+
+<p>‘No,’ he decided at last; ‘murder shall no longer
+lurk within the shadow of those walls! At any cost
+I will get rid of those wretches, with their pretence
+of long service and fidelity.’</p>
+
+<p>He thought of Mrs. Wincher, whom he had a
+little while ago considered one of the most well-meaning
+of women, completely devoted to her young mistress,
+faithful, affectionate.</p>
+
+<p>‘She may not know the extent of her husband’s
+iniquity,’ he thought; for it was painful to him to
+believe that the woman who had hovered about Love’s
+rosy pathway like a protecting angel was among the
+vilest of her sex.</p>
+
+<p>‘What about this night?’ he asked himself with
+painful anxiety. He had left a guard upon the house
+and its treasures, but what guard had he set upon
+that old man’s life? The doors of the sick room<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</span>
+might be locked ever so securely, and yet the assassin
+might enter. Wincher and his accomplice might
+know of that secret staircase, in spite of the old servant’s
+affectation of entire ignorance; and between
+the secret staircase and the sick chamber there was
+only a sliding panel.</p>
+
+<p>‘I’ll go back to-night,’ said Lucius. ‘I should
+be a dastard if, with my present knowledge, I left
+that old man unprotected. I’ll go back, and get into
+the garden from the creek. I shall find the detective
+on his beat at the back, no doubt. I’ll warn him
+about the secret staircase; so that no one shall get to
+Mr. Sivewright’s room that way, at any rate.’</p>
+
+<p>He lost no time in putting his resolve into execution.
+It was a few minutes past eleven, and the distance
+to Cedar House was about half an hour’s walk.
+Before midnight he would be there.</p>
+
+<p>Fortune favoured him. The night was dark, and
+there was no one to observe his trespass as he walked
+along the deserted wharf and stepped lightly across
+the untenanted barges. From one of these it was
+easy to get upon the low wall of Mr. Sivewright’s garden.
+He saw a light in the brewhouse, where he had
+found the entrance to the secret stair. The door was
+open, and the detective was lounging against the
+door-post, smoking his pipe and enjoying the night air.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘Who’s there?’ he demanded in cautious tones,
+as Lucius’s light footstep sounded on the weedy
+gravel.</p>
+
+<p>‘A friend—Davoren,’ answered Lucius, and then
+told the man the reason of his return.</p>
+
+<p>‘This is a worse case than even I thought it,’ he
+said. ‘There has been an attempt to poison the old
+gentleman up-stairs, as well as to rob him.’</p>
+
+<p>The man looked incredulous. Lucius briefly
+stated his grounds for this statement.</p>
+
+<p>‘There has been nothing stirring here?’ he asked.</p>
+
+<p>‘Nothing, except the beadles. They’re on short
+rations, and it seems to make ’em active. I’ve been
+in and out ever since you left.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Has Wincher gone to bed?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Two hours ago.’</p>
+
+<p>‘And you are sure he has never stirred since?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Quite sure. I’ve been past his door about every
+ten minutes or so, and have heard him and his wife
+snoring as peaceable as a pair of turtle-doves.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Well, I’ve come to share your watch till morning,
+if you’ve no objection. After the discovery I’ve
+just told you about, I couldn’t rest.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No objections, sir. If you’d brought a casebottle
+with a trifle of spirit it might have been welcome.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘I am sorry that I omitted to provide myself with
+such a thing,’ answered Lucius politely.</p>
+
+<p>He showed the detective the door opening upon
+the secret staircase, and told him not to leave the
+brewhouse while he, Lucius, went up-stairs to see
+that all was right on the upper floor.</p>
+
+<p>‘If the man who came last night should come
+again to-night, he will try to enter by that door,’ said
+Lucius, pointing to the door by which he had just
+come in. ‘Leave it open, and your light burning
+just where it is. He’ll take that to mean that all’s
+right, most likely. But be sure you keep in the
+background yourself till he’s fairly inside.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I hope I know my business, sir,’ replied the detective
+with dignity.</p>
+
+<p>Lucius went through the back premises to the
+hall. The doors in the interior of the house had
+been left open for the convenience of the watchers.
+His footsteps, cautiously as he trod, resounded on the
+stone-paved floor; so at the foot of the staircase he
+drew off his boots, and went up-stairs noiselessly
+in his stockings. He thought of Mr. Sivewright’s
+complaint of that mysterious foot-fall which had
+disturbed his slumbers in the deep of night,—the
+footstep of the secret assassin. To-night he was
+surely guarded. From the lower part of the house<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</span>
+no one could approach him without the knowledge of
+the watcher lying in wait below.</p>
+
+<p>But how about those upper rooms, in one of
+whose windows he had seen the light burning last
+night? Was there not some mystery there? He
+determined to explore that topmost story, now, in
+the darkness of the night even, rather than leave his
+doubts unsatisfied.</p>
+
+<p>Vain determination! The door of communication
+between the corridor and the upper staircase was
+locked. He tried it with a cautious hand, and found
+it firmly secured against him. Then he remembered
+how Lucille had locked that door and put the key
+in her pocket after they came down-stairs from the
+loft.</p>
+
+<p>If that door had been locked and the key in Lucille’s
+possession last night, how came the light in
+the upper window? That was a new problem for
+him to solve.</p>
+
+<p>He crept along the passage, and listened at the
+old man’s door. He could hear his patient’s breathing,
+laboured but regular. There was no other sound
+in the room.</p>
+
+<p>He waited here for some time, listening; but
+there was nothing save the old man’s breathing to
+disturb the stillness, nothing until from Lucille’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</span>
+room there came the sound of a long deep sigh—a
+sigh from a heart sorely oppressed.</p>
+
+<p>That sound smote his own heart with unspeakable
+pain. It betrayed such deep unhappiness—a
+sorrow which could only find vent in the dead of the
+night, in deep heartbroken sighs.</p>
+
+<p>‘Is it her grandfather’s danger that makes her
+so unhappy?’ he wondered. ‘Strange; for the old
+man has never been particularly kind to her—has
+always kept her at arm’s length, as it were. Yet, I
+daresay, to her tender nature the thought of approaching
+death is too terrible. She cannot face the
+inevitable doom; she lies awake and broods upon
+the approaching calamity. Poor child! if she but
+knew how baseless has been her dream of a father’s
+love, how vainly her tenderest feelings have been
+wasted on a wretch who has not even the poor claim
+of kindred to her love!’</p>
+
+<p>For more than an hour he waited, sometimes outside
+his patient’s door, sometimes by Lucille’s; but
+nothing happened to alarm him throughout his
+watch, and he knew the approach to the secret staircase
+was securely guarded. No intruder could reach
+Mr. Sivewright’s room that night, at any rate.</p>
+
+<p>Lucius went down-stairs at last, and smoked a
+cigar in the brewhouse while the detective took his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</span>
+round through all the lower rooms. Thus the night
+wore away, and in the gray dawn Lucius once more
+mounted the stairs, and paced the corridor. Again
+all was silence. This time he heard no sigh from
+Lucille. His heart was relieved by the thought that
+she was sleeping peacefully.</p>
+
+<p>With the dawn—Aurora the rosy-fingered showing
+poorly at this east-end of London—he made his
+way back by the garden-wall, the barges, and the
+wharf, and returned to his own abode, which looked
+sordid and cheerless enough beneath the pale light
+of newborn day—cold and dreary and poor, lacking
+the picturesqueness of a lodge in the primeval forest,
+and but slightly surpassing it in luxury. He laid
+himself down and tried his hardest to sleep; but the
+thought of old Homer Sivewright and his hidden
+enemy, the domestic poisoner, drove away slumber.</p>
+
+<p>‘I shall sleep no more till I have fathomed this
+mystery,’ he said to himself wearily.</p>
+
+<p>But at last, when the sun was shining through
+the poor screen afforded by a calico blind, he did fall
+into a kind of sleep, or rather that feverish condition
+which is neither sleeping nor waking. From this
+state he woke with a start—that kind of shock which
+jars the nerves of the dreamer when his vision ends
+on the brink of a precipice, whence he feels himself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</span>
+descending to fathomless depths below. His forehead
+was damp with a nameless horror; he trembled
+as he rose in his bed.</p>
+
+<p>It was as if a voice had spoken in his ear as he
+slept.</p>
+
+<p>‘What if Lucille were the poisoner?’</p>
+
+<p>Great Heaven! how could so vile a thought shape
+itself in his mind? Yet with the thought there
+arose before him, as if it had been shown to him
+upon the open pages of a book, all those circumstances
+which might seem to point to this hideous
+conclusion. Who else, in that lonely old house, had
+the same power to approach the patient? In whom
+else would Homer Sivewright trust as blindly?</p>
+
+<p>He remembered Lucille’s agitation when he first
+hinted the possibility of poison—that whitening
+cheek, that sudden look of horror. Might not guilt
+look thus?</p>
+
+<p>And then her emotion yesterday morning, when
+she had dropped lifeless at his feet? Could anything
+<em>but</em> guilt be thus stricken?</p>
+
+<p>‘O God,’ he cried, ‘I am surely going mad!
+Or how else could such horrible thoughts enter my
+mind? Do I not know her to be good and pure,
+loving, unselfish, compassionate? And with the
+conviction of her goodness firmly rooted in my heart,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</span>
+can I for one moment fear,—ay, even though circumstances
+should weave a web of proof around her,
+leaving not one loophole for escape?’</p>
+
+<p>He wrenched his thoughts away from the facts
+which seemed to condemn the woman he so deeply
+loved, and by a great effort of will dismissed a fancy
+which seemed the most cruel treason against love.</p>
+
+<p>‘Does the evil one inspire our dreams sometimes?’
+he wondered. ‘So vile a thought could
+never have entered my head if a voice had not whispered
+the hateful suggestion into my sleeping ear.
+But there shall be an end at once of suspicion and
+of mystery. I will no longer treat Lucille as a
+child. I frightened her more by my hints and suggestions
+than I could have done had I told her the
+plain facts. I will trust to her firmness and fortitude,
+and tell her all without reserve—the discovery
+of the attempted poisoning, the robbery, the secret
+entrance of the man I watched the night before last.
+I will trust her most fully.’</p>
+
+<p>This resolve gave extreme relief to his mind.
+He dressed hurriedly, took a brief breakfast of his own
+preparation, Mrs. Babb the charwoman not yet having
+left her domestic circle to minister to his wants, and
+at half-past eight o’clock found himself once more
+outside the iron gate which shut in the chief object<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</span>
+of his love. Mrs. Wincher admitted him with a
+solemn and mournful visage.</p>
+
+<p>‘Is there anything amiss?’ asked Lucius anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>‘I don’t believe there’ll ever be anything more in
+this blessed house that isn’t amiss,’ answered Mrs.
+Wincher obscurely, but with a despondent air that
+augered ill.</p>
+
+<p>‘Mr. Sivewright is worse, I suppose,’ said Lucius.</p>
+
+<p>‘Mr. Sivewright is much as usual, grumble,
+grumble—this here don’t agree with him, and that
+there turns sour on his stomach, and so on—enough
+to worrit folks into early graves. But there’s a deal
+more the matter than that this morning.’</p>
+
+<p>‘For Heaven’s sake, speak plainly,’ cried Lucius
+impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>‘Our missy is in a burning fever. She was
+heavy and lollopy-like all yesterday afternoon, and
+her cheeks, that have been as white as a chaney tea-plate
+latterly, was red and hot-looking, and she slept
+heavy and breathed short in her sleep, for I stood
+and watched her; and she moved about in a languid
+way that wasn’t a bit like her quick light ways when
+she’s well. But I thought it was nothink more than
+what you says yourself yesterday morning—want of
+rest. I should ’ave thought you might ’ave knowed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</span>
+she was sickening for a fever,’ added Mrs. Wincher
+reproachfully.</p>
+
+<p>‘Misfortune does not always declare itself so
+plainly. I could see that she was ill, and that was all.
+God grant the fever may not be very much, after all!’</p>
+
+<p>‘Not very much!’ exclaimed Mrs. Wincher.
+‘Why, when I took her a hearly cup of tea at half-past
+seven this morning, which was as soon as I
+could get my kittle boiled, she was raving like a
+lunatic—going on about her father, and such-like—in
+a dreadful way, and didn’t recognise me no more
+nor if I’d been a stranger out of the street.’</p>
+
+<p>This was a bad hearing; but Lucius bore the
+shock calmly enough. Troubles and perplexities
+had rained thickly upon him of late, and there is a
+kind of stoicism which grows out of familiarity with
+sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>‘Take me to Miss Sivewright’s room,’ he said
+quietly, ‘and let me see what is the matter.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I’ve moved her out of the little dressing-room
+into her own room,’ said Mrs. Wincher; ‘me and
+my good gentleman carried the bed with her on it
+while she was asleep. I thought as how it wouldn’t
+do for her grandpa to hear her carrying on that
+wild.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You were right enough there. Yet she was a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</span>
+faithful guardian, and your master is now in the
+power of his foes.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Foes, sir? What foes can he have in this
+house?’</p>
+
+<p>‘The same people who found their way to the
+plate in the muniment chest might find their way to
+Mr. Sivewright’s room,’ said Lucius.</p>
+
+<p>‘Lor, sir, how you do frighten one! But what
+harm could even thieves and robbers want to do to
+a harmless old man, unless he stood between ’em
+and the property?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I won’t stop to discuss that question with you
+now, Mrs. Wincher. I shall have something to say
+to you and your husband presently. Have the detectives
+gone?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, sir; but they’re coming back the same
+time to-night. One of ’em left a bit of a note for
+you. It’s on the kitchen chimleypiece. I’ll run
+and fetch it if you like.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Not till you have taken me to Miss Sivewright’s
+room. Is she alone all this time?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, sir; but she was asleep when I left her.
+She dozes off every now and then.’</p>
+
+<p>‘She must have a nurse to watch her, sleeping
+or waking.’</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Wincher led the way up-stairs, and to one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</span>
+of the doors in the corridor out of which Mr. Sivewright’s
+room opened. For the first time Lucius
+found himself in Lucille’s room—a spacious airy
+apartment, with three windows deep set in the solid
+walls, and provided with broad oak window-seats. A
+scantily furnished chamber, yet with that grace and
+prettiness of aspect which a girl’s taste can give to
+the poorest surroundings. There were books, a few
+water-coloured sketches on the walls, a few oddments
+of old china tastefully disposed on the high oak
+chimneypiece, white muslin curtains to the windows,
+a well-worn Persian carpet in the centre of the dark
+oak floor—everywhere the most perfect neatness,
+cleanliness the most scrupulous.</p>
+
+<p>Lucille was sleeping when Lucius and Mrs.
+Wincher entered; but at the sound of her lover’s
+footsteps, lightly as he trod, she started, opened her
+eyes, and looked at him.</p>
+
+<p>O, how sad to see those sweet eyes looking at
+him thus, without recognition! how sad to mark
+that dreamy unconscious stare in eyes that yesterday
+had been full of meaning! Lucius sank into a chair
+by the bed, fairly overcome. It was some moments
+before he was sufficiently master of himself to approach
+the case professionally, to go through the
+usual formula, with an aching heart.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</span></p>
+
+<p>She was very ill, with such an illness as might
+have been easily induced by long-continued anxiety
+and want of rest—anxious days, sleepless nights.
+The gravest feature in the case was the delirium—the
+inability to recognise familiar faces.</p>
+
+<p>‘Lucille,’ he said, in a low tender voice, ‘don’t
+you know me?’</p>
+
+<p>She did not answer him. Her head moved
+wearily on the pillow from side to side, while her
+lips murmured faintly. Lucius bent over her to
+catch the words.</p>
+
+<p>‘You shouldn’t have come here, father,’ she said,
+‘if you couldn’t forgive him. But no, no, you could
+not do him any harm—you could not be so vile as
+that. I have loved you so dearly. Papa, don’t you
+remember—the violin—our happy evenings?’</p>
+
+<p>Thus the parched lips went on, in low broken
+murmurs, which were sometimes quite unintelligible.</p>
+
+<p>‘It’s been all her father since she was took that
+way,’ said Mrs. Wincher.</p>
+
+<p>‘Strange that her mind should brood thus upon
+that one memory,’ thought Lucius—‘the one tender
+remembrance of her childhood.’</p>
+
+<p>He lingered for some time by the bedside, listening
+to those indistinct murmurs in which the name
+of ‘father’ was so often repeated. Then he began to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</span>
+consider what he must do to secure the safety of this
+beloved sufferer.</p>
+
+<p>To leave her in the custody of people whom he
+believed guilty of the deepest iniquity was not to be
+dreamed of. He must get rid of these Winchers at
+any hazard, bring in a sick nurse upon whose fidelity
+he could rely, and, so far as it was possible, keep
+watch upon the premises himself by day and night.</p>
+
+<p>Get rid of the Winchers? How was that to be
+done? He had no authority for their dismissal.</p>
+
+<p>There was one way, he thought, hazardous perhaps
+for his patient, but tolerably certain of immediate
+success. He must inform Mr. Sivewright of
+the robbery, and state on whom his suspicions fell.
+There was little doubt that on learning he had been
+robbed the <em>bric-à-brac</em> dealer would dismiss his old
+servants. The first thing to be done was to get the
+sick nurse and secure Lucille’s safety, come what
+might.</p>
+
+<p>He told Mrs. Wincher that he would return in
+half an hour or so to see her master, and left the
+house without giving her any farther hint as to his
+intention. He knew of a nurse in the immediate
+neighbourhood, a woman of the comfortable motherly
+order, of whose ministrations among his patients he
+had had ample experience, and he hailed the first cab<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</span>
+that hove in sight, and drove off in quest of this
+honest matron. Fortune favoured him. Mrs. Milderson,
+the nurse—like Mrs. Gamp, sick and monthly—had
+just returned from an interesting case in the
+West India-road.</p>
+
+<p>On this worthy woman Lucius descended like a
+whirlwind: would hardly give her time to rummage
+up an apron or two and a clean print gown, let alone
+her brush and comb—as she said plaintively—ere he
+whisked her into the devouring jaws of the hansom,
+which swallowed her up, bundle and all, and conveyed
+her with almost electric speed to Cedar House.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Wincher stared amain at this interloper, and
+would fain have kept her on the outer side of the iron
+gate.</p>
+
+<p>‘And pray, Dr. Davory, what may this good lady
+want?’ she asked, surveying the nurse and bundle
+with looks of withering scorn.</p>
+
+<p>‘This good lady’s name is Milderson; she is an
+honest and trustworthy person, and she has come to
+nurse Miss Sivewright.’</p>
+
+<p>‘May I ask, Dr. Davory, by whose orders?’</p>
+
+<p>‘By mine, the young lady’s medical attendant and
+her future husband,’ answered Lucius. ‘This way,
+if you please, Milderson. I’ll talk to you presently,
+Mrs. Wincher.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</span></p>
+
+<p>He passed that astonished female, who stood
+agape, staring after him with bewildered looks, and
+then raising her eyes aloft to outraged Heaven—</p>
+
+<p>‘And me not thought good enough to nurse our
+missy!’ she ejaculated. ‘Me, that took her through
+the measles, and had her on my lap three blessed days
+and nights with the chicken-pox. I couldn’t have
+thought it of you, Dr. Davory. And a stranger
+brought into this house without by your leave nor
+with your leave! Who’s to be respounceable for the
+safety of the bricklebrack after this, I should like
+to know!’</p>
+
+<p>Having propounded this question to the unresponsive
+sky, Mrs. Wincher uttered a loud groan, as
+if disappointed at receiving no answer, and then
+slowly dragged her weary way to the house, sliding one
+slippered foot after the other in deepest dejection.
+She walked up-stairs with the same slipshod step,
+and waited in the corridor outside Lucille’s room
+with folded arms and a countenance in which a blank
+stare had succeeded to the workings of indignation.</p>
+
+<p>This stony visage confronted Lucius when he
+emerged from the sick room, after about a quarter of
+an hour employed in giving directions to Mrs. Milderson.</p>
+
+<p>‘Do you mean to say, Dr. Davory, that I’m not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</span>
+to nurse my young missy?’ asked Mrs. Wincher,
+stifled emotion trembling in every accent.</p>
+
+<p>‘That is my intention, Mrs. Wincher,’ answered
+Lucius severely. ‘First and foremost, you are not an
+experienced nurse; and secondly, I cannot trust you.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Not experienced, after taking that blessed dear
+through the chicken-pox—which she had it worse than
+ever chicken-pox was knowed within the memory of
+the chemist round the corner, in Condick-street,
+where I got the gray powders as I gave her—and
+after walking about with her in the measles till I
+was ready to drop! Not to be trusted after five-and-twenty
+years’ faithful service! O, Dr. Davory, I
+couldn’t have thought it of you!’</p>
+
+<p>‘Five-and-twenty years’ service is a poor certificate
+if the service ends in robbery and attempted
+murder,’ answered Lucius quietly.</p>
+
+<p>‘Attempted murder!’ echoed Mrs. Wincher,
+aghast.</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, that’s a terrible word, Mrs. Wincher, isn’t
+it? And this is the worst of all murders—domestic
+murder—the slow and secret work of the poisoner,
+whose stealthy hand introduces death into the medicine
+that should heal, the food that should nourish.
+Of all forms of assassination there can be none so
+vile as that.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</span></p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Wincher uttered no syllable of reply. She
+could only gaze at the speaker in dumb wonderment.
+She began to fear that this young man was going
+mad.</p>
+
+<p>‘He’s been eggziting and werrying of hisself till
+he’s on the high road to a lunacy asylum,’ she said
+to herself presently, when Lucius had passed her and
+gone into Mr. Sivewright’s room.</p>
+
+<p>‘You took away my medicine yesterday morning,’
+said the invalid in his most querulous tone, ‘and
+sent me none to replace it. However, as I feel much
+better without it, your physic was no loss.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Pardon my inattention,’ said Lucius. ‘And you
+really feel better without the medicine? Those
+troublesome symptoms have abated, eh?’</p>
+
+<p>They had abated, Mr. Sivewright said, and he
+went on to describe his condition, in which there
+was positive improvement.</p>
+
+<p>‘I’m glad to find you so much better,’ Lucius
+said, ‘for you will be able to hear some rather disagreeable
+intelligence. You have been robbed.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Robbed!’ cried the old man, starting up in his
+bed as if moved by a galvanic battery. ‘Robbed!
+Yes, I thought as much when I heard those footsteps.
+Robbed! My collection rifled of its gems, I
+suppose. The Capo di Monte—the Copenhagen—the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</span>
+old Roman medals in the ebony cabinet—the
+Boucher tapestry!’ he exclaimed, running over the
+catalogue of his treasures breathlessly.</p>
+
+<p>‘These are safe, for anything I know to the contrary.
+You had a monstrance in silver-gilt?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Gold!’ cried the old man; ‘twenty-carat gold!
+I had it assayed. I gave thirty pounds for that
+monstrance to an old scoundrel who was going to
+break it up for the sake of the gems, and who believed
+it was lacquer. It had been stolen from some
+foreign church, no doubt. The emeralds alone are
+worth two hundred pounds. You don’t mean to tell
+me I’ve been robbed of that?’</p>
+
+<p>‘I’m sorry to say that and some pieces of old
+silver are missing; but I hope to recover them.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Recover the dead from the bottom of the sea and
+bring them to life again!’ cried Mr. Sivewright
+vehemently. ‘You might do that as easily as the
+other. Why, those things were in the muniment
+chest, and Wincher had the key. He has kept that
+key for the last twenty years.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Some one has found his way to the chest
+in spite of Mr. Wincher’s care,’ answered Lucius
+gravely.</p>
+
+<p>He went on to relate the particulars of the robbery.
+The old man got out of bed while he was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</span>
+talking, and began to drag on his clothes with
+trembling hands.</p>
+
+<p>‘I will not lie here to be plundered,’ he exclaimed,
+profoundly agitated.</p>
+
+<p>‘Now, that is what I feared,’ cried Lucius. ‘If
+you do not obey me implicitly, I shall repent having
+told you the truth. You must remain in this room
+till you are strong enough to leave it. You can
+surely trust me to protect the property in which your
+generous confidence has given me the strongest
+interest.’</p>
+
+<p>‘True, you are as much interested as I am,’
+muttered the old man; ‘nay, more so, for life is
+before you, and is nearly over with me. <em>My</em> interest
+in these things is a vanishing one; yet I doubt if
+there would be rest for me in the grave if those fruits
+of my life’s labour were in jeopardy.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Will you trust me to take care of this house and
+all it contains?’ asked Lucius anxiously. ‘Will you
+give me authority to dismiss these Winchers, whom
+I cannot but suspect of complicity with the thief,
+whoever he may be?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, dismiss them. They have robbed me, no
+doubt. I was a fool to trust old Wincher with the
+key of that chest; but he has served me so long, and
+I thought there was a dog-like fidelity in his nature,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</span>
+that he would be content to grub on to the end of
+his days, asking nothing more than food and shelter.
+I thought it was against his interests to rob me. At
+his age a man should cling to his home as a mussel
+sticks to his rock. The fellow is as sober as an
+anchorite. One would suppose he could have no
+motive for dishonesty. But you had better dismiss
+him.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I have your permission to do so?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Thank you, sir. It seems a hard thing, but I
+am convinced it is the right course. I will get your
+house taken good care of, depend upon it.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I trust you implicitly,’ answered the old man,
+with a faint sigh, half fatigue, half despondency.
+‘You are the only friend I have upon earth—except
+Lucille. Why has she not been to me this morning?’</p>
+
+<p>‘She is not very well. Anxiety and want of rest
+have prostrated her for a little while.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Ill!’ said Mr. Sivewright anxiously; ‘that is
+bad. Poor little Lucille!’</p>
+
+<p>‘Pray don’t be uneasy about her; be assured I
+shall be watchful.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, I am sure of that.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I have brought in a nurse—now, you mustn’t
+be angry with me, though in this matter I have disobeyed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</span>
+you—a thoroughly honest, competent woman,
+who will attend to you and Lucille too.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I detest strangers,’ said Mr. Sivewright; ‘but
+I suppose I must submit to the inevitable.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Now, I want your permission to remain in the
+house for a night or two. I would stay altogether,
+were it not for the possibility of night patients. I can
+occupy the little room next this, and shall be at hand
+to attend you. Lucille has returned to her own room.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Do as you please,’ answered Mr. Sivewright with
+wonderful resignation, ‘so long as you protect me
+from robbery.’</p>
+
+<p>‘With God’s help I will protect you from every
+peril. By the way, since you say my medicine has
+done you no good, you shall take no more. Your
+food shall be prepared according to my directions,
+and brought you by Mrs. Milderson, the nurse. I
+told you some time ago that yours was a case in
+which I attached more importance to diet than to
+drugs. And now I’ll go and settle matters with
+Mr. and Mrs. Wincher.’</p>
+
+<p>He had not far to go. Mrs. Wincher was still
+in the corridor, waiting for him with stony visage
+and folded arms.</p>
+
+<p>‘I should be glad to see your husband, Mrs.
+Wincher,’ said Lucius.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘My good gentleman is down-stairs, sir, and will
+be happy to wait upon you direckly minute.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius went down to the hall with Mrs. Wincher.
+Her good gentleman was pottering about among his
+master’s treasures, with a dusting-brush.</p>
+
+<p>‘Mr. Wincher,’ said Lucius without preamble,
+‘I have come to the determination that, under the
+very unpleasant circumstances which have arisen in
+this house, plain sailing is the wisest course. I have
+therefore informed Mr. Sivewright of the robbery.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Indeed, sir! I should have thought you’d
+hardly have ventured that while he’s so ill. And
+how did he take it?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Better than I expected: but he agreed with me
+as to the necessity of a step which I proposed to
+him.’</p>
+
+<p>‘What might that be, sir?’</p>
+
+<p>‘That you and Mrs. Wincher should immediately
+leave this house.’</p>
+
+<p>The old man, who was feeble and somewhat
+bowed with age and hard work, drew himself up
+with an offended dignity that might have become a
+prince of the blood-royal.</p>
+
+<p>‘If that is my master’s decision I am ready to go,
+sir,’ he said, without a quaver in his weak old voice.
+‘If that is my master’s decision after five-and-twenty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</span>
+years’ faithful service, I cannot go too soon.
+Deborah, get our bits of things together, my dear,
+as fast as you conveniently can, while I go out and
+look about me for a room.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Lemaître, at his best, was not a finer actor than
+this old man,’ thought Lucius. ‘It is the perfection
+of art.’</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Wincher only stared and breathed hard.
+In her, indignation had paralysed the power of
+speech.</p>
+
+<p>‘If it were a mere question of the robbery,’ said
+Lucius, ‘I should not have counselled your dismissal.
+It would have gone hard with me if, once put upon
+my guard, I could not have protected the property
+in this house. But there is one thing more valuable
+than a man’s property, and more difficult to protect,
+and that is his life. The reason of your dismissal,
+Mr. Wincher, is that there has been an attempt
+made by some one in this house—and you
+best know how many it contains—to poison your
+old master.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Poison!’ echoed Jacob Wincher helplessly.</p>
+
+<p>‘Yes, I discovered arsenic last night in a half-filled
+medicine bottle which I took from your master’s
+room. Some one had introduced arsenic into
+the medicine since it left my hands. Mr. Sivewright’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</span>
+symptoms of late have been those of arsenical
+poisoning. Under such circumstances you can
+hardly wonder that I wish to bring about a change
+of occupants in this house.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No, sir,’ answered the old man, ‘I don’t wonder.
+Poison!—a poisoner at work in this house
+where we have watched so faithfully! It is too horrible.
+It is a mystery beyond my power to fathom.
+There have been only three of us in the house—my
+wife, and Miss Lucille, and me. And you think it
+was I or my wife that put poison into that bottle.
+Well, I can’t wonder at that. It couldn’t be Miss
+Lucille, so it lies between my wife and me. We’re
+best out of the house, sir, after that. This house is
+no place for us. I hope you’ll contrive to take good
+care of my master when we’re gone, and I pray God
+that it may please Him in His good time to enlighten
+your mind about us, and to show, somehow,
+that neither I nor my good lady have tried to murder
+the master we’ve served faithfully for a quarter of
+a century.’</p>
+
+<p>‘If you are innocent, Mr. Wincher, I trust that
+fact may be speedily demonstrated. In the mean
+time you can hardly wonder that I think this house
+a safer place without your presence in it.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No, sir, that’s natural enough. Deborah, my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</span>
+good soul, will you get together those things of ours?
+The sooner the better.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I’ll do what I can,’ answered Mrs. Wincher,
+with a gasp; ‘but I don’t feel as if I had the proper
+use of my limbs.’</p>
+
+<p>‘There’s the catalogue, sir,’ suggested Jacob
+Wincher. ‘Hadn’t we better go through that before
+I leave, and see what is right and what isn’t?
+It’ll take some time, but it will be for the satisfaction
+of both parties. I’ve one catalogue, sir, and Mr. Sivewright
+another.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You are vastly conscientious, sir,’ said Lucius;
+‘but as it would take at least a day to go through
+these things, and as my ignorance unfits me for the
+task, I think I will take my chance, and not oppose
+any hindrance to your prompt departure. I’ll wait
+hereabouts till Mrs. Wincher is ready.’</p>
+
+<p>‘As you please, sir. In that case I’ll go off at
+once and look about me for a room.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Stay, Mr. Wincher,’ cried Lucius, as the old man
+shuffled off towards the door; ‘I should be sorry
+for you to leave this house penniless. Here are a
+couple of sovereigns, which will enable you to live
+for a week or so while you look for a new service.’</p>
+
+<p>‘A new service, sir!’ echoed Jacob Wincher bitterly.
+‘Do you think that at my age situations are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</span>
+plentiful? No, sir, thank you; I couldn’t take money
+from you, not if it was to save me from starvation.
+I shall seek no new service. Mr. Sivewright
+was never a very liberal paymaster, and since we
+came to this house he has given us no wages except
+a small allowance for our food. But our wants are
+few, and we contrived to save the best part of our
+wages while we were in Bond-street. No, sir, I am
+not afraid to face the world, hard as it is to the old.
+I shall get a few odd jobs to do among the poor
+folks, I daresay, even without a character, and I
+shall be able to rub along somehow.’</p>
+
+<p>Thus refusing Lucius’s proffered aid, Jacob Wincher
+put on his hat and went out. Lucius went into
+the room which contained the chief part of Mr. Sivewright’s
+collection, and waited there with the door
+open until Mr. Wincher’s good lady should make
+her appearance, ready for departure.</p>
+
+<p>He looked round at the chaotic mass of property
+wonderingly. How much had been plundered?
+The shabby old glass cases of china seemed full
+enough, yet who could tell how they had been
+thinned by the dexterous hand of one who knew the
+exact value of each separate object? It seemed hard
+that the fruit of Homer Sivewright’s toil should
+have been thus lessened; it seemed strange that he,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</span>
+who was a professed cynic, should have so entirely
+trusted his old servant, only to be victimised by
+him at last.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Wincher made her appearance, after an interval
+of about half an hour, laden with three bundles
+of various shapes and sizes, but all of the
+limpest description, two bandboxes, an ancient and
+dilapidated umbrella, a small collection of hardware
+in a hamper without a lid, a faded Paisley
+shawl across her arm, a bottle-green cloth cloak of
+antediluvian shape and style, and sundry small oddments
+in the way of pattens, a brown-crockery teapot,
+a paste-board, and a pepperbox.</p>
+
+<p>‘They’re our few little comforts, sir,’ she said
+apologetically, as divers of these minor objects slid
+from her grasp and rolled upon the stone floor of the
+hall. ‘I suppose if we was sent to Newgate as
+pisoners we shouldn’t be allowed to have ’em; but
+as there’s no crime brought against us <em>yet</em>’—with
+profoundest irony—‘I’ve took the liberty to bring
+’em. Perhaps you’d like to look through my bundles,
+Dr. Davory, to make sure as there’s none of
+the bricklebrack hidden amongst my good gentleman’s
+wardrobe.’</p>
+
+<p>‘No, thank you, Mrs. Wincher. I won’t trouble
+you to open your bundles,’ answered Lucius, whose<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</span>
+keen eye had taken note of the manner of goods
+contained in those flabby envelopes.</p>
+
+<p>Thus absolved from the necessity of exhibiting
+these treasures, Mrs. Wincher built them up in a
+neat pyramid by the side of the hall-door, with infinite
+pains, as if the monument were intended to be
+permanent, and then seated herself meekly on the
+lowest step of the staircase.</p>
+
+<p>‘I suppose as there’s no objections to my resting
+my pore feet a bit, Dr. Davory,’ she said plaintively,
+‘though me and my good gentleman is dismissed.’</p>
+
+<p>‘You are quite at liberty to rest yourself, Mrs.
+Wincher,’ replied Lucius. ‘But I don’t mean to
+take my eye off you till you’re out of this house,’
+he added mentally.</p>
+
+<p>He paced the hall and the room adjoining till the
+bell at the outer gate announced Jacob Wincher’s
+return. Mrs. Wincher went to admit her lord and
+master, who presently appeared with a small truck
+or hand-barrow, in which, aided by his wife, he deposited
+the pyramid of goods and chattels, which
+process involved a good deal more careful fitting-in
+of curiously-shaped objects into odd corners. Everything,
+however, having been finally adjusted to the
+satisfaction of both parties, Mr. Wincher reëntered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</span>
+the house for the last time, while Mrs. Wincher
+waited on the steps, and delivered the keys to Lucius.
+Every key was neatly labelled with a slip of
+parchment, whereon was inscribed its number in
+Homer Sivewright’s crabbed penmanship.</p>
+
+<p>‘Those are all the keys, sir, just as my master
+gave them to me when we first came here,’ said
+Jacob Wincher. ‘I’ve got a bit of a lodging. Perhaps
+you’d be kind enough to take down the address,
+as I should be glad to learn if ever you find out the
+real party that took the silver out of the chest, and
+likewise tampered with the medicine.’</p>
+
+<p>‘If ever I find any evidence of your innocence
+you shall hear of it, Mr. Wincher,’ answered Lucius
+gravely. ‘What is the address?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Mrs. Hickett’s, Crown-and-Anchor-alley, Bridge-street,
+sir; not a quarter of an hour’s walk from
+here.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius wrote the address in his pocket-book
+without another word.</p>
+
+<p>This last duty performed the Winchers departed,
+and Lucius felt that he had taken the one step most
+likely to insure the safety of his patient.</p>
+
+<p>‘If not they, who else?’ he said to himself,
+thinking of the arsenic in the medicine bottle.</p>
+
+<p>He went once more to Lucille’s room, but hardly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</span>
+crossed the threshold. The sick girl was sleeping,
+and the nurse gave a very fair account of her. He
+told Mrs. Milderson her duties—how she was to
+attend to Mr. Sivewright as well as to his granddaughter,
+and told her furthermore how he had just
+dismissed the old servants.</p>
+
+<p>‘I am going in search of some one to take their
+place,’ he said, having made up his mind upon that
+point some time ago.</p>
+
+<p>He went round the lower part of the house, tried
+all the keys, saw that all the doors were secured—those
+opening on the garden bolted and barred as
+firmly as if they had belonged to a besieged citadel.
+He looked through all the labels, but found no key
+to the staircase door up-stairs; a circumstance that
+annoyed him, as he had a particular desire to examine
+those rooms on the top story. Then, having made
+all safe, he went out, locking the hall-door and the
+iron gate after him, and proceeded straightway to
+Mr. Otranto’s office.</p>
+
+<p>Here he told that functionary exactly what he had
+done. Mr. Otranto chewed the end of his pen, and
+smiled upon his client with the calm smile of intellectual
+superiority.</p>
+
+<p>‘Now, I daresay you think you’ve been and gone
+and done a very clever thing,’ he said, when Lucius<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</span>
+had unbosomed himself; ‘but I can just tell you
+you’re on the wrong tack—a good hundred knots out
+of your course. That old party isn’t in the robbery;
+and as to the pison, it’s not for me to argue with a
+professional gent like you; no sorter should alter his
+crepidam, as we say in the Classics; but I wouldn’t
+mind laying even money that the pison is only your
+fancy. You’ve been worriting yourself about this
+blessed business till you’ve got nervous, so you goes
+and sniffs at the physic, and jumps at the conclusion
+that it’s poisoned.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I have not jumped at any conclusion,’ replied
+Lucius. ‘My opinion is supported by an infallible
+test.’</p>
+
+<p>He told Mr. Otranto that he wanted to find a
+thoroughly honest man and woman, who would take
+the place of the Winchers at Cedar House—a man
+who would act as night watchman, and a woman who
+would perform such trifling domestic duties as were
+needed. Mr. Otranto, who had minions of all kinds
+at his beck and call, did know of just such a couple—an
+ex-policeman, who had left the force on account of
+an accident that had lamed him, and a tidy body, the
+ex-policeman’s wife. If Mr. Davoren wished, they
+should be at Cedar House in two hours’ time.</p>
+
+<p>‘Let them meet me at the gate at three o’clock,’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</span>
+said Lucius. ‘I must go round among my patients
+in the mean while.’</p>
+
+<p>His day’s work still waited to be done, and it was
+long past twelve—dinner-time in the Shadrack district.
+He had to endure reproachful looks from some
+of his patients, but bore all with perfect good-temper,
+and did his very best for all. Happily the people
+believed in him, and were grateful for all the good he
+had done among them.</p>
+
+<p>At three o’clock he was at the iron gate, where he
+found Mr. Magsby, the ex-policeman, and his wife—a
+comfortable-looking young woman with a bundle
+and a baby, for which latter encumbrance Lucius
+had not bargained, and for which Mrs. Magsby duly
+apologised.</p>
+
+<p>‘Which Mr. Otranter may not have told you, sir,
+as I couldn’t leave the baby behind, but she’s as
+good a little dear as ever drew breath, and never
+cries, and in a large house will be no ill-convenience.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Perhaps not, if she never cries,’ said Lucius,
+‘but if she does cry, you must smother her, rather
+than let her voice be heard up-stairs.’ And then he
+touched the small cheek kindly with his finger, and
+smiled upon the little one, after a fashion which at
+once won Mrs. Magsby’s heart.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Magsby’s lameness was little more than a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</span>
+halt in his walk, and, although sufficient to disable
+him as a public servant, was no hindrance to him as
+a night-watchman. Altogether Lucius decided that
+the Magsbys would do. He inducted them in the
+gloomy old kitchen and the room with the presses,
+where Mr. and Mrs. Wincher’s turn-up bedstead
+yawned disconsolate and empty, and where there
+were such bits of humble furniture as would suffice
+for the absolute needs of life.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Magsby pronounced the apartments roomy
+and commodious, but somewhat wanting in cheerfulness.
+‘But me and Magsby have took care of all
+manner of houses,’ she added with resignation, ‘and
+we can make ourselves comfortable amost anywheres,
+purvided we’ve a bit o’ firing to bile the kettle for our
+cup o’ tea and a mouthful of victuals.’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius showed Mr. Magsby the premises—the door
+opening upon the hidden staircase, all the ins and outs
+of the place—and told him what was expected of him.</p>
+
+<p>After this induction of the Magsbys, he went up-stairs
+and saw Lucille. She was awake, but her
+mind still wandered. She looked at him with a far-off
+unrecognising gaze that went to his heart, and murmured
+some broken sentence, in which the name of
+‘father’ was the only word he could distinctly hear.</p>
+
+<p>‘Pray to our Father in heaven, dearest,’ said<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</span>
+Lucius, tenderly supporting the weary head, which
+moved so restlessly upon the pillow. ‘He is the only
+Father who never wrongs His children; in whose love
+and wisdom we can believe, come weal, come woe.’</p>
+
+<p>He stayed by the bedside a little while, gave his
+instructions to Mrs. Milderson, and then went to the
+other sick room.</p>
+
+<p>Here he found Mr. Sivewright, fretful and impatient,
+but decidedly improved since the suspension
+of the medicine; a fact which that gentleman dwelt
+upon in a somewhat cynical spirit.</p>
+
+<p>‘You may remember that at the beginning of
+our acquaintance I professed myself a sceptic with
+regard to medical science,’ he said with his harsh
+laugh, ‘and I cannot say that my experience even of
+your skill has been calculated to conquer my prejudices.
+You are a very good fellow, Lucius, but the only
+effect of your medicines for the last month or so has
+been to make me feel nearer death than ever I felt
+before. I seem to be twice the man I was since I
+left off that confounded tonic of yours.’</p>
+
+<p>‘I am very glad to hear it—not glad that the
+tonic has failed, but that you are better. Try to
+believe in me a little, however, in spite of this.’</p>
+
+<p>‘Have you sent away those thieves?’</p>
+
+<p>‘Mr. and Mrs. Wincher? Yes, they are gone.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</span></p>
+
+<p>‘So ends five-and-twenty years’ service! And
+I thought them faithful!’ said Mr. Sivewright with a
+sigh. ‘And by what models of honesty have you
+replaced these traitors?’</p>
+
+<p>Lucius explained his arrangements, to which
+Mr. Sivewright gave but doubtful approval.</p>
+
+<p>He inquired anxiously about Lucille, and seemed
+grieved to find that she was too ill to come to him as
+usual.</p>
+
+<p>‘Though for these many years past I have doubted
+the existence of any relationship between us, she has
+made herself dear to me somehow, in spite of myself.
+God knows I have tried to shut my heart against her.
+When my son abandoned me, I swore never to care
+for any living creature—never again to subject myself
+to the anguish that an ingrate can inflict.’</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<p class="center no-indent wsp fs90">END OF VOL. II.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<p class="center no-indent fs80 wsp">
+LONDON:<br>
+ROBSON AND SONS, PRINTERS, PANCRAS ROAD, N.W.<br>
+</p>
+<br>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter transnote">
+<h2 class="nobreak bold fs150" id="Transcribers_Notes">Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
+
+<table class="autotable">
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr">pg 8 Changed:</td>
+<td class="tdl">You loved this mam!</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr">to:</td>
+<td class="tdl">You loved this man!</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr">pg 152 Changed:</td>
+<td class="tdl">conger eel and mackarel were unpopular</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr">to:</td>
+<td class="tdl">conger eel and mackerel were unpopular</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr">pg 263 Changed:</td>
+<td class="tdl">having no farther business there</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr">to:</td>
+<td class="tdl">having no further business there</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+<br>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75876 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+book #75876 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/75876)