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diff --git a/1621.txt b/1621.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..1375c3e --- /dev/null +++ b/1621.txt @@ -0,0 +1,3960 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Miss or Mrs.?, by Wilkie Collins + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Miss or Mrs.? + +Author: Wilkie Collins + +Release Date: March 21, 2006 [EBook #1621] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MISS OR MRS.? *** + + + + +Produced by James Rusk and David Widger + + + + + +MISS OR MRS.? + +by Wilkie Collins + + + + +PERSONS OF THE STORY. + + Sir Joseph Graybrooke. . . . . . . . . .(Knight) + Richard Turlington . . . . (Of the Levant Trade) + Launcelot Linzie . .(Of the College of Surgeons) + James Dicas. . . . . .(Of the Roll of Attorneys) + Thomas Wildfang. . . . . .(Superannuated Seaman) + Miss Graybrooke. . . . . . (Sir Joseph's Sister) + Natalie. . . . . . . . . (Sir Joseph's Daughter) + Lady Winwood . . . . . . . .(Sir Joseph's Niece) + Amelia} Sophia}. (Lady Winwood's Stepdaughter's) + and Dorothea} + + + +Period: THE PRESENT TIME. Place: ENGLAND. + + + + +FIRST SCENE + +At Sea. + +The night had come to an end. The new-born day waited for its quickening +light in the silence that is never known on land--the silence before +sunrise, in a calm at sea. + +Not a breath came from the dead air. Not a ripple stirred on the +motionless water. Nothing changed but the softly-growing light; nothing +moved but the lazy mist, curling up to meet the sun, its master, on the +eastward sea. By fine gradations, the airy veil of morning thinned in +substance as it rose--thinned, till there dawned through it in the first +rays of sunlight the tall white sails of a Schooner Yacht. + +From stem to stern silence possessed the vessel--as silence possessed +the sea. + +But one living creature was on deck--the man at the helm, dozing +peaceably with his arm over the useless tiller. Minute by minute the +light grew, and the heat grew with it; and still the helmsman slumbered, +the heavy sails hung noiseless, the quiet water lay sleeping against +the vessel's sides. The whole orb of the sun was visible above the +water-line, when the first sound pierced its way through the morning +silence. From far off over the shining white ocean, the cry of a +sea-bird reached the yacht on a sudden out of the last airy circles of +the waning mist. + +The sleeper at the helm woke; looked up at the idle sails, and yawned +in sympathy with them; looked out at the sea on either side of him, and +shook his head obstinately at the superior obstinacy of the calm. + +"Blow, my little breeze!" said the man, whistling the sailor's +invocation to the wind softly between his teeth. "Blow, my little +breeze!" + +"How's her head?" cried a bold and brassy voice, hailing the deck from +the cabin staircase. + +"Anywhere you like, master; all round the compass." + +The voice was followed by the man. The owner of the yacht appeared on +deck. + +Behold Richard Turlington, Esq., of the great Levant firm of Pizzituti, +Turlington & Branca! Aged eight-and-thirty; standing stiffly and +sturdily at a height of not more than five feet six--Mr. Turlington +presented to the view of his fellow-creatures a face of the +perpendicular order of human architecture. His forehead was a straight +line, his upper lip was another, his chin was the straightest and the +longest line of all. As he turned his swarthy countenance eastward, +and shaded his light gray eyes from the sun, his knotty hand plainly +revealed that it had got him his living by its own labor at one time or +another in his life. Taken on the whole, this was a man whom it might +be easy to respect, but whom it would be hard to love. Better company at +the official desk than at the social table. Morally and physically--if +the expression may be permitted--a man without a bend in him. + +"A calm yesterday," grumbled Richard Turlington, looking with stubborn +deliberation all round him. "And a calm to-day. Ha! next season I'll +have the vessel fitted with engines. I hate this!" + +"Think of the filthy coals, and the infernal vibration, and leave your +beautiful schooner as she is. We are out for a holiday. Let the wind and +the sea take a holiday too." + +Pronouncing those words of remonstrance, a slim, nimble, curly-headed +young gentleman joined Richard Turlington on deck, with his clothes +under his arm, his towels in his hand, and nothing on him but the +night-gown in which he had stepped out of his bed. + +"Launcelot Linzie, you have been received on board my vessel in the +capacity of medical attendant on Miss Natalie Graybrooke, at her +father's request. Keep your place, if you please. When I want your +advice, I'll ask you for it." Answering in those terms, the elder man +fixed his colorless gray eyes on the younger with an expression which +added plainly, "There won't be room enough in this schooner much longer +for me and for you." + +Launcelot Linzie had his reasons (apparently) for declining to let his +host offend him on any terms whatever. + +"Thank you!" he rejoined, in a tone of satirical good humor. "It isn't +easy to keep my place on board your vessel. I can't help presuming +to enjoy myself as if I was the owner. The life is such a new one--to +_me!_ It's so delightfully easy, for instance, to wash yourself here. +On shore it's a complicated question of jugs and basins and tubs; one is +always in danger of breaking something, or spoiling something. Here you +have only to jump out of bed, to run up on deck, and to do this!" + +He turned, and scampered to the bows of the vessel. In one instant he +was out of his night-gown, in another he was on the bulwark, in a third +he was gamboling luxuriously in sixty fathoms of salt-water. + +Turlington's eyes followed him with a reluctant, uneasy attention as +he swam round the vessel, the only moving object in view. Turlington's +mind, steady and slow in all its operations, set him a problem to be +solved, on given conditions, as follows: + +"Launcelot Linzie is fifteen years younger than I am. Add to that, +Launcelot Linzie is Natalie Graybrooke's cousin. Given those two +advantages--Query: Has he taken Natalie's fancy?" + +Turning that question slowly over and over in his mind, Richard +Turlington seated himself in a corner at the stern of the vessel. He +was still at work on the problem, when the young surgeon returned to his +cabin to put the finishing touches to his toilet. He had not reached the +solution when the steward appeared an hour later and said, "Breakfast is +ready, sir!" + +They were a party of five round the cabin table. + +First, Sir Joseph Graybrooke. Inheritor of a handsome fortune made by +his father and his grandfather in trade. Mayor, twice elected, of a +thriving provincial town. Officially privileged, while holding that +dignity, to hand a silver trowel to a royal personage condescending to +lay a first stone of a charitable edifice. Knighted, accordingly, in +honor of the occasion. Worthy of the honor and worthy of the occasion. +A type of his eminently respectable class. Possessed of an amiable, rosy +face, and soft, silky white hair. Sound in his principles; tidy in his +dress; blessed with moderate politics and a good digestion--a harmless, +healthy, spruce, speckless, weak-minded old man. + +Secondly, Miss Lavinia Graybrooke, Sir Joseph's maiden sister. +Personally, Sir Joseph in petticoats. If you knew one you knew the +other. + +Thirdly, Miss Natalie Graybrooke--Sir Joseph's only child. + +She had inherited the personal appearance and the temperament of her +mother--dead many years since. There had been a mixture of Negro +blood and French blood in the late Lady Graybrooke's family, settled +originally in Martinique. Natalie had her mother's warm dusky color, her +mother's superb black hair, and her mother's melting, lazy, lovely +brown eyes. At fifteen years of age (dating from her last birthday) she +possessed the development of the bosom and limbs which in England is +rarely attained before twenty. Everything about the girl--except her +little rosy ears--was on a grand Amazonian scale. Her shapely hand was +long and large; her supple waist was the waist of a woman. The indolent +grace of all her movements had its motive power in an almost masculine +firmness of action and profusion of physical resource. This remarkable +bodily development was far from being accompanied by any corresponding +development of character. Natalie's manner was the gentle, innocent +manner of a young girl. She had her father's sweet temper ingrafted on +her mother's variable Southern nature. She moved like a goddess, and she +laughed like a child. Signs of maturing too rapidly--of outgrowing her +strength, as the phrase went--had made their appearance in Sir +Joseph's daughter during the spring. The family doctor had suggested +a sea-voyage, as a wise manner of employing the fine summer months. +Richard Turlington's yacht was placed at her disposal, with Richard +Turlington himself included as one of the fixtures of the vessel. +With her father and her aunt to keep up round her the atmosphere of +home--with Cousin Launcelot (more commonly known as "Launce") to +carry out, if necessary, the medical treatment prescribed by superior +authority on shore--the lovely invalid embarked on her summer cruise, +and sprang up into a new existence in the life-giving breezes of +the sea. After two happy months of lazy coasting round the shores of +England, all that remained of Natalie's illness was represented by a +delicious languor in her eyes, and an utter inability to devote herself +to anything which took the shape of a serious occupation. As she sat +at the cabin breakfast-table that morning, in her quaintly-made sailing +dress of old-fashioned nankeen--her inbred childishness of manner +contrasting delightfully with the blooming maturity of her form--the man +must have been trebly armed indeed in the modern philosophy who could +have denied that the first of a woman's rights is the right of being +beautiful; and the foremost of a woman's merits, the merit of being +young! + +The other two persons present at the table were the two gentlemen who +have already appeared on the deck of the yacht. + +"Not a breath of wind stirring!" said Richard Turlington. "The weather +has got a grudge against us. We have drifted about four or five miles in +the last eight-and-forty hours. You will never take another cruise with +me--you must be longing to get on shore." + +He addressed himself to Natalie; plainly eager to make himself agreeable +to the young lady--and plainly unsuccessful in producing any impression +on her. She made a civil answer; and looked at her tea-cup, instead of +looking at Richard Turlington. + +"You might fancy yourself on shore at this moment," said Launce. "The +vessel is as steady as a house, and the swing-table we are eating our +breakfast on is as even as your dining-room table at home." + +He too addressed himself to Natalie, but without betraying the anxiety +to please her which had been shown by the other. For all that, _he_ +diverted the girl's attention from her tea-cup; and _his_ idea instantly +awakened a responsive idea in Natalie's mind. + +"It will be so strange on shore," she said, "to find myself in a room +that never turns on one side, and to sit at a table that never tilts +down to my knees at one time, or rises up to my chin at another. How I +shall miss the wash of the water at my ear, and the ring of the bell +on deck when I am awake at night on land! No interest there in how the +wind blows, or how the sails are set. No asking your way of the sun, +when you are lost, with a little brass instrument and a morsel of pencil +and paper. No delightful wandering wherever the wind takes you, without +the worry of planning beforehand where you are to go. Oh how I shall +miss the dear, changeable, inconstant sea! And how sorry I am I'm not a +man and a sailor!" + +This to the guest admitted on board on sufferance, and not one word of +it addressed, even by chance, to the owner of the yacht! + +Richard Turlington's heavy eyebrows contracted with an unmistakable +expression of pain. + +"If this calm weather holds," he went on, addressing himself to Sir +Joseph, "I am afraid, Graybrooke, I shall not be able to bring you back +to the port we sailed from by the end of the week." + +"Whenever you like, Richard," answered the old gentleman, resignedly. +"Any time will do for me." + +"Any time within reasonable limits, Joseph," said Miss Lavinia, +evidently feeling that her brother was conceding too much. She spoke +with Sir Joseph's amiable smile and Sir Joseph's softly-pitched voice. +Two twin babies could hardly have been more like one another. + +While these few words were being exchanged among the elders, a private +communication was in course of progress between the two young people +under the cabin table. Natalie's smartly-slippered foot felt its way +cautiously inch by inch over the carpet till it touched Launce's boot. +Launce, devouring his breakfast, instantly looked up from his plate, +and then, at a second touch from Natalie, looked down again in a violent +hurry. After pausing to make sure that she was not noticed, Natalie +took up her knife. Under a perfectly-acted pretense of toying with it +absently, in the character of a young lady absorbed in thought, she +began dividing a morsel of ham left on the edge of her plate, into six +tiny pieces. Launce's eye looked in sidelong expectation at the divided +and subdivided ham. He was evidently waiting to see the collection of +morsels put to some telegraphic use, previously determined on between +his neighbor and himself. + +In the meanwhile the talk proceeded among the other persons at the +breakfast-table. Miss Lavinia addressed herself to Launce. + +"Do you know, you careless boy, you gave me a fright this morning? I was +sleeping with my cabin window open, and I was awoke by an awful splash +in the water. I called for the stewardess. I declare I thought somebody +had fallen overboard!" + +Sir Joseph looked up briskly; his sister had accidentally touched on an +old association. + +"Talk of falling overboard," he began, "reminds me of an extraordinary +adventure--" + +There Launce broke in, making his apologies. + +"It shan't occur again, Miss Lavinia," he said. "To-morrow morning I'll +oil myself all over, and slip into the water as silently as a seal." + +"Of an extraordinary adventure," persisted Sir Joseph, "which happened +to me many years ago, when I was a young man. Lavinia?" + +He stopped, and looked interrogatively at his sister. Miss Graybrooke +nodded her head responsively, and settled herself in her chair, as if +summoning her attention in anticipation of a coming demand on it. To +persons well acquainted with the brother and sister these proceedings +were ominous of an impending narrative, protracted to a formidable +length. The two always told a story in couples, and always differed +with each other about the facts, the sister politely contradicting +the brother when it was Sir Joseph's story, and the brother politely +contradicting the sister when it was Miss Lavinia's story. Separated one +from the other, and thus relieved of their own habitual interchange +of contradiction, neither of them had ever been known to attempt the +relation of the simplest series of events without breaking down. + +"It was five years before I knew you, Richard," proceeded Sir Joseph. + +"Six years," said Miss Graybrooke. + +"Excuse me, Lavinia." + +"No, Joseph, I have it down in my diary." + +"Let us waive the point." (Sir Joseph invariably used this formula as a +means of at once conciliating his sister, and getting a fresh start for +his story.) "I was cruising off the Mersey in a Liverpool pilot-boat. I +had hired the boat in company with a friend of mine, formerly notorious +in London society, under the nickname (derived from the peculiar brown +color of his whiskers) of 'Mahogany Dobbs.'" + +"The color of his liveries, Joseph, not the color of his whiskers." + +"My dear Lavinia, you are thinking of 'Sea-green Shaw,' so called from +the extraordinary liveries he adopted for his servants in the year when +he was sheriff." + +"I think not, Joseph." + +"I beg your pardon, Lavinia." + +Richard Turlington's knotty fingers drummed impatiently on the table. He +looked toward Natalie. She was idly arranging her little morsels of +ham in a pattern on her plate. Launcelot Linzie, still more idly, was +looking at the pattern. Seeing what he saw now, Richard solved the +problem which had puzzled him on deck. It was simply impossible that +Natalie's fancy could be really taken by such an empty-headed fool as +that! + +Sir Joseph went on with his story: + +"We were some ten or a dozen miles off the mouth of the Mersey--" + +"Nautical miles, Joseph." + +"It doesn't matter, Lavinia." + +"Excuse me, brother, the late great and good Doctor Johnson said +accuracy ought always to be studied even in the most trifling things." + +"They were common miles, Lavinia." + +"They were nautical miles, Joseph." + +"Let us waive the point. Mahogany Dobbs and I happened to be below in +the cabin, occupied--" + +Here Sir Joseph paused (with his amiable smile) to consult his +memory. Miss Lavinia waited (with _her_ amiable smile) for the coming +opportunity of setting her brother right. At the same moment Natalie +laid down her knife and softly touched Launce under the table. When +she thus claimed his attention the six pieces of ham were arranged as +follows in her plate: Two pieces were placed opposite each other, and +four pieces were ranged perpendicularly under them. Launce looked, and +twice touched Natalie under the table. Interpreted by the Code agreed +on between the two, the signal in the plate meant, "I must see you in +private." And Launce's double touch answered, "After breakfast." + +Sir Joseph proceeded with his story. Natalie took up her knife again. +Another signal coming! + +"We were both down in the cabin, occupied in finishing our dinner--" + +"Just sitting down to lunch, Joseph." + +"My dear! I ought to know." + +"I only repeat what I heard, brother. The last time you told the story, +you and your friend were sitting down to lunch." + +"We won't particularize, Lavinia. Suppose we say occupied over a meal?" + +"If it is of no more importance than that, Joseph, it would be surely +better to leave it out altogether." + +"Let us waive the point. Well, we were suddenly alarmed by a shout on +deck, 'Man over-board!' We both rushed up the cabin stairs, naturally +under the impression that one of our crew had fallen into the sea: an +impression shared, I ought to add, by the man at the helm, who had given +the alarm." + +Sir Joseph paused again. He was approaching one of the great dramatic +points in his story, and was naturally anxious to present it as +impressively as possible. He considered with himself, with his head a +little on one side. Miss Lavinia considered with _herself_, with _her_ +head a little on one side. Natalie laid down her knife again, and again +touched Launce under the table. This time there were five pieces of ham +ranged longitudinally on the plate, with one piece immediately under +them at the center of the line. Interpreted by the Code, this signal +indicated two ominous words, "Bad news." Launce looked significantly +at the owner of the yacht (meaning of the look, "Is he at the bottom of +it?"). Natalie frowned in reply (meaning of the frown, "Yes, he is"). +Launce looked down again into the plate. Natalie instantly pushed all +the pieces of ham together in a little heap (meaning of the heap, "No +more to say"). + +"Well?" said Richard Turlington, turning sharply on Sir Joseph. "Get on +with your story. What next?" + +Thus far he had not troubled himself to show even a decent pretense of +interest in his old friend's perpetually-interrupted narrative. It was +only when Sir Joseph had reached his last sentence--intimating that the +man overboard might turn out in course of time not to be a man of the +pilot-boat's crew--it was only then that Turlington sat up in his chair, +and showed signs of suddenly feeling a strong interest in the progress +of the story. + +Sir Joseph went on: + +"As soon as we got on deck, we saw the man in the water, astern. Our +vessel was hove up in the wind, and the boat was lowered. The master and +one of the men took the oars. All told, our crew were seven in number. +Two away in the boat, a third at the helm, and, to my amazement, when +I looked round, the other four behind me making our number complete. +At the same moment Mahogany Dobbs, who was looking through a telescope, +called out, 'Who the devil can he be? The man is floating on a hen-coop, +and we have got nothing of the sort on board this pilot-boat.'" + +The one person present who happened to notice Richard Turlington's +face when those words were pronounced was Launcelot Linzie. He--and he +alone--saw the Levant trader's swarthy complexion fade slowly to a +livid ashen gray; his eyes the while fixing themselves on Sir Joseph +Graybrooke with a furtive glare in them like the glare in the eyes of a +wild beast. Apparently conscious that Launce was looking at him--though +he never turned his head Launce's way--he laid his elbow on the table, +lifted his arm, and so rested his face on his hand, while the story went +on, as to screen it effectually from the young surgeon's view. + +"The man was brought on board," proceeded Sir Joseph, "sure enough, with +a hen-coop--on which he had been found floating. The poor wretch was +blue with terror and exposure in the water; he fainted when we lifted +him on deck. When he came to himself he told us a horrible story. He was +a sick and destitute foreign seaman, and he had hidden himself in the +hold of an English vessel (bound to a port in his native country) which +had sailed from Liverpool that morning. He had been discovered, and +brought before the captain. The captain, a monster in human form, if +ever there was one yet--" + +Before the next word of the sentence could pass Sir Joseph's lips, +Turlington startled the little party in the cabin by springing suddenly +to his feet. + +"The breeze!" he cried; "the breeze at last!" + +As he spoke, he wheeled round to the cabin door so as to turn his back +on his guests, and hailed the deck. + +"Which way is the wind?" + +"There is not a breath of wind, sir." + +Not the slightest movement in the vessel had been perceptible in the +cabin; not a sound had been audible indicating the rising of the breeze. +The owner of the yacht--accustomed to the sea, capable, if necessary, +of sailing his own vessel--had surely committed a strange mistake! He +turned again to his friends, and made his apologies with an excess of +polite regret far from characteristic of him at other times and under +other circumstances. + +"Go on," he said to Sir Joseph, when he had got to the end of his +excuses; "I never heard such an interesting story in my life. Pray go +on!" + +The request was not an easy one to comply with. Sir Joseph's ideas +had been thrown into confusion. Miss Lavinia's contradictions (held in +reserve) had been scattered beyond recall. Both brother and sister were, +moreover, additionally hindered in recovering the control of their own +resources by the look and manner of their host. He alarmed, instead +of encouraging the two harmless old people, by fronting them almost +fiercely, with his elbows squared on the table, and his face expressive +of a dogged resolution to sit there and listen, if need be, for the rest +of his life. Launce was the person who set Sir Joseph going again. After +first looking attentively at Richard, he took his uncle straight back to +the story by means of a question, thus: + +"You don't mean to say that the captain of the ship threw the man +overboard?" + +"That is just what he did, Launce. The poor wretch was too ill to work +his passage. The captain declared he would have no idle foreign vagabond +in his ship to eat up the provisions of Englishmen who worked. With his +own hands he cast the hen-coop into the water, and (assisted by one of +his sailors) he threw the man after it, and told him to float back to +Liverpool with the evening tide." + +"A lie!" cried Turlington, addressing himself, not to Sir Joseph, but to +Launce. + +"Are you acquainted with the circumstances?" asked Launce, quietly. + +"I know nothing about the circumstances. I say, from my own experience, +that foreign sailors are even greater blackguards than English sailors. +The man had met with an accident, no doubt. The rest of his story was a +lie, and the object of it was to open Sir Joseph's purse." + +Sir Joseph mildly shook his head. + +"No lie, Richard. Witnesses proved that the man had spoken the truth." + +"Witnesses? Pooh! More liars, you mean." + +"I went to the owners of the vessel," pursued Sir Joseph. "I got from +them the names of the officers and the crew, and I waited, leaving the +case in the hands of the Liverpool police. The ship was wrecked at the +mouth of the Amazon, but the crew and the cargo were saved. The men +belonging to Liverpool came back. They were a bad set, I grant you. But +they were examined separately about the treatment of the foreign sailor, +and they all told the same story. They could give no account of their +captain, nor of the sailor who had been his accomplice in the crime, +except that they had not embarked in the ship which brought the rest of +the crew to England. Whatever may have become of the captain since, he +certainly never returned to Liverpool." + +"Did you find out his name?" + +The question was asked by Turlington. Even Sir Joseph, the least +observant of men, noticed that it was put with a perfectly unaccountable +irritability of manner. + +"Don't be angry, Richard." said the old gentleman. "What is there to be +angry about?" + +"I don't know what you mean. I'm not angry--I'm only curious. _Did_ you +find out who he was?" + +"I did. His name was Goward. He was well known at Liverpool as a very +clever and a very dangerous man. Quite young at the time I am speaking +of, and a first-rate sailor; famous for taking command of unseaworthy +ships and vagabond crews. Report described him to me as having made +considerable sums of money in that way, for a man in his position; +serving firms, you know, with a bad name, and running all sorts of +desperate risks. A sad ruffian, Richard! More than once in trouble, on +both sides of the Atlantic, for acts of violence and cruelty. Dead, I +dare say, long since." + +"Or possibly," said Launce, "alive, under another name, and thriving in +a new way of life, with more desperate risks in it, of some other sort." + +"Are _you_ acquainted with the circumstances?" asked Turlington, +retorting Launce's question on him, with a harsh ring of defiance in his +brassy voice. + +"What became of the poor foreign sailor, papa?" said Natalie, purposely +interrupting Launce before he could meet the question angrily asked of +him, by an angry reply. + +"We made a subscription, and spoke to his consul, my dear. He went back +to his country, poor fellow, comfortably enough." + +"And there is an end of Sir Joseph's story," said Turlington, rising +noisily from his chair. "It's a pity we haven't got a literary man on +board--he would make a novel of it." He looked up at the skylight as he +got on his feet. "Here is the breeze, this time," he exclaimed, "and no +mistake!" + +It was true. At last the breeze had come. The sails flapped, the main +boom swung over with a thump, and the stagnant water, stirred at last, +bubbled merrily past the vessel's sides. + +"Come on deck, Natalie, and get some fresh air," said Miss Lavinia, +leading the way to the cabin door. + +Natalie held up the skirt of her nankeen dress, and exhibited the purple +trimming torn away over an extent of some yards. + +"Give me half an hour first, aunt, in my cabin," she said, "to mend +this." + +Miss Lavinia elevated her venerable eyebrows in amazement. + +"You have done nothing but tear your dresses, my dear, since you have +been in Mr. Turlington's yacht. Most extraordinary! I have torn none of +mine during the whole cruise." + +Natalie's dark color deepened a shade. She laughed, a little uneasily. +"I am so awkward on board ship," she replied, and turned away and shut +herself up in her cabin. + +Richard Turlington produced his case of cigars. + +"Now is the time," he said to Sir Joseph, "for the best cigar of the +day--the cigar after breakfast. Come on deck." + +"You will join us, Launce?" said Sir Joseph. + +"Give me half an hour first over my books," Launce replied. "I mustn't +let my medical knowledge get musty at sea, and I might not feel inclined +to study later in the day." + +"Quite right, my dear boy, quite right." + +Sir Joseph patted his nephew approvingly on the shoulder. Launce turned +away on _his_ side, and shut himself up in his cabin. + +The other three ascended together to the deck. + + + + +SECOND SCENE. + +The Store-Room. + +Persons possessed of sluggish livers and tender hearts find two serious +drawbacks to the enjoyment of a cruise at sea. It is exceedingly +difficult to get enough walking exercise; and it is next to impossible +(where secrecy is an object) to make love without being found out. +Reverting for the moment to the latter difficulty only, life within the +narrow and populous limits of a vessel may be defined as essentially +life in public. From morning to night you are in your neighbor's way, or +your neighbor is in your way. As a necessary result of these conditions, +the rarest of existing men may be defined as the man who is capable +of stealing a kiss at sea without discovery. An inbred capacity for +stratagem of the finest sort; inexhaustible inventive resources; +patience which can flourish under superhuman trials; presence of mind +which can keep its balance victoriously under every possible stress of +emergency--these are some of the qualifications which must accompany +Love on a cruise, when Love embarks in the character of a contraband +commodity not duly entered on the papers of the ship. + +Having established a Code of Signals which enabled them to communicate +privately, while the eyes and ears of others were wide open on every +side of them, Natalie and Launce were next confronted by the more +serious difficulty of finding a means of meeting together at stolen +interviews on board the yacht. Possessing none of those precious +moral qualifications already enumerated as the qualifications of an +accomplished lover at sea, Launce had proved unequal to grapple with the +obstacles in his way. Left to her own inventive resources, Natalie +had first suggested the young surgeon's medical studies as Launce's +unanswerable excuse for shutting himself up at intervals in the lower +regions, and had then hit on the happy idea of tearing her trimmings, +and condemning herself to repair her own carelessness, as the +all-sufficient reason for similar acts of self-seclusion on her side. +In this way the lovers contrived, while the innocent ruling authorities +were on deck, to meet privately below them, on the neutral ground of the +main cabin; and there, by previous arrangement at the breakfast-table, +they were about to meet privately now. + +Natalie's door was, as usual on these occasions, the first that opened; +for this sound reason, that Natalie's quickness was the quickness to be +depended on in case of accident. + +She looked up at the sky-light. There were the legs of the two gentlemen +and the skirts of her aunt visible (and stationary) on the lee side of +the deck. She advanced a few steps and listened. There was a pause in +the murmur of the voices above. She looked up again. One pair of legs +(not her father's) had disappeared. Without an instant's hesitation, +Natalie darted back to her own door, just in time to escape Richard +Turlington descending the cabin stairs. All he did was to go to one +of the drawers under the main-cabin book-case and to take out a map, +ascending again immediately to the deck. Natalie's guilty conscience +rushed instantly, nevertheless, to the conclusion that Richard suspected +her. When she showed herself for the second time, instead of venturing +into the cabin, she called across it in a whisper, + +"Launce!" + +Launce appeared at his door. He was peremptorily checked before he could +cross the threshold. + +"Don't stir a step! Richard has been down in the cabin! Richard suspects +us!" + +"Nonsense! Come out." + +"Nothing will induce me, unless you can find some other place than the +cabin." + +Some other place? How easy to find it on land! How apparently impossible +at sea! There was the forecastle (full of men) at one end of the vessel. +There was the sail room (full of sails) at the other. There was the +ladies' cabin (used as the ladies' dressing-room; inaccessible, in that +capacity, to every male human being on board). Was there any disposable +inclosed space to be found amidships? On one side there were the +sleeping berths of the sailing-master and his mate (impossible to +borrow _them_). On the other side was the steward's store-room. Launce +considered for a moment. The steward's store-room was just the thing! + +"Where are you going?" asked Natalie, as her lover made straight for a +closed door at the lower extremity of the main cabin. + +"To speak to the steward, darling. Wait one moment, and you will see me +again." + +Launce opened the store-room door, and discovered, not the steward, but +his wife, who occupied the situation of stewardess on board the vessel. +The accident was, in this case, a lucky one. Having stolen several +kisses at sea, and having been discovered (in every case) either by the +steward or his wife, Launce felt no difficulty in prefacing his request +to be allowed the use of the room by the plainest allusion to +his relations with Natalie. He could count on the silence of the +sympathizing authorities in this region of the vessel, having wisely +secured them as accomplices by the usual persuasion of the pecuniary +sort. Of the two, however, the stewardess, as a woman, was the more +likely to lend a ready ear to Launce's entreaties in his present +emergency. After a faint show of resistance, she consented, not only to +leave the room, but to keep her husband out of it, on the understanding +that it was not to be occupied for more than ten minutes. Launce made +the signal to Natalie at one door, while the stewardess went out by the +other. In a moment more the lovers were united in a private room. Is it +necessary to say in what language the proceedings were opened? Surely +not! There is an inarticulate language of the lips in use on these +occasions in which we are all proficient, though we sometimes forget it +in later life. Natalie seated herself on a locker. The tea, sugar, and +spices were at her back, a side of bacon swung over her head, and a net +full of lemons dangled before her face. It might not be roomy, but it +was snug and comfortable. + +"Suppose they call for the steward?" she suggested. ("Don't, Launce!") + +"Never mind. We shall be safe enough if they do. The steward has only to +show himself on deck, and they will suspect nothing." + +"Do be quiet, Launce! I have got dreadful news to tell you. And, +besides, my aunt will expect to see me with my braid sewn on again." + +She had brought her needle and thread with her. Whipping up the skirt +of her dress on her knee, she bent forward over it, and set herself +industriously to the repair of the torn trimming. In this position her +lithe figure showed charmingly its firm yet easy line. The needle, in +her dexterous brown fingers, flew through its work. The locker was a +broad one; Launce was able to seat himself partially behind her. In this +position who could have resisted the temptation to lift up her great +knot of broadly-plaited black hair, and to let the warm, dusky nape +of her neck disclose itself to view? Who, looking at it, could fail to +revile the senseless modern fashion of dressing the hair, which hides +the double beauty of form and color that nestles at the back of a +woman's neck? From time to time, as the interview proceeded, Launce's +lips emphasized the more important words occurring in his share of the +conversation on the soft, fragrant skin which the lifted hair let him +see at intervals. In Launce's place, sir, you would have done it too. + +"Now, Natalie, what is the news?" + +"He has spoken to papa, Launce." + +"Richard Turlington?" + +"Yes." + +"D--n him!" + +Natalie started. A curse addressed to the back of your neck, instantly +followed by a blessing in the shape of a kiss, is a little trying when +you are not prepared for it. + +"Don't do that again, Launce! It was while you were on deck smoking, +and when I was supposed to be fast asleep. I opened the ventilator in +my cabin door, dear, and I heard every word they said. He waited till my +aunt was out of the way, and he had got papa all to himself, and then he +began it in that horrible, downright voice of his--'Graybrooke! how much +longer am I to wait?'" + +"Did he say that?" + +"No more swearing, Launce! Those were the words. Papa didn't understand +them. He only said (poor dear!)--'Bless my soul, Richard, what do you +want?' Richard soon explained himself. 'Who could he be waiting for--but +Me?' Papa said something about my being so young. Richard stopped his +mouth directly. 'Girls were like fruit; some ripened soon, and some +ripened late. Some were women at twenty, and some were women at sixteen. +It was impossible to look at me, and not see that I was like a new being +after my two months at sea,' and so on and so on. Papa behaved like an +angel. He still tried to put it off. 'Plenty of time, Richard, plenty +of time.' 'Plenty of time for _her_' (was the wretch's answer to that); +'but not for _me_. Think of all I have to offer her' (as if I cared for +his money!); 'think how long I have looked upon her as growing up to +be my wife' (growing up for _him_--monstrous!), 'and don't keep me in +a state of uncertainty, which it gets harder and harder for a man in my +position to endure!' He was really quite eloquent. His voice trembled. +There is no doubt, dear, that he is very, very fond of me." + +"And you feel flattered by it, of course?" + +"Don't talk nonsense. I feel a little frightened at it, I can tell you." + +"Frightened? Did _you_ notice him this morning?" + +"I? When?" + +"When your father was telling that story about the man overboard." + +"No. What did he do? Tell me, Launce." + +"I'll tell you directly. How did it all end last night? Did your father +make any sort of promise?" + +"You know Richard's way; Richard left him no other choice. Papa had to +promise before he was allowed to go to bed." + +"To let Turlington marry you?" + +"Yes; the week after my next birthday." + +"The week after next Christmas-day?" + +"Yes. Papa is to speak to me as soon as we are at home again, and my +married life is to begin with the New Year." + +"Are you in earnest, Natalie? Do you really mean to say it has gone as +far as that?" + +"They have settled everything. The splendid establishment we are to set +up, the great income we are to have. I heard papa tell Richard that half +his fortune should go to me on my wedding-day. It was sickening to hear +how much they made of Money, and how little they thought of Love. What +am I to do, Launce?" + +"That's easily answered, my darling. In the first place, you are to make +up your mind not to marry Richard Turlington--" + +"Do talk reasonably. You know I have done all I could. I have told papa +that I can think of Richard as a friend, but not as a husband. He only +laughs at me, and says, 'Wait a little, and you will alter your opinion, +my dear.' You see Richard is everything to him; Richard has always +managed his affairs, and has saved him from losing by bad speculations; +Richard has known me from the time when I was a child; Richard has a +splendid business, and quantities of money. Papa can't even imagine that +I can resist Richard. I have tried my aunt; I have told her he is too +old for me. All she says is, 'Look at your father; he was much older +than your mother, and what a happy marriage theirs was.' Even if I said +in so many words, 'I won't marry Richard,' what good would it do to us? +Papa is the best and dearest old man in the world; but oh, he is so fond +of money! He believes in nothing else. He would be furious--yes, kind as +he is, he would be furious--if I even hinted that I was fond of _you_. +Any man who proposed to marry me--if he couldn't match the fortune that +I should bring him by a fortune of his own--would be a lunatic in papa's +eyes. He wouldn't think it necessary to answer him; he would ring the +bell, and have him shown out of the house. I am exaggerating nothing, +Launce; you know I am speaking the truth. There is no hope in the +future--that I can see--for either of us. + +"Have you done, Natalie? I have something to say on my side if you +have." + +"What is it?" + +"If things go on as they are going on now, shall I tell you how it will +end? It will end in your being Turlington's wife." + +"Never!" + +"So you say now; but you don't know what may happen between this and +Christmas-day. Natalie, there is only one way of making sure that you +will never marry Richard. Marry _me_." + +"Without papa's consent?" + +"Without saying a word to anybody till it's done." + +"Oh, Launce! Launce!" + +"My darling, every word you have said proves there is no other way. +Think of it, Natalie, think of it." + +There was a pause. Natalie dropped her needle and thread, and hid her +face in her hands. "If my poor mother was only alive," she said; "if I +only had an elder sister to advise me, and to take my part." + +She was evidently hesitating. Launce took a man's advantage of her +indecision. He pressed her without mercy. + +"Do you love me?" he whispered, with his lips close to her ear. + +"You know I do, dearly." + +"Put it out of Richard's power to part us, Natalie." + +"Part us? We are cousins: we have known each other since we were both +children. Even if he proposed parting us, papa wouldn't allow it." + +"Mark my words, he _will_ propose it. As for your father, Richard +has only to lift his finger and your father obeys him. My love, the +happiness of both our lives is at stake." He wound his arm round her, +and gently drew her head back on his bosom, "Other girls have done it, +darling," he pleaded, "why shouldn't you?" + +The effort to answer him was too much for her. She gave it up. A low +sigh fluttered through her lips. She nestled closer to him, and faintly +closed her eyes. The next instant she started up, trembling from head +to foot, and looked at the sky-light. Richard Turlington's voice was +suddenly audible on deck exactly above them. + +"Graybrooke, I want to say a word to you about Launcelot Linzie." + +Natalie's first impulse was to fly to the door. Hearing Launce's name on +Richard's lips, she checked herself. Something in Richard's tone roused +in her the curiosity which suspends fear. She waited, with her hand in +Launce's hand. + +"If you remember," the brassy voice went on, "I doubted the wisdom of +taking him with us on this cruise. You didn't agree with me, and, at +your express request, I gave way. I did wrong. Launcelot Linzie is a +very presuming young man." + +Sir Joseph's answer was accompanied by Sir Joseph's mellow laugh. + +"My dear Richard! Surely you are a little hard on Launce?" + +"You are not an observant man, Graybrooke. I am. I see signs of his +presuming with all of us, and especially with Natalie. I don't like +the manner in which he speaks to her and looks at her. He is unduly +familiar; he is insolently confidential. There must be a stop put to it. +In my position, my feelings ought to be regarded. I request you to check +the intimacy when we get on shore." + +Sir Joseph's next words were spoken more seriously. He expressed his +surprise. + +"My dear Richard, they are cousins, they have been playmates from +childhood. How _can_ you think of attaching the slightest importance to +anything that is said or done by poor Launce?" + +There was a good-humored contempt in Sir Joseph's reference to "poor +Launce" which jarred on his daughter. He might almost have been alluding +to some harmless domestic animal. Natalie's color deepened. Her hand +pressed Launce's hand gently. + +Turlington still persisted. + +"I must once more request--seriously request--that you will check this +growing intimacy. I don't object to your asking him to the house when +you ask other friends. I only wish you (and expect you) to stop his +'dropping in,' as it is called, any hour of the day or evening when he +may have nothing to do. Is that understood between us?" + +"If you make a point of it, Richard, of course it's understood between +us." + +Launce looked at Natalie, as weak Sir Joseph consented in those words. + +"What did I tell you?" he whispered. + +Natalie hung her head in silence. There was a pause in the conversation +on deck. The two gentlemen walked away slowly toward the forward part of +the vessel. + +Launce pursued his advantage. + +"Your father leaves us no alternative," he said. "The door will be +closed against me as soon as we get on shore. If I lose you, Natalie, I +don't care what becomes of me. My profession may go to the devil. I have +nothing left worth living for." + +"Hush! hush! don't talk in that way!" + +Launce tried the soothing influence of persuasion once more. + +"Hundreds and hundreds of people in our situation have married +privately--and have been forgiven afterward," he went on. "I won't ask +you to do anything in a hurry. I will be guided entirely by your wishes. +All I want to quiet my mind is to know that you are mine. Do, do, do +make me feel sure that Richard Turlington can't take you away from me." + +"Don't press me, Launce." She dropped on the locker. "See!" she said. +"It makes me tremble only to think of it!" + +"Who are you afraid of, darling? Not your father, surely?" + +"Poor papa! I wonder whether he would be hard on me for the first time +in his life?" She stopped; her moistening eyes looked up imploringly in +Launce's face. "Don't press me!" she repeated faintly. "You know it's +wrong. We should have to confess it--and then what would happen?" She +paused again. Her eyes wandered nervously to the deck. Her voice dropped +to its lowest tones. "Think of Richard!" she said, and shuddered at the +terrors which that name conjured up. Before it was possible to say a +quieting word to her, she was again on her feet. Richard's name had +suddenly recalled to her memory Launce's mysterious allusion, at the +outset of the interview, to the owner of the yacht. "What was that you +said about Richard just now?" she asked. "You saw something (or heard +something) strange while papa was telling his story. What was it?" + +"I noticed Richard's face, Natalie, when your father told us that the +man overboard was not one of the pilot-boat's crew. He turned ghastly +pale. He looked guilty--" + +"Guilty? Of what?" + +"He was present--I am certain of it--when the sailor was thrown into the +sea. For all I know, he may have been the man who did it." + +Natalie started back in horror. + +"Oh, Launce! Launce! that is too bad. You may not like Richard--you may +treat Richard as your enemy. But to say such a horrible thing of him as +that--It's not generous. It's not like _you_." + +"If you had seen him, you would have said it too. I mean to make +inquiries--in your father's interests as well as in ours. My brother +knows one of the Commissioners of Police, and my brother can get it done +for me. Turlington has not always been in the Levant trade--I know that +already." + +"For shame, Launce! for shame!" + +The footsteps on deck were audible coming back. Natalie sprang to the +door leading into the cabin. Launce stopped her, as she laid her hand on +the lock. The footsteps went straight on toward the stern of the vessel. +Launce clasped both arms round her. Natalie gave way. + +"Don't drive me to despair!" he said. "This is my last opportunity. I +don't ask you to say at once that you will marry me, I only ask you to +think of it. My darling! my angel! will you think of it?" + +As he put the question, they might have heard (if they had not been +too completely engrossed in each other to listen) the footsteps +returning--one pair of footsteps only this time. Natalie's prolonged +absence had begun to surprise her aunt, and had roused a certain vague +distrust in Richard's mind. He walked back again along the deck by +himself. He looked absently in the main cabin as he passed it. The +store-room skylight came next. In his present frame of mind, would he +look absently into the store-room too? + +"Let me go!" said Natalie. + +Launce only answered, "Say yes," and held her as if he would never let +her go again. + +At the same moment Miss Lavinia's voice rose shrill from the deck +calling for Natalie. There was but one way of getting free from him. She +said, "I'll think of it." Upon that, he kissed her and let her go. + +The door had barely closed on her when the lowering face of Richard +Turlington appeared on a level with the side of the sky-light, looking +down into the store-room at Launce. + +"Halloo!" he called out roughly. "What are you doing in the steward's +room?" + +Launce took up a box of matches on the dresser. "I'm getting a light," +he answered readily. + +"I allow nobody below, forward of the main cabin, without my leave. The +steward has permitted a breach of discipline on board my vessel. The +steward will leave my service." + +"The steward is not to blame." + +"I am the judge of that. Not you." + +Launce opened his lips to reply. An outbreak between the two men +appeared to be inevitable, when the sailing-master of the yacht joined +his employer on deck, and directed Turlington's attention to a question +which is never to be trifled with at sea, the question of wind and tide. + +The yacht was then in the Bristol Channel, at the entrance to Bideford +Bay. The breeze, fast freshening, was also fast changing the direction +from which it blew. The favorable tide had barely three hours more to +run. + +"The wind's shifting, sir," said the sailing-master. "I'm afraid we +shan't get round the point this tide, unless we lay her off on the other +tack." + +Turlington shook his head. + +"There are letters waiting for me at Bideford," he said. "We have lost +two days in the calm. I must send ashore to the post-office, whether we +lose the tide or not." + +The vessel held on her course. Off the port of Bideford, the boat was +sent ashore to the post-office, the yacht standing off and on, waiting +the appearance of the letters. In the shortest time in which it was +possible to bring them on board the letters were in Turlington's hands. + +The men were hauling the boat up to the davits, the yacht was already +heading off from the land, when Turlington startled everybody by one +peremptory word--"Stop!" + +He had thrust all his letters but one into the pocket of his sailing +jacket, without reading them. The one letter which he had opened he held +in his closed hand. Rage was in his staring eyes, consternation was on +his pale lips. + +"Lower the boat!" he shouted; "I must get to London to-night." He +stopped Sir Joseph, approaching him with opened mouth. "There's no time +for questions and answers. I must get back." He swung himself over the +side of the yacht, and addressed the sailing-master from the boat. "Save +the tide if you can; if you can't, put them ashore to-morrow at Minehead +or Watchet--wherever they like." He beckoned to Sir Joseph to lean over +the bulwark, and hear something he had to say in private. "Remember what +I told you about Launcelot Linzie!" he whispered fiercely. His parting +look was for Natalie. He spoke to her with a strong constraint on +himself, as gently as he could. "Don't be alarmed; I shall see you in +London." He seated himself in the boat and took the tiller. The last +words they heard him say were words urging the men at the oars to +lose no time. He was invariably brutal with the men. "Pull, you lazy +beggars!" he exclaimed, with an oath. "Pull for your lives!" + + + + +THIRD SCENE. + +The Money Market. + +Let us be serious.--Business! + +The new scene plunges us head foremost into the affairs of the Levant +trading-house of Pizzituti, Turlington & Branca. What on earth do we +know about the Levant Trade? Courage! If we have ever known what it is +to want money we are perfectly familiar with the subject at starting. +The Levant Trade does occasionally get into difficulties.--Turlington +wanted money. + +The letter which had been handed to him on board the yacht was from his +third partner, Mr. Branca, and was thus expressed: + +"A crisis in the trade. All right, so far--except our business with +the small foreign firms. Bills to meet from those quarters, (say) forty +thousand pounds--and, I fear, no remittances to cover them. Particulars +stated in another letter addressed to you at Post-office, Ilfracombe. I +am quite broken down with anxiety, and confined to my bed. Pizzituti is +still detained at Smyrna. Come back at once." + +The same evening Turlington was at his office in Austin Friars, +investigating the state of affairs, with his head clerk to help him. + +Stated briefly, the business of the firm was of the widely miscellaneous +sort. They plied a brisk trade in a vast variety of commodities. Nothing +came amiss to them, from Manchester cotton manufactures to Smyrna figs. +They had branch houses at Alexandria and Odessa, and correspondents +here, there, and everywhere, along the shores of the Mediterranean, and +in the ports of the East. These correspondents were the persons alluded +to in Mr. Branca's letter as "small foreign firms;" and they had +produced the serious financial crisis in the affairs of the great house +in Austin Friars, which had hurried Turlington up to London. + +Every one of these minor firms claimed and received the privilege of +drawing bills on Pizzituti, Turlington & Branca for amounts varying +from four to six thousand pounds--on no better security than a verbal +understanding that the money to pay the bills should be forwarded before +they fell due. Competition, it is needless to say, was at the bottom of +this insanely reckless system of trading. The native firms laid it down +as a rule that they would decline to transact business with any house +in the trade which refused to grant them their privilege. In the ease of +Turlington's house, the foreign merchants had drawn their bills on him +for sums large in the aggregate, if not large in themselves; had long +since turned those bills into cash in their own markets, for their own +necessities; and had now left the money which their paper represented +to be paid by their London correspondents as it fell due. In some +instances, they had sent nothing but promises and excuses. In others, +they had forwarded drafts on firms which had failed already, or which +were about to fail, in the crisis. After first exhausting his +resources in ready money, Mr. Branca had provided for the more pressing +necessities by pledging the credit of the house, so far as he _could_ +pledge it without exciting suspicion of the truth. This done, there were +actually left, between that time and Christmas, liabilities to be met to +the extent of forty thousand pounds, without a farthing in hand to pay +that formidable debt. + +After working through the night, this was the conclusion at which +Richard Turlington arrived, when the rising sun looked in at him through +the windows of his private room. + +The whole force of the blow had fallen on _him_. The share of his +partners in the business was of the most trifling nature. The capital +was his, the risk was his. Personally and privately, _he_ had to find +the money, or to confront the one other alternative--ruin. + +How was the money to be found? + +With his position in the City, he had only to go to the famous +money-lending and discounting house of Bulpit Brothers--reported to +"turn over" millions in their business every year--and to supply himself +at once with the necessary funds. Forty thousand pounds was a trifling +transaction to Bulpit Brothers. + +Having got the money, how, in the present state of his trade, was the +loan to be paid back? + +His thoughts reverted to his marriage with Natalie. + +"Curious!" he said to himself, recalling his conversation with Sir +Joseph on board the yacht. "Graybrooke told me he would give his +daughter half his fortune on her marriage. Half Graybrooke's fortune +happens to be just forty thousand pounds!" He took a turn in the room. +No! It was impossible to apply to Sir Joseph. Once shake Sir Joseph's +conviction of his commercial solidity, and the marriage would be +certainly deferred--if not absolutely broken off. Sir Joseph's fortune +could be made available, in the present emergency, in but one way--he +might use it to repay his debt. He had only to make the date at which +the loan expired coincide with the date of his marriage, and there +was his father-in-law's money at his disposal, or at his wife's +disposal--which meant the same thing. "It's well I pressed Graybrooke +about the marriage when I did!" he thought. "I can borrow the money at a +short date. In three months from this Natalie will be my wife." + +He drove to his club to get breakfast, with his mind cleared, for the +time being, of all its anxieties but one. + +Knowing where he could procure the loan, he was by no means equally sure +of being able to find the security on which he could borrow the +money. Living up to his income; having no expectations from any living +creature; possessing in landed property only some thirty or forty +acres in Somersetshire, with a quaint little dwelling, half farm house, +half-cottage, attached--he was incapable of providing the needful +security from his own personal resources. To appeal to wealthy friends +in the City would be to let those friends into the secret of his +embarrassments, and to put his credit in peril. He finished his +breakfast, and went back to Austin Friars--failing entirely, so far, to +see how he was to remove the last obstacle now left in his way. + +The doors were open to the public; business had begun. He had not been +ten minutes in his room before the shipping-clerk knocked at the door +and interrupted him, still absorbed in his own anxious thoughts. + +"What is it?" he asked, irritably. + +"Duplicate Bills of Lading, sir," answered the clerk, placing the +documents on his ma ster's table. + +Found! There was the security on his writing-desk, staring him in the +face! He dismissed the clerk and examined the papers. + +They contained an account of goods shipped to the London house on board +vessels sailing from Smyrna and Odessa, and they were signed by the +masters of the ships, who thereby acknowledged the receipt of the goods, +and undertook to deliver them safely to the persons owning them, as +directed. First copies of these papers had already been placed in the +possession of the London house. The duplicates had now followed, in +case of accident. Richard Turlington instantly determined to make the +duplicates serve as his security, keeping the first copies privately +under lock and key, to be used in obtaining possession of the goods +at the customary time. The fraud was a fraud in appearance only. The +security was a pure formality. His marriage would supply him with the +funds needed for repaying the money, and the profits of his business +would provide, in course of time, for restoring the dowry of his wife. +It was simply a question of preserving his credit by means which were +legitimately at his disposal. Within the lax limits of mercantile +morality, Richard Turlington had a conscience. He put on his hat and +took his false security to the money-lenders, without feeling at all +lowered in his own estimation as an honest man. + +Bulpit Brothers, long desirous of having such a name as his on their +books, received him with open arms. The security (covering the amount +borrowed) was accepted as a matter of course. The money was lent, for +three months, with a stroke of the pen. Turlington stepped out again +into the street, and confronted the City of London in the character of +the noblest work of mercantile creation--a solvent man.* + +The Fallen Angel, walking invisibly behind, in Richard's shadow, flapped +his crippled wings in triumph. From that moment the Fallen Angel had got +him. + + * It may not be amiss to remind the incredulous reader that + a famous firm in the City accepted precisely the same + security as that here accepted by Bulpit Brothers, with the + same sublime indifference to troubling themselves by making + any inquiry about it. + + + + +FOURTH SCENE. + +Muswell Hill. + +The next day Turlington drove to the suburbs, on the chance of finding +the Graybrookes at home again. Sir Joseph disliked London, and could +not prevail on himself to live any nearer to the metropolis than Muswell +Hill. When Natalie wanted a change, and languished for balls, theaters, +flower-shows, and the like, she had a room especially reserved for her +in the house of Sir Joseph's married sister, Mrs. Sancroft, living in +that central deep of the fashionable whirlpool known among mortals as +Berkeley Square. + +On his way through the streets, Turlington encountered a plain proof +that the Graybrookes must have returned. He was passed by Launce, +driving, in company with a gentleman, in a cab. The gentleman was +Launce's brother, and the two were on their way to the Commissioners +of Police to make the necessary arrangements for instituting an inquiry +into Turlington's early life. + +Arrived at the gate of the villa, the information received only +partially fulfilled the visitor's expectations. The family had returned +on the previous evening. Sir Joseph and his sister were at home, but +Natalie was away again already. She had driven into town to lunch with +her aunt. Turlington went into the house. + +"Have you lost any money?" Those were the first words uttered by Sir +Joseph when he and Richard met again, after the parting on board the +yacht. + +"Not a farthing. I might have lost seriously, if I had not got back in +time to set things straight. Stupidity on the part of my people left in +charge--nothing more. It's all right now." + +Sir Joseph lifted his eyes, with heartfelt devotion, to the ceiling. +"Thank God, Richard!" he said, in tones of the deepest feeling. He rang +the bell. "Tell Miss Graybrooke Mr. Turlington is here." He turned again +to Richard. "Lavinia is like me--Lavinia has been so anxious about you. +We have both of us passed a sleepless night." Miss Lavinia came in. Sir +Joseph hurried to meet her, and took her affectionately by both hands. +"My dear! the best of all good news, Richard has not lost a farthing." +Miss Lavinia lifted _her_ eyes to the ceiling with heartfelt devotion, +and said, "Thank God, Richard!"--like the echo of her brother's voice; +a little late, perhaps, for its reputation as an echo, but accurate to +half a note in its perfect repetition of sound. + +Turlington asked the question which it had been his one object to put in +paying his visit to Muswell Hill. + +"Have you spoken to Natalie?" + +"This morning," replied Sir Joseph. "An opportunity offered itself after +breakfast. I took advantage of it, Richard--you shall hear how." + +He settled himself in his chair for one of his interminable stories; he +began his opening sentence--and stopped, struck dumb at the first +word. There was an unexpected obstacle in the way--his sister was not +attending to him; his sister had silenced him at starting. The story +touching, this time, on the question of marriage, Miss Lavinia had her +woman's interest in seeing full justice done to the subject. She seized +on her brother's narrative as on property in her own right. + +"Joseph should have told you," she began, addressing herself to +Turlington, "that our dear girl was unusually depressed in spirits this +morning. Quite in the right frame of mind for a little serious talk +about her future life. She ate nothing at breakfast, poor child, but a +morsel of dry toast." + +"And marmalade," said Sir Joseph, striking in at the first opportunity. +The story, on this occasion, being Miss Lavinia's story, the polite +contradictions necessary to its successful progress were naturally +transferred from the sister to the brother, and became contradictions on +Sir Joseph's side. + +"No," said Miss Lavinia, gently, "if you _will_ have it, Joseph--jam." + +"I beg your pardon," persisted Sir Joseph; "marmalade." + +"What _does_ it matter, brother?" + +"Sister! the late great and good Doctor Johnson said accuracy ought +always to be studied even in the most trifling things." + +"You _will_ have your way, Joseph--"(this was the formula--answering +to Sir Joseph's 'Let us waive the point'--which Miss Lavinia used, as +a means of conciliating her brother, and getting a fresh start for her +story). "Well, we took dear Natalie out between us, after breakfast, +for a little walk in the grounds. My brother opened the subject with +infinite delicacy and tact. 'Circumstances,' he said, 'into which it was +not then necessary to enter, made it very desirable, young as she was, +to begin to think of her establishment in life.' And then he referred, +Richard (so nicely), to your faithful and devoted attachment--" + +"Excuse me, Lavinia. I began with Richard's attachment, and then I got +on to her establishment in life." + +"Excuse _me_, Joseph. You managed it much more delicately than you +suppose. You didn't drag Richard in by the head and shoulders in that +way." + +"Lavinia! I began with Richard." + +"Joseph! your memory deceives you." + +Turlington's impatience broke through all restraint. + +"How did it end?" he asked. "Did you propose to her that we should be +married in the first week of the New Year?" + +"Yes!" said Miss Lavinia. + +"No!" said Sir Joseph. + +The sister looked at the brother with an expression of affectionate +surprise. The brother looked at the sister with a fund of amiable +contradiction, expressed in a low bow. + +"Do you really mean to deny, Joseph, that you told Natalie we had +decided on the first week in the New Year?" + +"I deny the New Year, Lavinia. I said early in January." + +"You _will_ have your way, Joseph! We were walking in the shrubbery at +the time. I had our dear girl's arm in mine, and I felt it tremble. +She suddenly stopped. 'Oh,' she said, 'not so soon!' I said, 'My dear, +consider Richard!' She turned to her father. She said, 'Don't, pray +don't press it so soon, papa! I respect Richard; I like Richard as your +true and faithful friend; but I don't love him as I ought to love him +if I am to be his wife.' Imagine her talking in that way! What could she +possibly know about it? Of course we both laughed--" + +"_you_ laughed, Lavinia." + +"_you_ laughed, Joseph." + +"Get on, for God's sake!" cried Turlington, striking his hand +passionately on the table by which he was sitting. "Don't madden me by +contradicting each other! Did she give way or not?" + +Miss Lavinia turned to her brother. "Contradicting each other, Joseph!" +she exclaimed, lifting her hands in blank amazement. + +"Contradicting each other!" repeated Sir Joseph, equally astonished on +his side. "My dear Richard, what can you be thinking of? I contradict my +sister! We never disagreed in our lives." + +"I contradict my brother! We have never had a cross word between us from +the time when we were children." + +Turlington internally cursed his own irritable temper. + +"I beg your pardon--both of you," he said. "I didn't know what I was +saying. Make some allowance for me. All my hopes in life are centered in +Natalie; and you have just told me (in her own words, Miss Lavinia) that +she doesn't love. You don't mean any harm, I dare say; but you cut me to +the heart." + +This confession, and the look that accompanied it, touched the ready +sympathies of the two old people in the right place. The remainder of +the story dropped between them by common consent. They vied with each +other in saying the comforting words which would allay their dear +Richard's anxiety. How little he knew of young girls. How could he be +so foolish, poor fellow! as to attach any serious importance to what +Natalie had said? As if a young creature in her teens knew the state of +her own heart! Protestations and entreaties were matters of course, in +such cases. Tears even might be confidently expected from a right-minded +girl. It had all ended exactly as Richard would have wished it to end. +Sir Joseph had said, "My child! this is a matter of experience; love +will come when you are married." And Miss Lavinia had added, "Dear +Natalie, if you remembered your poor mother as I remember her, you would +know that your father's experience is to be relied on." In that way they +had put it to her; and she had hung her head and had given--all that +maiden modesty could be expected to give--a silent consent. "The +wedding-day was fixed for the first week in the New Year." ("No, Joseph; +not January--the New Year.") "And God bless you, Richard! and may your +married life be a long and happy one." + +So the average ignorance of human nature, and the average belief in +conventional sentiment, complacently contemplated the sacrifice of one +more victim on the all-devouring altar of Marriage! So Sir Joseph and +his sister provided Launcelot Linzie with the one argument which he +wanted to convince Natalie: "Choose between making the misery of +your life by marrying _him_, and making the happiness of your life by +marrying _me._" + +"When shall I see her?" asked Turlington, with Miss Lavinia (in tears +which did _her_ credit) in possession of one of his hands, and Sir +Joseph (in tears which did _him_ credit) in possession of the other. + +"She will be back to dinner, dear Richard. Stay and dine." + +"Thank you. I must go into the City first. I will come back and dine." + +With that arrangement in prospect, he left them. + +An hour later a telegram arrived from Natalie. She had consented to +dine, as well as lunch, in Berkeley Square--sleeping there that night, +and returning the next morning. Her father instantly telegraphed back +by the messenger, insisting on Natalie's return to Muswell Hill that +evening, in time to meet Richard Turlington at dinner. + +"Quite right. Joseph," said Miss Lavinia, looking over her brother's +shoulder, while he wrote the telegram. + +"She is showing a disposition to coquet with Richard," rejoined Sir +Joseph, with the air of a man who knew female human nature in its +remotest corners. "My telegram, Lavinia, will have its effect." + +Sir Joseph was quite right. His telegram _had_ its effect. It not only +brought his daughter back to dinner--it produced another result which +his prophetic faculty had altogether failed to foresee. + +The message reached Berkeley Square at five o'clock in the afternoon. +Let us follow the message. + + + + +FIFTH SCENE. + +The Square. + +Between four and five in the afternoon--when the women of the Western +regions are in their carriages, and the men are at their clubs--London +presents few places more conveniently adapted for purposes of private +talk than the solitary garden inclosure of a square. + +On the day when Richard Turlington paid his visit to Muswell Hill, two +ladies (with a secret between them) unlocked the gate of the railed +garden in Berkeley Square. They shut the gate after entering the +inclosure, but carefully forbore to lock it as well, and carefully +restricted their walk to the westward side of the garden. One of them +was Natalie Graybrooke. The other was Mrs. Sancroft's eldest daughter. +A certain temporary interest attached, in the estimation of society, +to this young lady. She had sold well in the marriage market. In other +words, she had recently been raised to the position of Lord Winwood's +second wife; his lordship conferring on the bride not only the honors of +the peerage, but the additional distinction of being stepmother to his +three single daughters, all older than herself. In person, Lady Winwood +was little and fair. In character, she was dashing and resolute--a +complete contrast to Natalie, and (on that very account) Natalie's bosom +friend. + +"My dear, one ambitious marriage in the family is quite enough! I have +made up my mind that _you_ shall marry the man you love. Don't tell me +your courage is failing you--the excuse is contemptible; I decline to +receive it. Natalie! the men have a phrase which exactly describes your +character. You want back-bone!" + +The bonnet of the lady who expressed herself in these peremptory terms +barely reached the height of Natalie's shoulder. Natalie might have +blown the little airy, light-haired, unsubstantial creature over the +railings of the garden if she had taken a good long breath and stooped +low enough. But who ever met with a tall woman who had a will of her +own? Natalie's languid brown eyes looked softly down in submissive +attention from an elevation of five feet seven. Lady Winwood's brisk +blue eyes looked brightly up in despotic command from an elevation of +four feet eleven (in her shoes). + +"You are trifling with Mr. Linzie, my dear. Mr. Linzie is a nice fellow. +I like him. I won't have that." + +"Louisa!" + +"Mr. Turlington has nothing to recommend him. He is not a well-bred old +gentleman of exalted rank. He is only an odious brute who happens to +have made money. You shall _not_ marry Mr. Turlington. And you _shall_ +marry Launcelot Linzie." + +"Will you let me speak, Louisa?" + +"I will let you answer--nothing more. Didn't you come crying to me this +morning? Didn't you say, 'Louisa, they have pronounced sentence on me! +I am to be married in the first week of the New Year. Help me out of it, +for Heaven's sake!' You said all that, and more. And what did I do when +I heard your story?" + +"Oh, you were so kind--" + +"Kind doesn't half express it. I have committed crimes on your account. +I have deceived my husband and my mother. For your sake I got mamma to +ask Mr. Linzie to lunch (as _my_ friend!). For your sake I have banished +my unoffending husband, not an hour since, to his club. You wretched +girl, who arranged a private conference in the library? Who sent Mr. +Linzie off to consult his friend in the Temple on the law of clandestine +marriage? Who suggested your telegraphing home, and stopping here for +the night? Who made an appointment to meet your young man privately in +this detestable place in ten minutes' time? I did! I did! I did! All in +your interests. All to prevent you from doing what I have done--marrying +to please your family instead of to please yourself. (I don't complain, +mind, of Lord Winwood, or of his daughters. _He_ is charming; his +daughters I shall tame in course of time. You are different. And Mr. +Turlington, as I observed before, is a brute.) Very well. Now what do +you owe me on your side? You owe it to me at least to know your own +mind. You don't know it. You coolly inform me that you daren't run +the risk after all, and that you can't face the consequences on second +thoughts. I'll tell you what! You don't deserve that nice fellow, who +worships the very ground you tread on. You are a bread-and-butter miss. +I don't believe you are fond of him!" + +"Not fond of him!" Natalie stopped, and clasped her hands in despair of +finding language strong enough for the occasion. At the same moment the +sound of a closing gate caught her ear. She looked round. Launce had +kept his appointment before his time. Launce was in the garden, rapidly +approaching them. + +"Now for the Law of Clandestine Marriage!" said Lady Winwood. "Mr. +Linzie, we will take it sitting." She led the way to one of the benches +in the garden, and placed Launce between Natalie and herself. "Well, +Chief Conspirator, have you got the License? No? Does it cost too much? +Can I lend you the money?" + +"It costs perjury, Lady Winwood, in my case," said Launce. "Natalie is +not of age. I can only get a License by taking my oath that I marry her +with her father's consent." He turned piteously to Natalie. "I couldn't +very well do that," he said, in the tone of a man who feels bound to +make an apology, "could I?" Natalie shuddered; Lady Winwood shrugged her +shoulders. + +"In your place a woman wouldn't have hesitated," her ladyship remarked. +"But men are so selfish. Well! I suppose there is some other way?" + +"Yes, there is another way," said Launce. "But there is a horrid +condition attached to it--" + +"Something worse than perjury, Mr. Linzie? Murder?" + +"I'll tell you directly, Lady Winwood. The marriage comes first. The +condition follows. There is only one chance for us. We must be married +by banns." + +"Banns!" cried Natalie. "Why, banns are publicly proclaimed in church!" + +"They needn't be proclaimed in _your_ church, you goose," said Lady +Winwood. "And, even if they were, nobody would be the wiser. You may +trust implicitly, my dear, in the elocution of an English clergyman!" + +"That's just what my friend said," cried Launce. "'Take a lodging near +a large parish church, in a remote part of London'--(this is my friend's +advice)--'go to the clerk, tell him you want to be married by banns, and +say you belong to that parish. As for the lady, in your place I should +simplify it. I should say she belonged to the parish too. Give an +address, and have some one there to answer questions. How is the +clerk to know? He isn't likely to be over-anxious about it--his fee is +eighteen-pence. The clerk makes his profit out of you, after you are +married. The same rule applies to the parson. He will have your names +supplied to him on a strip of paper, with dozens of other names; and he +will read them out all together in one inarticulate jumble in church. +You will stand at the altar when your time comes, with Brown and Jones, +Nokes and Styles, Jack and Gill. All that you will have to do is, to +take care that your young lady doesn't fall to Jack, and you to Gill, +by mistake--and there you are, married by banns.' My friend's opinion, +stated in his own words." + +Natalie sighed, and wrung her hands in her lap. "We shall never get +through it," she said, despondingly. + +Lady Winwood took a more cheerful view. + +"I see nothing very formidable as yet, my dear. But we have still to +hear the end of it. You mentioned a condition just now, Mr. Linzie. + +"I am coming to the condition, Lady Winwood. You naturally suppose, as +I did, that I put Natalie into a cab, and run away with her from the +church door?" + +"Certainly. And I throw an old shoe after you for luck, and go home +again." + +Launce shook his head ominously. + +"Natalie must go home again as well as you!" + +Lady Winwood started. "Is that the condition you mentioned just now?" +she asked. + +"That is the condition. I may marry her without anything serious coming +of it. But, if I run away with her afterward, and if you are there, +aiding and abetting me, we are guilty of Abduction, and we may stand, +side by side, at the bar of the Old Bailey to answer for it!" + +Natalie sprang to her feet in horror. Lady Winwood held up one finger +warningly, signing to her to let Launce go on. + +"Natalie is not yet sixteen years old," Launce proceeded. "She must go +straight back to her father's house from the church, and I must wait +to run away with her till her next birthday. When she's turned sixteen, +she's ripe for elopement--not an hour before. There is the law of +Abduction! Despotism in a free country--that's what I call it!" + +Natalie sat down again, with an air of relief. + +"It's a very comforting law, I think," she said. "It doesn't force one +to take the dreadful step of running away from home all at once. It +gives one time to consider, and plan, and make up one's mind. I can tell +you this, Launce, if I am to be persuaded into marrying you, the law of +Abduction is the only thing that will induce me to do it. You ought to +thank the law, instead of abusing it." + +Launce listened--without conviction. + +"It's a pleasant prospect," he said, "to part at the church door, and to +treat my own wife on the footing of a young lady who is engaged to marry +another gentleman." + +"Is it any pleasanter for _me_," retorted Natalie, "to have Richard +Turlington courting me, when I am all the time your wife? I shall never +be able to do it. I wish I was dead!" + +"Come! come!" interposed Lady Winwood. "It's time to be serious. +Natalie's birthday, Mr. Linzie, is next Christmas-day. She will be +sixteen--" + +"At seven in the morning," said Launce; "I got that out of Sir Joseph. +At one minute past seven, Greenwich mean time, we may be off together. I +got _that_ out of the lawyer." + +"And it isn't an eternity to wait from now till Christmas-day. You get +that, by way of completing the list of your acquisitions, out of +_me_. In the mean time, can you, or can you not, manage to meet the +difficulties in the way of the marriage?" + +"I have settled everything," Launce answered, confidently. "There is not +a single difficulty left." + +He turned to Natalie, listening to him in amazement, and explained +himself. It had struck him that he might appeal--with his purse in +his hand, of course--to the interest felt in his affairs by the late +stewardess of the yacht. That excellent woman had volunteered to do all +that she could to help him. Her husband had obtained situations for his +wife and himself on board another yacht--and they were both eager +to assist in any conspiracy in which their late merciless master was +destined to play the part of victim. When on shore, they lived in +a populous London parish, far away from the fashionable district of +Berkeley Square, and further yet from the respectable suburb of Muswell +Hill. A room in the house could be nominally engaged for Natalie, in the +assumed character of the stewardess's niece--the stewardess undertaking +to answer any purely formal questions which might be put by the church +authorities, and to be present at the marriage ceremony. As for Launce, +he would actually, as well as nominally, live in the district close by; +and the steward, if needful, would answer for _him_. Natalie might call +at her parochial residence occasionally, under the wing of Lady Winwood; +gaining leave of absence from Muswell Hill, on the plea of paying one of +her customary visits at her aunt's house. The conspiracy, in brief, was +arranged in all its details. Nothing was now wanting but the consent of +the young lady; obtaining which, Launce would go to the parish church +and give the necessary notice of a marriage by banns on the next day. +There was the plot. What did the ladies think of it? + +Lady Winwood thought it perfect. + +Natalie was not so easily satisfied. + +"My father has always been so kind to me!" she said. "The one thing +I can't get over, Launce, is distressing papa. If he had been hard on +me--as some fathers are--I shouldn't mind." She suddenly brightened, as +if she saw her position in a new light. "Why should you hurry me?" she +asked. "I am going to dine at my aunt's to-day, and you are coming in +the evening. Give me time! Wait till to-night." + +Launce instantly entered his protest against wasting a moment longer. +Lady Winwood opened her lips to support him. They were both silenced at +the same moment by the appearance of one of Mrs. Sancroft's servants, +opening the gate of the square. + +Lady Winwood went forward to meet the man. A suspicion crossed her mind +that he might be bringing bad news. + +"What do you want?" she asked. + +"I beg your pardon, my lady--the housekeeper said you were walking here +with Miss Graybrooke. A telegram for Miss Graybrooke." + +Lady Winwood took the telegram from the man's hand; dismissed him, and +went back with it to Natalie. Natalie opened it nervously. She read +the message--and instantly changed. Her cheeks flushed deep; her eyes +flashed with indignation. "Even papa can be hard on me, it seems, when +Richard asks him!" she exclaimed. She handed the telegram to Launce. Her +eyes suddenly filled with tears. "_You_ love me," she said, gently--and +stopped. "Marry me!" she added, with a sudden burst of resolution. "I'll +risk it!" + +As she spoke those words, Lady Winwood read the telegram. It ran thus: + +"Sir Joseph Graybrooke, Muswell Hill. To Miss Natalie Graybrooke; +Berkeley Square. Come back immediately. You are engaged to dine here +with Richard Turlington." + +Lady Winwood folded up the telegram with a malicious smile. "Well +done, Sir Joseph!" thought her ladyship. "We might never have persuaded +Natalie--but for You!" + + + + +SIXTH SCENE. + +The Church. + +The time is morning; the date is early in the month of November. The +place is a church, in a poor and populous parish in the undiscovered +regions of London, eastward of the Tower, and hard by the river-side. + +A marriage procession of five approaches the altar The bridegroom +is pale, and the bride is frightened. The bride's friend (a +resolute-looking little lady) encourages her in whispers. The two +respectable persons, apparently man and wife, who complete the +procession, seem to be not quite clear as to the position which they +occupy at the ceremony. The beadle, as he marshals them before the +altar, sees something under the surface in this wedding-party. Marriages +in the lower ranks of life are the only marriages celebrated here. Is +this a runaway match? The beadle anticipates something out of the common +in the shape of a fee. + +The clergyman (the junior curate) appears from the vestry in his robes. +The clerk takes his place. The clergyman's eye rests with a sudden +interest and curiosity on the bride and bridegroom, and on the bride's +friend; notices the absence of elderly relatives; remarks, in the +two ladies especially, evidences of refinement and breeding entirely +unparalleled in his professional experience of brides and brides' +friends standing before the altar of that church; questions, silently +and quickly, the eye of the clerk, occupied also in observing the +strangers with interest "Jenkinson" (the clergyman's look asks), "is +this all right?" "Sir" (the clerk's look answers), "a marriage by banns; +all the formalities have been observed." The clergyman opens his book. +The formalities have been observed; his duty lies plainly before him. +Attention, Launcelot! Courage, Natalie! The service begins. + +Launce casts a last furtive look round the church. Will Sir Joseph +Graybrooke start up and stop it from one of the empty pews? Is Richard +Turlington lurking in the organ-loft, and only waiting till the words of +the service appeal to him to prohibit the marriage, or "else hereafter +forever to hold his peace?" No. The clergyman proceeds steadily, +and nothing happens. Natalie's charming face grows paler and paler, +Natalie's heart throbs faster and faster, as the time comes nearer for +reading the words which unite them for life. Lady Winwood herself feels +an unaccustomed fluttering in the region of the bosom. Her ladyship's +thoughts revert, not altogether pleasantly, to her own marriage: "Ah +me! what was I thinking of when I was in this position? Of the bride's +beautiful dress, and of Lady Winwood's coming presentation at court!" + +The service advances to the words in which they plight their troth. +Launce has put the ring on her finger. Launce has repeated the words +after the clergyman. Launce has married her! Done! Come what may of it, +done! + +The service ends. Bridegroom, bride, and witnesses go into the vestry +to sign the book. The signing, like the service, is serious. No trifling +with the truth is possible here. When it comes to Lady Winwood's turn, +Lady Winwood must write her name. She does it, but without her usual +grace and decision. She drops her handkerchief. The clerk picks it up +for her, and notices that a coronet is embroidered in one corner. + +The fees are paid. They leave the vestry. Other couples, when it is +over, are talkative and happy. These two are more silent and more +embarrassed than ever. Stranger still, while other couples go off with +relatives and friends, all socially united in honor of the occasion, +these two and their friends part at the church door. The respectable man +and his wife go their way on foot. The little lady with the coronet on +her handkerchief puts the bride into a cab, gets in herself, and directs +the driver to close the door, while the bridegroom is standing on the +church steps! The bridegroom's face is clouded, as well it may be. He +puts his head in at the window of the cab; he possesses himself of the +bride's hand; he speaks in a whisper; he is apparently not to be shaken +off. The little lady exerts her authority, separates the clasped hands, +pushes the bridegroom away, and cries peremptorily to the driver to go +on. The cab starts; the deserted husband drifts desolately anyhow down +the street. The clerk, who has seen it all, goes back to the vestry and +reports what has happened. + +The rector (with his wife on his arm) has just dropped into the vestry +on business in passing. He and the curate are talking about the strange +marriage. The rector, gravely bent on ascertaining that no blame rests +with the church, interrogates, and is satisfied. The rector's wife is +not so easy to deal with. She has looked at the signatures in the book. +One of the names is familiar to her. She cross-examines the clerk as +soon as her husband is done with him. When she hears of the coronet on +the handkerchief she points to the signature of "Louisa Winwood," and +says to the rector, "I know who it is! Lord Winwood's second wife. I +went to school with his lordship's daughters by his first marriage. We +occasionally meet at the Sacred Concerts (on the 'Ladies' Committee'); +I shall find an opportunity of speaking to them. One moment, Mr. +Jenkinson, I will write down the names before you put away the book. +'Launcelot Linzie,' 'Natalie Graybrooke.' Very pretty names; quite +romantic. I do delight in a romance. Good-morning." + +She gives the curate a parting smile, and the clerk a parting nod, and +sails out of the vestry. Natalie, silently returning in Lady Winwood's +company to Muswell Hill; and Launce, cursing the law of Abduction as he +roams the streets--little think that the ground is already mined under +their feet. Richard Turlington may hear of it now, or may hear of +it later. The discovery of the marriage depends entirely on a chance +meeting between the lord's daughters and the rector's wife. + + + + +SEVENTH SCENE. + +The Evening Party. + + +---------------------------------------------------- MR. TURLINGTON, + +LADY WINWOOD At Home. + +Wednesday, December 15th.--Ten o'clock. +---------------------------------------------------- + +"Dearest Natalie--As the brute insists, the brute must have the +invitation which I inclose. Never mind, my child. You and Launce are +coming to dinner, and I will see that you have your little private +opportunities of retirement afterward. All I expect of you in return is, +_not_ to look (when you come back) as if your husband had been kissing +you. You will certainly let out the secret of those stolen kisses, if +you don't take care. At mamma's dinner yesterday, your color (when you +came out of the conservatory) was a sight to see. Even your shoulders +were red! They are charming shoulders, I know, and men take the +strangest fancies sometimes. But, my dear, suppose you wear a chemisette +next time, if you haven't authority enough over him to prevent his doing +it again! + +"Your affectionate LOUISA." + +The private history of the days that had passed since the marriage was +written in that letter. An additional chapter--of some importance in its +bearing on the future--was contributed by the progress of events at Lady +Winwood's party. + +By previous arrangement with Natalie, the Graybrookes (invited to +dinner) arrived early. Leaving her husband and her stepdaughters to +entertain Sir Joseph and Miss Lavinia, Lady Winwood took Natalie into +her own boudoir, which communicated by a curtained opening with the +drawing-room. + +"My dear, you are looking positively haggard this evening. Has anything +happened?" + +"I am nearly worn out, Louisa. The life I am leading is so unendurable +that, if Launce pressed me, I believe I should consent to run away with +him when we leave your house tonight." + +"You will do nothing of the sort, if you please. Wait till you are +sixteen. I delight in novelty, but the novelty of appearing at the Old +Bailey is beyond my ambition. Is the brute coming to-night?" + +"Of course. He insists on following me wherever I go. He lunched at +Muswell Hill today. More complaints of my incomprehensible coldness to +him. Another scolding from papa. A furious letter from Launce. If I +let Richard kiss my hand again in his presence, Launce warns me he will +knock him down. Oh, the meanness and the guiltiness of the life I am +leading now! I am in the falsest of all false positions, Louisa, and you +encouraged me to do it. I believe Richard Turlington suspects us. The +last two times Launce and I tried to get a minute together at my aunt's, +he contrived to put himself in our way. There he was, my dear, with +his scowling face, looking as if he longed to kill Launce. Can you do +anything for us tonight? Not on my account. But Launce is so impatient. +If he can't say two words to me alone this evening, he declares he will +come to Muswell Hill, and catch me in the garden tomorrow." + +"Compose yourself, my dear; he shall say his two words to-night." + +"How?" + +Lady Winwood pointed through the curtained entrance of the boudoir to +the door of the drawing-room. Beyond the door was the staircase landing. +And beyond the landing was a second drawing-room, the smaller of the +two. + +"There are only three or four people coming to dinner," her ladyship +proceeded; "and a few more in the evening. Being a small party, the +small drawing-room will do for us. This drawing-room will not be +lighted, and there will be only my reading-lamp here in the boudoir. I +shall give the signal for leaving the dining-room earlier than usual. +Launce will join us before the evening party begins. The moment he +appears, send him in here--boldly before your aunt and all of us." + +"For what?" + +"For your fan. Leave it there under the sofa-cushion before we go down +to dinner. You will sit next to Launce, and you will give him private +instructions not to find the fan. You will get impatient--you will go to +find it yourself--and there you are. Take care of your shoulders, Mrs. +Linzie! I have nothing more to say." + +The guests asked to dinner began to arrive. Lady Winwood was recalled to +her duties as mistress of the house. + +It was a pleasant little dinner--with one drawback. It began too late. +The ladies only reached the small drawing-room at ten minutes to ten. +Launce was only able to join them as the clock struck. + +"Too late!" whispered Natalie. "He will be here directly." + +"Nobody comes punctually to an evening party," said Launce. "Don't let +us lose a moment. Send me for your fan." + +Natalie opened her lips to say the necessary words. Before she could +speak, the servant announced--"Mr. Turlington." + +He came in, with his stiffly-upright shirt collar and his +loosely-fitting glossy black clothes. He made his sullen and clumsy +bow to Lady Winwood. And then he did, what he had done dozens of times +already--he caught Natalie, with her eyes still bright and her face +still animated (after talking to Launce)--a striking contrast to the +cold and unimpulsive young lady whom he was accustomed to see while +Natalie was talking to _him_. + +Lord Winwood's daughters were persons of some celebrity in the world of +amateur music. Noticing the look that Turlington cast at Launce, Lady +Winwood whispered to Miss Lavinia--who instantly asked the young ladies +to sing. Launce, in obedience to a sign from Natalie, volunteered to +find the music-books. It is needless to add that he pitched on the wrong +volume at starting. As he lifted it from the piano to take it back to +the stand, there dropped out from between the leaves a printed letter, +looking like a circular. One of the young ladies took it up, and ran her +eye over it, with a start. + +"The Sacred Concerts!" she exclaimed. + +Her two sisters, standing by, looked at each other guiltily: "What will +the Committee say to us? We entirely forgot the meeting last month." + +"Is there a meeting this month?" + +They all looked anxiously at the printed letter. + +"Yes! The twenty-third of December. Put it down in your book, Amelia." +Amelia, then and there, put it down among the engagements for the latter +end of the month. And Natalie's unacknowledged husband placidly looked +on. + +So did the merciless irony of circumstances make Launce the innocent +means of exposing his own secret to discovery. Thanks to his success +in laying his hand on the wrong music-book, there would now be a +meeting--two good days before the elopement could take place--between +the lord's daughters and the rector's wife! + +The guests of the evening began to appear by twos and threes. The +gentlemen below stairs left the dinner-table, and joined them. + +The small drawing-room was pleasantly filled, and no more. Sir Joseph +Graybrooke, taking Turlington's hand, led him eagerly to their host. +The talk in the dining-room had turned on finance. Lord Winwood was not +quite satisfied with some of his foreign investments; and Sir Joseph's +"dear Richard" was the very man to give him a little sound advice. The +three laid their heads together in a corner. Launce (watching them) +slyly pressed Natalie's hand. A renowned "virtuoso" had arrived, and +was thundering on the piano. The attention of the guests generally was +absorbed in the performance. A fairer chance of sending Launce for +the fan could not possibly have offered itself. While the financial +discussion was still proceeding, the married lovers were ensconced +together alone in the boudoir. + +Lady Winwood (privately observant of their absence) kept her eye on the +corner, watching Richard Turlington. + +He was talking earnestly--with his back toward the company. He neither +moved nor looked round. It came to Lord Winwood's turn to speak. +He preserved the same position, listening. Sir Joseph took up the +conversation next. Then his attention wandered--he knew beforehand what +Sir Joseph would say. His eyes turned anxiously toward the place in +which he had left Natalie. Lord Winwood said a word. His head turned +back again toward the corner. Sir Joseph put an objection. He glanced +once more over his shoulder--this time at the place in which Launce had +been standing. The next moment his host recalled his attention, and made +it impossible for him to continue his scrutiny of the room. At the same +times two among the evening guests, bound for another party, approached +to take leave of the lady of the house. Lady Winwood was obliged to +rise, and attend to them. They had something to say to her before they +left, and they said it at terrible length, standing so as to intercept +her view of the proceedings of the enemy. When she had got rid of them +at last, she looked--and behold Lord Winwood and Sir Joseph were the +only occupants of the corner! + +Delaying one moment, to set the "virtuoso" thundering once more, Lady +Winwood slipped out of the room and crossed the landing. At the +entrance to the empty drawing-room she heard Turlington's voice, low and +threatening, in the boudoir. Jealousy has a Second Sight of its own. +He had looked in the right place at starting--and, oh heavens! he had +caught them. + +Her ladyship's courage was beyond dispute; but she turned pale as she +approached the entrance to the boudoir. + +There stood Natalie--at once angry and afraid--between the man to +whom she was ostensibly engaged, and the man to whom she was actually +married. Turlington's rugged face expressed a martyrdom of suppressed +fury. Launce--in the act of offering Natalie her fan--smiled, with the +cool superiority of a man who knew that he had won his advantage, and +who triumphed in knowing it. + +"I forbid you to take your fan from that man's hands," said Turlington, +speaking to Natalie, and pointing to Launce. + +"Isn't it rather too soon to begin 'forbidding'?" asked Lady Winwood, +good-humoredly. + +"Exactly what I say!" exclaimed Launce. "It seems necessary to remind +Mr. Turlington that he is not married to Natalie yet!" + +Those last words were spoken in a tone which made both the women tremble +inwardly for results. Lady Winwood took the fan from Launce with one +hand, and took Natalie's arm with the other. + +"There is your fan, my dear," she said, in her easy off-hand manner. +"Why do you allow these two barbarous men to keep you here while the +great Bootmann is playing the Nightmare Sonata in the next room? Launce! +Mr. Turlington! follow me, and learn to be musical directly! You have +only to shut your eyes, and you will fancy you hear four modern German +composers playing, instead of one, and not the ghost of a melody among +all the four." She led the way out with Natalie, and whispered, "Did he +catch you?" Natalie whispered back, "I heard him in time. He only caught +us looking for the fan." The two men waited behind to have two words +together alone in the boudoir. + +"This doesn't end here, Mr. Linzie!" + +Launce smiled satirically. "For once I agree with you," he answered. "It +doesn't end here, as you say." + +Lady Winwood stopped, and looked back at them from the drawing-room +door. They were keeping her waiting--they had no choice but to follow +the mistress of the house. + +Arrived in the next room, both Turlington and Launce resumed their +places among the guests with the same object in view. As a necessary +result of the scene in the boudoir, each had his own special +remonstrance to address to Sir Joseph. Even here, Launce was beforehand +with Turlington. He was the first to get possession of Sir Joseph's +private ear. His complaint took the form of a protest against +Turlington's jealousy, and an appeal for a reconsideration of the +sentence which excluded him from Muswell Hill. Watching them from +a distance, Turlington's suspicious eye detected the appearance of +something unduly confidential in the colloquy between the two. Under +cover of the company, he stole behind them and listened. + +The great Bootmann had arrived at that part of the Nightmare Sonata in +which musical sound, produced principally with the left hand, is made to +describe, beyond all possibility of mistake, the rising of the moon in a +country church-yard and a dance of Vampires round a maiden's grave. Sir +Joseph, having no chance against the Vampires in a whisper, was obliged +to raise his voice to make himself audible in answering and comforting +Launce. "I sincerely sympathize with you," Turlington heard him say; +"and Natalie feels about it as I do. But Richard is an obstacle in our +way. We must look to the consequences, my dear boy, supposing Richard +found us out." He nodded kindly to his nephew; and, declining to pursue +the subject, moved away to another part of the room. + +Turlington's jealous distrust, wrought to the highest pitch of +irritability for weeks past, instantly associated the words he had just +heard with the words spoken by Launce in the boudoir, which had reminded +him that he was not married to Natalie yet. Was there treachery at work +under the surface? and was the object to persuade weak Sir Joseph to +reconsider his daughter's contemplated marriage in a sense favorable +to Launce? Turlington's blind suspicion overleaped at a bound all the +manifest improbabilities which forbade such a conclusion as this. After +an instant's consideration with himself, he decided on keeping his own +counsel, and on putting Sir Joseph's good faith then and there to a test +which he could rely on as certain to take Natalie's father by surprise. + +"Graybrooke!" + +Sir Joseph started at the sight of his future son-in-law's face. + +"My dear Richard, you are looking very strangely! Is the heat of the +room too much for you?" + +"Never mind the heat! I have seen enough to-night to justify me in +insisting that your daughter and Launcelot Linzie shall meet no more +between this and the day of my marriage." Sir Joseph attempted to speak. +Turlington declined to give him the opportunity. "Yes! yes! your opinion +of Linzie isn't mine, I know. I saw you as thick as thieves together +just now." Sir Joseph once more attempted to make himself heard. Wearied +by Turlington's perpetual complaints of his daughter and his nephew, he +was sufficiently irritated by this time to have reported what Launce had +actually said to him if he had been allowed the chance. But Turlington +persisted in going on. "I cannot prevent Linzie from being received in +this house, and at your sister's," he said; "but I can keep him out of +_my_ house in the country, and to the country let us go. I propose a +change in the arrangements. Have you any engagement for the Christmas +holidays?" + +He paused, and fixed his eyes attentively on Sir Joseph. Sir Joseph, +looking a little surprised, replied briefly that he had no engagement. + +"In that case," resumed Turlington, "I invite you all to Somersetshire, +and I propose that the marriage shall take place from my house, and not +from yours. Do you refuse?" + +"It is contrary to the usual course of proceeding in such cases, +Richard," Sir Joseph began. + +"Do you refuse?" reiterated Turlington. "I tell you plainly, I shall +place a construction of my own upon your motive if you do." + +"No, Richard," said Sir Joseph, quietly, "I accept." + +Turlington drew back a step in silence. Sir Joseph had turned the tables +on him, and had taken _him_ by surprise. + +"It will upset several plans, and be strongly objected to by the +ladies," proceeded the old gentleman. "But if nothing less will satisfy +you, I say, Yes! I shall have occasion, when we meet to-morrow at +Muswell Hill, to appeal to your indulgence under circumstances which may +greatly astonish you. The least I can do, in the meantime, is to set an +example of friendly sympathy and forbearance on my side. No more now, +Richard. Hush! the music!" + +It was impossible to make him explain himself further that night. +Turlington was left to interpret Sir Joseph's mysterious communication +with such doubtful aid to success as his own unassisted ingenuity might +afford. + +The meeting of the next day at Muswell Hill had for its object--as +Turlington had already been informed--the drawing of Natalie's +marriage-settlement. Was the question of money at the bottom of Sir +Joseph's contemplated appeal to his indulgence? He thought of his +commercial position. The depression in the Levant trade still continued. +Never had his business at any previous time required such constant +attention, and repaid that attention with so little profit. The Bills +of Lading had been already used by the firm, in the ordinary course of +trade, to obtain possession of the goods. The duplicates in the hands +of Bulpit Brothers were literally waste paper. Repayment of the loan +of forty thousand pounds (with interest) was due in less than a +month's time. There was his commercial position! Was it possible that +money-loving Sir Joseph had any modification to propose in the matter +of his daughter's dowry? The bare dread that it might be so struck him +cold. He quitted the house--and forgot to wish Natalie goodnight. + +Meanwhile, Launce had left the evening party before him--and Launce +also found matter for serious reflection presented to his mind before he +slept that night. In other words, he found, on reaching his lodgings, +a letter from his brother marked "private." Had the inquiry into the +secrets of Turlington's early life--now prolonged over some weeks--led +to positive results at last? Launce eagerly opened the letter. It +contained a Report and a Summary. He passed at once to the Summary, and +read these words: + +"If you only want moral evidence to satisfy your own mind, your end is +gained. There is, morally, no doubt that Turlington and the sea-captain +who cast the foreign sailor overboard to drown are on e and the same +man. Legally, the matter is beset by difficulties, Turlington having +destroyed all provable connection between his present self and his past +life. There is only one chance for us. A sailor on board the ship (who +was in his master's secrets) is supposed to be still living (under his +master's protection). All the black deeds of Turlington's early life are +known to this man. He can prove the facts, if we can find him, and make +it worth his while to speak. Under what alias he is hidden we do not +know. His own name is Thomas Wildfang. If we are to make the attempt to +find him, not a moment is to be lost. The expenses may be serious. Let +me know whether we are to go on, or whether enough has been done to +attain the end you have in view." + +Enough had been done--not only to satisfy Launce, but to produce the +right effect on Sir Joseph's mind if Sir Joseph proved obdurate when the +secret of the marriage was revealed. Launce wrote a line directing the +stoppage of the proceedings at the point which they had now reached. +"Here is a reason for her not marrying Turlington," he said to himself, +as he placed the papers under lock and key. "And if she doesn't marry +Turlington," he added, with a lover's logic, "why shouldn't she marry +Me?" + + + + +EIGHTH SCENE. + +The Library. + +The next day Sir Joseph Graybrooke, Sir Joseph's lawyer, Mr. Dicas +(highly respectable and immensely rich), and Richard Turlington were +assembled in the library at Muswell Hill, to discuss the question of +Natalie's marriage settlement. + +After the usual preliminary phrases had been exchanged, Sir Joseph +showed some hesitation in openly approaching the question which the +little party of three had met to debate. He avoided his lawyer's eye; +and he looked at Turlington rather uneasily. + +"Richard," he began at last, "when I spoke to you about your marriage, +on board the yacht, I said I would give my daughter--" Either his +courage or his breath failed him at that point. He was obliged to wait a +moment before he could go on. + +"I said I would give my daughter half my fortune on her marriage," he +resumed. "Forgive me, Richard. I can't do it!" + +Mr. Dicas, waiting for his instructions, laid down his pen and looked at +Sir Joseph's son-in-law elect. What would Mr. Turlington say? + +He said nothing. Sitting opposite the window, he rose when Sir Joseph +spoke, and placed himself at the other side of the table, with his back +to the light. + +"My eyes are weak this morning," he said, in an unnaturally low tone of +voice. "The light hurts them." + +He could find no more plausible excuse than that for concealing his face +in shadow from the scrutiny of the two men on either side of him. The +continuous moral irritation of his unhappy courtship--a courtship which +had never advanced beyond the frigid familiarity of kissing Natalie's +hand in the presence of others--had physically deteriorated him. Even +_his_ hardy nerves began to feel the long strain of suspicion that +had been laid unremittingly on them for weeks past. His power of +self-control--he knew it himself--was not to be relied on. He could hide +his face: he could no longer command it. + +"Did you hear what I said, Richard?" + +"I heard. Go on." + +Sir Joseph proceeded, gathering confidence as he advanced. + +"Half my fortune!" he repeated. "It's parting with half my life; it's +saying good-by forever to my dearest friend! My money has been such a +comfort to me, Richard; such a pleasant occupation for my mind. I know +no reading so interesting and so instructive as the reading of one's +Banker's Book. To watch the outgoings on one side," said Sir Joseph, +with a gentle and pathetic solemnity, "and the incomings on the +other--the sad lessening of the balance at one time, and the cheering +and delightful growth of it at another--what absorbing reading! The best +novel that ever was written isn't to be mentioned in a breath with it. +I can not, Richard, I really can _not_, see my nice round balance shrink +up to half the figure that I have been used to for a lifetime. It may +be weak of me," proceeded Sir Joseph, evidently feeling that it was not +weak of him at all, "but we all have our tender place, and my Banker's +Book is mine. Besides, it isn't as if you wanted it. If you wanted it, +of course--but you don't want it. You are a rich man; you are +marrying my dear Natalie for love, not for money. You and she and my +grandchildren will have it all at my death. It _can_ make no difference +to you to wait a few years till the old man's chair at the fireside +is empty. Will you say the fourth part, Richard, instead of the half? +Twenty thousand," pleaded Sir Joseph, piteously. "I can bear twenty +thousand off. For God's sake don't ask me for more!" + +The lips of the lawyer twisted themselves sourly into an ironical smile. +He was quite as fond of his money as Sir Joseph. He ought to have felt +for his client; but rich men have no sympathy with one another. Mr. +Dicas openly despised Sir Joseph. + +There was a pause. The robin-redbreasts in the shrubbery outside must +have had prodigious balances at their bankers; they hopped up on the +window-sill so fearlessly; they looked in with so little respect at the +two rich men. + +"Don't keep me in suspense, Richard," proceeded Sir Joseph. "Speak out. +Is it yes or no?" + +Turlington struck his hand excitedly on the table, and burst out on a +sudden with the answer which had been so strangely delayed. + +"Twenty thousand with all my heart!" he said. "On this condition, +Graybrooke, that every farthing of it is settled on Natalie, and on her +children after her. Not a half-penny to me!" he cried magnanimously, in +his brassiest tones. "Not a half-penny to me!" + +Let no man say the rich are heartless. Sir Joseph seized his +son-in-law's hand in silence, and burst into tears. + +Mr. Dicas, habitually a silent man, uttered the first two words that had +escaped him since the business began. "Highly creditable," he said, and +took a note of his instructions on the spot. + +From that point the business of the settlement flowed smoothly on to its +destined end. Sir Joseph explained his views at the fullest length, and +the lawyer's pen kept pace with him. Turlington, remaining in his +place at the table, restricted himself to a purely passive part in the +proceedings. He answered briefly when it was absolutely necessary to +speak, and he agreed with the two elders in everything. A man has no +attention to place at the disposal of other people when he stands at +a crisis in his life. Turlington stood at that crisis, at the trying +moment when Sir Joseph's unexpected proposal pressed instantly for a +reply. Two merciless alternatives confronted him. Either he must repay +the borrowed forty thousand pounds on the day when repayment was due, +or he must ask Bulpit Brothers to grant him an extension of time, and so +inevitably provoke an examination into the fraudulent security deposited +with the firm, which could end in but one way. His last, literally his +last chance, after Sir Joseph had diminished the promised dowry by one +half, was to adopt the high-minded tone which became his position, and +to conceal the truth until he could reveal it to his father-in-law in +the privileged character of Natalie's husband. "I owe forty thousand +pounds, sir, in a fortnight's time, and I have not got a farthing of +my own. Pay for me, or you will see your son-in-law's name in the +Bankrupt's List." For his daughter's sake--who could doubt it?--Sir +Joseph would produce the money. The one thing needful was to be married +in time. If either by accident or treachery Sir Joseph was led into +deferring the appointed day, by so much as a fortnight only, the fatal +"call" would come, and the firm of Pizzituti, Turlington & Branca would +appear in the Gazette. + +So he reasoned, standing on the brink of the terrible discovery which +was soon to reveal to him that Natalie was the wife of another man. + +"Richard!" + +"Mr. Turlington!" + +He started, and roused his attention to present things. Sir Joseph on +one side, and the lawyer on the other, were both appealing to him, and +both regarding him with looks of amazement. + +"Have you done with the settlement?" he asked. + +"My dear Richard, we have done with it long since," replied Sir Joseph. +"Have you really not heard what I have been saying for the last quarter +of an hour to good Mr. Dicas here? What _can_ you have been thinking +of?" + +Turlington did not attempt to answer the question. "Am I interested," he +asked, "in what you have been saying to Mr. Dicas?" + +"You shall judge for yourself," answered Sir Joseph, mysteriously; "I +have been giving Mr. Dicas his instructions for making my Will. I wish +the Will and the Marriage-Settlement to be executed at the same time. +Read the instructions, Mr. Dicas." + +Sir Joseph's contemplated Will proved to have two merits--it was simple +and it was short. Excepting one or two trifling legacies to distant +relatives, he had no one to think of (Miss Lavinia being already +provided for) but his daughter and the children who might be born of her +marriage. In its various provisions, made with these two main objects +in view, the Will followed the precedents established in such cases. +It differed in no important respect from the tens of thousands of other +wills made under similar circumstances. Sir Joseph's motive in claiming +special attention for it still remained unexplained, when Mr. Dicas +reached the clause devoted to the appointment of executors and trustees; +and announced that this portion of the document was left in blank. + +"Sir Joseph Graybrooke, are you prepared to name the persons whom you +appoint?" asked the lawyer. + +Sir Joseph rose, apparently for the purpose of giving special importance +to the terms in which he answered his lawyer's question. + +"I appoint," he said, "as sole executor and trustee--Richard +Turlington." + +It was no easy matter to astonish Mr. Dicas. Sir Joseph's reply +absolutely confounded him. He looked across the table at his client and +delivered himself on this special occasion of as many as three words. + +"Are you mad?" he asked. + +Sir Joseph's healthy complexion slightly reddened. "I never was in more +complete possession of myself, Mr. Dicas, than at this moment." + +Mr. Dicas was not to be silenced in that way. + +"Are you aware of what you do," persisted the lawyer, "if you appoint +Mr. Turlington as sole executor and trustee? You put it in the power of +your daughter's husband, sir, to make away with every farthing of your +money after your death." + +Turlington had hitherto listened with an appearance of interest in the +proceedings, which he assumed as an act of politeness. To his view, the +future was limited to the date at which Bulpit Brothers had a right to +claim the repayment of their loan. The Will was a matter of no earthly +importance to him, by comparison with the infinitely superior interest +of the Marriage. It was only when the lawyer's brutally plain language +forced his attention to it that the question of his pecuniary interest +in his father-in-law's death assumed its fit position in his mind. + +_His_ color rose; and _he_ too showed that he was offended by what Mr. +Dicas had just said. + +"Not a word, Richard! Let me speak for you as well as for myself," said +Sir Joseph. "For seven years past," he continued, turning to the lawyer, +"I have been accustomed to place the most unlimited trust in Richard +Turlington. His disinterested advice has enabled me largely to increase +my income, without placing a farthing of the principal in jeopardy. On +more than one occasion, I have entreated him to make use of my money +in his business. He has invariably refused to do so. Even his bitterest +enemies, sir, have been obliged to acknowledge that my interests were +safe when committed to his care. Am I to begin distrusting him, now +that I am about to give him my daughter in marriage? Am I to leave it on +record that I doubt him for the first time--when my Will is opened after +my death? No! I can confide the management of the fortune which my child +will inherit after me to no more competent or more honorable hands than +the hands of the man who is to marry her. I maintain my appointment, Mr. +Dicas! I persist in placing the whole responsibility under my Will in my +son-in-law's care." + +Turlington attempted to speak. The lawyer attempted to speak. Sir +Joseph--with a certain simple dignity which had its effect on both of +them--declined to hear a word on either side. "No, Richard! as long as +I am alive this is my business, not yours. No, Mr. Dicas! I understand +that it is your business to protest professionally. You have protested. +Fill in the blank space as I have told you. Or leave the instructions on +the table, and I will send for the nearest solicitor to complete them in +your place." + +Those words placed the lawyer's position plainly before him. He had no +choice but to do as he was bid, or to lose a good client. He did as he +was bid, and grimly left the room. + +Sir Joseph, with old-fashioned politeness, followed him as far as +the hall. Returning to the library to say a few friendly words before +finally dismissing the subject of the Will, he found himself seized by +the arm, and dragged without ceremony, in Turlington's powerful grasp, +to the window. + +"Richard!" he exclaimed, "what does this mean?" + +"Look!" cried the other, pointing through the window to a grassy walk +in the grounds, bounded on either side by shrubberies, and situated at a +little distance from the house. "Who is that man?--quick! before we lose +sight of him--the man crossing there from one shrubbery to the other?" +Sir Joseph failed to recognize the figure before it disappeared. +Turlington whispered fiercely, close to his ear--"Launcelot Linzie!" + +In perfect good faith Sir Joseph declared that the man could not +possibly have been Launce. Turlington's frenzy of jealous suspicion was +not to be so easily calmed. He asked significantly for Natalie. She was +reported to be walking in the grounds. "I knew it!" he said, with +an oath--and hurried out into the grounds to discover the truth for +himself. + +Some little time elapsed before he came back to the house. He had +discovered Natalie--alone. Not a sign of Launce had rewarded his search. +For the hundredth time he had offended Natalie. For the hundredth time +he was compelled to appeal to the indulgence of her father and her aunt. +"It won't happen again," he said, sullenly penitent. "You will find me +quite another man when I have got you all at my house in the country. +Mind!" he burst out, with a furtive look, which expressed his inveterate +distrust of Natalie and of every one about her. "Mind! it's settled +that you all come to me in Somersetshire, on Monday next." Sir Joseph +answered rather dryly that it was settled. Turlington turned to leave +the room--and suddenly came back. "It's understood," he went on, +addressing Miss Lavinia, "that the seventh of next month is the date +fixed for the marriage. Not a day later!" Miss Lavinia replied, rather +dryly on her side, "Of course, Richard; not a day later." He muttered, +"All right" and hurriedly left them. + +Half an hour afterward Natalie came in, looking a little confused. + +"Has he gone?" she asked, whispering to her aunt. + +Relieved on this point, she made straight for the library--a room which +she rarely entered at that or any other period of the day. Miss Lavinia +followed her, curious to know what it meant. Natalie hurried to the +window, and waved her handkerchief--evidently making a signal to some +one outside. Miss Lavinia instantly joined her, and took her sharply by +the hand. + +"Is it possible, Natalie?" she asked. "Has Launcelot Linzie really been +here, unknown to your father or to me?" + +"Where is the harm if he has?" answered Natalie, with a sudden outbreak +of temper. "Am I never to see my cousin again, because Mr. Turlington +happens to be jealous of him?" + +She suddenly turned away her head. The rich color flowed over her face +and neck. Miss Lavinia, proceeding sternly with the administration +of the necessary reproof, was silenced midway by a new change in her +niece's variable temper. Natalie burst into tears. Satisfied with this +appearance of sincere contrition, the old lady consented to overlook +what had happened; and, for this occasion only, to keep her niece's +secret. They would all be in Somersetshire, she remarked, before any +more breaches of discipline could be committed. Richard had fortunately +made no discoveries; and the matter might safely be trusted, all things +considered, to rest where it was. + +Miss Lavinia might possibly have taken a less hopeful view of the +circumstances, if she had known that one of the men-servants at Muswell +Hill was in Richard Turlington's pay, and that this servant had seen +Launce leave the grounds by the back-garden gate. + + + + +NINTH SCENE. + +The Drawing-Room. + + +"Amelia!" + +"Say something." + +"Ask him to sit down." + +Thus addressing one another in whispers, the three stepdaughters of +Lady Winwood stood bewildered in their own drawing-room, helplessly +confronting an object which appeared before them on the threshold of the +door. + +The date was the 23d of December. The time was between two and three in +the afternoon. The occasion was the return of the three sisters from the +Committee meeting of the Sacred Concerts' Society. And the object was +Richard Turlington. + +He stood hat in hand at the door, amazed by his reception. "I have come +up this morning from Somersetshire," he said. "Haven't you heard? A +matter of business at the office has forced me to leave my guests at my +house in the country. I return to them to-morrow. When I say my guests, +I mean the Graybrookes. Don't you know they are staying with me? Sir +Joseph and Miss Lavinia and Natalie?" On the utterance of Natalie's +name, the sisters roused themselves. They turned about and regarded each +other with looks of dismay. Turlington's patience began to fail him. +"Will you be so good as to tell me what all this means?" he said, a +little sharply. "Miss Lavinia asked me to call here when she heard I was +coming to town. I was to take charge of a pattern for a dress, which she +said you would give me. You ought to have received a telegram explaining +it all, hours since. Has the message not reached you?" + +The leading spirit of the three sisters was Miss Amelia. She was the +first who summoned presence of mind enough to give a plain answer to +Turlington's plain question. + +"We received the telegram this morning," she said. "Something has +happened since which has shocked and surprised us. We beg your pardon." +She turned to one of her sisters. "Sophia, the pattern is ready in the +drawer of that table behind you. Give it to Mr. Turlington." + +Sophia produced the packet. Before she handed it to the visitor, she +looked at her sister. "Ought we to let Mr. Turlington go," she asked, +"as if nothing had happened?" + +Amelia considered silently with herself. Dorothea, the third sister +(who had not spoken yet), came forward with a suggestion. She proposed, +before proceeding further, to inquire whether Lady Winwood was in the +house. The idea was instantly adopted. Sophia rang the bell. Amelia put +the questions when the servant appeared. + +Lady Winwood had left the house for a drive immediately after luncheon. +Lord Winwood--inquired for next--had accompanied her ladyship. No +message had been left indicating the hour of their return. + +The sisters looked at Turlington, uncertain what to say or do next. Miss +Amelia addressed him as soon as the servant had left the room. + +"Is it possible for you to remain here until either my father or Lady +Winwood return?" she asked. + +"It is quite impossible. Minutes are of importance to me to-day." + +"Will you give us one of your minutes? We want to consider something +which we may have to say to you before you go." + +Turlington, wondering, took a chair. Miss Amelia put the case before her +sisters from the sternly conscientious point of view, at the opposite +end of the room. + +"We have not found out this abominable deception by any underhand +means," she said. "The discovery has been forced upon us, and we stand +pledged to nobody to keep the secret. Knowing as we do how cruelly this +gentleman has been used, it seems to me that we are bound in honor to +open his eyes to the truth. If we remain silent we make ourselves +Lady Winwood's accomplices. I, for one--I don't care what may come of +it--refuse to do that." + +Her sisters agreed with her. The first chance their clever stepmother +had given them of asserting their importance against hers was now in +their hands. Their jealous hatred of Lady Winwood assumed the mask of +Duty--duty toward an outraged and deceived fellow-creature. Could any +earthly motive be purer than that? "Tell him, Amelia!" cried the two +young ladies, with the headlong recklessness of the sex which only stops +to think when the time for reflection has gone by. + +A vague sense of something wrong began to stir uneasily in Turlington's +mind. + +"Don't let me hurry you," he said, "but if you really have anything to +tell me--" + +Miss Amelia summoned her courage, and began. + +"We have something very dreadful to tell you," she said, interrupting +him. "You have been presented in this house, Mr. Turlington, as +a gentleman engaged to marry Lady Winwood's cousin. Miss Natalie +Graybrooke." She paused there--at the outset of the disclosure. A sudden +change of expression passed over Turlington's face, which daunted her +for the moment. "We have hitherto understood," she went on, "that you +were to be married to that young lady early in next month." + +"Well?" + +He could say that one word. Looking at their pale faces, and their eager +eyes, he could say no more. + +"Take care!" whispered Dorothea, in her sister's ear. "Look at him, +Amelia! Not too soon." + +Amelia went on more carefully. + +"We have just returned from a musical meeting," she said. "One of the +ladies there was an acquaintance, a former school-fellow of ours. She +is the wife of the rector of St. Columb Major--a large church, far from +this--at the East End of London." + +"I know nothing about the woman or the church," interposed Turlington, +sternly. + +"I must beg you to wait a little. I can't tell you what I want to tell +you unless I refer to the rector's wife. She knows Lady Winwood by +name. And she heard of Lady Winwood recently under very strange +circumstances--circumstances connected with a signature in one of the +books of the church." + +Turlington lost his self-control. "You have got something against my +Natalie," he burst out; "I know it by your whispering, I see it in your +looks! Say it at once in plain words." + +There was no trifling with him now. In plain words Amelia said it. + +* * * * * * * * * + +There was silence in the room. They could hear the sound of passing +footsteps in the street. He stood perfectly still on the spot where they +had struck him dumb by the disclosure, supporting himself with his +right hand laid on the head of a sofa near him. The sisters drew back +horror-struck into the furthest corner of the room. His face turned them +cold. Through the mute misery which it had expressed at first, there +appeared, slowly forcing its way to view, a look of deadly vengeance +which froze them to the soul. They whispered feverishly one to the +other, without knowing what they were talking of, without hearing their +own voices. One of them said, "Ring the bell!" Another said, "Offer him +something, he will faint." The third shuddered, and repeated, over and +over again, "Why did we do it? Why did we do it?" + +He silenced them on the instant by speaking on his side. He came on +slowly, by a step at a time, with the big drops of agony falling slowly +over his rugged face. He said, in a hoarse whisper, "Write me down the +name of the church--there." He held out his open pocketbook to Amelia +while he spoke. She steadied herself, and wrote the address. She tried +to say a word to soften him. The word died on her lips. There was a +light in his eyes as they looked at her which transfigured his face to +something superhuman and devilish. She turned away from him, shuddering. + +He put the book back in his pocket, and passed his handkerchief over his +face. After a moment of indecision, he suddenly and swiftly stole out of +the room, as if he was afraid of their calling somebody in, and stopping +him. At the door he turned round for a moment, and said, "You will hear +how this ends. I wish you good-morning." + +The door closed on him. Left by themselves, they began to realize it. +They thought of the consequences when his back was turned and it was too +late. + +The Graybrookes! Now he knew it, what would become of the Graybrookes? +What would he do when he got back? Even at ordinary times--when he was +on his best behavior--he was a rough man. What would happen? Oh, good +God! what would happen when he and Natalie next stood face to face? It +was a lonely house--Natalie had told them about it--no neighbors near; +nobody by to interfere but the weak old father and the maiden aunt. +Something ought to be done. Some steps ought to be taken to warn them. +Advice--who could give advice? Who was the first person who ought to +be told of what had happened? Lady Winwood? No! even at that crisis the +sisters still shrank from their stepmother--still hated her with the old +hatred! Not a word to _her!_ They owed no duty to _her!_ Who else could +they appeal to? To their father? Yes! There was the person to advise +them. In the meanwhile, silence toward their stepmother--silence toward +every one till their father came back! + +They waited and waited. One after another the precious hours, pregnant +with the issues of life and death, followed each other on the dial. Lady +Winwood returned alone. She had left her husband at the House of Lords. +Dinner-time came, and brought with it a note from his lordship. There +was a debate at the House. Lady Winwood and his daughters were not to +wait dinner for him. + + + + +TENTH SCENE. + +Green Anchor Lane. + +An hour later than the time at which he had been expected, Richard +Turlington appeared at his office in the city. + +He met beforehand all the inquiries which the marked change in him +must otherwise have provoked, by announcing that he was ill. Before he +proceeded to business, he asked if anybody was waiting to see him. One +of the servants from Muswell Hill was waiting with another parcel +for Miss Lavinia, ordered by telegram from the country that morning. +Turlington (after ascertaining the servant's name) received the man in +his private room. He there heard, for the first time, that Launcelot +Linzie had been lurking in the grounds (exactly as he had supposed) on +the day when the lawyer took his instructions for the Settlement and the +Will. + +In two hours more Turlington's work was completed. On leaving the +office--as soon as he was out of sight of the door--he turned eastward, +instead of taking the way that led to his own house in town. Pursuing +his course, he entered the labyrinth of streets which led, in that +quarter of East London, to the unsavory neighborhood of the river-side. + +By this time his mind was made up. The forecast shadow of meditated +crime traveled before him already, as he threaded his way among his +fellow-men. + +He had been to the vestry of St. Columb Major, and had satisfied himself +that he was misled by no false report. There was the entry in the +Marriage Register. The one unexplained mystery was the mystery of +Launce's conduct in permitting his wife to return to her father's house. +Utterly unable to account for this proceeding, Turlington could only +accept facts as they were, and determine to make the most of his time, +while the woman who had deceived him was still under his roof. A hideous +expression crossed his face as he realized the idea that he had got her +(unprotected by her husband) in his house. "When Launcelot Linzie _does_ +come to claim her," he said to himself, "he shall find I have been even +with him." He looked at his watch. Was it possible to save the last +train and get back that night? No--the last train had gone. Would she +take advantage of his absence to escape? He had little fear of it. She +would never have allowed her aunt to send him to Lord Winwood's house, +if she had felt the slightest suspicion of his discovering the truth in +that quarter. Returning by the first train the next morning, he might +feel sure of getting back in time. Meanwhile he had the hours of the +night before him. He could give his mind to the serious question that +must be settled before he left London--the question of repaying the +forty thousand pounds. There was but one way of getting the money now. +Sir Joseph had executed his Will; Sir Joseph's death would leave his +sole executor and trustee (the lawyer had said it!) master of his +fortune. Turlington determined to be master of it in four-and-twenty +hours--striking the blow, without risk to himself, by means of another +hand. In the face of the probabilities, in the face of the facts, he had +now firmly persuaded himself that Sir Joseph was privy to the fraud +that had been practiced on him. The Marriage-Settlement, the Will, the +presence of the family at his country house--all these he believed to be +so many stratagems invented to keep him deceived until the last moment. +The truth was in those words which he had overheard between Sir Joseph +and Launce--and in Launce's presence (privately encouraged, no doubt) at +Muswell Hill. "Her father shall pay me for it doubly: with his purse and +with his life." With that thought in his heart, Richard Turlington wound +his way through the streets by the river-side, and stopped at a blind +alley called Green Anchor Lane, infamous to this day as the chosen +resort of the most abandoned wretches whom London can produce. + +The policeman at the corner cautioned him as he turned into the alley. +"They won't hurt _me!_" he answered, and walked on to a public-house at +the bottom of the lane. + +The landlord at the door silently recognized him, and led the way +in. They crossed a room filled with sailors of all nations drinking; +ascended a staircase at the back of the house, and stopped at the door +of the room on the second floor. There the landlord spoke for the first +time. "He has outrun his allowance, sir, as usual. You will find him +with hardly a rag on his back. I doubt if he will last much longer. He +had another fit of the horrors last night, and the doctor thinks badly +of him." With that introduction he opened the door, and Turlington +entered the room. + +On the miserable bed lay a gray-headed old man of gigantic stature, +with nothing on him but a ragged shirt and a pair of patched, filthy +trousers. At the side of the bed, with a bottle of gin on the rickety +table between them, sat two hideous leering, painted monsters, wearing +the dress of women. The smell of opium was in the room, as well as the +smell of spirits. At Turlington's appearance, the old man rose on the +bed and welcomed him with greedy eyes and outstretched hand. + +"Money, master!" he called out hoarsely. "A crown piece in advance, for +the sake of old times!" + +Turlington turned to the women without answering, purse in hand. + +"His clothes are at the pawnbroker's, of course. How much?" + +"Thirty shillings." + +"Bring them here, and be quick about it. You will find it worth your +while when you come back." + +The women took the pawnbroker's tickets from the pockets of the man's +trousers and hurried out. + +Turlington closed the door, and seated himself by the bedside. He laid +his hand familiarly on the giant's mighty shoulder, looked him full in +the face, and said, in a whisper, + +"Thomas Wildfang!" + +The man started, and drew his huge hairy hand across his eyes, as if in +doubt whether he was waking or sleeping. "It's better than ten years, +master, since you called me by my name. If I am Thomas Wildfang, what +are you?" + +"Your captain, once more." + +Thomas Wildfang sat up on the side of the bed, and spoke his next words +cautiously in Turlington's ear. + +"Another man in the way?" + +"Yes." + +The giant shook his bald, bestial head dolefully. "Too late. I'm past +the job. Look here." + +He held up his hand, and showed it trembling incessantly. "I'm an old +man," he said, and let his hand drop heavily again on the bed beside +him. + +Turlington looked at the door, and whispered back, + +"The man is as old as you are. And the money is worth having." + +"How much?" + +"A hundred pounds." + +The eyes of Thomas Wildfang fastened greedily on Turlington's face. +"Let's hear," he said. "Softly, captain. Let's hear." + +* * * * * * * * * + +When the women came back with the clothes, Turlington had left the room. +Their promised reward lay waiting for them on the table, and Thomas +Wildfang was eager to dress himself and be gone. They could get but one +answer from him to every question they put. He had business in hand, +which was not to be delayed. They would see him again in a day or two, +with money in his purse. With that assurance he took his cudgel from +the corner of the room, and stalked out swiftly by the back door of the +house into the night. + + + + +ELEVENTH SCENE. + +Outside the House + +The evening was chilly, but not cold for the time of year. There was no +moon. The stars were out, and the wind was quiet. Upon the whole, the +inhabitants of the little Somersetshire village of Baxdale agreed that +it was as fine a Christmas-eve as they could remember for some years +past. + +Toward eight in the evening the one small street of the village was +empty, except at that part of it which was occupied by the public-house. +For the most part, people gathered round their firesides, with an eye to +their suppers, and watched the process of cooking comfortably indoors. +The old bare, gray church, situated at some little distance from the +village, looked a lonelier object than usual in the dim starlight. The +vicarage, nestling close under the shadow of the church-tower, threw +no illumination of fire-light or candle-light on the dreary scene. The +clergyman's shutters fitted well, and the clergyman's curtains were +closely drawn. The one ray of light that cheered the wintry darkness +streamed from the unguarded window of a lonely house, separated from +the vicarage by the whole length of the church-yard. A man stood at the +window, holding back the shutter, and looking out attentively over the +dim void of the burial-ground. The man was Richard Turlington. The room +in which he was watching was a room in his own house. + +A momentary spark of light flashed up, as from a kindled match, in the +burial-ground. Turlington instantly left the empty room in which he had +been watching. Passing down the back garden of the house, and crossing +a narrow lane at the bottom of it, he opened a gate in a low stone wall +beyond, and entered the church-yard. The shadowy figure of a man of +great stature, lurking among the graves, advanced to meet him. Midway +in the dark and lonely place the two stopped and consulted together in +whispers. Turlington spoke first. + +"Have you taken up your quarters at the public-house in the village?" + +"Yes, master." + +"Did you find your way, while the daylight lasted, to the deserted +malt-house behind my orchard wall?" + +"Yes, master." + +"Now listen--we have no time to lose. Hide there, behind that monument. +Before nine o'clock to-night you will see me cross the churchyard, as +far as this place, with the man you are to wait for. He is going to +spend an hour with the vicar, at the house yonder. I shall stop short +here, and say to him, 'You can't miss your way in the dark now--I will +go back.' When I am far enough away from him, I shall blow a call on +my whistle. The moment you hear the call, follow the man, and drop him +before he gets out of the church-yard. Have you got your cudgel?" + +Thomas Wildfang held up his cudgel. Turlington took him by the arm, and +felt it suspiciously. + +"You have had an attack of the horrors already," he said. "What does +this trembling mean?" + +He took a spirit-flask from his pocket as he spoke. Thomas Wildfang +snatched it out of his hand, and emptied it at a draught. "All right +now, master," he said. Turlington felt his arm once more. It was +steadier already. Wildfang brandished his cudgel, and struck a heavy +blow with it on one of the turf mounds near them. "Will that drop him, +captain?" he asked. + +Turlington went on with his instructions. + +"Rob him when you have dropped him. Take his money and his jewelry. I +want to have the killing of him attributed to robbery as the motive. +Make sure before you leave him that he is dead. Then go to the +malt-house. There is no fear of your being seen; all the people will be +indoors, keeping Christmas-eve. You will find a change of clothes hidden +in the malt-house, and an old caldron full of quicklime. Destroy the +clothes you have got on, and dress yourself in the other clothes +that you find. Follow the cross-road, and when it brings you into the +highroad, turn to the left; a four-mile walk will take you to the town +of Harminster. Sleep there to-night, and travel to London by the train +in the morning. The next day go to my office, see the head clerk, and +say, 'I have come to sign my receipt.' Sign it in your own name, and you +will receive your hundred pounds. There are your instructions. Do you +understand them?" + +Wildfang nodded his head in silent token that he understood, and +disappeared again among the graves. Turlington went back to the house. + +He had advanced midway across the garden, when he was startled by the +sound of footsteps in the lane--at that part of it which skirted one of +the corners of the house. Hastening forward, he placed himself behind a +projection in the wall, so as to see the person pass across the stream +of light from the uncovered window of the room that he had left. The +stranger was walking rapidly. All Turlington could see as he crossed the +field of light was, that his hat was pulled over his eyes, and that he +had a thick beard and mustache. Describing the man to the servant on +entering the house, he was informed that a stranger with a large beard +had been seen about the neighborhood for some days past. The account he +had given of himself stated that he was a surveyor, engaged in taking +measurements for a new map of that part of the country, shortly to be +published. + +The guilty mind of Turlington was far from feeling satisfied with +the meager description of the stranger thus rendered. He could not be +engaged in surveying in the dark. What could he want in the desolate +neighborhood of the house and church-yard at that time of night? + +The man wanted--what the man found a little lower down the lane, hidden +in a dismantled part of the church-yard wall--a letter from a young +lady. Read by the light of the pocket-lantern which he carried with him, +the letter first congratulated this person on the complete success of +his disguise--and then promised that the writer would be ready at her +bedroom window for flight the next morning, before the house was astir. +The signature was "Natalie," and the person addressed was "Dearest +Launce." + +In the meanwhile, Turlington barred the window shutters of the room, and +looked at his watch. It wanted only a quarter to nine o'clock. He took +his dog-whistle from the chimney-piece, and turned his steps at once in +the direction of the drawing-room, in which his guests were passing the +evening. + + + + +TWELFTH SCENE. + +Inside the House. + +The scene in the drawing-room represented the ideal of domestic comfort. +The fire of wood and coal mixed burned brightly; the lamps shed a soft +glow of light; the solid shutters and the thick red curtains kept the +cold night air on the outer side of two long windows, which opened on +the back garden. Snug arm-chairs were placed in every part of the +room. In one of them Sir Joseph reclined, fast asleep; in another, Miss +Lavinia sat knitting; a third chair, apart from the rest, near a round +table in one corner of the room, was occupied by Natalie. Her head was +resting on her hand, an unread book lay open on her lap. She looked pale +and harassed; anxiety and suspense had worn her down to the shadow of +her former self. On entering the room, Turlington purposely closed the +door with a bang. Natalie started. Miss Lavinia looked up reproachfully. +The object was achieved--Sir Joseph was roused from his sleep. + +"If you are going to the vicar's to-night. Graybrooke," said Turlington, +"it's time you were off, isn't it?" + +Sir Joseph rubbed his eyes, and looked at the clock on the mantel-piece. +"Yes, yes, Richard," he answered, drowsily, "I suppose I must go. Where +is my hat?" + +His sister and his daughter both joined in trying to persuade him to +send an excuse instead of groping his way to the vicarage in the dark. +Sir Joseph hesitated, as usual. He and the vicar had run up a sudden +friendship, on the strength of their common enthusiasm for the +old-fashioned game of backgammon. Victorious over his opponent on the +previous evening at Turlington's house, Sir Joseph had promised to pass +that evening at the vicarage, and give the vicar his revenge. Observing +his indecision, Turlington cunningly irritated him by affecting to +believe that he was really unwilling to venture out in the dark. "I'll +see you safe across the churchyard," he said; "and the vicar's servant +will see you safe back." The tone in which he spoke instantly roused +Sir Joseph. "I am not in my second childhood yet, Richard," he replied, +testily. "I can find my way by myself." He kissed his daughter on the +forehead. "No fear, Natalie. I shall be back in time for the mulled +claret. No, Richard, I won't trouble you." He kissed his hand to his +sister and went out into the hall for his hat: Turlington following him +with a rough apology, and asking as a favor to be permitted to accompany +him part of the way only. The ladies, left behind in the drawing-room, +heard the apology accepted by kind-hearted Sir Joseph. The two went out +together. + +"Have you noticed Richard since his return?" asked Miss Lavinia. "I +fancy he must have heard bad news in London. He looks as if he had +something on his mind." + +"I haven't remarked it, aunt." + +For the time, no more was said. Miss Lavinia went monotonously on with +her knitting. Natalie pursued her own anxious thoughts over the unread +pages of the book in her lap. Suddenly the deep silence out of doors and +in was broken by a shrill whistle, sounding from the direction of the +church-yard. Natalie started with a faint cry of alarm. Miss Lavinia +looked up from her knitting. + +"My dear child, your nerves must be sadly out of order. What is there to +be frightened at?" + +"I am not very well, aunt. It is so still here at night, the slightest +noises startle me." + +There was another interval of silence. It was past nine o'clock when +they heard the back door opened and closed again. Turlington came +hurriedly into the drawing-room, as if he had some reason for wishing to +rejoin the ladies as soon as possible. To the surprise of both of them, +he sat down abruptly in the corner, with his face to the wall, and took +up the newspaper, without casting a look at them or uttering a word. + +"Is Joseph safe at the vicarage?" asked Miss Lavinia. + +"All right." He gave the answer in a short, surly tone, still without +looking round. + +Miss Lavinia tried him again. "Did you hear a whistle while you were +out? It quite startled Natalie in the stillness of this place." + +He turned half-way round. "My shepherd, I suppose," he said after +a pause--"whistling for his dog." He turned back again and immersed +himself in his newspaper. + +Miss Lavinia beckoned to her niece and pointed significantly to +Turlington. After one reluctant look at him, Natalie laid her head +wearily on her aunt's shoulder. "Sleepy, my dear?" whispered the old +lady. "Uneasy, aunt--I don't know why," Natalie whispered back. "I would +give the world to be in London, and to hear the carriages going by, and +the people talking in the street." + +Turlington suddenly dropped his newspaper. "What's the secret between +you two?" he called out roughly. "What are you whispering about?" + +"We wish not to disturb you over your reading, that is all," said Miss +Lavinia, coldly. "Has anything happened to vex you, Richard?" + +"What the devil makes you think that?" + +The old lady was offended, and showed it by saying nothing more. Natalie +nestled closer to her aunt. One after another the clock ticked off +the minutes with painful distinctness in the stillness of the room. +Turlington suddenly threw aside the newspaper and left his corner. +"Let's be good friends!" he burst out, with a clumsy assumption of +gayety. "This isn't keeping Christmas-eve. Let's talk and be sociable. +Dearest Natalie!" He threw his arm roughly round Natalie, and drew her +by main force away from her aunt. She turned deadly pale, and struggled +to release herself. "I am suffering--I am ill--let me go!" He was deaf +to her entreaties. "What! your husband that is to be, treated in this +way? Mustn't I have a kiss?--I will!" He held her closer with one hand, +and, seizing her head with the other, tried to turn her lips to him. She +resisted with the inbred nervous strength which the weakest woman living +has in reserve when she is outraged. Half indignant, half terrified, at +Turlington's roughness, Miss Lavinia rose to interfere. In a moment more +he would have had two women to overpower instead of one, when a noise +outside the window suddenly suspended the ignoble struggle. + +There was a sound of footsteps on the gravel-walk which ran between the +house wall and the garden lawn. It was followed by a tap--a single faint +tap, no more--on one of the panes of glass. + +They all three stood still. For a moment more nothing was audible. Then +there was a heavy shock, as of something falling outside. Then a groan, +then another interval of silence--a long silence, interrupted no more. + +Turlington's arm dropped from Natalie. She drew back to her aunt. +Looking at him instinctively, in the natural expectation that he would +take the lead in penetrating the mystery of what had happened outside +the window, the two women were thunderstruck to see that he was, to +all appearance, even more startled and more helpless than they were. +"Richard," said Miss Lavinia, pointing to the window, "there is +something wrong out there. See what it is." He stood motionless, as if +he had not heard her, his eyes fixed on the window, his face livid with +terror. + +The silence outside was broken once more; this time by a call for help. + +A cry of horror burst from Natalie. The voice outside--rising wildly, +then suddenly dying away again--was not entirely strange to _her_ ears. +She tore aside the curtain. With voice and hand she roused her aunt to +help her. The two lifted the heavy bar from its socket; they opened the +shutters and the window. The cheerful light of the room flowed out over +the body of a prostrate man, lying on his face. They turned the man +over. Natalie lifted his head. + +Her father! + +His face was bedabbled with blood. A wound, a frightful wound, was +visible on the side of his bare head, high above the ear. He looked at +her, his eyes recognized her, before he fainted again in her arms. +His hands and his clothes were covered with earth stains. He must +have traversed some distance; in that dreadful condition he must have +faltered and fallen more than once before he reached the house. His +sister wiped the blood from his face. His daughter called on him +frantically to forgive her before he died--the harmless, gentle, +kind-hearted father, who had never said a hard word to her! The father +whom she had deceived! + +The terrified servants hurried into the room. Their appearance roused +their master from the extraordinary stupor that had seized him. He was +at the window before the footman could get there. The two lifted Sir +Joseph into the room, and laid him on the sofa. Natalie knelt by him, +supporting his head. Miss Lavinia stanched the flowing blood with her +handkerchief. The women-servants brought linen and cold water. The man +hurried away for the doctor, who lived on the other side of the village. +Left alone again with Turlington, Natalie noticed that his eyes were +fixed in immovable scrutiny on her father's head. He never said a word. +He looked, looked, looked at the wound. + +The doctor arrived. Before either the daughter or the sister of the +injured man could put the question, Turlington put it--"Will he live or +die?" + +The doctor's careful finger probed the wound. + +"Make your minds easy. A little lower down, or in front, the blow might +have been serious. As it is, there is no harm done. Keep him quiet, and +he will be all right again in two or three days." + +Hearing those welcome words, Natalie and her aunt sank on their knees in +silent gratitude. After dressing the wound, the doctor looked round for +the master of the house. Turlington, who had been so breathlessly eager +but a few minutes since, seemed to have lost all interest in the case +now. He stood apart, at the window, looking out toward the church-yard, +thinking. The questions which it was the doctor's duty to ask were +answered by the ladies. The servants assisted in examining the injured +man's clothes: they discovered that his watch and purse were both +missing. When it became necessary to carry him upstairs, it was the +footman who assisted the doctor. The foot man's master, without a word +of explanation, walked out bare headed into the back garden, on the +search, as the doctor and the servants supposed, for some trace of the +robber who had attempted Sir Joseph's life. + +His absence was hardly noticed at the time. The difficulty of conveying +the wounded man to his room absorbed the attention of all the persons +present. + +Sir Joseph partially recovered his senses while they were taking him up +the steep and narrow stairs. Carefully as they carried the patient, the +motion wrung a groan from him before they reached the top. The bedroom +corridor, in the rambling, irregularly built house rose and fell on +different levels. At the door of the first bedchamber the doctor asked a +little anxiously if that was the room. No; there were three more stairs +to go down, and a corner to turn, before they could reach it. The first +room was Natalie's. She instantly offered it for her father's use. The +doctor (seeing that it was the airiest as well as the nearest room) +accepted the proposal. Sir Joseph had been laid comfortably in his +daughter's bed; the doctor had just left them, with renewed assurances +that they need feel no anxiety, when they heard a heavy step below +stairs. Turlington had re-entered the house. + +(He had been looking, as they had supposed, for the ruffian who had +attacked Sir Joseph; with a motive, however, for the search at which it +was impossible for other persons to guess. His own safety was now bound +up in the safety of Thomas Wildfang. As soon as he was out of sight in +the darkness, he made straight for the malt-house. The change of clothes +was there untouched; not a trace of his accomplice was to be seen. +Where else to look for him it was impossible to tell. Turlington had no +alternative but to go back to the house, and ascertain if suspicion had +been aroused in his absence.) + +He had only to ascend the stairs, and to see, through the open door, +that Sir Joseph had been placed in his daughter's room. + +"What does this mean?" he asked, roughly. + +Before it was possible to answer him the footman appeared with a +message. The doctor had come back to the door to say that he would take +on himself the necessary duty of informing the constable of what had +happened, on his return to the village. Turlington started and changed +color. If Wildfang was found by others, and questioned in his employer's +absence, serious consequences might follow. "The constable is my +business," said Turlington, hurriedly descending the stairs; "I'll go +with the doctor." They heard him open the door below, then close it +again (as if some sudden thought had struck him), and call to the +footman. The house was badly provided with servants' bedrooms. The +women-servants only slept indoors. The footman occupied a room over the +stables. Natalie and her aunt heard Turlington dismiss the man for the +night, an hour earlier than usual at least. His next proceeding was +stranger still. Looking cautiously over the stairs, Natalie saw him lock +all the doors on the ground-floor and take out the keys. When he went +away, she heard him lock the front door behind him. Incredible as it +seemed, there could be no doubt of the fact--the inmates of the house +were imprisoned till he came back. What did it mean? + +(It meant that Turlington's vengeance still remained to be wreaked on +the woman who had deceived him. It meant that Sir Joseph's life still +stood between the man who had compassed his death and the money which +the man was resolved to have. It meant that Richard Turlington was +driven to bay, and that the horror and the peril of the night were not +at an end yet.) + +Natalie and her aunt looked at each other across the bed on which Sir +Joseph lay. He had fallen into a kind of doze; no enlightenment could +come to them from _him_. They could only ask each other, with beating +hearts and baffled minds, what Richard's conduct meant--they could only +feel instinctively that some dreadful discovery was hanging over them. +The aunt was the calmer of the two--there was no secret weighing heavily +on _her_ conscience. _She_ could feel the consolations of religion. "Our +dear one is spared to us, my love," said the old lady, gently. "God has +been good to us. We are in his hands. If we know that, we know enough." + +As she spoke there was a loud ring at the doorbell. The women-servants +crowded into the bedroom in alarm. Strong in numbers, and encouraged by +Natalie--who roused herself and led the way--they confronted the risk +of opening the window and of venturing out on the balcony which extended +along that side of the house. A man was dimly visible below. He called +to them in thick, unsteady accents. The servants recognized him: he was +the telegraphic messenger from the railway. They went down to speak to +him--and returned with a telegram which had been pushed in under the +door. The distance from the station was considerable; the messenger had +been "keeping Christmas" in more than one beer-shop on his way to the +house; and the delivery of the telegram had been delayed for some +hours. It was addressed to Natalie. She opened it--looked at it--dropped +it--and stood speechless; her lips parted in horror, her eyes staring +vacantly straight before her. + +Miss Lavinia took the telegram from the floor, and read these lines: + +"Lady Winwood, Hertford Street, London. To Natalie Graybrooke, Church +Meadows, Baxdale, Somersetshire. Dreadful news. R. T. has discovered +your marriage to Launce. The truth has been kept from me till to-day +(24th). Instant flight with your husband is your only chance. I would +have communicated with Launce, but I do not know his address. You +will receive this, I hope and believe, before R. T. can return to +Somersetshire. Telegraph back, I entreat you, to say that you are safe. +I shall follow my message if I do not hear from you in reasonable time." + +Miss Lavinia lifted her gray head, and looked at her niece. "Is this +true?" she said--and pointed to the venerable face laid back, white, on +the white pillow of the bed. Natalie sank forward as her eyes met the +eyes of her aunt. Miss Lavinia saved her from falling insensible on the +floor. + +* * * * * * * * * + +The confession had been made. The words of penitence and the words of +pardon had been spoken. The peaceful face of the father still lay hushed +in rest. One by one the minutes succeeded each other uneventfully in the +deep tranquillity of the night. It was almost a relief when the silence +was disturbed once more by another sound outside the house. A pebble +was thrown up at the window, and a voice called out cautiously, "Miss +Lavinia!" + +They recognized the voice of the man-servant, and at once opened the +window. + +He had something to say to the ladies in private. How could he say it? +A domestic circumstance which had been marked by Launce, as favorable +to the contemplated elopement, was now noticed by the servant as lending +itself readily to effecting the necessary communication with the ladies. +The lock of the gardener's tool-house (in the shrubbery close by) was +under repair; and the gardener's ladder was accessible to any one who +wanted it. At the short height of the balcony from the ground, the +ladder was more than long enough for the purpose required. In a few +minutes the servant had mounted to the balcony, and could speak to +Natalie and her aunt at the window. + +"I can't rest quiet," said the man, "I'm off on the sly to see what's +going on down in the village. It's hard on ladies like you to be locked +in here. Is there anything I can do for either of you?" + +Natalie took up Lady Winwood's telegram. "Launce ought to see this," +she said to her aunt. "He will be here at daybreak," she added, in a +whisper, "if I don't tell him what has happened." + +Miss Lavinia turned pale. "If he and Richard meet--" she began. "Tell +him!" she added, hurriedly--"tell him before it is too late!" + +Natalie wrote a few lines (addressed to Launce in his assumed name at +his lodgings in the village) inclosing Lady Winwood's telegram, and +entreating him to do nothing rash. When the servant had disappeared with +the letter, there was one hope in her mind and in her aunt's mind, which +each was ashamed to acknowledge to the other--the hope that Launce would +face the very danger that they dreaded for him, and come to the house. + +They had not been long alone again, when Sir Joseph drowsily opened his +eyes and asked what they were doing in his room. They told him gently +that he was ill. He put his hand up to his head, and said they were +right, and so dropped off again into slumber. Worn out by the emotions +through which they had passed, the two women silently waited for the +march of events. The same stupor of resignation possessed them both. +They had secured the door and the window. They had prayed together. They +had kissed the quiet face on the pillow. They had said to each other, +"We will live with him or die with him as God pleases." Miss Lavinia +sat by the bedside. Natalie was on a stool at her feet--with her eyes +closed, and her head on her aunt's knee. + +Time went on. The clock in the hall had struck--ten or eleven, they +were not sure which--when they heard the signal which warned them of the +servant's return from the village. He brought news, and more than news; +he brought a letter from Launce. + +Natalie read these lines: + +"I shall be with you, dearest, almost as soon as you receive this. The +bearer will tell you what has happened in the village--your note throws +a new light on it all. I only remain behind to go to the vicar (who is +also the magistrate here), and declare myself your husband. All disguise +must be at an end now. My place is with you and yours. It is even worse +than your worst fears. Turlington was at the bottom of the attack on +your father. Judge if you have not need of your husband's protection +after that!--L." + +Natalie handed the letter to her aunt, and pointed to the sentence which +asserted Turlington's guilty knowledge of the attempt on Sir Joseph's +life. In silent horror the two women looked at each other, recalling +what had happened earlier in the evening, and understanding it now. The +servant roused them to a sense of present things, by entering on the +narrative of his discoveries in the village. + +The place was all astir when he reached it. An old man--a stranger in +Baxdale--had been found lying in the road, close to the church, in a +fit; and the person who had discovered him had been no other than Launce +himself. He had, literally, stumbled over the body of Thomas Wildfang in +the dark, on his way back to his lodgings in the village. + +"The gentleman gave the alarm, miss," said the servant, describing the +event, as it had been related to him, "and the man--a huge, big old +man--was carried to the inn. The landlord identified him; he had taken +lodgings at the inn that day, and the constable found valuable property +on him--a purse of money and a gold watch and chain. There was nothing +to show who the money and the watch belonged to. It was only when my +master and the doctor got to the inn that it was known whom he had +robbed and tried to murder. All he let out in his wanderings before they +came was that some person had set him on to do it. He called the person +'Captain,' and sometimes 'Captain Goward.' It was thought--if you +could trust the ravings of a madman--that the fit took him while he +was putting his hand on Sir Joseph's heart to feel if it had stopped +beating. A sort of vision (as I understand it) must have overpowered +him at the moment. They tell me he raved about the sea bursting into the +church yard, and a drowning sailor floating by on a hen-coop; a sailor +who dragged him down to hell by the hair of his head, and such like +horrible nonsense, miss. He was still screeching, at the worst of the +fit, when my master and the doctor came into the room. At sight of one +or other of them--it is thought of Mr. Turlington, seeing that he came +first--he held his peace on a sudden, and then fell back in convulsions +in the arms of the men who were holding him. The doctor gave it a +learned name, signifying drink-madness, and said the case was hopeless. +However, he ordered the room to be cleared of the crowd to see what he +could do. My master was reported to be still with the doctor, waiting to +see whether the man lived or died, when I left the village, miss, with +the gentleman's answer to your note. I didn't dare stay to hear how it +ended, for fear of Mr. Turlington's finding me out." + +Having reached the end of his narrative, the man looked round restlessly +toward the window. It was impossible to say when his master might not +return, and it might be as much as his life was worth to be caught in +the house after he had been locked out of it. He begged permission to +open the window, and make his escape back to the stables while there +was still time. As he unbarred the shutter they were startled by a voice +hailing them from below. It was Launce's voice calling to Natalie. The +servant disappeared, and Natalie was in Launce's arms before she could +breathe again. + +For one delicious moment she let her head lie on his breast; then she +suddenly pushed him away from her. "Why do you come here? He will kill +you if he finds you in the house. Where is he?" + +Launce knew even less of Turlington's movements than the servant. +"Wherever he is, thank God, I am here before him!" That was all the +answer he could give. + +Natalie and her aunt heard him in silent dismay. Sir Joseph woke, and +recognized Launce before a word more could be said. "Ah, my dear boy!" +he murmured, faintly. "It's pleasant to see you again. How do you come +here?" He was quite satisfied with the first excuse that suggested +itself. "We'll talk about it to-morrow," he said, and composed himself +to rest again. + +Natalie made a second attempt to persuade Launce to leave the house. + +"We don't know what may have happened," she said. "He may have followed +you on your way here. He may have purposely let you enter his house. +Leave us while you have the chance." + +Miss Lavinia added her persuasions. They were useless. Launce quietly +closed the heavy window-shutters, lined with iron, and put up the bar. +Natalie wrung her hands in despair. + +"Have you been to the magistrate?" she asked. "Tell us, at least, are +you here by his advice? Is he coming to help us?" + +Launce hesitated. If he had told the truth, he must have acknowledged +that he was there in direct opposition to the magistrate's advice. He +answered evasively, "If the vicar doesn't come, the doctor will. I have +told him Sir Joseph must be moved. Cheer up, Natalie! The doctor will be +here as soon as Turlington." + +As the name passed his lips--without a sound outside to prepare them +for what was coming--the voice of Turlington himself suddenly penetrated +into the room, speaking close behind the window, on the outer side. + +"You have broken into my house in the night," said the voice. "And you +don't escape _this_ way." + +Miss Lavinia sank on her knees. Natalie flew to her father. His eyes +were wide open in terror; he moaned, feebly recognizing the voice. +The next sound that was heard was the sound made by the removal of the +ladder from the balcony. Turlington, having descended by it, had taken +it away. Natalie had but too accurately guessed what would happen. The +death of the villain's accomplice had freed him from all apprehension +in that quarter. He had deliberately dogged Launce's steps, and had +deliberately allowed him to put himself in the wrong by effecting a +secret entrance into the house. + +There was an interval--a horrible interval--and then they heard the +front door opened. Without stopping (judging by the absence of sound) +to close it again, Turlington rapidly ascended the stairs and tried the +locked door. + +"Come out, and give yourself up!" he called through the door. "I have +got my revolver with me, and I have a right to fire on a man who has +broken into my house. If the door isn't opened before I count three, +your blood be on your own head. One!" + +Launce was armed with nothing but his stick. He advanced, without an +instant's hesitation, to give himself up. Natalie threw her arms round +him and clasped him fast before he could reach the door. + +"Two!" cried the voice outside, as Launce struggled to force her from +him. At the same moment his eye turned toward the bed. It was exactly +opposite the door--it was straight in the line of fire! Sir Joseph' s +life (as Turlington had deliberately calculated) was actually in greater +danger than Launce's life. He tore himself free, rushed to the bed, and +took the old man in his arms to lift him out. + +"Three!" + +The crash of the report sounded. The bullet came through the door, +grazed Launce's left arm, and buried itself in the pillow, at the very +place on which Sir Joseph's head had rested the moment before. Launce +had saved his father-in-law's life. Turlington had fired his first shot +for the money, and had not got it yet. + +They were safe in the corner of the room, on the same side as the +door--Sir Joseph, helpless as a child, in Launce's arms; the women +pale, but admirably calm. They were safe for the moment, when the second +bullet (fired at an angle) tore its way through the wall on their right +hand. + +"I hear you," cried the voice of the miscreant on the other side of the +door. "I'll have you yet--through the wall." + +There was a pause. They heard his hand sounding the wall, to find out +where there was solid wood in the material of which it was built, and +where there was plaster only. At that dreadful moment Launce's composure +never left him. He laid Sir Joseph softly on the floor, and signed to +Natalie and her aunt to lie down by him in silence. Their lives depended +now on neither their voices nor their movements telling the murderer +where to fire. He chose his place. The barrel of the revolver grated +as he laid it against the wall. He touched the hair trigger. A faint +_click_ was the only sound that followed. The third barrel had missed +fire. + +They heard him ask himself, with an oath, "What's wrong with it now?" + +There was a pause of silence. + +Was he examining the weapon? + +Before they could ask themselves the question, the report of the +exploding charge burst on their ears. It was instantly followed by a +heavy fall. They looked at the opposite wall of the room. No sign of a +bullet there or anywhere. + +Launce signed to them not to move yet. They waited, and listened. +Nothing stirred on the landing outside. + +Suddenly there was a disturbance of the silence in the lower regions--a +clamor of many voices at the open house door. Had the firing of the +revolver been heard at the vicarage? Yes! They recognized the vicar's +voice among the others. A moment more, and they heard a general +exclamation of horror on the stairs. Launce opened the door of the room. +He instantly closed it again before Natalie could follow him. + +The dead body of Turlington lay on the landing outside. The charge in +the fourth barrel of the revolver had exploded while he was looking at +it. The bullet had entered his mouth and killed him on the spot. + + + + +DOCUMENTARY HINTS, IN CONCLUSION. + +First Hint. + +(Derived from Lady Winwood's Card-Rack.) + +"Sir Joseph Graybrooke and Miss Graybrooke request the honor of Lord +and Lady Winwood's company to dinner, on Wednesday, February 10, at +half-past seven o'clock. To meet Mr. and Mrs. Launcelot Linzie on their +return." + + +Second Hint. + +(Derived from a recent Money Article in morning Newspaper.) + +"We are requested to give the fullest contradiction to unfavorable +rumors lately in circulation respecting the firm of Pizzituti, +Turlington, and Branca. Some temporary derangement in the machinery of +the business was undoubtedly produced in consequence of the sudden death +of the lamented managing partner, Mr. Turlington, by the accidental +discharge of a revolver which he was examining. Whatever temporary +obstacles may have existed are now overcome. We are informed, on good +authority, that the well-known house of Messrs. Bulpit Brothers has an +interest in the business, and will carry it on until further notice." + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Miss or Mrs.?, by Wilkie Collins + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MISS OR MRS.? *** + +***** This file should be named 1621.txt or 1621.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/2/1621/ + +Produced by James Rusk and David Widger + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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