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@@ -46,40 +46,7 @@ p.hang2 {margin-left:3em; text-indent:0em;}
<body>
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Court Netherleigh, by Mrs. Henry Wood
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Court Netherleigh
- A Novel
-
-Author: Mrs. Henry Wood
-
-Release Date: January 26, 2019 [EBook #58774]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COURT NETHERLEIGH ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Charles Bowen from page scans provided by Google Books
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 58774 ***</div>
@@ -16327,4763 +16294,7 @@ thoughts were full of Mr. Grubb, as the verses went on. Every word
came home to her aching heart.</p>
<div style="margin-left:10%; font-size:smaller">
-<pre>
-&quot;But him I loved so well
- Still in my heart doth dwell&mdash;
- Oh, I shall ne'er forget
- Robin Adair.&quot;
-</pre>
-</div>
-
-<p>Applause ensued. It was much better deserved than that usually
-accorded in these cases. A minute later, and some one called out
-&quot;Hush!&quot; for the lady had consented to sing again. The noise subsided
-into silence; the singer was turning over the leaves of her
-music-book.</p>
-
-<p>To this silence there arose an interruption. Mr. Blunt's English
-butler appeared, announcing a late guest:</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Sir Francis Netherleigh.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The man had a low, sonorous voice, and every syllable penetrated to
-Lady Adela's ear. The name struck on the chords of her memory. Sir
-Francis Netherleigh! Why, he had been dead many a year. Could another
-Sir Francis Netherleigh be in existence? What did it mean?&mdash;for it
-must be remembered that all such news had been kept and was still kept
-from her. Lady Adela gazed out from her obscure vantage-ground.</p>
-
-<p>Not for a minute or two did she see anything: the company was dense.
-Then, threading his way through the line made for him, advanced a man
-of noble form and face, the form and face of him she had once called
-husband.</p>
-
-<p>He was in evening-dress, and in mourning. He seemed to be making
-direct for the recess, and for Adela; and she shrank behind the
-draperies to conceal herself.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment all things seemed to be in a mist, inwardly and
-outwardly. What brought Mr. Grubb <i>there</i>&mdash;and who was the Sir Francis
-Netherleigh that had been announced, and where was he?</p>
-
-<p>Not to Adela had he been advancing, neither did he see her. Mrs. Blunt
-chanced to be standing before the recess; it was to her he was making
-his way.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;How do you do, Sir Francis?&quot; she warmly exclaimed, meeting his hand.
-&quot;It is so good of you to come: my husband feared you would not be able
-to spare the time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I thought so also when I spoke to him this afternoon,&quot; was the
-answer, given in the earnest pleasant tones Adela remembered so well.
-&quot;My stay in Paris is but for a few hours this time. Where is Mr.
-Blunt?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I saw him close by a minute ago. Ah, there he is. John,&quot; called Mrs.
-Blunt, &quot;here is Sir Francis Netherleigh.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>They moved towards the fireplace; the crowd closed behind them, hiding
-them from sight, and Adela breathed again. So then, <i>he</i> was Sir
-Francis Netherleigh! How had it all come about?</p>
-
-<p>Gathering her shawl around her, she escaped from the recess and glided
-through the room with bent head. In the outer room, opening to the
-corridor and the staircase, she came upon her sister.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Harriet, I must go,&quot; she feverishly uttered. &quot;I can't stay here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oh, indeed!&quot; said Lady Harriet. &quot;Well&mdash;I don't know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;If there's no carriage waiting, I can have a coach. Or I can walk. It
-will do me no harm. I shall find my way through the streets.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>She ran down the stairs. Harriet felt obliged to follow her. &quot;Will you
-call up Sir Sandy MacIvor's carriage,&quot; asked Lady Harriet of the
-servants standing below. &quot;Adela, do wait an instant! One would think
-the house was on fire.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I must get away,&quot; was the eager, terrified interruption, and Adela
-bore onwards to the outer door.</p>
-
-<p>The carriage was called, and came up. In point of fact, Sir Sandy and
-his wife had privately agreed to keep it waiting, in case Adela should
-turn faint in the unusual scene and have to leave. In the porte
-cochère they encountered a lady who was only then arriving.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What, going already!&quot; she exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; replied Lady Harriet; &quot;and I wish you would just tell Sir Sandy
-for me: you will be sure to see him somewhere in the rooms. Say my
-sister does not feel well, and we have gone home.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>They passed out to the carriage and were soon bowling along the
-streets. Adela drew into her corner, cowering and shivering.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Did you see him?&quot; she gasped.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oh yes, I saw him,&quot; grumblingly responded Lady Harriet, who was not
-very pleased at having to quit the gay scene in this summary fashion.
-&quot;I am sure Sandy will conclude we have been spirited away, unless Mrs.
-Seymour finds him. A fine flurry he'll be in.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Harriet, what did it mean? They called him Sir Francis Netherleigh.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;He is Sir Francis Netherleigh.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Since when? Why did you not tell me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;He has been Francis Netherleigh since Aunt Margery died: the name
-came to him with the property. He has been Sir Francis since&mdash;oh, for
-about six weeks now. The old Uncle Francis wished the baronetcy to be
-revived in him, and his wishes have been carried out.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Adela paused, apparently revolving the information. &quot;Then his name is
-no longer Grubb?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;In one sense, no. For all social uses that name has passed from him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Why did you never tell me this?&quot; repeated Adela.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;From the uncertainty as to whether you would care to hear it, Adela.
-We decided to say nothing until you were stronger.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>A second pause of thought. &quot;If he has succeeded to the name, why, so
-have I. Have I not? Though he puts me away from himself, Harriet, he
-cannot take from me his name.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Of course you have succeeded to it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Pause the third. &quot;Then I ought to have been announced tonight as Lady
-Adela Netherleigh!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Had you been announced at all. You solved the difficulty, you know,
-by telling me you would not be announced&mdash;you would creep in after me
-and Sandy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What difficulty?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Well, had you heard yourself called Netherleigh, you would have
-wanted to know, there and then, the why and the wherefore. It might
-have created a small commotion.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Pause the fourth. &quot;Who is he in mourning for? Aunt Margery?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And also for his mother. Mrs. Lynn lived just long enough to see him
-take up the baronetcy. I think it must have gratified her&mdash;that her
-son should be the one to succeed at last. <i>She</i> would have had Court
-Netherleigh in the old days, Adela, had she not displeased Uncle
-Francis by her marriage, not Margery Upton. He told Margery so when he
-was dying.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;The world seems full of changes,&quot; sighed Adela.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It always was, and always will be. But I fancy the right mostly comes
-uppermost in the end,&quot; added Lady Harriet. &quot;Where is Mary Lynn, you
-ask? She lives with Sir Francis, in Grosvenor Square; the house's
-mistress.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Adela ceased her questioning. Amidst the many items for reflection
-suggested to her by the news, was this: that the once-hated name of
-Grubb had been suppressed for ever. There flashed across her a
-reminiscence of a day in the past autumn, when she was last staying at
-Court Netherleigh. She had been giving some scorn to the name, after
-her all-frequent custom, and Miss Upton had answered it with a
-peculiar look. Adela did not then understand the look: she did now.
-That expressive look, had she been able to read it, might have told
-her that Mr. Grubb would not long retain the name. Adela shrank closer
-into the corner of the carriage and pressed her hands upon her burning
-eyes. Foolish, infatuated woman that she had been!</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Did you notice how noble he looked tonight?&quot; she murmured, after
-awhile.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;He always did look noble, Adela. Here we are.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The carriage drew up. As Lady Harriet, after getting out herself,
-turned to give her hand to Adela, still weak enough to require
-especial care, she did not find it responded to.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Are you asleep, Adela? Come. We are at home.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I beg your pardon,&quot; was the meek answer.</p>
-
-<p>She had only been waiting to stem the torrent of tears flowing forth.
-Lady Harriet saw them glistening on her wasted cheeks by the light of
-the carriage-lamps. Bitter tears, telling of a breaking heart.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Sandy,&quot; observed Lady Harriet to her husband that night, &quot;I do not
-see that a further stay here will be of any use to Adela. We may as
-well be making preparations for our journey to the Highlands.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Just as you please,&quot; acquiesced Sir Sandy. &quot;I, you know, would rather
-be in the Highlands than anywhere else. Fix your own time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Then we will start next week,&quot; decided Lady Harriet. But we must
-revert for a few moments to Sir Francis Netherleigh before closing the
-chapter.</p>
-
-<p>His stay in Paris, a matter of business having taken him there, was
-limited to some four-and-twenty hours. Upon reaching Calais on his
-return homewards, he found one of the worst gales blowing that Calais
-had ever known, and he was greeted with the news that not a boat could
-leave the harbour. All he could do was to go to an hotel, Dessin's,
-and make himself comfortable until the morrow. Late in the afternoon
-he strolled out to take a look at the raging sea, and found it was
-with difficulty he could struggle against the wind. In returning, he
-was blown against a gentleman, or the gentleman against him; the two
-laughed, began an apology, and then simultaneously shook hands&mdash;for it
-was Gerard Hope. Sir Francis Netherleigh's heart went out in
-compassion; Gerard was looking so thin and careworn.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Come to my hotel and dine with me, Gerard,&quot; he said impulsively. And
-Gerard went.</p>
-
-<p>After dinner, they left the table d'hôte for a private room, to which
-a bottle of choice claret was ordered. Talking together of past times,
-the subject of the lost bracelet came up. Sir Francis, listening
-attentively to what Gerard said, looking at him keenly as he said it,
-drew the absolute conclusion that Gerard was not the thief: he was
-quick at distinguishing truth from falsehood.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Gerard,&quot; he quietly asked, &quot;why have you remained so long abroad? It
-bears a look, you see, to some people, that you are afraid to come
-back and face the charge.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It's not that,&quot; returned Gerard. &quot;What I can't face is my body of
-creditors. They would pretty soon lay hold of me, if I went over. As
-to the other affair, what could I do in it? Nothing. My uncle will
-never believe me not guilty; and I could not prove that I am
-innocent.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Fill your glass, Gerard. How much do you owe?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Well, it must be as much, I'm afraid, as five hundred pounds.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Is that all?&quot; spoke Sir Francis, rather slightingly.</p>
-
-<p>Gerard laughed. &quot;Not much to many a man; but a very great deal to a
-poor one. I don't know that I should be much better off at home than
-here,&quot; he added in a thoughtful tone. &quot;So long as that bracelet affair
-lies in doubt, the world will look askance at me: and I expect it will
-never be cleared up.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It was a most singular thing, quite a mystery, as Lady Sarah always
-calls it. I suppose you have no suspicion yourself, Gerard, as to the
-culprit.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Why, yes, I have, unfortunately.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Sir Francis caught at the words. &quot;Who was it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Gerard Hope's pale face, so much paler than of yore, turned red. But
-that he had been in a reverie he would not have made the unguarded
-admission.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I am sorry to have said so much, Sir Francis,&quot; he avowed hastily. &quot;It
-is true that a doubt lies on my mind; but I ought not to have spoken
-of it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Nay, but you may trust me, Gerard.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I don't like to,&quot; hesitated Gerard. &quot;It was of a lady. And perhaps I
-was mistaken.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Not Alice herself,&quot; cried Sir Francis, jestingly.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No, no. I&mdash;think&mdash;Alice&mdash;holds&mdash;the&mdash;same&mdash;suspicion,&quot; he added, with
-a pause between each word.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You had better trust me, Gerard. No harm shall come of it, to you or
-to her; I promise you that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I thought,&quot; breathed Gerard, &quot;it was Selina Dalrymple.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Selina Dalrymple!&quot; echoed Sir Francis, utterly surprised. &quot;Since when
-have you thought that?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ever since.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But why?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Well, partly because no one but myself and Selina went into the room;
-and I know that it was not I who took it. And partly because her visit
-to the house that evening was kept secret. Her name, as I dare say you
-know, was never spoken of at all in connection with the matter. Alice
-did not say she had been there, and of course I did not.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But how do you know she was there?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I opened the door to her. As I left that back-room where the jewels
-lay upon the table, I looked round to speak to Alice, and I saw that
-self-same glistening bracelet lying on the table behind the others. I
-did not return into the room at all; what I had to say to Alice I said
-with the door in my hand. Upon opening the front-door, to let myself
-out, there stood Selina Dalrymple, about to ring. She asked for Alice,
-and ran upstairs to her quietly, as if she did not want to be heard.
-That Selina went into the room where the jewels were and admired them,
-Alice casually said to me when we met in the street next day. But her
-visit was never spoken of in the house, as far as I know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Sir Francis made no remark. Gerard went on.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;In the first blush of the loss, I should as soon have suspected
-myself as Selina Dalrymple; sooner perhaps: but when it came to
-be asserted at the investigation that no other person whatever had
-been in the room than myself, excepting Alice, I could not see the
-reason of that assertion, and the doubt flashed upon me. For one
-thing&quot;&mdash;Gerard dropped his voice&mdash;&quot;we learnt how terribly hard-up poor
-Selina was just then. Worse than I was.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I am very sorry to have heard this, Gerard,&quot; said Sir Francis,
-perceiving at once how grave were the grounds for suspicion. &quot;Poor
-Selina, indeed! It must never transpire; it would kill Oscar. At
-heart, he is fond of her as ever.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Of course it must not transpire,&quot; assented Gerard. &quot;I have never
-breathed it, until now, to mortal man. But it has made things harder
-for me, you see.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It was said at the time, I remember, that you denied the theft in a
-half-hearted manner. Lady Sarah herself told me that. This suspicion
-trammelled you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;To be sure it did. I vowed to them I did not take the bracelet, but
-in my fear of directing doubts to Selina, I was not as emphatic
-as I might have been. I felt just as you express it, Sir
-Francis&mdash;trammelled. And I fear,&quot; went on Gerard, after a pause, &quot;that
-this same suspicion has been making havoc with poor Alice's heart and
-health. When I receive a letter from Frances, as I do now and then,
-she is sure to lament over Alice's low spirits and her increasing
-illness.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Francis Netherleigh sat thinking. &quot;It seems to me, Gerard,&quot; he
-presently said, &quot;that you are being punished unjustly. You ought to
-return to England.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ah, but I can't,&quot; answered Gerard, shaking his head. &quot;The sharks
-would be on to me. Before I could turn round I should be lodged in the
-Queen's Bench.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No, no; not if they saw you wished to pay them later, and that there
-was a fair probability of your doing so.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;My wish is good enough. As to the probability&mdash;it is nowhere.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Creditors are not as hard as they are sometimes represented, Gerard.
-I can assure you of that. I have always found them reasonable.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Gerard laughed outright. &quot;I dare <i>say</i> you have, Sir Francis. It would
-be an odd creditor that would be hard to you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ah, but I meant when I have dealt with them for other people,&quot;
-replied Sir Francis, joining in the laugh.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And if I did get back to London, I should have nothing to live upon,&quot;
-resumed Gerard. &quot;The pittance that I half starve upon in these cheap
-places, I might wholly starve upon there. I often wish I could get
-employed as a clerk; no one but myself knows how thankful I should be.
-But with this other thing hanging over my head, who'd give me a
-recommendation, and who'd take me without one!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Well, well, we will see, Gerard. It is a long lane that has no
-turning.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>They talked yet further, and then Gerard said good-night. And in the
-morning Sir Francis Netherleigh heard the welcome tidings that the
-wind had gone down sufficiently to allow the mail-packet to venture
-out. So he went in her to England.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_33" href="#div1Ref_33">CHAPTER XXXIII.</a></h4>
-<h5>DESPAIR.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p>The year had gone on, and the season was at its height. In the
-breakfast-room at Sir Francis Netherleigh's house in Grosvenor Square
-sat his sister, waiting to pour out the coffee. Ah, how different
-things were from what they had been in his wife's time! Then he had to
-wait upon himself at breakfast, often to take it alone; now he always
-found his sister down before him.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Lynn was good-looking as ever, her wonderful grey eyes, as Miss
-Upton used to call them, were not a whit less beautiful; but the mirth
-of early days had given place to a calm, sad seriousness. It could be
-seen that some great sorrow had passed over her heart and left its
-traces there for ever. Just now, as she laid down a letter she had
-been reading, her face wore an especial air of sadness, somewhat of
-perplexity. Sir Francis entered.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I have a letter from Netherleigh, Francis, from Alice Dalrymple,&quot;
-began Mary, after they had said good-morning. &quot;Mrs. Dalrymple has met
-with an accident, and&mdash;but I will read you what she says,&quot; she broke
-off, taking up the letter.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;'Selina was driving mamma in a borrowed pony-chaise yesterday; the
-pony took fright at a passing caravan&mdash;a huge thing, Selina says,
-covered with brooms and baskets and shining tins&mdash;ran away, and
-overturned the chaise. Selina was not hurt, she never is; but mamma
-has received, it is feared, some internal injury. She asks if you will
-come down to her, dear Mary. Lose no time; you know how she values
-you!'&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Selina was driving carelessly, I expect,&quot; observed Sir Francis.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Of course I will go down. But it cannot be today, Francis?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Not very well,&quot; he answered, as he took his cup of coffee from her
-hand. &quot;What should I do with the crowd, coming here tonight, without
-a hostess to receive them?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>For Sir Francis Netherleigh had bidden the great world to his house
-that evening. Such invitations from him were rare. This was the first
-he had given since his wife's departure and his mother's death.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;True,&quot; observed Mary, in answer. &quot;And you also expect that gentleman
-and his wife, who are just home from India, to lunch here today.
-Then I will write to Alice, and tell her I cannot be with her until
-tomorrow. Her mother is not so ill, I trust, as to make a day's delay
-of moment. Perhaps you will go down with me, Francis?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;If I can. I know I am wanted at Court Netherleigh.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;That is settled, then. And now tell me, will the Hopes also be here
-at luncheon?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes, I asked them last night to meet the Didnums. As I told you,
-Mary, the Hopes and the Didnums were great friends out in India.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Although Francis Netherleigh had put away his wife, the intimate
-relations that had existed between himself and her family had not been
-interrupted. He was sometimes at Lord Acorn's and at Colonel Hope's,
-and they were often with him. Mr. Didnum, the head of a great
-mercantile house in Calcutta, in constant correspondence with that of
-Christopher Grubb and Son in London, was an old friend of Colonel
-Hope, and they were now about to meet at luncheon in Grosvenor Square.</p>
-
-<p>Breakfast over, Sir Francis Netherleigh went to Leadenhall Street as
-usual, returning in time to receive his visitors.</p>
-
-<p>Frances Chenevix, staying with her sister, Lady Sarah Hope, made one
-of the party. &quot;I don't know whether I am expected or whether I am not,
-but I shall go,&quot; she remarked to Lady Sarah, in her careless fashion.
-And she went, and was warmly welcomed. Every one liked gay-hearted
-Frances Chenevix.</p>
-
-<p>The luncheon had been over some little time, and they were all talking
-together with interest, when a telegram was brought in for Miss Lynn.
-It proved to be from the Rector of Netherleigh, the Reverend Thomas
-Cleveland.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Mrs. Dalrymple has undergone an operation, and is in a very exhausted
-condition. Come to her at once. I am sending also to Leadenhall Street
-to your brother. She is asking for him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Such a message creates confusion. Sir Francis looked to ascertain at
-what time they were likely to find a train to carry them to
-Netherleigh, and found they could just catch one if they started at
-once. A servant was sent for the fleetest-looking cab he could find;
-there was no time to get the carriage round.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Lynn was already seated in the cab, and Sir Francis was shaking
-hands with Colonel Hope, who had come out to the door, when he
-remembered the guests bidden to his house that night. It caused him to
-pause.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You must stay and receive them for me, colonel: be host in my place,
-and your wife hostess, if she will be so good,&quot; he hastily decided.
-&quot;Explain to every one how it is: dying wishes must be attended to, you
-know: and my getting back is, I dare say, out of the question.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;All right,&quot; answered Colonel Hope. &quot;Don't wait, or you will lose your
-train.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The colonel returned indoors, went back to the dining-room and told
-his wife what was required of them. Lady Sarah stared in perplexity.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Receive the people tonight in his place! Why, we cannot do so,
-colonel. Did you forget that we dine with those people at Hounslow?
-It's hard to say at <i>what</i> time we shall get back.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Hope looked a little perplexed too. &quot;I did forget it,&quot; he said
-in his solemn way. &quot;What is to be done?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Let mamma be here early and receive them,&quot; suggested Lady Frances. &quot;I
-will help her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>It was an excellent solution of the difficulty. Mr. and Mrs. Didnum
-took their departure; and Lady Sarah Hope, accompanied by Frances,
-entered her carriage and ordered it to Chenevix House. The colonel
-walked away to his club.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Acorn was alone when they entered. She listened to the news her
-daughters told her of her son-in-law's being summoned away, and of the
-request that she would take his place that night, and receive his
-guests.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I suppose I must,&quot; said she, in her tart way; &quot;but I shall have to
-get round to Grosvenor Square at an inconveniently early hour.
-Something is sure to happen when you want things to go particularly
-smoothly. And now&mdash;who do you suppose is here?&quot; continued Lady Acorn.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;How can we tell, mamma?&quot; cried Frances, before Sarah had time to
-speak. &quot;Mary?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No; Adela.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;<i>Adela!</i>&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The countess nodded. &quot;She and MacIvor arrived here this morning by the
-Scotch mail. Sandy had an unexpected summons to London, from the
-lawyers who are acting for him in the action about that small property
-he lays claim to; and when he was starting from home, nothing would do
-for Adela, it seems, but she must accompany him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Has Harriet come also?&quot; asked Lady Sarah.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No. Sandy goes back in a day or two.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And Adela? Does she return with him?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;<i>I</i> don't know. Sir Sandy says she seems miserable with them, and he
-thinks she will be miserable everywhere.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Where is she?&quot; asked Frances.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Upstairs somewhere: Grace is with her. Grace pities and soothes her
-just as though she were a martyr&mdash;instead of a silly woman who has
-wilfully blighted her own happiness in life, and entailed no end of
-anxiety on us all.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>After their short stay in Paris in the spring, where we last saw Lady
-Adela, the MacIvors went straight to Scotland, avoiding London and the
-cost that would have attended a London season, which they could ill
-afford. Adela also shrank from that; she would have left them had they
-sojourned in the metropolis. They took up their abode in the
-Highlands, in the old castle that was the paternal stronghold of the
-MacIvors, which was utterly bleak, dull, and remote; and, here, for
-the past three months, Adela had been slowly dying of remorse.</p>
-
-<p>No wonder. Her mind, her whole being, so to say, was filled with the
-image of her husband; with the longing only to see him; with the
-bitter, unavailing remorse for the past. That one solitary sight of
-him, in Paris at Mrs. Blunt's, had revived within her the pain and
-excitement, which had been previously subsiding into a sort of dull
-apathy. The château in Switzerland had been, as a residence, lonely
-and wearisome; it was nothing, in those respects, compared with this
-old castle of Sir Sandy's. At least, Adela, found it so. In fact, she
-did not know what she wanted. She shrank from even the bare suggestion
-of publicity, and she shrank from solitude. She felt herself in the
-position of one whose whole interest in life has departed while yet a
-long life lies before her: the saddest of all sad positions, and the
-most rare.</p>
-
-<p>Was it to continue so for ever and for ever? Yes, she would wail out
-in answer, when asking herself the question: at least, as long as time
-should last. For there could be no change in it. She had forfeited all
-possibility of that. The lone, miserable woman that she was now, must
-she remain to the end.</p>
-
-<p>She wondered sometimes whether any one ever died of repentance and
-regret. Existence was becoming all but unendurable. When she opened
-her weary eyelids to the dawn of a new day she would moan out a faint
-prayer that God in His compassion would help her to get through it,
-and would bury her face in the pillow, wishing she could so bury
-herself and her misery.</p>
-
-<p>It must not be thought she was encouraged in this state of mind. Lady
-Harriet MacIvor had become intolerably cross about it long ago, openly
-telling Adela she had no patience with her. From her Adela received no
-sympathy whatever. Look where she would, not a gleam of brightness
-shone for her. Sick at heart, fainting in spirit, it seemed to Adela
-that any change would be welcome; and when Sir Sandy received a letter
-one morning, telling him his presence was needed in London, and he
-announced his intention of starting that same day, Adela said she
-should go with him.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Harriet did not oppose it. In truth, it brought her relief. Adela
-was becoming more of a responsibility day by day; and she had held
-some anxious conferences with her husband as to the expediency of
-their resigning charge of her.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It is the best thing that could have happened, Sandy,&quot; she said to
-him in private. &quot;Take her over to mamma, and tell her everything. I
-think they had better keep her themselves for a time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Hence the unexpected irruption of the travellers at Chenevix House.
-Lady Acorn was not pleased. Not that she was sorry to see Adela once
-more; but she had lived in a chronic state of anger with her since the
-separation, and the accounts written to her from time to time by her
-daughter Harriet in no way diminished it.</p>
-
-<p>After the briefest interview with her mother, Adela escaped to the
-chamber assigned her; the one she used to occupy. This left Sir Sandy
-free to open the budget his wife had charged him with, and to say that
-for the present he and Harriet would rather not continue to have the
-responsibility of Adela. Lady Acorn, as she listened, audibly wished
-Adela was a child again, that she might &quot;have the nonsense shaken out
-of her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Lady Sarah Hope raised her condemnatory shoulders, as her mother
-related this. She had never had the slightest sympathy with the
-trouble Adela had brought upon herself, or with the remorse it
-entailed.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Will you see her, Sarah?&quot; asked Lady Acorn.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No; I would rather not. At least, not today. I must be going
-shortly.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Poor Adela! True, she had been guilty of grievous offences, but they
-had brought their punishment. As we sow, so do we generally reap. This
-return to her mother's home seemed to bring back all the past sin, all
-the present anguish, in colours tenfold more vivid.</p>
-
-<p>Kneeling on the floor in the bedroom, her hands clasped round Grace's
-knees as she sat, Adela sobbed out her repentance, her hopeless
-longings for the life and the husband she had thrown away.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Poor child!&quot; sighed Grace, her own tears falling as she stroked with
-a gentle hand her unhappy sister's hair, &quot;your sorrow is, I see, hard
-to bear. If I only knew how to comfort you!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>No answer.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Still, Adela, although he is yet, in one sense of the word, your
-husband, it is not well for you to indulge these thoughts; these
-regrets. Were there even the most distant hope that things between you
-would alter, it would be different; but I fear there is none.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I know it,&quot; bewailed Adela. &quot;What he did, he did for ever.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Then you should no longer, for your own peace' sake, dwell upon his
-memory. Try and forget him. It seems curious advice, Adela, but I have
-none better to give.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I cannot forget him. My dreams by night, my thoughts by day, are of
-him, of him alone. If I could only be with him for just one week of
-reconciliation, to show him how I would, if possible, atone to him, to
-let him see that my repentance is lasting, though he put me away again
-at the week's end, it would be something. Oh, Grace, you don't know
-what my remorse is&mdash;how hard a cross I have to bear.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>She knelt there in her bitter distress. Not much less distressing was
-it to Grace. By dint of coaxing, Adela was at length partially calmed,
-and lay back, half-exhausted, in an easy-chair.</p>
-
-<p>At lunch-time, for this had occurred in the morning, she refused to go
-down, or to take anything. In the afternoon, when Grace was back
-again, Darvy brought up a cup of chocolate and some toast. Whilst
-languidly taking this, Adela abruptly renewed the subject: the only
-one, as she truly said, that ever occupied her mind.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Do you see him often, Grace?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Rather often,&quot; replied Grace, knowing that the question must refer to
-Sir Francis.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;He is friendly with you, then?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Quite so. The friendship has never been interrupted. We are going to
-his house tonight,&quot; she added, perhaps incautiously.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;To Grosvenor Square?&quot; cried Adela.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes. I think it is the first entertainment he has given since you
-left it. Half London will be there.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;If I could only go!&quot; exclaimed Adela, a light rising in her eye, a
-flush to her pale cheek. Grace looked at her in surprise; she had
-forfeited the right ever to enter there. Grace made no comment, and a
-pause ensued.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Did you read the speech he made last Thursday night to the Commons?&quot;
-resumed Adela, in a low tone.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes. Every one was talking of it. Did <i>you</i> read it, Adela?&mdash;in
-Scotland?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Grace received no answer. Sir Sandy below could have told her that
-Adela used to seize upon the <i>Times</i>, when it arrived, with feverish
-interest, to see whether any speech of her husband's was reported in
-it. If so, Sir Sandy's belief was that she learnt it by heart, so long
-did she keep the paper.</p>
-
-<p>The chocolate finished, she lay back in the chair, her eyes looking
-into vacancy, her listless hands folded before her. Grace, sitting
-opposite, ostensibly occupied with some work, for she was rarely idle,
-had leisure to note her sister's countenance. It was much changed.
-Worn, wan, and weary it looked, but there was no special appearance
-now of ill health.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You are much better, are you not, Adela?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oh, I am very well,&quot; was the languid answer.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Do you like Scotland?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I don't know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Grace thought she was tired after the night journey, and resolved to
-leave her to silence; but an interruption occurred. Frances came in.</p>
-
-<p>And, that Frances Chenevix could be melancholy for more than a minute
-at any time, was not to be expected. In spite of Adela's evidently
-subdued state of mind, she, after a few staid sentences, ran off at a
-gay tangent.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What do you think, Grace?&quot; she began. &quot;We had very nearly lost our
-party tonight&mdash;one, Adela, that your whilom husband gives. He and his
-sister have been telegraphed for this afternoon to Netherleigh. Poor
-Mrs. Dalrymple has met with some serious accident; there has been an
-operation, and the result is, I suppose, uncertain. They have both
-started by train, and therefore cannot be at home to receive the
-people tonight.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Is the party put off, then?&quot; questioned Grace.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No, there was not time to do it: how could he send round to all the
-world and his wife? It is to take place without him, mamma playing
-host in his absence.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I wonder what Mrs. Dalrymple could want with him?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Just what I wondered, Grace. Mamma thinks it must be to speak to him
-about her affairs. He is her executor, I believe: not, poor woman,
-that she has much to leave.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Adela had listened to this in silence: an eager look was dawning on
-her face.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Do you mean to say, Frances, that he&mdash;that my husband&mdash;will not be
-there at all?&mdash;in his own house?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;To be sure I mean it, Adela. He cannot be in two places at once, here
-and Netherleigh. He and Mary Lynn have only now started on their way
-there. I tell mamma that whilst she plays host I shall play hostess.
-Won't it be fun!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Grace,&quot; began Adela very quietly, after her sisters had left, for
-Lady Sarah, thinking better of it, came up to see her for a moment, &quot;I
-shall go with you tonight.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Go&mdash;where did you say?&quot; questioned Grace, in doubt.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;To my husband's
-house.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Grace dropped her work in consternation. &quot;You cannot mean it, Adela.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I do mean it. I shall go.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oh, Adela, pray consider what you are saying. Go <i>there</i>. Why, you
-know that you must not do so.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It was my house once,&quot; said Adela, in agitation.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But it is yours no longer. Pray consider. Of all people in the world,
-you must not attempt to enter it. It would be unseemly.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Adela burst into tears. &quot;If you knew&mdash;if you knew how I long for a
-sight of it, Gracie,&quot; she gasped, &quot;you would not deny me. Only just
-one little look at it, Grace! What can it matter? <i>He</i> is not there.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>How Grace would have contrived to combat this wish, cannot be told:
-but Lady Acorn came in. In answer to her questioning as to what Adela
-was crying about now, Grace thought it well to tell her.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oh,&quot; said the countess, receiving the affair lightly, for she did not
-suppose Adela could be serious. &quot;Go <i>there</i>, would you! What would the
-world say, I wonder, if they met Lady Adela Netherleigh at that house?
-Don't be silly, child.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>What indeed! Adela sighed and said no more. Yet, she did so want to
-go. Lying back in her chair, her thoughts busy with the past and
-present, the longing took a terrible hold upon her.</p>
-
-<p>She dressed, but did not go down to dinner, refusing that meal as she
-had refused luncheon. Lady Acorn went straight from the dinner-table
-to Grosvenor Square, calling on her way at Colonel Hope's for her
-daughter Frances, as had been arranged. Grace, who did not care to
-leave Adela alone for too long an evening, would go later with Sir
-Sandy. She hastened to dress, not having done so before dinner, and
-then went to her sister's room to remain with her to the last moment.</p>
-
-<p>But when Grace got there, she found, to her dismay, that Adela <i>was
-prepared to go also</i>. Her fan lay on the table, her gloves beside it.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Adela, indeed you must not go!&quot; decisively spoke Grace. &quot;Only think
-how&mdash;I said it this afternoon&mdash;<i>unseemly</i> it will be.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;If you only knew how I am yearning for it,&quot; came the piteous
-reiteration, and Adela entwined her wasted arms entreatingly about her
-sister. &quot;My own home once, Gracie, my own home once! I seem to be
-dying for a sight of it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Never had Grace felt so perplexed, rarely so distressed. &quot;Adela, I
-<i>dare</i> not sanction it; dare not take you. What would be said and
-thought? Mamma&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You need not take me; I don't wish to get you into trouble with
-mamma. Darvy can tell them to get a cab. Grace, you have no right to
-oppose me,&quot; went on Adela, in low, firm tones; &quot;what right can you
-have? My husband will not be there, and I must see my old home. It may
-be the last time I shall have the chance of it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Sir Sandy's step was heard outside in the corridor, passing to his
-chamber. Grace opened the door, and told him of the trouble. He put
-his little head inside and said a few words to Adela in his mild way,
-begging her not to attempt to go; and then went on to his room.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I must go, Gracie; I <i>must</i> go! Grace, don't look harshly at me, for
-I am very miserable.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>What was Grace to do? A little more combating, and she yielded in very
-helplessness. The conviction lay upon her that if she refused to the
-end, Adela would certainly go alone. When an ardent desire, such as
-this, takes possession of one weakened in spirit and in health, it
-assumes the form of a fever that must have its course.</p>
-
-<p>The contention delayed them, and it was late when they went down to
-the carriage. Little Sir Sandy took his seat opposite Grace and Adela.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I wash my hands of it,&quot; he said, amiably. &quot;Do not let your mother put
-the blame of it upon me, Lady Adela, and tell me I ought not to have
-brought you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes, and the carriage stopped in Grosvenor Square. Other
-guests were entering the house at the same moment. Adela shrank
-behind Grace and Sir Sandy, and was not observed in the crowd. Her
-dress was black net, as it had been at Mrs. Blunt's, though she was
-not in mourning now; she kept her thin black burnous cloak on and held
-it up to her face as she passed close to Hilson. The man stepped back
-in astonishment, recollected himself, and saluted her with an
-impassive face.</p>
-
-<p>Keeping in the shade as much as was possible, shrinking into corners
-to avoid observation, Adela lost the others. She heard their names
-shouted out in a louder voice than Hilson's, &quot;Lady Grace Chenevix and
-Sir Sandy MacIvor,&quot; and she lingered behind looking about her.</p>
-
-<p>How painful to her was the sight of the old familiar spots! She turned
-into a small niche and halted there; her heart was beating too
-painfully to go on, her breath had left her. No, she should not be
-able to carry out this expedition; she saw now how wrong and foolish
-it had been to attempt it; she had put herself into a false position,
-and she felt it in every tingling vein.</p>
-
-<p>Just one peep she would give at the drawing-rooms above. Just one. No
-one would notice her. Amidst the crowds pressing in she should escape
-observation. One yearning look, and then she would turn back and
-escape the way she came.</p>
-
-<p>Three or four persons in a group, strangers to her, were passing
-upwards. Adela glided on behind them. Their names were shouted out as
-her sister's and Sir Sandy's had been; as others were; and she stole
-after them, within the portals.</p>
-
-<p>But only to steal back again. Nay, to start back. For a
-too-well-remembered voice had greeted the visitors: &quot;I am so glad to
-see you,&quot; and a tall, distinguished form stood there with outstretched
-hands: the voice and form of her husband. Later, she knew how it was.
-The faintness succeeding to the operation (a very slight one), which
-had alarmed Mrs. Dalrymple herself, and also the surgeon and the
-Rector, had passed off, and she was really in no danger. So that when
-Sir Francis learnt this on his arrival at Netherleigh, he found
-himself at liberty to return.</p>
-
-<p>Feeling as if she must die in her agony of shame, shame at her
-unwarrantable intrusion, which the unexpected sight of her husband
-brought home to her, Adela got down the stairs again unseen and
-unnoticed, and encountered Hilson in the hall.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Can I do anything for you, my lady?&mdash;can I get you anything?&quot; he
-asked, his tone betraying his compassion for her evident sickness.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; she said, &quot;yes. I want to go home; I find I am not well enough
-to remain: perhaps one of the carriages outside would take me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Can I assist you, Lady Adela?&quot; said a voice at her side, from one who
-was then entering and had overheard the colloquy: and Adela turned to
-behold Gerard Hope.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Is it you?&quot; she faintly cried. &quot;I thought you were abroad, Gerard.
-Are you making one of the crowd here tonight?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Not as a guest. These grand things no longer belong to me. I am in
-England again, and at work&mdash;a clerk in your husband's house, Lady
-Adela; and I have come here tonight to see him on a pressing matter
-of business.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Hilson managed it all. An obliging coachman, then setting down his
-freight, was only too willing to take home a sick lady. Gerard Hope
-and Hilson both went out with her.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Don't say to&mdash;to any one&mdash;that I came, Hilson,&quot; she whispered, as she
-shrank into a corner of the carriage: and Hilson discerned that by
-&quot;any one&quot; she must especially mean Sir Francis Netherleigh.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You may depend upon me, my lady. Chenevix House,&quot; he added to the
-friendly coachman: and closed the door on the unhappy woman who was
-once his master's indulged and idolized wife.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;How she is changed!&quot; thought Gerard, gazing after the carriage as it
-bowled away. &quot;Hilson,&quot; he said, turning to the butler, &quot;I must see
-your master for a minute or two. Have you any room that you can put me
-into, away from this crowd?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;There's the housekeeper's parlour, sir: if you don't mind going
-there. It's quite empty.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;All right, Tell Sir Francis I bring a note from Mr. Howard. Something
-important, I believe.&quot;</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_34" href="#div1Ref_34">CHAPTER XXXIV.</a></h4>
-<h5>ON LADY LIVINGSTONE'S ARM.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p>The stately rooms were thrown open for the reception of the guests,
-and the evening was already waning. Wax-lights innumerable shed their
-rays on the gilded decorations, the exquisite paintings, the gorgeous
-dresses of the ladies; the enlivening strains of the band invited to
-the dance, and rare exotics shed forth a sweet perfume. Admission to
-the residence of Sir Francis Netherleigh was coveted by the gay world.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;There's a tear!&quot; almost screamed a pretty-looking girl. By some
-mishap in the dancing-room her partner had contrived to put his foot
-upon her thin white dress, and the bottom of the skirt was half torn
-away.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Quite impossible than I can finish the quadrille,&quot; quoth she, half in
-amusement, half provoked at the misfortune. &quot;You must find another
-partner whilst I go and have this repaired.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>It was Frances Chenevix. By some neglect, no maid was at the moment in
-attendance upstairs; and Frances, in her impatience, ran down to the
-housekeeper's parlour. As Adela's sister, and frequently there with
-Mary Lynn, she was quite at home in the house. She had gathered the
-damaged dress up on her arm, but her white silk petticoat fell in rich
-folds around her.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Just look what an object that stupid&mdash;&mdash;&quot; And there stopped the young
-lady. For, instead of the housekeeper or maid, whom she expected to
-meet, no one was in the room but a gentleman; a tall, handsome man.
-She looked thunderstruck: and then slowly advanced and stared at him,
-as if unable to believe her own eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Gerard! Well, I should just as soon have expected to meet the dead
-here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;How are you, Lady Frances?&quot; he said, holding out his hand with
-hesitation.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;<i>Lady</i> Frances! I am much obliged to you for your formality. Lady
-Frances returns her thanks to Mr. Hope for his polite inquiries,&quot;
-continued she, honouring him with a swimming curtsy.</p>
-
-<p>He caught her hand. &quot;Forgive me, Fanny, but our positions have
-altered. At least, mine has: and how did I know that you were not
-altered with it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You are an ungrateful&mdash;raven,&quot; cried she, &quot;to croak like that. After
-getting me to write to you no end of letters, with all the news about
-every one, and beginning 'My dear Gerard,' and ending 'Your
-affectionate Fanny,' and being as good to you as a sister, you meet me
-with 'My Lady Frances!' Now, don't squeeze my hand to atoms. What on
-earth have you come to England for?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I could not stop over there,&quot; he returned, with emotion; &quot;I was
-fretting away my heart-strings. So I accepted an offer that was made
-to me, and came back. Guess in what way, Frances; and what to do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;How should I know? To call me 'Lady Frances,' perhaps.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;As a City clerk; earning my bread. That's what I am now. Very
-consistent, is it not, for one in my position to address familiarly
-Lady Frances Chenevix?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You never spoke a grain of sense in your life, Gerard,&quot; she exclaimed
-peevishly. &quot;What do you mean?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Sir Francis Netherleigh has taken me into his house in Leadenhall
-Street.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Sir Francis Netherleigh!&quot; she echoed, in surprise. &quot;What, with
-that&mdash;that&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;That crime hanging over me. Speak up, Frances.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No; I was going to say that doubt,&quot; returned the outspoken girl. &quot;I
-don't believe you were guilty: you know that, Gerard.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I have been there some little time now, Frances; and I came up
-tonight from the City to bring a note to him from Mr. Howard&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Rather late, is it not, to be in the City?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It is foreign post night, and we are very busy. A telegram came, of
-some importance, I believe, and Mr. Howard has enclosed it to Sir
-Francis.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But you owned to a mountain of debt in England, Gerard; you were
-afraid of arrest.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I have managed a portion of that, thanks to Sir Francis, and the rest
-they are going to let me square up by instalments.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And pray, if you have been back some time, why have you not come to
-see us?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I don't care to encounter old acquaintances, Frances; still less to
-intrude voluntarily upon them. They might not like it, you see.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I see that you have taken up very ridiculous notions; that you are
-curiously altered.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Adversity alters most people. That bracelet has never been heard of?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oh, that's gone for good. No doubt melted down in a caldron, as the
-colonel calls it, and the diamonds reset. It remains a mystery of the
-past, and is never expected to be solved.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And they still suspect me! What is the matter with your dress?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Matter enough,&quot; answered she, letting it down and turning round for
-his inspection. &quot;I came here to get it repaired. That great booby,
-John Cust, did it for me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Fanny, how is Alice Dalrymple?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You have cause to ask after her! She is dying.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Dying!&quot; repeated Gerard, in hushed, shocked tones.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I do not mean actually dying tonight, or going to die tomorrow; but
-that she is dying by slow degrees there is no doubt. It may be weeks
-yet, or months; perhaps years: I cannot tell.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Where is she?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Still at Lady Sarah's. Just now she is making a short stay with her
-mother at Netherleigh. She went home also in the spring for a month,
-and when she came back Sarah was so shocked at the change in her that
-she called in medical advice, and we have been trying to nurse her up.
-It is all of no use: she grows thinner and weaker.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You are still at Lady Sarah's also?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oh, to be sure; I am a fixture there,&quot; laughed Frances.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Are the
-Hopes here tonight?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes: or will be. They went out somewhere to dinner, and expected to
-be late.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Does my uncle ever speak of me less resentfully?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Not he. I think his storming over it has only made his suspicion
-stronger. Not a week passes but he begins again about that detestable
-bracelet. He is unalterably persuaded that you took it, and no one
-must dare to put in a word in your defence.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And does your sister honour me with the same belief?&quot; demanded the
-young man, bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Sarah is silent on the point to me: I think she scarcely knows what
-to believe. You see I tell you all freely, Gerard.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Fanny,&quot; he said, dropping his voice, &quot;how is it that I saw Lady Adela
-here tonight?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Lady Adela!&quot; retorted Frances, who knew nothing of the escapade.
-&quot;That you never did.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But I assure you&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Hush, for goodness' sake. Here comes Sir Francis.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Why, Fanny,&quot; he exclaimed to his sister-in-law as he entered, &quot;you
-here!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes: look at the sight they have made of me,&quot; replied she, shaking
-down her dress for his benefit, as she had previously done for
-Gerard's. &quot;I am waiting for some of the damsels to mend it for me: I
-suppose Mr. Hope's presence has scared them sway. Won't mamma be in a
-rage when she sees it! it is new on tonight.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>She made her escape. Sir Francis's business with Gerard was soon over,
-when he walked with him into the hall. Who should be standing there
-but Colonel Hope. He started back when he saw Gerard.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Can I believe my senses?&quot; stuttered he. &quot;Sir Francis Netherleigh, is
-he one of your guests?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;He is here on business,&quot; was the reply. &quot;Pass on, colonel.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No, sir, I will not pass on,&quot; cried the enraged colonel, who had not
-rightly caught the word business. &quot;Or if I do pass on, it will only be
-to warn your guests to take care of their jewellery. So, sir,&quot; he
-added, turning to his nephew, &quot;you can come back, can you, when the
-proceeds of your theft are spent! You have been starring it in Calais,
-I hear. How long did the bracelet last you to live upon?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Sir,&quot; answered Gerard, with a pale face, &quot;it has been starving rather
-than starring. I asserted my innocence at the time, Colonel Hope, and
-I repeat it now.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Innocence!&quot; ironically repeated the colonel, turning to all sides of
-the hall, as if he took delight in parading the details of the
-unfortunate past. &quot;The trinkets were spread out on a table in Lady
-Sarah's own house: you came stealthily into it&mdash;after having been
-forbidden it for another fault&mdash;went stealthily into the room, and the
-next minute the diamond bracelet was missing. It was owing to my
-confounded folly in listening to a parcel of women that I did not
-bring you to trial at the time; I have only once regretted not doing
-it, and that has been ever since. A little wholesome correction at the
-Penitentiary might have made an honest man of you. Good-night, Sir
-Francis; if you encourage him in your house, you don't have me in it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Now another gentleman had entered and heard this: some servants also
-heard it. Colonel Hope, who firmly believed in his nephew's guilt,
-turned off, peppery and indignant; his wife had gone upstairs; and
-Gerard, giving vent to sundry unnephew-like expletives, strode after
-him. The colonel made a dash into a street cab, and Gerard walked
-towards the City.</p>
-
-<p>The evening went on. Lady Frances Chenevix, her dress all right again,
-at least to appearance, was waiting to regain breath, after a whirling
-waltz. Next to her stood a lady who had also been whirling. Frances
-did not know her.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You are quite exhausted: we kept it up too long,&quot; said the gentleman
-in attendance on the stranger. &quot;Sit down. What can I get you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;My fan: there it is. Thank you. Nothing else.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What an old creature to dance herself down!&quot; thought Frances. &quot;She's
-forty, if she's a day.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The lady opened her fan, and, whilst using it, the diamonds of her
-rich bracelet gleamed right in the eyes of Frances Chenevix. Frances
-looked at it, and started: she strained her eyes and looked at it
-again: she bent nearer to it, and became agitated with emotion. If her
-recollection did not play her false, that was the lost bracelet.</p>
-
-<p>She saw Grace at a distance, and glided up to her. &quot;Who is that lady?&quot;
-she asked, pointing to the stranger.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I don't know who she is,&quot; replied Grace. &quot;I was standing by mamma
-when she was introduced, but did not catch the name. She came late,
-with the Cadogans.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;The idea of people being in the house that you don't know!&quot;
-indignantly spoke Frances, who was working herself into a fever.
-&quot;Where's Sarah? Do you know that?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;In the card-room, at the whist-table.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Lady Sarah, however, had left it, for Frances only turned from Grace
-to encounter her. &quot;I do believe your lost bracelet is in the room,&quot;
-she whispered, in agitation. &quot;I think I have seen it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Impossible!&quot; responded Lady Sarah Hope.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It looks exactly the same; gold links interspersed with diamonds: and
-the clasp is the same; three stars. A tall, ugly woman has it on, her
-black hair strained off her face.&quot; For, it should be remarked <i>en
-passant</i>, that such was not the fashion then.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;So very trying for plain people!&quot; remarked Lady Sarah, carelessly.
-&quot;Where is she?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;There: she is standing up now. Let us get close to her. Her dress is
-that beautiful maize colour, with old lace.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Lady Sarah Hope drew near, and obtained a sight of the bracelet. The
-colour flew into her face.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It is mine, Fanny,&quot; she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>But the lady, at that moment, took the gentleman's arm, and moved
-away. Lady Sarah followed her, with the view of obtaining another
-look. Fanny went to Sir Francis, and told him. He showed himself hard
-of belief.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You cannot be sure at this distance of time, Fanny. And, besides,
-more bracelets than one may have been made of that pattern.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I am so certain, that I feel as if I could swear to the bracelet,&quot;
-eagerly replied Lady Frances.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Hush, hush, Fanny.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I recollect it perfectly: the bracelet struck me the moment I saw it.
-How singular that I should have been talking to Gerard Hope about it
-tonight!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Sir Francis smiled. &quot;Imagination is very deceptive, Frances. Your
-having spoken to Mr. Hope of the bracelet brought it into your
-thoughts.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But it could not have brought it to my eyes,&quot; returned the girl.
-&quot;Stuff and nonsense about imagination, Francis Netherleigh! I am
-positive it is the bracelet. Here comes Sarah.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I suppose Frances has been telling you,&quot; observed Lady Sarah to her
-brother-in-law. &quot;I feel convinced it is my own bracelet.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But&mdash;as I have just remarked to Frances&mdash;other bracelets may have
-been made precisely similar to yours,&quot; he urged.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;If it is mine, the
-initials 'S. H.' are scratched on the back of the middle star. I did
-it one day with a penknife.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You never mentioned that fact before.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No. I was determined to give no clue. I was always afraid of the
-affair being traced home to Gerard, and it would have reflected so
-much disgrace on my husband's name.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Did you speak to the lady?&mdash;did you ask where she got the bracelet?&quot;
-interrupted Frances.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;How could I ask her?&quot; retorted Lady Sarah. &quot;I do not know her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I will,&quot; cried Frances, in a resolute tone.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;My dear Fanny!&quot; remonstrated Sir Francis.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I vow I will,&quot; she persisted. But they did not believe her.</p>
-
-<p>Frances kept her word. She found the strange lady in the
-refreshment-room. Locating herself by her side, she entered upon a few
-trifling remarks, which were civilly received. Suddenly she dashed at
-once to her subject.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What a beautiful bracelet!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I think it is,&quot; was the stranger's reply, holding out her arm for its
-inspection, without any reservation.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;One does not often see such a bracelet as this,&quot; pursued Frances.
-&quot;Where did you buy it?&mdash;if you don't mind my asking.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Garrards are my jewellers,&quot; she replied.</p>
-
-<p>This very nearly did for Frances: for it was at Garrards' that the
-colonel originally purchased it: and it seemed to give a colouring to
-Sir Francis Netherleigh's view of more bracelets having been made of
-the same pattern. But she was too anxious and determined to stand upon
-ceremony&mdash;for Gerard's sake: and he was dearer to her than the world
-suspected.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;We&mdash;one of my family&mdash;lost a bracelet exactly like this some time
-back. When I saw it on your arm, I thought it was the same. I hoped it
-was.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The lady froze directly, and laid down her arm, making no reply.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Are you&mdash;pardon me, there are painful interests involved&mdash;are you
-sure you purchased this at Garrards'?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I have said that Messrs. Garrard are my jewellers,&quot; replied the
-stranger, in cold, repelling tones; and the words sounded evasive to
-Frances. &quot;More I cannot say: neither am I aware by what law of
-courtesy you thus question me, nor whom you may be.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The young lady drew herself up, proudly secure in her name and rank.
-&quot;I am Lady Frances Chenevix. And I must beg you to pardon me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>But the stranger only bowed in silence, and turned to the
-refreshment-table. Frances went to find the Cadogans, and to question
-them.</p>
-
-<p>She was a Lady Livingstone, they told her, wife of Sir Jasper
-Livingstone. The husband had made a mint of money at something or
-other, and had been knighted; and now they were launching out into
-high society.</p>
-
-<p>The nose of Lady Frances went into the air. A City knight and his
-wife: that was it, was it! How could Mrs. Cadogan have taken up with
-<i>them?</i></p>
-
-<p>The Honourable Mrs. Cadogan did not choose to say: beyond the
-assertion that they were extremely worthy, good sort of people. She
-could have said that her spendthrift of a husband had borrowed money
-from Sir Jasper Livingstone; and to prevent being bothered for it, and
-keep them in good humour, they introduced the Livingstones where they
-could.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed that nothing more could be done. Frances Chenevix went home
-with her sister Sarah in great excitement, ready to go through fire
-and water, if that would have set her doubts at rest one way or the
-other.</p>
-
-<p>They found Colonel Hope in excitement on another score, and Lady Sarah
-learnt what it was that had caused her husband not to make his
-appearance in the rooms, which she had thought quite unaccountable.
-The colonel treated them to a little abuse of Gerard, prophesying that
-the young man would come to be hanged&mdash;which he would deserve, if for
-impudence alone&mdash;and wondering what on earth could possess Francis
-Netherleigh to make that Leadenhall house of his a refuge for the
-ill-doing destitute.</p>
-
-<p>Before Frances went to bed, she wrote a full account of what had
-happened to Alice Dalrymple, at Netherleigh, saying she was <i>quite
-sure</i> it was the lost bracelet, and also telling her of Gerard's
-return.</p>
-
-<p>It may, perhaps, as well be mentioned, before we have quite done with
-the evening, that the sudden disappearance of Adela caused some
-commotion in the minds of those two individuals, Grace Chenevix and
-Sir Sandy MacIvor, who were alone cognizant of her presence in the
-house. When Grace saw Sir Francis Netherleigh standing in his place as
-host, she turned sharply round to motion back Adela, following, as she
-believed, behind. But she did not see her: and at the moment Sir
-Francis advanced, took Grace's hand, and began telling her about Mrs.
-Dalrymple.</p>
-
-<p>What had become of Adela? Grace's face went hot and cold, and as soon
-as she got away from Sir Francis, she looked about for her. Not
-finding her, unable to inquire after her of any of the guests, as it
-would have betrayed Adela's unlawful presence in the house, fearing
-she knew not what, Grace grew so troubled that she had no resource but
-to seek her mother and whisper the news. Lady Acorn, whilst giving a
-few hard words to Adela and to Grace also, hit upon the truth&mdash;that
-the sight of her husband had terrified her away, and she had in all
-probability gone back home. &quot;Hilson will know; he is in the hall,&quot;
-she said to Grace: and Grace went to Hilson, and found her mother's
-view the correct one.</p>
-
-<p>But, although it had ended without exposure, Lady Acorn could not
-forgive it. She spent the next day telling Adela what she thought of
-her, and that she must be getting into a fit state for a lunatic
-asylum.</p>
-<br>
-
-<p>The letter of Frances Chenevix so troubled Alice Dalrymple that she
-showed it to Selina, confessing at the same time what a terrible
-nightmare the loss of the bracelet had been to her. Selina told her
-she was &quot;silly;&quot; that but for her weak health she would surely never
-have suspected either herself or Gerard of taking it. &quot;Go back to
-London without delay,&quot; was her emphatic advice to Alice, &quot;and sift it,
-if you can, to the bottom.&quot; And, as Mrs. Dalrymple was certainly out
-of danger, Alice went up at once.</p>
-
-<p>She found Frances Chenevix had lost none of her eager excitement,
-whilst Lady Sarah had nearly determined not to move in the matter: the
-bracelet seen on Lady Livingstone's arm must have been one of the same
-pattern sold to that lady by Messrs. Garrard. To the colonel nothing
-had been said. Frances, however, would not let it drop.</p>
-
-<p>The following morning, saying she wanted to do an errand or two,
-Frances got possession of Lady Sarah's carriage, and down she went to
-the Haymarket to see the Messrs. Garrard. Alice&mdash;more fragile than
-ever, her once lovely countenance so faded now that she looked to be
-dying, as Frances had said to Gerard Hope&mdash;waited her return in a
-pitiable state of anxiety. Frances came in, all excitement.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Alice, it <i>is</i> the bracelet. I am more certain of it than ever.
-Garrards' people say they have sold many articles of jewellery to Lady
-Livingstone, but not a diamond bracelet. Moreover, they say that they
-never had, of that precise pattern, but the one bracelet Colonel Hope
-bought.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What is to be done?&quot; exclaimed Alice.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I know: I shall go to those Livingstones; Garrards' people gave me
-their address. Gerard shall not remain under this cloud if I can help
-him out of it. Sir Francis won't act in it; he laughs at me: Sarah
-won't act; and we dare not tell the colonel. He is so obstinate and
-wrongheaded, he would be for arresting Gerard, pending the
-investigation.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Frances&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Now, don't preach, Alice. When I will a thing, I <i>will</i>. I am like my
-lady mother for that. Sarah says she scratched her initials on the
-gold inside the bracelet, and I shall demand to see it: if these
-Livingstones refuse, I'll put the detectives on the scent. I will; as
-sure as my name is Frances Chenevix.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And if the investigation should bring the guilt home to&mdash;to&mdash;Gerard?&quot;
-whispered Alice, in hollow tones.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And if it should bring it home to you! and if it should bring it home
-to me!&quot; spoke the exasperated Frances. &quot;For shame, Alice! it cannot
-bring it home to Gerard, for he was never guilty.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Alice sighed; she saw there was no help for it, for Lady Frances was
-resolute. &quot;I have a deeper stake in this than you,&quot; she said, after a
-pause of consideration: &quot;let me go to the Livingstones. Yes, Frances,
-you must not refuse me; I have a very, very urgent motive for wishing
-it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You, you weak mite of a thing! you would faint before you were
-half-way through the interview,&quot; cried Frances, in tones between jest
-and vexation.</p>
-
-<p>Alice persisted: and Frances at length conceded the point, though with
-much grumbling. The carriage was still at the door, for Frances had
-desired that it should wait, and Alice hastily dressed herself and
-went down to it, without speaking to Lady Sarah. The footman was
-closing the door upon her, when out flew Frances.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Alice, I have made up my mind to go with you; I cannot keep my
-patience until you are back again. I can sit in the carriage whilst
-you go in, you know. Lady Livingstone will be two feet higher from
-today&mdash;that the world should have been gladdened with a spectacle of
-Lady Frances Chenevix waiting humbly at her door.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>They drove off. Frances talked incessantly on the road, but Alice was
-silent: she was deliberating what she should say, and was nerving
-herself to the task. Lady Livingstone was at home; and Alice, sending
-in her card, was conducted to her presence, leaving Lady Frances in
-the carriage.</p>
-
-<p>Frances had described her to be as thin as a whipping-post, with a red
-nose: and Alice found Lady Livingstone answer to it very well. Sir
-Jasper, who was also present, was much older than his wife, and short
-and stout; a good-natured looking man, with a wig on the top of his
-head.</p>
-
-<p>Alice, refined and sensitive, scarcely knew how she opened her
-subject, but she was met in a different manner from what she had
-expected. The knight and his wife were really worthy people, as Mrs.
-Cadogan had said: but the latter had a mania for getting into &quot;high
-life and high-lived company:&quot; a feat she would never be able
-thoroughly to accomplish. They listened to Alice's tale with courtesy,
-and at length with interest.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You will readily conceive the nightmare this has been to me,&quot; panted
-Alice, for her emotion was great. &quot;The bracelet was under my charge,
-and it disappeared in this extraordinary way. All the trouble it has
-been productive of to me I am not at liberty to tell you, but it has
-certainly helped to shorten my life.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You look very ill,&quot; observed Lady Livingstone, with sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I am worse than I look. I am going into the grave rapidly. Others
-less sensitive, or with stronger health, might have battled
-successfully with the distress and annoyance; I could not. I shall die
-in greater peace if this unhappy affair can be cleared. Should it
-prove to be the same bracelet, we may be able to trace out how it was
-lost.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Lady Livingstone left the room and returned with the diamond bracelet.
-She held it out to Miss Dalrymple, and the colour rushed into Alice's
-poor wan face at the gleam of the diamonds: for she believed she
-recognized them.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But, stay,&quot; she said, drawing back her hand as she was about to touch
-it: &quot;do not give it me just yet. If it be the one we lost, the letters
-'S. H.' are scratched irregularly on the back of the middle star.
-Perhaps you will first look if they are there, Lady Livingstone.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Lady Livingstone turned the bracelet, glanced at the spot indicated,
-and then silently handed it to Sir Jasper. The latter smiled.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Sure enough here's something on the gold&mdash;I can't see distinctly
-without my glasses. What is it, Lady Livingstone?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;The letters 'S. H.,' as Miss Dalrymple described: I cannot deny it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Deny it! no, my lady, why should we deny it? If we are in possession
-of another's bracelet, lost by fraud, and if the discovery will set
-this young lady's mind at ease, I don't think either you or I shall be
-the one to deny it. Examine it for yourself, ma'am,&quot; added he, giving
-it to Alice.</p>
-
-<p>She turned it about, she put it on her arm, her eyes lighting with the
-eagerness of conviction. &quot;It is certainly the same bracelet,&quot; she
-affirmed: &quot;I could be sure of it, I think, without proof; but Lady
-Sarah's initials are there, scratched irregularly, just as she
-describes to have scratched them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It is not beyond the range of possibility that initials may have been
-scratched on this bracelet, without its being the same,&quot; observed Lady
-Livingstone.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I think it must be the same,&quot; mused Sir Jasper. &quot;It looks
-suspicious.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Lady Frances Chenevix understood you to say you bought this of
-Messrs. Garrard,&quot; resumed Alice.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Livingstone felt rather foolish. &quot;What I said was, that Messrs.
-Garrard were my jewellers. The fact is, I do not know exactly where
-this was bought: but I did not consider myself called upon to proclaim
-that fact to a young lady who was a stranger to me, and in answer to
-questions which I thought verged on impertinence.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Her anxiety, scarcely less than my own, may have rendered her
-abrupt,&quot; replied Alice, by way of apology for Frances. &quot;Our hope is
-not so much to regain the bracelet, as to penetrate the mystery of its
-disappearance. Can you not let me know where you did buy it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I can,&quot; interposed Sir Jasper: &quot;there's no disgrace in having bought
-it where I did. I got it at a pawnbroker's.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Alice's heart beat violently. A pawnbroker's! Was her haunting fear
-growing into a dread reality?</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I was one day at the East-end of London, walking fast, when I saw a
-topaz-and-amethyst cross in a pawnbroker's window,&quot; said Sir Jasper.
-&quot;The thought struck me that it would be a pretty ornament for my wife,
-and I went in to look at it. In talking about jewellery with the
-master, he reached out this diamond bracelet, and told me <i>that</i> would
-be a present worth making. Now, I knew my lady's head had been running
-on a diamond bracelet; and I was tempted to ask what was the lowest
-figure he would put it at. He said it was the most valuable article of
-the sort he had had for a long while, the diamonds of the first water,
-worth four hundred guineas of anybody's money; but that, being
-second-hand, he could part with it for two hundred and fifty. And I
-bought it. There's where I got the bracelet, ma'am.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;That was just the money Colonel Hope gave for it new at Garrards',&quot;
-said Alice. &quot;Two hundred and fifty guineas.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Sir Jasper stared at her: and then broke forth with a comical attempt
-at rage, for he was one of the best-tempered men in the world.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;The old wretch of a cheat! Sold it to me at second-hand price, as he
-called it, for the identical sum it cost new! Why, he ought to be
-prosecuted for usury.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It is just what I tell you, Sir Jasper,&quot; grumbled his lady. &quot;You will
-go to these low second-hand dealers, who always cheat where they can,
-instead of to a regular jeweller; and nine times out of ten you get
-taken in.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But your having bought it of this pawnbroker does not bring me any
-nearer to knowing how he procured it,&quot; observed Alice.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I shall go to him this very day and ascertain,&quot; returned Sir Jasper.
-&quot;Tradespeople may not sell stolen bracelets with impunity. You shall
-hear from me as soon as possible,&quot; he added to Alice, as he escorted
-her out to the carriage.</p>
-
-<p>But Sir Jasper Livingstone found it easier to say a thing than to do
-it. The pawnbroker protested his ignorance and innocence. If the
-bracelet was a stolen bracelet, he knew nothing of that. He had bought
-it, he said, in the regular course of business, at one of the
-pawnbrokers' periodical sales: and of this he convinced Sir Jasper.</p>
-
-<p>Frances Chenevix was in despair. She made a confidante of Lady Sarah,
-and got her to put the affair once more into the hands of the
-detectives; the same officer who had charge of it before, Mr. Pullet,
-taking it up again. He had something to work upon now.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_35" href="#div1Ref_35">CHAPTER XXXV.</a></h4>
-<h5>LIGHT AT LAST.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p>Some weeks later, in an obscure room of a low and dilapidated
-lodging-house, in a low and dilapidated neighbourhood, there sat a man
-one evening in the coming twilight: a towering, gaunt skeleton, whose
-remarkably long arms and legs looked little more than skin and bone.
-The arms were fully exposed to view, since their owner, though he
-possessed and wore a waistcoat, dispensed with the use of a shirt. An
-article, once a coat, lay on the floor, to be donned at will&mdash;if it
-could be got into for the holes. The man sat on the floor in a corner,
-his head finding a resting-place against the wall, and he had dropped
-into a light sleep; but if ever famine was depicted in a face, it was
-in his. Unwashed, unshaven, with matted hair and feverish lips: the
-cheeks were hollow, the nostrils white and pinched. Some one tried,
-and shook the door; it aroused him, and he started up, but only to
-cower in a bending attitude, and listen.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I hear you,&quot; cried a voice. &quot;How are you tonight, Joe? Open the
-door.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The voice was not one he knew; consequently not one that might be
-responded to.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Do you call this politeness, Joe Nicholls? If you don't open the
-door, I shall take the liberty of opening it for myself: which will
-put you to the trouble of mending the fastenings afterwards.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Who are you?&quot; cried Nicholls, reading determination in the voice.
-&quot;I'm gone to bed, and I can't admit folks tonight.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Gone to bed at eight o'clock?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes: I am ill.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I give you one minute, and then I come in. You will open it, if you
-wish to save trouble.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Nicholls yielded to his fate: and opened the door.</p>
-
-<p>The gentleman&mdash;he looked like one&mdash;cast his keen eyes round the room.
-There was not a vestige of furniture in it; nothing but the bare dirty
-walls, from which the mortar crumbled, and the bare dirty boards.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What did you mean by saying you were gone to bed, eh?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;So I was. I was asleep there,&quot; pointing to the corner, &quot;and that's my
-bed. What do you want?&quot; added Nicholls, peering at the stranger's face
-in the gloom of the evening, but seeing it imperfectly, for his hat
-was drawn low over it.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;A little talk with you. That last sweepstake you put into&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The man lifted his face, and burst forth with such eagerness that the
-stranger could only arrest his own words and listen.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It was a swindle from beginning to end. I had scraped together the
-ten shillings to put in it; and I drew the right horse, and was
-shuffled out of the gains, and I have never had my dues; not a
-farthing of 'em. Since then I've been ill, and I can't get about to
-better myself. Are you come, sir, to make it right?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Some&quot;&mdash;the stranger coughed&mdash;&quot;friends of mine were in it also,&quot; said
-he: &quot;and they lost their money.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Everybody lost it; the getters-up bolted with all they had drawn into
-their fingers. Have they been took, do you know?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;All in good time; they have left their trail. So you have been ill,
-have you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ill! just take a sight at me! There's a arm for a big man.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>He stretched out his naked arm for inspection: it appeared as if a
-touch would snap it. The stranger laid his hand upon its fingers, and
-his other hand appeared to be stealing furtively towards his own
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I should say this looks like starvation, Joe.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Some'at akin to it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>A pause of unsuspicion, and the handcuffs were clapped on the
-astonished man. He started up with an oath.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No need to make a noise, Nicholls,&quot; said the detective, with a
-careless air, as he lifted off his hat: &quot;I have two men waiting
-outside. Do you know me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The prisoner gave a gasp. &quot;Why, it's Mr. Pullet!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes; it's Mr. Pullet, Joe.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I swear I wasn't in the plate robbery,&quot; passionately uttered the man.
-&quot;I knew of it, but I didn't join 'em, and I never had the worth of as
-much as a saltspoon, after it was melted down. And they call me a
-coward, and they leave me here to starve and die! Sir, I swear I
-wasn't in it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;We'll talk of the plate robbery another time,&quot; said the officer; &quot;you
-have got these bracelets on, my man, for another sort of bracelet. A
-diamond one. Don't you remember it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The prisoner's mouth fell. &quot;I thought that was over and done with, all
-this time&mdash;&mdash; I don't know what you mean,&quot; he added, correcting
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No,&quot; said the officer, &quot;it is just beginning. The bracelet is found,
-and has been traced to you. You were a clever fellow, Joe, and I had
-my doubts of you at the time, you know. I thought then you were too
-clever to go on long.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I should be ashamed to play the sneak, and catch a fellow in this
-way,&quot; cried Joe, driven to exasperation. &quot;Why couldn't you come
-openly, in your proper clothes&mdash;not playing the spy in the garb of a
-friendly civilian?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;My men are in their proper clothes,'&quot; was the equable answer, &quot;and
-you will have the honour of their escort presently. I came in because
-they did not know you, and I did. You might have had a host of friends
-around you here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Three officers to take a single man, and he a skeleton!&quot; retorted
-Nicholls, with a great show of indignation.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ay; but you were powerful once, and ferocious too. The skeleton
-aspect is a recent one.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And to be took for nothing! I know naught of any bracelet.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Don't trouble yourself with inventions, Nicholls. Your friend is safe
-in our hands, and has made a full confession.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What friend?&quot; asked Nicholls, too eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;The lady you got to dispose of it for you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Nicholls was startled to incaution. &quot;She hasn't split, has she?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Every particular she knew or guessed at. Split to save herself.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Then there's no faith in woman.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;There never was yet,&quot; returned Mr. Pullet. &quot;If they are not at the
-top and bottom of every mischief, Joe, they are sure to be in the
-middle. Is this your coat?&quot; touching it gingerly.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;She's a disgrace to the female sex, she is!&quot; raved Nicholls,
-disregarding the question as to his coat. &quot;But it's a relief now I'm
-took: it's a weight off my mind. I was always expecting it: and I
-shall, at any rate, get food in the Old Bailey.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ah,&quot; said the officer, &quot;you were in good service as a respectable
-servant, Nicholls: you had better have stuck to your duties.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;The temptation was so great,&quot; returned the man, who had evidently
-abandoned all idea of denial; and, now that he had done so, was ready
-to be voluble with remembrances and particulars.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Don't say anything to me. It will be used against you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It all came of my long legs,&quot; cried Nicholls, ignoring the friendly
-injunction, and proceeding to enlarge on the feat he had performed.
-And it may as well be observed that legs so long as his are rarely
-seen. &quot;I have never had a happy hour since; it's true, sir. I was
-second footman there, and a good place I had: and I have wished,
-thousands of times, that the bracelet had been at the bottom of the
-sea. Our folks had took a house in the neighbourhood of Ascot for the
-race-week; they had left me at home to take care of the kitchen-maid
-and another inferior or two, carrying the rest of the servants with
-them. I had to clean the winders before they returned, and I had druv
-it off till the Thursday evening, when out I got on the balqueny,
-intending to begin with the back drawing-room&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What do you say you got out on?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;The balqueny. The thing with the green rails round it, that
-encloses the winder. While I was leaning over the rails sorting my
-wash-leathers, I heard something like click, click, click, going on in
-the fellow-room next door&mdash;which was Colonel Hope's&mdash;just as if light
-articles of some sort were being laid sharp on a table. Presently two
-voices began to talk, a lady's and a gentleman's, and I listened&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No good ever comes of listening, Joe,&quot; interrupted the officer.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I didn't listen for the sake of listening; but it was awful hot,
-standing outside there in the sun, and listening was better than
-working. I didn't want to hear, neither, for I was thinking of my own
-concerns, and what a fool I was to have idled away my time all day
-till the sun come on the back winders. Bit by bit, I heard what they
-were talking of&mdash;that it was jewels they had got there, and that one
-of 'em was worth two hundred guineas. Thinks I, if that was mine,
-I'd do no more work. After a while, I heard them go out of the room,
-and I thought I'd have a look at the rich things, so I stepped over
-slant-ways on to the little ledge running along the houses, holding on
-by our balqueny, and then I passed my hands along the wall till I got
-hold of their balqueny&mdash;but one with ordinary legs and arms couldn't
-have done it. You couldn't, sir.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Perhaps not,&quot; remarked the officer.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;There wasn't fur to fall, if I had fell, only on to the kitchen leads
-underneath: leastways not fur enough to kill one, and the leads was
-flat. But I didn't fall, and I raised myself on to their balqueny, and
-looked in. My! what a show it was! stunning jewels, all laid out there:
-so close, that if I had put my hand inside, it must have struck all
-among 'em: and the fiend prompted me to take one. I didn't stop to
-look, I didn't stop to think: the one that twinkled the brightest and
-had the most stones in it was the nearest to me, and I clutched it,
-and slipped it into my footman's undress jacket, and stepped back
-again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And got safe into your balcony?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes, and inside the room. I didn't clean the winder that night. I was
-upset like, by what I had done; and, if I could have put it back
-again, I think I should; but there was no opportunity. I wrapped it in
-my winder-leather, and then in a sheet of brown paper, and then I put
-it up the chimbley in one of the spare bedrooms. I was up the next
-morning afore five, and I cleaned my winders: I'd no trouble to awake
-myself, for I had never slept. The same day, towards evening&mdash;or
-the next was it? I forget&mdash;you called, sir, and asked me some
-questions&mdash;whether we had seen any one on the leads at the back, and
-such like. I said that master was just come home from Ascot, and would
-you be pleased to speak to him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ah!&quot; again remarked the officer, &quot;you were a clever fellow that day.
-But if my suspicions had not been strongly directed to another
-quarter, I might have looked you up more sharply.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I kep' it by me for a month or two, and then I gave warning to
-leave. I thought I'd have my fling, and I had made acquaintance with
-her&mdash;that lady you've just spoke of&mdash;and somehow she wormed out of me
-that I had got it, and I let her dispose of it for me, for she said
-she knew how to do it without danger.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What did you get for it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The skeleton shook his head. &quot;Thirty-four pounds, and I had counted on
-a hundred and fifty. She took her oath she had not helped herself to a
-sixpence.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oaths are plentiful with some ladies,&quot; remarked Mr. Pullet.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;She stood to it she hadn't kep' a farthing, and she stopped and
-helped me to spend the change. After that was done she went over to
-stop with somebody else who was in luck. And I have tried to go on,
-and I can't: honestly or dishonestly, it seems all one: nothing
-prospers, and I'm naked and famishing. I wish I was dying.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Evil courses rarely do prosper, Nicholls,&quot; said the officer, as he
-called in the policemen and consigned the gentleman to their care.</p>
-<br>
-
-<p>So Gerard Hope was innocent!</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But how was it you skilful detectives could not be on this man's
-scent?&quot; asked Colonel Hope of Mr. Pullet, when he heard the tale.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Colonel, I was thrown off it. Your positive belief in your nephew's
-guilt infected me; appearances were certainly very strong against him.
-Neither was his own manner altogether satisfactory to my mind. He
-treated the obvious suspicion of him more as a jest than in earnest;
-never, so far as I heard, giving a downright hearty denial to it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;He was a fool,&quot; interjected the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Also,&quot; continued Mr. Pullet, &quot;Miss Dalrymple's evidence served to
-throw me off other suspicion. She said, if you remember, sir, that she
-did not leave the room; but it now appears that she did leave it when
-your nephew did, though only for a few moments. Those few moments
-sufficed to do the job.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It is strange she could not tell the exact truth,&quot; growled the
-colonel.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;She probably thought she was exact enough, since she remained outside
-the door, and could answer for it that no one entered by it. She
-forgot the window. I thought of the window the instant the loss was
-mentioned to me; but Miss Dalrymple's assertion, that she never had
-the window out of her view, prevented my dwelling on it. I did go to
-the next door, and saw this very fellow who committed the robbery, but
-his manner was sufficiently satisfactory. He talked too freely; I did
-not like that; but I found he had been in the same service fifteen
-months; and, as I must repeat, in my mind the guilt lay with another.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It is a confoundedly unpleasant affair for me,&quot; cried the colonel. &quot;I
-have published my nephew's disgrace all over London.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It is more unpleasant for him, colonel,&quot; was the rejoinder of Mr.
-Pullet.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And I have kept him short of money, and suffered him to be sued for
-debt; and I have let him go and live among the runaway scamps over the
-water; and now he is working as a merchant's clerk! In short, I have
-played the very deuce with him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But reparation lies, doubtless, in your own heart and hands,
-colonel.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I don't know that, sir,&quot; testily concluded the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>Once more Gerard Hope entered his uncle's house; not as an interloper,
-stealing into it in secret; but as an honoured guest, to whom
-reparation was due, and must be made. Alice Dalrymple chanced to be
-alone. She was leaning back in her invalid-chair, a joyous flush on
-her wasted cheek, a joyous happiness in her eye. Still the shadow of
-coming death was there, and Mr. Hope was shocked to see her&mdash;more
-shocked and startled than he had expected, or chose to express.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oh, Alice! what has done this?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;That has helped it on,&quot; she answered, pointing to the bracelet;
-which, returned to its true owner, lay on the table. &quot;I should not
-have lived very many years; of that I am convinced: but I think this
-has taken a little from my life. The bracelet has been the cause of
-misery to many of us. Lady Sarah says she shall never regard it but as
-an ill-starred trinket, or wear it with any pleasure.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But, Alice, why should you have suffered it thus to affect you?&quot; he
-remonstrated. &quot;You knew your own innocence, and you say you believed
-and trusted in mine: what did you fear?</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I will tell you, Gerard,&quot; she whispered, a deeper hectic rising to
-her cheeks. &quot;I could not have confessed my fear, even in dying; it was
-too distressing, too terrible; but now that it is all clear, I will
-tell it. <i>I believed my sister had taken the bracelet</i>.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ah,&quot; said Gerard, carelessly.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Selina called to see me that evening, as you saw, and she was for a
-minute or two in the room alone with the trinkets: I went upstairs to
-get a letter. She wanted money badly at the time, as you cannot
-fail to remember, and I feared she had been tempted to take the
-bracelet&mdash;just as this unfortunate man was tempted. Oh, Gerard! the
-dread of it has been upon me night and day, preying upon my fears,
-weighing down my spirits, wearing away my health and my life. Now hope
-would be in the ascendant, now fear. And I had to bear it all in
-silence. It is that enforced, dreadful silence that has so tried me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Why did you not question Selina?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I did. She denied it. As good as laughed at me. But you know how
-light-headed and careless her nature is; and the fear remained with
-me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It must have been a morbid fear, Alice.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Not so&mdash;if you knew all. But it is at an end, and I am very thankful.
-I have only one hope now,&quot; she added, looking up at him with a sunny
-smile. &quot;Ah, Gerard, can you not guess it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No,&quot; he answered, in a stifled voice. &quot;I can only guess that you are
-lost to me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Lost to all here. Have you forgotten our brief conversation, the
-night you went into exile? I told you then there was one far more
-worthy of you than I could have ever been.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;None will ever be half so worthy; or&mdash;I will say it, Alice, in spite
-of your warning hand&mdash;half so loved.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Gerard,&quot; sinking her voice, &quot;she has waited for you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Nonsense,&quot; he rejoined.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;She has. When she shall be your wife, you may tell her that I saw it
-and said it. She might have had John Cust.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;My darling&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Stay, Gerard,&quot; she gravely interrupted; &quot;those words of endearment
-are not for me. Can you deny that you love her?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Perhaps I do&mdash;in a degree. Next to yourself&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Put me out of your thoughts whilst we speak. If I were&mdash;where I may
-perhaps soon be, would she not be dearer to you than any one on earth?
-Would you not be well pleased to make her your wife?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes, I might be.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;That is enough, Gerard. Frances&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Wait a bit,&quot; interrupted Gerard. &quot;Don't you think, Alice, that you
-have the morbid feeling on you yet? With this dread removed&mdash;which, as
-you truly express it, must have been to you a very nightmare&mdash;you may,
-nay, I think you will, regain health and strength, and be a comfort to
-us all for years.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I may regain it in a measure. It is simply impossible that in any
-case my life will be a long one. Let me&mdash;dear Gerard!&mdash;let me make
-some one happy while I may! Hark! that's the door&mdash;and this is her
-light step on the stairs!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Frances Chenevix came in. &quot;Good gracious, is it you, Gerard!&quot; she
-exclaimed. &quot;You and Alice look as if you had been talking secrets.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;So we have been,&quot; said Alice. &quot;Frances, what can we do to keep him
-amongst us? Do you know what Colonel Hope has told him?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No. What?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;That though he shall be reinstated in favour as to money matters, he
-shall not be in his affection or his home, unless he prove sorry for
-that past rebellion of his.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;When did the colonel tell him? When did he see him?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;This morning: before Gerard came here. I think Gerard <i>is</i> sorry for
-it: you must help him to be more so.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Fanny,&quot; said Gerard, while a damask flush mantled in her cheeks,
-deeper than the hectic making havoc with those of Alice, &quot;<i>will</i> you
-help me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;As if I could make head or tail of what you two are rambling about!&quot;
-cried she, as she attempted to turn away; but Gerard caught her to his
-side.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Fanny&mdash;will you drive me again from the house?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>She lifted her eyes, twinkling with a little spice of mischief. &quot;I did
-not drive you before.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;In a manner, yes. Do you know what did drive me?&quot; She had known it at
-the time; and Gerard read it in her face.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I see it all,&quot; he murmured; &quot;you have been far kinder to me than I
-deserved. Fanny, let me try and repay you for it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Are you sure you would not rather have Alice?&quot; she asked, in her
-clear-sighted independence.</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head sorrowfully. Alice caught their hands together, and
-held them between her own, with a mental aspiration for their life's
-future happiness. Some time back she could not have breathed it in so
-fervent a spirit: but&mdash;as she had said&mdash;the present world and its
-hopes were closing to her.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But you know, Gerard,&quot; cried Lady Frances, in a saucy tone, &quot;if you
-ever do help yourself to somebody's bracelet in reality, you must not
-expect me to go to prison with you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes, I shall,&quot; he answered promptly. &quot;A wife must share the fortunes
-of her husband. She takes him for better&mdash;or for worse.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>He sealed the compact with a kiss. And there was much rejoicing that
-day in the house of Colonel Hope.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_36" href="#div1Ref_36">CHAPTER XXXVI.</a></h4>
-<h5>VISITORS AT MOAT GRANGE.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p>Autumn weather lay on the world and on Netherleigh.</p>
-
-<p>Things were coming to a revolt. Never were poor tenant-farmers so
-ground down and oppressed as those on the estate of Moat Grange. Rents
-were raised, fines imposed, expenses, properly belonging to landlords,
-refused to be paid or allowed for. Oscar Dalrymple was ruling with a
-hand of iron, hard and cruel.</p>
-
-<p>At least, Oscar had the credit of it. In point of fact, he was perhaps
-a little ashamed of the existing state of things, and would have
-somewhat altered it if he could. A year ago Oscar had let the whole
-estate to a sort of agent, a man named Pinnett, and Pinnett was
-playing Old Gooseberry with everything.</p>
-
-<p>That was the expressive phrase, whatever it might mean, the indignant
-people used. They refused to lay the blame on Pinnett, utterly refused
-to recognize him in the matter; arguing, perhaps rightly, that unless
-he had Mr. Dalrymple's sanction to harsh measures, he could not
-exercise them, and that Mr. Dalrymple was, therefore, alone to blame.
-Most likely Oscar had no resource but to sanction it all, tacitly at
-any rate.</p>
-
-<p>As to the Grange itself, the mansion, it was now the dreariest of the
-dreary. It had not been let with the estate, and Oscar and his wife
-still lived in it. Two maids were kept, and a man for outdoor
-work&mdash;the garden and the poultry. Most of the rooms were locked up.
-Selina would unlock the doors sometimes and open the shutters; and
-pace about the lonely floors, and wish she had not been guilty of the
-folly which had led to these wretched retrenchments. Things indoors
-and out were growing worse day by day.</p>
-
-<p>One morning John Lee called at the Grange: a respectable man, whose
-name you cannot have forgotten. He had rented all his life, and his
-father before him, under the Dalrymples.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Sir,&quot; he began to Oscar, without circumlocution, &quot;I have come up
-about that paper which has been sent to me by Jones, your lawyer. It's
-a notice that next Michaelmas, when my lease will expire, the rent is
-to be raised.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Well?&quot; said Mr. Dalrymple.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;A pound an acre. <i>A pound an acre</i>,&quot; repeated the farmer, with
-increased emphasis. &quot;Jones must have made a mistake, sir.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I fancy not. But Jones is not my lawyer, you know; he is Mr.
-Pinnett's.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;We don't want to have anything to do with Mr. Pinnett, or to hear his
-name, sir. I have always rented under the Dalrymples; and I hope to do
-it still, sir, with your leave.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You know, Lee, that Pinnett has a lease of the whole estate. What he
-proposes is no doubt fair. Your farm will well bear the increased rent
-he means to put on it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Increased by a pound an acre!&quot; cried the farmer, in his excitement.
-&quot;No, sir; it won't bear it, for I'll never pay it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I am sorry for that, Mr. Lee, because it will leave Pinnett only one
-alternative: to substitute in its place a notice to quit.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;To quit! to quit the farm!&quot; reiterated Lee, in his astonishment. &quot;Why,
-it has been my home all my life, sir, and it was my father's before
-me. I was born on that farm, Mr. Dalrymple, years and years before you
-ever came into the world, and I mean to die on it. I have spared
-neither money nor labour to bring it to its present flourishing
-condition.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;My good sir, I say as you do, that the land is flourishing:
-sufficiently so to justify the advanced rent Pinnett proposes. Two of
-you were here yesterday on this same errand&mdash;Watkins and Rumford.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;They have spent money on their farms, too, expecting to reap future
-benefit. You see, we never thought of Mr. Dalrymple's dying young,
-and&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Are you speaking of young Robert Dalrymple?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No, no, poor fellow: of his father. Mr. Dalrymple did die young, so
-to say; you can't call a man under fifty old. His death, and his son's
-close upon it, brought you, sir, to rule over us, and I am sorry to
-say your rule's a very hard one.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It will not be made easier,&quot; curtly replied Oscar Dalrymple, who was
-getting angry. &quot;And I will not detain you longer, Mr. Lee,&quot; he added,
-rising. &quot;Your time is valuable.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And what is to be my answer, sir?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It no longer lies with me to give an answer, Lee, and I must request
-that you do not refer to me again. Pinnett's answer will no doubt be
-that you must renew the lease at the additional rent demanded, or else
-give up the farm.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Farmer Lee swung away in a passion. In turning out of the first field
-he met two ladies: one young and very pretty, the other getting to
-look old; her thin features were white and her hair was grey. They
-were Mrs. Dalrymple and Mary Lynn. Close upon Mrs. Dalrymple's
-recovery from her accident, which turned out to have been not at all
-formidable, she caught a violent cold; it laid her up longer than a
-cold had ever laid her up before, and seemed to have tried her
-greatly. Mary Lynn had now just come again to Netherleigh to stay a
-week or two with her.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Is it you, ma'am!&quot; cried the farmer, touching his hat. &quot;I'm glad to
-see you out again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;At one time I thought I never should be out again,&quot; she answered; &quot;I
-am very weak still. And how are you, Mr. Lee?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Middling, ma'am. Anything but well just now, in temper.&quot; And the
-farmer touched upon his grievances, spoke of the interview he had just
-held at the Grange, and of its master's harshness.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;<i>Is</i> it right to us, ma'am?&quot; he wound up with. &quot;<i>Is</i> it just, Miss
-Lynn?&quot; turning to that young lady. &quot;Ah, if poor young Mr. Robert had
-but lived! We should have had no oppression then.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Mary turned away her face, blushing almost to tears with unhappy
-remembrances. Robert! Robert!</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I do believe it will come to a revolt!&quot; said the farmer to Mrs.
-Dalrymple. &quot;Not with us tenants; you know better than to think that
-likely, ma'am; but with those people at the cottages. They are getting
-ripe for it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ay,&quot; she answered, in a low, grieved tone. &quot;And the worst of it, Mr.
-Lee, the worst to me is, that I am powerless for help or remedy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;We cannot quite think&mdash;it is impossible to think or believe, that Mr.
-Oscar Dalrymple should have put all control out of his power.
-Therefore, his refusing to interfere with Pinnett seems all the more
-harsh. You must see that, ma'am.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I have no comfort, no advice to give,&quot; she whispered, putting her
-hand into Mr. Lee's as she turned away. For Mrs. Dalrymple could not
-bear to speak of the existing state of things, the trouble that had
-come of Selina's folly and Oscar's rule.</p>
-
-<p>Yet Oscar was kind to her. Continuously so. In no way would he allow
-her income, that which he allowed her, to be in the slightest degree
-diminished. He pinched himself, but he would not pinch poor Mrs.
-Dalrymple. Over and over again had she wished Reuben to leave her, but
-Oscar would not hear of it. Neither, for the matter of that, would
-Reuben. He did not want wages, he said, but he would not desert his
-mistress in her premature old age, her sickness, and her sorrow. A
-small maid only was kept in addition to Reuben; and the man had
-degenerated (as he might have called it but for his loyalty) to little
-better than a man-of-all-work. He stood behind the ladies now at a
-respectful distance, having stopped when they stopped.</p>
-
-<p>The grievance alluded to by Mr. Lee, ready to ripen into open revolt,
-had nothing to do with the tenant-farmers. It was this. In a very
-favourable position on the estate, as regarded situation, stood a
-cluster of small dwellings. They were for the most part very poor,
-some of them little better than huts, but they commanded a lovely
-view. They were inhabited by labourers employed on the land, and were
-called the Mill Cottages: a mill, done away with now, having formerly
-stood close by.</p>
-
-<p>One fine day it had struck the new man, Pinnett&mdash;looking about here
-and there to discover some means of adding to the profits he meant to
-make off the land&mdash;that if these cottages were taken down and handsome
-dwellings erected in their place, it would be a great improvement,
-pecuniarily and artistically, for such houses would let directly in
-this picturesque locality. No sooner thought of than resolved upon.
-Miles Pinnett was not a man to linger over his plans, and he gave
-these small tenants notice to quit.</p>
-
-<p>It was rebelled against. Some of the men had been in the cottages as
-long as Farmer Lee had been in his farm, and to be ordered to leave
-seemed a terrible hardship. It no doubt increased the difficulty that
-there were no other small dwellings on the estate the men could go
-into: all others were already occupied: and, if they left these, they
-must go to a distance whence they would have a two or three miles'
-walk to their day's work. And so, encouraged perhaps by the feeling
-pervading the neighbourhood, of sympathy with them and opposition to
-Pinnett, the men, one and all, refused to go out. The next step would
-be ejectment; and it was looked for day by day.</p>
-
-<p>For all this, Oscar Dalrymple suffered in opinion. Pinnett could not
-go to such lengths, oppress them as he was oppressing, against the
-will of the owner, Mr. Dalrymple, argued the community, rich and poor.
-Perhaps he could not. But how it really was, no one knew, or what
-power Mr. Dalrymple had put out of his own hands, and into Pinnett's,
-when he leased him the demesne.</p>
-
-<p>Farmer Lee's visit to Moat Grange was paid in the morning. In the
-afternoon the Grange had another visitor&mdash;Lady Adela Netherleigh.</p>
-
-<p>Adela had not lingered long at her mother's in London. After a few
-weeks' sojourn she came down to Netherleigh Rectory, invited by the
-Rector and his wife, her sister Mary. They had gone to London for a
-day, had been struck with compassion at Adela's evident state of
-mental suffering, and they asked her to return with them for a little
-change.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It is not change I want,&quot; she had answered, speaking to Lady Mary.
-&quot;What I want is peace. Perhaps I shall find it with you, Mary, at the
-Rectory.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Lady Mary Cleveland hesitated. Peace? The word posed her.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Adela,&quot; she said, &quot;we should be very glad to have you, and there is
-plenty of room for you and Darvy. But, as to peace&mdash;I don't know about
-that. The Rectory is full of children great and small, and I'm afraid
-it is noisy and bustling from morning till night.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Adela smiled faintly. The peace her heart craved for was not that
-imparted by the absence of noise. She might feel all the better for
-having the bustle of children about her; it might draw her at moments
-out of her own sorrow. But another thought struck her.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;My&mdash;&mdash;&quot; husband, she had been about to say, but changed the words.
-&quot;Sir Francis is not staying at Court Netherleigh? Is he?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No. It is said he means to take up his abode there later; he is not
-there yet.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Then I will come to you, Mary. And I will stay with you for months
-and months if I like it&mdash;and you must allow me to contribute towards
-your housekeeping as Sir Sandy and Harriet did.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Lady Mary winced a little at that, but she did not say no. With all
-those children&mdash;she had two of her own now&mdash;and the Rector's moderate
-income, they could not be rich.</p>
-
-<p>So Adela and Darvy went down with them to Netherleigh. That was in
-summer, now it was autumn: and, so far as could be seen or judged, the
-change had not as yet effected much for her. Adela seemed just as
-before; wan, weary, sick, and sorry.</p>
-
-<p>And yet, there was a change in a certain degree. The bitter rebellion
-at her fate had partly passed from her mind, and therefore its traces
-had left her face. The active repining in which her days had been
-spent was giving place to a sort of hopeless resignation. She strove
-to accept her punishment, strove to bear it, to be patient and gentle
-always, hardly ever ceasing day or night to beseech God to blot out
-the past from the book of the Recording Angel. The sense of shame,
-entailed by her conduct of long years, had not lifted itself in the
-least degree; nay, it seemed to grow of a deeper scarlet as time went
-on. Sometimes she would think if she could trample upon herself and
-annihilate all power of remembrance, she would do it gladly; but that
-would not stamp it out of her ever-living soul. Adela had erred;
-wilfully, cruelly, persistently; and if ever retribution came home to
-a woman, it surely had come to her.</p>
-
-<p>On this same day, when the sky was blue and the afternoon sun lay on
-the green fields at Netherleigh, Lady Adela went out, and turned her
-languid steps towards Moat Grange. Selina had called to see her at the
-Rectory several times; each time Adela had promised to pay return
-visits, and had not yet done so. The direct road lay, as the reader
-may perhaps remember, through the village and past Court Netherleigh.
-Lingeringly would her eyes look on the house whenever this happened,
-lingeringly they rested on it now. The home, in which she had spent so
-many happy days with Aunt Margery, was closed to her for ever. Of all
-people in the living world, she was the only one debarred from
-entering it. Very rarely indeed was Sir Francis at Netherleigh. It had
-been supposed that he meant to take up his abode in it for the autumn
-months; but this appeared to be a mistake; when he did come it was but
-for a flying visit of a few hours. Mr. Cleveland privately told his
-wife that he believed Sir Francis stayed away from the place because
-Adela was in it.</p>
-
-<p>Selina was in the larger of the two drawing-rooms when Adela reached
-the Grange. Selina rarely used it now, her husband never, but she had
-gone into it this afternoon. Opening the shutters and the window, she
-sat there making herself a lace collar. The time had gone by when she
-could order these articles of a Madame Damereau, and pay a fabulous
-price for them.</p>
-
-<p>Adela untied her bonnet strings and took off her gloves as she sat
-down opposite Selina. Not strong now, the walk had greatly tired her.
-Selina could but notice how fragile and delicate she looked, as the
-light from the window fell upon her face. The once rounded cheeks were
-wasted, their bright colour had faded to the faintest tinge of pink;
-from the once lustrous eyes shone only sadness.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Let me get you something, Adela,&quot; cried Selina, impulsively. &quot;A cup
-of tea&mdash;I will make it for you directly. Of wine&mdash;well, I am not sure,
-really, that we possess any. I can ask Oscar.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Not anything, not anything,&quot; returned Adela, &quot;I could not take it.
-Thank you all the same. As to my looks&mdash;I look as I always do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ah me,&quot; sighed Selina, &quot;it is a weary life. A weary life, Adela, for
-you and for me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;If that were all&mdash;its weariness&mdash;it might be better borne,&quot; murmured
-Adela. &quot;And yet I do try to bear,&quot; she added, pushing her pretty brown
-hair from her aching brow, and for once induced to speak of her
-troubles to this friend, who had suffered too&mdash;though not as she had.
-&quot;But there is the remorse as well, you see. Oh, how wrong, how
-foolish, how <i>wicked</i> we were!&mdash;at least <i>I</i> was. Do you ever think of
-our past folly, Selina?&mdash;of the ease and happiness we then held in our
-hands, and flung away?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;We have paid for it,&quot; said Selina. &quot;Yes, I do sometimes think of the
-past, Adela; and then I wonder at the folly of women. See to what
-folly has reduced me!&mdash;to drag out a dead-alive existence in a
-semi-prison, for the Grange is no better now, with never a friend to
-stay with me, or a shilling to spend. And all for the sake of a few
-fine bonnets and gowns! Would you believe it,&quot; she added, laughing,
-&quot;that the costly things have not half come to an end yet?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Just for <i>that?</i>&quot; dissented Adela, in her pain, and losing sight of
-Selina's trouble in her own. &quot;If it had been for nothing more than
-that!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Well, well, we have paid for it, I say. Bitterly and cruelly.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;<i>I</i> have. You have not.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No?&quot; somewhat indifferently returned Selina, her attention partly
-given to her lace again, for she was never serious long together. &quot;How
-do you make that out?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You have your husband still. Poverty with him, with one we love, must
-carry little sting with it. But for me&mdash;my whole life is one of
-never-ending loneliness, without a future, without hope. Do you know
-what fanciful thought came to me the other night?&quot; she went on, after
-a pause. &quot;I have all sorts of fanciful ideas when I sit alone in the
-twilight. I thought that life might be so much happier if God gave us
-a chance once of beginning it all over again from the first. Just
-once, when we found out what dreadful mistakes we had been making.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And we should make the same again, though we began it fifty times
-over, Adela. Unless we could carry back with us our dearly-bought
-experience.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Adela sighed. &quot;Yes, I suppose so. God would have so ordered it had it
-been well for us. He knows best. But there are some women who seem
-never to make mistakes, who go on their way smoothly and happily.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Placing themselves under God's guidance, I imagine,&quot; returned Selina.
-&quot;That's what my mother says to me, when she lectures me on the past.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Adela's eyes filled with tears. &quot;Yes, yes,&quot; she murmured, meekly,
-recalling that it was what she had been striving to do for some little
-time now&mdash;to hold on her way, under submission to God.</p>
-
-<p>The conversation turned into other channels, and by-and-by, when Adela
-was rested, she rose to leave. Selina accompanied her into the hall.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Won't you just say 'How d'you do' to my husband?&quot; she cried, opening
-the door of their common sitting-room. &quot;He is here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Adela made no objection, and followed Selina. Oscar was standing in
-the bay window, facing the door. And some one else, towering nearly a
-head above him, was standing at his side.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Francis Netherleigh.</p>
-
-<p>They stood, the husband and wife, face to face. With a faint cry,
-Adela put up her hands, as if to ward off the sight&mdash;as if to bespeak
-pardon in all humility for herself, for her intrusion&mdash;and disappeared
-again, whiter than death. It was rather an awkward moment for them
-all. Selina disappeared after her, and shut the door.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Is Lady Adela ill?&quot; asked Sir Francis of Oscar, the question breaking
-from him involuntarily in the moment's impulse&mdash;for she did, indeed,
-look fearfully so.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ay,&quot; replied Oscar, &quot;ill with remembrance. Repentance has made her
-sick unto death. Remorse has told upon her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>But Sir Francis said no more.</p>
-
-<p>Adela had departed across the fields with the best speed she could
-command. About half-way home she came upon Mr. Cleveland, seated on a
-stile and whistling softly.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Those two young rascals of mine&quot;&mdash;alluding to two of his little
-sons&mdash;&quot;seduced me from my study to help fly their kites,&quot; he began to
-Adela. &quot;Here I follow them, to the appointed field, and find them
-nowhere, little light-headed monkeys! But, my dear, what's the matter
-with you?&quot; he added, with fatherly kindness, as he remarked her pale,
-troubled face. &quot;You look alarmed.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I have just seen my husband,&quot; she panted, her breath painfully short.
-All the old pain that she had been striving to subdue had come back
-again; the sight of him, whom she now passionately loved, had stirred
-distressing emotion within her.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Well?&quot; said Mr. Cleveland.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Did you know he was at Netherleigh?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;He came down today.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;He was in the bay-parlour with Oscar, and I went into it. It has
-agitated me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But why should it agitate you?&quot; rejoined the old Rector, who was very
-matter-of-fact. &quot;It seems to me that you ought to accustom yourself to
-bear these chance meetings with equanimity, child. You can scarcely
-expect to go through life without seeing him now and then.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Adela bent her head to the stile and broke into sobs. Mr. Cleveland
-laid his protecting hand upon her shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;My dear! my dear! Strive to be calm. Surely a momentary sight of him
-ought not to put you into this state. Is it that you still dislike him
-so much?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Dislike him!&quot; she exclaimed, the contrast between the word and the
-truth striking her painfully, and causing her to say more than she
-would have said. &quot;I am dying for his forgiveness; dying to show him
-how true is my remorse; dying because I lost him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The Rector did not quite see what answer to make to this. He held his
-tongue, and Adela resumed.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I wish I was a Roman Catholic!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The good man, evangelical Protestant, felt as if his gray hair were
-standing on end with surprise. &quot;Oh, hush!&quot; said he. &quot;You don't know
-what you are saying.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I do wish it,&quot; she sobbed. &quot;I could then go into a convent, and find
-peace.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Peace!&quot; echoed Mr. Cleveland. &quot;No, child, don't let your imagination
-run away with that idea. It is a false one. No woman, entering a
-convent in the frame of mind you seem to be entertaining, could expect
-peace, or find it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Any way, I should feel more at rest: I should <i>have</i> to bear life
-then, you know. And, oh, I was trying to do so: I was indeed trying!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Thoroughly put out, the Rector made no comment. Perhaps would not
-trust himself to make any.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I suppose there are no such things as Protestant convents, or
-sisterhoods,&quot; she went on, &quot;that receive poor creatures who have no
-longer any place in this world?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Not to my knowledge,&quot; sharply spoke Mr. Cleveland, as he jumped off
-the stile. &quot;It is time we went home, Adela.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>They walked away side by side. Gaining the Rectory&mdash;a large,
-straggling, red-brick building, its old walls covered with
-time-honoured ivy&mdash;Adela ascended to her chamber, and shut herself in
-with her grief.</p>
-
-<p>How scornfully her husband must despise her!&mdash;despise her for her past
-shame and sin; despise her in her present contemptible humiliation,
-she reflected, a low moan escaping her&mdash;he so pure and upright in all
-his ways, so good and generous and noble! Oh that she could hide to
-the end from him and from the world!</p>
-
-<p>Lifting her trembling hands, her despairing face, Adela breathed a
-faint petition that the Most High would be pleased to vouchsafe to her
-somewhat of His heavenly comfort, or take her out of the tribulation
-that she could so hardly battle with.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_37" href="#div1Ref_37">CHAPTER XXXVII.</a></h4>
-<h5>AN ALARM.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p>It was a few days later. Mrs. Oscar Dalrymple, who had been spending
-the afternoon with her mother and Mary Lynn, was preparing to return
-to the Grange. Alice had just come home again, a brilliant hectic on
-her cheeks, but weaker, as it seemed to them all. Alice was happier
-than she had been for years, in her sweet unselfishness. The trouble
-which had divided Colonel Hope and his nephew was at an end; Gerard
-had been reinstated in his uncle's favour, and was to marry Frances
-Chenevix. Lying on the sofa by the window, in the fading light, Alice
-had been giving them various particulars of this; and Selina, greatly
-interested, lingered longer than she had intended. But she had to go.</p>
-
-<p>Rising hurriedly, she put on her bonnet and cloak. Mrs. Dalrymple rang
-the bell. It was to tell Reuben to be in readiness to attend her
-daughter.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;As if I wanted old Reuben with me, mamma!&quot; exclaimed Selina. &quot;Why, I
-shall run home in no time!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;He had better be with you,&quot; sighed Mrs. Dalrymple: the sigh given to
-the disturbed state of things abroad. &quot;The neighbourhood is not very
-quiet today, as you know, Selina, and it is growing dusk.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>It was not quiet at all. The summary process, eviction, had been
-resorted to by Pinnett, as regarded the tenants of the Mill Cottages.
-He had forced them out with violence. One of them, named Thoms, had
-resisted to the last. Go out he would not, and the assailants could
-not get him out.</p>
-
-<p>A meeting was to be held this same evening at Farmer Lee's. It could
-not be called a secret meeting; the farmer would have disdained the
-name; but those about to attend it waited until the dusk should
-shelter them, conscious that they were likely to speak treason against
-their landlord.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Thoms is out,&quot; cried Farmer Bumford, as he entered Mr. Lee's house in
-excitement.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;How did they get him out?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Unroofed him, Lee. Pulled his place to pieces bit by bit, and so
-forced him out. He is now with the rest of the unfortunate lot.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I thought such practices were confined to Ireland,&quot; said the honest
-farmer. &quot;It's time something was done to protect us. Oscar Dalrymple
-will have his sins to answer for.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>It was at this hour, when the autumn twilight was deepening, that
-Selina started for home. She chose the way by the common: a longer
-way, and in other respects not a desirable one tonight. Selina's
-spirit was fearless enough, and she wanted to see whether the rumour
-could be true&mdash;that the unhappy people, just ejected, had collected
-there, meaning to encamp on it. Reuben, with the licence of an old and
-faithful servant, remonstrated, begging her to go home by the turnpike
-road: but Selina chose to cross the common.</p>
-
-<p>Surely enough, the unfortunate lot, as Mr. Bumford called them, had
-gathered on its outskirts, in view of their late homes, their poor
-goods and chattels, much damaged in the mêlée, piled in little heaps
-around them. Men, their hearts panting for revenge, sobbing women and
-shivering children, there they stood, sat, or lay about. The farmers,
-Lee and Bumford, would later on open their barns to them for the
-night; but at present they expected to encamp under the stars.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of the harsh converse that prevailed, the oaths, and the
-abuse lavished on Oscar Dalrymple&mdash;for these poor, ignorant labourers
-refused, like their betters, to believe that Pinnett could so act
-without the landlord's orders&mdash;they espied, hurrying past them at a
-swift pace, their landlord's wife. Selina walked with her head down;
-now that she saw the threatening aspect of affairs, she wished she had
-listened to Reuben, and taken the open road. One of them came running
-up; a resolute fellow, named Dyke.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You'd hurry by, would you?&quot; said he, in tones that spoke more of
-plaint than threat. &quot;Won't you turn your eyes once to the ruin your
-husband has wrought? Look at the mud and mortar! If the walls weren't
-of new brick or costly stone, they was good enough for us. They were
-our homes. Look at the spot now.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Selina trembled visibly. She was aware of the awful feeling abroad
-against her husband, and a dread rushed into her heart that they might
-be going to visit it on her. Would they ill-use her?&mdash;beat her, or
-kill her?</p>
-
-<p>Reuben spoke up: but he was powerless against so many, and he knew it;
-therefore his tone was more conciliating than it would otherwise have
-been.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What do you mean by molesting this lady? Stand away, Dyke, and let
-her pass. You wouldn't hurt her; if she is Mr. Dalrymple's wife, she
-was the Squire's daughter, and he was always good to you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Stand away yourself, old man; who said we were going to hurt her?&quot;
-roughly retorted Dyke. &quot;'Taint likely; and you've said the reason why.
-Ma'am, do you see these ruins? Do they make you blush?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I am very sorry to see them, Dyke,&quot; answered Selina. &quot;It is no fault
-of mine.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Is it hard upon us, or not, that we should be turned out of the poor
-walls that sheltered us? We paid our bit of rent, all on us; not one
-was a defaulter. How would you like to be turned out of your home, and
-told the poorhouse was afore you and an order for it, if you liked to
-go there?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I can only say how very sorry I am,&quot; she returned, distressed as well
-as terrified. &quot;I wish I could help you, and put you into better
-cottages tomorrow! But I am as powerless as you are.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Will you tell the master to do it? We be coming up to ask him. Will
-you tell him to come out and face us, and look at the ruins he have
-made, and look at our wives and little ones a-shivering there in the
-cold?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Selina seemed to be shivering as much as they were. &quot;It is Pinnett who
-has done it,&quot; she said, &quot;not Mr. Dalrymple. You should lay the blame
-on him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Pinnett!&quot; roared Dyke, throwing his arm before the other men, now
-surrounding them, to silence their murmurings, for he thought his own
-eloquence the best. &quot;Would Pinnett have dared to do this without the
-master's orders? Pinnett's a tool in his hands. Say to him, ma'am,
-please, that we're not going to stand Pinnett's doings and be quiet;
-we'll drownd him first, let us once catch hold on him; and we be
-coming up to the Grange ourselves to say so to the master.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Finding she was to be no further detained, Selina sped on to the
-Grange. Oscar was in the oak-parlour. She threw herself into a chair,
-and burst into tears.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oscar, I have been so terrified. As I came by the common with Reuben,
-the men were there, and&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What men?&quot; interrupted Mr. Dalrymple.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Those who have been ejected from the cottages. They stopped me, and
-began to speak about their wrongs.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Their&mdash;<i>wrongs</i>&mdash;did they say?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes, and I must say it also,&quot; she firmly answered, induced by fright
-and excitement to remonstrate against the injustice she had hitherto
-not liked to interfere with. &quot;Cruel wrongs. Oscar, if you go on like
-this, oppressing all on the estate, you will be murdered as sure as
-you are living. They are threatening to drown Pinnett, if they can get
-hold of him; and they do not lay the blame on Pinnett, except as your
-agent, but on you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Pinnett is not my agent. What Pinnett does, he does on his own score.
-As to these harsh measures&mdash;as they are called&mdash;my sanction was not
-asked for them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But the poor men cannot see it in that light, Oscar; cannot be
-brought to believe it,&quot; she returned, the tears running down her
-cheeks. &quot;It does seem so impossible to believe that Pinnett can be
-allowed to&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;There, that's enough,&quot; interrupted Oscar. &quot;Let it end.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes; but the trouble won't end, Oscar. And the men say they are
-coming up here. There's a meeting, too, at Lee's tonight.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;They can come if they please, and hold as many meetings as they
-please,&quot; equably observed Oscar. &quot;Men who are living in a state of
-semi-rebellion must learn a wholesome lesson.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;They have been provoked to it. They were never rebellious in papa's
-time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>He made no reply. Selina, her feelings strongly excited, her
-sympathies bubbling up, continued.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It will be cruel to the farmers if you turn them from their farms; it
-is doubly cruel to have forced these poor men from their cottages.
-They paid their rent. You should see the miserable wives and children
-huddled together on the common. I could not have acted so, Oscar, if I
-had not a shilling in the world.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Dalrymple wheeled round his chair to face his wife. &quot;Whose cruel
-conduct has been the original cause of it?&quot; he asked in his cold
-voice, that to her sounded worse than another man's anger. &quot;Who
-got into secret debt, to the tune of some seven or eight thousand
-pounds&mdash;ay, nearer ten thousand, counting expenses&mdash;and let the bills
-come in to me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>She dropped her eyes then, for his reproach was true.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And forced me to retrench, almost to starvation, and to exact the
-last farthing that the estate will yield, to keep me from a prison?
-Was it you or I, Mrs. Dalrymple?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But things need not be made quite so bad,&quot; she took courage to say in
-a timid tone; &quot;you need not proceed to these extremes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Your father's system was one of indulgence, mine is not; and the
-tenants, large and small, don't know what to make of it. As to
-Pinnett, he does not consider himself responsible to me for his
-actions; and I&mdash;I cannot interfere with them. So long as I am a poor
-man, struggling to pay your debts, Selina, so long must Pinnett take
-his own course.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Oscar turned back again, caught up the book he had laid down, and went
-on reading it. Selina took a seat on the other side of the table, and
-sat supporting her head with her hands. She wished things were not so
-wretchedly uncomfortable, or that some good fairy would endow her with
-a fortune. Suddenly a tramp of feet arose outside the house. Oscar
-heard it, unmoved; Selina, her ears covered, did not hear it, or she
-might have flown sooner to bar the doors. Before she could effect
-this, the malcontents of the common were in the hall, their numbers
-considerably augmented. It looked a formidable invasion. Was it murder
-they intended?&mdash;or arson?&mdash;what was it not? Selina, in her terror,
-flew to the top of the house, a servant-maid after her: they both,
-with one accord, seized upon a rope, and the great alarm-bell boomed
-out from the Grange.</p>
-
-<p>Up came the people from far and near; up came the fire-engines, from
-the station close by, and felt exceedingly aggrieved at finding no
-fire: the farmers, disturbed in the midst of their pipes and ale,
-rushed up from Mr. Lee's. It was nothing but commotion. Old Mrs.
-Dalrymple, terrified at the alarm-bell, hastened to the scene, Mary
-Lynn with her, and Reuben coming up behind them.</p>
-
-<p>Contention, prolonged and bitter, was going on in the hall. Oscar
-Dalrymple was at one end, listening, and not impatiently, to his
-undesirable visitors, who would insist upon being heard at length. He
-answered them calmly and civilly, not exasperating them in any way,
-but he gave no hope of a change in the existing policy.</p>
-
-<p>After seeing his mistress seated in the hall, for she insisted on
-making one of the audience, poor Reuben, grieved to the heart at the
-aspect of affairs altogether, went outside the house, and paced about
-in the moonlight. It was a fine, light night. He had strolled near the
-stables, when he was accosted by some one who stood aloof, under the
-shade of the walls.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What's the matter here, that people should be running, in this way,
-into the Grange?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I should call it something like a rise,&quot; answered Reuben,
-sorrowfully. &quot;Are you a stranger, sir?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I am a stranger. Until this night I have not been in the
-neighbourhood for years. But I formerly was on intimate terms with the
-Dalrymple family, and have stayed here with them for weeks together.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Have you, though!&quot; cried Reuben. &quot;In the Squire's time, sir?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;In the Squire's time. I remember you, I think. Reuben.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ay, I am Reuben, sir. Sad changes have taken place since then. My old
-master's gone, and Mr. Robert is gone, and the Grange is now Oscar
-Dalrymple's.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I knew of Mr. Dalrymple's death. What became of his son?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;He soon followed his father. It will not do to talk of, sir.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Do you mean that he died?&quot; returned the stranger. But before Reuben
-could answer, Farmer Lee came up and commenced a warm comment on the
-night's work.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I hope there'll be no bloodshed,&quot; said he; &quot;we don't want that; but
-the men are growing more excited, and Mr. Dalrymple has sent off a
-private messenger to the police-station.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;This gentleman used to know the family,&quot; interposed Reuben; &quot;he has
-come to the place tonight for the first time for years. This riot is
-a fine welcome for him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I was asking some particulars of what has transpired since my
-absence,&quot; explained the stranger. &quot;I have been out of England, and now
-thought to renew my acquaintance with the family. What did Robert
-Dalrymple die of? I knew him well.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;He fell into trouble, sir,&quot; interposed Reuben. &quot;A random, wicked
-London set got hold of him, fleeced and ruined him, and he could not
-bear up against it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Died of it?&quot; questioned the stranger.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;He put an end to himself,&quot; said Mr. Lee, in a low tone. &quot;Threw
-himself into the Thames from one of the London bridges, and was
-drowned.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;How deplorable! And so the Grange passed to Oscar Dalrymple.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; said the farmer. &quot;He married the eldest of the young ladies,
-Selina, and something not pleasant arose with them. They went to
-London, and there she ran very deeply into debt. Her husband brought
-her back to the Grange; and since then he has been an awful landlord,
-grinding us all down to powder. Things have come to such a pass now
-that we expect a riot. The poor labourers who tenanted the Mill
-Cottages have been ejected today; they have come up to have it out
-with Oscar Dalrymple, leaving their families and chairs and tables on
-the common. One of them, Thoms, could not be forced out, so they just
-took his roof off and his doors out.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The stranger seemed painfully surprised. &quot;I never thought to hear this
-of a Dalrymple!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>But here Reuben again interposed. Jealous for the name, even though
-borne by Oscar, he told of the leasing of the estate to Pinnett, and
-that it was he, not Oscar, who was proceeding to these cruel
-extremities.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I should call that so much nonsense,&quot; said the stranger. &quot;Lease the
-estate! that has a curious sound. Has he leased away all power over
-it? One cannot believe that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No; and we don't believe it,&quot; said the farmer, &quot;not one of us; Mr.
-Dalrymple can't make us, though he tries hard to do so. He is playing
-Old Nick with us, sir, and nothing else. It was a fatal night for us
-that took Mr. Robert.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You would have been better off under him, you think?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Think!&quot; indignantly retorted the farmer. &quot;You could not have known
-Robert Dalrymple to ask it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Robert Dalrymple died in debt, I take it. Did he owe much in this
-neighbourhood?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Nothing here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Did he owe you anything?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Me!&quot; cried the farmer. &quot;Not he. Why, only a day before his death I
-had sent five hundred pounds to him to invest for me. He had not time
-to do it himself, but a gentleman who took a great deal of interest in
-Mr. Robert, and saw to his affairs afterwards, did it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What gentleman was that?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It was Mr. Grubb: he is Sir Francis Netherleigh now, and has come
-into Court Netherleigh. His sister&mdash;who is at the Grange tonight with
-old Mrs. Dalrymple&mdash;and Mr. Robert were to have been married. She has
-stayed single for his sake.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Robert Dalrymple may not be dead,&quot; spoke the stranger.</p>
-
-<p>But this hypothesis was received with disfavour; not to say scorn. The
-stranger maintained his opinion, saying that it was his opinion.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Then perhaps you'll enjoy your opinion in private,&quot; rebuked Mr. Lee.
-&quot;To talk in that senseless manner only makes us feel the fact of his
-death more sharply.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What if I tell you I met him abroad, only a year ago?&quot; There was a
-dead pause. Reuben breathed heavily. &quot;Oh, don't play with us!&quot; he
-cried out; &quot;if my dear young master's alive, let me know it. But he
-cannot be alive,&quot; he added mournfully: &quot;he would have made it known to
-us before now.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The stranger unwound a large handkerchief, in which his face and chin
-had been muffled, raised his soft round hat from his brows, and
-advanced from the shade into the moonlight.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Reuben! John Lee! do I look anything like him?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Reuben sank on his knees, too faint to support himself in the
-overwhelming surprise and joy. For it was indeed his young master,
-Robert Dalrymple, raised, as it seemed, from a many years' grave. The
-old servant broke into sobs that would not be controlled.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But it is nothing less than magic,&quot; cried the farmer, when he had
-wrung Robert's hand as if he would wring it off, and both he and
-Reuben had had time to take in the full truth of the revelation.
-&quot;Dead&mdash;yet living!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I never was dead,&quot; said Robert. &quot;The night that I found myself
-irretrievably ruined&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>But here Robert Dalrymple's explanation was interrupted by a noise.
-The malcontents, driven wild by Oscar's cold equanimity, which they
-took to be purely supercilious, were rushing out of the Grange by the
-front-entrance, fierce threats and oaths pouring from their lips.
-Oscar Dalrymple might go to perdition! They'd fire the place over his
-head, commencing with the barns and outhouses!</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Stay, stay, stay! let me have a few words with you before you begin,&quot;
-spoke one, meeting them with assured, but kind authority; and his calm
-voice acted like oil poured upon troubled waters.</p>
-
-<p>It was Sir Francis Netherleigh. Hearing of the riot, he had hastened
-up. He reasoned with the men, promised to see what he could do to get
-their wrongs redressed, told them that certain barns and outhouses of
-his were being warmed and made comfortable for them for the night, and
-their wives and children were already on their way to take possession.
-Finally, he subdued them to peace and good temper.</p>
-
-<p>But while this was taking place in front of the house, there had been
-another bit of by-play near the stables. Mary Lynn, terrified for the
-effect of the riotous threats on Mrs. Dalrymple in her precarious
-state of health, begged her to return home, and ran out to look
-for Reuben. Mr. Lee discerned her leaning over the gate of the
-kitchen-garden, gazing about on all sides in the moonlight. A bright
-idea struck him, quite a little bit of romance.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I'll fetch her to you here, Mr. Robert,&quot; he said. &quot;I'll break the
-glad news to her carefully. And&mdash;<i>you</i> won't turn as out of our homes,
-will you, sir?&quot; he lingered to say.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;That I certainly will not; and those who are already out shall go
-back again. But,&quot; added Robert, smiling, &quot;I fear I shall be obliged to
-turn somebody out of the Grange.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;There's Pinnett, sir?&quot; came the next doubting remark. &quot;If Mr. Oscar
-Dalrymple has leased him the estate, who knows but the law may give
-him full power over us&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Leased him the estate!&quot; interposed Robert. &quot;Why, my good friend, it
-was not Oscar Dalrymple's to lease: it was mine. Be at rest.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Relieved at heart, the farmer marched up to Mary; managing, despite
-the most ingenious intentions, to startle and confuse her. He opened
-the conference by telling her, with an uncomfortably mysterious air,
-that a dead man had come to life again who was waiting to see her: and
-Mary's thoughts, greatly disturbed, flew to a poor labourer who had
-died, really died, that morning.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What do you mean, Mr. Lee?&quot; she interrupted, with some awe. &quot;You
-can't know what you are saying. Colter come to life again!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;There! I know how I always bungle over this sort o' thing,&quot; cried the
-abashed farmer. &quot;You must just forgive me. And you can well afford to,
-Miss Mary, for it's not Colter come to life at all; it is young Mr.
-Robert Dalrymple. And here he is, walking towards you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The farmer discreetly disappeared. Mary tottered into the shade, and
-stood for support against the trunk of the great elm-tree. Robert drew
-her from it to the shelter of his faithful heart.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes; it is I, my darling; I, myself&mdash;do not tremble so,&quot; he
-whispered. &quot;God has been very merciful to me, more merciful than I
-deserve, and has brought me back to you and to home again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>She lay there, on his breast, the strong arms around her that would
-henceforth be her shelter throughout life.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_38" href="#div1Ref_38">CHAPTER XXXVIII.</a></h4>
-<h5>ROBERT DALRYMPLE.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p>Sundry shouts startling the night-air, combined with the dashing up of
-horsemen, caused no little stir amidst the crowd. The booming of the
-alarm-bell somewhat earlier in the evening had been less ominous than
-this.</p>
-
-<p>They were the police-officers from Netherleigh, sent for by Oscar
-Dalrymple, and they had come mounted, for the sake of speed. The
-moon had gone under a cloud, the old structure, Moat Grange,
-appeared shadowy and indistinct, and to the imagination of these poor
-excited labourers, assembled to discuss their position, the three
-officers&mdash;for there were but three&mdash;looked magnified into a formidable
-number. Sir Francis Netherleigh had appeased their anger, but he could
-not subdue the sense of wrong that burnt in the men's minds; and when
-he left them, they, instead of dispersing quietly in accordance with
-his recommendation, lingered where they were, and whispered together
-of Pinnett and of treason.</p>
-
-<p>On the other side of the house was a group, more peaceful, but not a
-whit less excited. Of all the surprises met with by Francis
-Netherleigh in his own life, he had never had so complete a one as
-this, or one so satisfactory. Searching about after malcontents that
-might have scattered themselves, he came round by the outhouses and
-the kitchen-garden; and there he saw a stranger talking with his
-sister Mary, Farmer Lee and Reuben standing at a little distance. The
-moon was bright then; the stranger stood bareheaded, and there was
-that in his form and in the outlines of his face that thrilled chords
-in the memory of Sir Francis.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Don't be frightened, sir,&quot; spoke Farmer Leo to him, in whispered
-tones, as befitted the wonderful subject; &quot;it is himself, and not his
-ghost. It is, indeed.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But <i>who</i> is it?&quot; cried Sir Francis, his eyes strained earnestly on
-the stranger.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Himself, I say, sir&mdash;Robert Dalrymple.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Robert Dalrymple!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ay. Come back from the dead, as one may say. He made himself known to
-me and Reuben; and then I went and broke the news to Miss Mary. And
-there they both are, talking together.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>But Mary had discerned her brother, and they were coming forward. &quot;Is
-it possible to believe it?&quot; asked Sir Francis, as they met, his hand
-clasping Robert's with a warm grasp.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I think you may; I think you cannot fail to recognize me, changed and
-aged though I know I am,&quot; answered Robert, with an emotion that
-bordered upon tears.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You have been alive all this time&mdash;and not dead, as we have deplored
-you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes, all this time; and I never knew until a little while ago that I
-was looked upon as dead.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But what became of you, Robert? It was thought, that dreadful night,
-that you&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Threw myself into the Thames,&quot; put in Robert, in the slight pause
-made by Sir Francis. They were all standing together now, Mary a
-little apart, her hand upon the gate, and the moonlight flickered on
-them through the branches of the thinning autumn trees. &quot;I was very
-near doing it,&quot; he continued; &quot;nearer than any one, save God, can
-know. It was a dreadful night to me, one of shame and despair. Knowing
-myself to be irretrievably ruined, a rogue upon earth&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Hold there, sir,&quot; cried Reuben, &quot;a rogue you never were.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I was, Reuben. And you shall all hear how. Mary,&quot;&mdash;turning to
-her&mdash;&quot;<i>you</i> shall hear also. A beggar myself, I staked that night at
-the gaming-table the money I held of yours, Lee, the five hundred
-pounds you had entrusted to me, staked it, and lost it. I cannot
-understand how you&mdash;but I'll leave that just now. The money gone, I
-wandered about the streets, a desperate man, and found myself on
-Westminster Bridge. It was in my heart to leap into the river, to take
-the blind leap into futurity my uncle had taken before me. I was
-almost in the very act of doing it, when a passer-by, seeing my
-perilous position, pulled me back, and asked what I meant by hanging
-over there. It is to him I owe my life.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Under God,&quot; breathed Mary, remembering her dream.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ay,&quot; assented Robert, &quot;under God. It proved to be one Joseph Horn, a
-young man employed at my tailor's, and he recognized me. I made an
-excuse about the heat of the night, that I was leaning over for a
-breath of air from the water: and finally Horn left me. But the
-incident had served to arrest my purpose; to show me my folly and my
-sin. I am not ashamed to confess that I knelt down, there and then, to
-ask God to help me, and to save me from myself; and&mdash;He did it. I
-quitted the dangerous spot&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Your hat was found in the Thames, and brought back the next day, Mr.
-Robert,&quot; interrupted poor, bewildered, happy Reuben.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It blew off, into the river; it was one of the windiest nights I was
-ever out in, except at sea,&quot; answered Robert. &quot;I walked about the
-streets till morning, taking myself sharply to task, and considering
-how I could give myself a chance for a better life. I had still my
-watch and ring, both of value&mdash;they would have gone long before, just
-as everything else had gone, but that they had been my father's, and
-were given over by him to me on his death-bed. I parted with them now,
-disguised myself in rough clothes, went to Liverpool, and thence to
-America.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But why did you not come to me instead?&quot; asked Sir Francis.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I was ashamed to do so. Look at the debts I owed; at what I had done
-with Lee's money! No, there was nothing for it but to hide my head
-from you all, and from the world. Had I made a fortune, I should have
-come back in triumph, but I never did make it. I found employment as a
-clerk at New Orleans, and kept myself; that was all.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;If you had only just let us know you were alive, Robert!&quot; cried Mary.</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head. &quot;I did not suppose any one would care to know it. I
-expected that the extent of my villainy had come out, and that you
-would all be thankful if I disappeared for ever. So there I remained,
-in the Crescent City, passing as 'Mr. Charles,' my second name, and
-making the best of my blighted life. I&quot;&mdash;his tone suddenly changed to
-laughter&mdash;&quot;nearly married and settled there.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oh!&quot;&mdash;Mary gave quite a start.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I had an excellent offer; yes, I assure you I had. It was leap-year.
-A flourishing widow, some few years older than myself, took a fancy to
-me. She had a fine house and grounds on the banks of the Mississippi,
-and an income not to be despised; and she proposed that I should throw
-up my wearisome daily work and become the master of all this&mdash;and of
-her. I took it into consideration, I can tell you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And what prevented your accepting it?&quot; laughed Sir Francis.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Well, the one bare thought&mdash;it did not amount to hope&mdash;that a turn of
-good fortune <i>might</i> some time bring me back here, to find&quot;&mdash;with a
-glance at Mary&mdash;&quot;what I have found.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And the good fortune came, sir&mdash;and has brought you back!&quot; exclaimed
-the farmer.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes; it came,&quot; replied Robert, &quot;it came: a turn that was very like
-romance, and once more exemplified the saying that truth is stranger
-than fiction. You are aware, I think, that my father had a relative
-living in Liverpool, Benjamin Dalrymple?&quot; added Robert, chiefly
-addressing Sir Francis&mdash;who nodded in reply.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Benjamin Dalrymple never corresponded with us, would not notice us; a
-serious difference had arisen between him and my father in early days.
-But, a year after my father's death, when I chanced to be in
-Liverpool, I called upon him. He was cordial enough with me, seemed
-rather to take a fancy to me, and I stayed with him three weeks. He
-was a cotton-broker, and would take me down to his office in a
-morning, and show me his routine of business, verily hoping, I
-believe, that I should take to it and join him. When, later, I became
-hard up, and had not a shilling to turn to in the world, I wrote to
-Benjamin Dalrymple from London, asking him to help me. Not by the
-smallest fraction, he replied; a young man who could run into debt,
-with my patrimony, would run into debt to the end of the chapter,
-though his income might number tens of thousands. Well, all that
-passed away; and&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Robert paused.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;The house I served in America exported cotton home in large
-quantities,&quot; he continued rapidly. &quot;Benjamin Dalrymple was amongst
-their larger correspondents. Some few months ago, his confidential
-clerk, a taciturn gentleman named Patten, came over on business to New
-Orleans, to this very house I was in. He saw me and recognized me; we
-had dined together more than once at old Benjamin's table in
-Liverpool. Patten had believed me dead; drowned; and it no doubt gave
-him a turn when he saw me alive. I told him my history, asking him
-not to let it transpire in the old world or the new. But it seems he
-considered it his duty to repeat it to old Benjamin on his return
-home: and he did so. The result was, that Benjamin set up a
-correspondence with me, and finally commanded me to give up my place
-as clerk and go back to him. I did so; and I&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Again Robert stopped; this time in evident emotion.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Go on, Robert,&quot; said Sir Francis. &quot;What is it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;My story has a sad ending,&quot; answered Robert, his tone depressed. &quot;I
-landed at Liverpool to find Benjamin Dalrymple ill with a mortal
-illness. He had been ailing for some time, but the fatal truth had
-then declared itself. He was so changed, too!&mdash;I suppose people do
-change when they are about to die. From being a cold, hard man, he had
-become gentle and loving in manner. I must remain with him until the
-end, he said, and be to him as a son.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Was he not married, sir?&quot; asked Farmer Lee.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;He had never married. I did remain with him, doing what I could for
-him, and making no end of promises, which he exacted, with regard to
-my future life and conduct. In twenty-one days, exactly, from the day
-I landed, the end came.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;He died?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;He died. I waited for his funeral. And,&quot; concluded Robert, modestly,
-&quot;he has made me his heir.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Thank Heaven for that!&quot; murmured old Reuben.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;How much it is, I cannot tell you,&quot; said Robert, &quot;but an enormous
-sum. Patten puts it down at half a million: and, that, after clerks
-and other dependents have been well provided for. So, every one who
-has ever suffered by me in the shape of debt will be recompensed; and
-Moat Grange will hold its own again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>But his return had to be made known to others who were interested in
-it: his mother, his sisters, Oscar Dalrymple. Of the latter Robert
-spoke some hard words.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I had thought to give him a fair portion of this wealth in right of
-Selina,&quot; avowed he. &quot;But I don't know now. A man who can so oppress an
-estate does not merit much favour.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oscar has been worse thought of than he deserves,&quot; explained Sir
-Francis Netherleigh. &quot;Rely upon that, Robert. He has been sorely
-tried, sorely put to for money for some few years now, through no
-fault of his own&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No; through Selina's,&quot; interrupted Robert. &quot;Old Benjamin knew all
-about it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;He has been striving to make both ends meet, to pay his obligations
-justly and honourably, and he could only do it by dint of pinching and
-screwing,&quot; went on Sir Francis. &quot;The great mistake of his later life
-was leasing the estate to Pinnett. It is thought that he could have
-arrested Pinnett's harsh acts; my opinion is that he could not.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I am glad to hear you say so,&quot; cried Robert, cordially. &quot;Oscar was
-always near, but he was just.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>They were moving slowly through the garden to the house, when a
-disturbance struck upon their ears. It came from the front of the
-Grange; and all, except Mary, hastened round to the scene. It was, in
-fact, the moment of the arrival of the mounted police. The officers
-shouted, the crowd rebelled; and Oscar Dalrymple ran out. The police,
-hasty as usual, were for taking up the malcontents wholesale; the
-latter resisted, protesting they had done nothing to be taken up for.
-They had only come up to speak to Mr. Dalrymple, and &quot;there was no law
-against that,&quot; said they.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You break the law when you use threats to a man in his own house,&quot;
-cried Featherston, the chief constable.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;We haven't used no threats,&quot; retorted Dyke. &quot;We want an answer from
-Mr. Dalrymple; whether he's going to force us to lodge under the wind
-and the rain, or whether he'll find us roofs in place of them he has
-destroyed. They've bid us go to the workhouse; but he knows that if we
-go there we lose all chance of getting our living, and shall never
-have a home for our families again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;There's no longer room for you on the estate; no dwellings for you
-left upon it,&quot; spoke up a voice; and the men turned sharply, for they
-knew it was Pinnett's. Countenanced by the presence of the constables,
-the agent came out from some shelter or other, and showed himself
-openly.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;We won't say nothing about mercy,&quot; savagely cried Dyke; &quot;but we'd
-like justice. Justice, sir!&quot; turning to Oscar Dalrymple, as he stood
-by the side of Mr. Cleveland, who had just come up. &quot;Hands off, Mr.
-Constable! I'm doing nothing yet, save asking a plain question. Is
-there any justice?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes, there is justice,&quot; interrupted another voice, which thrilled
-through the very marrow of Oscar Dalrymple, as Robert advanced and
-took his place near Mr. Cleveland, who started back in positive
-fright. &quot;Oscar, you know me, I see; gentlemen, some of you know me: I
-am Robert Dalrymple, and I have returned to claim my own.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Was it a spectre? Many of them looked as if they feared so. Was it
-some deception of the moonlight? Featherston, brave policeman though
-he was, backed away in terror.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I find you have all thought me dead,&quot; proceeded Robert; &quot;but I am not
-dead, and never was dead; I have simply been abroad. I fell into debt
-and difficulty; but, now that the difficulties are over, I have come
-amongst you again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It's the Squire!&quot; burst forth the men, as they gradually awoke to the
-truth; &quot;we've never called the other one so. Our own young Squire's
-come home again, and our troubles are over. Good luck to the ship that
-brought him!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Robert laughed. &quot;Yes, your troubles shall be over. I hear that there
-has been dissatisfaction; and, perhaps, oppression. I can only say
-that I will set everything right. The tenants who have been served
-with a notice to quit&quot;&mdash;glancing round at Lee and Bumford&mdash;&quot;may burn
-it; and you, my poor fellows, who have been ejected from your
-cottages, shall be reinstalled in them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But, my dear young master,&quot; cried Dyke, despondingly, &quot;some of the
-roofs be off, and the walls be pretty nigh levelled with the ground.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I will build them up for you, Dyke, stronger than ever,&quot; said
-Robert, heartily. &quot;Here's my hand upon it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Not only Dyke, but many more pressed forward to clasp Robert's hands;
-and so hard and earnest were the pressures, that Robert was almost
-tempted to cry for quarter. In the midst of this, Pinnett thought it
-time to speak.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You talk rather fast, sir: even if you are Mr. Robert Dalrymple. The
-estate is mine for some six years to come. It has been leased to me by
-its owner.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;That it certainly has not been,&quot; returned Robert, his tone one of
-conscious power. &quot;I am its owner. The estate has been mine throughout;
-as I did not die, it could not have lapsed from me. My brother-in-law,
-acting under a mistake, entered into possession, but he has never been
-the legal owner. Consequently, whatever acts be may have ordered,
-performed, or sanctioned, are NULL and VOID. Constables, I think your
-services will not be required here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Pinnett ground his teeth. &quot;It's to know whether you <i>are</i> Robert
-Dalrymple&mdash;and not an impostor.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I can certify that it is really Robert Dalrymple; I baptized him,&quot;
-laughed Mr. Cleveland. &quot;There is no mistaking him and his handsome
-face.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And I and Mr. Lee can swear to it, if you like,&quot; put in Reuben,
-looking at Pinnett. &quot;So could the rest of us. I wish we were all as
-sure of heaven!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Robert put his hand into Oscar's under cover of the darkness. &quot;You
-know me, Oscar, well enough. Let us be friends. I have not come home
-to sow discord; rather peace and goodwill. The Grange must be mine
-again, you know; I can't help that; but, when you and Selina quit it
-for your own place, you shall not go out empty-handed.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I don't understand you,&quot; returned Oscar.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I have come back a rich man; and you shall share in the good. Next to
-endowing my mother, I shall take care of my sisters. Ah, Oscar, these
-past few years have been full of gloom and trouble for many of us. Now
-that the clouds have broken, let us hope that the future will bring
-with it a good deal of sunshine.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The assemblage began to disperse. Mr. Cleveland undertook to break the
-glad news to Mrs. Dalrymple and Selina.</p>
-
-<p>Reuben crept up to his master with an anxious, troubled face. &quot;Mr.
-Robert,&quot; he breathed, &quot;have you quite left off the&mdash;the PLAY? You will
-not be tempted to take to it again?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Never, Reuben,&quot; was the grave, hushed answer. &quot;That night, which you
-all thought fatal to me, and which was so near being so, as I stood on
-the bridge, looking into the dark water, I took a solemn oath that I
-would never again touch a card, or any other incentive to gambling. I
-never shall.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Heaven be praised!&quot; murmured Reuben. And the old man felt that he was
-ready to say with Simeon of old: &quot;Lord, now lettest thou thy servant
-depart in peace.&quot;</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_39" href="#div1Ref_39">CHAPTER XXXIX.</a></h4>
-<h5>LADY ADELA.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p>Winter had come, and passed; and spring flowers and sunshine gladdened
-the land.</p>
-
-<p>In my Lady Acorn's dressing-room at Chenevix House stood my lady
-herself, her head and hands betraying temper, her tart tongue in loud
-assertion. Opposite to her, the same blonde, suave dame she had ever
-been, waited Madame Damereau. Madame was not tart or rude; she could
-not be that; but nevertheless she maintained her own cause, and gave
-my lady answer for answer.</p>
-
-<p>Every available place in the room was covered with a robe, bonnet,
-mantle, or other choice article essential to a lady's attire: on the
-sofa lay a costly bridal dress. You might have fancied it the
-show-room itself of Madame Damereau. Lady Frances Chenevix was to be
-married on the morrow to Gerard Hope. The colonel had been telling
-them both ever since Christmas that he thought they ought to fix the
-day if they meant to marry at all, and so arrangements were made, and
-they named one early in April.</p>
-
-<p>The articles lying about formed part of the trousseau of Lady Frances;
-the grievance distracting Lady Acorn was connected with them; for she
-saw great many more spread out than she had ordered, and was giving
-way to wrath. Madame Damereau, condescending to appear at Chenevix
-House this afternoon, to superintend, herself, the trying-on of the
-bridal robe, had arrived just in time for the storm.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Was anything so unreasonable, was anything so extravagant ever seen
-before in this world?&quot; demanded Lady Acorn, spreading out her arms to
-right and left. &quot;I tell you there are fifty things here that I
-never ordered; that I never should order, unless I lost my senses.
-Look at that costly silk costume&mdash;that shaded grey&mdash;why, you'd charge
-five-and-twenty guineas for that, if you charged a farthing. Don't
-tell me, madame.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Plutôt thirty guineas, I believe,&quot; equably answered madame. &quot;It is of
-the richest, that silk. Miladi Frances intends it for her robe de
-voyage tomorrow.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;She may intend to go voyaging about in gold, but be no nearer doing
-it,&quot; retorted the countess. &quot;I never ordered that dress, and I won't
-take it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Is anything the matter?&quot; interrupted a joyous voice at this juncture,
-and Frances ran into the room with her bonnet on. &quot;I am sorry to have
-kept you waiting, madame, but I could not help it. Is my lady mother
-scolding at my extravagance?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Extravagance is not the name for it,&quot; retorted the countess. &quot;How
-dare you do these wild things, Frances? Do you suppose I should accept
-all these things, or pay for them?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No, mamma, I knew you would not,&quot; laughed Frances, &quot;I shall pay for
-them myself.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oh, indeed! Where will the money come from?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Colonel Hope gave it me,&quot; said the happy girl, executing a pirouette.
-&quot;A few days ago he put three bank-notes of one hundred pounds each
-into my hands, saying he supposed I could spend it; and I went to
-madame's at once. What a love of a costume!&quot; cried Frances, turning to
-the grey silk which had so excited her mother's ire. &quot;I am going away
-in that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>But the great event of this afternoon, that of trying-on the bridal
-dress, must be proceeded with, for Madame Damereau's time was more
-precious than that of ordinary mortals. The bride-elect was arrayed in
-it, and was pacing about in her splendour, peeping into all the
-mirrors, when a message was brought to Lady Acorn that Mr. Cleveland
-was below. He had come up from Netherleigh to perform the marriage
-ceremony, and was to be the guest for a day or two of Lord and Lady
-Acorn.</p>
-
-<p>She went down at once, leaving Frances and Madame Damereau. There were
-many odds and ends of Netherleigh gossip she wished to hear from the
-Rector. He was bending over the drawing-room fire.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Are you cold?&quot; inquired Lady Acorn.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Rather. As we grow older, we feel the cold and fatigue of a journey
-more keenly,&quot; he added, smiling. &quot;It is a regular April day: warm in
-the sun, very cold in the wind and shade.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;He is getting older,&quot; thought Lady Acorn, as she looked at his face,
-chilled and grey, and his whitening hair; though, for a wonder, she
-did not tell him so. They had not met for some months. He had paid no
-visit to London since the previous November, and then his errand had
-been the same as now&mdash;to celebrate a marriage.</p>
-
-<p>And, of the events of the past autumn and winter months there is not
-much to relate. Oscar Dalrymple was in his own place now, Knutford,
-Selina with a handsome income settled on her; and Robert and his wife
-lived at Moat Grange. They had been married from Grosvenor Square in
-November, Mr. Cleveland, as again now, coming up for it. Lady Adela
-was still at Netherleigh Rectory. And, perhaps it was of her that the
-countess wanted chiefly to question the Rector. She did not, however,
-do that all at once.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;All quite well at home?&quot; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Tolerably so, thank you,&quot; he replied. &quot;Mary, as you know, is ailing:
-and will be for some little time to come.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Dear me, yes,&quot; came the quick, irritable assent. &quot;This baby will make
-the third. I can't think what you want with so many.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The Rector laughed. &quot;Mary sent her love to you; and especially to
-Frances: and I was to be sure to say to Frances how sorry she was not
-to be able to be at her wedding. Adela also sent her love.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ah! And how is <i>she?</i>&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;She&mdash;&mdash;&quot; Mr. Cleveland hesitated. &quot;She is much the same. Tolerably
-well in health, I think.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I suppose Robert Dalrymple and his wife are coming up today?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;They came with me. Francis Netherleigh's carriage was waiting for
-them at the terminus. It brought me on also.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And that poor girl Alice, is she any stronger?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;She will never be stronger in this world,&quot; said the Rector, shaking
-his head. &quot;But she is pretty well&mdash;for her. I think her life may be
-prolonged some few years yet.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;She and Gerard Hope had a love affair once; I am pretty sure of it.
-He liked her better than he liked Frances.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Well, she could never have married. One so sickly as Alice ought not
-to become a wife; and she had, I expect, the good sense to see that.
-I know she is pleased at his marriage with Frances. She is most
-unselfish; truly good; there are not many like Alice Dalrymple. Her
-mother is surprisingly well,&quot; he went on, after a pause; &quot;seems to
-have gone from an old woman into a young one. Robert's coming back did
-that for her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And now&mdash;what about Adela's behaviour? how is she going on?&quot; snapped
-Lady Acorn, as if the very subject soured her.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I wanted to speak to you about Adela,&quot; said Mr. Cleveland. &quot;In one
-sense of the word, she is not going on satisfactorily. Though her
-health is pretty good, I believe, her mind is anything but healthy.
-Mary and I often talk of it in private, and she said I had better
-speak to you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Why, it is just the case of the MacIvors over again!&quot; interrupted
-Lady Acorn. &quot;Harriet sent Sandy to talk to me about it, just in this
-way, last summer.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes, there has not been much change since then, I fancy. I confess
-that I am very sorry for Adela.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Is she still like a shadow?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Like little else. The fever of the mind is consuming the body. I look
-upon it as the most hopeless case I have ever known. Adela does the
-same, though from a different point of view. She is dying for her
-husband's forgiveness. She would like to live in his memory as one not
-abjectly despicable, and she knows she must and does so live in it.
-She pictures his contempt for her, his condemnation of the way she
-acted in the past; and her humiliation, coupled with remorse, has
-grown into a disease. Yes, it is a miserable case. They are as
-entirely and hopelessly separated as they could be by death.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ah, Cleveland! You are here, then?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The interruption came from the earl. He stepped forward to shake
-hands, and drew a chair beside the Rector.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;We were talking of Adela,&quot; said the countess, when the few words of
-greeting were over. &quot;She has not come to her senses yet.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I was saying that her case is certainly one of the most hopeless ever
-known,&quot; observed Mr. Cleveland. &quot;She is as utterly separated from her
-husband as she could be by death, whilst both are yet living, and have
-probably a long life before them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Lord Acorn sighed. &quot;One can't help being sorry for Adela, wrong and
-mistaken though she was.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cleveland glanced at the earl. &quot;I am glad you came in,&quot; he said.
-&quot;I wanted to speak to you as well as to Lady Acorn. Adela talks of
-going into a Sisterhood.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Into a <i>what?</i>&quot; cried her ladyship; her tone one of unbounded
-surprise.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;She has had the idea in her mind for some time, I fancy,&quot; continued
-the Rector. &quot;I heard of it first last autumn, when she startled me one
-day by suddenly expressing a wish that she was a Roman Catholic. I
-found that the wish did not proceed from any desire to change her
-creed, but simply because the Roman Catholics possess places of refuge
-in the shape of convents, into which a poor creature, as Adela
-expressed it, tired of having no longer a place in the world, might
-enter, and find peace.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;She'd soon wish herself out again!&quot; cried Lady Acorn: while the
-earl's generally impassive face wore a look of disturbance.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I heard no more of this for some time,&quot; resumed Mr. Cleveland, &quot;and
-dismissed it from my memory, believing it to have been only a hasty
-expression arising from some moment's vexation. But a week or two ago
-Mary discovered that Adela was really and truly thinking of retiring
-into some place of refuge or other.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Into a convent?&quot; cried Lady Acorn.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No. And not into any institution of the Roman Catholics. It seems she
-has been corresponding lately with some of her former acquaintances,
-who might, as she thought, help her, and making inquiries of them. I
-noticed that letters came for her rather frequently, and I hoped she
-was beginning to take a little more interest in life. However, through
-some person or other, she has heard of an institution that she feels
-inclined to try. I think&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What is this institution?&quot; imperatively demanded the countess. &quot;If
-it's not a convent, what is it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Well, it is not, as I gather, a religious institution at all, in the
-sense of setting itself up for religion especially, or professing any
-one particular creed over other creeds,&quot; replied Mr. Cleveland. &quot;It
-is, in point of fact, a nursing institution. And Adela, if she enters
-it, will have to attend to the sick, night or day.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Heaven help her for a simpleton!&quot; ejaculated her ladyship. &quot;Why, you
-might take every occupation known to this world, and not find one to
-which she is less suited. Adela could not nurse the sick, however good
-her will night be. She has no vocation for it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Just what my wife says. Some people are, so to say, born nurses,
-while others, and Adela is one of them, could never fit themselves for
-it. Mary told her so only yesterday. To this, and to other
-remonstrance, Adela has only one answer&mdash;that the probationary
-training she will have to undergo will remedy her defects and
-inexperience,&quot; replied the Rector.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But the life of a sick-nurse is so exhausting, so wearying to the
-frame and spirit!&quot; cried Lord Acorn, who had listened in dismay.
-&quot;Where is this place?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It is in Yorkshire. Three or four ladies, sisters, middle-aged,
-educated women of fortune, set up the scheme. Wishing, it is said, to
-satisfy their consciences by doing some useful work in the world, they
-pitched upon nursing, and began by going out of their home, first one
-and then another, whenever any poor peasant turned sick. They were, no
-doubt, good Christian women, sacrificing their own ease, comfort, and
-income for the benefit of others. From that arose the Institution, as
-it is called now; other ladies joined it, and it is known far and
-wide. I have not one word to say against it: rather would I speak in
-its praise; but it will not do for Adela. Perhaps you can remonstrate
-with her. It is not settled, I believe,&quot; added Mr. Cleveland. &quot;Adela
-has not finally made up her mind to go; though Mary fears she will do
-so at once.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Let her,&quot; cried the countess, in her vexation. &quot;Let my young lady
-give the place a trial! She will soon come out of it again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>In truth, poor Adela was at a loss what to do with her blighted
-life&mdash;how to get through the weary days that had no pleasure in them.
-Netherleigh Rectory had brought to her no more rest than Sir Sandy's
-Scottish stronghold had brought, or the bleak old château in
-Switzerland. She wanted peace, and she found it not.</p>
-
-<p>Some excitement crept into the daily monotony of her life whenever Sir
-Francis was staying at Court Netherleigh. It was not often. She could
-not bear to see him, for it brought back to her all the cruel pain of
-having lost him; and yet, when she knew he was at Netherleigh, she was
-unable to rest indoors, but must go out in the hope that she should
-meet him at some safe distance; for she never ventured within view. It
-was as a fever. And perhaps this very fact&mdash;that she could not, when
-he was breathing the same atmosphere, rest without striving to see
-him, combined with the consciousness that she ought not to do
-so&mdash;rendered her more anxious to get away from Netherleigh and be
-employed, mentally and bodily, at some wholesome daily work. Anyway,
-what Mr. Cleveland stated was quite true: Lady Adela was corresponding
-with this nursing institution in Yorkshire, with the view of entering
-it.</p>
-
-<p>One phase of torment, which has not been mentioned, was growing to lie
-so heavily upon her mind as to be almost insupportable. It was the
-thought of the income allowed her by her husband. That she, who had
-blighted his life, should be living upon his bounty, indebted to him
-for every luxury that remained to her, was in truth hard to bear. If
-she could only get a living for herself, though ever so poor a one,
-how thankful she should be, she often told herself. And, perhaps this
-trouble turned the scale, or speedily would turn it, in regard to
-embracing this life of usefulness: for there would no longer be any
-necessity for the allowance from Sir Francis.</p>
-<br>
-
-<p>The wedding-day, Thursday, rose bright and glorious; just the day that
-should shine on all happy bridals. Frances was given away by her
-father, and Gerard was attended by a former fellow-clerk in the Red
-Tape Office. Colonel Hope had settled an income upon his nephew; but
-Gerard was still in the house in Leadenhall Street, and was likely to
-remain there: for the colonel disapproved of idle young men. Gerard
-had taken a small and pretty house at Richmond, and would travel to
-the City of a morning.</p>
-
-<p>At the wedding breakfast-table at Lord Acorn's, Grace and Sir Francis
-Netherleigh sat side by side. Towards its close, Grace took the
-opportunity of saying something to him in a whisper.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;We have been so confidential on many points for years, you and I,
-unhappily have had to be so,&quot; she began, &quot;that I think I scarcely need
-make an apology, or ask your forgiveness, for a few words I wish to
-say to you now.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Say on, Grace,&quot; was the cordial answer.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It is about Adela.&quot; And then she briefly touched upon what her father
-and mother had heard from Mr. Cleveland the day before: of Adela's
-unhappy frame of mind, and her idea of entering a nursing institution,
-to become one of its sisterhood.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Francis heard her to the end in silence. But he heard her
-apparently without interest: and somehow Grace's anxious spirit felt
-thrown back upon itself.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It has troubled us all to hear this, my father especially,&quot; she said.
-&quot;It would be so laborious a life, so very unsuited to one delicate as
-Adela.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I can readily understand that you would not altogether like it,&quot; he
-replied, at length. &quot;If money could be of any use&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oh no, no,&quot; interrupted Grace, flushing painfully. &quot;The allowance you
-have made from the first has been so wonderfully liberal. I don't know
-why I mentioned the subject to you&mdash;except that we think it is
-altogether undesirable for Adela.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Lord and Lady Acorn must be the best judges of that,&quot; was the very
-indifferent answer.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Her mind is in the most unhappy state conceivable; as it has been all
-along. For one thing,&quot; added Grace, her voice sinking to a yet lower
-key, &quot;I think she is pining for your forgiveness.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;That is not at all likely, I fancy,&quot; coldly returned Sir Francis. And
-as he evinced no inclination to continue the subject, but rather the
-contrary, Grace said no more.</p>
-
-<p>She could not have told herself why she introduced it. Had it been
-with any hope, consciously, or unconsciously, of being of service to
-Adela, it had signally failed. Evidently his wife and her concerns
-were topics that bore no longer any interest for Francis Netherleigh.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_40" href="#div1Ref_40">CHAPTER XL.</a></h4>
-<h5>AT COURT NETHERLEIGH.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p>&quot;Oh, Robert, what a lovely day!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Standing at the open window of her own pretty sitting-room, a room
-that had been built and decorated for her during the late alterations
-to Moat Grange, was Mary Dalrymple. Robert, heated and flushed, had
-come swinging in at the gate, and caught the words across the lawn. He
-had been out since early morning, superintending various matters; for
-today was the grand fête-day at Moat Grange, and preparations were
-being made for it.</p>
-
-<p>Robert called it a house-warming. He had talked of it, as a thing to
-come, ever since his marvellous return&mdash;and marvellous the world
-thought that return still: but he had waited for his marriage with
-Mary Lynn to take place, and then for the alterations to be completed
-that were to make the gloomy old house into a new one, and finally for
-the warm summer weather. For this was to be an open-air entertainment,
-for the gratification of the poor as well as the rich. Improvements
-had gone on without doors as well as within. Those cottages by the old
-mill had been rebuilt, and their humble tenants were reinstated.
-Gratitude and contentment had taken the place of rebellion, and the
-once angry men thought they could never do enough for their young
-Squire, Robert Dalrymple.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What a lovely day!&quot; repeated Mary.</p>
-
-<p>It was the first day of June, and one of the sweetest days that
-charming month ever put forth. Excepting for a light fleecy cloud here
-and there, the sky was of a deep blue; the sun flickered through the
-trees, that yet wore somewhat of their tender green, and caught
-Robert's head as he stood looking up at his wife.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ay, it is,&quot; said Robert, in reply to her remark, &quot;very lovely. But it
-will be uncommonly hot, Mary; it is so already.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>She leaned from the window in her cool white morning gown, smiling at
-her husband. How good-looking they both were&mdash;and how happy! Every now
-and then, even yet, Mary could scarcely realize the change&mdash;the
-intense happiness which had succeeded to the years of what had
-appeared irredeemable sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And now, Robert,&quot; said Mary, &quot;I think you must want breakfast&mdash;if you
-have not had it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But I have had it. I ran in to my mother's, and took some with her
-and Alice. The tents are all up, Mary, and the people are getting into
-their Sunday best.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;So soon! Don't forget, if you please, sir, that we sit down to lunch
-today at one o'clock precisely. We can't do without you then, you
-know, though we did without you at breakfast.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Robert drew a little nearer to the window. &quot;Where are they all?&quot; he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Gone for a stroll. I told them that I had a famished husband coming
-in and must wait at home for him. I think Gerard and his wife have
-only gone to your mother's. I don't know about Oscar and Selina.
-Perhaps she is gone to see the new baby at the Rectory.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Selina does not care for babies.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But she cares for gossip. And Lady Mary is well enough for any amount
-of that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What is that letter in your hand?&quot; asked Robert.</p>
-
-<p>His wife's face changed to sadness. &quot;It contains bad news, Robert; and
-though I have been chattering to you so gaily and lightly, it is lying
-on my heart. Francis cannot come.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Some dreadful measure&mdash;important, he calls it&mdash;has to be debated upon
-in committee in the House this afternoon, and Francis has to stay for
-it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Well, I am disappointed,&quot; cried Robert.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;As we all are. Robert, I do think it is too bad. I do think Francis
-might have spared this one day to us,&quot; added Mary, with a sigh. &quot;He
-seems to regard politics as quite a recreation.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Don't be hard on him, Mary. He has little else now in the way of
-recreation.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Gerard Hope and Lady Frances had come to the Grange for the fête:
-Gerard having coaxed a three days' holiday out of Mr. Howard, with
-whom he was a favourite, though the old gentleman had grumblingly
-reminded him that his honeymoon was not long over. Oscar Dalrymple and
-Selina had also arrived the previous night from their own place,
-Knutford. Perhaps in his heart Oscar had not been sorry to give up the
-Grange and its troubles. At any rate, he made no sign of regret. Peace
-and plenty had supervened on discomfort, and he and Selina were
-friends with all.</p>
-
-<p>Mary had guessed rightly: Selina had gone to the Rectory. If not to
-see the new baby, to see the baby's mother. The baby was more than two
-weeks old, and Lady Mary was seated on a sofa, doing some useful work.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It is early days for that, is it not?&quot; cried Selina, as she went in.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Not at all,&quot; laughed Lady Mary. &quot;With all my little ones, I have to
-be always at work. And I am thankful to be well enough for it. You
-reached the Grange yesterday?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes&mdash;and found all well. Mamma came up to dinner last night. She is
-quite young and active. Gerard and Frances have gone to see Alice, who
-is much better&mdash;and then Frances is coming here to see you. Every one
-seems to be better,&quot; concluded Selina.&mdash;&quot;And what delightful weather
-we have for today!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Where is your husband?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oscar! He went across the fields to the Mead House to see old
-Bridport. What a pity you cannot come out today, Mary! And who else do
-you think cannot come out? At least, not out <i>here</i>.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Who is that?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Francis Netherleigh. Mary Dalrymple heard from him this morning. He
-is kept in London by some business connected with the House. He would
-have been the star of the fête. Yes, don't laugh at me&mdash;he <i>would</i>&mdash;
-and we are all vexed. I wouldn't be in that House of Commons for the
-world,&quot; resentfully concluded Selina. &quot;I do think he might have
-stretched a point today!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Y-e-s&mdash;if he wished to come,&quot; was: the doubting assent. &quot;The question
-is&mdash;did he wish it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What do you mean?&quot; asked Selina.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Cleveland dropped her needle and looked at Mrs. Oscar Dalrymple.
-&quot;It has struck me that he has not cared to come here, you know.
-Instead of taking up his abode at Court Netherleigh, he pays only a
-flying visit to it now and then. My husband and I both think that he
-does not choose to subject himself to the chance of meeting Adela.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I should not wonder. They were talking about Adela at the Grange last
-night,&quot; resumed Selina, in accents of hesitation&mdash;&quot;saying something
-about her joining a sisterhood of nurses. But I'm sure <i>that</i> can't be
-true.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It is quite true, Selina.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Selina opened her amazed eyes. &quot;True! Why, she would have to put her
-hair under a huge cap, and wear straight-down cotton gowns and white
-aprons!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Lady Mary smiled. <i>That</i> part of the programme would assuredly have
-kept Selina from entering on anything of the sort.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes; it is true,&quot; repeated Mary. &quot;The negotiations have been pending
-for some time; but it is decided at last, and Adela departs for
-Yorkshire on Saturday, the day after tomorrow, to shut herself into
-the institution.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And will she never come out again?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Lady Mary shook her head. &quot;We cannot foresee the future, Selina. All
-we know is, that Adela is most unfitted for the kind of work, and we
-shall be surprised if she does not break down under it. Her frame is
-slight and delicate, her instincts are sensitive and refined. Fancy
-Adela dressing broken heads, or sitting up for a week with a family of
-children ill with fever!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Selina put her hands before her eyes. &quot;Oh!&quot; she cried in horror. &quot;But
-she surely won't have to do all that?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;She will. She must take any case she is appointed to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Lady Mary took up her work again, and Selina, serious and sobered for
-once in her life, sat revolving what she had heard.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Surely she will not do this, Mary!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Indeed she will. She is fully determined to enter upon it, and she
-intends that it shall be for life. Her father came down here to
-remonstrate with her: he has always had more influence over her than
-any one else: but it availed nothing. They were together for an hour
-in Adela's sitting-room here&mdash;and I could see how distressing to her
-the interview had been. Her eyes were swollen with crying.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Well, I can't understand it,&quot; concluded Selina, rising. &quot;Had it been
-a question of necessity, there might be reason in her wanting to make
-a guy of herself, but it is not so. Those big linen caps are
-dreadful.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>The door of the red parlour was open as Selina gained the hall. Adela
-sat there sewing: and Selina went in. How fragile and dainty and
-delicate she looked, this still young and lovely woman, in her simple
-muslin dress, with a ribbon at her throat and an edging of lace at the
-wrists. Selina sat down.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;At work today, Adela!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I am making frocks for that poor Widow Jeffrey's children. But for
-Mr. Cleveland I don't know what they would do, now their father is
-gone.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But all Netherleigh is en fête today So ought you to be!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Adela raised her sad and beautiful eyes to Selina's in some surprise.
-&quot;The fête can have nothing to do with me, Selina. I am very glad it is
-so fine for it: and I hope every one will enjoy it, yourself
-included.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Thank you: I'm sure I shall. Adela, what is this we hear about you?&quot;
-broke forth Selina, unable to keep silence longer. &quot;You are going to
-shut yourself up in a grim building, and wear a most disfiguring
-costume, and nurse cases of fever!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; sighed Adela.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;But you surely never will?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I must do it. I leave for it the day after tomorrow.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Selina lowered her voice. &quot;Have you sat down and <i>counted the cost?</i>&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Over and over again. It will be less painful than what I have long
-been enduring: bodily discomfort is more tolerable than remorse. I
-shall live a useful life, at any rate, Selina. For a long while now it
-has been worse than a wasted one.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;They think&mdash;Mary does at least&mdash;that you will not be strong enough to
-stand the fatigue.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I must do my best,&quot; sighed Adela. &quot;I hope the strength&mdash;in all
-ways&mdash;will come with the need.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I dare say they give nothing but suet puddings for dinner four days
-out of the seven!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Adela faintly smiled. &quot;I don't expect to find luxuries, Selina.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Do you take Darvy?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Darvy!&quot; echoed Lady Adela. &quot;No, indeed. I shall be, so to say, a
-servant myself.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Selina, in very dismay, gave her hands a slight wring. To her, it
-seemed that Adela might as well put herself at once out of the world.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I must be going,&quot; she said, advancing to say farewell. &quot;You are sure
-you will not come to the fête, Adela?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I have done with fêtes for ever,&quot; replied Adela, as she drew down
-Selina's face for a farewell kiss. &quot;Perhaps you will write to me
-sometimes?&quot; And Selina Dalrymple, sick and sorry for the blighted
-life, went out with her eyes full of tears.</p>
-
-<p>The day wore on to the afternoon, and the business of the fête began.
-Old and young, gentle and simple, the aristocracy surrounding the
-neighbourhood, the tenant-farmers and the labourers, all congregated
-on the lawns, in the gardens, and in the home field, where the tents
-were placed. Of the attendants, Reuben was chief, his fresh face happy
-again as of yore.</p>
-
-<p>Amidst games, dancing, and various other entertainments, there was a
-fancy-fair, the proceeds of it to be distributed to the poor: though
-indeed it was more for fun than gain, fortune-telling, post-offices,
-and mock auctions prevailing.</p>
-
-<p>Alice Dalrymple had a corner in this tent for her reclining chair, and
-watched with pleasure the busy scene. Lady Frances Hope stood by her;
-her husband was flitting from stall to stall. Robert's coming back had
-worked wonders for Alice.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;There!&quot; said Gerard, coming up to her, his face gay as usual,
-his tone light, as he handed a charming bouquet to Alice: &quot;a fine
-squabble I have had to get you this. Ten shillings those keepers of
-the flower-stall wanted, if you'll believe me I gave them five, and
-told them they were harpies.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You should not have bought it for me,&quot; smiled Alice, gratefully
-inhaling at the same time the scent of the flowers. &quot;You are just what
-you always were, Gerard&mdash;thinking of every one else, never of self.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Why should I think of self?&quot; returned Gerard, his wife having left
-them for a distant stall. &quot;But you know you always liked to lecture
-me, Alice.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;For your good,&quot; she answered, raising her eyes to his.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Was it for my good? Ah, Alice,&quot; he added, his tone changing to one of
-regret, &quot;if you had only taken me into your hands, as you might have
-done&mdash;as I prayed you to do&mdash;you would have made a Solomon of me for
-wisdom&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Hush, Gerard. Best as it is,&quot; she impressively whispered, gently
-laying her hand upon his. &quot;I was not fit&mdash;in any way. As it is, I have
-you both to love, and I am supremely happy. And I think you are.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ah, well,&quot; quaintly conceded Gerard, &quot;one is warned not to expect
-perfect bliss in this sublunary world, so one can only make the best
-of what fate and fortune bestow upon us. Would you not like to walk
-round and look at the stalls, Alice? You can go comfortably, I think,
-on my arm.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Thank you; yes, I should like it&mdash;if you will take me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Amidst the few people of note not at the fête was Lady Adela. She had
-kept to her determination not to go near it. Mr. Cleveland had asked
-her, when setting out himself, whether she would not go with him just
-to have a peep at it, but she said she preferred to sit with Mary. She
-had heard the news, spoken openly by the Rector at the luncheon-table,
-that Sir Francis Netherleigh was not coming to it. And in Lady Mary's
-room she sat, pursuing her work.</p>
-
-<p>But as the afternoon advanced, and its hours struck, one after the
-other, Adela grew weary and restless, needing a little fresh air. She
-put on her garden-hat and went out: not with any view of going near
-the gaiety, rather of keeping securely away from it. And little fear
-was there of her encountering any stragglers, for the feasting was
-just beginning, and no Englishman voluntarily walks away from that.</p>
-
-<p>These later hours of the day, as the earlier ones had been, were warm
-and beautiful. Adela walked gently along, until she came to Court
-Netherleigh. A sudden impulse prompted her to enter the grounds. She
-had never yet done so during these months of sojourn, had always
-driven back the almost irrepressible yearning. Surely there would be
-no harm in entering now: she did want to see the place once more
-before quitting Netherleigh and civilized life for ever. No one
-would see her. She was perfectly secure from interruption by Sir
-Francis&mdash;and from all other people besides, the world and his wife
-having gone a-gadding.</p>
-
-<p>Not by the lodge-gates and the avenue did she enter; but by a little
-gate, higher up the road, that she had gone in and out of so often in
-the time of Aunt Margery. Drawing near to the house, she sat down
-under a group of trees in view of the favourite apartment that used to
-be called Miss Margery's parlour, the glass-doors of which were
-standing open. Cool and gentle she looked as she sat there; she wore
-the same simple muslin gown that she had worn in the morning.
-Unfastening the strings of her straw hat, she pushed it somewhat back
-from her delicate face, and sat on, thinking of the past.</p>
-
-<p>Of the past generally and of her own particular part in it&mdash;when was
-it absent from her memory? Of the means of happiness that had been
-bestowed upon her in a degree Heaven seldom vouchsafes to mortal
-woman, and of her terrible ingratitude. How different all would have
-been now had she only been what she might have been!</p>
-
-<p>Not only had she wrecked her own life, but also her husband's. The
-bitter requital she had dealt out to him day after day and year after
-year in return for all the loving care he lavished on her, was very
-present to her now. For a long while past she had pined for his
-forgiveness&mdash;just to hear him speak it; she coveted it more than ever
-now that she was about to put all chance of hearing it beyond
-possibility. God's pardon she hoped she was obtaining, for she prayed
-for it night and day&mdash;but she yearned for her husband's.</p>
-
-<p>It was close upon two years since he put her away from him and from
-her home. It would be two years next Christmas since Miss Margery
-died. All that time to have been feeding the bitter grief that played
-upon her heart-strings!&mdash;to have been doing perpetual battle with her
-remorse!</p>
-
-<p>Lost in these regrets, Adela sat on, taking no heed of the time, when
-a movement caught her eye. Some one, who appeared to have come in by
-the same little gate, was striding towards the house. With a faint
-exclamation of dismay, Adela drew back within the trees. For it was
-her husband.</p>
-
-<p>Of all the world that could intrude, she had deemed herself most
-secure from <i>him</i>: knowing that he was detained in London, and could not
-be down. How was it, ran her tumultuous thoughts. She supposed&mdash;what
-was indeed the truth&mdash;that he had at the last found himself able to
-come.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, but only for an hour or two. She did not know that he had got
-down at midday, had been to the fête, and was now on his way back to
-the train, calling at home on his road. He made straight for the open
-doors of Miss Margery's room, and went in.</p>
-
-<p>A strange impulse seized upon Adela. What if she dared speak to him
-now? to sue for the forgiveness for which her heart seemed breaking?
-He could not kill her for it: and perhaps he might speak it&mdash;and she
-should carry with her to her isolation so much of peace.</p>
-
-<p>Without pausing to weigh the words she should utter, or the
-consequences of her act, she glided after him into the room. Sir
-Francis stood at a table, his back to the window, apparently taking
-some papers out of his pocketbook. The sudden darkening of the
-light, for she made no noise, must have caused him to turn: and there
-they stood face to face, each gazing, if they so minded, at the
-ravages time had made in the other. She was the more changed. Her
-once-brilliant eyes were sad and gentle, her cheeks bore the hectic of
-emotion, all the haughtiness had gone out of her sweet face for ever.
-And he? He was noble as always, but his hair had grey threads in it,
-and his forehead was lined.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;May I be allowed to speak to you for a moment?&quot; she panted, breaking
-the silence, yet hardly able to articulate &quot;I&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;&quot; And then she
-broke down from sheer inability to draw breath.</p>
-
-<p>He stood quite still by the table, as if waiting, his tall form drawn
-to its full height, his face and bearing perfectly calm. But he made
-no answer.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I beg your pardon,&quot; she humbly began again, having halted just inside
-the window. &quot;I would not have presumed to follow you in, or to speak
-to you, but that it is the last opportunity we shall have of meeting
-on earth. I go away the day after tomorrow to seclude myself from the
-world; and I&mdash;I cannot go without your forgiveness. When I saw you
-come in now, not knowing even that you were at Netherleigh&mdash;an impulse
-I could not resist brought me after you to ask you to forgive me. Just
-to ask it!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>But still Sir Francis did not answer. Poor Adela, now white, now
-hectic, went on, in her weak and imploring tone.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;It has seemed to me that if I went away for good without your
-forgiveness, I should almost die as the days went on&mdash;knowing that I
-could never ask it then. If you could believe how truly, how bitterly
-I have repented, perhaps you would not in pity withhold it from me.
-Will you not give it me? Will you not hear me?&quot; she added, lifting her
-trembling hands, as he yet made no sign. &quot;God forgives: will not you
-forgive also?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Advancing, she sank on her knees before him, as he stood; her sad face
-lifted to his in yearning. He drew a step back: he had listened in
-impassive silence; but he spoke now.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Rise, rise, Lady Adela. Do not kneel to me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>She bent forward; she laid her poor weak hands upon him; the scalding
-tears began to stream down her face, so pitiful in its sad entreaty.
-Sir Francis gently touched her hands with his, essaying to raise her;
-a cold, distant touch, evidently not of goodwill.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Lady Adela, I will not say another word, or allow you to say one,
-until you rise. You must be aware that you are only vexing me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>She rose to her feet obediently. She stood still, apart from him. He
-drew back yet, and stood still also, his arms folded.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Tell me what it is you wish. I scarcely understand.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Only your forgiveness, your pardon for the past. It will be a comfort
-to carry it with me where I am going.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Where is it that you are going?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I am going to join some ladies in Yorkshire, who pass their time in
-nursing the poor and sick,&quot; she answered. &quot;It is called a Sisterhood.
-I have been thinking that perhaps in that retirement, and in the
-occupation it will entail, I may find peace. Once entered, I feel sure
-I shall never have courage to leave it: therefore I know that we shall
-not meet again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>He did not speak.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And I should like to thank you, if I may dare, for all your
-consideration, your generous loving-kindness. Believe me, that, in the
-midst of the humiliation of accepting it, I have been grateful. When
-once I have entered this refuge, the necessity for your bounty will
-cease. Thank you deeply for all.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You are tired of the world?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes. It has been to me so full of shame and misery.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Do you know that you brought a great deal of misery upon <i>me?</i>&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oh, it is the consciousness of <i>that</i> that is killing me. If I could
-undo it with my life, I would; and be thankful. The recollection of
-the past, the cruel remorse ever haunting my conscience, has well-nigh
-crushed me. I want you to say that you will try to be happy in your
-life; there will be less impediment, perhaps, now that I shall be far
-away: I shall be to you as one dead. If I could only know that you
-were happy! that I have not quite blighted your life, as I have my
-own!&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Do you like the idea of entering this retreat?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;As well as I could like anything that can be open to me in this
-world now. It will be a refuge; and I dare to hope&mdash;I have dared to
-<i>pray</i>&mdash;that I may in time gain peace.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Could the past come over again, you would, then, be a different wife
-to me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Don't reproach me,&quot; she sobbed. &quot;None can know how cruel my fate is,
-how bitter my repentance. Will you not be merciful?&mdash;will you not say
-that you forgive me before I go away for ever?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes, Adela, I will say it,&quot; he answered then. &quot;I forgive you from my
-heart. I will say more. If you do wish to atone for the past, to be my
-true and loving wife, these arms are open to you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>He opened them as he spoke. She staggered back, unable to comprehend
-or believe. He did not move: simply stood still where he was, his
-extended arms inviting her.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Do not mock me, pray,&quot; she feebly wailed. &quot;Do not be cruel: you were
-never that. I have told you how bitterly I repent&mdash;that my remorse is
-greater than I can bear. If my life could undo the past, could atone
-to you in the least degree, I would gladly lay it down.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Adela, I am not mocking you. You cannot surely think it, knowing me
-as you do. You may come back to me, if you will, and be once more my
-dear wife. My arms are waiting for you; my heart is waiting for you:
-it shall be as you will.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Panting, breathless, the hectic coming and going on her wasted cheeks,
-she slowly, doubtfully advanced; and when near him she halted and fell
-at his feet. His own breath was shortening, emotion nearly overcame
-him. Raising her, he enfolded her to his loving heart.</p>
-
-<p>For a little while, as she lay in his arms, their tears mingled
-together; ay, even his were falling. A moment of agitation, such as
-this, does not often visit a man during his lifetime.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;There must be no mistake in future, Adela? You will be to me a loving
-wife?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Once more, in deep humiliation, she bent before him. &quot;Your loving and
-faithful wife for ever and for ever.&quot;</p>
-<br>
-
-<p>Quietly enough they walked, side by side, through the park. Who,
-watching them, could have suspected the agitation just lived through,
-the momentous change that had taken place in their lives? Sir Francis
-went on his way to the railway-station, for he had to go back to
-London. Adela returned to the Rectory.</p>
-
-<p>And that night, in the solitude of her chamber, its window open to the
-stars of the summer sky, she spent hours on her knees in prayer and
-thanksgiving.</p>
-
-<p>On the following morning Mr. Cleveland took Adela to Chenevix House.
-Sir Francis had been there to prepare the way for her. It was great
-news for the earl and countess; but it had not much diminished my
-lady's tartness. She had been too angry with Adela to come round at
-once.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Do you know where you are going this evening, Adela?&quot; Grace asked her
-in a whisper, a happy light in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;No. Where?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Francis Netherleigh has some mission that is taking him to Paris&mdash;my
-belief is, he has improvised it. He starts tonight, and he will take
-you with him&mdash;if you are very good.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;How kind he is!&quot; murmured Adela.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Have a care how you behave in future, Adela,&quot; said her father, in
-solemn admonition that evening, as Sir Francis stood ready to take her
-out to his carriage, which waited to convey them to the station.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I will, papa: Heaven helping me. Good-bye, dear mamma.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oh, good-bye, and a pleasant journey to you! It's more than you
-deserve,&quot; retorted my lady.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_41" href="#div1Ref_41">CHAPTER XLI.</a></h4>
-<h5>CONCLUSION.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p>There is little more to relate.</p>
-
-<p>On just such a lovely June day as described above, and twelve months
-later, another fête took place. But this time it was at Court
-Netherleigh. Not an open-air fête, this, or one on a large scale, for
-only a few chosen friends had been invited to it.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning, in Netherleigh Church, and at the hands of the good
-Rector, the infant heir of Court Netherleigh had been made one of
-Christ's fold.</p>
-
-<p>Court Netherleigh was made their chief home by Sir Francis and his
-wife. Grosvenor Square was visited occasionally, but not for very long
-together. Adela's tastes had totally changed: fashion and frivolity no
-longer held chief places in her heart: higher aims and duties had
-superseded them. Lady Mary Cleveland herself was not so actively
-anxious for the welfare of the poor and distressed as was Adela,
-Netherleigh.</p>
-<div style="margin-left:10%; font-size:smaller">
-<p class="t1" style="text-indent:-10px">
-&quot;Sweet are the uses of adversity,<br>
-Which like a toad, ugly and venomous,<br>
-Wears yet a precious jewel in its head.&quot;</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>As she stood this morning at the baptismal font, her child in the arms
-of Mr. Cleveland, tears of joy silently trickled down her face. Hardly
-a day or a night of this latter twelvemonth, but they had risen in
-gratitude, contrasting what had been with what was.</p>
-
-<p>Lord and Lady Acorn were present; and Grace, who was godmother, held
-the baby in readiness for the clergyman. Mr. Howard had come down with
-Colonel and Lady Sarah Hope; Robert Dalrymple and Mary were there from
-Moat Grange, and the Rector's wife.</p>
-
-<p>While walking back to Court Netherleigh after the ceremony, the party
-were joined by another guest&mdash;Sir Turtle Kite.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Turtle's presence was quite unexpected. Deeply sensible of the
-service he once rendered them&mdash;for, had the little alderman chosen to
-be crusty then, where would Charles Cleveland have been, where Lady
-Adela?&mdash;the Acorn family had not dropped him with the passing moment.
-Neither had Sir Francis Netherleigh. On this particular day&mdash;a very
-splendid one in London&mdash;the knight chanced to think he should like to
-air himself in the sunbeams, and take a holiday. Remembering the
-standing invitation to Court Netherleigh&mdash;of which he had not yet
-availed himself&mdash;and knowing that Sir Francis was staying there and
-not in Grosvenor Square, Sir Turtle travelled down, and met the party
-as they were going home from church.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Dear me I am very sorry,&quot; he cried, somewhat disconcerted. &quot;I had no
-idea&mdash;I had better go home again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Not a bit of it,&quot; said Sir Francis, heartily, as he clasped his hand.
-&quot;You are all the more welcome. I am sure you will like to join us in
-good wishes to my little boy. Adela will show him to you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>So Sir Turtle's beaming face made one at the luncheon-table, none so
-delighted as he. And he surreptitiously scribbled a note in his
-pocketbook to purchase the handsomest christening-cup that could be
-found for money.</p>
-
-<p>Luncheon over, they went out into the charming sunshine, some
-strolling hither and thither, some taking refuge on the shaded benches
-under the trees. Adela gained possession of her baby in the nursery,
-and carried him out to show him to Sir Turtle. He was a fine little
-fellow of six weeks old, promising to be as noble-looking as his
-father, and certainly possessing his beautiful grey-blue eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What is its name?&quot; asked Sir Turtle, venturing to pat the soft little
-cheek with his forefinger, and rather at a loss what to say, for he
-did not understand as much about babies as he did about tallow.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Francis,&quot; answered Adela. &quot;Francis Upton. I would not have had any
-name but Francis for the world, and my husband thought he would like
-to add Upton, in remembrance of Miss Upton who used to live here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Francis is a very nice name; better than mine,&quot; observed Sir Turtle,
-sitting down by Adela. &quot;And who are its godfathers?&quot; he resumed, still
-at sea as to the proper things to be said of a baby.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;My father is one, Mr. Howard the other. Sir Francis fixed upon papa,
-and I upon Mr. Howard. Formerly I used not to like Mr. Howard,&quot;
-ingenuously added Lady Adela, &quot;but I have learnt his worth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ay, a worthy man, my lady; first-rate in business. Talking of
-business,&quot; broke off the little alderman, glad, no doubt, to leave the
-subject of the baby, but none the less inopportunely, &quot;do you chance
-to know what has become of a young fellow who got into some trouble at
-Grubb and Howard's&mdash;the Rector's son, yonder&quot;&mdash;nodding towards Mr.
-Cleveland&mdash;&quot;Charles, I think, his name was. I have often wished to ask
-about him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Lady Adela bent over her child, as if to do something to its cap: her
-face had flushed blood-red.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Charles Cleveland is in India,&quot; she said. &quot;He is doing well, very
-well. My husband was&mdash;was very kind to him, and pushes him forward. He
-is kind to every one.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Rising rather abruptly from the bench, she gave the baby to the nurse
-and went into the house. Her mother, standing at one of the windows of
-the large drawing-room, turned round as she entered.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;What have you been doing to flush your face so, Adela?&quot; called out my
-lady&mdash;for it was glowing still.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oh, nothing: the sun perhaps,&quot; answered Adela, carelessly.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;You were talking with Sir Turtle Kite.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Yes, he was looking at baby, and asking me his name. I told him his
-father's&mdash;Francis.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Ah,&quot; said Lady Acorn, with her irrepressible propensity for bringing
-up disagreeable reminiscences, &quot;I remember the time when you would not
-have your child's name Francis, because it was your husband's.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Oh, mamma, don't! That was in the mistaken years of long ago.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;And I hope you were civil to Sir Turtle,&quot; continued my lady: &quot;you
-seemed to leave him very abruptly. He is a funny little round-headed
-man, and nothing but an alderman; but he means well. Think what <i>your</i>
-fate might have been now&mdash;but for his&mdash;his clemency.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;If you would <i>please</i> not recall these things, mother!&quot; besought
-Adela, meekly, tears starting to her eyes. &quot;Especially today, when we
-are all so happy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>Somehow the past, with all its terrible mistakes and the misery they
-had entailed, came rushing upon her mind so vividly that she could not
-control her emotion. Passing into the next room, and not perceiving
-her husband, her sobs broke forth. He came forward.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;My love, what is it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Only&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Nay, tell me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Something mamma said made me think of that cruel time when&mdash;when I
-was so wrong and wicked. Francis, the shame and sin seemed all to come
-back again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>He held her before him; his tone one of tender reproof. &quot;But the shame
-and sin never can come back, Adela. My wife, you know it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p>&quot;I know how good you are. And I know how merciful to me God has been,&quot;
-she replied, glancing at him through her wet lashes, with eyes full of
-love and devotion.</p>
-
-<p>&quot;Very merciful: very merciful to me and to you,&quot; whispered Francis
-Netherleigh. &quot;Do you know, my darling, that through all that dark
-time, I never lost my trust in Him.&quot;</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4>THE END.</h4>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<hr class="W90">
-<h5>PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED, LONDON AND BECCLES.</h5>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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