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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #62159 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62159)
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-Project Gutenberg's The Impending Sword (Vol. 2 of 3), by Edmund Yates
-
-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: The Impending Sword (Vol. 2 of 3)
- A Novel
-
-Author: Edmund Yates
-
-Release Date: May 17, 2020 [EBook #62159]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE IMPENDING SWORD (VOL. 2 OF 3) ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Charles Bowen from page scans provided by the Web Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
- 1. Page scan source:
- http://www.archive.org/details/impendingswordno02yate
- (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE IMPENDING SWORD.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-LONDON:
-ROBSON AND SONS, PRINTERS, PANCRAS ROAD, N.W.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE
-IMPENDING SWORD.
-
-
-
-A Novel.
-
-
-
-BY
-EDMUND YATES,
-
-AUTHOR OF 'BLACK SHEEP,' 'THE ROCK AHEAD,' 'THE YELLOW FLAG,' ETC.
-ETC.
-
-
-
- 'Put we our quarrel to the will of Heaven,
- Who, when He sees the hours ripe on earth,
- Will rain hot vengeance on the offenders' heads.'
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
-
-
-IN THREE VOLUMES.
-VOL. II.
-
-
-
-LONDON:
-TINSLEY BROTHERS, 8 CATHERINE ST. STRAND.
-1874.
-[_The right of translation, dramatic adaptation, and reproduction is
-reserved._]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
-
-Book the Second.
-THE CRIME.
-
-CHAP.
- I. DOWN TO LIVERPOOL.
- II. TRAPPED.
- III. HELEN'S JOURNAL.
- IV. 'SCOT FREE.'
- V. A BLAZE OF TRIUMPH.
- VI. STARTLING NEWS.
- VII. ONLY TOO TRUE.
- VIII. THORNTON CAREY.
-
-
-
-
-
-Book the Second.
-THE CRIME.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-DOWN TO LIVERPOOL.
-
-
-Bryan Duval had not forgotten his promise to Miss Montressor. Early in
-the morning of that eventful day, when she and Mr. Dolby had parted so
-strangely, and before she had even yet shaken off the extra slumber
-occasioned by the fatigue of the Richmond dinner, the fair actress had
-received a letter from her _entrepreneur_ which ran thus:
-
-
-'My dear Clara,--The business which I feared might possibly have
-detained me has been smoothed over, and we positively sail on
-Saturday, in the Cuba. We shall go down to Liverpool by the twelve
-o'clock train, on Friday, stop the night at the Adelphi, and have
-plenty of time to see our traps--and what with music scores,
-promptbooks, and costumes, I have a tolerable amount of
-luggage--comfortably on board one of the first tenders which will be
-despatched to the ship. I think we shall be a pleasant party. I have
-concluded engagements with Mrs. Regan, for old women and heavies, with
-Skrymshire for first low comedy, and with Cooington for walking
-gentleman and utility. He is a nice-looking young fellow, can make-up
-very fairly, and will, consequently, make an excellent foil for me;
-all the other people I can get over there, but these are absolutely
-necessary. Cooington will be especially valuable. You are young, and
-your ideas of the dreadful are, probably, vague, but when you have
-once seen an American _jeune premier_, with his peculiar style of hair
-and costume, they will immediately become definite.
-
-'By the way, my dear, talking about costumes, I think it would be
-advisable that you should have two first-rate evening gowns--don't fly
-into a rage now. Your toilette yesterday was particularly good, and I
-have no doubt you show quite as much good taste in your evening dress,
-but I want something exceptionally stylish; you will be seen a great
-deal more in public over there than you are here. You will probably
-have a reception, as they call it, from one of their artistic
-societies, and on off-nights will have to show-up at the opera, or one
-of the other theatres; and as our good friends on the other side
-attach immense importance to dress--and rightly too, according to my
-notions--I want you at once to send a pattern-body to Madame Lagrange,
-118 Rue Vivienne. That's all! You need take no further trouble about
-the matter. I have written to old Lagrange by this post--I have known
-her ever since I was a boy--and told her exactly what you want; for my
-sake the old lady will put on all steam, and you will have your gowns
-in time to pack them for America. I have also desired Madame Lagrange
-to send the bill to me, a liberty which, I trust, under the
-circumstances, you will excuse.
-
-'I have an enormous number of things to get ready before I start; the
-rehearsal of _Pickwick's Progress_ to superintend at the Gravity, and
-an action to bring against a rascal in the North who has been
-producing an exact copy of the _Cruiskeen Lawn,_ fights, songs, Irish
-wake, and all under the title of the _Jug of Punch_. The copyright law
-in this country is disgraceful. By the way, did you see those absurd
-remarks in the _Earwig_ about me and Mr. Dickens, in connection with
-Pickwick's Progress? I mention this in case I may not be able to call
-upon you before we start, so that you may be perfectly sure to be at
-Euston very soon after eleven. Till then good-bye.
-
- 'Yours always,
-
- 'BRYAN DUVAL.
-
-'P.S.--What a good dinner it was yesterday, and how very jolly we all
-were! I have taken a great fancy to Foster, he seems to be an
-exceptionally good fellow. He talks of coming down to Liverpool to
-see us off. If he does, I shall make a point of giving him a dinner at
-the Adelphi the night before we sail--they have some green turtle
-there--but women don't understand these things.'
-
-
-'Mr. Foster is an exceptionally good fellow,' said Miss Montressor,
-laying down the letter, 'and you are another, Bryan Duval. This
-experience confirms me in my opinion, that whenever you hear men
-bitter and disparaging in their remarks about a man who is before the
-world, and who is successful, he is sure to prove remarkably pleasant,
-agreeable, and kind-hearted. Now I am sure nothing could be more
-thoughtful or more delicate than Mr. Duval's suggestion about those
-gowns, and what a queer fellow he is too!' she said, taking up the
-letter again; 'fancy his writing about a "pattern-body"--he seems to
-know everything.'
-
-By this time the fact of the great actor-author's departure for
-America, taking with him a select troupe for the purpose of playing
-certain of his own pieces, had been heralded in the newspapers, and
-had created as much excitement as even he could have wished. Most of
-the journals congratulated Mr. Duval on the engagement, and the
-Americans on the fact that they were about to renew their acquaintance
-with that distinguished combination of literature and art, who would
-add fresh laurels to the wreath which had already adorned his brows,
-and from this they proceeded in a tone of patronage towards the
-Western hemisphere generally, telling it how thankful it ought to be
-in having such a school of talent as England to draw upon for its
-artists.
-
-Some of the other journals, however, the conductors or writers of
-which had a personal pique against Mr. Duval, did not think so
-strongly on the matter. They averred, roundly enough, that the autumn
-was the usual time for English actors to go out to America, and not
-the spring; and that probably the reason which induced Mr. Duval to
-take his departure from his native country at the present time was
-that he was entirely played out and used up there, and he hoped to
-recoup himself by repeating his previous success in America, an
-expectation which would be undoubtedly disappointed.
-
-Mr. Duval read these various reports with equal delight. He liked
-being praised; but he did not in the least mind being found fault
-with.
-
-'I like to see 'em pitch in,' he would say, slowly rubbing his hands
-together, with a broad grin, such as those who had only seen him in
-his melo-dramatic parts on the stage, could never believe him capable
-of giving. 'I like to see them pitch in; it shows their interest in
-me. I would sooner that they would write about me with bradawls dipped
-in vitriol, rather than that they should say nothing. This,' touching
-one of the journals before him, 'is Cosby's doing. Cosby is a stupid
-ass. I have told him so in print and by word of mouth many a time and
-oft. I have dropped down hot and heavy upon Cosby frequently, and he
-don't forgive that. When my _Varco the Vampire_ was produced at the
-Parthenon, Cosby's original comedy of _Gold and Gloom_ (taken from a
-play of Maquet and Dumas, produced at the Porte St. Martin in '52--I
-have it there in the bookcase, and can show it to you) was brought out
-at the Gravity. _Varco_ ran for one hundred and fifty nights, when I
-stopped it myself, as I wanted a little chamois shooting in Styria,
-and _Gold and Gloom_ fizzled out in a fortnight. Cosby didn't like
-that--he don't like the notion that my _Pickwick's Progress_ is about
-to be produced at the Gravity, which he looks upon somewhat as his own
-theatre; he don't like, what he knows to be the fact, that I have a
-splendid engagement with Van Buren in New York, and so he writes these
-lies about me, thinking to rile me and to draw me out. No good, dear
-Cosby; no good, dear boy. There is nothing makes a venomous ruffian
-like that so wild as to completely ignore his attack, and if you
-chance to meet him in the street, greet him with the utmost
-politeness; you need not take his hand, but you also need not put your
-fist into his face. Cosby will watch the papers daily, looking for an
-indignant letter from me in reply to his screed; but he will find
-none; and if I see him at the first night of _Pickwick's Progress,_ I
-shall wag my head at him, and express a hope that he is pleased with
-the entertainment.'
-
-But though he declined to resent this newspaper controversy, Mr. Duval
-found more than enough to occupy his mind and to fill up his time.
-Half a dozen needy persons belonging to the theatrical profession--not
-adventurers, and in no way dishonest--simply men and women who, from
-stress of circumstances, had undertaken to do something for which they
-were not in the least qualified, and who consequently had gone to the
-wall, were simultaneously struck with the brilliant idea that it would
-be a remarkably good thing for Mr. Duval if he took a temporary
-farewell of the British public in a performance the proceeds of which
-should be devoted to their benefit. Others there were who addressed
-him on the strength of having read that he was about to take a company
-with him to perform his pieces in the United States, and at once
-expressing themselves as perfectly certain that such company would not
-be complete unless they, the writers, joined it in prominent positions
-with high salaries. In fact, the notice of his departure brought upon
-him all the horde of impertinent correspondents who prey upon a public
-man's time, and rob him of such leisure as he might otherwise have;
-autograph hunters, photographers, who could make it convenient to
-receive him at any time, sanctimonious begging-letter writers, who
-declared that his path across the ocean would neither be happy nor
-successful unless he were blessed with the inward consciousness of
-having left behind him half a crown to succour modest misery in
-distress.
-
-Applications such as these Mr. Duval treated with sovereign
-contempt--he had quite enough real business on hand. His rooms in
-Vernon-chambers were very much changed from their normal condition;
-all the nick-nacks were put away, all the pictures and handsome
-furniture covered over, and in the midst stood enormous boxes, some
-crammed to repletion, others yet gaping as it were for food, all
-bearing the great actor's name in large red letters, all marked with
-the word 'Hold.'
-
-Thither, threading their way among the packages which littered the
-landings as well as the apartments, came those anxious to have a last
-few words with Mr. Duval. Mr. Moss Marks, the manager of the Gravity,
-was there, nervously anxious about the forthcoming _Pickwick's
-Progress_, and constantly endeavouring to cut down costly items of
-furniture and decoration which Duval had insisted upon being provided.
-Mr. Hodgkinson, too, came to impress upon his friend his parting
-injunctions, that if he saw anything in the States likely to make a
-sensation, any 'fakement' likely to hit up the British public, he
-should wire him at once and send it over by the next boat. There, too,
-was the great impresario, Wuff, who began to find that camels and
-coryphées spelt bankruptcy as well as Shakespeare, and he was eager to
-beg a few last words of advice from the omniscient Bryan Duval before
-he started. Mr. Foster looked in, too, once or twice, to see how his
-friend was getting on, and to ask whether he could be any use in
-helping him in his preparations for the voyage.
-
-Nor was Miss Montressor without her visitors. Two days after the
-announcement of her intended visit to America appeared in the Sunday
-papers, a mysterious old lady, neatly dressed in black silk, with an
-old-fashioned bonnet, appeared at the Brompton villa, and giving her
-name as Mrs. Porter, begged permission to speak for a few minutes to
-the lady of the house. The page, who, though a sharp boy, was not yet
-sufficiently versed in his business to gauge the social position of
-visitors, was about to usher the old lady into the drawing-room, but
-Justine, happening to pass downstairs at the moment, promptly bade her
-take a seat in the hall, and took upon herself the task of announcing
-her arrival.
-
-Miss Montressor started very much at tearing the name, but recovering
-herself, desired that the visitor should be shown to her bedroom. The
-old lady bowed when she received the summons; and Justine noticed that
-she trembled very much as she ascended the stairs. What passed during
-the interview Justine did not exactly know, though she loitered about
-the passage to gather as much as she could. First, she heard her
-mistress's voice in high sharp tones of rebuke, and the old lady
-apparently pleading. Miss Montressor's voice then softened very much,
-and the conversation was carried on in a low earnest undertone,
-mingled, so Justine thought, with sobs from one, if not from both, and
-just before the door opened she could have sworn she heard a sound as
-of many kisses, broken with words of blessing and farewell. And Miss
-Montressor's eyes were very red, and her brilliant complexion rather
-tear-blurred, after her visitor's departure; and though she speedily
-rectified this irregularity, she remained singularly quiet and subdued
-all that evening.
-
-Also, just before the day of her departure, arrived Miss Thomasina
-Campbell and Miss Georgina Goss, formerly Miss Montressor's colleagues
-at the T.R.D.L., where they had many a bitter quarrel together; but
-now that she was going to rid them of her presence, and to interfere
-no more, her devoted friends. The visit of these young ladies was
-ostensibly to bid their dear Clara good-bye, but in reality to
-endeavour to ascertain from her what terms she had got, and what
-parts she was likely to play, and to look at the dresses she was
-going to take with her. As regards the first items, they failed
-lamentably--Miss Montressor spoke vaguely of enormous sums, and of
-'leading business,' but declined to enter into any particulars--but as
-regards the latter, they were gratified to the highest extent. Miss
-Montressor showed them all her pretty things, and even went to the
-extent of unpacking an enormous trunk for the sake of displaying the
-two splendid gowns which had duly arrived from Madame Lagrange, and
-which were pronounced by staid Miss Campbell to be 'truly superb,' and
-by giggling Miss Goss to be 'perfect ducks.' When they had seen all
-the pretty things, and partaken of sherry and seltzer-water, with
-which gay little Miss Goss moistened a cigarette, they took their
-leave, not without warning their hostess to beware of the fascinations
-of Bryan Duval, who, they insinuated, was a heartless wretch who made
-love to everybody.
-
-Finally, Mr. Foster paid his first and last visit to the young lady in
-whom he seemed to have taken so kindly an interest.
-
-'You are surprised to see me here, Miss Montressor,' he said, 'more
-especially when you recollect that you never asked me to call upon
-you.'
-
-'I am very much delighted to see you, Mr. Foster,' said Miss
-Montressor frankly, extending her hand to him, 'and I should be more
-pleased if I did not think that your presence here meant that there
-was no chance of your sailing with us in the Cuba, on Saturday.'
-
-'It does mean that, indeed,' said Mr. Foster. 'I shall not be able to
-complete my business so early, but I hope to follow you in a very
-short time. You are kind enough to say you wish I were coming with
-you, Miss Montressor, but you cannot regret the impossibility half so
-much as I do. I am home sick, and that talk which we had the other day
-about my wife and my belongings has made me more than ever anxious to
-get back to them.'
-
-'I verily believe it was the chance of another chat about them that
-procured me the pleasure of this visit,' said Miss Montressor. 'But,
-however, you shall not be gratified this time. You shall talk to me of
-nothing but what I shall do in New York, where I shall go, what I
-shall see, and to whom I must make myself most gracious and agreeable
-in order to insure my success. By the way,' she added, turning
-suddenly round to him, 'one thing struck me in thinking over our talk
-the other day. This business of which you think so much, and in
-connection with which you came over here, it must be still going on in
-New York, is it not?'
-
-'Certainly.'
-
-'But not by itself; you must have left it in somebody's charge?'
-
-'Of course, in the charge of my most intimate friend.'
-
-'O, indeed,' said Miss Montressor. 'And Mrs. Foster, she is doubtless
-with her family--father or mother, or something of that sort?'
-
-'No, indeed, poor Helen is an orphan; she remains at home, in our own
-house, but I have desired my friend to look after her.'
-
-'The same friend?' inquired Miss Montressor.
-
-'The same friend!'
-
-'O, indeed,' said Miss Montressor, in the same tone. 'It must be a
-great comfort to you to think that there is some one to whom you can
-confide your business and your wife with a perfect feeling of
-security.'
-
-And then they talked of subjects connected with theatricals and New
-York until Mr. Foster took his departure.
-
-At length the eventful Friday morning arrived, and though, from the
-ordinary condition of the Euston Station, it would seem impossible
-that there should ever be any extra bustle there, some little
-additional excitement might have been noticed. Mr. Bryan Duval, never
-oblivious of the chances of advertisement, had written to the traffic
-manager, enclosing a slip cut from the newspaper, announcing his
-departure, and requesting some extra facilities in the way of
-transport. The traffic manager, with great politeness, had ordered a
-saloon carriage to be placed at the disposal of the theatrical party;
-and thus their intended arrival became known. People who were waiting
-about on the platform, ordinary passengers and their friends, saw the
-handsome saloon carriage, and concluding immediately that it must be
-for some member of the Royal Family, or some other equally
-distinguished personage, lingered round it in the pleasant expectation
-of being gratified with the sight of a hat or a beard, the skirt of a
-robe or the end of a bonnet-string.
-
-They were not, however, much disappointed when, upon inquiry, they
-learned who were really to be the occupants of the carriage. A live
-actor or actress in their ordinary citizen garb has an immense
-attraction for the many-headed, and Bryan Duval was both well known
-and popular; his very luggage, arriving, as it did, in a huge break,
-interested them much, and they studied the enormous red letters
-announcing 'Bryan Duval, passenger per Cuba, New York, U.S.A.,' and
-the mysterious word 'Hold,' with a feeling akin to awe. The
-well-informed told the ignorant of the plays he had written and what
-characters he had played, what a magnificent fortune he had, and what
-a number of duchesses and marchionesses were dying of love for him.
-
-The great actor was the first to arrive. Ordinary people travel in
-rough clothes, and drive to the station in a cab. Not so Mr. Bryan
-Duval. His belief in the necessity of advertising himself remained
-with him to the last, and the hoofs of the spanking chestnuts, as
-their master tooled them under the archway, roused the echoes of the
-Euston courtyard. No sign of vulgar luggage appeared in Mr. Duval's
-trap--the only hint that he was about to travel might have been found
-in the natty morocco-leather courier's pouch, slung over his shoulder
-by a trap; otherwise he might have been going down to a picnic at St.
-Albans, for he was dressed in a suit of gray dittos, wore a crimson
-tie, shiny-tip jean boots, and his usual curly-brimmed hat.
-
-The little crowd gathered round him as he drew up to the station, but
-he pretended to take no notice of them, and to be absorbed in giving
-directions to his groom. When these were concluded, he was apparently
-about moving off, when the groom touched his hat, and said, with
-something like a quiver in his voice, 'Take the liberty of wishing you
-good-bye, sir--happy voyage and a safe return.'
-
-'Thank you, James, very much,' said Mr. Duval, in his clearest tones.
-'Take care of the horses--see that Black Bess and Tantivy are always
-properly exercised, and remember me very kindly to your wife.' And Mr.
-Duval moved off midst a murmur of sympathetic admiration from the
-crowd.
-
-'Sharp fellow that James,' he muttered to himself, as he entered the
-ticket office; 'spoke that line I taught him deuced well. I shall
-probably be able to make something of him on the stage when I come
-back.'
-
-His elation was a little dazed at the sight of Mrs. Regan, who,
-running up to him, clasped him by both hands, and whose appearance was
-scarcely calculated to impress bystanders with admiration. This worthy
-old person, who was of Hibernian descent, and had what is known
-amongst her countrymen as a 'potato' face, was dressed in a voluminous
-chintz gown, like bed furniture, and, slung on her arm, carried a
-check wicker basket, like a soft chess-board, with what was obviously
-the neck of a bottle protruding from it. He was gratified, however, by
-the appearance of Mr. Cooington, who, with a feeling that he was about
-to spend ten days on the ocean, arrived at Euston Station in a
-yachting costume, a straw hat with a very narrow brim, and a ribbon
-with 'Plover' in gold letters round it. Mr. Skyrmshire, the low-comedy
-man, had apparently adopted some of his theatrical wardrobe for
-travelling purposes, and consequently arrived in a suit of such
-enormous stripes, that in it he looked like a zebra on his hind legs.
-He was a practical as well as a poetical humourist too, and combining
-jocosity with business, carried about with him a number of small
-labels, printed 'Go and hear Skrymshire, the brilliant Momus,' and
-gummed at the back, with which he adorned the velveteen jackets of all
-the porters with whom he came in contact.
-
-And then Mr. Foster arrived, and then Miss Montressor, looking very
-pretty, and dressed with great simplicity and good taste. Mr. Duval
-offered her his arm, and led the way to the saloon carriage, the
-others following. Then rushed out to take a last look that the baggage
-was all safe, to compliment the inspector and tip the porters, and
-returned. A whistle, a shriek, Mr. Skrymshire said, 'Give him his
-head, John,' Mrs. Regan breathed hard and cried, 'Now we're off,' the
-train moved on a little, and then stopped.
-
-A porter put his head into the carriage in which the actor's party had
-already begun to lean back, and realise the fact that they had
-started, and inquired whether the gentleman who owned the portmanteau
-left at the station an hour ago, and which he had just put into the
-van, according to orders, was there. The occupants of the carriage
-glanced at each other, shook their heads in a general negative, and
-Bryan Duval answered for them, 'No, the gentleman was not there.'
-
-'Beg pardon, gentlemen,' said the porter, 'but I can't find the owner
-of the portmanteau.'
-
-'And you want your tip, I suppose?' said Bryan Duval, in an undertone,
-to the man, who was standing on the step of the carriage, with his
-hands on the door.
-
-'No, sir, I don't,' said the man; 'the gentleman paid me to look after
-the portmanteau. I only wanted to make sure that he was here, so as it
-shouldn't go amongst missing luggage, but I can't find him--he isn't
-in the train.' He fell back, made a sign to the guard, and the train
-moved on this time, to pursue its way unbrokenly.
-
-'What a horrid nuisance!' said Miss Montressor to Mr. Foster. 'I can't
-imagine anything more worrying than losing one's luggage.'
-
-'And yet,' said Mr. Foster, 'it is one of those things no one gets
-pitied for. For my part, I always stick to mine in this country, where
-matters of that kind are certainly not regulated with the intelligence
-and attention to public convenience they are amongst us. However, I
-daresay this gentleman and his portmanteau will not be long parted.
-That porter was an honest fellow. Shall I pull the window up?'
-
-'No, thanks,' said Miss Montressor. 'I am perfectly comfortable. You
-have very good notions of travelling, Mr. Foster, and have chosen my
-seat with admirable discretion. Where is the library?--O, overhead, I
-see. Not that I care much for reading in a train; it tries one's eyes.
-Do you always read in the train?'
-
-'That depends on my company,' said Mr. Foster. 'I don't feel inclined
-to read to-day.'
-
-'Then suppose we make a law that nobody is to read?' said Miss
-Montressor, looking round upon her companions with the proud
-consciousness of being a leading lady in every sense of the word.
-
-'Never make a law unless you are sure of its being obeyed,' said Bryan
-Duval drily, as he settled his travelling cap, and ensconced his head
-in a convenient angle of the partition between his seat and that of
-his fair neighbour, opposite to whom Mr. Foster was placed, and
-immediately immersed himself in the pages of the _Times_.
-
-The journey was a very pleasant one; every one was good-humoured, and
-Miss Montressor had her own way. She and Mr. Foster talked a good deal
-more than any of their companions, but the tone of the conversation
-was necessarily general. Thus, there was no reference on his part to
-the domestic circumstances which had annoyed Miss Montressor when he
-confided them to her at Richmond, and her versatile nature had enabled
-her almost entirely to dismiss the recollection of her sister Bess,
-except in the general sense of being rather glad than otherwise that
-she should have an opportunity of seeing her.
-
-In her present sanguine mood, Miss Montressor doubted not that she
-should be able to induce Bess to say, or to leave unsaid, precisely
-whatever she pleased to indicate--at the worst, this was an annoyance
-to be postponed for consideration, until after her arrival on the
-other side; she was not going to trouble herself about it prematurely.
-
-To tell the truth about Miss Montressor, she thought very little of
-Mr. Dolby during the pleasant hours of her journey to Liverpool. It
-would be good fun finding him in New York, and either making up the
-quarrel which had marked their parting or not making it up, precisely
-as it should suit her humour and her convenience, when the time had
-arrived. That, too, she need not think of beforehand. Altogether, Miss
-Montressor could recall few days in her life which had passed more
-completely to her satisfaction than that of her departure from London,
-and she mentioned the fact to Mr. Foster, when, for the first time,
-she found herself out of hearing of her companions on the arrival of
-the train, when he gave her his arm to walk along the platform at
-Lime-street.
-
-During a momentary pause in order to rally their party, the attention
-of Miss Montressor and Mr. Foster was attracted to the unloading of
-the luggage van. A solitary portmanteau had been chucked upon the
-platform with a contemptuous indifference, which is the destiny of
-waifs and strays among luggage.
-
-'I am sure that is the unclaimed portmanteau,' said Miss Montressor;
-'looks new too. What will they do with it?'
-
-'Put it in the parcel-office, of course,' said Mr. Foster, 'for the
-present, and then they forget all about it.'
-
-The portmanteau, a shiny black one of the most commonplace appearance,
-lay upon the pavement until all the claimed luggage had been disposed
-of and wheeled away on trucks to its various destinations; then the
-waif was carried by a porter to the parcel-office and there deposited,
-with a brief intimation to the official who resided behind a sliding
-window, amid huge barricades of packing-cases, hampers, and every
-description of impedimenta, from camel trunks to brown-paper parcels
-and stray hand-bags, 'That this 'ere box, name o' Dunn, hadn't been
-owned.'
-
-Travellers to Liverpool by all trains, at all hours, are a motley
-crew; all ranks and classes of society, all industries, all
-circumstances, may be found represented in the voyagers going towards
-the great outlet of England. The train which conveyed Bryan Duval and
-his troop was no exception, but rather a notable example of this
-truth. Only two components of the crowd which were whirled from the
-great social to the great commercial capital on that particular day
-have any interest for us; they are our theatrical friends, and one
-other man, a solitary and insignificant unit among the number.
-
-This man wore a sailor's dress, and carried a parcel, done up in a bit
-of tarpaulin, under his arm. He had arrived at Euston Station a few
-minutes before the party whose departure had formed a feature of the
-day; had stood wholly unnoticed among the third-class passengers
-crowding that portion of the platform opposite to the pens appointed
-for their use, and had quietly taken his seat in the farthest corner
-of the last compartment in the train. There was nothing remarkable in
-this man's appearance or manner. His sailor's clothes were clean, and
-fitted with characteristic looseness. He did not remove his cap or
-relinquish his hold of his tarpaulin bundle, which he placed upon his
-knees, and folding his arms upon it, kept them there during the whole
-of the journey. He exchanged not a word with his fellow passengers,
-except a mechanic and his family about to exchange the used-up old
-world for the new and happy land--though they thought him a morose
-surly sort of fellow, no doubt; but they were full of their own hopes,
-interests, and regrets, which they discussed with the simple unreserve
-of the poor, and, after a few minutes, did not notice him.
-
-He was a dark-complexioned man, with a rough red beard and hair to
-match, and had probably but recently adopted the avocation of a
-sailor, for his hands were rather delicate for a man of that class,
-and had evidently had no prolonged acquaintance with the ropes or
-great familiarity with tar. Though he travelled down the whole way to
-Liverpool without appearing to be conscious of the presence of his
-immediate companions, this sailor seemed to have some attraction
-towards the more distinguished passengers by the train. He lingered
-for a few minutes on the platform on their arrival at Lime-street,
-though he had put no luggage in the van, and had no occasion to wait
-while its contents were being turned out and sorted; and during this
-delay he surveyed,--with an intentness probably caused by his
-knowledge of their celebrity,--the party of actors as they took their
-way to the exit. He was but a few steps behind them when they reached
-the entrance of the station, and he stood in the doorway while they
-crossed the street on foot and entered the hospitable portals of the
-Adelphi Hotel, where their rooms had been engaged. When they had gone
-in, and were quite hidden from his view, he still lingered; indeed,
-the greater part of the burden which the train had carried had been
-discharged from the station before this desultory mariner moved on.
-Even then he only crossed the street, still hugging his tarpaulin
-bundle under his arm, and slouched along under the windows of the
-Adelphi, as though the place had some attraction for him.
-
-The contrasts offered by London itself are hardly greater than those
-to be found in Liverpool; the physical division of the great town into
-high and low is not more marked than its moral division into luxury
-and want, into respectability and infamy, into leisure and toil. There
-is a calm, tranquil, well-bred comfort about some of the uncommercial
-districts of Liverpool as characteristic and as striking as the
-splendour of its great streets, the long line of shops, each
-displaying the products of the teeming wealth of many countries, and
-are lost in those wonderful masses of warehouses, stores, factories,
-and shipping offices, which epitomise the whole history of commerce in
-its greatest forms, while they exhibit it in its minutest detail. The
-actual story of the world in its most practical, and at the same time
-not in its least romantic, aspect may be read by him who runs--if his
-hurried way should take him past the great landing-stages which
-project upon the Mersey. All the interests of life in its present
-crowded phase, and in its extended intercourse of business and of
-greatness, find their symbols there; its transitoriness, its change,
-its tumultuous variety, its youthful hope, its keenest anxieties, its
-bitterest partings, have found their theatre there since the first
-ship brought in the wealth of a foreign land, and the first ship
-carried out the produce of our own. The steadiest industry, the most
-inveterate vagabondism, find their representatives among the
-population of Liverpool; there is no place in existence in which the
-student of human nature may discover more to interest, to edify, to
-puzzle, and to appal him.
-
-The sailor who had travelled by the five-o'clock train to Liverpool
-was seemingly possessed by a great curiosity concerning the commercial
-city. He had not eaten or drunk since early in the day; but this
-circumstance, rarely devoid of interest to persons of his class,
-seemed to trouble him but little. He had not turned into any
-eating-house, he had not visited any drinking-bar; but he took his way
-slowly, and always meditatively, along the streets which led to the
-water-side. In Water-street he lingered long. The great business
-centres and conduits were emptying themselves of the swarms of human
-beings whose business lies in the deep waters, who, if they did not go
-down to the sea in ships themselves, spent their lives in business
-matters connected with those who do; hurrying crowds jostled the
-sailor upon the pathways, crowds whose backs were turned upon the
-direction in which he was going; and as he took his way at a lounging
-pace, which contrasted curiously with the vigorous hurry and
-breaking-up air of bustle around him which marks the close of the
-business day in Liverpool, and the 'coming on of evening mild,' with
-its welcome recreation, at home or elsewhere, according to the
-diversity of tastes. The water-side was almost deserted when he
-debouched upon it from Water-street under the shadow of the huge
-warehouses.
-
-In the dim light the prosaic landing-stage looked almost
-picturesque--shortly to be turned to a silver radiance by the yet
-unrisen moon; the waters of the Mersey lay in solemn calm; in the dim
-light, the long lines of huge warehouses, with their cumbrous
-apparatus of crank and pulley, of windlass and stage, looked more than
-ever like a series of gigantic gallows, prepared for a general
-execution. The mind speedily loses itself in the mere contemplation of
-their resources in the way of sacks and bales. To stray into
-considerations of cotton is to get lost, to think of pig-iron is
-distraction; the best way is to accept it all as a picture, happily
-unaccompanied at that hour of the night by the maddening noise of the
-day-time, and to be satisfied, without attempting to comprehend them,
-with the vastness, with the wealth, of Liverpool.
-
-Probably this was not the line on which the sailor's thoughts were
-running when he examined the before-mentioned long range of
-warehouses, which lie parallel to the great landing-stage, with the
-wide roadway lying between, to inspire the observer with constant
-wonder how, by any effort of human industry, it is ever kept in a
-state of repair. His examination was minute, careful, and marked by
-one peculiarity. He laid his hand on every door as he passed it by,
-giving the sturdy panel a strong and stealthy push; in every instance
-but one, the response to this movement was the steady resistance of a
-stout bolt. One door, very far down the range, and in a place where
-already the profoundest tranquillity reigned, fell open at his touch,
-and the sailor, with a lounging gait of perfectly idle curiosity,
-ready, if challenged, to apologise for an intrusion on that score,
-passed into the yard to which the complying portal gave admittance.
-
-It was some minutes before he emerged and began to retrace his steps
-towards Water-street; but he had now discarded his lounging gait, his
-step was purpose-like, quick, and wholly out of unison with his dress
-and appearance; nor had he any longer the uncertain discovery-making
-manner of a man unacquainted with the locality in which he finds
-himself for the first time.
-
-He threaded his way with great rapidity through a number of small
-streets and lanes, best described by the generic term of 'slums,'
-quite regardless of the sights and sounds in perfect harmony with the
-neighbourhood, which was a particularly villanous one; he bent his
-steps to a low public-house, and close to the river.
-
-Here he called for bread-and-cheese, of which he ate sparingly, and
-for a pot of beer, of which he drank a very small quantity--the meal
-did not seem to recommend itself to his palate; here, too, he spoke no
-word, and looked no one in the face, but he passed in and out quite
-disregarded.
-
-The drinking-den--for it was hardly more--was, indeed, crowded, as it
-was at most hours of the day, and as far into the night as the police
-would permit but its occupants were either drinking or quarrelling, or
-both, and too much engaged in these pursuits to notice the surly
-newcomer.
-
-Having thus sparingly satisfied the hunger and thirst which he must
-have been experiencing, the sailor sought for a place of repose. He
-selected for this purpose a common lodging-house, much in use by men
-of his craft when on shore, under circumstances which may be briefly
-described as 'down on their luck.' It was a dirty, ill-ventilated,
-wretched place, where beds of the very coarsest sacking, with very
-repulsive-looking bed-clothes, were stretched out in long lines on two
-sides of the low whitewashed room; a carpetless and matless lane ran
-up the centre, encumbered with the discarded garments of the occupants
-of the beds, and every accessory of the scene was unpleasant. The
-sailor seemed indisposed to avail himself of even the full extent of
-the accommodation which this uninviting hostelry afforded, limited as
-it was; he abstained from undressing himself, but flung himself down
-in his clothes upon the bed which was pointed out to him, and which he
-was congratulated by the proprietor of this hideous retreat upon
-having been so fortunate as to secure, as it was the only one which
-had not already a tenant.
-
-This was not exactly a place in which good order might be expected to
-reign. Its temporary occupants were in many instances drunk, in very
-few decent, in almost all noisy; but the new-comer contributed no more
-to the horrid merriment of the sleeping den than he had contributed to
-the conviviality of the drinking den during that day. He met all
-attempts at questioning with a sullen growl; and placing his tarpaulin
-bundle under his head for a pillow, he soon fell, or seemed to fall,
-into a heavy slumber.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-TRAPPED.
-
-
-The normal state of the Adelphi Hotel at Liverpool is one of such
-bustle and confusion, that when the entire establishment goes stark
-staring mad, as is the case twice a year, on the occasions of the
-Grand National Steeplechase and the Waterloo Meeting, the people are
-not inclined to regard the eccentricity as anything to be wondered at.
-Passing a night at the Adelphi, you are liable to come across the man
-who went out to California five-and-twenty years ago with the full
-determination never to revisit the motherland where the first half of
-his life had been so thrown away, but who, his fortune made and the
-nostalgia strong upon him, arrived last night from New York, to travel
-for six months like a gentleman in the country where, for a quarter of
-a century, he had starved and slaved. Or you are equally likely to run
-into the arms of the elderly friend whom you have always considered as
-a fixed item of London life, but who, having heard a rumour 'that
-things are going wrong out there,' is starting by the next day's
-outward-bound mail to satisfy himself. The halls and passages of the
-Adelphi are always crammed with sea-going chests and Saratoga boxes,
-and deckchairs, more or less maimed; and there is generally a dozen of
-champagne being cracked in some of the rooms to drink the health of
-the captain who has just brought the good ship safely over, or success
-to the captain who is just going to take the good ship out; and there
-are newspaper reporters flying to and fro to get lists of passengers,
-or details of any occurrences on the voyage, and relations of the
-newly-arrived, who are very much elated, and relations of the
-departing, who are very much depressed, and whose excessive emotion in
-their case contrasts curiously with the steady-going business tone of
-the members of the establishment.
-
-It was not to be supposed that a man of Mr. Bryan Duval's foresight
-would have neglected writing beforehand to secure rooms, any more than
-that he would have omitted sending a hint of his intended arrival to
-two or three members of the local press with whom he was on terms of
-friendship. Consequently, when the theatrical party from London walked
-into the house, they were not merely received with gracious smiles
-from the three young ladies in the bar, and with portentous grins from
-Sam the boots (not naturally a good-natured man, but an old
-acquaintance of Mr. Duval's, and the recipient of many orders for the
-upper boxes when that gentleman was staying there on a starring tour),
-but with a warm acclamation from Mr. Lavrock, the popular editor of
-the _Liverpool Lion_, and two or three of his comrades. It was not Mr.
-Lavrock's fault that he was not a London editor; it was the one hope
-of his life; but being unable to accomplish the feat, and finding
-himself tied to Liverpool, he revenged himself on the fate which had
-dictated, as his duty, the pulverisation of the Mayor, the castigation
-of the Corporation, and the flaying of the Mersey Board, by devoting
-every minute of his off-time to London things and London people, by
-running to the metropolis at all times when he could get away, and by
-acting as general agent for every London literary or theatrical
-celebrity.
-
-It had not wanted the presence of these gentlemen to remind Bryan
-Duval that he had intended giving a little banquet that evening in
-honour of Mr. Foster; but when he saw them, he at once thought that
-they would not be merely pleasant additions to the party, but that
-they might be the means of giving it world-wide publicity by inserting
-a neat little paragraph in the next morning's editions, which he would
-take over with him, and have copied immediately after arrival in the
-New York journals. Mr. Lavrock and his friends would be delighted to
-accept the invitation, and the party separated with the understanding
-that they were to meet at seven o'clock, the travellers going to their
-bedrooms to rest themselves after their journey, and the newspaper men
-to their offices, to prepare that little paragraph concerning which
-Mr. Duval had dropped a hint into the ear of each of them.
-
-The Adelphi can give a dinner when it has a mind, and it had a mind
-this day. The turtle was superb; so good that Mr. Foster, who had had
-two or three rather sharp culinary arguments with Mr. Duval since
-their acquaintance, was compelled to acknowledge that on one point, at
-least, he had been wrong, and that he had never, even at the Brevoort
-House in New York, tasted better soup than that then set before him;
-and when dinner was over, Mr. Duval made a very prolonged epigrammatic
-speech, proposing Mr. Foster's health, and Mr. Foster, with that
-self-possession and flow of language so characteristic of his
-countrymen, returned thanks. And then Mr. Lavrock stood up and
-exhausted the dictionary of flattery upon Bryan Duval, who, in
-responding, remarked that he hoped in a couple of months or so to give
-another dinner to almost the same party in the same place, on his
-return from what he intended should be a prosperous run; and then, as
-they were most of them tired, and had to get up betimes, the party
-broke up.
-
-When Mr. Foster came down the next morning, he found Bryan Duval,
-already the centre of an admiring crowd, giving directions for the
-stowage of his luggage on the huge trucks which were to convey it to
-the steamer's tender. Mr. Duval had exchanged his costume of the
-previous day for a yachting suit, and with an oilskin-covered straw
-hat, low patent-leather shoes, and striped silk socks, looked ready to
-lead off a hornpipe on any given cue. It had been arranged that they
-should breakfast in their rooms, and that Mr. Foster, who might be
-looked upon as accustomed to this kind of thing, should act as convoy
-to the company, Mr. Duval going in front to attend to the luggage. No
-sooner, therefore, was the truck duly piled than Bryan rattled off
-before it in a swift-going hansom, while Mr. Foster, Miss Montressor,
-and the others followed in a more sober vehicle.
-
-The landing-stage at which the Cunard tender was lying was thronged on
-this occasion with even a more motley crowd than usual, for the
-paragraphs in the morning journals had announced to the actors the
-presence among them of their great colleague, and several of them had
-come down to see him off. Many of the young brokers and shipping
-clerks too had rushed away from their offices for a few minutes to
-catch a glimpse of the popular artistes, and, as if to act as a
-corrective to the light tone of thought likely to be engendered by
-these people, a dark-bearded sombre-faced man, in the rustic garb of a
-Methodist preacher, made his way in and out amongst the crowd,
-distributing tracts to whoever would take them. There was no chance
-for his admirers mistaking any one else for Mr. Duval; that
-gentleman's activity was preternatural; and when the tender left the
-shore, they raised a little cheer, which he gratefully acknowledged by
-squeezing his hat over his chest exactly as he had done on many
-occasions after a successful first night's performance.
-
-There was not much talk among the little party as they made their way
-to the ship. They praised her noble proportions as she lay at anchor
-in mid-stream, cast looks at the sky, and prophesied about the
-weather; but their hearts were too full to say much, and they soon
-lapsed into silence. When they were once on board they, those who were
-to make the voyage, went straight to their state-rooms, and of our
-friends all remained there with the exception of Miss Montressor and
-Bryan Duval; the latter had still to see the luggage safely stowed
-away in the hold, the former came straight to Mr. Foster as he was
-standing very dejectedly on the hurricane-deck.
-
-'I have just found another instance of your kindness, another thing to
-be grateful to you for.'
-
-'Not in the least,' he replied with a sad smile. 'I had forgotten all
-about it; but I know there is no preventive of sea-sickness like
-champagne, and you can depend upon that case being genuine.'
-
-'I wish you would have a bottle of it now,' she said. 'I think it
-would do you good.'
-
-'I am afraid not,' he replied, with an attempt at gaiety. 'I am very
-depressed and very dull, I know, and I do not think champagne would
-help me; the only cure for me will be when I find myself on this or
-some sister ship bound for home.'
-
-'And Helen!' whispered Miss Montressor.
-
-'And Helen,' he repeated gravely, lifting his hat as though invoking a
-blessing on the name.
-
-Then the shore-bell rang, and Bryan Duval came up, and in a few words
-of kindly friendship, without a trace of professional affectation,
-spoke his thanks and adieux to his newly-made friend.
-
-When Mr. Foster turned to Miss Montressor he tried to put on a light
-and rallying manner, but his voice broke, and the tears rose in his
-eyes. He muttered something, she could not distinguish what, for she
-herself was very much overcome, and vanished down the ladder and
-across the gangway.
-
-Then the tender steamed away. Bryan Duval and Clara Montressor,
-leaning over the rail, watched the figure of the man in whom alone
-they had an interest until it was undistinguishable; still stood
-gazing until the tender herself became a mere speck in the distance.
-Then he touched her on the arm.
-
-'You had better go down and see to your things, Clara, my dear,' he
-said, in a kindly tone. 'We shall meet Foster again, I trust--he is a
-downright good fellow.'
-
-'He is a gentleman,' sobbed Clara Montressor, 'and one of the best men
-on the face of the earth.'
-
-By this time the good ship was standing out to sea.
-
- * * * * * *
-
-Mr. Foster returned to his hotel in very low spirits; the mere sight
-of the sea, the mere sense of being on board a steamer, the bustle and
-departure, and the glad anticipations which he heard all around him,
-had produced a fit of home-sickness. It rarely occurred that Mr.
-Foster, as the strictly business man, revolted against business in any
-shape, or resented its exactions, but he did so on this occasion, and
-yielded to a sort of physical and mental _malaise_, which he was ready
-to impute partly to fatigue, and partly to the fact that he had been
-amusing himself more than was his custom during the last few days, and
-this was the reaction. 'I go back to the grind now,' he thought, 'and
-I will get it over as soon as possible--I can't stand much more of
-this kind of thing; it doesn't pay. My Helen would be cured of her
-funny unreasonable notions about the supremacy of my business in my
-thoughts, her pretty jealousy would vanish like a cloud if she could
-only see me now, if she could only look into my heart and know how I
-longed to have done with it all and to get back to her. How I envy the
-people who are going where she is!'
-
-He was walking slowly, with bent head and a musing manner, rarely seen
-in the busy streets of the water-side city, as he thought this, and he
-mechanically put his hand into his breast-pocket searching for his
-wife's last letter, which he felt sure he had brought down with him;
-but it was not there. 'I must have left it in my room,' he thought,
-and quickened his steps. On reaching the hotel, Mr. Foster went to his
-room and found the letter, which he glanced over and placed in his
-pocket-book.
-
-Everything, tide included, had favoured the departure of his friends.
-It was nigh noon when the ship steamed down the Mersey, and the
-solitary man, who was in a humour to indulge the sense of solitude,
-had several hours to dispose of before returning to London. He had
-contemplated staying one night in Liverpool, but he changed his mind;
-he would go and have a look at the chief places of interest in the
-city and its environs, and so dispose of the hours until he could go
-away.
-
-It was a little after one when he left the Adelphi, and set out on a
-sort of strolling tour, and his mind, an active and intelligent one,
-soon became diverted and interested in the novel scene. There is a
-good deal to be seen in Liverpool and at Birkenhead, and Mr. Foster
-gave his mind to seeing it; so that it was much later than he had
-calculated upon when he was crossing in the ferry from the latter
-place, and he perceived, with some vexation, that he had overstayed
-his time, and could not possibly leave by the night train as he had
-intended. 'Not that it matters,' he thought, 'except that Helen's
-letter will be waiting for me instead of my being waiting for it.'
-
-'I beg your pardon,' he said, making room on the bench where he was
-sitting for a man who had stood, with rather an ostentatious air of
-expecting to have room made for him, just in front of Mr. Foster, 'I
-didn't see that you wanted a place;' and the man sat down, after some
-words of course.
-
-He was a slight man, who carried himself awkwardly, with high
-shoulders and sunken chest and stooping head; he was of dark
-complexion, had straight black hair, which fitted his head like a
-thatch, and a black beard, but he was painfully nearsighted, and wore
-spectacles of such power that his eyes, seen through them, seemed to
-be buried in cavities altogether disproportionate to the other
-feature. He was curiously ill-dressed, not only as regards the fabric
-of his garments, which was incongruous, but also as regards their fit,
-which had not the slightest reference to either his height or his
-breadth. They were formed of two or three kinds of cloth of different
-degrees of coarseness, but all of the cheapest description, and
-all rusty black, which associates itself in one's mind with the
-Scripture-reading, amateur-preaching, charity-letter writing, and
-tract-distributing class. He wore shoes, which might have been made
-for any one of the passengers on board the ferry with as much
-reference to their fit as for him, and his gray cotton gloves were too
-long in the fingers and too wide in the wrists. In the dog's-eared
-pocket of his black cloth waistcoat he carried a clumsy silver watch,
-attached to a frayed piece of black braid; and a shiny leather case,
-which had evidently been replenished with tracts since he had lavishly
-distributed his morning supply of that improving order of literature,
-protruded from the breast-pocket of his shapeless coat.
-
-Mr. Foster glanced at the stranger as one naturally glances at a
-person to whom one has done a passing civility, and was not far out in
-his estimate of his social position and professional character; not
-that he was familiar with the precise type, but the character was too
-ostentatiously put forward to be mistaken.
-
-A respectable-looking stout woman, with a large basket, which she held
-tenaciously upon her knees, to her extreme discomfort, no doubt
-considering it much too precious to be intrusted to the open space of
-deck at her feet, got into conversation with Mr. Foster's neighbour,
-with all the facility accorded by custom to social intercourse with
-gentlemen of his profession, and after a few minutes Mr. Foster found
-himself taking an interest in the conversation. It referred to the
-physical and spiritual needs of the water-side population, and the man
-spoke in a sensible and straightforward way, quite devoid of cant,
-which pleased Mr. Foster, and was singularly at variance with his
-appearance--that of the most conventional theatrical type, which one
-is almost irresistibly tempted to associate with imposture and
-hypocrisy.
-
-'I wonder,' said the woman, 'you are not afraid to go down into them
-dens. What extraordinary sights you must see there!'
-
-'I see a great deal of poverty and suffering,' said the man, in a
-marked Irish accent, 'but much less wickedness than people think for.'
-
-And he then proceeded to tell one or two stories of his experience of
-that day, which had a very real ring about them, and which he related
-with no affectation, self-seeking, or technical phraseology. Probably
-he had observed that the gentleman who had made way for him was taking
-an interest in the conversation, for he shifted his position, in which
-he had previously had his shoulder turned towards Mr. Foster, for one
-which placed him straight between his two neighbours, his shoulders
-against the rail of the bench, and his bent head on his breast. There
-was occasionally the slightest possible glance of the strange-looking
-eyes, from under the magnifying spectacles, in the direction of Mr.
-Foster's attentive and sympathising face.
-
-'May I ask if you have seen much of this sort of thing?' said Mr.
-Foster, when the speaker came to a pause, and the kindly woman on his
-other side was unaffectedly wiping from her eyes tears of compassion
-evoked by his story of a scene which the narrator had that morning
-witnessed at a certain 'rookery,' as he called it.
-
-'O yes; my life has passed among such scenes,' said the man.
-
-'Do you get used to them?' asked Mr. Foster.
-
-'In a certain sense, of course I do; as a surgeon gets used to the
-sight of pain, and a judge to the presence of criminals; but if you
-mean do I leave off feeling them, do the individual cases become
-merged in the general, no, certainly not. And, sir,' said the man, now
-turning decidedly towards Mr. Foster, but propping his arm on his
-knee, and covering with his hand the end of his nose and the upper
-lip, already sufficiently hidden by his straight black moustache,
-which shaded his teeth and mingled with the hair of the beard, 'mine
-is a life which has its consolations as well as its duties. I see a
-great deal of misery, vice, sickness, cruelty, and injustice, but I
-see a great deal of charity too. I am made the channel through which
-not a little of it flows. Are you familiar with Liverpool?'
-
-'No,' said Mr. Foster; 'I never was here until yesterday, having
-merely passed through when I came from New York, and I am going back
-to town to-morrow morning, and should have gone to-night if I hadn't
-over-stayed my time in sight-seeing, and run myself late for the
-train.'
-
-'Among the sights you have seen,' said the man with the spectacles,
-'had the low quarters of Liverpool and their inhabitants any place?'
-
-'O no,' said Mr. Foster. 'I had not time for anything of that
-kind--just to get a look at the surface was all I have been able to
-do; besides, one never sees anything of that sort in reality, I fancy,
-if one goes loafing into it as a casual stranger; one must go round
-with the police to get any real insight into the life of such places.'
-
-'Do you think so?' said the man, in a remonstrating tone. 'Did you
-ever try ta get a look into the lives of the poor and the dangerous
-classes in the company of their friends, for they have friends, rather
-than in that of their enemies?'
-
-'No,' said Mr. Foster; 'the idea never occurred to me; indeed, I am
-sorry to say, I am such a busy man, that I have hardly ever seen
-anything of that sort, even at home. I am afraid I have been rather
-remiss,' he continued, with a cordial frankness, which was one of his
-pleasant peculiarities; 'too easily satisfied with giving a little
-money now and then, which I can readily spare, and shielding my own
-feelings from the sight of poverty, which we are all ready to talk
-about and depute other people to relieve.'
-
-At this point in the conversation the brief crossing came to an end,
-and the two men stepped off the ferry-boat together. He whom we may
-call for convenience the stranger scrupulously assisted the woman and
-her cumbersome basket--an act of politeness which he accomplished with
-not a little difficulty, as it appeared he also had a parcel to carry.
-As the ferry touched the landing-stage, he stooped down and picked up
-from under the bench, where he had placed it unnoticed by either of
-his temporary companions, a good-sized package, rather neatly done up
-in tarpaulin.
-
-Mr. Foster was the first to step off the ferry, and he and the
-stranger stood for a moment outside, while the latter relinquished her
-basket to the woman, who took a civil leave of both, and then waited,
-as if supposing that the sentence addressed to him was incomplete.
-
-'I beg your pardon,' he said, as if expecting Mr. Foster to resume it;
-'I thought you asked me a question.'
-
-'I did not,' said Mr. Foster; 'but may I now ask you if your day's
-work is done?'
-
-The first smile which had appeared upon the face of the stranger
-crossed it now, but it was instantly controlled, and had been almost
-imperceptibly brief. 'O dear, no,' he replied, giving the parcel which
-he had tucked under his arm a significant squeeze; 'I am on an errand
-to one of the poorest places in all Liverpool--a rookery down near the
-landing-stage--and I am taking some clothes there which have just been
-given me for the purpose for a woman and two children, who are lying
-on old sacks under a piece of old sail-cloth, because the mother has
-no clothes in which she can go and beg for work. That was not a case
-in which to wait for to-morrow, so I went and begged the clothes from
-some people I know at Birkenhead, and I am going down there direct.'
-
-They had walked on a few steps, but the stranger stood still now, as
-if expecting--several places branching off here--the gentleman would
-take leave of him. In that moment of waiting he had an indescribable
-look of suspicion: the nostrils expanded and closed, the dark
-complexion paled slightly, and the fingers of one hand clenched
-themselves. It was only for a second, though; the next Mr. Foster
-spoke:
-
-'I suppose the place you're going to is quite a representative den?'
-he said. 'Would you mind taking me with you--I should like to see it,
-and I should like to help a little through you, who know these poor
-people? I suppose it isn't very far? But of course it is not, down by
-the landing-stage. I should hardly have thought there were dens of
-that kind down there in the region of the great wharves and
-warehouses.'
-
-'That's just where they swarm,' said the stranger in a bold tone of
-assertion, 'as you will see' (he stepped out briskly as he spoke). 'I
-will show you several as we go down to the one my business lies in.'
-
-The night had fallen rapidly; there was no moon, and though the stars
-were coming out, there was a considerable drift of cloud, so that the
-sky was gloomy. As the two men walked side by side along the lighted
-streets, Mr. Foster found himself occasionally outstripping his
-companion, with whom he was talking familiarly, not exclusively upon
-topics which had previously engaged them, but with reference to the
-aspect of Liverpool. On each occasion of the kind he apologised; on
-the first the stranger complained of a slight lameness, which
-prevented his keeping up with the alert step of the strange gentleman.
-
-The slowness and the slouchingness of his gait certainly did not
-decrease during their long walk; their progress was tediously slow;
-and Mr. Foster would probably have been surprised at the lateness of
-the hour, had it occurred to him to think about it.
-
-The city was settling down into the silence produced by the general
-evacuation of its business quarters before that walk commenced. By the
-time the two turned on Water-street--along the great line of the
-warehouses past which the sailor who had been Mr. Foster's
-fellow-traveller from London on the previous day had taken his way the
-night before--that part of Liverpool was as silent as the City of
-London at midnight. It presented somewhat of a similar aspect, from a
-picturesque point of view, of a great centre of wealth and business in
-isolation and inaction. With this aspect of London Mr. Foster was well
-acquainted. One of the sights and sensations he had procured for
-himself some time before was 'the City'--properly so called--when
-nobody is in it; and Liverpool was now affording him a similar study;
-but the locality was entirely new, and very shortly Mr. Foster was
-quite bewildered, and had lost all notion of where he was. Out there
-lay the river, on the other side of the town, and the great buildings
-stretched endlessly under the frowning sky, like a giant wall between
-him and its life.
-
-They had passed along innumerable immense blocks of building,
-profoundly still, when they reached one where there was a kind of yard
-surrounded on three sides with high walls, pierced with many windows.
-The fore wall forming the front was considerably lower than the other
-three, and in one corner was a door standing ajar, and kept from
-closing by a stone; the aperture was very slight, and the probability
-of any passer-by, previously unacquainted with the locality,
-perceiving that the door was unfastened was exceedingly small. As the
-two passed it, Mr. Foster, who was on the inner side, would not have
-been the least aware of the fact, had not his companion stretched his
-arm across him and pushed the door wide open.
-
-'This is the rookery,' said the stranger, having checked Mr. Foster's
-steps by the movement of his arm, and stopped with suddenness which
-took him by surprise; 'clean and quiet as it looks outside, it swarms
-like a London court.'
-
-Mr. Foster stepped back on the pathway for a moment, while his
-companion crossed the threshold, and expressed some astonishment at no
-light being visible.
-
-'They are all at the back,' replied the man, as he kicked away the
-stone and held the door for Mr. Foster to pass through. He did so, and
-it was shut behind him. 'Follow me,' said the stranger; 'the door into
-the house is in an opposite corner, and the stairs are dark till you
-get to the first landing--mind the step.'
-
-Mr. Foster followed him in silence, and they passed through the narrow
-door into the flagged passage, from which a steep and narrow
-staircase, with an iron railing, led to a square landing at some
-height above them. Still there was no light, except a feeble glimmer
-emitted from the window above the landing. When they had mounted the
-staircase so far, and could see each other's faces by the feeble
-light, Mr. Foster remarked:
-
-'There cannot be any rooks here tonight--there is no cawing.'
-
-It was not, perhaps, any feeling so decided as distrust which lent a
-peculiar tone to his voice, but it was certainly discomfort.
-
-'I beg your pardon,' said the man; 'I didn't catch what you said,' and
-he drew quite close to him on the narrow landing, from which a second
-flight of steep stairs went up.
-
-Mr. Foster repeated the sentence. 'There cannot be any rooks here
-to-night--there is no cawing;' and had hardly uttered it when the man
-pushed him into the angle of the wall on which the little ray of light
-fell obliquely, and stabbed him to the heart! Stabbed him with a hand
-so sure, with a thrust so steady, with a blade so keen, with an aim so
-precise, that he only groaned and sank down dead when the hand which
-pressed him back, the hilt of the weapon within it, was withdrawn.
-
-Then the murderer, making one cautious step backward, which just
-withdrew him beyond the reach of the outstretched feet, as the dead
-man dropped into a heap in the corner, lighted an inch of wax candle
-which he took from his pocket, and, standing well away from the blood
-which soaked through the dead man's clothes, welling upwards from the
-wound, but neither spurting nor dropping, for it was all caught in the
-folds of the waistcoat and the shirt, stooped over him and closely
-examined the features, without touching the body. The examination,
-prolonged until the fixity of death had gripped every feature, and the
-film of death had covered the wide-open eyes, was perfectly
-satisfactory.
-
-This ascertained, the murderer, standing at the full length of his arm
-from the dead man, slowly and carefully withdrew the weapon, and
-placing it on his victim's lap, proceeded to search the breast-pocket
-from which he had seen a note-book peeping out. He found the
-note-book, and, after a hasty glance at its contents, transferred it,
-taking care that it received no stain of blood, to his own pocket; but
-his rifling of the dead stopped there, with one trifling exception.
-There was a handkerchief in the same pocket with the note-book, marked
-in initials which did not correspond with Mr. Foster's name; this he
-took possession of.
-
-There was no hurry, there was no tremor, there was not a moment's
-uncertainty, there was not an undecided movement throughout the whole
-of these proceedings. This man and his victim might have been alone in
-the universe for any trace of haste or fear of detection which he
-displayed. His face was motionless, his lips were still, there was no
-hurried breathing, no muttered words, as he minutely inspected his own
-clothes and hands. His precautions had been eminently successful;
-there was no stain on either.
-
-The landing was narrow, the space was small, and for his next
-operation the murderer required a little more room. Mr. Foster had
-fallen completely in the angle of the wall, and when the body slipped
-down, the feet projected almost to the top of the lower stair. The
-murderer took hold of these feet and gently pushed them towards the
-wall, so as to leave himself more space; he had deposited his bundle
-on the second step of the upper stair, and he left it undisturbed
-while he divested himself of every article of clothing except his
-shirt, and folded them up into a neat roll, corresponding in size with
-that enclosed in the tarpaulin covering.
-
-This done, he took off his black wig, beard, and moustaches, placed
-them in the centre of the roll, and proceeded to unpack the bundle. It
-contained a suit of sailors clothes, including a blue shirt, a red
-wig, and a red beard. These were very carefully constructed, and he
-assumed them without any difficulty. He then put on the sailor's dress
-complete, wrapped his white shirt round the clothes he had taken off,
-and sitting down on the topmost step of the lower stair, with the dead
-man's feet within a foot of his elbow, sewed up the second bundle in
-the tarpaulin cover which had enclosed the first, by the aid of a
-packing-needle and a piece of twine which he took with him ready in
-his trousers pocket.
-
-This done, he stood up and stood still for two clear minutes, mentally
-recapitulating the precautions he had just taken, and comparing them
-with the programme he had arranged. He had omitted nothing, he was
-quite satisfied; so he put his bundle under his arm, blew out the
-scrap of candle, and without a glance in the direction in which the
-dead man lay in a mass rapidly becoming indistinguishable in the
-darkness, almost groped his way down the stairs, passed out of the
-door, crossed the yard noiselessly, and noiselessly pushing back the
-bolt of the outer gate, emerged from it just as a policeman on his
-beat had reached the second block of building above it, and was safe
-not to observe him.
-
-The sailor strolled leisurely down to the landing-stage. If any one
-had met him, it would have been impossible to mistake his character of
-houseless, companionless, foreign sailor; but no one did meet him, and
-a few minutes' keen inspection of the lonely scene satisfied him that
-the opportunity for the last precaution to be taken with success was
-there. He advanced to the edge of the stage, and leaning against one
-of the iron posts which supported the boundary chain, he slowly
-dropped the parcel with its tarpaulin covering into the river. Even to
-his impassiveness, to his almost incredible indifference of manner,
-the finality of this act seemed to be a relief. He straightened his
-figure, drew a deep breath, stretched his arms out to their full
-length, and brought them down by his sides, and after standing for a
-few minutes, with a straight look-out seawards, he turned away, and
-keeping the side of the road which borders the landing-stage, avoiding
-on this occasion the shade of the great warehouses, he took his way
-towards the tramps' quarters where he had passed the previous night.
-
-On his road he passed a trough provided for the watering of cattle on
-their way from shipment. A lamp stood near, so that, though the
-darkness of the night had increased, there was light on that spot. The
-sailor took his cap off, pulled up the sleeves of his jersey, and
-pumped a quantity of water over his head and face. This done, he once
-more inspected the premises, and finding himself perfectly free from
-any danger of observation, he took off his shoes and examined his feet
-by the gaslight. It was as he supposed. There were traces of blood
-upon them, but it had dried before he had put on his stockings, so
-that no tell-tale marks had extended to them. He swung himself up on
-the side of the trough, and carefully washed first one foot, then the
-other; after which he sat swinging them in the air until they were
-perfectly dry, when he resumed his shoes and stockings, and again went
-on his way.
-
-The lodging-house was even more crowded than it had been on the
-previous night, and the proprietor was more drunk and less
-accommodating. A couple of dirty sacks on the landing, outside the
-wretched dormitory, was all that the sailor could procure by way of a
-bed; and when he asked for a pillow, he was told that he might roll up
-his clothes, and use them for that purpose--they hadn't got no
-pillows--advice which was accompanied by a coarse jest at the
-luxuriousness of his requirements, and which was overheard by one of
-the men whose efforts at conversation the sailor had met, on the
-previous night, with sullen moroseness.
-
-'Pillow,' said this man; 'what do you want with a pillow? Where's that
-'ere bundle you were so particular about last night? One would think
-it was stuffed with diamonds, you was so fond of it.'
-
-'I've been robbed of it,' replied the man, with an oath. 'Worse luck.'
-
-'Well, you weren't robbed of it here,' said the proprietor of the
-establishment.
-
-'No, that you weren't, Tom Summers,' struck in his neighbour; 'we
-ain't fine gentlemen here as are above being spoken to, but we're on
-the square, and pals is safe with us.' With which testimony to the
-virtues of the company, and protest against the surliness of the
-new-comer, this gentleman turned on his bed of sacking and went to
-sleep.
-
-And so the night wore on in Liverpool, and the dawn brightened over
-the fair ship with her happy and hopeful company out at sea, and over
-the stark figure of the dead man who lay with wide-open eyes upon the
-landing of the great warehouse, where many hurrying feet would shortly
-be arrested beside him in horror at the fate of the unknown, unclaimed
-stranger.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-HELEN'S JOURNAL.
-
-
-Sitting down this morning to make a beginning towards the fulfilment
-of my promise to my husband, I ask myself if I am indeed the same
-person as I was when he left me. It seems to me that a great gulf lies
-between me and that time, and that the experience which I have gained
-of human nature and of the possibilities of life has completely
-changed me. With all the relief which the absence of Alston's friend
-has given me there is a great pang of pain for Alston himself, and a
-horrid sense of a barrier of concealment between us. I have allowed
-so many days to elapse before I force myself into commencing this
-self-communing, in sheer uncertainty of what my line of duty is, and
-though I am now tolerably clearly convinced that neither now nor ever
-must I reveal to Alston what has passed, the conviction invests my
-task of writing to him with great pain and difficulty. Somehow we seem
-to be doubly parted; first by distance, then by secret. Will this
-additional sense of parting yield even to his return? How shall I bear
-to see him take up his relations with Warren just where he dropped
-them, and to know, as I do know, how his confidence is betrayed? Not
-in business matters, I daresay; so far as I understand anything about
-them, there is no likelihood that Alston's interests and Warren's
-could ever clash, and so far he is safe. It would do my husband such
-harm in every way to know what has occurred; his own frankness and
-loyalty of nature could hardly withstand so great a shock; the world
-would be changed for him. No, he shall never know it; I will trust to
-the chapter of accidents, or rather, I should say, to the beneficence
-of Providence, to preserve us harmless from his false friend.
-
-But my journal, to which he looked forward with such pleasure, and
-which I determined should be so frank and free and full a record of my
-life, telling it all out to him in so far as one human heart can break
-the bar of its solitude in words to another--what has become of that?
-To keep any freshness and any truth in it at all, I must make this
-record of what has passed for myself, waiting it indeed, but laying it
-by as a thing that is done with--as a chronicle of the truth for
-reference, for precisely that which must not be brought into my
-letters to Alston is that relief for the feelings and the fears which
-must be hidden from him. What are these fears? How often I ask myself
-that question, and I never find an answer! The man has gone; not alone
-has he pledged his word--he could hardly expect me to set much store
-by that; but he knows it is for his own interest, for his own safety,
-for the future preservation of the good relations between him and
-Alston, which, false as all pretext to friendship is on his part, are,
-nevertheless, valuable to him, that he should keep his promise to
-me--that he should remain away; that he should never attempt to see me
-or to communicate with me while I am alone. A thousand times a day I
-tell myself this; I strive to feel my freedom; I recall the oppression
-of his presence: I remember my dislike to him long before I knew the
-secret unconscious origin it had; and I ask myself why I do not exult,
-why I am not able to bear with more than composure anything which has
-led to such an emancipation? But it is not so. The presence of the
-enemy seems to hem me in, an evil influence is in the air I breathe;
-no effort frees me from this morbid terror, of which I am half
-ashamed, while I write this secret record no eyes but my own are ever
-to see. How cleverly, how skilfully this man has carried out this
-sudden and complete change of all his plans; how reasonably he seems
-to have accounted for leaving New York! No one seems surprised, and I
-am quite certain not the slightest shade of suspicion that his
-departure is of any consequence to me has presented itself to the mind
-of any of our common acquaintance, though the close tie between him
-and Alston is perfectly well known. It is just this power, this
-influence over others, which makes me so afraid of him even now. What
-if on Alston's return he took some other means of alienating him from
-me! The feminine inferiority, the absence of a power of understanding
-business matters, will serve him no longer: he won't try to revive
-that theory when Alston returns; he shall find that I have
-administered every affair which he left in my charge too well to be
-set down as an incapable for the future; but he may try a more subtle
-means. I believe the love of a man like Warren is half passion, half
-hatred, and that the hatred swallows up the passion when it is
-effectually checked. Whence that notion has come to me, I know not,
-but it has come, and with it a fear of this man's hatred, greater, if
-possible, than my horror of his love.
-
-There, I have recorded it, and now I will try to turn my mind from
-it--I will try to write to Alston a cheery letter, a pious fraud.
-
-
-When you told me, dearest Alston, that my letters were to take the
-form of a journal, I remember thinking of the passage in our pet book,
-the _Vicar of Wakefield_, in which Dr. Primrose describes the
-vicissitudes of primroses' existence, and summoning them up in
-migrations from the blue bed to the brown. My journal, if I keep it at
-all within the actual sense of the term, would record nothing more
-strange or exciting. I migrate from the nursery to the parlour, from
-the parlour to the park, from the park to the nursery; but my chief
-sojourn is in the latter place. I never could have imagined that a
-baby could give one so much to do, even when one is assisted, as I am,
-by the most capable of nurses, concerning whom I have a lot to tell
-you presently; neither could I have believed that a baby could be so
-interesting. We made up our minds, you remember, that we were not
-going to plague our neighbours, and make fools of ourselves, by
-advancing the claims of this remarkable infant to be quite the finest,
-the most intelligent, and the most precocious that ever existed.
-Bearing this resolution in mind, I endeavoured to be a very rational
-mother, but I protest, quite genially, that I do not want any society
-except baby's, until the kind Fates send me that of baby's papa.
-
-The child has become so strong and healthy that I am no longer in the
-least uneasy about her; therefore she is a pure unmitigated pleasure
-to me; and the real truth is that if I am to tell you all about my
-daily life, I fear you will suffer from the plethora of baby. Of
-course, I read and work, and visit and receive some people
-sometimes--not many and not often; and, of course, I get out and do
-some shopping. I bought the loveliest pelisse, yesterday, that ever
-was seen out of Paris, and I believe it came from there; and then,
-again, even shopping has come to mean baby--the pelisse was for her,
-not for me. I play the piano, sometimes, a little--nurse says baby is
-beginning to take notice of music. But after all this is not my life,
-you know; it is only the outside of it, and one shell is very like
-another.
-
-Of course I miss you frightfully, more and more every day, but I do
-not feel helpless. I made up my mind, you know, that I never would
-yield to that helpless feeling, from which I have seen so many women
-suffer who are guarded as I am by the care and love and generosity of
-good men, from every trouble from which one human being can shield
-another, and so I have kept my promise made to myself. When there is
-anything to make up my mind about, I make up my mind promptly; when
-there is anything to do, I do it at once, to the best of my ability;
-if I make mistakes I don't fret over them, but I think I shall manage
-them better next time, and I don't get discouraged. I daresay I shall
-see in the end how very good for me this parting between us proved.
-Don't suppose I am going back upon what you laughed at me for, and
-called my jealous susceptibility. I have got over all that, but I
-really am going to say that you will find me ever so much more useful,
-ever so much more of a companion; because I shall have had this little
-interval for exercising my judgment as well as my taste, for exerting
-my discretion as well as gratifying my fancies. Hitherto, your
-indulgence and affection have limited me to the less useful and less
-strengthening of these processes; so when you come home, dearest
-Alston, you will have to tell me all about business, and you will find
-I shall understand it quite as well, and take quite as much pleasure
-in it, as in our old discussions on books and music and pictures and
-acting.
-
-Writing that word 'acting' reminds me of our baby's new nurse--rather
-an inconsequent style of writing this, you will perhaps say, for a
-woman who is claiming a newly-developed talent for business; but it is
-what you asked for. Baby's nurse is the oddest woman, and such a
-treasure! I will tell you how she came to me, and really it is not out
-of proportion, for it was certainly the most striking event in my life
-since you left me. She came in answer to my advertisement--she was the
-first candidate, her name is Bessie Jenkins, her husband is somewhere
-in the Western States. They had misfortunes, and were obliged to part
-for a while, like ourselves. I suppose it was that likeness in
-unlikeness which attracted me towards the good woman from the first.
-She spoke with a hearty love and a hearty sorrow of her absent husband
-and her dead baby, only a day or two dead when she came to me, and I
-shall never forget her face when she took our little Mary in her arms,
-and saw how delicate the child was. The very way she said: 'This won't
-do you don't understand babies, ma'am;' put aside the food which
-Jessie and I had been messing up unskilfully; and made some mysterious
-alterations in the way the child's clothes were put on, made me feel
-that the right person had been sent to me. Dr. Clark just looked at
-her and said, 'She will do; make sure of her, Mrs. Griswold;' and I
-asked her if she could come to me at once--if she could stay that very
-night; she said she would, and went and fetched her things on the
-spot.
-
-We are quite friends--we were from the beginning--and she takes almost
-as much care of me as of little Mary; even that she does cleverly, and
-has avoided making any jealousy or confusion in the house, which was
-just what I dreaded, you know, when the doctor told me I must have a
-nurse. Mrs. Jenkins is a good-looking woman, tall, large, active, with
-a very fair skin, and fine, honest, gray eyes. She says she does not
-know exactly how old she is, and I believe her--she looks about
-five-and-twenty; she is very well spoken for a woman of her class, and
-not at all ignorant. We have long talks in the nursery and in our
-drives--for I never go out without nurse and baby; it is so horribly
-dull to drive out alone; and I find I learn a good deal from her about
-the realities of life as they exist for women who have not been taken
-the care of that you have taken of me.
-
-After all, dearest Alston, what a very little bit of trouble I have
-known in my life--just those dark days when poor papa's affairs went
-badly, and you came and brightened them up with that blessed, steady
-light which has shone on all my pathway since. Why are people's
-history so different? Is mine to be always an exception? Some time
-before you left me, and when I was much less thoughtful than I am now,
-I have occasionally felt afraid that I was too happy; there seemed
-such deep peace, of such settled certainty, in our lives. I hardly
-understand all the talk in books and in speech about the turbulence
-and the transitoriness and the perpetual change which mark human
-existence all over the world; while your absence has taken away that
-deep tranquillity, it has not touched, of course, the real happiness
-of my life. I would not have you think me discontented, and, perhaps,
-this little shake is good for me--will be good for us both. This is a
-lesson which Mrs. Jenkins, in her good, quiet, homely, honest way,
-impresses on me very often. It does one good to see a person who has
-had plenty of trouble of a sternly material kind, as well as a great
-sorrow, bear them with the ready submission and cheerful courage of
-this poor woman; and many a time when I see her with our baby in her
-arms and at her breast, where her dead child once lay, I ask myself
-how I should have faced such a life as hers.
-
-I have said before that we are great friends; she has formed a really
-strong affection for me--it is like the kind of thing one hears about
-the Irish people in old times. I fancy she would not shrink from any
-sacrifice for me. She is extremely curious about you, and never tired
-of hearing me tell how I came to know you first, and the story of my
-girlhood; and I talk to her about all these things; so you will have
-no difficulty in believing that our new nurse is an exceptional
-person, and that, though she is homely in speech and manner, there is
-no real inferiority in her. Don't laugh at me when I say that I am
-quite sure you and she will be great friends. There is, at least, one
-very strong bond of union between you: Mrs. Jenkins has a ruling
-passion--it is for the drama. I found that out very soon.
-
-You know we agreed that the nursery was to be made into a very pretty
-and cheerful room, so that baby's nurse, if we had the good fortune to
-find a good one, should be thoroughly comfortable, and feel herself at
-home. Looking about through the house for such things as I could spare
-to ornament her domain, on the day after Mrs. Jenkins's arrival, I
-came upon a lot of photographs in a drawer in the study--they were
-likenesses of all the actors and actresses whom, I verily believe, you
-have seen in the whole course of your life. I had no notion you had
-such a collection; and you need not be frightened, I have not deprived
-you of them, I have only taken such as have duplicates--there are a
-good many. I put them all into the photograph-book which belonged to
-me when I was a girl, and made it over for nursery use. Who knows how
-soon Mrs. Jenkins will find out that her wonderful nurseling takes
-notice of pictures as well as of music? Two or three days after, I
-asked her if she liked her rooms, if she was quite comfortable, and so
-forth. She replied, with great delight, that she had never been so
-comfortable in her life, and expressed peculiar pleasure at finding
-some pictures about. I found she had been eagerly investigating the
-contents of the photograph-book, and she surprised me not a little by
-running glibly over the names of all the portraits. As I hadn't
-written them in--for one very good reason among others, that I had no
-notion of who are represented by several of their numbers--I could not
-understand how she came to know who all these theatrical ladies and
-gentlemen were. It came out then; the theatre is a celestial vision to
-Mrs. Jenkins; to see a play is the greatest enjoyment of which she is
-capable.
-
-She says that she knows a good play from a bad one as well as any one
-in the world, and is a first-rate judge of acting; but she would much
-rather see a bad play than none at all, which I take as a mark of
-enthusiasm, if true, that does not justify much faith in her critical
-faculty. I think she knows every play that has been produced in New
-York in her time. If she hasn't seen she has read them; she knows all
-about the 'castes,' as she calls it, is a perfect chronicle of the
-successes and the failures of the actors and actresses who have come
-here from London and Paris, and has, among her possessions, a huge
-scrap-book, of which she is inordinately proud, crammed with newspaper
-critiques, squibs, old playbills, and gaudy woodcuts, which represent
-her prime favourites as it is devoutly to be hoped they never did
-appear upon any stage. Mrs. Jenkins is not an American by birth; she
-was born in Hampshire and reared in London; and though she has been in
-America since her fifteenth year, she seems to have enjoyed a good
-deal of her favourite amusement even at that early age. I am, however,
-positive that she was never employed in any capacity in connection
-with the stage herself, if only because she speaks of the fact with
-considerable regret.
-
-One portrait in the photograph-book has so special an attraction for
-her, that I took it out and put it in a little upright frame, which
-she keeps on her dressing-table. This slight act of kindness has, it
-appears, particularly touched her heart; and yesterday, when I
-mentioned that I should be despatching my letter to you this morning,
-she begged me to ask you to be sure and go to see the original of this
-beloved portrait, a certain Miss Clara Montressor, who is at present
-playing at one of the London theatres. The theatre in question is
-called the Thespian; you may perhaps know it, but I am so deplorably
-ignorant of such matters that I really do not know whether I am
-talking to you of a first-rate or a fifth-rate establishment. I
-disguised my ignorance, for Mrs. Jenkins's harmless enthusiasm and
-true believership amuses me so much that I would not snub her for the
-world; and when she assured me that she has heard tell that Miss Clara
-Montressor is quite the finest actress in existence, I did not allow
-her to perceive that I had never heard Miss Clara Montressor's name.
-If you can at all conveniently get anywhere near to confirming Mrs.
-Jenkins's belief, pray do so; at all events, let your reply to this
-contain an assurance that you have beheld the prodigy. I should not
-like baby's nurse to be prejudiced against baby's papa by supposing
-that he could be in London without seeing Miss Clara Montressor and
-appreciating the advantage as it deserves.
-
-This young lady is one craze; but Mrs. Jenkins has another, rather an
-abstract one, for she has never seen its object, who is no less a
-person than the famous actor, Bryan Duval. She has followed his career
-with most amusing zeal, and has told me all about his best characters
-and his peculiar points, until I feel that he too is an old
-acquaintance. How heartily you would have laughed if you could have
-been present, unseen, at baby's bedtime yesterday! I had just heard a
-piece of information which I knew would be productive of unbounded
-delight to Mrs. Jenkins, and I took that favourable opportunity, when
-she is always thoroughly disposed for a chat, to tell her about it.
-She had been rather low all day--she sometimes is, I observe, when she
-gets a letter from her husband (he is not like you, Alston, though she
-loves him)--and I knew I should cheer her up by telling her, what no
-doubt you know as well as we know it here, that Bryan Duval is coming
-to New York. You never saw anything so absurd as her delight, which
-appeared to be thoroughly shared by baby, judging by the kicking and
-crowing of that young lady in consequence of the additional dangling
-and tossing which her nurse bestowed upon her in her pleasure. I told
-her not only that she could go to see him, but that she might
-accompany me--we can manage to put baby in commission for that little
-time--and I even hinted at the possibility of her unknown idol
-presenting himself in the flesh at our house. I suppose you will have
-made this gentleman's acquaintance in London; do be sure and tell me
-if so, and whether he is really the very charming man in society which
-he has the name of being here. Mrs. Sinclair said, in speaking of him
-to-day, that he was one of the very few great actors whom it did to
-know off the stage, but that he was thoroughly satisfactory. 'So
-unlike either authors or painters, you know,' added Mrs. Sinclair, in
-that bored manner of hers; 'they never do, dear, out of print and off
-canvas; but Bryan Duval is charming!' Charming doesn't mean very much,
-for every one says it, and everybody means by it something different
-from what everybody else means. If you say Bryan Duval is 'charming,'
-I shall know the value of the verdict, and be quite sure that I shall
-find him so, for of course we shall know him here, whether you have
-made his acquaintance in London or not. If you have, dear Alston, give
-him a letter of introduction to me, for I really think I am slightly
-bitten by the popular enthusiasm, and though I cannot say, like Mrs.
-Sinclair, that I am 'dying to know him,' it would be very pleasant,
-and I should at once call upon his wife, of whom I have heard a great
-deal.
-
-I have nothing particularly interesting to communicate respecting
-household affairs; everything is going on very well and very quietly.
-Of course, my dearest Alston, you will expect that this letter should
-contain some reference to the commission with which you charged Mr.
-Warren on the day of your departure, and which he immediately
-fulfilled. Will you pardon me if I make my reference to it a brief one
-in proportion to its importance and to the large share which I know it
-has had in your thoughts? Our parting is too new, the sense of its
-inevitable duration weighs too heavily upon me. I am obliged to set my
-face too steadfastly to overcome the nervousness, the anxiety, and the
-loneliness involved in dwelling upon it to admit of my saying all that
-I feel, or even any part of it, with regard to the contents of the
-letter which your friend handed to me. If I said all, if I said any,
-it would come to the same thing--that letter is like you, Alston; it
-is an absolute fulfilment, a complete realisation of the estimate
-which I have formed of you. If by any horrible decree of Fate the
-occasion should ever arise on which it would be my doom and my duty to
-act upon the instructions, and to carry out the provisions, contained
-in that letter, I should do so with a proud and full sense that they
-are worthy of you, that they are such last words, such last
-instructions, as, if I could have chosen, I should have asked of you.
-And now I must pass away from this subject. I am unequal to saying
-more about it. When I can say what I have felt, with my head on your
-shoulder and my hand in yours, you will know what the receipt and the
-reading of that letter was to me. The other commission with which you
-charged Mr. Warren, I fear, I received in a different spirit--one
-which made it difficult for me to bow my own will completely to yours,
-to substitute your judgment unrepiningly for my own. Happily no
-occasion has yet arisen to oblige me to have recourse to Mr. Warren's
-advice or assistance. I have needed neither. All external matters,
-with which alone he could have any concern, have passed along very
-smoothly, nor can I, at present, foresee any possible contingency in
-which it would be necessary for me to apply to him; should any such
-arise, you may rest assured that I shall strictly conform to your
-instructions. It was rather hard for me, my dear husband, to be told
-by that one friend of yours, concerning whom we are not entirely of
-one opinion, that my letters to you were to pass through his hands.
-Did I not know that you are quite above such a futile and foolish
-exercise of power, such experimenting in the pliability of the human
-will, had we not often discussed the contemptible folly of the patient
-Griselda, and quite made up our minds as to what we thought of
-Geraint, I might have supposed for a moment that you had imposed this
-restriction upon me as a sort of test, as well as a significant hint
-to me that thus far and no farther I might go in our domestic
-relations. I might have thought you meant to say, 'I like Warren, you
-don't; you will have to give in to my liking.' This would have been a
-calculation and an act of a domestic tyrant; therefore an
-impossibility to you. I accept the restriction in a perfectly frank
-and candid spirit, and absolute loyalty towards you. Some day you will
-perhaps tell me--when you find that I am capable of being more of a
-companion to you than I have hitherto been--what is the precise nature
-of your present business, and the exact character of the complication
-which has rendered it necessary that my letters should not go direct
-from your own house in New York to your own address in London; and I
-have no doubt that I shall entirely recognise the force of the reason.
-If, however, you should never tell me, if for any reason conceivable
-or unconceivable by me it should remain impossible for you to confide
-this to me, I shall be perfectly satisfied that the motive not to be
-explained is one which does no discredit to you, and is wholly
-uninfluenced with any slight to me. And now, dear Alston, I pass from
-the subject either for ever or until such time as you choose to resume
-it. I wonder if you will be provoked with my pertinacity if I tell you
-that I have discovered that Mr. Warren has very few such partial
-friends as you are. The fact is, he is not much liked by men, and he
-is, generally speaking, as much disliked by their wives as he is by
-me. I think no polish of manner, no external surface, brightness, or
-gallantry of that kind which, when looked into by a keen-eyed woman,
-is much more insulting than complimentary, has ever enabled him to
-conceal from women in general the sentiment which all right-minded
-women must resent, and which would render neglect, even rudeness, from
-Mr. Warren, the most acceptable line of treatment he could adopt
-towards a woman. Mrs. Sinclair was talking of him yesterday. I did not
-introduce the subject, and I kept my own opinion to myself. I should
-regard it as a kind of side wind of disloyalty to you, my dearest, if
-I allowed anybody but yourself to know the difference that exists
-between us on that point, to suspect that your friend was not my
-friend. Mrs. Sinclair spoke of him pretty roundly, and saying a great
-many things which were untrue, I daresay, she said one in which I
-believed. It was that Mr. Warren was, in her opinion, an unsafe friend
-and an exceedingly dangerous enemy. I pray that we may never have him
-for an enemy! I wish to God, and with a growing earnestness, that we
-had never had him for a friend!
-
-At this point in my letter, dearest Alston, I was interrupted by a
-visit, and now I fear that I shall have to finish this up hurriedly in
-time for the mail. My unexpected visitor was Thornton Carey. He sat
-with me a long time. I didn't like to hint to him that his coming was
-a little imprudent, in one sense, as curtailing my time for writing to
-you--that, however, I can take up again; in another sense, his visit
-was exceedingly apropos. You will be delighted to hear how admirably
-your generous intentions towards him have been realised. Can I ever
-thank you sufficiently for all you have done for him, indeed for every
-one dear to me, from my father to the merest acquaintance whom I have
-ever recommended to your good offices? Thornton looks remarkably well,
-and so far from complaining of hard work in his new office, he says he
-hasn't half enough to do but judging from the account he gave me of
-his duties, I should say most men would consider they had a tolerably
-fair share of labour and responsibility in his post of librarian at
-New Orleans. He has taken to his occupation with enthusiasm; in that
-respect (only) he reminded me very strongly of Tom Pinch, when he set
-to work so vehemently about making a catalogue of his unknown
-employer's books in the Temple chambers. He seems to have grown fond
-of the very outside of his charge; and when we were talking of our
-childish days together, and I reminded him of the awful quarrel we had
-because he tore the red-and-gold cover of my _Arabian Nights_, he
-regarded me with the most comical horror, as though I had suddenly dug
-up and brought to light the corpse of a victim, and produced it in the
-sight of its murderer, after the fashion of, 'You don't mean to say,
-Helen,' he said, 'that even in my most cub-like and uncivilised days I
-ever tore a book?' I laughed as I little thought I should ever laugh
-during your absence; but I thought we were both very near tears
-occasionally during our interview, for, of course, we talked of our
-friendlessness until we respectively found the best of all friends in
-you. I wonder if Thornton Carey has any chance of being a great man
-some day--in his own studious scientific line, I mean? How nice it
-would be if he did turn into a great man, and it was all your
-doing--for so it would be! No man could work without tools; you have
-put his into his hand. Do you know even I had no notion how hopeless
-he was, how severely he felt the restriction of poverty, and that
-narrow sphere from which there seemed no chance of escape, until you
-opened the barrier with the golden key? I suppose I understand most
-things better now; and though I always felt very much for him, and had
-a dim notion that he was a case of what I have heard you call 'wasted
-force,' I have only come to see it clearly since he has been talking
-to me.
-
-How earnestly I thank you for all your goodness to my old friend! It
-seems, he says, the most absurd of all possible ideas that he could
-ever be able to express his feelings otherwise than by, or even by,
-words. There is small chance that he should ever be able to prove his
-gratitude or repay his obligation to you--not that he ever wishes it
-ever to be repaid; I do believe him to be one of those few noble men
-who can bear obligation nobly; but should the opportunity ever come,
-he would snatch at it gladly. He said a great deal to me which I feel
-I cannot repeat, partly because he would not like it, and partly
-because you could not bear it. I never met any one who can so ill
-endure to be thanked as you, my dear Alston. I have seen you carry
-that sometimes to an almost ungracious extent. So when Thornton meets
-you he will not try to thank you--he will leave that to me; you will
-accept the substitute, won't you?
-
-We had one more laugh, he and I, before I had to send him away, in
-order that I might get time just to finish this. It was over our
-recollections of the time when we took great delight in the fable of
-the Lion and the Mouse. He and I differed in opinion in those days--he
-wanted to be the lion, I preferred being the mouse; we agreed just now
-that Fate had turned us both into mice, and put the kindest of lions
-in our way. May God keep him from any net, or any need of nibblers!
-
-Of course I am looking out very anxiously for all sorts of details
-about your daily life. I should like to know that you are exceedingly
-comfortable, very well looked after, and enjoying yourself when you
-are not immersed in business; but I don't think I want to hear that
-you like London very much, that you find the time flies, and that your
-quarters are sufficiently snug to prevent your remembering home very
-constantly, and missing me at every turn. This is not small-minded, is
-it? And even if it were, you would not care, Alston, for it has
-nothing to do with my mind, but everything to do with my heart. I do
-not say, for my own part,
-
-
- 'There is na luck about the house,'
-
-
-but there is no joy, and there is a constant sense of waiting;
-nothing seems particularly well worth doing, and my life, comfortable,
-well-ordered, and not useless as it is, has established itself on a
-very dead level. I am not going to mope, however, or to be
-discontented, or anything but cheerful, than what you would have me,
-until the time comes when the waiting will be over, and I can say,
-once more,
-
-
- 'His very foot has music in't
- As he comes up the stair.'
-
-
-And now I must shut this up, sealing it with a kiss from baby, and one
-from your own HELEN.
-
-
-Helen Griswold sealed her letter, placed it in a large envelope, on
-which she wrote, with a strange shrinking repugnance, Trenton Warren's
-New York address, despatched it by a special messenger to his office,
-and went immediately to her child. A nervous flurry had come upon her
-while writing the last lines of her letter, and it was only by a
-determined struggle with herself that she kept off a passionate fit of
-crying; but she put it down, and went into the nursery with a calm
-face. This woman was growing apace. By what mysterious process? She
-talked cheerfully to Mrs. Jenkins, and taking the baby, who was
-sleepy, in her arms, rocked it to rest. The monotonous movement had a
-quieting influence upon herself, and by degrees her cheerfulness was
-restored.
-
-That night, when Helen Griswold was in her own room, she wrote for a
-while in the private memorandum-book in which we have already seen her
-record the circumstances which had given a double current and meaning
-to her life. Having made a few cursory notes of the main points of her
-letter to her husband, laying special stress upon the mention of
-Trenton Warren, she went on to note in her duplicate chronicle the
-principal event of the day--this was Thornton Carey's visit.
-
-'I wonder,' she wrote, 'why it is that a pure and unmitigated
-pleasure, one totally unassociated with any pain, one perfectly free
-from any drawback, should not avail to crush, at least for a time, the
-oppressing pain and dread which has been troubling me of late. If I
-have, as I believe I have, a relentless enemy in Trenton Warren, I
-have a friend upon whose fidelity I may rely, whose love I can trust
-with all my heart, and accept with all my conscience, to oppose to
-him. My friend is a cleverer man than my enemy; he surpasses him by
-all the distance which makes a gentleman to surpass a man who is not a
-gentleman; his will is as steadfast; his courage is, or I am much
-mistaken, far more high; of his devotion to me I have many years'
-experience; of his devotion to Alston I have the guarantee of a nature
-large enough and good enough to contain that great virtue, gratitude;
-and yet there is no reassurance, there is no consolation, there is no
-rest for me in all this knowledge. I don't think it would come, if
-even I should tell Thornton what is in my heart; and that I could not
-do! I could not bear that lie should know that such a profanation had
-ever overtaken me as the avowal of this man's hideous love; the mere
-remembrance of it seems to stain my soul, as it troubles my repose; it
-has gotten into my life like a bad influence. When I awake in the
-morning, I think not of Alston, but of Warren, and I welcome sleep
-because it shuts out the hateful remembrance. I must shake this off,
-or I shall turn the fancied evil into a real one, and give my own
-fears their worst fulfilment.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-'SCOT FREE.'
-
-
-On the morning after the murder, so much of the daylight as could
-force its way through the begrimed glass, or greased paper acting as
-substitute for absent glass, in the low window of the tramps' home
-struggled in a shame-faced manner into the den, and faintly revealed
-the prostrate forms of its inhabitants.
-
-Most of them were still asleep, but by one man there the advent of
-that streak of light had been long and anxiously looked for. This was
-the man dressed in sailor's clothes, whose dread proceedings on the
-previous night have been at length recounted; he who was called Tom
-Summers by those lying around him, and whose demand for a pillow, and
-complaint of the loss of his bundle, had alternately roused their
-scorn and mirth.
-
-As the first ray penetrated the room, Tom Summers cautiously withdrew
-the arm which, during the night, he had kept drawn across his face,
-and looked round him. So far as he could make out, none of his
-companions were yet awake, and he availed himself of the opportunity
-to take a small looking-glass from his pocket, and propping it against
-the wall, he rapidly surveyed himself in it, pulling his red wig
-further down over his face, and settling the red beard, which had
-become shifted during the night. No stings of conscience, no
-terrifying reminiscences of the foul deed which he had committed,
-disturbed his rest; the strain upon his mental and bodily faculties
-had been so great that he had slept heavily and soundly, without a
-dream, without a movement. Even then, as he surveyed himself in the
-little pocket glass, he felt his eyelids closing, the elbow on which
-he leant giving way under him, and he felt more than half inclined to
-drop down upon his side, and slumber again.
-
-It must not be! He had set himself the task of rousing with daylight,
-and had fulfilled it, and he had too much to do to permit himself to
-relapse into slumber; so, after indulging in one luxurious but silent
-yawn and stretch, he pulled himself together by an effort, and
-staggered to his feet. One or two of the sleepers in his immediate
-neighbourhood, roused by the noise he made, cursed him roundly; but
-beyond this no notice was taken of his proceedings.
-
-Tom Summers stepped quickly down the creaking, rickety staircase, at
-the bottom of which he found the proprietor's 'deputy'--a
-shock-headed, blear-eyed old man, who acted as the porter and boots of
-the establishment; the daylight had not yet penetrated to this part of
-the house, and the old man held a flaring tallow candle in his hand,
-with which he surveyed the sailor.
-
-'O, it's you, Jack, is it?' he said, in a thin piping voice. 'I
-thought it was some of the coves trying to come the double over me,
-but you paid your shot last night--I saw you.'
-
-'Yes, yes, I paid last night,' repeated the sailor quickly. 'Open the
-door, please, and let me out.'
-
-'Why, what's your hurry?' asked the old man, turning towards the hole
-from which he had just emerged, and looking up at the old Dutch clock
-which hung against the wall; 'it has only just gone five, and--'
-
-'I've got to join my ship,' said Summers, 'and I must be off at once.
-Let me out, please.'
-
-The old man unlocked the door, and pulled it open by degrees. As soon
-as there was space enough for him to pass, Tom Summers slipped by
-without a word, and went limping up the court. The old man looked
-after him with bent brows, muttering in a tone of great disgust:
-'That's polite, any way--got to join your ship, have you? I tell you
-what, my lad, I believe your ship is H.M. gunboat Crimp; and that as
-soon as you get on board of her, there will be a muster of all hands
-for punishment parade;' and grumbling thus, he returned to his den,
-closing the door after him.
-
-Meanwhile Tom Summers, when he once found himself clear of the court,
-turned his back on the water-side quarters, and made the best of his
-way towards the Lime-street station. He still walked with an
-apparently painful limp; he still shuffled along with his shoulder
-almost rubbing against the wall; he looked like a sailor just
-recovering from a bad illness, and as such he was compassionated at
-the Lime-street station by an old woman, who gave him sixpence, and
-offered him a pull at the black bottle in her wicker basket, telling
-him, at the same time, that her son was at sea too, and on the west
-coast of Africa; worse luck!
-
-It was for the parliamentary train to Chester, which was about to
-start, that Tom Summers took a third-class ticket; and carefully
-avoiding the carriage into which he watched his recent benefactress,
-climbed into an empty compartment, and curling himself up into a
-corner, scarcely waited for the starting of the train to fall asleep.
-There was no chance of any particular notice being taken of him, for
-scarcely a train left Lime-street which did not carry some liberty-men
-from the great ships in the Mersey going inland for a few days'
-furlough. There was no chance of his being carried beyond his
-destination, for he had purposely selected a carriage which did not go
-farther than Chester; he could enjoy the luxury of a long silent
-sleep, and he did. Once he started forward and groaned, but on waking
-suddenly he could recollect nothing more than that he had been
-striking at something which disappeared beneath his blow; and once
-more he put his feet upon the seat, and went to sleep again.
-
-By the time the slow-going train, which stopped at every station to
-pick up and let out crowds of men and women, carrying baskets of
-country produce, arrived at the Chester station, Tom Summers was
-thoroughly rested. He stepped blithely out of the carriage, exchanged
-a pleasant good-morning with the guard, and made straight for the
-newspaper stall on which the bundle of Liverpool papers, only arriving
-in time at Lime-street to be thrown into the van, were then being
-unpacked. He bought a copy of each morning journal, and seating
-himself on a neighbouring bench, turned one after the other inside
-out, and rapidly ran his eye over their contents. Twice he passed the
-morning journals thus in review before him, occasionally starting as
-his eye caught certain paragraphs with sensation headings, but reading
-rapidly on until he had perused the batch. Then, with a sigh of
-relief, he rose and made his way to the cloak-room. To the porter who
-was in attendance there in the absence of the general functionary, not
-yet arrived, Tom Summers handed a printed ticket, immediately
-receiving for it in exchange a small black bag.
-
-'Here is your kit. Jack,' remarked the porter, handing it to him.
-
-'My skipper's, not mine,' said Tom Summers; 'it's too fine for the
-likes of me;' words which had a hidden humour apparently altogether
-too much for the porter? who kept bursting into loud guffaws of
-laughter long after Tom Summers had left him.
-
-With the small bag swinging upon his hand, Tom Summers walked past the
-Queen's Hotel, and down the broad road, yet unbuilt on, leading to the
-town. On one spot a temporary wooden circus had been erected, and he
-stopped to read the bills of the performance hanging at the door. Then
-he lounged along again; but as soon as he came within the precincts of
-the town, he turned in between two of the old houses up a passage, at
-the end of which was a flight of stone steps leading to the ancient
-city walls. These he ascended, and when he found himself on the walls,
-he hesitated as though in doubt which way to turn.
-
-Beneath him lay the old city, its quaintly fantastic gabled roofs, its
-cathedral tower, its numerous church spires, and its hundred relics of
-mediaeval architecture glowing in the early morning sun. Beyond were
-to be seen the broad silver windings of the Dee, the velvet-turfed
-racecourse, just outlined by its white posts and rails, and far away
-in the distance, heaving up their broad shoulders out of the blue
-haze, the majestic range of the Welsh mountains.
-
-That was the side to which Tom Summers inclined; he sought the
-country, not the city; and turning sharply to his right, he made a
-half circuit of the wall, and descended in a by-lane which gave right
-upon the racecourse.
-
-Once only did he pause in his work, and that was when his steps took
-him in front of the county gaol, a full view of which is commanded
-from the walls; a prison omnibus drew up at the huge outer gate, and
-from it some half-dozen prisoners descended, heavily handcuffed, and
-were marched into the gaol-yard between a file of warders. Tom Summers
-surveyed this little ceremony with great interest, leaning over the
-top of the crumbling wall, and shading his eyes from the sun with his
-hands. When the great gates clanged behind them, an expression, half
-of pity, half of contempt, crossed his face, and after he had
-muttered: 'Poor devils,' he speedily added: 'Stupid fools,' then he
-shrugged his shoulders and went on his way.
-
-When Tom Summers found himself on the flat bare expanse of the
-racecourse, he seemed considerably disappointed, and looked round with
-dismay at the abandoned prospect before him. On one side lay the
-river, but that seemed to offer him no consolation; on the other, the
-town, but on that he had already turned his back. At length, after a
-careful survey, he saw at about the distance of half a mile, on a
-rising ground, a little thicket, not much more indeed than a largish
-clump of trees, and towards that he at once bent his way. The sun by
-this time had attained considerable height, and more than considerable
-strength; and when the wayfarer had skirted the racecourse, and toiled
-across the intervening fields, and up a wooded knoll, he was tired and
-hot. The outermost edge of shade did not, however, content him. He
-paused there and looked round to note the farmer's wain, a dot upon
-the distant turnpike road; the lark singing in high heaven above his
-head; the man and boy at plough-work three fields off, the one intent
-on his furrow, the other on his team. And then, having satisfied
-himself that such human beings as he had seen were unobservant of his
-actions, and that there were none others within range, he plunged
-deeper into the little wood, and opening the bag which he carried with
-a key, drew from it a plain gray suit of morning dress and a soft-felt
-wideawake.
-
-In less time almost than it takes to write, he had divested himself of
-his sailor's clothes, and of the red wig and beard, all of which he
-thrust into the bag; then dressing himself in the gray suit, and
-donning the wideawake, he took the bag in his hand, and left the
-little wood on the opposite side to that on which he had entered it.
-
-The clerk in the cloak-room at the Lime-street station that afternoon
-was more than usually busy, and consequently more than usually
-short-tempered. He was ticking off an enormous number of entries in
-the way-bill, and was well down the third column, when he heard a soft
-voice from the sliding window, which was open, say:
-
-'I beg your pardon.'
-
-'Seven hundred and twenty-three, barrel of oysters marked X.O.,'
-muttered the clerk to himself, giving no heed to the interruption.
-'Seven hundred and twenty-four, crate of live fowls; seven--'
-
-'I beg your pardon,' said the voice again, and the clerk looked up and
-found that it belonged to a slim gentleman in a pale gray suit, and
-with a soft black-felt hat on his head, and carrying a small bag in
-his hand. 'Two days ago I came by the noon express from Euston,' said
-the gentleman, 'and booked my portmanteau to Liverpool; but being
-taken ill, I was compelled to get out at Edge-hill, and so my
-luggage came on without me. A brown portmanteau, bearing the name of
-Dunn--shall I have the good luck to find it here?'
-
-'If it is here you will, sir,' growled the clerk, dying to get back to
-the way-bill. 'Two days ago, you say; brown portmanteau, name of Dunn?
-Here you are.'
-
-'I am very much obliged to you, indeed,' said the gentleman.
-
-'Going by cab or train, sir?' said the clerk shortly.
-
-'By cab, if you please, to--'
-
-'Here, Jim,' called the clerk to a passing porter, 'put this
-portmanteau on a cab for the gentleman. Parson out for a holiday, I
-should think,' he said, muttering to himself, looking after the
-passenger, who was following his luggage; 'they always try to get out
-of uniform, but are frightened to get into anything louder than gray.'
-
-Mr. Dunn saw his portmanteau placed upon the cab, and, giving the
-porter sixpence, bade him tell the driver to go to the Adelphi Hotel.
-He looked hard at the porter's face while he spoke to him, as he had
-looked from under his overhanging brow at the clerk in the cloak-room,
-as he looked at the cabman when, after taking a note of the number of
-the vehicle, he descended in front of the Adelphi.
-
-As he advanced quickly to the glass case in which are enshrined the
-presiding goddesses of the establishment, he was struck with a sudden
-chill; he shivered violently and shrugged his shoulders, and rubbed
-his hands together as he stood asking whether he could be accommodated
-with two rooms--a sitting-room and bedroom--leading out of one
-another.
-
-'Certainly, sir,' was the gracious reply. 'Show ten and eleven,
-Charles. You seem to be very cold, sir?'
-
-'I have taken a chill, I think,' said Mr. Dunn, pausing at the bottom
-of the stairs and looking round. 'I come from a climate where frost
-and east winds are unknown, and if I mistake not, there is a fine
-specimen of the latter raging through your streets just now.'
-
-'Beg your pardon, sir, wind's southwest,' said Sam, the porter, who
-was standing by.
-
-'Well, whatever it is, it seems to have penetrated right through me,'
-said Mr. Dunn, shivering again, 'and I must ask for a good fire in my
-sitting-room. What's this?' He was proceeding up the stairs, but
-paused again as two policemen, followed by a small mob, which remained
-outside, entered the house, and approached the glazed sanctum.
-
-'Beg your pardon, miss,' said one of them, who wore the blue-braided
-frock of an inspector, touching his hat, 'but we have come to make
-some inquiries. The body of a gentleman, evidently a case of murder,
-has been discovered, and it is recognised by a cabman as that of a
-fare whom he drove from this hotel to the docks, and who is supposed
-to have been a visitor here.'
-
-'O my, how dreadful!' says the young lady in the glass shrine.
-'Perhaps you had better see the manager, inspector; just step in here,
-if you please.'
-
-She rang a bell, and Sam and the waiter and the traveller, who had all
-suspended their proceedings, now walked up-stairs, the former bearing
-the portmanteau, and the latter muttering:
-
-'Murder! body! What an unpleasant affair!' Then calling back, said:
-'Please don't forget to send a chambermaid to light the fire at once.'
-
-When the porter had placed the portmanteau in the bedroom, and he and
-the waiter had retired, Mr. Dunn threw himself into an easy-chair, and
-with his arms folded and his legs crossed, fell into a reverie, which
-lasted until he was aroused by a knock at the door. He did not call
-out 'Come in' until he had retired to his bedroom, half closing after
-him the door of communication, and through the crack watched the
-operation of lighting the fire by the kneeling chambermaid.
-
-When the girl had retired, Mr. Dunn emerged from the bedroom, and made
-straight for the window. A great breadth of street between the hotel
-and the opposite houses; no chance of his being overlooked. He walked
-quietly to the door, turned the key, and settled it so in the lock as
-to prevent his being spied upon from the outside; then, with soft
-quick steps, entered the bedroom and immediately came out again,
-bringing with him the hand-bag which he himself carried up the stairs.
-
-A momentary hesitation now, and a stealthy and sharp look round; the
-next minute the bag is open, and Mr. Dunn has taken from it and laid
-upon the table the sailor's dress which Tom Summers wore in the low
-tavern and the tramps' lodging-house, and at the same time has
-produced from his breast-pocket a long shiny pair of scissors. With
-these he makes short work of the sailor's suit, tearing and ripping it
-into strips, and cutting these strips into smaller pieces, which he
-gathers together in a heap in the middle of the table.
-
-Then Mr. Dunn, returning to the bedroom, unlocks the portmanteau which
-he had received from the cloak-room at Lime-street, lays out his
-dressing materials on the table and some clothes on a chair, takes a
-Bradshaw and a Tourist's Guide to Ireland with him into the
-sitting-room, and then, with a sudden effort, gathers the whole heap
-of cut and tattered clothing in his arms, and throws it on to the
-fire, which by this time is blazing brightly. Some of the little bits
-of blue cloth take fire at once, and go eddying up the chimney--others
-smoulder slowly; but Mr. Dunn stands in front of the fireplace, gazing
-at the grate, now and then patting and forming its contents with the
-shovel, until no fragment of the clothes remains visible--only white
-dust and charred ashes. Then he throws back his shoulders and
-stretches out his arms like one rid of an intolerable burden, and
-heaves a great sigh of relief.
-
-Quick now, for the burning cloth has left a pungent, titillating,
-acrid smell, which must be attended to immediately. Mr. Dunn draws an
-easy-chair to the corner of the table close by the fireplace, and
-rumples the antimacassar, which has been laid on by careful hands;
-then takes the Tourist's Guide, places it on the table in close
-proximity to the chair, opens it, and places his gold pencil-case
-between the leaves; lastly, he takes a shovelful of red-hot coals from
-the grate, and deliberately strews them over the hearthrug; then he
-quietly quits the room, leaving the door open behind him.
-
-Meanwhile, Inspector Jeffery and his subordinate. Sergeant Scott, were
-enjoying themselves after their fashion. They had a great triumph of
-popular excitement and curiosity up to the doors of the hotel, and
-once inside, they were destined to still greater distinction, not,
-indeed, at the hands of the young lady in the glass case--she was too
-much in the habit of seeing celebrities of all kinds, military and
-naval heroes, leading lawyers, great authors and actors, all of whom
-were in the habit of putting up at the Adelphi, and addressing polite
-nothings to her, to be particularly moved at the entrance of a couple
-of policemen, even though engaged in investigating a murder mystery.
-When she had turned them over to the manager, her business with them
-was concluded, and she went back to her ledger and to answering the
-numerous applicants at the glass case, without bestowing another
-thought upon the visitors in blue-braided uniform. But the gentleman
-who at that time filled the position of manager was a very different
-kind of person; he delighted in the mysterious and romantic, and the
-word 'murder' sounded pleasantly in his ear. The police officers were
-invited into his private sanctum, were bidden to take seats, and were
-asked what beverage would be most agreeable to them. The inspector, a
-man of travel and of taste, suggested dry sherry; the sergeant, a pure
-and simple Liverpudlian, would have liked to have named gin, but he
-recollected where he was, and asked for brandy.
-
-'And now,' said the manager, as soon as the visitors were comfortably
-seated, with their glasses before them, 'now, inspector, tell us all
-about it.'
-
-'There isn't much to tell, sir,' said Inspector Jeffery, 'though it is
-as bold and, I may say, as clean a job as I have met with in my
-experience.'
-
-'And you mean to say the murdered man was a visitor in this hotel?'
-interrupted the manager. 'Who could it be?'
-
-'I'm coming to that presently, sir,' said the inspector, who always
-delivered himself according to what he called 'the laws of evidence,'
-and who was terribly put out by having his straight story broken in
-upon. 'I said it was a bold and clean job, and I might have added
-clever, for although there was a patrol passing up and down in front
-of the very door of the warehouse where it was committed every half
-hour, to say nothing of sergeants visiting rounds and all that, not a
-trace was seen or heard of anything about it until the people came to
-the warehouse this morning.'
-
-'Warehouse! How did he get in there? It must have been done by one of
-the warehouse hands,' again interrupted the manager.
-
-'When you have done, sir, I will continue,' said the inspector
-testily. 'It was one of those large warehouses close by Water-street,
-which are let in floors, or flats as they call them in Scotland; each
-lock up separate to themselves, with a common stairway, and where,
-there being no porter resident on the place, the front door is always
-kept unfastened. I have spoken to the commissioners about that once or
-twice, suggesting an order should be issued to have some one
-responsible for those doors being locked, and if that had been the
-case there would have been no murder. It was an out-door clerk
-belonging to Triggs and Vyner, wool-staplers, on the third floor, that
-discovered the murder. He came about seven o'clock this morning,
-having forgotten his note-book last night, and being unable to start
-his rounds without it. When he got up to the first-floor landing, he
-found the dead man lying in a heap in the corner. He thought he was
-drunk at first--not a tramp, he could not have been that by his
-clothes, but some gentleman who had been dining out and mistaken his
-road home--but when he bent over him he found that the man was dead.
-There was very little blood on the floor, though his clothes were
-soaked with it. He had been stabbed to the heart with a long-bladed
-knife, more like a dagger, which was lying by his side. Such a stab,
-so straight and sure, I never saw before in my experience, nor our
-divisional surgeon neither. He says, if it weren't for reflecting upon
-the credit of the profession, he could almost swear it had not been
-done by any amateur.'
-
-'Good Lord!' said the manager, by this time intensely interested.
-'Well, what then?'
-
-'Then, I was sent for,' resumed the inspector, 'and I came down, and
-by this time there was a crowd round the place, and my men had some
-difficulty in turning them out. Two or three of them I allowed to
-stop, and among them was old Tom Langman the flyman, who whispered to
-me that he recognised the body as that of the gentleman he had driven
-from this house to the docks, and who, he thought, was one of a large
-theatrical party now staying here.'
-
-'Not now,' cried the manager, 'they're gone; went away yesterday in
-the Cuba. Why, good heavens, it must be number fourteen! He was to
-have gone back to London last night, but Miss Jennings told me he had
-changed his mind, and though he was not at home his things were still
-in his room.'
-
-'Better send and see if they are there now,' said the inspector. 'What
-was the gentleman's name?'
-
-'I cannot say,' said the manager. 'You see I was so taken up with
-listening ta Duval, and looking at Miss Montressor, and laughing at
-that funny fellow in the check suit, that I didn't take much notice of
-the others. I will call somebody to go up to fourteen, and--I beg your
-pardon, sir,' he exclaimed to the gentleman whom he found on the other
-side of the door just as he opened it, 'did you wish for anything?'
-
-'Not at all,' said the gentleman in a soft voice. 'I am Mr. Dunn, a
-visitor at this house occupying number ten, and I heard something as I
-was passing the bar about some murder which had been discovered.'
-
-'Yes, indeed, sir, a dreadful murder of a poor gentleman who
-was staying here, and who seems to have been decoyed into some
-out-of-the-way place and stabbed to the heart.'
-
-'Indeed,' said Mr. Dunn, 'decoyed into an out-of-the-way place? Ah,
-probably some woman in it, I should imagine.'
-
-'That's a very good notion, sir,' said the manager, 'very good indeed;
-the inspector of police is in this room, sir; perhaps you would just
-step in and mention it. Inspector, here is a gentleman staying in the
-house who has got what I consider a very excellent idea about the
-murder.'
-
-'O indeed, sir,' said the inspector gruffly. He greatly disapproved of
-amateur suggestions.
-
-'Not at all a great idea, inspector,' said Mr. Dunn softly; 'our
-friend here is pleased to speak too highly of it--merely a notion
-which has occurred to me, and I have no doubt has previously occurred
-to you, that a--I beg your pardon,' said Mr. Dunn, stopping short and
-sniffing through his nose, 'isn't there a very peculiar smell?'
-
-The manager, the inspector, and the sergeant all sniffed in concert;
-the two latter never smelt anything, but the manager called out at
-once, 'Something burning.'
-
-'So I thought,' said Mr. Dunn; 'something woollen.'
-
-'We must see to this at once,' cried the manager, and rushed out.
-
-The others rushed with him, and after a prolonged amount of sniffing
-made their way up the stairs leading to number ten. As they advanced
-the smell grew stronger, and they came upon a vast quantity of smoke,
-which they soon found proceeded from number ten itself, where the
-atmosphere was so dense that it was impossible to see across the room.
-There was no trace of any flame, but when the windows had been thrown
-open it was discovered that the hearth-rug and a portion of the carpet
-around it were smouldering slowly, and were nearly consumed. Bells
-were rung and water was brought, though long before it arrived the
-inspector and the sergeant had removed any further cause for fear by
-stamping out the fire with their heavy boots.
-
-The manager was very cross; he did not quite see how he could explain
-the matter at the next meeting of the directors, and ask for a new
-carpet. He had intended to show his temper to Mr. Dunn, but that
-gentleman he saw was far too savage himself to brook being spoken to.
-
-'It is most annoying,' said Mr. Dunn. 'I am only here for a day on my
-way to Ireland and this accident occurs. The silly woman who lit the
-fire did not bring a guard for it. I am unused to fires; I live in a
-warm climate; but some friends of mine told me never to sit by a fire
-in England unless it had a guard on it. I looked for a guard before I
-left the room, but could not find one, and I thought it would be all
-right.'
-
-The manager was full of apologies.
-
-'Should they move Mr. Dunn to another suite of rooms? They could do so
-at once.'
-
-'No, thank you,' said Mr. Dunn in reply. 'It is unfortunate, but still
-it is an accident, and could not have been prevented. I will sleep in
-the bedroom to-night, and I should not have used the sitting-room
-much, as I am a stranger in Liverpool, and I want to see all that is
-to be seen on this the only day I have. In the mean time, I shall be
-thankful if you will prepare me a little dinner, some fish and a chop,
-in the coffee-room, and I will come down to it as soon as I have
-washed my hands and face, which seem to be tolerably blackened by the
-smoke.'
-
-When the manager and the servants had taken their departure--the
-inspector and sergeant had gone long since--Mr. Dunn retired to his
-bedroom, and, after turning the key in the door, took off his coat and
-waistcoat, and seated himself on the edge of the bed.
-
-'So far so good,' he soliloquised; 'so far everything that I have done
-has been perfectly successful. My personal identity ceased on my
-leaving America, and no one can have found any traces of Mr. Dolby,
-the cynical millionaire, in Tom Summers, the sailor, or Mr. Dunn, the
-soft-spoken tourist. One night more and I shake the dust of this land
-from my feet, and can fairly consider myself scot free. That was a
-lucky idea of mine to strew those cinders on the hearth-rug; the smell
-of Tom Summers' smouldering rags might have awakened the keen
-suspicions of those police gentry downstairs. That flannel shirt was
-beginning to smoke confoundedly before I left the room, but that is
-now all provided for; the police themselves were the first persons to
-see what had occurred, and helped to extinguish the smouldering
-carpet. Not one precaution has been omitted, and, distrustful of
-myself as I generally am, I begin to look with pride upon my powers of
-organisation as exhibited in this matter. If my orders have only been
-implicitly obeyed in America, all I could have looked for is
-accomplished. One more night of acting and character-playing, and I
-can rest in peace, and return to reap the reward of all I have gone
-through.'
-
-Then Mr. Dunn rose from the edge of the bed, carefully washed his face
-and hands, put on the gray coat and waistcoat, and, looking
-wonderfully simple and respectable, went down to dinner.
-
-The dinner was ready, and as soon as he heard that his visitor was
-seated, the manager was in attendance to give special directions to
-the waiter, and to exhibit the utmost consideration for one who had
-been the victim of such an untoward accident. When Mr. Dunn had
-finished his fish, the manager ventured to attempt a little
-confidential conversation.
-
-'That unfortunate fire, sir,' said he, 'prevented us hearing more
-about the murder from the police. It is a very, very sad affair. I
-have been with the inspector since I saw you, and though we are not
-going to view the body until to-morrow, I have no doubt that the
-unfortunate gentleman was a Mr. Foster, an American gentleman of great
-wealth who had been staying in this house, and who occupied the very
-rooms adjoining yours, where his things still remain.'
-
-'An American was he?' asked Mr. Dunn.
-
-'Yes, sir, American,' replied the manager; 'very rich, and with an
-enormous fancy for theatricals. Beg your pardon, sir; not very much in
-your line, I should say; but Mr. Foster was very fond of them indeed.
-He came down here with the celebrated Bryan Duval, of whom you may
-have heard, and a party of performers who were going across to
-America. Mr. Foster left this house to see them off, and after that we
-never set eyes upon him.'
-
-'That's a strange thing for an inhabitant of such a town as Liverpool
-to confess,' said Mr. Dunn. 'We in the colonies speak of the mother
-country as the home of the rarest civilisation. What with your gas and
-your much-vaunted police arrangement, we are apt to boast of the
-safety of your streets, of the enormous difference between the state
-of things in which law and order prevail and where they are governed
-by a reckless rabble, such as is sometimes found amongst us; and yet
-here is a most wonderfully cool and audacious murder committed in the
-heart of the second city of the empire, and not discovered for a
-certain number of hours afterwards. By the way, is there no trace of
-the wretch who committed the crime?'
-
-'No, sir, not yet; though I don't know what evidence Inspector Jeffery
-may bring forward at the inquest to-morrow morning. Perhaps you would
-like to be present at the inquest, sir? I am sure I should be able to
-get a place for you.'
-
-'You are very good,' said Mr. Dunn, 'and I should much like to be
-present at the scene, as a study of law, of character, and society;
-but my time to return to Jamaica is drawing nigh and I must get
-through the rest of my British visits as soon as I can. The direct
-steamer for Belfast leaves to-morrow morning?'
-
-The manager replied in the affirmative.
-
-'Then I will go by it,' said Mr. Dunn. 'I have heard much of the
-beauties of Ireland, and I wish to see them before I return. Now I
-think I will make my way to bed, for I have had a fatiguing day. I
-wish you good-night.'
-
-The manager bowed his acknowledgment of his politeness, and Mr. Dunn
-retired.
-
-
-As, about noon next day, Mr. Dunn was proceeding to the cab which was
-to convey him to the dock, he saw in the hall of the hotel the
-presiding goddess in the glass case, and the chambermaid, gallantly
-escorted by Inspector Jeffery, one of the waiters, and the porter.
-
-'The witnesses, sir,' whispered the manager, pointing to them. 'The
-body has been removed to the dead-house, the inquest is just over, and
-the jury found a verdict of wilful murder against some person or
-persons unknown.'
-
-'Unknown!' echoed Mr. Dunn. 'Then there is no trace of the murderer?'
-
-'Not at present, sir,' said the manager. 'Inspector Jeffery had
-nothing to bring forward. I wish you good-morning, sir.'
-
-'Good-morning,' said Mr. Dunn, descending the steps.
-
-Then, as the cab drove off, he opened his shoulders, took a long
-respiration, and muttered between his teeth, 'At last! Scot free!'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-A BLAZE OF TRIUMPH.
-
-
-The voyage on board the Cuba was by no means the dreadful experience
-which Miss Montressor had been led to believe; in fact, when they were
-twenty-four hours clear of the coast of Ireland--where it was, as
-usual, very wet and inclement, the weather always, apparently,
-endeavouring to spoil the pleasure prepared by the hospitable
-inhabitants for their visitors--she roused up and enjoyed herself very
-much. At first the mere idea of food upset her, and she declared that
-the constant round of meals was 'disgusting;' but it was soon observed
-that 'when refection bell did call,' Miss Montressor was one of the
-first persons to smilingly take up her position at the board, and one
-of the last to leave it. It was a part of Mr. Bryan Duval's policy
-that everything should be done in the most liberal manner, and there
-was consequently abundance of wine and of very excellent quality, on
-the merits and demerits of which Mr. Duval would descant to the
-admiration of the company.
-
-This was not the only point on which, that eminent artist won renown.
-He expounded his views on certain questions of seamanship to the
-captain with such a wealth of professional phraseology that the worthy
-officer, who was not in the habit of consorting much with his
-theatrical passengers, looked upon him with especial favour, asked him
-constantly into his deckhouse, and ventilated at length--almost, as
-Byran thought, at too great length--his original theories concerning
-currents and wind storms. When, moreover, Mr. Duval had corrected the
-third officer, who was a Yorkshireman, about the exact position of a
-tobacconist's shop in Boar-lane, Leeds, and had demonstrated that a
-Scotch professor of St. Andrew's University, who was looked upon as a
-miracle of learning, was little better than an idiot, he was generally
-allowed to be a man of universal genius, and respected accordingly. As
-for the officers of the ship, they took the greatest fancy to him. He
-was unanimously elected an honorary member of their mess, and the
-deliciously titillating and highly-spiced dishes which, at a late hour
-of the night, he prepared in the purser's cabin, the effervescent
-cooling drinks which he manufactured to go with them, and the romantic
-little Spanish love songs which he sung afterwards to the
-accompaniment of a guitar, formed the theme of conversation for many a
-future voyage.
-
-Mr. Skrymshire, the low comedian, who had been seen in the exercise of
-his profession by several of the passengers, both in London and
-Liverpool, and from whom a fund of amusement was expected, did not
-quite come up to popular anticipation, as he passed the principal part
-of the voyage moaning in his berth in the agonies of illness, and
-requesting, as a personal favour, that he might be thrown overboard.
-It was not until the ship had passed Sandy Hook that he put in an
-appearance on deck; and she was safe at anchor in the quarantine
-ground--where, in consequence of her late arrival, she was compelled
-to remain during the night--before he cracked his first joke.
-
-All the party were up on deck very early the next morning, looking
-with admiring eyes at the beauties of Staten Island, and with wonder
-at the steamers and ferry-boats darting in and out. Acting upon the
-private hint given to her by Bryan Duval the night before, Miss
-Montressor had paid a little special attention to her toilette, and
-looked very pretty and fascinating.
-
-'Quite right, my dear,' said Bryan, when lie saw her--he himself was
-arrayed in a high hat with a curly brim, blue body coat, gray trousers,
-and jean boots with patent leather tips--'quite right, my dear; they
-go in immensely for this sort of thing here, and you will find that we
-shall have a few of the press fellows on board before we land, and no
-end of them waiting at the wharf. First impressions are everything,
-and half a column in the _Scarifier_, a personal paragraph in the
-_Growler_, and a subleader in the _Democrat_ to-morrow morning, will
-do us good service with our first night's audience; besides, Van Buren
-is a man who fancies himself a lady-killer, and I want him to be
-impressed.'
-
-'And won't you be at all jealous?' asked Miss Montressor, looking up
-coquettishly.
-
-'I jealous?' cried Bryan. 'Of course; stark, staring, raving crazy
-with jealousy. I'd push those side curls a little further back, my
-dear, if I were you; and just let me tighten that pin at the back of
-your collar. That will do nicely. Have you seen anything of
-Skrymshire?'
-
-'The last time he appeared he was looking very melancholy and
-disconsolate,' said Miss Montressor.
-
-'It is most important that Van Buren should not see him until he is in
-better feather,' said Bryan. 'There will be some champagne cocktail
-going on when these press fellows come on board, and I will take care
-that Skrymshire has a dose of that to pick him up. A low comedian with
-a horse's head and that suit of clothes is enough to frighten any
-manager out of an engagement.'
-
-Mr. Duval's predictions were fulfilled. The health officer had
-scarcely rowed off after his interview with the doctor when another
-boat was seen approaching the vessel, containing certain members of
-the press, who quickly appeared on board and were conducted to Mr.
-Duval, by whom they were received with great courtesy. His ability and
-geniality had made him a general favourite during his last visit to
-America, and his return, bringing out a company of whom--notably of
-Miss Montressor--great things were expected, was hailed with delight.
-The literary gentlemen, who had a general air of having been up all
-night, and not having thought it worth while to devote much attention
-to their toilets in the morning, were conducted to the cabin, where
-champagne cocktails and other exhilarating drinks were provided for
-them by Mr. Duval, who, when the liquor had well circulated,
-despatched a trusty emissary to conduct Miss Montressor to their
-presence.
-
-In her fresh morning toilette, with her pleasant smiles and frank
-ingenuous manner, the London actress took by storm the susceptible
-hearts of the literary gentlemen. They had come with the express
-intention of interviewing her, and, lo and behold, the most they could
-do was to utter little compliments and flattery, while most of their
-time was occupied in staring at her. But Mr. Duval, who knew exactly
-what was wanted, was not going to let slip such a golden opportunity,
-and went about from one to the other, answering such questions as he
-thought might have been propounded.
-
-'What should I say her height was? About five feet five, I should
-think--a little taller, perhaps, with those new French heels, which
-set the foot off, but are deuced dangerous for walking. Ah, Willie
-Webster, you rascal,' whispering in the ear of a dirty little man in a
-wideawake, 'you're the lad for the ladies, and you're death on
-complexions, I know. Look at hers; look at the Montressor's. That's
-the real thing--none of your bismuth and pearl powder, but with the
-warm tinge on it which she has caught on her voyage from the sea and
-sun. Natural daughter of a most distinguished man, my dear Carter;
-blue blood, Norman descent, and all that sort of thing--look at it in
-her hands and feet, that's where the real breeding comes out. You
-don't care about noble descent in this country, I know--honesty,
-virtue, simple citizen, and all that kind of thing; but you do admire
-hands and feet, and most of your ladies have them in perfection.'
-
-The press gentlemen went off in their swift-sailing little boat, and
-landing before the huge steamer worked her way to the wharf, so
-aroused the enthusiasm of those waiting there by their description of
-Miss Montressor's charms, that when she was seen on the deck, leaning
-on Bryan Duval's arm, she was greeted with great applause, cheerings,
-and waving of handkerchiefs. Most interested among those assembled on
-the wharf to meet the voyagers was Mr. Van Buren, a strikingly
-handsome man of between forty and fifty, with jet-black hair in crisp
-waves over his well-shaped head, a classic profile, and an excellent
-figure. He was naturally nervous, for the good old British comedies,
-which were the staple attraction at Van Buren's Varieties, had ceased
-to attract, and the manager was looking to the engagement of Duval's
-company to recoup him his losses, and finish his season brilliantly.
-Dogging his heels was his friend and adviser Mr. Morris Jacobs, who
-had entered the service of Mr. Van Buren's father as call-boy at three
-dollars a week, but who was now reputed to be worth half a million,
-and to be the real owner of Van Buren's Varieties and almost of Van
-Buren himself, for the manager-actor was fond of pleasure, and was
-besides a great sportsman. He had always horses in training somewhere,
-and whenever he could get away from the theatre he was rushing off to
-look after them; while Mr. Morris Jacobs had but one thought in life,
-the accumulation of money; and finding that could be best attended to
-at the Varieties, there he remained, and there, morning, noon, and
-night, he was to be found. But when Mr. Van Buren had been presented
-to Miss Montressor by Bryan Duval all his nervousness vanished. He
-bowed his curly head over her daintily gloved hand, and lifted it to
-his lips. Then turning to Mr. Jacobs, he muttered,
-
-'No use shinning about any more, Morris; trump card's found!'
-
-More and more delights were there in store for the newly-arrived
-troupe: banquets in their rooms at the Fifth-avenue Hotel, bushels of
-cards left by distinguished callers, artistic clubs proffering
-receptions, and invitations for all kinds of entertainments. Miss
-Montressor was in the highest state of delight. 'If this is America,'
-she said to Bryan Duval, 'I rather think I am likely to be pleased
-with it.'
-
-Intelligence of the arrival of the star company, and their brilliant
-reception in New York, speedily reached Mrs. Griswold's house. Helen,
-with her usual cordial kindness, sent the newspaper which contained
-the lengthiest and most sensational account of the proceedings of the
-popular reception, and the programme of the performance, to Mrs.
-Jenkins. She would have gone to the nursery to read it all for her,
-and enjoy the pleasure and excitement with which she felt the nurse
-would peruse it, but she happened just then to be detained by callers.
-
-Mrs. Jenkins clutched the paper from the hand of the servant who
-brought it to her, and read it with the utmost avidity. When, shortly
-afterwards, Mrs. Griswold went up-stairs to pay her customary visit to
-the baby before dressing for lunch, she found the nurse in rather a
-fidgety state; she was absent while Mrs. Griswold talked to her, she
-answered one or two of her questions at random, and altogether her
-manner was so _distrait_ that Helen resolved to find out what it all
-meant.
-
-'Has anything happened to you?' she said; 'have you had any bad news?
-Pray tell me.'
-
-'No, ma'am,' said Mrs. Jenkins, 'I have not had any bad news, but I
-should like very much to go out for a while; there is some one come to
-New York that I know, and I should like to call and see her.'
-
-Perhaps a transitory feeling of surprise crossed Helen's mind at the
-unusual reticence of Mrs. Jenkins, who by this time had become so
-familiarised with her friendly manner and her kindly genial interest
-in all that concerned the dwellers in her house that she would have
-supposed the nurse would at once have told her who the person was, and
-all about it; but Helen's kindness was not of the exacting sort, and
-she received this brief communication with her usual sweet compliance.
-
-'Of course you can go out,' she said. 'I will take care of baby; I can
-take you in the carriage wherever you want to go, and then you can
-leave baby with me.'
-
-'No, thank you,' answered Mrs. Jenkins, with some embarrassment and a
-rising colour, which Helen at once perceived, but passed over quite
-unnoticed, concluding that Mrs. Jenkins's confusion had something to
-do with the good-for-nothingness of her husband--a point on which
-Helen deeply commiserated her lot, because, though she had been told
-no particulars, she felt perfectly convinced that Mr. Jenkins's
-good-for-nothingness, and no other cause, was at the bottom of his
-wife's present dependent situation--'no, thank you, ma'am, I would
-rather go alone, if you please; and if you will allow me, I should
-like very much to take baby. I think you can trust me not to take her
-into any place or to see any person of whom you would disapprove.'
-
-'Indeed, I can,' said Helen cordially. 'I can trust you most
-completely. You shall take baby, and you shall go where you like, and
-stay as long as you like, and,' she added, laying her hand gently on
-Mrs. Jenkins's shoulder, as she stooped over the nursing chair, 'never
-think it necessary to tell me more than you wish, never think that I
-wish to drive your confidence faster than its natural pace.'
-
-Then she immediately left the room, and Mrs. Jenkins, after a few
-minutes, got herself and the child ready and went out.
-
-
-Miss Montressor was very much pleased with the aspect of affairs in
-New York. For the first time in her life, she felt herself a person of
-real and indubitable importance; the reception had pleased her; she
-was charmed with the look of the city, and delighted with her quarters
-at Fifth-avenue Hotel; the largeness and liberality of all the
-arrangements for public comfort, which cannot fail to strike the
-newly-arrived visitor in New York, duly impressed themselves upon Miss
-Montressor, and she had hardly become accustomed to her large and
-pleasant rooms, she was still discovering new perfections in them, and
-finding out points of advantage in everything American over everything
-English, when she was told that a person wished to see her.
-
-Visions of eager strangers bent on obtaining her autograph and
-photograph, dreams of interviewing, even notions of a sharp contention
-between rival managers, flashed in a moment across her lively
-imagination, as she requested that the person--no indication of the
-sex of the applicant had been given--should be invited to walk up.
-
-Miss Montressor was already very handsomely dressed, so that nothing
-remained but for her to assume a statuesque and striking attitude in
-which to await the arrival of her visitor. Half a minute sufficed to
-show her that her preparations were thrown away: no fashionable
-lounger, no splendidly-dressed lady, no eager man of business, was
-this visitor who thus early claimed admittance to her; only a
-plainly-dressed woman, carrying an infant in her arms, who stretched
-her disengaged hand eagerly towards her with a glad cry of, 'Clara!
-Clara!'
-
-Miss Montressor recoiled--to do her justice, it was only for a
-moment--the next she took the woman's hand, and saying, 'Hush! do not
-speak so loud,' kissed her.
-
-'O, how glad I am to see you, Clara! You see, your grand new name
-comes quite easy to me. I have never forgotten that you told me not to
-call you Matty any more. How glad I was when I heard you were coming
-out, and though at first I took it very unkind that you did not write
-to tell me, I soon knew it was because you were sure I should see it
-in the papers.'
-
-The speaker had seated herself, loosened her shawl, and taken off her
-bonnet before Miss Montressor had recovered from the slight constraint
-of the first surprise.
-
-'Yes,' she said, 'I am very glad, indeed, to see you; but you have put
-me in a mortal fright. I don't want to be unkind, you know--and you're
-a sensible woman--only think how it would ruin me if Jenkins came
-about after me here.'
-
-'Jenkins can't, my dear soul.' said the other. 'He is away, he ain't
-in New York; and if he was he would do nothing to harm you, bless you.
-He and I both understand that we must keep our distance from you
-now--not that you're not a good sister, as you always was and always
-will be, but for your sake and ourselves too--only you must forgive my
-coming to you. I really couldn't bear it, and I knew it was all safe;
-it is such a time since I have seen you, and you have done such a deal
-in the time. Only to think, Clara, of your being a regular star, and
-leading lady at the Thespian.'
-
-Miss Montressor laughed a good-natured laugh, but with a peculiar
-sound in it, which comes of a superior knowledge of the world and a
-truer test of greatness than that of the speaker.
-
-'My dear, you have got very funny notions about me. I have not done
-badly; but as to the great things, I have not many of them to count up,
-and this is the very first really big chance I have had.'
-
-'Don't be afraid that I shall spoil it,' said Bess, laying the
-sleeping child comfortably in a corner of a luxurious settee, and
-seating herself beside Miss Montressor, with one arm placed fondly
-round her neck, while her honest gray eyes, full of tears, looked
-searchingly in the other's face. 'I would rather never see you for
-half my life than harm you, dear; and I suppose it would harm you,
-even in this country, where everybody is free and equal, they say, if
-you were known to have a servant for a sister?'
-
-'A servant, Bess!' said Miss Montressor with surprise and displeasure.
-'How is that? What do you mean?'
-
-'Just what I say to you. I am a servant. I am a nurse in a very good
-family here in town; it is a good place, and I am happy, trusted,
-useful, and comfortable.'
-
-'Nurse!' said Miss Montressor; 'is that your nurse-child, then? I
-thought it was your own.'
-
-'Mine? O dear no. My baby was a poor little cripple, and he was taken
-away from all his troubles a little while ago. Jenkins was leaving me
-for a profitable job he had got, and I could not stand the loneliness;
-besides we were very poor, and so I took a place. It is Mrs.
-Griswold's, in Fifth-avenue, and I get along very well indeed. Mrs.
-Griswold is alone, like myself. Her husband is in Europe; and she gave
-me leave to come here to-day, and to bring the child, so as I might be
-free, as kind as possible.'
-
-'Fifth-avenue?' said Miss Montressor; 'why, that's a fashionable part
-of New York. I know that much, though I have only been one night in
-the place. I knew it before, however. This lady must be a person of
-importance. My dear Bess, you didn't let out to her where you were
-coming to?'
-
-'I did not,' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'I only told her some one had come to
-New York that I wanted to see, and she never asked another question.
-She is a perfect lady, is Mrs. Griswold, and respects everybody's
-confidence. She will ask me nothing when I get back; and when you meet
-her, I am sure you need not be afraid she will know that the famous
-Miss Montressor is her nurse's sister.'
-
-There was just the slightest tone of hurt feeling in Mrs. Jenkins's
-kindly voice, and Miss Montressor, who was as kindly as herself at
-bottom--only a little overlaid by the affectation of her profession
-and her associations--sympathetically perceived it. 'The gentleman
-talked nonsense, Bess,' she said, bestowing on her sister a hearty
-hug, to which the other responded. 'Here we are now, and here we may
-not be long uninterrupted, so let us have a talk while we may. What's
-Jenkins about?'
-
-'I don't know, darling. No harm, but some business of a private
-nature, which will keep him away for some time--it's only a commission
-agency, but I don't know in what.'
-
-Mrs. Jenkins was the most loyal of wives, and even to her beloved
-sister, the pride and delight of her life, would not have betrayed her
-husband's confidence, and Miss Montressor was in reality profoundly
-indifferent to the answer to the question which she had just asked.
-She did not care one straw where Jenkins was, provided he was not in
-New York, or what he was doing, provided his occupation was not of a
-nature to expose her to any risk of contact with him. Satisfied on
-this point, she was quite ready to respond to her sister's
-affectionate inquisitiveness respecting herself and her concerns, and
-the two plunged immediately into an animated and confidential
-conversation, which brought out the best sides of the characters of
-both.
-
-Miss Montressor gave her sister a tolerably correct and exceedingly
-pleasant description of her career during the years which had parted
-them--years which had been very prosperous on the whole for the
-friendless young actress, and not unmarked by acts of generosity
-towards her sister, whose lot had been very different. That Mrs.
-Jenkins was so poor as she had been when we first made her
-acquaintance in Bleeker-street was not Miss Montressor's fault; she
-had frequently assisted her sister and her good-for-nothing husband
-out of her, at first, very moderate means; but when Bess saw that
-Jenkins's good-for-nothingness was an established fact, her honesty of
-purpose and truthfulness of mind made her make a resolution to accept
-no more assistance from Clara. 'I don't mind working hard,' was her
-mental comment on the situation, 'that he may have money to
-waste--I am his wife; but Clara shall not do it. I will never touch a
-shilling of her earnings more;' and she had written to Clara asking
-her to abstain from sending them money.
-
-This, to tell the truth, Miss Montressor, who had had an instinctively
-bad opinion of her brother-in-law, was not sorry to do; and so her
-knowledge of the Jenkinses' circumstances became slight and confused.
-Her sister could not very well keep her informed of them without
-appearing to ask for the aid which she had deprecated; she therefore
-wrote vaguely and seldom, and Miss Montressor had acquiesced in this
-latterly, contenting herself with the reflection that she was now so
-extensively reported in the newspapers as being here or there, and
-playing this or that engagement to more or less appreciative
-audiences, that really Bess would know as much about her from the
-journals as she cared to tell, for there were one or two things she
-did not wish to tell. But she was brimful of news now, and Mrs.
-Jenkins's impression that Miss Montressor was by far the finest
-actress in existence was deepened by the narrative of triumphs which
-her sister poured into her ear. It was not an untrue narrative, it was
-only coloured; and yet, with all their confidence, with all their
-eager talk, there was a reticence on both sides.
-
-Miss Montressor never mentioned Mr. Dolby.
-
-Mrs. Jenkins made no allusion to Trenton Warren.
-
-Bess had a great deal to say respecting Mrs. Griswold; and here told
-her sister, with lively pleasure, of that lady's promise to take her
-with herself to the play. 'But,' she added, 'she will have the
-satisfaction of seeing you before I shall, Clara. You see, I didn't
-care to press her so much as asking to go on the first or second night
-would have done--I thought it would not seem reasonable, and might
-arouse a suspicion; and if it did not do you harm, it might make you
-angry; and I would rather know you were playing for a whole week to
-all New York, and turning the place upside down about you, and sit at
-home without the chance of seeing you, than vex you; and so I have got
-to wait patiently until my betters are served. But I know she will
-keep her word; and, as I was going to say, she will see you before I
-shall, for she is going to-night.'
-
-'To-night?' said Miss Montressor; 'that's quick! Is she as fond of the
-play as you are?'
-
-'I think she is very fond of it. She tells me she and Mr. Griswold
-always went to see anything that was worth seeing. But now that he is
-away she is very particular indeed. She never goes anywhere except
-amongst old friends, and she does that very sparingly; and as to a
-theatre or concert, she has never put her foot in one since he left.'
-
-'O, then, Mr. Griswold is not at home?' said Miss Montressor.
-
-'O dear no! he went away before I came. I have never seen him.'
-
-'Where is he?'
-
-'He is in London, I believe, doing some business in a very large way.
-People say Griswold is a very rich man; and I suppose he wants to be
-richer, like all the rest of them, and must pay a price for it--pretty
-big price too, going to the other end of the world, and leaving his
-young wife alone so long. She mopes dreadfully; I am quite glad she is
-going to-night, if it is only to cheer her up. She was in great
-spirits at getting so good a place. It was bespoke long before you
-came.'
-
-'You had been talking about me, I suppose?'
-
-'Of course I had. I had just told her you were the finest actress in
-the world, and she had better make haste to see you.'
-
-'Have you any idea in what part of the theatre Mrs. Griswold would be
-sitting?' said Miss Montressor. 'I very seldom try to see any one from
-the stage; and most times, when one does try, one cannot do it. But I
-will have a look at her, if you will tell me where she will sit.'
-
-'I can tell you,' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'She will be right at the end of
-the dress circle, last seat but two, right-hand side; and I know what
-she is going to wear, so that you can tell her by her dress. An old
-gentleman and an old lady and their son are going with her--it is just
-a party of four.'
-
-'Tell me about her dress,' said Miss Montressor, 'and the colour of
-her hair.'
-
-'She has a quantity of very fine brown hair,' said Mrs. Jenkins,
-'which matches her eyes, and she never wears any ornaments in it. The
-dress she is going to wear to-night is pale blue velvet, square cut,
-with turnovers, and very fine guipure lace. She always wears plain
-gold ornaments with that gown, and a blue-and-gold fan.'
-
-'Very well,' said Miss Montressor; 'I will look out for the blue
-velvet and the guipure, for the gold ornaments, and the blue-and-gold
-fan.'
-
-A timepiece rang out the hour.
-
-'Dear me, how late it is!' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'I had no notion I had
-been here so long. I think I must go now, Clara; but I shall get down
-to see you again before long, and you will come to see me, won't you?'
-
-'My dear Bess, what are you thinking of?' replied her sister. 'How do
-you suppose I am to keep the secret, which you see I cannot help
-keeping? It is not unkindness and it is not snobbishness; it is only
-for the sake of the interests which I cannot afford to throw over. If
-I am seen going to Mrs. Griswold's house to visit Mrs. Griswold's
-nurse, why, if she didn't find it out, as I suppose she need not--no
-doubt I could always see you in a room to ourselves--just fancy how
-the servants would talk. There is not one in New York, I suppose, by
-this time who does not know my face; and it would be all over the
-place in a few hours. No, no you must come and see me when you can. It
-is muck safer, and just as easy.'
-
-'I really think you might let me tell Mrs. Griswold,' said Mrs.
-Jenkins; 'you have no notion how kind she is, and how free from
-nonsense and pretence of all sorts. Her heart would be touched if I
-told her how we two were left poor motherless children to the care of
-our old aunt, who pushed us out into the world when we were almost
-babies, to do the best we could each for ourselves, and how you did
-the best, and it was very good, and I did--well, not quite the worst
-after all.'
-
-A sweet smile, though sad, passed over the frank features of the
-speaker, a spark of the ever-burning lamp of life within her, that
-light which glorified even so mean an object as Ephraim Jenkins.
-
-'Good Heavens,' thought Miss Montressor, 'she actually believes in
-that vagabond still, and is as fond of him as ever; she is perfectly
-incorrigible!' She did not give utterance to these sentiments, but
-took a most affectionate leave of her sister, even bestowing some
-transient expressions of admiration upon little Mary Griswold, who was
-wide awake by this time, and staring about her with a greedy curiosity
-which succeeds the first stages of stolid indifference incidental to
-babyhood. She did not kiss the child, she was not quite equal to
-that--Mrs. Jenkins wondered how she could deny herself the
-indulgence--but she patted her and chirped to her, and sent her sister
-away delighted with her amiability and her affability.
-
-How hard it was for Bess to keep from talking of her visit when she
-went to assist at Mrs. Griswold's evening toilette nobody but Bess
-knew. When Mrs. Griswold had gone down-stairs, and driven away in the
-carriage which her friends had brought to fetch her, arrayed and
-looking very handsome in the pale blue velvet gown, with the guipure
-trimming, in the gold ornaments, and carrying her blue-and-gold fan,
-Mrs. Jenkins indemnified herself for the unnatural restraint by
-talking rapturously to the baby.
-
-
-An enormous crowd of well-dressed people was flocking into Van Buren's
-Varieties, to the great delight of Mr. Van Buren himself, who stood at
-the checktaker's wicket, with his friend Mr. Morris Jacobs by his
-side. Mr. Van Buren had that amount of vanity which is inseparable
-from the theatrical profession, and to see himself recognised by
-members of the crowd, to hear the flattering remarks made on his
-personal appearance and his histrionic talents, rendered him supremely
-happy. Mr. Jacobs, who had no pretensions to manly beauty, being a
-short stout man, with an enormous head and an exaggerated Jewish cast
-of countenance, contented himself with silently counting the people as
-they came in, and keeping a wary eye upon the checktaker. It was a
-long time since the Varieties had boasted such an audience; every seat
-was taken, and the large lobbies at the back of the circles were
-inconveniently crowded. There was scarcely one in the many-sided
-phases of New York society which was not represented. The journals had
-done their work so well, and Mr. Van Buren and Mr. Jacobs had worked
-their various agencies with such success, that a desire to see the
-English actress and renew acquaintance with the handsome tragedian had
-been generated amongst people who had not visited the theatre for
-years. Good old Knickerbocker families, prouder of the 'Van' before
-their names than of the enormous fortunes which had accrued to them
-from the sale of the lands which had once formed the gardens and
-grounds of their old red-brick houses, and which now formed avenues
-and streets in the most fashionable districts; steady church-goers,
-whose wildest idea of dissipation was attendance at a lecture or a
-mass meeting; men who passed their days in Wall-street, and their
-evenings at the extemporised exchange in the hall of the Fifth-avenue
-Hotel--all these classes seemed to have caught the infection, and were
-largely represented. The regular attendants at theatrical
-representations--the club men, Fifth-avenue families, the people who
-wished to be thought 'in the style,' and whose newly-gotten wealth has
-made of them a plutocracy as imperious, as intolerant, and as hollow
-as any aristocracy in the Old World--all these were in fullest force.
-Such a reunion was seldom to be seen at so late a period; and the
-buzzing conversation of friends which took place before the
-commencement of the play was not, as usual, about the balls and
-entertainments to which they were invited, but treated rather of their
-intended summer flights; the various merits of style at Saratoga,
-rural quiet at Lake George, boisterous frivolity at Long Branch, or
-sea breezes at Newport being fully discussed.
-
-Behind the scenes, too, there was very great excitement. Bryan Duval
-knew exactly the kind of audience he might expect to welcome his
-return and Miss Montressor's first appearance; he knew that on such an
-occasion his appeal ought to be made rather to the sympathies than the
-intelligence of the people; and so, reserving for a further occasion
-_Romeo and Juliet_, and other specimens of poetical drama in which he
-knew that he and Miss Montressor could help each other largely, and
-make themselves appreciated by the critical and the educated, he had
-determined upon commencing his campaign with the celebrated Irish
-drama, _Cruiskeen Lawn_. The American version of this play--it
-underwent considerable modification when acted in the United
-Kingdom--contained a goodly amount of treasonable speeches,
-denunciation of British kings and British government, and therefore
-greatly acceptable to that portion of the New York population which
-made their entry into America through the fair haven of Castle Garden;
-the dialogue, too, was sprinkled with numerous tropes and metaphors
-which Bryan had carefully culled from Tom Moore's poetical works. When
-there is to be added to this that it gave scope for pretty scenery,
-quaint coquettish peasant dresses for Miss Montressor, much
-love-making, and various astonishing feats, such as diving down a well
-and rushing through a blazing cottage, for Mr. Duval himself, it was
-evident that those who loved sensation were likely to be gratified.
-
-Mr. Duval had arrived at the theatre early, donned his stage costume,
-and was occupying himself in looking after the members of his troupe.
-He found Mr. Covington, like most novices, in deep distress as regards
-his costume, and assisted that young gentleman to make up his face,
-and showed him how to wear his sword. He gave Mr. Skrymshire a little
-more red eyebrow, and threw a Hibernian expression into the low
-comedian's somewhat long face by the simple process of making two
-thick black streaks under his nose, which imparted to that organ a
-turn-up appearance. With Mrs. Regan, on the contrary, he had to tone
-down the Hibernianism, that worthy old woman being desirous of
-expressing her nationality by entering into a fight with her
-attendant dresser. Finally, Mr. Duval knocked at Miss Montressor's
-dressing-room, and being bidden to come in, stood in the doorway and
-expressed his delight by clapping his hands.
-
-'Nothing could be better, my dear,' said he. 'Why on earth didn't I
-have you for the original Kathleen Mavourneen in London? If I had, I
-should have made 32,000_l_. by this time. The rouge a little higher up
-on the left cheek, dear, I think, and the right eyebrow, too, a
-hair's-breadth longer--that will do nicely! You must take off your
-rings, dear; peasant girls in Kerry don't wear blue silk stockings
-either, but that's a poetical license; but I do not think the public
-will stand the rings. That's right! Now just remember one thing, that
-the Irish brogue is permanent, and not a temporary affliction, and
-that you are sometimes in the habit of forgetting it, and talking in
-your native Regent-street accent; think of that, and hold to it all
-through; and if you stick at all for words--I don't think you will,
-for you struck me as being letter perfect--but if you do, just say
-"Arrah!" and "Bedad!" until I can get alongside and prompt you. Now,
-then, it is my time to go on.'
-
-Two minutes after, an enormous roar of applause welcomed Mr. Bryan's
-return to the United States, a roar which very speedily was exceeded
-twenty fold by the greeting given to Miss Montressor. There is an idea
-that an American audience is not enthusiastic, but it is a false one,
-for if you please them there is no people so lavish in their favour.
-The ladies waved their handkerchiefs, the gentlemen cheered and
-clapped their hands, the rougher portion of the community roared and
-shrieked until they were hoarse, and Miss Montressor stood curtsying
-and curtsying, her hands crossed over her little blue bodice, and her
-eyes demurely cast upon the ground.
-
-When silence was restored and the business of the play recommenced,
-she took advantage of the first opportunity to look in the direction
-where, according to Bess's information, she expected to see Mrs.
-Griswold. There, accordingly, at the end of the first circle, in the
-last seat but one on the right-hand side, sat a lady with a quantity
-of fine brown hair, dressed in plain blue velvet and guipure lace, and
-bearing a blue-and-gold fan. What caused Miss Montressor to start as
-she gazed upon this face? What rendered her so oblivious for the
-moment that Bryan Duval had to prompt her? Mrs. Griswold had never
-been out of America, and yet Miss Montressor could have sworn she had
-seen her before. Whenever she could she stole a glance at the face,
-and still found it familiar to her; but it was not until nearly the
-close of the play that the right idea came to her.
-
-It came like an inspiration. 'The portrait!' she said to herself; 'the
-portrait! That woman may or may not be Mrs. Griswold, but assuredly
-she is the original of the portrait set in the watch which was shown
-to me on the terrace at Richmond by Mr. Foster.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-STARTLING NEWS.
-
-
-The curtain had fallen upon the happy marriage of Kathleen Mavourneen
-and Comether O'Shaughnessy. The talented representatives of the two
-characters had been called forward several times amidst huzzahs, and
-most of the audience had quitted the theatre; and Miss Montressor had
-retired to her dressing-room, where, throwing herself into a chair,
-she fell into a reverie.
-
-'What could be the meaning of that extraordinary resemblance between
-the lady who had sat in the very seat which Bess had assured her had
-been taken by Mrs. Griswold, and the portrait which Mr. Foster had
-shown her on the terrace at Richmond, as that of his wife? There must
-have been some mistake; Bess must have made a blunder about the exact
-position in the circle, or Mrs. Griswold must have been unable to
-obtain the seat on which she had first set her mind!' But then came
-the identity of the costume the lady in the circle wore--the exact
-dress which Bess had described as that which her mistress was about to
-wear; the blue velvet and guipure lace, the plain gold ornaments, the
-blue-and-gold fan--all were there. It was most astonishing--Miss
-Montressor admitted that; but she could not understand why, as she
-admitted it, a sombre presentiment, a sense of some impending
-calamity, seemed to come across her.
-
-She was roused by a knock at the door, following immediately on which
-Mr. Bryan Duval put in his head.
-
-'Clara, my clear,' said he, 'I will get dressed as quickly as
-possible; I have got a room at Delmonico's.'
-
-'Delmonico's!' echoed Miss Montressor. 'What's that?
-
-'Something very nice,' said Mr. Duval; 'the best restaurant in the
-world. The piece has been such a go, that I could not do less than ask
-a few people to an improvised supper--Van Buren and two or three of
-the press people, you know. Of course we must have you, and old Mrs.
-Regan will come as chaperone. It will be remarkably jolly, and I
-shouldn't wonder if there were a few lines about it in to-morrow
-morning's paper, which will be quite worth the expense.'
-
-Supper was a weakness with Miss Montressor. When she was acting she
-didn't care particularly about dinner, invariably refused all
-invitations to that meal, and ate sparingly at a comparatively early
-hour; but supper had always been her favourite amusement. In the early
-days of her stage apprenticeship, long before her Christian name was
-Clara or her surname Montressor, when she was a struggling, raw-boned,
-weak-eyed girl, playing chambermaids and general utility in a
-provincial theatre, with a salary of eighteen shillings a week, she
-used to devote a portion of that modest sum to the purchase of pigs'
-pettitoes and polonies, on which, with a pint of very flat porter, she
-used to regale herself in her wretched garret after her return from
-the theatre. After she had established herself, and made a success in
-later life, she kept up the same practice, the Brompton villa being
-substituted for the garret, boned turkeys, _pâté de foie gras_, and
-cold game for the delicacies above mentioned, and the society of
-pleasant Bohemians for the cruel solitude. So Miss Montressor
-intimated to Bryan Duval her acceptance of his invitation, and made
-all possible haste to get ready for the scene of action.
-
-As soon as she was dressed she joined Mr. Duval and Mrs. Regan, and
-the three drove off in a carriage together.
-
-Miss Montressor thought there was an air of comfort as she stepped
-across the little garden and entered the bright cheery hall at
-Delmonico's, with its bureau immediately fronting the street, its
-glimpse of well-dressed men and women, attentive waiters, steaming
-dishes, and silver-necked flasks lolling out of ice-pails, in the
-large room on the left, and its broad staircase, up and down which the
-nimble attendants were flitting. But when she found herself on the
-first floor, in the room furnished with extravagant richness, but in
-perfect French taste, and looked through the open folding-doors into
-another room, where the round table for a dozen convives was already
-spread, and shimmering with its accumulation of plate and glass, she
-could not resist clapping and giving a little scream of delight.
-
-'Welcome to the star of the evening,' cried Mr. Van Buren, his hair
-poodled up into a magnificent curling crop, his moustache lacquered
-and pointed in the latest fashion, advancing to do homage. 'I have to
-thank you, my dear young lady, for your performance to-night.'
-
-'If you were pleased,' said Miss Montressor, with a sweet smile, which
-went straight to the heart of the inflammable manager, 'I have every
-reason to be satisfied.'
-
-'Pleased!' cried he. 'I not merely look upon the success as certain,
-but I regard this as the first of a series of visits which you shall
-pay to this country, and by which I shall be enabled to help you to
-realise a fortune; and there is something selfish in the thought,' he
-added, 'for it will not merely give me the assurance of seeing you
-constantly, but enable me to support your absence with the certain
-idea of your return.'
-
-Miss Montressor smiled upon him again, and Mr. Van Buren immediately
-began to calculate how he could dispose of the thirty-fourth Mrs. Van
-Buren, who was at that moment on his hands, and substitute the new
-favourite for her.
-
-'Now,' said Mr. Duval, bustling about, 'let us get to table as soon as
-possible. Those who have not been introduced to Miss Montressor
-already had better come to me, and I will perform the ceremony. My
-dear Clara, I think you already know Mr. Willy Webster of the
-_Democrat_' he added, pushing forward a dirty little man with soiled
-shirt, and clothes shining with grease--'not clean, perhaps, but
-decidedly clever,' said Bryan, dropping his voice; 'and you must shake
-hands with him.'
-
-Mr. Looby of the _Scarifier_ and Mr. O'Gog of the _Growl_, came
-forward and made their obeisance; Henry P. Remington and Samuel D.
-Silliman, two young men about town, who had more money than brains,
-and less manners than either; a gray-headed man, with a thin keen
-face, who seemed to know everything and every one, and who was
-universally addressed as Uncle William, completed the party.
-
-'Now are we all here?' said Bryan Duval, who had seated Miss Montressor
-between himself and Mr. Van Buren, and who was compelled to stand up
-to look round the table, so large and luxurious was the basket of
-flowers in the centre--'are we all here?'
-
-'No,' said Willy Webster from the other side of the table. 'Here, next
-me, is a chair for our good friend Banquo.'
-
-'Who is our good friend Banquo on this occasion? Let me see,' said
-Bryan Duval. 'Looby, O'Gog--'pon my word, I can't recollect.'
-
-'I thought you told me you had sent round to the _Globe_ office to
-tell Brighthurst to come up?' said Van Buren.
-
-'To be sure,' cried Bryan. 'Brighthurst is Banquo. Why on earth is he
-not here?'
-
-'I sincerely hope he will come,' said Willy Webster.
-
-'And I--and I!' cried several others.
-
-'Mr. Brighthurst seems to be a general favourite,' said Miss
-Montressor to her neighbour--'what are his particular attractions?'
-
-'I am sure I don't know,' said Mr. Van Buren, a little piqued; 'he is
-a good sort of fellow, I believe.'
-
-'Brighthurst, my dear,' said Duval, 'is one of the cleverest men on
-the press of this or any other country. He has written everything in
-his time--five-act plays, political pamphlets, orthodox sermons, and
-hymns which would draw tears from a hard-shell Baptist--then he's very
-good-looking and capital talk. I shall be sincerely disappointed if he
-doesn't come soon. I am sure you and he would get on well together.'
-
-'Do you think he would be horrified at seeing me eating these enormous
-oysters?' said Miss Montressor, with a little playfulness, turning to
-her other neighbour.
-
-'I don't know whether _he_ would, but I am not,' said Mr. Van Buren.
-'Everything you do is done with a grace possessed by no other woman in
-the world.'
-
-'O, Mr. Van Buren,' said the actress with an upward glance, 'that
-compliment is even more difficult to swallow than the large oysters.'
-
-'Now, boys,' cried Bryan Duval, as the first crack of the champagne
-corks was heard, 'there must be an exception to the general rule in
-America to-night--we will have no speech-making.'
-
-'We must have one toast,' cried Willy Webster. 'You won't refuse to
-drink this--Success to the _Cruiskeen Lawn_.'
-
-'Stay!' cried Van Buren, holding up his hand; 'add this to it--And all
-our thanks to the lovely Kathleen!'
-
-The men rose to their feet to drink the toast, and had not resumed
-their seats when the door opened, and a tall middle-aged man, with a
-bald head, aquiline nose, and large grizzled whiskers, entered the
-room. He made straight for Duval, and shook hands with him warmly.
-
-'My dear Brighthurst,' cried the host, 'I am delighted to see you. We
-were all just now regretting your absence, and if you had not been so
-erratic a being, should have wondered at its cause. However, here you
-are--let me present you to Miss Montressor.'
-
-After his introduction, Mr. Brighthurst took the vacant seat, and
-bending over to the young actress, said:
-
-'You must not fully believe all these gentlemen say about my
-Bohemianism and erratic propensities, Miss Montressor; living in
-crystal palaces themselves, they should be the last to throw stones.
-They cannot understand, these frivolous butterflies, that I am a
-steady man, and that I was prevented from coming here by attention to
-my duty.'
-
-'No, we certainly cannot understand that,' said Mr. Looby.
-
-'No, indeed, bedad,' said Mr. O'Gog; 'that is not your usual form,
-Brighthurst, anyhow!'
-
-'It may not be my usual form, sweet flower of Erin,' said Mr.
-Brighthurst; 'but what I say happens to be correct as regards
-to-night. I was detained at the office to write a short editorial upon
-some news which just came in.'
-
-'News!' cried Willy Webster. 'And what was it, pray? Has Tweed been
-nominated for the Presidency, or has A.T. Stewart proved to be nothing
-but a dead head? Has the Commodore issued a new lot of central stock,
-or has John Morrissy joined the Particular Baptists? Speak the word,
-Brighthurst, and ease our impatient minds.'
-
-'What I speak of is English news from the latest files of London
-papers, which were delivered this evening, my dear Willy,' said
-Brighthurst quietly.
-
-'European news!' cried Webster. 'Has Queen Victoria sent for Sam Ward
-at last, or is the Prince Imperial going to be united to Queen
-Isabella, and thus consolidate the two thrones?'
-
-'The news does not treat of any such important personages or
-subjects,' said Brighthurst; 'it simply sends us details of the
-English murder, information of which was cabled some days ago.'
-
-'A murder!' cried Bryan Duval. 'You cannot possibly have the joyful
-news for me that the victim was a tailor living in the neighbourhood
-of Bond-street?'
-
-'No,' said Brighthurst with a slight smile; 'nor was the crime
-committed in London. The victim was an American gentleman of the name
-of Foster.'
-
-Miss Montressor turned deadly pale, and set down untasted the glass
-she was in the act of raising to her lips.
-
-'What name did you say, Brighthurst?' said Duval, turning quickly to
-him. 'Foster, an American? Where was the murder committed?'
-
-'In Liverpool,' said Brighthurst. 'He had been staying at the Adelphi
-Hotel.'
-
-'Great Heavens,' cried Duval, 'this is most terrific!'
-
-Miss Montressor buried her face in her handkerchief, and sobbed
-silently.
-
-'What is the meaning of this?' asked Mr. Van Buren, while a look of
-inquiry passed round the table.
-
-'The meaning is simply that this unfortunate gentleman was well known
-to me and all my party. He took a great interest in theatricals, and
-actually accompanied us to Liverpool to see the last of us before we
-sailed. It must have been about that time that his murder took place.'
-
-'It was within a day or two of your sailing,' said Mr. Brighthurst.
-
-'But what was the name of the assassin? What was the motive for his
-crime? For God's sake, my dear fellow, tell us more about it!' cried
-Bryan.
-
-'I am very sorry, my dear Duval, that I cannot give you any
-particulars of your poor friend's fate,' said Brighthurst. 'The
-coroner's jury have returned a verdict of wilful murder against some
-person or persons unknown, and no trace of the assassin had been
-discovered up to the time of the papers going to press. I know this
-much, for I made it the text of my editorial, that the English police
-do not seem more active in discovering the perpetrators of great
-crimes than our detectives here. I shall, however, be able to let you
-know all about it in a few minutes, as I instructed a boy to bring a
-proof of my article here, and with it a copy of the London _Times_,
-containing the account of the coroner's inquest, which I proposed
-reading in bed tonight.'
-
-'I shall await it with the greatest anxiety,' said Bryan. Then turning
-to Miss Montressor, whose face was still buried in her handkerchief,
-and dropping his voice, he said: 'There is no occasion yet, at all
-events, to be so overwhelmed, my dear Clara. Foster is by no means an
-uncommon American name. Liverpool is even more frequented by Americans
-than London, and all of them who visit Liverpool of course go to the
-Adelphi. The victim in this awful case may not be our poor friend,
-after all.'
-
-'But the date,' whispered poor Miss Montressor; 'the date of the
-murder concurs just with the time when he would be at Liverpool;
-though, by the way, he told me he intended to return to London on the
-evening of our departure. Something, however, may have detained him;
-and, besides, I have a kind of presentiment--something which I cannot
-shake off--that we shall discover it was our friend Mr. Foster, and no
-one else.'
-
-'I confess I feel very uncomfortable and desponding about it myself,'
-said Bryan; 'and I should not be surprised if-- What is this?' he
-cried, as the waiter entered, bringing a packet for Mr. Brighthurst.
-'O, the newspaper at last!'
-
-'Pray take it, my dear Duval, and satisfy yourself at once,' said
-Brighthurst, handing the paper across to Bryan; 'I can fully apprehend
-your anxiety.'
-
-Bryan took the journal, and, in the midst of a sympathetic silence,
-turned it over until he came upon the spot which he was seeking--a
-description of the proceedings at the coroner's inquest. In a broken
-voice he read out certain details with which the readers of this story
-are already familiar: the finding of the body on the landing-place of
-the warehouse, the evidence of the outdoor clerk, the two policemen,
-and the various persons present at the scene, the fly-driver, who
-recognised the victim as one of his customers, and the manager of the
-Adelphi, who gave evidence that the body was that of Mr. Foster, who
-had been staying at the hotel.
-
-'There is no doubt at all about it,' said Bryan Duval, laying down the
-paper for a minute, his eyes filling with tears. 'It was poor Foster;
-it was our poor friend!'
-
-'It is too dreadful to think of,' said Miss Montressor, giving way to
-her grief.
-
-'Who can the murderer be? What can have been the motive for such a
-deed?' cried Duval, after reading a little farther. 'Foster was the
-kindest, gentlest soul in the world--a man who could not possibly have
-had an enemy; besides, he knew but few people in England, and none, I
-should have thought, in Liverpool.'
-
-'Perhaps he was in the habit of sporting his money,' said Mr. O'Gog;
-'there are terrible thieves in them Liverpool taverns.'
-
-'No, that could not have been,' said Bryan, pointing to a passage in
-the paper; 'for it says here that though no papers, cards, or letters
-were found upon the body, his purse, containing several sovereigns and
-some silver, keys, penknife, and pencil, were found in the pockets
-untouched.'
-
-'That's a strange circumstance,' said Mr. Brighthurst, looking at it
-with the professional eye of an editorial writer. 'My experience leads
-me to believe that there are two principal motives which lead to the
-commission of murder--lust of gain or desire for vengeance. By the
-finding of the purse, the first motive is wanting in this instance;
-and as regards the second, you tell me he had very few acquaintances
-in England, and was the last man in the world likely to have any
-enemies, much less one fierce and implacable enough to do such a deed
-as this.'
-
-'He was the kindest-hearted man in the world,' sobbed Miss Montressor;
-'always willing to do everybody a service, and more like a woman than
-a man in the soft sweetness of his disposition.'
-
-'Stay,' said Bryan, who had again taken up the paper; 'here are some
-farther particulars. The manager of the hotel deposed that, on
-examining the room occupied by the deceased, he found a small American
-valise, containing a suit of clothes, some linen, and the usual
-dressing apparatus; a valuable gold watch had been left on the
-dressing-table, which, at the request of the jury, was handed to them.
-Here,' continued Bryan, still reading the newspaper, 'a curious
-incident occurred. One of the jury was our well-known townsman, Mr.
-Hand, the watch and clock maker, who served his time in America. On
-examining this watch, Mr. Hand declared, without hesitation, that a
-certain portion of its works was made under the patent of the
-celebrated house of Tiffany, in New York. All possible search and
-inquiry seems to have been made by the police and others concerned,
-but without any effect. The conclusion of the story is to be found in
-the verdict of wilful murder against some person or persons unknown,
-so we must wait and see what time will bring forth. Poor Foster--poor
-fellow!'
-
-'Poor dear Mr. Foster!' sobbed Miss Montressor, in great agitation. 'I
-declare it is one of the most horrible things I ever knew. What will
-his poor wife say, when she hears the news?'
-
-'Has he a wife?' asked Mr. Brighthurst.
-
-'O dear yes; a sweetly pretty woman, with one young child.'
-
-'It's pretty rough on her, poor thing,' said Mr. Brighthurst, a shadow
-stealing over his handsome features.
-
-'Yes; and the most awful part of it is, that even now she must be in
-complete ignorance of what has happened, for I saw her this very night
-at the theatre.'
-
-'At the theatre?' cried several.
-
-'At the theatre, not two hours since,' cried Miss Montressor. 'I have
-most excellent reasons for believing that the lady I saw was Mrs.
-Foster.'
-
-'My dear Miss Montressor,' said Mr. Brighthurst, leaning forward, 'I
-think, I trust, you are mistaken. The news that an American gentleman
-named Foster had been found murdered in Liverpool was received here by
-cable, without any particulars, several days since, and was published
-in all the newspapers. It would have been impossible that Mrs. Foster,
-or some of her family or friends, should not have seen it.'
-
-'It may be that I am mistaken,' said Miss Montressor. 'I trust I am,
-for it is an awful thing to think of that pretty creature amusing
-herself at the theatre with this awful thunder-cloud ready to break
-over her head.' And Miss Montressor's tears again began to flow.
-
-Bryan Duval, who had been listening silently but most attentively to
-this colloquy, then roused himself.
-
-'I think, my dear Clara, you had better retire for a few minutes, and
-endeavour to compose yourself. Gentlemen, I am sure you will excuse
-Miss Montressor for a time; this news has been too much for her. We
-will rejoin you later.'
-
-All rose as he spoke, and Bryan Duval, taking the actress by the arm,
-led her through the folding-doors into the adjoining apartment, and
-carefully closed the doors behind him.
-
-'Try to quiet yourself,' said Bryan Duval, as he placed her in a chair
-beside an open window, and, seating himself alongside of her, assumed
-a perfectly tranquil air. 'This is a very serious business, and I want
-to speak to you about it without delay, and out of hearing of these
-people. It is better they should not get hold of such facts as may be
-hidden under the surface of this horrible event prematurely. Will you
-tell me as quietly as you can exactly what you mean about the lady
-whom you saw at the theatre to-night? That's right; you are quieter
-now; don't speak for a minute, until you can do so without sobbing;
-try to recollect every circumstance, and to be perfectly exact.'
-
-The purpose-like composure of his manner had its due effect upon the
-excitable but not foolish woman to whom he spoke. She made a steady
-effort, and subdued the rising hysterical agitation, and after a
-minute or two was quite able to speak plainly.
-
-'You remember,' she said, 'the dinner Mr. Foster gave us at Richmond,
-and that I had a good deal of talk with him both down at Richmond and
-in the carriage as we came home?'
-
-Bryan Duval nodded.
-
-'He told me a good deal about himself, and spoke much of his wife, to
-whom he seemed to be quite unusually attached. He said he would
-introduce me to her, as he knew she would like me; that she was very
-fond of the stage, had a passion for artistes' society, and a great
-many other things of the same kind. Of course I asked him what she was
-like, and he gave me a great description of her beauty and grace. I
-suppose I did not keep down a smile of something like incredulity, or
-at least of a suspicion of some exaggeration, in this description, for
-he said, "You shall see for yourself, Miss Montressor, whether I am
-exaggerating like an absent lover my Helen's charms;" and he took out
-a watch--one of a very peculiar construction; I had never seen one
-like it--and opened it by touching a spring so carefully concealed
-that, when he put it into my hands afterwards, and told me to try if I
-could open it, I could not even perceive where the spring lay. The
-cover flew back and disclosed a miniature of a woman who was certainly
-very pretty, and had the kind of face which one does not forget. I
-looked at it for a good while: held it in my hand--for Mr. Foster had
-taken it off his watch-chain--as we walked up and down on the terrace,
-and made myself perfectly familiar with the features; the arrangement
-of the hair particularly struck me, and I remarked to him how well it
-suited the face. He said yes, he had always thought so; that his wife
-had very good taste, and was her own hairdresser. You will see
-presently why I tell you these particulars.'
-
-'I especially wish you to tell me every particular you can recollect,'
-said Bryan Duval.
-
-'I do not think there was anything remarkable except that in what he
-said to me,' said Miss Montressor. 'The subject was again referred to
-during our drive home, and he told me the watch containing the
-portrait was a parting gift from his wife. She had given it to him on
-the very evening before he had left New York, and he had promised
-always to wear it. I thought it a little unusual for a man to speak so
-frankly and so freely of a thing of the kind, and I suppose I said it
-or looked it. I do not remember that, but I do recollect his saying,
-"Out of the fulness of the heart, you know. Miss Montressor, the mouth
-speaketh," when neither a lack of sympathy nor ridicule was to be
-apprehended. I thought him a man of considerable feeling, and that he
-found his sojourn in England very wearisome, so that he was relieved
-by finding any one, even a stranger, to whom he might talk of his
-home.'
-
-'He was not a reticent man,' said Bryan Duval, 'as I have good reason
-to know; a reason which I shall tell you presently if, as I fear,
-there is more in this matter than meets the eye, and I have to ask
-your help in a painful duty that may fall to my share. But pray go on,
-and tell me what is the connection between Mr. Foster's confidence to
-you and the lady whom you saw tonight.'
-
-Miss Montressor hesitated for just one moment. Could she explain
-herself fully without the revelation of the family secret she had
-strongly desired to preserve? Not if Bryan Duval were to question her
-very closely on material issues. 'Never mind,' she thought, 'I must
-risk it. I won't tell it unless I am forced, but I cannot hold my
-tongue here--it is too serious.'
-
-'I have a friend in New York,' she said, 'who came to see me
-yesterday, and in the course of some gossip about this place and the
-people in it she happened to mention a certain Mrs. Griswold, who
-holds a high position here, and who is a great admirer of the drama.
-My friend told me that Mrs. Griswold had been particularly anxious to
-see me in one of my best parts, and had taken places for our first
-appearance. This Mrs. Griswold, it appears, was very handsome, very
-charming, and altogether a somebody. I fancied I should like to
-recognise her, if possible, among the audience; and as my friend knew
-where she was going to sit, she gave me a description of her
-appearance and dress, which would have enabled me to recognise her,
-had this lady occupied the place my friend knew she had taken. The
-description was--brown hair, worn plain, without flowers or jewels,
-brown eyes, pale blue velvet dress, gold ornaments, and a
-blue-and-gold fan. Not very distinct, after all, when you come to
-think of it, now that pale blue velvet is so fashionable; but true
-enough, when I looked at the place my friend had directed my attention
-to--the last seat but two, dress circle, right-hand side--I saw a lady
-who was watching the play intently, and whose appearance and dress
-entirely coincided with my friend's description--but the lady was not
-Mrs. Griswold.'
-
-'Not Mrs. Griswold!' exclaimed Bryan Duval. 'How do you know?'
-
-'Because,' returned Miss Montressor impressively, 'the face was the
-face of Mr. Foster's wife, as I saw it in the miniature enclosed in
-the watch-cover; the hair and the eyes were quite unmistakable. That
-she was the woman who had sat for that miniature I cannot entertain
-the smallest doubt. It is Mrs. Foster, and therefore _not_ Mrs.
-Griswold!'
-
-Bryan Duval had listened to the latter part of Miss Montressor's
-narrative with intense, even painful, eagerness. It was evident that
-he attached immense importance to the apparently insignificant mistake
-made by Miss Montressor; a mistake easily to be explained on the
-theory that her friend had given her an erroneous indication of Mrs.
-Griswold's place in the house. Not so did Bryan Duval interpret it.
-
-'You are quite sure,' he repeated, 'that you looked at the place where
-you were told to look for Mrs. Griswold?'
-
-'I am quite sure.'
-
-'You are quite sure that the lady you saw in that place bore a close
-resemblance to the miniature likeness of Mr. Foster's wife?'
-
-'I am perfectly certain of it,' returned Miss Montressor; 'every
-feature and line was identical, and the peculiar unornamented mode in
-which the hair was dressed was a conclusive proof to my mind. Stay a
-moment,' she said, with a start like one catching at a suddenly
-suggested point, and laying her hand upon his arm, 'there is a curious
-coincidence in this. My friend told me that Mrs. Griswold had
-beautiful brown hair, in which she never wore any ornament.'
-
-Bryan Duval rose, walked slowly up and down the room twice, and then
-returned to Miss Montressor's side. His face was very pale, and his
-voice sounded hoarsely, as he said to her:
-
-'There is far more than ordinary villany in this atrocious murder, and
-perhaps the only way by which it can be exposed rests with you and
-with me. I think you will be discreet, and if it be necessary to ask
-you to take any part in this terrible matter, I think you will consent
-to do so, and to act under orders.'
-
-'Certainly,' replied Miss Montressor, looking considerably frightened.
-'I wish you would explain what you mean, and what part in it can
-possibly fall to me.'
-
-'I will explain,' said Bryan Duval. 'I fear I shall soon have to
-violate a dead man's confidence more extensively than by telling the
-story to you. Foster took, as you know, a great fancy to me, and even
-before that day when we went down to Richmond he had told me a great
-deal about himself; but his confidences with me took a different form
-from those in which he indulged on that day with you--they chiefly
-related to business matters. He told me what was the object of his
-journey to London--with which I need not trouble you, it has no
-immediate bearing on the case: he told me how unexpectedly and rapidly
-successful he had been in the accomplishment of that object, and that
-he had good hopes of being able to return to New York at a much
-earlier date than that fixed at his departure. I remember that he did
-say he hadn't as yet announced to his wife that such a prospect had
-opened up to him, preferring to make quite sure rather than run the
-risk of keeping her in suspense, which might possibly end in
-disappointment. The details were rather complicated, and it struck me
-at the time that there was a good deal, not only of fair business
-competition, but of equivocal manoeuvring to be apprehended in the
-carrying through of the enterprise. That it was by no means smooth
-sailing for Foster was particularly borne in upon me by one fact,
-which he communicated to me in the strictest confidence, now unhappily
-dispersed. It was this'--Bryan Duval now spoke in a whisper, and with
-great intentness--'he had come to England under a false name.'
-
-Miss Montressor looked up wonderingly. 'Under a false name?' she
-repeated. 'His name was not Foster? What was it, then?'
-
-'I do not know,' returned Bryan Duval. 'But an awful surmise as to what
-it might have been came to me with your first words, when this horrid
-news was conveyed to us just now.'
-
-'I don't understand you,' said Miss Montressor, with a somewhat
-confused and wondering look. She had not caught at the chain of
-probabilities which had presented itself to Bryan Duval.
-
-'I have a horrible conviction,' said he, 'that Foster's name really
-was Griswold.'
-
-'My God,' exclaimed Miss Montressor, moved to the exclamation by more
-feelings than the one which could be easily interpreted by her hearer,
-'can it be?'
-
-'It struck me in an instant, and every word that you have spoken has
-confirmed the suspicion. He told me that his wife had no notion that
-he had been obliged to assume a false name; he spoke of her to me only
-casually--with great affection it is true--but my only distinct
-recollection of any quality which he assigned to her was a negative
-one: that she knew nothing about business, and that, therefore, he
-could not have told her that the assumption of a name not his own was
-a necessary precaution without alarming her. He had, not very wisely I
-thought at the time, kept her in ignorance of this detail, and
-arranged for her letters to him passing through the hands of a friend,
-who was to redirect them to him under his assumed appellation, known
-only to this friend. How well I recollect that the whole story struck
-me as the sort of thing which, had it occurred in a play or a book,
-would have been pronounced rather unnatural, and likely to involve so
-much confusion of detail as to hamper rather than aid business
-operations! How little I dreamt of such a complication as that which
-has arisen now! I do not think you see it?'
-
-'I confess I do not,' said Miss Montressor.
-
-'Well, it is simply this: the lady you saw in the theatre to-night was
-Mrs. Griswold, but none the less was she the original of the miniature
-which Mr. Foster showed you as that of his wife. The unhappy woman has
-no conception that the news with which all New York is ringing
-concerns her--that the murdered man is her husband.'
-
-'I see it now, I see it now!' said Miss Montressor.
-
-'You do not see it all even yet,' resumed Bryan Duval impressively.
-'You don't see how it touches us. We two are the only people in this
-city who know the truth--we two are the only people on whom the task
-of making the truth known can possibly devolve, except, indeed, the
-friend through whom Foster received his wife's letters; and I know
-neither his name, his address, nor his business--I have, indeed, no
-clue whatever to him. The position of this unfortunate man's wife is
-one of the most terrible and tragic that can be conceived. What is to
-be done?'
-
-'What, indeed!' said Miss Montressor, whose mind, however, glanced
-rapidly towards her sister. 'I suppose you must communicate with the
-authorities.'
-
-'Of course, of course!' said Bryan Duval. 'But I am not thinking so
-much of the public and official steps to be taken in this horrible
-affair; it is the wife, whose position, poor unconscious creature, is
-so very awful.'
-
-To this Miss Montressor assented with ready sympathy, but it was
-agreed between them, as at that late hour nothing whatever could be
-done until the morning, there was nothing for it but that they should
-keep their own counsel. Bryan Duval impressed upon Miss Montressor the
-absolute necessity of appearing to be totally unconcerned in the
-matter, lest she should expose herself to indiscreet questioning by
-any member of the party, which it had now become necessary they should
-rejoin.
-
-'If I could avoid seeing them at all,' she said, 'it would be better,
-and, indeed, I hardly feel equal to the exertion. I cannot forget the
-face I saw to-night, so full of interest and delight, beaming with
-youth, beauty, and happiness; I cannot forget the pride and pleasure
-with which that poor fellow showed me its miniature presentment in the
-watch, which was his wife's parting gift. The two pictures will haunt
-me all night, and when the morn comes, what shall we do?'
-
-'I do not know,' said Bryan Duval, 'what my part may have to be; I
-must be well advised in that matter: but one grand object would be to
-secure access to Mrs. Griswold. How well I remember poor Foster
-talking of the pleasure it would give his wife to make our
-acquaintance, and telling me that he could not give me a letter of
-introduction to her, because it might lead to the leaking out, through
-some other members of the company, of the fact that they had known him
-as Mr. Foster. If the poor fellow had only made his confidence in me
-complete, if he had told me what was the real name which he had hidden
-under a false one, it might be easier for me now to help in this
-terrible calamity. There is no way of getting at Mrs. Griswold without
-startling her, if, indeed, we must be the persons to reveal the
-truth.'
-
-'Perhaps we may devise one,' said Miss Montressor; 'but we must break
-up now. I am quite worn out.'
-
-'Do not return to the supper-room at all,' said Bryan Duval; 'here is
-a side door by which you can get away. I will apologise for you,
-though, indeed, no apology is needed.'
-
-During the conversation the hum of voices in the next room had been
-distinctly audible. The English actors had suddenly found themselves
-invested with a new importance and interest in New York; the very
-latest intelligence of the murdered man was to be had from them; and
-when Bryan Duval returned, he found his companions the centre of an
-eager group, who were all listening with absorbed avidity to every
-detail which could be furnished by the party concerning their
-acquaintance with Mr. Foster. The telegraph had given accurate
-particulars of the place and time at which the murder had been
-committed, which had so immediately followed the farewell scene on
-board the Cuba, that every utterance of Mr. Foster's which could be
-retailed by his companions on that occasion was regarded and noted
-with all the impressiveness due to last words.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-ONLY TOO TRUE.
-
-
-Mr. Jacobs was as punctual as usual in his early attendance in the
-box-office of the Varieties on the morning after the first appearance
-of the Bryan Duval troupe, when he was lightly touched on the
-shoulder, and, turning round, was astonished to perceive the great
-London star himself.
-
-'Ha, ha, my dear boy, it is you, is it?' cried Mr. Jacobs, with
-unctuous familiarity. 'Looking after business--always got an eye to
-the dollars--come down to see how the places are going? Well, you need
-not look so anxious about it; we're going right ahead, we are, this
-time.'
-
-'It wasn't for that, Jacobs,' said Bryan, with a faint smile. 'I want
-to look at the sheet for last night. I want to see what names certain
-places were taken in.'
-
-'O, that's the game, is it?' said Mr. Jacobs, handing him the sheet
-required. 'Want to see whether any of your old flames came to welcome
-you back. Hallo! what's the matter?' he cried, as Duval uttered a
-short groan.
-
-'Nothing,' said Bryan; 'nothing at all. As Jacobs looked up at him he
-saw his finger resting motionless on a certain portion of the box
-sheet. 'Thank you, I won't intrude upon you any more. Good-morning,
-Jacobs;' and he sauntered off.
-
-'Mrs. Alston E. Griswold,' murmured Jacobs to himself, reading the
-name underneath which Bryan's finger had been fixed. 'That's it;
-there's the mark of his black glove on the sheet now. Alston Griswold?
-Why, that's the name of one of your Wall-street customers, with a fine
-up-town house and--ah, Bryan, my boy, your propensities will get you
-into mischief one of these days.'
-
-'All doubt is at an end now,' said Bryan, as he walked up to the
-hotel, 'and Clara was right. The case seems to me even darker and
-worse than she seems to think at present. It is lucky that she has a
-head upon her shoulders, for I shall have to take her into
-consultation.'
-
-Thereupon he despatched an elderly Irishman to Miss Montressor's room,
-with a message intimating his desire to be allowed access to her as
-soon as possible. Bryan Duval's messenger returned with an affirmatory
-answer to his inquiry whether Miss Montressor could let him see her;
-they had not yet met on that morning, and she was in a high state of
-expectation of what the interview might bring forth.
-
-Miss Montressor had been thinking intently on the subject in
-discussion during all her waking moments since she and Bryan Duval had
-parted on the preceding night. It had not kept her from sleeping; her
-nerves were in too good order and her constitution was too sound for
-her to be subjected to inconveniences of that sort by any abstract
-cause of emotion; but she had thought over it until she fell asleep,
-and it had recurred to her with her first consciousness on waking. She
-had endeavoured, in anticipation of Bryan Duval's possible line of
-interrogation, to recall everything that had been said during the
-conversation between herself and Mr. Foster on the terrace at
-Richmond, and, strangely as she considered it, she found this very
-difficult to do. If Miss Montressor had understood the laws of mental
-processes better, she would have known that this difficulty was of
-ordinary occurrence, and to be anticipated in her case. She was not in
-the habit of thinking about anything systematically, and a beginning
-in this direction is no easier than any other mental process directed
-with intention. So that Miss Montressor had got herself rather into a
-muddle between what had really been said by Mr. Foster and her general
-impression of the interview, when she found Bryan Duval in the small
-ante-room in which the residents at the hotel usually received their
-friends.
-
-Neither was insensible to the gravity and incongruity of the occasion.
-That two strangers, come to New York in the trifling and superficial
-character of actors, should be--to their own almost indubitable
-persuasion, and quite unsuspected by the public--able to supply the
-key of one of the most terrible mysteries of crime which had for a
-long time startled and disturbed society, was a circumstance full of
-oddity and interest that they appreciated to the full. Literally
-nothing could have influenced, impressed, surprised, or agitated Duval
-out of the instincts of the dramatist who combines, and the actor who
-reproduces, the situations supplied by human events. When this story
-should be complete in its reality, it would find its way to the
-pigeon-holes in which Bryan Duval's materials, the pabulum of his
-ever-active brain, were stored up, with the regularity, in order and
-in date, of a privately edited edition of the _Annual Register_. In
-due, not in undue time--Bryan Duval was never so wanting in taste and
-judgment as to incur the charge of indecent haste--this drama of real
-life would no doubt be put upon the stage, with charming accessories
-of scenery, decoration, and padding-out. Bryan Duval saw his way to it
-already, though as yet the knowledge of the murderer and his motive
-were wanting to the story.
-
-It had occupied his thoughts also almost exclusively; and though he
-had been trained to habits of mental precision, and the following of
-clues to human nature altogether beyond Miss Montressor's ken and
-capacity, he had not reached a much clearer state of mind than that in
-which his fair friend was about to join him. Bryan Duval was a man of
-too much natural keenness and too much acquired experience to accept
-generalities as bases for argument, or to seek conclusions in them.
-While he constructed a system with the skill and minuteness of a
-Procureur Impérial, he did not lend his judgment to one hypothesis,
-and turn the facts to fit it. Without ignoring or depreciating the
-influence of women in all human events, he regarded the 'Who is she?'
-which has become axiomatic as rather smart than sound, and was
-disposed to believe that dollars are quite as often to be found as
-women at the bottom of the crimes, as they assuredly are of the
-misfortunes, of men. In the present instance, if anything could be
-said to induce an explanation in the midst of the mystery of this
-crime, it was Bryan Duval's conviction that money was in question. Mr.
-Foster's private business in London; the disguise about his name,
-which he had avowed, but not explained; the perfectly conceivable
-rivalry and envy which his expedition might have excited--all these
-were plain to the mind of Bryan Duval as he pondered the matter, and
-they pointed each and all to another conclusion than that of 'Who is
-she?' Of Mr. Foster, or, as he had almost come to name the murdered
-man in his thoughts, Alston Griswold, he had not known very much, and
-their term of acquaintance had been short; but it had sufficed to
-create a strong regard for him, and Bryan Duval had formed a pretty
-accurate estimate of the New York merchant's character.
-
-'An honest, true-hearted fellow,' said Duval to himself, 'and
-profoundly in love with his wife, who seems to have been equally
-attached to him. There was no woman in this case--no woman on either
-side the Atlantic. The murderer must be looked for in the ordinary
-category of ruffians, or if it is a put-up job, the wire-puller is
-here in New York among his rivals in business.'
-
-The scene and circumstances of the crime, imperfectly as they could be
-gathered from the newspaper reports, made a very vivid picture to the
-mind's eye of the dramatist, accustomed to seize upon salient points;
-and he thought he discerned in them tokens of a surprise and a
-discovery, rather than of the common assault of a robber.
-
-'Why should he have gone with any man into an empty warehouse?' Bryan
-Duval asked himself. 'May he not have been enticed thither by a
-promise of information of some kind? May he not have been suddenly set
-upon and murdered, because he refused to give certain information?'
-
-The circumstance of Mr. Foster having lingered in Liverpool later than
-the departure of the train by which he mentioned to Duval it was his
-intention to return to London, did not make any impression upon the
-actor's mind.
-
-'Business men have business matters to attend to in many places,' he
-thought. 'If the poor fellow strained a point a little in letting me
-suppose that he had nothing to do and nobody to see in Liverpool, and
-only came down on our account, it was a harmless little bit of
-compliment, and I daresay he did. No man is bound to tell a far closer
-friend than I was _all_ about any matter in which he is concerned, and
-this one may have had an extensive connection in Liverpool, and lots
-to do there for anything I know to the contrary. I have, to be sure,
-no very solid grounds for my belief; but it is certainly more than an
-impression that this poor fellow's business in England lies at the
-root of this matter, and that there is no woman in the case.'
-
-The words were passing through his mind as Miss Montressor entered the
-room.
-
-'You were only too right,' said Bryan Duval, as Miss Montressor
-entered the room with face full of inquiry: 'the lady who occupied the
-seat you described to me last night was indeed Mrs. Alston Griswold;
-here is the memorandum from the box-office, giving the name and
-address. This is certainty on one side of the question; certainty on
-the other will, I fear, be only too readily attained.'
-
-Miss Montressor sat down and looked, as she felt, very much concerned.
-The condition of the unconscious wife appealed at once to her womanly
-and her artistic feelings; the truth and the situation alike struck
-her as deeply impressive.
-
-'I shall communicate at once with the city authorities,' said Bryan
-Duval; 'it will be impossible for me to keep out of this sad affair,
-and it is manifestly my duty to volunteer all the information it is in
-my power to give. I suppose there will be some person who will be
-deputed to break this terrible news to her?'
-
-'No, no,' said Miss Montressor; 'do not act in the matter in that way.
-What do the ends of justice matter in comparison with the wife who is
-widowed in such a horrible manner, and who knows nothing of the
-calamity which has befallen her? Let them wait; let us first try to
-find some personal friend of the poor thing, and tell him.'
-
-'Of course,' said Bryan Duval, 'that would be the proper line of
-action if we knew anything about a personal friend; but we must first
-discover the identity of a person of the sort, and how am I to do that
-except by communicating with the authorities? Very likely the
-officials with whom it will be my duty to confer may all, or some of
-them, be acquainted with Mrs. Griswold. Full particulars of the murder
-cannot be known until the arrival of the mail, and it is just possible
-that no suspicion may arise, unless I awaken it, that Mr. Foster is
-the well-known Mr. Griswold I now firmly believe him to be. To keep
-the knowledge of such a possibility from the police authorities here
-for a moment longer than it can be avoided may seriously impede action
-on the other side, as it must prevent the supplying of information
-from thence.'
-
-Miss Montressor had listened to Bryan Duval with a troubled
-countenance and an equally troubled heart. A line of action was
-suggesting itself to her, which had the full consent of her judgment
-and her feelings, but a consideration of self-interest was striving to
-withhold her from propounding it. She knew that the means of acquiring
-the information which would enable Bryan Duval to communicate direct
-with some acquaintance or friend of Mrs. Griswold's lay ready at her
-hand, but she hesitated to use it. Bess was that means--it would cost
-her something to avail herself of Bess. The struggle in Miss
-Montressor's mind was not lasting. The kindly remembrance of the man
-who had treated her with such gentlemanly consideration, with such
-unfeigned respect, a thought of the fair woman whom she had seen on
-the previous night and her pathetic ignorance, overcame her
-misgivings.
-
-'I think,' she said, 'I can supply you with a hint which may change
-your view of the most judicious course for you to pursue. Do you
-remember that I told you yesterday that I had a friend who knew Mrs.
-Griswold, and had given me indications by which I recognised her--or,
-as I thought, recognised Mrs. Foster--at the theatre?'
-
-'Yes, I remember,' said Bryan Duval. 'How stupid I am not to have
-remembered it sooner! I suppose you can put yourself in communication
-with her?'
-
-'Easily,' said Miss Montressor. 'She is'--here she hesitated for one
-last moment--'she is in a very humble station--no higher than that of
-nurse to Mrs. Griswold's child.'
-
-'Capital,' said Bryan Duval, passing over the explanation with an
-absolute carelessness highly reassuring to Miss Montressor; 'nothing
-could be better. She is positively in the house, and knows all about
-them.'
-
-'Well, she has only been in the house since Mr. Griswold's departure;
-but I have no doubt she can give us the information we require.'
-
-'Can you get it from her?' said Bryan Duval, in that curt business
-tone which Miss Montressor had come to know so thoroughly, and which
-had in it something extremely satisfactory to everybody who wanted to
-transact business with the man who spoke thus to the purpose.
-
-'I can,' she replied, 'but it will be a little difficult to do without
-exciting suspicion and precipitating discovery, if indeed the
-discovery is to be made. I cannot send for her to come to me
-openly--such an invitation would astonish Mrs. Griswold, and she might
-meet it with an objection--neither can I go in my proper capacity to
-Mrs. Griswold's house to visit one of Mrs. Griswold's servants.'
-
-'Why can't you go as a servant yourself?' said Bryan Duval. 'Your
-make-up in that line is unexceptionable; try it off the boards at
-once!'
-
-'I will,' said Miss Montressor; 'that is a capital idea. I will go
-disguised, and discover whether the lady at the play really was Mrs.
-Griswold. If I cannot see her, which I may manage to do by some
-contrivance, I shall at least be sure to see a portrait of her. A man
-like her husband was not likely to be satisfied with a mere miniature
-of his wife while a full-length portrait was to be had for money. We
-are, of course, morally certain that the fact is what we take it to
-be, but the first thing to be done is to achieve actual certainty.
-Taking it for granted that I see Mrs. Griswold and identify her with
-the miniature, what will you do next?'
-
-'I cannot decide upon that until I have received your report,' said
-Bryan Duval, 'on these two heads--first, the identity of Mrs. Griswold
-with the portrait Mr. Foster showed you; secondly, the name and
-address of some intimate friend of the family, with whom I may at once
-communicate.'
-
-'I am quite sure there is such a person,' interrupted Miss Montressor.
-'I could not distinctly recall everything that Mr. Foster told me, in
-the hurry and confusion of last night; but since then I have
-remembered a good deal. He mentioned to me, but not by name, one
-friend in particular, in whose charge he had confided not only his
-business interests in New York during his absence, but also his
-household treasures. Poor fellow, he quite amused me--though I am
-conscious now that I did not respond very warmly or graciously--by his
-simple talk about his wife and child. He would try to describe the
-baby to me, and he did describe the mother as well as showing me her
-picture. He was a good soul. But I quite remember now that he told me
-he had this trusty friend.'
-
-'A piece of information which makes your suggestion all the more
-admirable and your aid all the more valuable. We now have some
-definite basis of action. When we discover this friend of Foster's, or
-Griswold's, we shall not only have found the man who will be our best
-guide as to what we ought to do, but we shall have found the man who
-will be sure to hit upon the motive of the crime. And now lose no
-time. Set about your task at once; the sooner it is over, the better
-for you and for what I have to do. I do not say to you, do it well and
-do it delicately--that I feel is unnecessary. We have not had half
-sufficient time to realise how horrid this thing is which has
-happened; and so much the better, since it has so strangely fallen out
-that we have come to this side of the world to act in such a tragedy.'
-
-Miss Montressor rose and was about to leave the room, when she said:
-
-'Suppose by any possibility I should be wrong, and that this lady is
-not the original of the miniature, consequently that Mr. Griswold, her
-husband, is not the murdered man--what will you do in that case?'
-
-'In that case,' said Bryan Duval, 'I shall simply have to communicate
-with the authorities the fact that Mr. Foster is not the murdered
-man's real name; this on his own authority, and of course it will be
-immediately transmitted to London. Go now. You will find me here on
-your return; I shall not leave the house.'
-
-Miss Montressor left him, and, going to her own room, made rapid
-preparation for the arduous task she had been set. She hurriedly
-turned over such articles of her wardrobe as had yet been unpacked,
-searching for those most suitable to the part she was to play. While
-doing this, her thoughts reverted to the last unprofessional
-masquerade in which she had indulged, and, by a natural transition, to
-Mr. Dolby. She had thought very little about him during her voyage
-out, but as it approached its termination she had occasionally
-speculated upon whether that gentleman would present himself at the
-wharf, or whether he would wait and pay her a more dignified visit at
-her hotel. She had actually spared him a few moments' recollection in
-all the triumph of her first brilliantly successful appearance on the
-previous evening. 'Was Mr. Dolby in the house?' she had wondered. 'Was
-his hand among the number of those which had flung prodigal floral
-tributes at her feet? Or--was he sulky still?' She had, however,
-completely forgotten him from the announcement of the supper, and in
-all the hurry, agitation, and confusion of the ensuing hours of the
-night, her mind had never once glanced towards him. But now--she
-selected a plain gray skirt, originally intended to fulfil the once
-humble office of petticoat, but which was rather an unduly smart
-morning walking dress for the part she was assuming--she remembered
-the day on which she had gone to the house in Queen-street, and
-inquired ineffectually for her angry lover. Even now it was only a
-passing remembrance; her feelings were unaffectedly and deeply engaged
-in the matter in hand. Miss Montressor's wardrobe contained nothing
-suitable to be worn as an out-door dress of the sort which she
-required; but she remedied the deficiency by putting on a thick dark
-shawl, which she found among the parcel of wraps, and removing the too
-conspicuous feather from her hat, over which she pinned a veil.
-
-As she unfolded the shawl the sharp end of a pin caught her finger.
-'How tiresome of Justine,' she muttered, 'to leave pins stuck in
-shawls! I have so often spoken to her about it;' and she turned over
-the folds of the garment to find the obnoxious object. It was a long
-gold pin with a carved head, rather intended for a gentleman's necktie
-than as a shawl fastener; the stone was a very fine specimen of
-intaglio work, and Miss Montressor looked at it without any
-recognition of whence it came. It was not hers; and as it was a very
-uncommon article, it was not the sort of thing to be picked up on the
-floor or anywhere, as people pick up ordinary pins. 'I wonder whose it
-is, and how I came by it?' she thought, as she mechanically used it to
-fasten the shawl.
-
-She then went quickly clown the stairs, and passed out of the door,
-comparatively unnoticed. It was early in the day, and the customary
-groups of loungers had not yet assembled. On leaving the hotel, Miss
-Montressor turned to the right, and making inquiry of the first person
-whom she met as to the distance which divided her from that portion of
-Fifth-avenue in which Mrs. Griswold's house was situate, learned that
-she would be overtaken in about a minute by a street car, which would
-deposit her close by. She had barely thanked her informant when the
-car came up, and the man to whom she had spoken signalled to the
-conductor; the next moment Miss Montressor was making her first
-experience of the marvellously-convenient and well-arranged street
-locomotion of New York. As she seated herself, a sudden recollection
-flashed across her that the pin which she had been so surprised to
-find in her shawl had belonged to Mr. Foster. With the suddenness of
-the vision, the little circumstance which had placed it in her
-possession returned to her memory--again she felt the slight chill of
-the evening air; she saw Mr. Foster's face, and felt his careful hands
-drawing the warm folds around her; remembering that he held them
-together with one hand, as he removed the pin from his own necktie
-with the other. How came she to have forgotten this pin--to have
-omitted returning it to him? It was a strange oversight. How curious
-and mysterious, should it be now destined to be an important
-coincidence! 'His wife will remember it,' she thought. 'If we are
-right in our terrible belief, my bringing it to her, my requesting her
-to identify it, will enable me to prove my sad story to the poor lady.'
-What was it Mr. Foster had told her about this pin? She must try to
-recollect all he had said very exactly; she must not add a word or
-subtract a word if possible. He had said that it was a sleeve button
-that had belonged to his wife; that on his arrival in London he had
-found it among his things, where it had no doubt been put by accident,
-and that he had had it made into a pin--yes, that was exactly what he
-had said. She took out her pocket-book, and in the few minutes
-occupied by the transit she wrote down, with all the accuracy
-attainable by her memory, the words in which Mr. Foster had told her
-these facts.
-
-She had hardly concluded the memorandum when she was set down, and in
-a few minutes found herself at the door of Mrs. Griswold's house. A
-good-humoured coloured servant answered the summons of the bell, and,
-on her inquiry for Mrs. Jenkins, ushered her into a small waiting-room
-on the right of the hall. Several newspapers lay upon the table; she
-turned them over hurriedly, and found in each great prominence given
-to the appalling murder in Liverpool of an American gentleman. She had
-no time to read the details, which were afforded in every variety of
-type, and embellished with every device to attract curiosity and
-direct attention, for she was joined by her sister within a few
-moments. 'Civil people these,' she thought, in the way that people
-will think of trifles amid the most serious occupations of the mind;
-'civil people these, to give a message to a servant with such
-celerity.'
-
-'You see I have come to visit you, Bess, after all'
-
-Mrs. Jenkins received her sister with unbounded delight, but had
-hardly greeted her and recounted with what eloquent praises Mrs.
-Griswold had spoken of the performance, and especially of Clara's part
-in it, that morning, when she was helping to dress her, when she broke
-off to ask about the very subject which was occupying Miss
-Montressor's thoughts.
-
-'My dear,' she said, 'of course you have heard of this horrible
-murder? It gave me a dreadful turn last night, when I heard the boys
-crying out, about an hour after Mrs. Griswold went to the play, and
-Jim went out to find out all about it. Mrs. Griswold hadn't heard
-anything of it when she came in, and I was very glad; for really it is
-enough to make one nervous. You heard all about it, of course?'
-
-'O, yes,' said Miss Montressor; 'we have heard all about it. It
-happened the very day after we sailed. Does every one know about it in
-the house now?'
-
-'Of course,' said Mrs. Jenkins.
-
-'I didn't mean to ask that,' said Miss Montressor; 'my mind is
-wandering. I meant to say, was Mrs. Griswold acquainted with Mr.
-Foster?'
-
-'Lor' bless you! no, Clara,' said her sister, laughing. 'I think you
-Londoners imagine London is the only big place in the world, and think
-people who live anywhere else must know everybody who ever came from
-the place where they live. There are lots of Fosters in New York, I
-should think, and there is not anything known about this poor gentleman
-except that his name is Foster. Mrs. Griswold saw it this morning, and
-she said she did not think Mr. Griswold knew any one of the name; but
-it made her quite downhearted--set her off thinking of Mr. Griswold, I
-suppose.'
-
-'Well, I am glad she hadn't heard it before she left the theatre,'
-said Miss Montressor; 'it isn't pleasant news to wind up the evening
-with, even when one knows nothing at all of the parties concerned, a
-dreary epilogue to the play. I saw Mrs. Griswold last night, Bess.'
-
-'I am glad you did. What do you think of her--though I suppose you
-couldn't judge very well at that distance?'
-
-'Well, in the first place, I should like to be sure that it was Mrs.
-Griswold. People change places occasionally, you know, at the theatre,
-and I didn't catch sight of her until the third act, nor see her very
-distinctly then; but I could make out the gown, and that she wore gold
-ornaments of the new fashion--warming-pan style, all clink and clatter
-when you are near them, and very like harness when you are not. I saw
-the blue-and-gold fan, too; so I suppose there is no doubt that was
-the lady?'
-
-'No doubt at all,' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'She was in the seat I told you
-to look at, and said how comfortable it was, and what a capital view
-of the stage she had from it. She was highly delighted, I can tell
-you, Clara, and said she liked your acting better than any she had
-ever seen. I told her it was not your best part, that it was nothing
-to your Juliet; but she said she was afraid she was too stupid to care
-about Shakespeare--not that she is stupid. I am sure I don't set
-myself up for a judge, but I think she is as bright as she is pretty.'
-
-'I don't exactly know whether she is pretty or not,' said Miss
-Montressor, 'and I take a great interest in your Mrs. Griswold: a lady
-who is so kind to her dependents as you make her out to be, and has
-the good sense and the good taste to be an admirer of the drama, is a
-legitimate subject of interest. I am sorry I did not see her face more
-distinctly; could you give me a sight of her now?'
-
-'Now,' said Mrs. Jenkins, 'and in that dress, Clara! What would she
-think?'
-
-'Why, my dear Bess, you do not imagine I want you to introduce me as
-Miss Montressor in this costume, and thus deliberately tell on myself
-the very thing which I have been impressing upon you must be kept
-profoundly secret? Not at all. But nursery visitors are not
-impossibilities in a house of this sort, I suppose? Couldn't I be a
-humble friend, a former fellow-servant somewhere--I suppose she thinks
-you were a servant before you came to her--who has just dropped in to
-have a look at baby?'
-
-Mrs. Jenkins laughed. 'It would be good fun to have a private play of
-that sort on our own account, Clara, but unfortunately it cannot be
-done, for Mrs. Griswold is not in the nursery, and she is not likely
-to come to it. She caught cold last night at the play, and I could not
-persuade her not to get up this morning; but she felt very tired after
-breakfast, and I did persuade her to go and lie down: she is lying
-down in her own room, and the orders are that she is not to be
-disturbed for anything less important than a cable message from Mr.
-Griswold. She is always expecting one, though, as far as I can see, he
-is too sensible to waste money in them, and satisfies himself with
-writing by the mail--precious long letters they are, and doesn't she
-prize them just! However, she is lying down, and I cannot disturb her,
-above all by taking a stranger into the room; so you cannot see her at
-present.'
-
-'O, never mind,' said Miss Montressor; 'so much the better that she is
-in the room. I shall have plenty of chances of seeing her. And now I
-should like a look at the house, Bess. It is the first house I have
-been in in New York, and I have a fancy for that sort of thing, and I
-like to get hints about carpets and curtains and drawing-room fixings.
-Can't you take me round--it is allowed, I suppose?'
-
-'O, certainly, it is allowed,' said Mrs. Jenkins; 'we are under no
-restraint here. Come along up-stairs;' and the unsuspecting woman led
-Miss Montressor up the broad staircase to the white-and-gold
-folding-doors which gave access to the reception-rooms.
-
-'What a simple creature it is,' thought Miss Montressor, 'that it has
-never occurred to her to ask me why I have so decidedly changed mv
-mind as to come here to see her, that being the very exact thing which
-I so positively assured her yesterday I could not do! Very handsome
-rooms, indeed,' she said aloud; 'fitted up in capital taste, and
-evidently quite regardless of expense. That's a fine picture on the
-wall opposite.'
-
-She stepped across the floor rapidly, and stood still in front of it.
-It was a fine picture; an admirably executed portrait of Helen
-Griswold. The artist had painted her in an unconventional attitude,
-and the whole picture was pleasing to the general eye, interested in
-the work of art rather than in the likeness. It represented a slight,
-almost girlish figure, in soft white muslin robes slightly trimmed
-with lace, touched here and there with a knot of ribbon, a lace veil
-being loosely tied over the rich chestnut-brown hair, softening its
-masses, but hiding neither its richness nor its colour; the hands were
-clad in gardening-gloves; in the right was a large pair of scissors,
-just about to be applied to a rose-bush, one blossom of which was held
-apart from the stem by the left; a basket of roses already cut stood
-at the feet, and the scene of the picture was a conservatory, the
-original of which Miss Montressor had caught a glimpse of on the first
-floor of the house.
-
-'That is Mrs. Griswold's portrait,' said Mrs. Jenkins, in reply to her
-sister's observation, 'and it is not at all flattered; so now you can
-see, if you had got a near view of her last night, you would have
-agreed with me about her beauty.'
-
-'Yes,' said Miss Montressor slowly, 'that is a pretty face, and one
-cannot say of it, as one does of so many pretty faces, that there is
-nothing in it. I should think she was a very sensible woman, as well
-as a very kind-hearted one?'
-
-'She is just that,' said Mrs. Jenkins enthusiastically. 'Sit down
-here, Clara, and have a good look at it.'
-
-The sisters placed themselves side by side upon an ottoman which
-commanded a good view of the portrait, at which Miss Montressor
-continued steadfastly to gaze. All doubt was over now, all hope that
-she had been mistaken was at an end; the miniature she had seen in the
-watch that day as she paced the terrace at Richmond was but a reduced
-copy without the veil, and the face that looked mildly, beaming down
-upon her out of its gilded frame, was as fresh and fair as the roses
-in the feet. Miss Montressor was not of a classic turn of mind; her
-education had not gone far in any direction, nor at all in that; she
-did not refer the suggestiveness of the open scissors in the woman's
-hand, about to snip the fresh young life of the beautiful rose, to any
-recollection of the Pareae; but it had a certain something in it which
-impressed her, something of suspicion which filled her eyes with tears
-unseen by Mrs. Jenkins.
-
-'Is there a portrait of Mr. Griswold?' she asked.
-
-'Only a small one, half-sized, and since he went away Mrs. Griswold
-has had it moved to her bedroom. It hangs on the wall just over her
-dressing-table, and opposite the foot of her bed. It is the first
-thing she must see in the morning when she opens her eyes. They say it
-is uncommonly like him; it is painted by the same artist who did this
-one; but Mrs. Griswold will have it the picture in her bracelet--much
-handsomer and much younger--is more like Mr. Griswold.'
-
-'Does any one of her family stay with her while he is away?' was Miss
-Montressor's next question.
-
-'There is not any family. She has no relatives, I am told, not only in
-New York, but in all the world; she was an orphan when Mr. Griswold
-married her, and I do not believe he has any relatives; for I have
-never seen any nor heard them spoken of, either by her or among the
-servants.'
-
-'That's lonely for Mrs. Griswold. Has she much company while he is
-away? But I think you said not yesterday?'
-
-'O dear, no she leads the quietest life that any lady could live. Many
-a one would think it very dull; but she doesn't, what with her books,
-and music, and baby, and her letters to Mr. Griswold. She is sometimes
-sorrowful, but never dull. She has some visitors at times, but I don't
-think she cares for them--one person is pretty much the same to her as
-another, when it is not Mr. Griswold--and one day she said to me, "I
-have no intimates, and my husband has very few for so wonderfully
-sociable a man, and such a general favourite as he is."'
-
-'Then there is no one to take care of her in particular?' said Miss
-Montressor; 'for she is young, you know, to be left alone with so
-much to look after and to do as there must be in the care of all
-this,'--with a comprehensive sweep of her arm, intended to take in all
-the household goods at once.
-
-'O, no, there is no one to take care of her,' said Mrs. Jenkins; 'but
-she can take very good care of herself. She always wishes to do, and
-she always does, what is right and good and kind towards every one.'
-
-Miss Montressor was profoundly discouraged. Her embassy was not
-prospering; the worst that they feared was true, and the aid on which
-they had speculated did not seem to be forthcoming. Mrs. Griswold had
-no relatives and no intimates. Mr. Griswold had no relatives, and if
-he had any intimates, Mrs. Jenkins could evidently have no information
-concerning them. What was to be done now? Miss Montressor dared not
-pursue her questioning of her sister any further, and hastily decided
-that the best thing she could do would be to return to the hotel and
-narrate to Bryan Duval exactly what had passed. She felt that her
-mission was but imperfectly executed; but its solemnity and importance
-had grown upon her with every moment since she had entered Mrs.
-Griswold's house, and she was now strongly actuated by a nervous
-desire to get out of it as soon as possible. She looked at her watch
-and started up in a hurry.
-
-'I must be going, Bess,' she said; 'I had no notion it was so late. I
-am overdue at rehearsal, and here I have stayed talking about other
-people, and not said anything of all I wanted to say to you. Come
-along down-stairs with me.'
-
-'You will come again, Clara?' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'Nobody will ever
-suspect you in that gown and with that great shawl--it spoils your
-figure, dear, but never mind.'
-
-'I will try,' said Miss Montressor, 'I will see about it; if not, you
-can come to me. Good-bye now.'
-
-Mrs. Jenkins had come to the door with her; the hall was empty as the
-sisters spoke their last few words there. Mrs. Jenkins's hand was upon
-the lock of the street door when the bell was rung. She mechanically
-drew back the lock, and a gentleman presented himself. He was a young
-man, tall, slight, and upright, with bright black eyes and dark
-complexion, fine curly black hair, and a dark moustache.
-
-'Is Mrs. Griswold at home?' he said.
-
-'She is at home, sir,' said Mrs. Jenkins, 'but she is very tired and
-not very well, and she is lying down.'
-
-'O, then,' said the stranger, passing into the hall, 'I will content
-myself with a visit to your quarters, Mrs. Jenkins, and a look at the
-baby.' He had lifted his hat to Miss Montressor, who by this time was
-on the outside of the door. 'And,' he now added, 'I will just write a
-line in the waiting-room before you take me up-stairs, Mrs. Jenkins,
-and ask you to give it to Mrs. Griswold when she awakes.' The sisters
-parted with a wave of the hand, and Mrs. Jenkins shut the door.
-
-Miss Montressor walked slowly and thoughtfully down the street. She
-felt sure that the gentleman whom she had just seen, and who spoke so
-familiarly to her sister, must be at least an intimate acquaintance of
-Mrs. Griswold's--the early hour of his visit, his familiar manner, the
-fact that he was going to be taken up to see the child, the very tone
-of her sister's voice as she answered his question, all indicated that
-he was no stranger. Bess had said Mrs. Griswold had no intimate
-friends. Perhaps she had forgotten this one, or the intimacy might be
-between him and Mr. Griswold. From that, may be, Miss Montressor felt
-instinctively that here was a resource--an instrument put into her
-hands. There could be no risk in the using of it.
-
-By the time she had arrived at this conclusion she was well out of
-sight from the windows of Mrs. Griswold's house; but no one could
-leave that house and turn to either side without her perceiving the
-fact. She crossed the street and waited on the opposite side. She was
-quite alone, as it happened, throughout its long length, and might
-pass slowly back and forward a few steps in each direction without
-attracting attention.
-
-The minutes during which she was thus engaged seemed very long to Miss
-Montressor. Would Bryan Duval approve of what she was going to do? It
-might be a great blunder; it might be the best thing under the
-circumstances. She was forced to use her discretion in the matter;
-there seemed the one way in which she could fulfil the promise with
-which she had left Duval. After an interval of at least a quarter of
-an hour the door of Mrs. Griswold's house opened, and the young man
-for whom Miss Montressor was watching appeared on the threshold,
-attended by the coloured servant, to whom he was speaking pleasantly,
-and who was receiving a communication with the most expressive grin.
-In another moment he came down the steps, and advanced briskly in the
-same direction which she had taken. She stood perfectly still until he
-was nearly opposite to her. Then she crossed the street rapidly, went
-up to him, and, without giving herself a moment to consider, said:
-
-'You are a friend of Mrs. Griswold's? In her interest may I speak with
-you?'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-THORNTON CAREY.
-
-
-Thornton Carey, who was much surprised at this sudden address,
-stopped, hesitated, and looked somewhat embarrassed. Another man,
-accustomed to what are called 'adventures,' would not have been in the
-least thrown off his balance, either by the suddenness or the style of
-the address; he would have accepted it as a matter of course, and done
-his best to make himself pleasant to the speaker. Thornton Carey,
-however, was not this style of man, and, even if he had been, there
-was something in the earnestness of Miss Montressor's voice and manner
-which would have stopped his flippancy. Had she not, moreover,
-mentioned the name of Helen, and declared herself to be about to speak
-in Mrs. Griswold's interests? That would have been quite enough at any
-time to command Thornton Carey's sympathy and attention.
-
-'I am a friend of Mrs. Griswold's,' he replied, looking keenly at his
-interlocutor, 'and, for the matter of that, of Mr. Griswold's too, I
-hope.'
-
-'What I have to say concerns them both most nearly,' said Miss
-Montressor, frankly meeting his gaze. 'Will you, in the exercise of
-your friendship for them, trust me so far as to accompany me in a
-carriage to the Fifth-avenue Hotel?'
-
-Again Thornton Carey hesitated. He went very little into female
-society, and, under any other circumstances, the idea of being shut up
-in a carriage with a strange lady would certainly have frightened him;
-and again he suffered himself to be persuaded by Miss Montressor's
-manner and the object of her mission.
-
-'I will do so willingly,' he said; and ordering the coachman to drive
-to the hotel, he entered the vehicle, and took his place by his fair
-companion's side.
-
-As they drove through the crowded streets, Thornton Carey thought with
-wonder upon his strange position. Here was he, the hermit, the
-recluse, who so seldom emerged from his lettered seclusion far away in
-the city of the South, who seldom sought for any company beyond that
-of the distinguished dead who gathered around him as he pored over his
-books--here he was, rattling over the stones of New York, bound for
-the most luxurious hotel in the city, and with a very handsome,
-dashing young woman by his side. In the course of the desultory
-reading which, like most young men, he had indulged in before
-permanently settling down to valuable study, he had, he remembered,
-come across the description of certain adventures, such as he was then
-going through; and the idea that he, whom all his coevals looked upon
-as a model of sageness and sobriety, should be found under such
-circumstances, would have amused him, had he not at the same time
-remembered that the errand on which he was bound was, according to his
-companion's words, one in which Helen's happiness was deeply
-interested.
-
-The carriage stopped at the ladies' entrance of the hotel, and Miss
-Montressor, on being handed out by Thornton Carey, requested him to
-follow her. They passed up the staircase to the first floor, and
-finding one of the smaller parlours disengaged, his companion
-requested Mr. Carey to be seated, while she sent one of the servants
-to call Mr. Bryan Duval.
-
-'Bryan Duval!' echoed Carey in astonishment. 'Why, surely that is the
-name of a famous actor? Even I, though not much given to dramatic
-literature or theatre-going, have heard of him.'
-
-'It is the same,' said Miss Montressor.
-
-'But how can he be mixed up in any matter concerning Mrs. Griswold?'
-asked Carey.
-
-'It is as much in his power as in mine,' said Miss Montressor, 'to
-give information upon a subject in which Mrs. Griswold is most deeply
-and most unhappily interested.'
-
-'Unhappily!' interrupted Thornton Carey, turning pale.
-
-'Most unhappily, as you will agree when you know all,' said Miss
-Montressor. 'Here, however, is Mr. Duval; he will explain matters to
-you much better than I can.'
-
-She introduced the gentlemen, and was pleased to notice that, so far
-as she could see, each liked the look of the other's appearance. Duval
-was pleased with Thornton Carey's frank honest expression, while Carey
-himself recognised the keen acumen and subtle intelligence displayed
-in the broad brow and bright eves of the dramatist.
-
-Miss Montressor commenced the conversation by rapidly explaining to
-Duval, so far as she thought necessary, and without, of course, any
-allusion to Bess, the failure of her mission to Mrs. Griswold's house,
-adding that she there had met Mr. Carey, and learning that he was an
-intimate friend of the family, she had thought it best to ask his kind
-assistance, and had brought him there in order that the matter might
-be explained to him.
-
-'You have acted perfectly right, my dear Miss Montressor,' said Bryan,
-avoiding his usual familiarity, under the idea that it would prove
-surprising, if not displeasing, to their new ally. 'And now, sir,' he
-added, turning to Carey, 'I will keep you no longer in suspense. You
-have, of course, heard of this terrible murder of the American
-gentleman in Liverpool, the news of which is ringing through all New
-York.'
-
-'I have indeed,' replied Carey; 'and though the victim, whose name I
-believe was Foster, was personally unknown to me, the fact of his
-being a stranger, apparently without friends or connections at the
-scene of the assassination, seems to render the tragedy doubly
-dreadful.'
-
-'That he had no friends or relatives at the scene of the murder is, I
-have no doubt, perfectly true,' said Bryan Duval; 'but I have too much
-reason to believe, not merely that his name was not Foster, but, from
-what we now learn, that he was an intimate friend of yours.'
-
-'Good God!' cried Thornton Carey, upon whom a light suddenly broke.
-'And you say that Helen Griswold is also deeply interested in the
-matter? You cannot imagine for an instant--' and he stopped, for his
-voice suddenly failed him.
-
-'I do not merely imagine,' said Bryan Duval, speaking deliberately,
-'but in my own mind I no longer entertain any doubt that the man, the
-news of whose murder has caused such a shock in New York society, was
-Mr. Griswold, the husband of the lady whom you went to see this
-morning.'
-
-'It is too terrible,' said Thornton Carey, covering his face with his
-hands. 'You seem to speak with certainty. Mr. Griswold was in
-Europe--might have been in Liverpool at the very time--and yet why
-this assumption of a false name?'
-
-'That is exactly what we want you to explain to us,' said Bryan
-quickly; 'but before you attempt to do so, let me explain to you as
-shortly as possible the story of my acquaintance with Griswold, and
-the reason I have for coming to this sad conclusion.'
-
-Then Bryan Duval succinctly, and in as few words as possible, sketched
-the story of their acquaintance with Griswold in London--narrated the
-particulars of the Richmond dinner, the conversation which the
-unfortunate man had had with Miss Montressor, the devoted manner in
-which he had spoken of his wife, and in which he had exhibited her
-portrait set in the watch; the melancholy which had overcome him at
-Liverpool at the knowledge that they were about to proceed to New
-York, while his business must detain him some little time longer in
-England; told him, in fact, the whole story, without concealment or
-curtailment, down to Miss Montressor's recognition of the lady in the
-stalls on the previous evening as the original of the portrait which
-the so-called Mr. Foster had shown her, and the terrible dread which
-had then fallen upon her and Duval, that the murdered man was Mr.
-Griswold, who, for some object of his own unknown to them, had chosen,
-while away from home, to pass under an assumed name.
-
-'But what that object was,' said Bryan Duval, in conclusion, 'we want
-you to tell us.'
-
-After a pause of a few minutes, during which he had remained buried in
-abstraction, Thornton Carey spoke. 'You have given me a task which I
-am quite unable to fulfil,' he said, shaking his head. 'There is
-probably no man in the world who understands so little of business, by
-which I mean commercial matters, as myself. Mr. Griswold never spoke
-to me about them, and if he had I should have been unable to
-understand them; and, fond of me as I am sure he was, I should have
-been one of the last persons in the world to whom he would have made
-any business confidence.'
-
-'You believe, then,' said Bryan Duval, 'that this taking of an assumed
-name was really done for business purposes?'
-
-'I have not the least doubt of it,' said Thornton Carey earnestly.
-
-'I am myself inclined to that belief,' said Bryan. 'There was a
-singular frankness and honesty about the man, and the way in which he
-spoke about his wife, both to myself and Miss Montressor here, was
-evidently genuine; though,' he continued, with a touch of that worldly
-cynicism which sometimes came upon him, as it were, in spite of
-himself, 'these are matters in which one must never be led away by
-what one either sees or hears. There are men who love their wives very
-deeply, and who yet, when away from them, urged on by vanity or
-passion, or whatever they may choose to call it--'
-
-'I know what you would say,' said Thornton Carey, holding up his hand,
-'and I suppose, as regards the generality of men, you are right. But,
-believe me, this was not the case with Alston Griswold--his was not a
-mere mouth worship of his wife; no other woman, be she who she might,
-would have been able for an instant to make him forget her whom he so
-dearly loved.'
-
-'I believe you, Mr. Carey,' said Bryan, 'and in any case I honour you
-for your championship; but in this case I think you are right. From
-the little I saw of him, I have no doubt that your friend was all you
-say. We will allow, then, that he dropped his own name and called
-himself Foster for the furtherance of certain business transactions.
-To obtain anything like a clue to this murder, it is necessary for us
-to know what those business transactions were, and whence this
-necessity for concealment arose; until we can obtain that, we shall
-still be in the dark as to the motives of the murderer.'
-
-'I cannot help you,' said Thornton Carey, shaking his head ruefully.
-'As I said before, I only knew Mr. Griswold in his domestic capacity
-as my friend, and the word business was never even mentioned between
-us.'
-
-'You may yet be able to help us,' said Miss Montressor, leaning
-forward. 'This unfortunate Mr. Foster--Mr. Griswold as we must now
-think of him--told me that evening in the garden at Richmond that he
-had an intimate friend and confidant in New York, to whom during his
-absence he had not merely intrusted the conduct and supervision of his
-affairs and correspondence, but he had also placed his wife in this
-man's charge. Now, knowing the Griswolds as you do, you will probably
-be able to tell us if there is any man who stood in this relation with
-them and if so, what is his name?'
-
-'This declaration goes further to corroborate your idea that the
-murdered man was indeed poor Griswold,' said Thornton Carey, with a
-sigh. 'There was a man exactly fulfilling those functions, who was
-understood to be a sort of partner of Griswold's in certain matters,
-and from whom he was never separated. I did not know that he carried
-the intimacy into his domestic life, and, indeed, I should have
-thought the person I mean was one for whom Mrs. Griswold would have
-had but little liking.'
-
-'What was the name?' asked Duval eagerly.
-
-'His name was Warren--Trenton Warren,' replied Carey. 'He was a man
-much thought of for his foresight and acuteness in commercial matters,
-and he had an office down town in Broad-street, not far from
-Griswold's own place of business.'
-
-'The thing to be done, then, is to see this Mr. Warren at once,' said
-Bryan Duval. 'If we prove to him, as we shall be able to do, that we
-were friends of Mr. Griswold's, he will doubtless be able to clear up
-the whole mystery of the change of names.'
-
-'Even in this we are baffled for the time being,' said Thornton Carey.
-'I heard accidentally that Mr. Warren was at Chicago.'
-
-'Is that far distant?' asked Miss Montressor.
-
-'Thirty-six hours' journey at least,' said Duval; 'and being, as I
-understand, essentially a man of business, Mr. Warren might not be
-able to leave at once, however earnestly we might venture to recall
-him.'
-
-'You would be right, under ordinary circumstances,' said Thornton
-Carey; 'but I think if you were to let him know that it was of great
-importance that Mrs. Griswold should see him at once, he would
-return.'
-
-'And what shall we say to him when he comes?' asked Miss Montressor.
-
-'Rather what shall he say to us?' said Carey. 'Mixed up as he is with
-Griswold's affairs, he will be able to see at a glance to whose
-interest it would be that this unfortunate man should be unfairly
-gotten rid of.'
-
-'You seem disposed to take my view of this affair, Mr. Carey,' said
-Bryan Duval: 'that robbery was not the motive cause for this murder,
-but some ulterior object.'
-
-'Unquestionably,' said Carey, 'robbery was not the object, because, if
-the papers be correct, the unfortunate man's watch and money were left
-undisturbed. Some other motive, doubtless connected with the business
-which took him on his fatal journey, and which he was at such pains to
-keep secret--perhaps even dictated from this side of the water--must
-be at the bottom of it.'
-
-'Your views coincide exactly with mine,' said Bryan Duval. 'It is
-useless for us, however, further to speculate on this matter, more
-especially since we know nothing at all approaching certainty, until
-Mr. Warren helps us with his experience. The one thing that confronts
-us and that cannot be blinked at is, that no matter from what reason
-or other the poor fellow has been murdered, the fact, sooner or later,
-must be broken to his wife.'
-
-'That is what I feel so deeply,' said Carey. 'There is a mail from
-Europe due to-morrow; she will know of its arrival; and after that the
-truth can no longer be kept from her.'
-
-'All that will remain, then, for us,' said Bryan, 'will be to break it
-to her in the most delicate manner possible, and it is most lucky that
-we have found you to aid us in that difficult task.'
-
-'I will do my best most willingly,' said Carey; 'and after I have
-settled upon the matter, I may be of some use. At present, I confess
-that the news has come upon me so suddenly, my obligation to this
-unfortunate gentleman is so great, and my regard for him and his wife
-so essentially a portion of my life, that I cannot trust myself to
-give anything like clear advice or reliable aid.'
-
-'I perfectly comprehend your feelings,' said Bryan Duval, 'and there
-is no need for us to prolong this painful interview--in fact, Miss
-Montressor and myself have our duties to attend to at the theatre, and
-we must go to them. We may, however, rely upon you to take the one
-step immediately necessary--namely, to apprise Mr. Warren by telegraph
-that his presence is most desirable in New York.'
-
-'You may depend upon my doing so,' said Carey, 'and upon my being here
-tomorrow to take my part in any further consultation.'
-
-So they parted.
-
-Thornton Carey was completely overwhelmed by the news he had just
-heard. He would have disbelieved it, but he was never in the habit of
-allowing his common sense to be over-ridden by his sympathies; and
-that rare and inestimable quality told him that Mr. Bryan Duval had,
-indeed, good foundation for the deductions he had drawn. The more he
-thought over it, the less real doubt had he that the _soi-disant_
-Foster and his friend and benefactor, Alston Griswold, were one. He
-knew that Griswold's one idea in life had been to achieve such a
-fortune as would enable him to vie with the proudest millionaire in
-New York, and to retire altogether from business. It was evident that,
-in this endeavour, he had gone in for some great stake; so great as to
-require the exercise of what in the commercial world is known as tact,
-but in free-spoken circles, outside the commercial world, is called
-duplicity. This change of name, for instance--it could be easily
-learned whether the secret had been confided to Warren alone, or was
-known to the clerks in Griswold's house of business--that could be
-learned from the clerks themselves; and Thornton Carey determined at
-once to inquire of them.
-
-Wall-street, hot, rushing, and demented as usual; closing hour just at
-hand, and everybody anxious to make a few hundred or thousand more
-dollars before returning up-town for the day; telegraphs ticking from
-attic to basement in each of the enormous houses between Canal-street
-and Bowling-green; messengers rushing about in frantic haste, and the
-bar at Delmonico's at the corner of Chambers-street actually for five
-minutes without an occupant. Hustled on all sides, and swayed hither
-and thither by the fluctuating crowd, Thornton Carey at last made his
-way into Griswold's office. Telegraph instrument madly clicking in one
-corner, and white serpents winding out from it and covering the floor
-with their tortuous folds; clerks running races with the telegraph
-instrument, and endeavouring to drown its noise with the scratching of
-their pens over the paper; men in shiny hats tumbling in and out, and
-adding to the general confusion.
-
-After some delay, Thornton Carey was recognised by one of the
-principal clerks, who vouchsafed him three minutes' conversation. 'Mr.
-Griswold still in Europe; hoped he would be back very shortly; should
-be able to say more to-morrow, as letters were expected by the morning
-mail, giving the date of his return.'
-
-Plainly everybody there was wholly unconscious of any evil having
-befallen the head of the establishment. 'That argued nothing,'
-Thornton Carey thought to himself, 'save that Griswold had placed no
-confidence in his servants.' He must try Warren's office next.
-
-Being a partner of Mr. Griswold's, Trenton Warren had the use of the
-clerks and appliances of his friend's office. For his own particular
-service he kept but one quiet, silent, trustworthy individual, who
-looked up when Carey entered, and in reply to his inquiry, announced
-that Mr. Warren was at Chicago. 'I forward his letters to him every
-day,' said the man, 'and if you have anything to send, it can go with
-my lot.'
-
-Thornton Carey reflected for a moment.
-
-'No, thank you,' he said; 'my business is important, and I must wire
-Mr. Warren at once. What is his address?'
-
-'Three Bryan's Block, Chicago, will find him,' said the clerk, and
-immediately whirled round on his stool to continue his writing.
-
-On Thornton Carey leaving Warren's office, he stepped at once into the
-Western Union Telegraph, and sent the following message:
-
-
-'Trenton Warren, 3 Bryan's Block, Chicago.--I most earnestly request
-you to come to New York without delay; it is of the utmost importance
-that I should see you; a great calamity has occurred.
-
-'HELEN GRISWOLD.'
-
-
-'Now we must trust to Providence for the rest,' said Thornton Carey,
-as he walked away.
-
-Having despatched the telegram, Thornton Carey returned to Mrs.
-Griswold's house, to which he was admitted by Jim. He ascertained from
-Mrs. Jenkins and from Helen's maid that there was not any danger of
-her proposing to go out when she should leave her room. On this point
-he was extremely anxious. He knew it would have been impossible for
-her to have passed a street corner, any public building, or any group
-of talkers without seeing the announcement of the latest news from
-England of the murder which was occupying the attention of every
-intelligent person in New York at that moment, or hearing it
-discussed. It was everything to those who were now engaged in
-considering how best the awful truth should be broken to the
-unconsciously bereaved woman, that no uneasiness should be created in
-her mind through any indirect source.
-
-'You are quite sure,' Thornton Carey asked of Mrs. Jenkins, 'that she
-has not ordered the carriage for this afternoon?'
-
-'I am quite sure,' returned Mrs. Jenkins. 'About an hour ago she sent
-a note down to Mrs. Villiers to excuse herself from a dinner
-engagement for to-day, which was made at the play last night; and,
-indeed, I should not be surprised if she did not leave her room all
-day--her cold is very heavy.'
-
-It was impossible that Thornton Carey could have thus questioned the
-two women servants without exciting some suspicion, some uneasiness in
-their minds. He saw very plainly that he had done so, and he thought
-he might just venture to give them a hint of the origin of the
-caution, to endeavour to impress it upon them, and thereby render them
-more certain to observe it.
-
-'I daresay you wonder,' he continued, 'why I am so anxious to know
-about Mrs. Griswold's probable movements of to-day; and, as I am sure
-I may trust you, and that you are both faithful friends to her'--the
-women exchanged looks with each other, and each bestowed an inquiring
-nod upon Thornton Carey, while they drew closer to him in their
-eagerness--'I will tell you that there is a rumour of an accident
-having occurred in England, in which it is just possible that Mr.
-Griswold may have been injured.'
-
-'A railway accident, sir?' the two women exclaimed simultaneously.
-
-'No,' he answered, with some confusion, 'not a railway accident; it
-is, I believe, a case of supposed malicious injury. I cannot enter
-into the particulars now. I am not, indeed, fully aware of them. As
-soon as I am, and that I know for certain whether Mr. Griswold is or
-is not injured, I will tell you. In the mean time, you will understand
-that it is of immense importance that Mrs. Griswold should not be
-alarmed. If what we fear is true, she must know it soon enough. If it
-is not true, it will be most cruel to subject her to the excitement
-and suspense of knowing anything about it until all is known. I want
-you, Mrs. Jenkins, and you, Annette,' addressing Helen's maid, 'to
-make me the same promise that I have also secured from Jim.'
-
-'I will do anything you wish, sir,' said Mrs. Jenkins; 'and I am sure
-Annette will say the same.'
-
-'Mais oui, mais oui,' assented Annette eagerly.
-
-'Well, then, you promise to be very cautious in your own manner,
-looks, and speech--not to let Mrs. Griswold hear you talking to one
-another in any unusual way; not to go into her room with frightened
-faces, or with anything in your look which could lead her to think
-that this day is different from any other day in any respect. Will you
-promise me to keep a perpetual watch over yourselves, and to remember
-that all we want is a few hours' interval, during which I and other
-friends of Mrs. Griswold's may be quite sure that no one will be
-allowed to see her who can talk to her about the distressing rumour
-which has just reached New York, and yet that she will not suspect
-that any such watchfulness is being observed?'
-
-Again he received assuring nods from the two women.
-
-'I must also beg you,' he continued, 'to be very particular to keep
-every newspaper out of your mistress's sight until after the next time
-I shall have been here; make any excuse and every excuse that comes in
-your heads, but don't permit her to get hold of a single evening paper
-or any morning paper of to-day. I hope none have found their way to
-her room this morning?'
-
-'No, I think not,' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'You haven't seen any newspapers
-about, Annette?'
-
-'No,' Annette replied; 'madame had not asked for any newspapers, and
-she had taken none up to her.'
-
-'You need not be frightened on that point,' said Mrs. Jenkins; 'for I
-never saw a lady with so little curiosity about news as Mrs. Griswold.
-She reads the weeklies sometimes, when they are all about books and
-interesting things that are happening in the world; but I have known
-her go a whole week without looking into a daily; and we will keep
-them out of her way, if by any perverse chance she should take it into
-her head to want to see them. She is not given to scolding, but I
-daresay Jim would not mind taking a scolding from her for not having
-thought of fetching an evening paper, if it is for her.'
-
-'Don't make yourself uneasy, sir; not but what we should like to have
-a look at what they say.'
-
-'They don't say anything,' said Thornton Carey; 'at least, they have
-not said it yet. The news has come by private cable message, and I am
-only afraid of its getting into the later editions. I shall be here
-tomorrow early, and implicitly trust you in this matter. There is
-another thing, too, you will have to be very careful about, if you
-please.'
-
-'Certainly, sir,' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'What is that?'
-
-'It is just possible that a telegram may come, directed to Mrs.
-Griswold.'
-
-'From Europe, sir?'
-
-'No,' said Thornton Carey; 'from Chicago.'
-
-Mrs. Jenkins started slightly, and said:
-
-'Chicago! Is there anything wrong there?'
-
-'O, no, there is nothing wrong; only Mrs. Griswold has been sending a
-message on business to a friend of Mr. Griswold's, and it is better,
-until we are sure that Mr. Griswold is all right, that she should not
-see the answer. Will you therefore, Mrs. Jenkins, undertake, if this
-telegram should come, to have it sent at once to me at the
-Fifth-avenue Hotel? You need not be alarmed at undertaking the
-responsibility--the giving the message to one to whom it is not
-addressed. I can give you my word of honour for that, and you will
-know why almost as soon as I do. I cannot tell you more just now,
-because I do not know more.'
-
-'I will have the message sent, sir,' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'Up to what
-hour shall you expect it?'
-
-'I mean to remain at the hotel all day--at least until it comes,' said
-Thornton Carey. 'There is an almost absolute certainty that it will
-come.'
-
-'There will be no difficulty about it, sir,' said Mrs. Jenkins; 'but
-may I ask you if we are to be as particular about letters as about
-telegrams and newspapers?'
-
-'Certainly,' said Thornton Carey; 'my injunctions refer to every kind
-of communication which could possibly reach Mrs. Griswold between this
-time and my next visit.'
-
-'I don't see how we are to manage that, sir,' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'She
-doesn't mind about newspapers, and she does not expect any telegrams
-from any part of the States; but she will be looking out for English
-letters in the morning--they ought to be in--and it won't be possible,
-I am afraid, to keep her quiet then, to prevent her coming downstairs,
-or to hide the letters from her, if they come. What are we to do in
-that case?'
-
-'It will not matter about English letters,' he replied. 'Any she could
-get tomorrow morning must have been written before the accident which
-is reported, so you need not trouble about that; besides, I will be
-here almost as soon as the mail can be delivered.'
-
-He received an earnest assurance from the two women that all his
-requests should be scrupulously observed, and he left the house
-feeling that, as far as human precaution could be taken towards
-securing her from a premature shock, Helen was safe, at all events,
-for a few hours.
-
-Mrs. Jenkins and Annette retired to the waiting-room of the hall, and
-earnestly discussed the strange directions which they had just
-received. As a matter of course, they immediately seized on the
-morning paper of that day; for it had not escaped Mrs. Jenkins's
-characteristic acuteness that there was a decided inconsistency
-between Thornton Carey's statement that the news which he apprehended
-reaching Mrs. Griswold had come in private telegram, and his question
-as to whether any newspapers had been taken to her room that day.
-'Depend upon it,' said she to Justine, 'whatever it is, there is some
-hint of it in the dailies for to-day. Let us have a look.'
-
-The papers lay, as they had done on the previous day, on the table in
-the waiting-room; the two women turned them over eagerly, but found
-nothing which they could suppose to have reference to the mysterious
-rumour to which Thornton Carey had vaguely alluded--the murder at
-Liverpool was still the leading theme.
-
-'I cannot,' said Mrs. Jenkins, 'find out that anybody has come to
-grief except that unlucky Mr. Foster.'
-
-Thornton Carey returned to the Fifth-avenue Hotel, where he found
-Bryan Duval, looking weary and dejected. The actor said little in
-reply to the narrative of the steps which he had taken. The little he
-did say was in approval, and then he made a dreary effort to get away
-for a while from the terrible subject which was occupying them.
-
-'I shall stay here all day,' said Thornton Carey, 'and wait for the
-telegram, and I really don't see that there is anything else to be
-done. But you had better go out and get a little fresh air to string
-yourself up for to-night's work--it will be hard to get through, I
-fancy.'
-
-'Deuced hard,' said Bryan Duval. 'It is not the first time I have
-comedied on the beards and tragedied behind the scenes, but I do not
-know that I ever found the contrast so great a pull as this time--it
-is the unconsciousness of the woman that is so horrid; when she knows
-the worst, it will not be so bad. Good Heavens! only think, if she
-took it into her head to come to the theatre to-night!'
-
-'There is not the slightest danger of that,' said Thornton Carey. 'I
-forgot to tell you that she has a heavy cold.'
-
-But little more was said between them, and Bryan Duval took the young
-man's advice. He went out until it was time to go down to the theatre.
-About two hours later than the time at which Thornton Carey had
-rejoined him they met for a moment before the performance, and
-Thornton told him that no news had come; a message to the same effect
-was conveyed to Bryan Duval in a twisted note on his return after the
-play, but Thornton Carey made no attempt to see him again that night.
-
-Once more the house had been crowded by an enthusiastic audience;
-again the performance had realised public expectation to the fullest
-extent. If possible, Bryan Duval had been more exquisitely humorous,
-had thrown more of his characteristic acuteness into his part, than on
-the previous evening. Miss Montressor had charmed all the spectators;
-but some of those who had been present at the first performance
-noticed that she was slightly nervous, which she had not been on that
-occasion, and that she wore a little more rouge.
-
-During the whole of that night Thornton Carey did not undress or lie
-down; the hours passed drearily away, and no message came to interrupt
-them. Just before the time at which Mrs. Griswold's house was usually
-closed and her servants retired, Jim had 'slipped round,' as he
-phrased it, to Fifth-avenue Hotel, and told Mr. Carey that his orders
-had been strictly observed; no callers, no news, no newspapers, no
-messages had been suffered to reach Mrs. Griswold, who was better, had
-got up rather late in the evening, and passed an hour in the nursery;
-but she had asked no dangerous questions, she had displayed no
-imprudent curiosity. She was in bed, and asleep, old Jim said, on the
-authority of Mrs. Jenkins, when he came out to report to Thornton
-Carey; but no telegram had been received.
-
-This inexplicable circumstance sorely troubled and beset the mind of
-Thornton Carey. Advice, assistance from Warren, if not his actual
-presence, was entirely indispensable under the circumstances; but when
-the morning dawned, and when the letter-post hour was near, Thornton
-knew that the moment he dreaded so intensely had arrived, that no
-further delay was possible, and that that advice and assistance must
-be dispensed with.
-
-At the early hour which had previously been agreed upon, Bryan Duval,
-Thornton Carey, and Miss Montressor--the trio had by this time become
-quite friends--left the hotel and proceeded on foot to Helen
-Griswold's house. As they reached it, the postman came up, with his
-usual quick important step, and delivered a few unimportant notes,
-which Jim, with a glance at Thornton Carey, who was ascending the
-steps, took from his hand. The three entered the house, the door was
-shut behind them, and the letters just received were handed by the
-docile Jim to Carey.
-
-'There is nothing here,' he remarked, laying them on the table in the
-waiting-room. 'Jim, ring for the women.'
-
-In answer to the customary summons, both Mrs. Jenkins and Annette came
-downstairs. The first thing to be done was to send up word, in reply
-to Mrs. Griswold's eager inquiry (made, as Mrs. Jenkins told them, the
-moment she awoke, only a few instants ago) as to whether letters from
-England were yet delivered, 'that they had not yet come.'
-
-'Tell her this,' said Thornton Carey, 'and then tell her that I am
-here, and that I beg she will see me as soon as is convenient. If she
-asks why I come so early, say you do not know. It is too late to make
-any excuse now.'
-
-'Is it true, sir,' said Mrs. Jenkins--'has anything really happened to
-Mr. Griswold?'
-
-'It is too true,' said Duval, addressing the wondering woman, whose
-eager interest and curiosity about him showed in every feature of her
-face, even in this crisis; 'it is too true--you will soon know all! In
-the mean time be more cautious than ever.'
-
-Without a word Mrs. Jenkins returned up-stairs, whither Annette had
-preceded her, and Thornton Carey led the way into the dining-room,
-where the three sat in profound silence, interrupted after the
-interval of a few minutes by Mrs. Jenkins, who entered the room with a
-very pale face, and addressed Thornton Carey.
-
-'She will see you, sir; she is just getting up, and Annette is
-dressing her as fast as she can. But--I hope you won't be angry, sir,
-or think it was my fault--I gave my message as matter-of-fact as could
-be, and the curtain was between me and her, so she could not see my
-face; but the very moment she heard you wanted to see her at this hour
-of the morning, she took fright. I suppose it was because she had not
-had the English letters that she expected, and that disappointment had
-told upon her nerves, and helped to make her suspicious. She said she
-knew there was something wrong. "Go down," said she, "and say I will
-see him. Bring him up to the boudoir, and let him tell me whatever I
-have got to hear and bear." Not another word, sir, but she is as white
-as a corpse.'
-
-Thornton Carey had started up before Mrs. Jenkins had got through her
-first sentence, and turned a face of wild distress upon the other two.
-
-'It cannot be helped,' said Bryan Duval, 'and it is better so. Go up
-with the good woman at once--for God's sake get it over.'
-
-He, too, rose as he spoke, and turning abruptly towards the
-chimneypiece, laid his arms upon it, and hid his face in them.
-
-Miss Montressor sat profoundly still, but the description her sister
-had just given of Helen might have been repeated of her--she, too, was
-as pale as a corpse.
-
-Thornton Carey and Mrs. Jenkins went up-stairs without exchanging a
-single word. The door of Helen's boudoir opened in the corridor
-outside her bedroom. Mrs. Jenkins merely threw it open in passing, and
-the young man went in, while she entered the bedroom by the other
-door. No sound reached his strained ear for the few minutes during
-which he waited. At their expiration Helen came in. She wore a white
-muslin dressing-gown, and her hair was simply brushed behind her ears,
-and hung loose upon her shoulders. As she came through the door of her
-bedroom into the boudoir, she faced Thornton Carey directly, and her
-first glance at him told her that her fears had been prophetic--that
-he had bad news to tell.
-
-
-
-END OF VOL. II.
-
-
-
-LONDON:
-ROBSON AND SONS, PRINTERS, PANCRAS ROAD, N.W.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Impending Sword (Vol. 2 of 3), by Edmund Yates
-
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-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
-<html>
-<head>
-<title>Te Impending Sword. Vol. II.</title>
-<meta name="Subtitle" content="A Novel.">
-<meta name="Author" content="Edmund Yates">
-<meta name="Publisher" content="TInsley Brothrs">
-<meta name="Date" content="1874">
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-
-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's The Impending Sword (Vol. 2 of 3), by Edmund Yates
-
-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: The Impending Sword (Vol. 2 of 3)
- A Novel
-
-Author: Edmund Yates
-
-Release Date: May 17, 2020 [EBook #62159]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE IMPENDING SWORD (VOL. 2 OF 3) ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Charles Bowen from page scans provided by the Web Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<p class="hang1">Transcriber's Note:<br>
-1. Page scan source:<br>
-http://www.archive.org/details/impendingswordno02yate<br>
-(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign)</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>THE IMPENDING SWORD.</h3>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h5>LONDON:<br>
-ROBSON AND SONS, PRINTERS, PANCRAS ROAD, N.W.</h5>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h5>THE</h5>
-<h4>IMPENDING SWORD.</h4>
-<br>
-<h5>A Novel.</h5>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h5>BY</h5>
-<h4>EDMUND YATES,</h4>
-<h5>AUTHOR OF 'BLACK SHEEP,' 'THE ROCK AHEAD,' 'THE YELLOW FLAG,'<br>
-ETC. ETC.</h5>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<p style="margin-left:15%; font-size: smaller; text-indent:-.5em">'Put we our quarrel to the will of Heaven,<br>
-Who,when He sees the hours ripe on earthWill rain hot vengeance on the offenders' heads.'</p>
-<p style="text-indent:60%">SHAKESPEARE.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h5>IN THREE VOLUMES.</h5>
-<h5>VOL. II.</h5>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h5>LONDON:<br>
-TINSLEY BROTHERS, 8 CATHERINE ST. STRAND.<br>
-1874.</h5>
-
-<h5>[<i>The right of translation, dramatic adaptation, and reproduction is
-reserved</i>.]</h5>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<table cellpadding="10" style="width:90%; margin-left:5%; font-weight:bold">
-<colgroup>
-<col style="width:10%; vertical-align:top; text-align:right">
-<col style="width:90%; vertical-align:top; text-align:left">
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2">
-<h3>CONTENTS OF VOL. II.</h3>
-<h4>Book the Second.</h4>
-<h4>THE CRIME.</h4></td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td>CHAP.</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><a name="div2Ref_01" href="#div2_01">I.</a></td>
-<td>DOWN TO LIVERPOOL.</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><a name="div2Ref_02" href="#div2_02">II.</a></td>
-<td>TRAPPED.</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><a name="div2Ref_03" href="#div2_03">III.</a></td>
-<td>HELEN'S JOURNAL.</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><a name="div2Ref_04" href="#div2_04">IV.</a></td>
-<td>'SCOT FREE.'</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><a name="div2Ref_05" href="#div2_05">V.</a></td>
-<td>A BLAZE OF TRIUMPH.</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><a name="div2Ref_06" href="#div2_06">VI.</a></td>
-<td>STARTLING NEWS.</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><a name="div2Ref_07" href="#div2_07">VII.</a></td>
-<td>ONLY TOO TRUE.</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><a name="div2Ref_08" href="#div2_08">VIII.</a></td>
-<td>THORNTON CAREY.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>Book the Second.</h3>
-<h4>THE CRIME.</h4>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div2_01" href="#div2Ref_01">CHAPTER I.</a></h4>
-<h5>DOWN TO LIVERPOOL.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p>Bryan Duval had not forgotten his promise to Miss Montressor. Early in
-the morning of that eventful day, when she and Mr. Dolby had parted so
-strangely, and before she had even yet shaken off the extra slumber
-occasioned by the fatigue of the Richmond dinner, the fair actress had
-received a letter from her <i>entrepreneur</i> which ran thus:</p>
-<br>
-
-<p>'My dear Clara,--The business which I feared might possibly have
-detained me has been smoothed over, and we positively sail on
-Saturday, in the Cuba. We shall go down to Liverpool by the twelve
-o'clock train, on Friday, stop the night at the Adelphi, and have
-plenty of time to see our traps--and what with music scores,
-promptbooks, and costumes, I have a tolerable amount of
-luggage--comfortably on board one of the first tenders which will be
-despatched to the ship. I think we shall be a pleasant party. I have
-concluded engagements with Mrs. Regan, for old women and heavies, with
-Skrymshire for first low comedy, and with Cooington for walking
-gentleman and utility. He is a nice-looking young fellow, can make-up
-very fairly, and will, consequently, make an excellent foil for me;
-all the other people I can get over there, but these are absolutely
-necessary. Cooington will be especially valuable. You are young, and
-your ideas of the dreadful are, probably, vague, but when you have
-once seen an American <i>jeune premier</i>, with his peculiar style of hair
-and costume, they will immediately become definite.</p>
-
-<p>'By the way, my dear, talking about costumes, I think it would be
-advisable that you should have two first-rate evening gowns--don't fly
-into a rage now. Your toilette yesterday was particularly good, and I
-have no doubt you show quite as much good taste in your evening dress,
-but I want something exceptionally stylish; you will be seen a great
-deal more in public over there than you are here. You will probably
-have a reception, as they call it, from one of their artistic
-societies, and on off-nights will have to show-up at the opera, or one
-of the other theatres; and as our good friends on the other side
-attach immense importance to dress--and rightly too, according to my
-notions--I want you at once to send a pattern-body to Madame Lagrange,
-118 Rue Vivienne. That's all! You need take no further trouble about
-the matter. I have written to old Lagrange by this post--I have known
-her ever since I was a boy--and told her exactly what you want; for my
-sake the old lady will put on all steam, and you will have your gowns
-in time to pack them for America. I have also desired Madame Lagrange
-to send the bill to me, a liberty which, I trust, under the
-circumstances, you will excuse.</p>
-
-<p>'I have an enormous number of things to get ready before I start; the
-rehearsal of <i>Pickwick's Progress</i> to superintend at the Gravity, and
-an action to bring against a rascal in the North who has been
-producing an exact copy of the <i>Cruiskeen Lawn,</i> fights, songs, Irish
-wake, and all under the title of the <i>Jug of Punch</i>. The copyright law
-in this country is disgraceful. By the way, did you see those absurd
-remarks in the <i>Earwig</i> about me and Mr. Dickens, in connection with
-Pickwick's Progress? I mention this in case I may not be able to call
-upon you before we start, so that you may be perfectly sure to be at
-Euston very soon after eleven. Till then good-bye.</p>
-
-<p style="text-indent:45%">'Yours always,</p>
-<p style="text-indent:55%">'BRYAN DUVAL.</p>
-<br>
-<p>'P.S.--What a good dinner it was yesterday, and how very jolly we all
-were! I have taken a great fancy to Foster, he seems to be an
-exceptionally good fellow. He talks of coming down to Liverpool to
-see us off. If he does, I shall make a point of giving him a dinner at
-the Adelphi the night before we sail--they have some green turtle
-there--but women don't understand these things.'</p>
-<br>
-
-<p>'Mr. Foster is an exceptionally good fellow,' said Miss Montressor,
-laying down the letter, 'and you are another, Bryan Duval. This
-experience confirms me in my opinion, that whenever you hear men
-bitter and disparaging in their remarks about a man who is before the
-world, and who is successful, he is sure to prove remarkably pleasant,
-agreeable, and kind-hearted. Now I am sure nothing could be more
-thoughtful or more delicate than Mr. Duval's suggestion about those
-gowns, and what a queer fellow he is too!' she said, taking up the
-letter again; 'fancy his writing about a &quot;pattern-body&quot;--he seems to
-know everything.'</p>
-
-<p>By this time the fact of the great actor-author's departure for
-America, taking with him a select troupe for the purpose of playing
-certain of his own pieces, had been heralded in the newspapers, and
-had created as much excitement as even he could have wished. Most of
-the journals congratulated Mr. Duval on the engagement, and the
-Americans on the fact that they were about to renew their acquaintance
-with that distinguished combination of literature and art, who would
-add fresh laurels to the wreath which had already adorned his brows,
-and from this they proceeded in a tone of patronage towards the
-Western hemisphere generally, telling it how thankful it ought to be
-in having such a school of talent as England to draw upon for its
-artists.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the other journals, however, the conductors or writers of
-which had a personal pique against Mr. Duval, did not think so
-strongly on the matter. They averred, roundly enough, that the autumn
-was the usual time for English actors to go out to America, and not
-the spring; and that probably the reason which induced Mr. Duval to
-take his departure from his native country at the present time was
-that he was entirely played out and used up there, and he hoped to
-recoup himself by repeating his previous success in America, an
-expectation which would be undoubtedly disappointed.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Duval read these various reports with equal delight. He liked
-being praised; but he did not in the least mind being found fault
-with.</p>
-
-<p>'I like to see 'em pitch in,' he would say, slowly rubbing his hands
-together, with a broad grin, such as those who had only seen him in
-his melo-dramatic parts on the stage, could never believe him capable
-of giving. 'I like to see them pitch in; it shows their interest in
-me. I would sooner that they would write about me with bradawls dipped
-in vitriol, rather than that they should say nothing. This,' touching
-one of the journals before him, 'is Cosby's doing. Cosby is a stupid
-ass. I have told him so in print and by word of mouth many a time and
-oft. I have dropped down hot and heavy upon Cosby frequently, and he
-don't forgive that. When my <i>Varco the Vampire</i> was produced at the
-Parthenon, Cosby's original comedy of <i>Gold and Gloom</i> (taken from a
-play of Maquet and Dumas, produced at the Porte St. Martin in '52--I
-have it there in the bookcase, and can show it to you) was brought out
-at the Gravity. <i>Varco</i> ran for one hundred and fifty nights, when I
-stopped it myself, as I wanted a little chamois shooting in Styria,
-and <i>Gold and Gloom</i> fizzled out in a fortnight. Cosby didn't like
-that--he don't like the notion that my <i>Pickwick's Progress</i> is about
-to be produced at the Gravity, which he looks upon somewhat as his own
-theatre; he don't like, what he knows to be the fact, that I have a
-splendid engagement with Van Buren in New York, and so he writes these
-lies about me, thinking to rile me and to draw me out. No good, dear
-Cosby; no good, dear boy. There is nothing makes a venomous ruffian
-like that so wild as to completely ignore his attack, and if you
-chance to meet him in the street, greet him with the utmost
-politeness; you need not take his hand, but you also need not put your
-fist into his face. Cosby will watch the papers daily, looking for an
-indignant letter from me in reply to his screed; but he will find
-none; and if I see him at the first night of <i>Pickwick's Progress,</i> I
-shall wag my head at him, and express a hope that he is pleased with
-the entertainment.'</p>
-
-<p>But though he declined to resent this newspaper controversy, Mr. Duval
-found more than enough to occupy his mind and to fill up his time.
-Half a dozen needy persons belonging to the theatrical profession--not
-adventurers, and in no way dishonest--simply men and women who, from
-stress of circumstances, had undertaken to do something for which they
-were not in the least qualified, and who consequently had gone to the
-wall, were simultaneously struck with the brilliant idea that it would
-be a remarkably good thing for Mr. Duval if he took a temporary
-farewell of the British public in a performance the proceeds of which
-should be devoted to their benefit. Others there were who addressed
-him on the strength of having read that he was about to take a company
-with him to perform his pieces in the United States, and at once
-expressing themselves as perfectly certain that such company would not
-be complete unless they, the writers, joined it in prominent positions
-with high salaries. In fact, the notice of his departure brought upon
-him all the horde of impertinent correspondents who prey upon a public
-man's time, and rob him of such leisure as he might otherwise have;
-autograph hunters, photographers, who could make it convenient to
-receive him at any time, sanctimonious begging-letter writers, who
-declared that his path across the ocean would neither be happy nor
-successful unless he were blessed with the inward consciousness of
-having left behind him half a crown to succour modest misery in
-distress.</p>
-
-<p>Applications such as these Mr. Duval treated with sovereign
-contempt--he had quite enough real business on hand. His rooms in
-Vernon-chambers were very much changed from their normal condition;
-all the nick-nacks were put away, all the pictures and handsome
-furniture covered over, and in the midst stood enormous boxes, some
-crammed to repletion, others yet gaping as it were for food, all
-bearing the great actor's name in large red letters, all marked with
-the word 'Hold.'</p>
-
-<p>Thither, threading their way among the packages which littered the
-landings as well as the apartments, came those anxious to have a last
-few words with Mr. Duval. Mr. Moss Marks, the manager of the Gravity,
-was there, nervously anxious about the forthcoming <i>Pickwick's
-Progress</i>, and constantly endeavouring to cut down costly items of
-furniture and decoration which Duval had insisted upon being provided.
-Mr. Hodgkinson, too, came to impress upon his friend his parting
-injunctions, that if he saw anything in the States likely to make a
-sensation, any 'fakement' likely to hit up the British public, he
-should wire him at once and send it over by the next boat. There, too,
-was the great impresario, Wuff, who began to find that camels and
-coryphées spelt bankruptcy as well as Shakespeare, and he was eager to
-beg a few last words of advice from the omniscient Bryan Duval before
-he started. Mr. Foster looked in, too, once or twice, to see how his
-friend was getting on, and to ask whether he could be any use in
-helping him in his preparations for the voyage.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was Miss Montressor without her visitors. Two days after the
-announcement of her intended visit to America appeared in the Sunday
-papers, a mysterious old lady, neatly dressed in black silk, with an
-old-fashioned bonnet, appeared at the Brompton villa, and giving her
-name as Mrs. Porter, begged permission to speak for a few minutes to
-the lady of the house. The page, who, though a sharp boy, was not yet
-sufficiently versed in his business to gauge the social position of
-visitors, was about to usher the old lady into the drawing-room, but
-Justine, happening to pass downstairs at the moment, promptly bade her
-take a seat in the hall, and took upon herself the task of announcing
-her arrival.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor started very much at tearing the name, but recovering
-herself, desired that the visitor should be shown to her bedroom. The
-old lady bowed when she received the summons; and Justine noticed that
-she trembled very much as she ascended the stairs. What passed during
-the interview Justine did not exactly know, though she loitered about
-the passage to gather as much as she could. First, she heard her
-mistress's voice in high sharp tones of rebuke, and the old lady
-apparently pleading. Miss Montressor's voice then softened very much,
-and the conversation was carried on in a low earnest undertone,
-mingled, so Justine thought, with sobs from one, if not from both, and
-just before the door opened she could have sworn she heard a sound as
-of many kisses, broken with words of blessing and farewell. And Miss
-Montressor's eyes were very red, and her brilliant complexion rather
-tear-blurred, after her visitor's departure; and though she speedily
-rectified this irregularity, she remained singularly quiet and subdued
-all that evening.</p>
-
-<p>Also, just before the day of her departure, arrived Miss Thomasina
-Campbell and Miss Georgina Goss, formerly Miss Montressor's colleagues
-at the T.R.D.L., where they had many a bitter quarrel together; but
-now that she was going to rid them of her presence, and to interfere
-no more, her devoted friends. The visit of these young ladies was
-ostensibly to bid their dear Clara good-bye, but in reality to
-endeavour to ascertain from her what terms she had got, and what
-parts she was likely to play, and to look at the dresses she was
-going to take with her. As regards the first items, they failed
-lamentably--Miss Montressor spoke vaguely of enormous sums, and of
-'leading business,' but declined to enter into any particulars--but as
-regards the latter, they were gratified to the highest extent. Miss
-Montressor showed them all her pretty things, and even went to the
-extent of unpacking an enormous trunk for the sake of displaying the
-two splendid gowns which had duly arrived from Madame Lagrange, and
-which were pronounced by staid Miss Campbell to be 'truly superb,' and
-by giggling Miss Goss to be 'perfect ducks.' When they had seen all
-the pretty things, and partaken of sherry and seltzer-water, with
-which gay little Miss Goss moistened a cigarette, they took their
-leave, not without warning their hostess to beware of the fascinations
-of Bryan Duval, who, they insinuated, was a heartless wretch who made
-love to everybody.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, Mr. Foster paid his first and last visit to the young lady in
-whom he seemed to have taken so kindly an interest.</p>
-
-<p>'You are surprised to see me here, Miss Montressor,' he said, 'more
-especially when you recollect that you never asked me to call upon
-you.'</p>
-
-<p>'I am very much delighted to see you, Mr. Foster,' said Miss
-Montressor frankly, extending her hand to him, 'and I should be more
-pleased if I did not think that your presence here meant that there
-was no chance of your sailing with us in the Cuba, on Saturday.'</p>
-
-<p>'It does mean that, indeed,' said Mr. Foster. 'I shall not be able to
-complete my business so early, but I hope to follow you in a very
-short time. You are kind enough to say you wish I were coming with
-you, Miss Montressor, but you cannot regret the impossibility half so
-much as I do. I am home sick, and that talk which we had the other day
-about my wife and my belongings has made me more than ever anxious to
-get back to them.'</p>
-
-<p>'I verily believe it was the chance of another chat about them that
-procured me the pleasure of this visit,' said Miss Montressor. 'But,
-however, you shall not be gratified this time. You shall talk to me of
-nothing but what I shall do in New York, where I shall go, what I
-shall see, and to whom I must make myself most gracious and agreeable
-in order to insure my success. By the way,' she added, turning
-suddenly round to him, 'one thing struck me in thinking over our talk
-the other day. This business of which you think so much, and in
-connection with which you came over here, it must be still going on in
-New York, is it not?'</p>
-
-<p>'Certainly.'</p>
-
-<p>'But not by itself; you must have left it in somebody's charge?'</p>
-
-<p>'Of course, in the charge of my most intimate friend.'</p>
-
-<p>'O, indeed,' said Miss Montressor. 'And Mrs. Foster, she is doubtless
-with her family--father or mother, or something of that sort?'</p>
-
-<p>'No, indeed, poor Helen is an orphan; she remains at home, in our own
-house, but I have desired my friend to look after her.'</p>
-
-<p>'The same friend?' inquired Miss Montressor.</p>
-
-<p>'The same friend!'</p>
-
-<p>'O, indeed,' said Miss Montressor, in the same tone. 'It must be a
-great comfort to you to think that there is some one to whom you can
-confide your business and your wife with a perfect feeling of
-security.'</p>
-
-<p>And then they talked of subjects connected with theatricals and New
-York until Mr. Foster took his departure.</p>
-
-<p>At length the eventful Friday morning arrived, and though, from the
-ordinary condition of the Euston Station, it would seem impossible
-that there should ever be any extra bustle there, some little
-additional excitement might have been noticed. Mr. Bryan Duval, never
-oblivious of the chances of advertisement, had written to the traffic
-manager, enclosing a slip cut from the newspaper, announcing his
-departure, and requesting some extra facilities in the way of
-transport. The traffic manager, with great politeness, had ordered a
-saloon carriage to be placed at the disposal of the theatrical party;
-and thus their intended arrival became known. People who were waiting
-about on the platform, ordinary passengers and their friends, saw the
-handsome saloon carriage, and concluding immediately that it must be
-for some member of the Royal Family, or some other equally
-distinguished personage, lingered round it in the pleasant expectation
-of being gratified with the sight of a hat or a beard, the skirt of a
-robe or the end of a bonnet-string.</p>
-
-<p>They were not, however, much disappointed when, upon inquiry, they
-learned who were really to be the occupants of the carriage. A live
-actor or actress in their ordinary citizen garb has an immense
-attraction for the many-headed, and Bryan Duval was both well known
-and popular; his very luggage, arriving, as it did, in a huge break,
-interested them much, and they studied the enormous red letters
-announcing 'Bryan Duval, passenger per Cuba, New York, U.S.A.,' and
-the mysterious word 'Hold,' with a feeling akin to awe. The
-well-informed told the ignorant of the plays he had written and what
-characters he had played, what a magnificent fortune he had, and what
-a number of duchesses and marchionesses were dying of love for him.</p>
-
-<p>The great actor was the first to arrive. Ordinary people travel in
-rough clothes, and drive to the station in a cab. Not so Mr. Bryan
-Duval. His belief in the necessity of advertising himself remained
-with him to the last, and the hoofs of the spanking chestnuts, as
-their master tooled them under the archway, roused the echoes of the
-Euston courtyard. No sign of vulgar luggage appeared in Mr. Duval's
-trap--the only hint that he was about to travel might have been found
-in the natty morocco-leather courier's pouch, slung over his shoulder
-by a trap; otherwise he might have been going down to a picnic at St.
-Albans, for he was dressed in a suit of gray dittos, wore a crimson
-tie, shiny-tip jean boots, and his usual curly-brimmed hat.</p>
-
-<p>The little crowd gathered round him as he drew up to the station, but
-he pretended to take no notice of them, and to be absorbed in giving
-directions to his groom. When these were concluded, he was apparently
-about moving off, when the groom touched his hat, and said, with
-something like a quiver in his voice, 'Take the liberty of wishing you
-good-bye, sir--happy voyage and a safe return.'</p>
-
-<p>'Thank you, James, very much,' said Mr. Duval, in his clearest tones.
-'Take care of the horses--see that Black Bess and Tantivy are always
-properly exercised, and remember me very kindly to your wife.' And Mr.
-Duval moved off midst a murmur of sympathetic admiration from the
-crowd.</p>
-
-<p>'Sharp fellow that James,' he muttered to himself, as he entered the
-ticket office; 'spoke that line I taught him deuced well. I shall
-probably be able to make something of him on the stage when I come
-back.'</p>
-
-<p>His elation was a little dazed at the sight of Mrs. Regan, who,
-running up to him, clasped him by both hands, and whose appearance was
-scarcely calculated to impress bystanders with admiration. This worthy
-old person, who was of Hibernian descent, and had what is known
-amongst her countrymen as a 'potato' face, was dressed in a voluminous
-chintz gown, like bed furniture, and, slung on her arm, carried a
-check wicker basket, like a soft chess-board, with what was obviously
-the neck of a bottle protruding from it. He was gratified, however, by
-the appearance of Mr. Cooington, who, with a feeling that he was about
-to spend ten days on the ocean, arrived at Euston Station in a
-yachting costume, a straw hat with a very narrow brim, and a ribbon
-with 'Plover' in gold letters round it. Mr. Skyrmshire, the low-comedy
-man, had apparently adopted some of his theatrical wardrobe for
-travelling purposes, and consequently arrived in a suit of such
-enormous stripes, that in it he looked like a zebra on his hind legs.
-He was a practical as well as a poetical humourist too, and combining
-jocosity with business, carried about with him a number of small
-labels, printed 'Go and hear Skrymshire, the brilliant Momus,' and
-gummed at the back, with which he adorned the velveteen jackets of all
-the porters with whom he came in contact.</p>
-
-<p>And then Mr. Foster arrived, and then Miss Montressor, looking very
-pretty, and dressed with great simplicity and good taste. Mr. Duval
-offered her his arm, and led the way to the saloon carriage, the
-others following. Then rushed out to take a last look that the baggage
-was all safe, to compliment the inspector and tip the porters, and
-returned. A whistle, a shriek, Mr. Skrymshire said, 'Give him his
-head, John,' Mrs. Regan breathed hard and cried, 'Now we're off,' the
-train moved on a little, and then stopped.</p>
-
-<p>A porter put his head into the carriage in which the actor's party had
-already begun to lean back, and realise the fact that they had
-started, and inquired whether the gentleman who owned the portmanteau
-left at the station an hour ago, and which he had just put into the
-van, according to orders, was there. The occupants of the carriage
-glanced at each other, shook their heads in a general negative, and
-Bryan Duval answered for them, 'No, the gentleman was not there.'</p>
-
-<p>'Beg pardon, gentlemen,' said the porter, 'but I can't find the owner
-of the portmanteau.'</p>
-
-<p>'And you want your tip, I suppose?' said Bryan Duval, in an undertone,
-to the man, who was standing on the step of the carriage, with his
-hands on the door.</p>
-
-<p>'No, sir, I don't,' said the man; 'the gentleman paid me to look after
-the portmanteau. I only wanted to make sure that he was here, so as it
-shouldn't go amongst missing luggage, but I can't find him--he isn't
-in the train.' He fell back, made a sign to the guard, and the train
-moved on this time, to pursue its way unbrokenly.</p>
-
-<p>'What a horrid nuisance!' said Miss Montressor to Mr. Foster. 'I can't
-imagine anything more worrying than losing one's luggage.'</p>
-
-<p>'And yet,' said Mr. Foster, 'it is one of those things no one gets
-pitied for. For my part, I always stick to mine in this country, where
-matters of that kind are certainly not regulated with the intelligence
-and attention to public convenience they are amongst us. However, I
-daresay this gentleman and his portmanteau will not be long parted.
-That porter was an honest fellow. Shall I pull the window up?'</p>
-
-<p>'No, thanks,' said Miss Montressor. 'I am perfectly comfortable. You
-have very good notions of travelling, Mr. Foster, and have chosen my
-seat with admirable discretion. Where is the library?--O, overhead, I
-see. Not that I care much for reading in a train; it tries one's eyes.
-Do you always read in the train?'</p>
-
-<p>'That depends on my company,' said Mr. Foster. 'I don't feel inclined
-to read to-day.'</p>
-
-<p>'Then suppose we make a law that nobody is to read?' said Miss
-Montressor, looking round upon her companions with the proud
-consciousness of being a leading lady in every sense of the word.</p>
-
-<p>'Never make a law unless you are sure of its being obeyed,' said Bryan
-Duval drily, as he settled his travelling cap, and ensconced his head
-in a convenient angle of the partition between his seat and that of
-his fair neighbour, opposite to whom Mr. Foster was placed, and
-immediately immersed himself in the pages of the <i>Times</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The journey was a very pleasant one; every one was good-humoured, and
-Miss Montressor had her own way. She and Mr. Foster talked a good deal
-more than any of their companions, but the tone of the conversation
-was necessarily general. Thus, there was no reference on his part to
-the domestic circumstances which had annoyed Miss Montressor when he
-confided them to her at Richmond, and her versatile nature had enabled
-her almost entirely to dismiss the recollection of her sister Bess,
-except in the general sense of being rather glad than otherwise that
-she should have an opportunity of seeing her.</p>
-
-<p>In her present sanguine mood, Miss Montressor doubted not that she
-should be able to induce Bess to say, or to leave unsaid, precisely
-whatever she pleased to indicate--at the worst, this was an annoyance
-to be postponed for consideration, until after her arrival on the
-other side; she was not going to trouble herself about it prematurely.</p>
-
-<p>To tell the truth about Miss Montressor, she thought very little of
-Mr. Dolby during the pleasant hours of her journey to Liverpool. It
-would be good fun finding him in New York, and either making up the
-quarrel which had marked their parting or not making it up, precisely
-as it should suit her humour and her convenience, when the time had
-arrived. That, too, she need not think of beforehand. Altogether, Miss
-Montressor could recall few days in her life which had passed more
-completely to her satisfaction than that of her departure from London,
-and she mentioned the fact to Mr. Foster, when, for the first time,
-she found herself out of hearing of her companions on the arrival of
-the train, when he gave her his arm to walk along the platform at
-Lime-street.</p>
-
-<p>During a momentary pause in order to rally their party, the attention
-of Miss Montressor and Mr. Foster was attracted to the unloading of
-the luggage van. A solitary portmanteau had been chucked upon the
-platform with a contemptuous indifference, which is the destiny of
-waifs and strays among luggage.</p>
-
-<p>'I am sure that is the unclaimed portmanteau,' said Miss Montressor;
-'looks new too. What will they do with it?'</p>
-
-<p>'Put it in the parcel-office, of course,' said Mr. Foster, 'for the
-present, and then they forget all about it.'</p>
-
-<p>The portmanteau, a shiny black one of the most commonplace appearance,
-lay upon the pavement until all the claimed luggage had been disposed
-of and wheeled away on trucks to its various destinations; then the
-waif was carried by a porter to the parcel-office and there deposited,
-with a brief intimation to the official who resided behind a sliding
-window, amid huge barricades of packing-cases, hampers, and every
-description of impedimenta, from camel trunks to brown-paper parcels
-and stray hand-bags, 'That this 'ere box, name o' Dunn, hadn't been
-owned.'</p>
-
-<p>Travellers to Liverpool by all trains, at all hours, are a motley
-crew; all ranks and classes of society, all industries, all
-circumstances, may be found represented in the voyagers going towards
-the great outlet of England. The train which conveyed Bryan Duval and
-his troop was no exception, but rather a notable example of this
-truth. Only two components of the crowd which were whirled from the
-great social to the great commercial capital on that particular day
-have any interest for us; they are our theatrical friends, and one
-other man, a solitary and insignificant unit among the number.</p>
-
-<p>This man wore a sailor's dress, and carried a parcel, done up in a bit
-of tarpaulin, under his arm. He had arrived at Euston Station a few
-minutes before the party whose departure had formed a feature of the
-day; had stood wholly unnoticed among the third-class passengers
-crowding that portion of the platform opposite to the pens appointed
-for their use, and had quietly taken his seat in the farthest corner
-of the last compartment in the train. There was nothing remarkable in
-this man's appearance or manner. His sailor's clothes were clean, and
-fitted with characteristic looseness. He did not remove his cap or
-relinquish his hold of his tarpaulin bundle, which he placed upon his
-knees, and folding his arms upon it, kept them there during the whole
-of the journey. He exchanged not a word with his fellow passengers,
-except a mechanic and his family about to exchange the used-up old
-world for the new and happy land--though they thought him a morose
-surly sort of fellow, no doubt; but they were full of their own hopes,
-interests, and regrets, which they discussed with the simple unreserve
-of the poor, and, after a few minutes, did not notice him.</p>
-
-<p>He was a dark-complexioned man, with a rough red beard and hair to
-match, and had probably but recently adopted the avocation of a
-sailor, for his hands were rather delicate for a man of that class,
-and had evidently had no prolonged acquaintance with the ropes or
-great familiarity with tar. Though he travelled down the whole way to
-Liverpool without appearing to be conscious of the presence of his
-immediate companions, this sailor seemed to have some attraction
-towards the more distinguished passengers by the train. He lingered
-for a few minutes on the platform on their arrival at Lime-street,
-though he had put no luggage in the van, and had no occasion to wait
-while its contents were being turned out and sorted; and during this
-delay he surveyed,--with an intentness probably caused by his
-knowledge of their celebrity,--the party of actors as they took their
-way to the exit. He was but a few steps behind them when they reached
-the entrance of the station, and he stood in the doorway while they
-crossed the street on foot and entered the hospitable portals of the
-Adelphi Hotel, where their rooms had been engaged. When they had gone
-in, and were quite hidden from his view, he still lingered; indeed,
-the greater part of the burden which the train had carried had been
-discharged from the station before this desultory mariner moved on.
-Even then he only crossed the street, still hugging his tarpaulin
-bundle under his arm, and slouched along under the windows of the
-Adelphi, as though the place had some attraction for him.</p>
-
-<p>The contrasts offered by London itself are hardly greater than those
-to be found in Liverpool; the physical division of the great town into
-high and low is not more marked than its moral division into luxury
-and want, into respectability and infamy, into leisure and toil. There
-is a calm, tranquil, well-bred comfort about some of the uncommercial
-districts of Liverpool as characteristic and as striking as the
-splendour of its great streets, the long line of shops, each
-displaying the products of the teeming wealth of many countries, and
-are lost in those wonderful masses of warehouses, stores, factories,
-and shipping offices, which epitomise the whole history of commerce in
-its greatest forms, while they exhibit it in its minutest detail. The
-actual story of the world in its most practical, and at the same time
-not in its least romantic, aspect may be read by him who runs--if his
-hurried way should take him past the great landing-stages which
-project upon the Mersey. All the interests of life in its present
-crowded phase, and in its extended intercourse of business and of
-greatness, find their symbols there; its transitoriness, its change,
-its tumultuous variety, its youthful hope, its keenest anxieties, its
-bitterest partings, have found their theatre there since the first
-ship brought in the wealth of a foreign land, and the first ship
-carried out the produce of our own. The steadiest industry, the most
-inveterate vagabondism, find their representatives among the
-population of Liverpool; there is no place in existence in which the
-student of human nature may discover more to interest, to edify, to
-puzzle, and to appal him.</p>
-
-<p>The sailor who had travelled by the five-o'clock train to Liverpool
-was seemingly possessed by a great curiosity concerning the commercial
-city. He had not eaten or drunk since early in the day; but this
-circumstance, rarely devoid of interest to persons of his class,
-seemed to trouble him but little. He had not turned into any
-eating-house, he had not visited any drinking-bar; but he took his way
-slowly, and always meditatively, along the streets which led to the
-water-side. In Water-street he lingered long. The great business
-centres and conduits were emptying themselves of the swarms of human
-beings whose business lies in the deep waters, who, if they did not go
-down to the sea in ships themselves, spent their lives in business
-matters connected with those who do; hurrying crowds jostled the
-sailor upon the pathways, crowds whose backs were turned upon the
-direction in which he was going; and as he took his way at a lounging
-pace, which contrasted curiously with the vigorous hurry and
-breaking-up air of bustle around him which marks the close of the
-business day in Liverpool, and the 'coming on of evening mild,' with
-its welcome recreation, at home or elsewhere, according to the
-diversity of tastes. The water-side was almost deserted when he
-debouched upon it from Water-street under the shadow of the huge
-warehouses.</p>
-
-<p>In the dim light the prosaic landing-stage looked almost
-picturesque--shortly to be turned to a silver radiance by the yet
-unrisen moon; the waters of the Mersey lay in solemn calm; in the dim
-light, the long lines of huge warehouses, with their cumbrous
-apparatus of crank and pulley, of windlass and stage, looked more than
-ever like a series of gigantic gallows, prepared for a general
-execution. The mind speedily loses itself in the mere contemplation of
-their resources in the way of sacks and bales. To stray into
-considerations of cotton is to get lost, to think of pig-iron is
-distraction; the best way is to accept it all as a picture, happily
-unaccompanied at that hour of the night by the maddening noise of the
-day-time, and to be satisfied, without attempting to comprehend them,
-with the vastness, with the wealth, of Liverpool.</p>
-
-<p>Probably this was not the line on which the sailor's thoughts were
-running when he examined the before-mentioned long range of
-warehouses, which lie parallel to the great landing-stage, with the
-wide roadway lying between, to inspire the observer with constant
-wonder how, by any effort of human industry, it is ever kept in a
-state of repair. His examination was minute, careful, and marked by
-one peculiarity. He laid his hand on every door as he passed it by,
-giving the sturdy panel a strong and stealthy push; in every instance
-but one, the response to this movement was the steady resistance of a
-stout bolt. One door, very far down the range, and in a place where
-already the profoundest tranquillity reigned, fell open at his touch,
-and the sailor, with a lounging gait of perfectly idle curiosity,
-ready, if challenged, to apologise for an intrusion on that score,
-passed into the yard to which the complying portal gave admittance.</p>
-
-<p>It was some minutes before he emerged and began to retrace his steps
-towards Water-street; but he had now discarded his lounging gait, his
-step was purpose-like, quick, and wholly out of unison with his dress
-and appearance; nor had he any longer the uncertain discovery-making
-manner of a man unacquainted with the locality in which he finds
-himself for the first time.</p>
-
-<p>He threaded his way with great rapidity through a number of small
-streets and lanes, best described by the generic term of 'slums,'
-quite regardless of the sights and sounds in perfect harmony with the
-neighbourhood, which was a particularly villanous one; he bent his
-steps to a low public-house, and close to the river.</p>
-
-<p>Here he called for bread-and-cheese, of which he ate sparingly, and
-for a pot of beer, of which he drank a very small quantity--the meal
-did not seem to recommend itself to his palate; here, too, he spoke no
-word, and looked no one in the face, but he passed in and out quite
-disregarded.</p>
-
-<p>The drinking-den--for it was hardly more--was, indeed, crowded, as it
-was at most hours of the day, and as far into the night as the police
-would permit but its occupants were either drinking or quarrelling, or
-both, and too much engaged in these pursuits to notice the surly
-newcomer.</p>
-
-<p>Having thus sparingly satisfied the hunger and thirst which he must
-have been experiencing, the sailor sought for a place of repose. He
-selected for this purpose a common lodging-house, much in use by men
-of his craft when on shore, under circumstances which may be briefly
-described as 'down on their luck.' It was a dirty, ill-ventilated,
-wretched place, where beds of the very coarsest sacking, with very
-repulsive-looking bed-clothes, were stretched out in long lines on two
-sides of the low whitewashed room; a carpetless and matless lane ran
-up the centre, encumbered with the discarded garments of the occupants
-of the beds, and every accessory of the scene was unpleasant. The
-sailor seemed indisposed to avail himself of even the full extent of
-the accommodation which this uninviting hostelry afforded, limited as
-it was; he abstained from undressing himself, but flung himself down
-in his clothes upon the bed which was pointed out to him, and which he
-was congratulated by the proprietor of this hideous retreat upon
-having been so fortunate as to secure, as it was the only one which
-had not already a tenant.</p>
-
-<p>This was not exactly a place in which good order might be expected to
-reign. Its temporary occupants were in many instances drunk, in very
-few decent, in almost all noisy; but the new-comer contributed no more
-to the horrid merriment of the sleeping den than he had contributed to
-the conviviality of the drinking den during that day. He met all
-attempts at questioning with a sullen growl; and placing his tarpaulin
-bundle under his head for a pillow, he soon fell, or seemed to fall,
-into a heavy slumber.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div2_02" href="#div2Ref_02">CHAPTER II.</a></h4>
-<h5>TRAPPED.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p>The normal state of the Adelphi Hotel at Liverpool is one of such
-bustle and confusion, that when the entire establishment goes stark
-staring mad, as is the case twice a year, on the occasions of the
-Grand National Steeplechase and the Waterloo Meeting, the people are
-not inclined to regard the eccentricity as anything to be wondered at.
-Passing a night at the Adelphi, you are liable to come across the man
-who went out to California five-and-twenty years ago with the full
-determination never to revisit the motherland where the first half of
-his life had been so thrown away, but who, his fortune made and the
-nostalgia strong upon him, arrived last night from New York, to travel
-for six months like a gentleman in the country where, for a quarter of
-a century, he had starved and slaved. Or you are equally likely to run
-into the arms of the elderly friend whom you have always considered as
-a fixed item of London life, but who, having heard a rumour 'that
-things are going wrong out there,' is starting by the next day's
-outward-bound mail to satisfy himself. The halls and passages of the
-Adelphi are always crammed with sea-going chests and Saratoga boxes,
-and deckchairs, more or less maimed; and there is generally a dozen of
-champagne being cracked in some of the rooms to drink the health of
-the captain who has just brought the good ship safely over, or success
-to the captain who is just going to take the good ship out; and there
-are newspaper reporters flying to and fro to get lists of passengers,
-or details of any occurrences on the voyage, and relations of the
-newly-arrived, who are very much elated, and relations of the
-departing, who are very much depressed, and whose excessive emotion in
-their case contrasts curiously with the steady-going business tone of
-the members of the establishment.</p>
-
-<p>It was not to be supposed that a man of Mr. Bryan Duval's foresight
-would have neglected writing beforehand to secure rooms, any more than
-that he would have omitted sending a hint of his intended arrival to
-two or three members of the local press with whom he was on terms of
-friendship. Consequently, when the theatrical party from London walked
-into the house, they were not merely received with gracious smiles
-from the three young ladies in the bar, and with portentous grins from
-Sam the boots (not naturally a good-natured man, but an old
-acquaintance of Mr. Duval's, and the recipient of many orders for the
-upper boxes when that gentleman was staying there on a starring tour),
-but with a warm acclamation from Mr. Lavrock, the popular editor of
-the <i>Liverpool Lion</i>, and two or three of his comrades. It was not Mr.
-Lavrock's fault that he was not a London editor; it was the one hope
-of his life; but being unable to accomplish the feat, and finding
-himself tied to Liverpool, he revenged himself on the fate which had
-dictated, as his duty, the pulverisation of the Mayor, the castigation
-of the Corporation, and the flaying of the Mersey Board, by devoting
-every minute of his off-time to London things and London people, by
-running to the metropolis at all times when he could get away, and by
-acting as general agent for every London literary or theatrical
-celebrity.</p>
-
-<p>It had not wanted the presence of these gentlemen to remind Bryan
-Duval that he had intended giving a little banquet that evening in
-honour of Mr. Foster; but when he saw them, he at once thought that
-they would not be merely pleasant additions to the party, but that
-they might be the means of giving it world-wide publicity by inserting
-a neat little paragraph in the next morning's editions, which he would
-take over with him, and have copied immediately after arrival in the
-New York journals. Mr. Lavrock and his friends would be delighted to
-accept the invitation, and the party separated with the understanding
-that they were to meet at seven o'clock, the travellers going to their
-bedrooms to rest themselves after their journey, and the newspaper men
-to their offices, to prepare that little paragraph concerning which
-Mr. Duval had dropped a hint into the ear of each of them.</p>
-
-<p>The Adelphi can give a dinner when it has a mind, and it had a mind
-this day. The turtle was superb; so good that Mr. Foster, who had had
-two or three rather sharp culinary arguments with Mr. Duval since
-their acquaintance, was compelled to acknowledge that on one point, at
-least, he had been wrong, and that he had never, even at the Brevoort
-House in New York, tasted better soup than that then set before him;
-and when dinner was over, Mr. Duval made a very prolonged epigrammatic
-speech, proposing Mr. Foster's health, and Mr. Foster, with that
-self-possession and flow of language so characteristic of his
-countrymen, returned thanks. And then Mr. Lavrock stood up and
-exhausted the dictionary of flattery upon Bryan Duval, who, in
-responding, remarked that he hoped in a couple of months or so to give
-another dinner to almost the same party in the same place, on his
-return from what he intended should be a prosperous run; and then, as
-they were most of them tired, and had to get up betimes, the party
-broke up.</p>
-
-<p>When Mr. Foster came down the next morning, he found Bryan Duval,
-already the centre of an admiring crowd, giving directions for the
-stowage of his luggage on the huge trucks which were to convey it to
-the steamer's tender. Mr. Duval had exchanged his costume of the
-previous day for a yachting suit, and with an oilskin-covered straw
-hat, low patent-leather shoes, and striped silk socks, looked ready to
-lead off a hornpipe on any given cue. It had been arranged that they
-should breakfast in their rooms, and that Mr. Foster, who might be
-looked upon as accustomed to this kind of thing, should act as convoy
-to the company, Mr. Duval going in front to attend to the luggage. No
-sooner, therefore, was the truck duly piled than Bryan rattled off
-before it in a swift-going hansom, while Mr. Foster, Miss Montressor,
-and the others followed in a more sober vehicle.</p>
-
-<p>The landing-stage at which the Cunard tender was lying was thronged on
-this occasion with even a more motley crowd than usual, for the
-paragraphs in the morning journals had announced to the actors the
-presence among them of their great colleague, and several of them had
-come down to see him off. Many of the young brokers and shipping
-clerks too had rushed away from their offices for a few minutes to
-catch a glimpse of the popular artistes, and, as if to act as a
-corrective to the light tone of thought likely to be engendered by
-these people, a dark-bearded sombre-faced man, in the rustic garb of a
-Methodist preacher, made his way in and out amongst the crowd,
-distributing tracts to whoever would take them. There was no chance
-for his admirers mistaking any one else for Mr. Duval; that
-gentleman's activity was preternatural; and when the tender left the
-shore, they raised a little cheer, which he gratefully acknowledged by
-squeezing his hat over his chest exactly as he had done on many
-occasions after a successful first night's performance.</p>
-
-<p>There was not much talk among the little party as they made their way
-to the ship. They praised her noble proportions as she lay at anchor
-in mid-stream, cast looks at the sky, and prophesied about the
-weather; but their hearts were too full to say much, and they soon
-lapsed into silence. When they were once on board they, those who were
-to make the voyage, went straight to their state-rooms, and of our
-friends all remained there with the exception of Miss Montressor and
-Bryan Duval; the latter had still to see the luggage safely stowed
-away in the hold, the former came straight to Mr. Foster as he was
-standing very dejectedly on the hurricane-deck.</p>
-
-<p>'I have just found another instance of your kindness, another thing to
-be grateful to you for.'</p>
-
-<p>'Not in the least,' he replied with a sad smile. 'I had forgotten all
-about it; but I know there is no preventive of sea-sickness like
-champagne, and you can depend upon that case being genuine.'</p>
-
-<p>'I wish you would have a bottle of it now,' she said. 'I think it
-would do you good.'</p>
-
-<p>'I am afraid not,' he replied, with an attempt at gaiety. 'I am very
-depressed and very dull, I know, and I do not think champagne would
-help me; the only cure for me will be when I find myself on this or
-some sister ship bound for home.'</p>
-
-<p>'And Helen!' whispered Miss Montressor.</p>
-
-<p>'And Helen,' he repeated gravely, lifting his hat as though invoking a
-blessing on the name.</p>
-
-<p>Then the shore-bell rang, and Bryan Duval came up, and in a few words
-of kindly friendship, without a trace of professional affectation,
-spoke his thanks and adieux to his newly-made friend.</p>
-
-<p>When Mr. Foster turned to Miss Montressor he tried to put on a light
-and rallying manner, but his voice broke, and the tears rose in his
-eyes. He muttered something, she could not distinguish what, for she
-herself was very much overcome, and vanished down the ladder and
-across the gangway.</p>
-
-<p>Then the tender steamed away. Bryan Duval and Clara Montressor,
-leaning over the rail, watched the figure of the man in whom alone
-they had an interest until it was undistinguishable; still stood
-gazing until the tender herself became a mere speck in the distance.
-Then he touched her on the arm.</p>
-
-<p>'You had better go down and see to your things, Clara, my dear,' he
-said, in a kindly tone. 'We shall meet Foster again, I trust--he is a
-downright good fellow.'</p>
-
-<p>'He is a gentleman,' sobbed Clara Montressor, 'and one of the best men
-on the face of the earth.'</p>
-
-<p>By this time the good ship was standing out to sea.</p>
-
-<p>* * * * * *</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Foster returned to his hotel in very low spirits; the mere sight
-of the sea, the mere sense of being on board a steamer, the bustle and
-departure, and the glad anticipations which he heard all around him,
-had produced a fit of home-sickness. It rarely occurred that Mr.
-Foster, as the strictly business man, revolted against business in any
-shape, or resented its exactions, but he did so on this occasion, and
-yielded to a sort of physical and mental <i>malaise</i>, which he was ready
-to impute partly to fatigue, and partly to the fact that he had been
-amusing himself more than was his custom during the last few days, and
-this was the reaction. 'I go back to the grind now,' he thought, 'and
-I will get it over as soon as possible--I can't stand much more of
-this kind of thing; it doesn't pay. My Helen would be cured of her
-funny unreasonable notions about the supremacy of my business in my
-thoughts, her pretty jealousy would vanish like a cloud if she could
-only see me now, if she could only look into my heart and know how I
-longed to have done with it all and to get back to her. How I envy the
-people who are going where she is!'</p>
-
-<p>He was walking slowly, with bent head and a musing manner, rarely seen
-in the busy streets of the water-side city, as he thought this, and he
-mechanically put his hand into his breast-pocket searching for his
-wife's last letter, which he felt sure he had brought down with him;
-but it was not there. 'I must have left it in my room,' he thought,
-and quickened his steps. On reaching the hotel, Mr. Foster went to his
-room and found the letter, which he glanced over and placed in his
-pocket-book.</p>
-
-<p>Everything, tide included, had favoured the departure of his friends.
-It was nigh noon when the ship steamed down the Mersey, and the
-solitary man, who was in a humour to indulge the sense of solitude,
-had several hours to dispose of before returning to London. He had
-contemplated staying one night in Liverpool, but he changed his mind;
-he would go and have a look at the chief places of interest in the
-city and its environs, and so dispose of the hours until he could go
-away.</p>
-
-<p>It was a little after one when he left the Adelphi, and set out on a
-sort of strolling tour, and his mind, an active and intelligent one,
-soon became diverted and interested in the novel scene. There is a
-good deal to be seen in Liverpool and at Birkenhead, and Mr. Foster
-gave his mind to seeing it; so that it was much later than he had
-calculated upon when he was crossing in the ferry from the latter
-place, and he perceived, with some vexation, that he had overstayed
-his time, and could not possibly leave by the night train as he had
-intended. 'Not that it matters,' he thought, 'except that Helen's
-letter will be waiting for me instead of my being waiting for it.'</p>
-
-<p>'I beg your pardon,' he said, making room on the bench where he was
-sitting for a man who had stood, with rather an ostentatious air of
-expecting to have room made for him, just in front of Mr. Foster, 'I
-didn't see that you wanted a place;' and the man sat down, after some
-words of course.</p>
-
-<p>He was a slight man, who carried himself awkwardly, with high
-shoulders and sunken chest and stooping head; he was of dark
-complexion, had straight black hair, which fitted his head like a
-thatch, and a black beard, but he was painfully nearsighted, and wore
-spectacles of such power that his eyes, seen through them, seemed to
-be buried in cavities altogether disproportionate to the other
-feature. He was curiously ill-dressed, not only as regards the fabric
-of his garments, which was incongruous, but also as regards their fit,
-which had not the slightest reference to either his height or his
-breadth. They were formed of two or three kinds of cloth of different
-degrees of coarseness, but all of the cheapest description, and
-all rusty black, which associates itself in one's mind with the
-Scripture-reading, amateur-preaching, charity-letter writing, and
-tract-distributing class. He wore shoes, which might have been made
-for any one of the passengers on board the ferry with as much
-reference to their fit as for him, and his gray cotton gloves were too
-long in the fingers and too wide in the wrists. In the dog's-eared
-pocket of his black cloth waistcoat he carried a clumsy silver watch,
-attached to a frayed piece of black braid; and a shiny leather case,
-which had evidently been replenished with tracts since he had lavishly
-distributed his morning supply of that improving order of literature,
-protruded from the breast-pocket of his shapeless coat.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Foster glanced at the stranger as one naturally glances at a
-person to whom one has done a passing civility, and was not far out in
-his estimate of his social position and professional character; not
-that he was familiar with the precise type, but the character was too
-ostentatiously put forward to be mistaken.</p>
-
-<p>A respectable-looking stout woman, with a large basket, which she held
-tenaciously upon her knees, to her extreme discomfort, no doubt
-considering it much too precious to be intrusted to the open space of
-deck at her feet, got into conversation with Mr. Foster's neighbour,
-with all the facility accorded by custom to social intercourse with
-gentlemen of his profession, and after a few minutes Mr. Foster found
-himself taking an interest in the conversation. It referred to the
-physical and spiritual needs of the water-side population, and the man
-spoke in a sensible and straightforward way, quite devoid of cant,
-which pleased Mr. Foster, and was singularly at variance with his
-appearance--that of the most conventional theatrical type, which one
-is almost irresistibly tempted to associate with imposture and
-hypocrisy.</p>
-
-<p>'I wonder,' said the woman, 'you are not afraid to go down into them
-dens. What extraordinary sights you must see there!'</p>
-
-<p>'I see a great deal of poverty and suffering,' said the man, in a
-marked Irish accent, 'but much less wickedness than people think for.'</p>
-
-<p>And he then proceeded to tell one or two stories of his experience of
-that day, which had a very real ring about them, and which he related
-with no affectation, self-seeking, or technical phraseology. Probably
-he had observed that the gentleman who had made way for him was taking
-an interest in the conversation, for he shifted his position, in which
-he had previously had his shoulder turned towards Mr. Foster, for one
-which placed him straight between his two neighbours, his shoulders
-against the rail of the bench, and his bent head on his breast. There
-was occasionally the slightest possible glance of the strange-looking
-eyes, from under the magnifying spectacles, in the direction of Mr.
-Foster's attentive and sympathising face.</p>
-
-<p>'May I ask if you have seen much of this sort of thing?' said Mr.
-Foster, when the speaker came to a pause, and the kindly woman on his
-other side was unaffectedly wiping from her eyes tears of compassion
-evoked by his story of a scene which the narrator had that morning
-witnessed at a certain 'rookery,' as he called it.</p>
-
-<p>'O yes; my life has passed among such scenes,' said the man.</p>
-
-<p>'Do you get used to them?' asked Mr. Foster.</p>
-
-<p>'In a certain sense, of course I do; as a surgeon gets used to the
-sight of pain, and a judge to the presence of criminals; but if you
-mean do I leave off feeling them, do the individual cases become
-merged in the general, no, certainly not. And, sir,' said the man, now
-turning decidedly towards Mr. Foster, but propping his arm on his
-knee, and covering with his hand the end of his nose and the upper
-lip, already sufficiently hidden by his straight black moustache,
-which shaded his teeth and mingled with the hair of the beard, 'mine
-is a life which has its consolations as well as its duties. I see a
-great deal of misery, vice, sickness, cruelty, and injustice, but I
-see a great deal of charity too. I am made the channel through which
-not a little of it flows. Are you familiar with Liverpool?'</p>
-
-<p>'No,' said Mr. Foster; 'I never was here until yesterday, having
-merely passed through when I came from New York, and I am going back
-to town to-morrow morning, and should have gone to-night if I hadn't
-over-stayed my time in sight-seeing, and run myself late for the
-train.'</p>
-
-<p>'Among the sights you have seen,' said the man with the spectacles,
-'had the low quarters of Liverpool and their inhabitants any place?'</p>
-
-<p>'O no,' said Mr. Foster. 'I had not time for anything of that
-kind--just to get a look at the surface was all I have been able to
-do; besides, one never sees anything of that sort in reality, I fancy,
-if one goes loafing into it as a casual stranger; one must go round
-with the police to get any real insight into the life of such places.'</p>
-
-<p>'Do you think so?' said the man, in a remonstrating tone. 'Did you
-ever try ta get a look into the lives of the poor and the dangerous
-classes in the company of their friends, for they have friends, rather
-than in that of their enemies?'</p>
-
-<p>'No,' said Mr. Foster; 'the idea never occurred to me; indeed, I am
-sorry to say, I am such a busy man, that I have hardly ever seen
-anything of that sort, even at home. I am afraid I have been rather
-remiss,' he continued, with a cordial frankness, which was one of his
-pleasant peculiarities; 'too easily satisfied with giving a little
-money now and then, which I can readily spare, and shielding my own
-feelings from the sight of poverty, which we are all ready to talk
-about and depute other people to relieve.'</p>
-
-<p>At this point in the conversation the brief crossing came to an end,
-and the two men stepped off the ferry-boat together. He whom we may
-call for convenience the stranger scrupulously assisted the woman and
-her cumbersome basket--an act of politeness which he accomplished with
-not a little difficulty, as it appeared he also had a parcel to carry.
-As the ferry touched the landing-stage, he stooped down and picked up
-from under the bench, where he had placed it unnoticed by either of
-his temporary companions, a good-sized package, rather neatly done up
-in tarpaulin.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Foster was the first to step off the ferry, and he and the
-stranger stood for a moment outside, while the latter relinquished her
-basket to the woman, who took a civil leave of both, and then waited,
-as if supposing that the sentence addressed to him was incomplete.</p>
-
-<p>'I beg your pardon,' he said, as if expecting Mr. Foster to resume it;
-'I thought you asked me a question.'</p>
-
-<p>'I did not,' said Mr. Foster; 'but may I now ask you if your day's
-work is done?'</p>
-
-<p>The first smile which had appeared upon the face of the stranger
-crossed it now, but it was instantly controlled, and had been almost
-imperceptibly brief. 'O dear, no,' he replied, giving the parcel which
-he had tucked under his arm a significant squeeze; 'I am on an errand
-to one of the poorest places in all Liverpool--a rookery down near the
-landing-stage--and I am taking some clothes there which have just been
-given me for the purpose for a woman and two children, who are lying
-on old sacks under a piece of old sail-cloth, because the mother has
-no clothes in which she can go and beg for work. That was not a case
-in which to wait for to-morrow, so I went and begged the clothes from
-some people I know at Birkenhead, and I am going down there direct.'</p>
-
-<p>They had walked on a few steps, but the stranger stood still now, as
-if expecting--several places branching off here--the gentleman would
-take leave of him. In that moment of waiting he had an indescribable
-look of suspicion: the nostrils expanded and closed, the dark
-complexion paled slightly, and the fingers of one hand clenched
-themselves. It was only for a second, though; the next Mr. Foster
-spoke:</p>
-
-<p>'I suppose the place you're going to is quite a representative den?'
-he said. 'Would you mind taking me with you--I should like to see it,
-and I should like to help a little through you, who know these poor
-people? I suppose it isn't very far? But of course it is not, down by
-the landing-stage. I should hardly have thought there were dens of
-that kind down there in the region of the great wharves and
-warehouses.'</p>
-
-<p>'That's just where they swarm,' said the stranger in a bold tone of
-assertion, 'as you will see' (he stepped out briskly as he spoke). 'I
-will show you several as we go down to the one my business lies in.'</p>
-
-<p>The night had fallen rapidly; there was no moon, and though the stars
-were coming out, there was a considerable drift of cloud, so that the
-sky was gloomy. As the two men walked side by side along the lighted
-streets, Mr. Foster found himself occasionally outstripping his
-companion, with whom he was talking familiarly, not exclusively upon
-topics which had previously engaged them, but with reference to the
-aspect of Liverpool. On each occasion of the kind he apologised; on
-the first the stranger complained of a slight lameness, which
-prevented his keeping up with the alert step of the strange gentleman.</p>
-
-<p>The slowness and the slouchingness of his gait certainly did not
-decrease during their long walk; their progress was tediously slow;
-and Mr. Foster would probably have been surprised at the lateness of
-the hour, had it occurred to him to think about it.</p>
-
-<p>The city was settling down into the silence produced by the general
-evacuation of its business quarters before that walk commenced. By the
-time the two turned on Water-street--along the great line of the
-warehouses past which the sailor who had been Mr. Foster's
-fellow-traveller from London on the previous day had taken his way the
-night before--that part of Liverpool was as silent as the City of
-London at midnight. It presented somewhat of a similar aspect, from a
-picturesque point of view, of a great centre of wealth and business in
-isolation and inaction. With this aspect of London Mr. Foster was well
-acquainted. One of the sights and sensations he had procured for
-himself some time before was 'the City'--properly so called--when
-nobody is in it; and Liverpool was now affording him a similar study;
-but the locality was entirely new, and very shortly Mr. Foster was
-quite bewildered, and had lost all notion of where he was. Out there
-lay the river, on the other side of the town, and the great buildings
-stretched endlessly under the frowning sky, like a giant wall between
-him and its life.</p>
-
-<p>They had passed along innumerable immense blocks of building,
-profoundly still, when they reached one where there was a kind of yard
-surrounded on three sides with high walls, pierced with many windows.
-The fore wall forming the front was considerably lower than the other
-three, and in one corner was a door standing ajar, and kept from
-closing by a stone; the aperture was very slight, and the probability
-of any passer-by, previously unacquainted with the locality,
-perceiving that the door was unfastened was exceedingly small. As the
-two passed it, Mr. Foster, who was on the inner side, would not have
-been the least aware of the fact, had not his companion stretched his
-arm across him and pushed the door wide open.</p>
-
-<p>'This is the rookery,' said the stranger, having checked Mr. Foster's
-steps by the movement of his arm, and stopped with suddenness which
-took him by surprise; 'clean and quiet as it looks outside, it swarms
-like a London court.'</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Foster stepped back on the pathway for a moment, while his
-companion crossed the threshold, and expressed some astonishment at no
-light being visible.</p>
-
-<p>'They are all at the back,' replied the man, as he kicked away the
-stone and held the door for Mr. Foster to pass through. He did so, and
-it was shut behind him. 'Follow me,' said the stranger; 'the door into
-the house is in an opposite corner, and the stairs are dark till you
-get to the first landing--mind the step.'</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Foster followed him in silence, and they passed through the narrow
-door into the flagged passage, from which a steep and narrow
-staircase, with an iron railing, led to a square landing at some
-height above them. Still there was no light, except a feeble glimmer
-emitted from the window above the landing. When they had mounted the
-staircase so far, and could see each other's faces by the feeble
-light, Mr. Foster remarked:</p>
-
-<p>'There cannot be any rooks here tonight--there is no cawing.'</p>
-
-<p>It was not, perhaps, any feeling so decided as distrust which lent a
-peculiar tone to his voice, but it was certainly discomfort.</p>
-
-<p>'I beg your pardon,' said the man; 'I didn't catch what you said,' and
-he drew quite close to him on the narrow landing, from which a second
-flight of steep stairs went up.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Foster repeated the sentence. 'There cannot be any rooks here
-to-night--there is no cawing;' and had hardly uttered it when the man
-pushed him into the angle of the wall on which the little ray of light
-fell obliquely, and stabbed him to the heart! Stabbed him with a hand
-so sure, with a thrust so steady, with a blade so keen, with an aim so
-precise, that he only groaned and sank down dead when the hand which
-pressed him back, the hilt of the weapon within it, was withdrawn.</p>
-
-<p>Then the murderer, making one cautious step backward, which just
-withdrew him beyond the reach of the outstretched feet, as the dead
-man dropped into a heap in the corner, lighted an inch of wax candle
-which he took from his pocket, and, standing well away from the blood
-which soaked through the dead man's clothes, welling upwards from the
-wound, but neither spurting nor dropping, for it was all caught in the
-folds of the waistcoat and the shirt, stooped over him and closely
-examined the features, without touching the body. The examination,
-prolonged until the fixity of death had gripped every feature, and the
-film of death had covered the wide-open eyes, was perfectly
-satisfactory.</p>
-
-<p>This ascertained, the murderer, standing at the full length of his arm
-from the dead man, slowly and carefully withdrew the weapon, and
-placing it on his victim's lap, proceeded to search the breast-pocket
-from which he had seen a note-book peeping out. He found the
-note-book, and, after a hasty glance at its contents, transferred it,
-taking care that it received no stain of blood, to his own pocket; but
-his rifling of the dead stopped there, with one trifling exception.
-There was a handkerchief in the same pocket with the note-book, marked
-in initials which did not correspond with Mr. Foster's name; this he
-took possession of.</p>
-
-<p>There was no hurry, there was no tremor, there was not a moment's
-uncertainty, there was not an undecided movement throughout the whole
-of these proceedings. This man and his victim might have been alone in
-the universe for any trace of haste or fear of detection which he
-displayed. His face was motionless, his lips were still, there was no
-hurried breathing, no muttered words, as he minutely inspected his own
-clothes and hands. His precautions had been eminently successful;
-there was no stain on either.</p>
-
-<p>The landing was narrow, the space was small, and for his next
-operation the murderer required a little more room. Mr. Foster had
-fallen completely in the angle of the wall, and when the body slipped
-down, the feet projected almost to the top of the lower stair. The
-murderer took hold of these feet and gently pushed them towards the
-wall, so as to leave himself more space; he had deposited his bundle
-on the second step of the upper stair, and he left it undisturbed
-while he divested himself of every article of clothing except his
-shirt, and folded them up into a neat roll, corresponding in size with
-that enclosed in the tarpaulin covering.</p>
-
-<p>This done, he took off his black wig, beard, and moustaches, placed
-them in the centre of the roll, and proceeded to unpack the bundle. It
-contained a suit of sailors clothes, including a blue shirt, a red
-wig, and a red beard. These were very carefully constructed, and he
-assumed them without any difficulty. He then put on the sailor's dress
-complete, wrapped his white shirt round the clothes he had taken off,
-and sitting down on the topmost step of the lower stair, with the dead
-man's feet within a foot of his elbow, sewed up the second bundle in
-the tarpaulin cover which had enclosed the first, by the aid of a
-packing-needle and a piece of twine which he took with him ready in
-his trousers pocket.</p>
-
-<p>This done, he stood up and stood still for two clear minutes, mentally
-recapitulating the precautions he had just taken, and comparing them
-with the programme he had arranged. He had omitted nothing, he was
-quite satisfied; so he put his bundle under his arm, blew out the
-scrap of candle, and without a glance in the direction in which the
-dead man lay in a mass rapidly becoming indistinguishable in the
-darkness, almost groped his way down the stairs, passed out of the
-door, crossed the yard noiselessly, and noiselessly pushing back the
-bolt of the outer gate, emerged from it just as a policeman on his
-beat had reached the second block of building above it, and was safe
-not to observe him.</p>
-
-<p>The sailor strolled leisurely down to the landing-stage. If any one
-had met him, it would have been impossible to mistake his character of
-houseless, companionless, foreign sailor; but no one did meet him, and
-a few minutes' keen inspection of the lonely scene satisfied him that
-the opportunity for the last precaution to be taken with success was
-there. He advanced to the edge of the stage, and leaning against one
-of the iron posts which supported the boundary chain, he slowly
-dropped the parcel with its tarpaulin covering into the river. Even to
-his impassiveness, to his almost incredible indifference of manner,
-the finality of this act seemed to be a relief. He straightened his
-figure, drew a deep breath, stretched his arms out to their full
-length, and brought them down by his sides, and after standing for a
-few minutes, with a straight look-out seawards, he turned away, and
-keeping the side of the road which borders the landing-stage, avoiding
-on this occasion the shade of the great warehouses, he took his way
-towards the tramps' quarters where he had passed the previous night.</p>
-
-<p>On his road he passed a trough provided for the watering of cattle on
-their way from shipment. A lamp stood near, so that, though the
-darkness of the night had increased, there was light on that spot. The
-sailor took his cap off, pulled up the sleeves of his jersey, and
-pumped a quantity of water over his head and face. This done, he once
-more inspected the premises, and finding himself perfectly free from
-any danger of observation, he took off his shoes and examined his feet
-by the gaslight. It was as he supposed. There were traces of blood
-upon them, but it had dried before he had put on his stockings, so
-that no tell-tale marks had extended to them. He swung himself up on
-the side of the trough, and carefully washed first one foot, then the
-other; after which he sat swinging them in the air until they were
-perfectly dry, when he resumed his shoes and stockings, and again went
-on his way.</p>
-
-<p>The lodging-house was even more crowded than it had been on the
-previous night, and the proprietor was more drunk and less
-accommodating. A couple of dirty sacks on the landing, outside the
-wretched dormitory, was all that the sailor could procure by way of a
-bed; and when he asked for a pillow, he was told that he might roll up
-his clothes, and use them for that purpose--they hadn't got no
-pillows--advice which was accompanied by a coarse jest at the
-luxuriousness of his requirements, and which was overheard by one of
-the men whose efforts at conversation the sailor had met, on the
-previous night, with sullen moroseness.</p>
-
-<p>'Pillow,' said this man; 'what do you want with a pillow? Where's that
-'ere bundle you were so particular about last night? One would think
-it was stuffed with diamonds, you was so fond of it.'</p>
-
-<p>'I've been robbed of it,' replied the man, with an oath. 'Worse luck.'</p>
-
-<p>'Well, you weren't robbed of it here,' said the proprietor of the
-establishment.</p>
-
-<p>'No, that you weren't, Tom Summers,' struck in his neighbour; 'we
-ain't fine gentlemen here as are above being spoken to, but we're on
-the square, and pals is safe with us.' With which testimony to the
-virtues of the company, and protest against the surliness of the
-new-comer, this gentleman turned on his bed of sacking and went to
-sleep.</p>
-
-<p>And so the night wore on in Liverpool, and the dawn brightened over
-the fair ship with her happy and hopeful company out at sea, and over
-the stark figure of the dead man who lay with wide-open eyes upon the
-landing of the great warehouse, where many hurrying feet would shortly
-be arrested beside him in horror at the fate of the unknown, unclaimed
-stranger.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div2_03" href="#div2Ref_03">CHAPTER III.</a></h4>
-<h5>HELEN'S JOURNAL.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p>Sitting down this morning to make a beginning towards the fulfilment
-of my promise to my husband, I ask myself if I am indeed the same
-person as I was when he left me. It seems to me that a great gulf lies
-between me and that time, and that the experience which I have gained
-of human nature and of the possibilities of life has completely
-changed me. With all the relief which the absence of Alston's friend
-has given me there is a great pang of pain for Alston himself, and a
-horrid sense of a barrier of concealment between us. I have allowed
-so many days to elapse before I force myself into commencing this
-self-communing, in sheer uncertainty of what my line of duty is, and
-though I am now tolerably clearly convinced that neither now nor ever
-must I reveal to Alston what has passed, the conviction invests my
-task of writing to him with great pain and difficulty. Somehow we seem
-to be doubly parted; first by distance, then by secret. Will this
-additional sense of parting yield even to his return? How shall I bear
-to see him take up his relations with Warren just where he dropped
-them, and to know, as I do know, how his confidence is betrayed? Not
-in business matters, I daresay; so far as I understand anything about
-them, there is no likelihood that Alston's interests and Warren's
-could ever clash, and so far he is safe. It would do my husband such
-harm in every way to know what has occurred; his own frankness and
-loyalty of nature could hardly withstand so great a shock; the world
-would be changed for him. No, he shall never know it; I will trust to
-the chapter of accidents, or rather, I should say, to the beneficence
-of Providence, to preserve us harmless from his false friend.</p>
-
-<p>But my journal, to which he looked forward with such pleasure, and
-which I determined should be so frank and free and full a record of my
-life, telling it all out to him in so far as one human heart can break
-the bar of its solitude in words to another--what has become of that?
-To keep any freshness and any truth in it at all, I must make this
-record of what has passed for myself, waiting it indeed, but laying it
-by as a thing that is done with--as a chronicle of the truth for
-reference, for precisely that which must not be brought into my
-letters to Alston is that relief for the feelings and the fears which
-must be hidden from him. What are these fears? How often I ask myself
-that question, and I never find an answer! The man has gone; not alone
-has he pledged his word--he could hardly expect me to set much store
-by that; but he knows it is for his own interest, for his own safety,
-for the future preservation of the good relations between him and
-Alston, which, false as all pretext to friendship is on his part, are,
-nevertheless, valuable to him, that he should keep his promise to
-me--that he should remain away; that he should never attempt to see me
-or to communicate with me while I am alone. A thousand times a day I
-tell myself this; I strive to feel my freedom; I recall the oppression
-of his presence: I remember my dislike to him long before I knew the
-secret unconscious origin it had; and I ask myself why I do not exult,
-why I am not able to bear with more than composure anything which has
-led to such an emancipation? But it is not so. The presence of the
-enemy seems to hem me in, an evil influence is in the air I breathe;
-no effort frees me from this morbid terror, of which I am half
-ashamed, while I write this secret record no eyes but my own are ever
-to see. How cleverly, how skilfully this man has carried out this
-sudden and complete change of all his plans; how reasonably he seems
-to have accounted for leaving New York! No one seems surprised, and I
-am quite certain not the slightest shade of suspicion that his
-departure is of any consequence to me has presented itself to the mind
-of any of our common acquaintance, though the close tie between him
-and Alston is perfectly well known. It is just this power, this
-influence over others, which makes me so afraid of him even now. What
-if on Alston's return he took some other means of alienating him from
-me! The feminine inferiority, the absence of a power of understanding
-business matters, will serve him no longer: he won't try to revive
-that theory when Alston returns; he shall find that I have
-administered every affair which he left in my charge too well to be
-set down as an incapable for the future; but he may try a more subtle
-means. I believe the love of a man like Warren is half passion, half
-hatred, and that the hatred swallows up the passion when it is
-effectually checked. Whence that notion has come to me, I know not,
-but it has come, and with it a fear of this man's hatred, greater, if
-possible, than my horror of his love.</p>
-
-<p>There, I have recorded it, and now I will try to turn my mind from
-it--I will try to write to Alston a cheery letter, a pious fraud.</p>
-<br>
-
-<p>When you told me, dearest Alston, that my letters were to take the
-form of a journal, I remember thinking of the passage in our pet book,
-the <i>Vicar of Wakefield</i>, in which Dr. Primrose describes the
-vicissitudes of primroses' existence, and summoning them up in
-migrations from the blue bed to the brown. My journal, if I keep it at
-all within the actual sense of the term, would record nothing more
-strange or exciting. I migrate from the nursery to the parlour, from
-the parlour to the park, from the park to the nursery; but my chief
-sojourn is in the latter place. I never could have imagined that a
-baby could give one so much to do, even when one is assisted, as I am,
-by the most capable of nurses, concerning whom I have a lot to tell
-you presently; neither could I have believed that a baby could be so
-interesting. We made up our minds, you remember, that we were not
-going to plague our neighbours, and make fools of ourselves, by
-advancing the claims of this remarkable infant to be quite the finest,
-the most intelligent, and the most precocious that ever existed.
-Bearing this resolution in mind, I endeavoured to be a very rational
-mother, but I protest, quite genially, that I do not want any society
-except baby's, until the kind Fates send me that of baby's papa.</p>
-
-<p>The child has become so strong and healthy that I am no longer in the
-least uneasy about her; therefore she is a pure unmitigated pleasure
-to me; and the real truth is that if I am to tell you all about my
-daily life, I fear you will suffer from the plethora of baby. Of
-course, I read and work, and visit and receive some people
-sometimes--not many and not often; and, of course, I get out and do
-some shopping. I bought the loveliest pelisse, yesterday, that ever
-was seen out of Paris, and I believe it came from there; and then,
-again, even shopping has come to mean baby--the pelisse was for her,
-not for me. I play the piano, sometimes, a little--nurse says baby is
-beginning to take notice of music. But after all this is not my life,
-you know; it is only the outside of it, and one shell is very like
-another.</p>
-
-<p>Of course I miss you frightfully, more and more every day, but I do
-not feel helpless. I made up my mind, you know, that I never would
-yield to that helpless feeling, from which I have seen so many women
-suffer who are guarded as I am by the care and love and generosity of
-good men, from every trouble from which one human being can shield
-another, and so I have kept my promise made to myself. When there is
-anything to make up my mind about, I make up my mind promptly; when
-there is anything to do, I do it at once, to the best of my ability;
-if I make mistakes I don't fret over them, but I think I shall manage
-them better next time, and I don't get discouraged. I daresay I shall
-see in the end how very good for me this parting between us proved.
-Don't suppose I am going back upon what you laughed at me for, and
-called my jealous susceptibility. I have got over all that, but I
-really am going to say that you will find me ever so much more useful,
-ever so much more of a companion; because I shall have had this little
-interval for exercising my judgment as well as my taste, for exerting
-my discretion as well as gratifying my fancies. Hitherto, your
-indulgence and affection have limited me to the less useful and less
-strengthening of these processes; so when you come home, dearest
-Alston, you will have to tell me all about business, and you will find
-I shall understand it quite as well, and take quite as much pleasure
-in it, as in our old discussions on books and music and pictures and
-acting.</p>
-
-<p>Writing that word 'acting' reminds me of our baby's new nurse--rather
-an inconsequent style of writing this, you will perhaps say, for a
-woman who is claiming a newly-developed talent for business; but it is
-what you asked for. Baby's nurse is the oddest woman, and such a
-treasure! I will tell you how she came to me, and really it is not out
-of proportion, for it was certainly the most striking event in my life
-since you left me. She came in answer to my advertisement--she was the
-first candidate, her name is Bessie Jenkins, her husband is somewhere
-in the Western States. They had misfortunes, and were obliged to part
-for a while, like ourselves. I suppose it was that likeness in
-unlikeness which attracted me towards the good woman from the first.
-She spoke with a hearty love and a hearty sorrow of her absent husband
-and her dead baby, only a day or two dead when she came to me, and I
-shall never forget her face when she took our little Mary in her arms,
-and saw how delicate the child was. The very way she said: 'This won't
-do you don't understand babies, ma'am;' put aside the food which
-Jessie and I had been messing up unskilfully; and made some mysterious
-alterations in the way the child's clothes were put on, made me feel
-that the right person had been sent to me. Dr. Clark just looked at
-her and said, 'She will do; make sure of her, Mrs. Griswold;' and I
-asked her if she could come to me at once--if she could stay that very
-night; she said she would, and went and fetched her things on the
-spot.</p>
-
-<p>We are quite friends--we were from the beginning--and she takes almost
-as much care of me as of little Mary; even that she does cleverly, and
-has avoided making any jealousy or confusion in the house, which was
-just what I dreaded, you know, when the doctor told me I must have a
-nurse. Mrs. Jenkins is a good-looking woman, tall, large, active, with
-a very fair skin, and fine, honest, gray eyes. She says she does not
-know exactly how old she is, and I believe her--she looks about
-five-and-twenty; she is very well spoken for a woman of her class, and
-not at all ignorant. We have long talks in the nursery and in our
-drives--for I never go out without nurse and baby; it is so horribly
-dull to drive out alone; and I find I learn a good deal from her about
-the realities of life as they exist for women who have not been taken
-the care of that you have taken of me.</p>
-
-<p>After all, dearest Alston, what a very little bit of trouble I have
-known in my life--just those dark days when poor papa's affairs went
-badly, and you came and brightened them up with that blessed, steady
-light which has shone on all my pathway since. Why are people's
-history so different? Is mine to be always an exception? Some time
-before you left me, and when I was much less thoughtful than I am now,
-I have occasionally felt afraid that I was too happy; there seemed
-such deep peace, of such settled certainty, in our lives. I hardly
-understand all the talk in books and in speech about the turbulence
-and the transitoriness and the perpetual change which mark human
-existence all over the world; while your absence has taken away that
-deep tranquillity, it has not touched, of course, the real happiness
-of my life. I would not have you think me discontented, and, perhaps,
-this little shake is good for me--will be good for us both. This is a
-lesson which Mrs. Jenkins, in her good, quiet, homely, honest way,
-impresses on me very often. It does one good to see a person who has
-had plenty of trouble of a sternly material kind, as well as a great
-sorrow, bear them with the ready submission and cheerful courage of
-this poor woman; and many a time when I see her with our baby in her
-arms and at her breast, where her dead child once lay, I ask myself
-how I should have faced such a life as hers.</p>
-
-<p>I have said before that we are great friends; she has formed a really
-strong affection for me--it is like the kind of thing one hears about
-the Irish people in old times. I fancy she would not shrink from any
-sacrifice for me. She is extremely curious about you, and never tired
-of hearing me tell how I came to know you first, and the story of my
-girlhood; and I talk to her about all these things; so you will have
-no difficulty in believing that our new nurse is an exceptional
-person, and that, though she is homely in speech and manner, there is
-no real inferiority in her. Don't laugh at me when I say that I am
-quite sure you and she will be great friends. There is, at least, one
-very strong bond of union between you: Mrs. Jenkins has a ruling
-passion--it is for the drama. I found that out very soon.</p>
-
-<p>You know we agreed that the nursery was to be made into a very pretty
-and cheerful room, so that baby's nurse, if we had the good fortune to
-find a good one, should be thoroughly comfortable, and feel herself at
-home. Looking about through the house for such things as I could spare
-to ornament her domain, on the day after Mrs. Jenkins's arrival, I
-came upon a lot of photographs in a drawer in the study--they were
-likenesses of all the actors and actresses whom, I verily believe, you
-have seen in the whole course of your life. I had no notion you had
-such a collection; and you need not be frightened, I have not deprived
-you of them, I have only taken such as have duplicates--there are a
-good many. I put them all into the photograph-book which belonged to
-me when I was a girl, and made it over for nursery use. Who knows how
-soon Mrs. Jenkins will find out that her wonderful nurseling takes
-notice of pictures as well as of music? Two or three days after, I
-asked her if she liked her rooms, if she was quite comfortable, and so
-forth. She replied, with great delight, that she had never been so
-comfortable in her life, and expressed peculiar pleasure at finding
-some pictures about. I found she had been eagerly investigating the
-contents of the photograph-book, and she surprised me not a little by
-running glibly over the names of all the portraits. As I hadn't
-written them in--for one very good reason among others, that I had no
-notion of who are represented by several of their numbers--I could not
-understand how she came to know who all these theatrical ladies and
-gentlemen were. It came out then; the theatre is a celestial vision to
-Mrs. Jenkins; to see a play is the greatest enjoyment of which she is
-capable.</p>
-
-<p>She says that she knows a good play from a bad one as well as any one
-in the world, and is a first-rate judge of acting; but she would much
-rather see a bad play than none at all, which I take as a mark of
-enthusiasm, if true, that does not justify much faith in her critical
-faculty. I think she knows every play that has been produced in New
-York in her time. If she hasn't seen she has read them; she knows all
-about the 'castes,' as she calls it, is a perfect chronicle of the
-successes and the failures of the actors and actresses who have come
-here from London and Paris, and has, among her possessions, a huge
-scrap-book, of which she is inordinately proud, crammed with newspaper
-critiques, squibs, old playbills, and gaudy woodcuts, which represent
-her prime favourites as it is devoutly to be hoped they never did
-appear upon any stage. Mrs. Jenkins is not an American by birth; she
-was born in Hampshire and reared in London; and though she has been in
-America since her fifteenth year, she seems to have enjoyed a good
-deal of her favourite amusement even at that early age. I am, however,
-positive that she was never employed in any capacity in connection
-with the stage herself, if only because she speaks of the fact with
-considerable regret.</p>
-
-<p>One portrait in the photograph-book has so special an attraction for
-her, that I took it out and put it in a little upright frame, which
-she keeps on her dressing-table. This slight act of kindness has, it
-appears, particularly touched her heart; and yesterday, when I
-mentioned that I should be despatching my letter to you this morning,
-she begged me to ask you to be sure and go to see the original of this
-beloved portrait, a certain Miss Clara Montressor, who is at present
-playing at one of the London theatres. The theatre in question is
-called the Thespian; you may perhaps know it, but I am so deplorably
-ignorant of such matters that I really do not know whether I am
-talking to you of a first-rate or a fifth-rate establishment. I
-disguised my ignorance, for Mrs. Jenkins's harmless enthusiasm and
-true believership amuses me so much that I would not snub her for the
-world; and when she assured me that she has heard tell that Miss Clara
-Montressor is quite the finest actress in existence, I did not allow
-her to perceive that I had never heard Miss Clara Montressor's name.
-If you can at all conveniently get anywhere near to confirming Mrs.
-Jenkins's belief, pray do so; at all events, let your reply to this
-contain an assurance that you have beheld the prodigy. I should not
-like baby's nurse to be prejudiced against baby's papa by supposing
-that he could be in London without seeing Miss Clara Montressor and
-appreciating the advantage as it deserves.</p>
-
-<p>This young lady is one craze; but Mrs. Jenkins has another, rather an
-abstract one, for she has never seen its object, who is no less a
-person than the famous actor, Bryan Duval. She has followed his career
-with most amusing zeal, and has told me all about his best characters
-and his peculiar points, until I feel that he too is an old
-acquaintance. How heartily you would have laughed if you could have
-been present, unseen, at baby's bedtime yesterday! I had just heard a
-piece of information which I knew would be productive of unbounded
-delight to Mrs. Jenkins, and I took that favourable opportunity, when
-she is always thoroughly disposed for a chat, to tell her about it.
-She had been rather low all day--she sometimes is, I observe, when she
-gets a letter from her husband (he is not like you, Alston, though she
-loves him)--and I knew I should cheer her up by telling her, what no
-doubt you know as well as we know it here, that Bryan Duval is coming
-to New York. You never saw anything so absurd as her delight, which
-appeared to be thoroughly shared by baby, judging by the kicking and
-crowing of that young lady in consequence of the additional dangling
-and tossing which her nurse bestowed upon her in her pleasure. I told
-her not only that she could go to see him, but that she might
-accompany me--we can manage to put baby in commission for that little
-time--and I even hinted at the possibility of her unknown idol
-presenting himself in the flesh at our house. I suppose you will have
-made this gentleman's acquaintance in London; do be sure and tell me
-if so, and whether he is really the very charming man in society which
-he has the name of being here. Mrs. Sinclair said, in speaking of him
-to-day, that he was one of the very few great actors whom it did to
-know off the stage, but that he was thoroughly satisfactory. 'So
-unlike either authors or painters, you know,' added Mrs. Sinclair, in
-that bored manner of hers; 'they never do, dear, out of print and off
-canvas; but Bryan Duval is charming!' Charming doesn't mean very much,
-for every one says it, and everybody means by it something different
-from what everybody else means. If you say Bryan Duval is 'charming,'
-I shall know the value of the verdict, and be quite sure that I shall
-find him so, for of course we shall know him here, whether you have
-made his acquaintance in London or not. If you have, dear Alston, give
-him a letter of introduction to me, for I really think I am slightly
-bitten by the popular enthusiasm, and though I cannot say, like Mrs.
-Sinclair, that I am 'dying to know him,' it would be very pleasant,
-and I should at once call upon his wife, of whom I have heard a great
-deal.</p>
-
-<p>I have nothing particularly interesting to communicate respecting
-household affairs; everything is going on very well and very quietly.
-Of course, my dearest Alston, you will expect that this letter should
-contain some reference to the commission with which you charged Mr.
-Warren on the day of your departure, and which he immediately
-fulfilled. Will you pardon me if I make my reference to it a brief one
-in proportion to its importance and to the large share which I know it
-has had in your thoughts? Our parting is too new, the sense of its
-inevitable duration weighs too heavily upon me. I am obliged to set my
-face too steadfastly to overcome the nervousness, the anxiety, and the
-loneliness involved in dwelling upon it to admit of my saying all that
-I feel, or even any part of it, with regard to the contents of the
-letter which your friend handed to me. If I said all, if I said any,
-it would come to the same thing--that letter is like you, Alston; it
-is an absolute fulfilment, a complete realisation of the estimate
-which I have formed of you. If by any horrible decree of Fate the
-occasion should ever arise on which it would be my doom and my duty to
-act upon the instructions, and to carry out the provisions, contained
-in that letter, I should do so with a proud and full sense that they
-are worthy of you, that they are such last words, such last
-instructions, as, if I could have chosen, I should have asked of you.
-And now I must pass away from this subject. I am unequal to saying
-more about it. When I can say what I have felt, with my head on your
-shoulder and my hand in yours, you will know what the receipt and the
-reading of that letter was to me. The other commission with which you
-charged Mr. Warren, I fear, I received in a different spirit--one
-which made it difficult for me to bow my own will completely to yours,
-to substitute your judgment unrepiningly for my own. Happily no
-occasion has yet arisen to oblige me to have recourse to Mr. Warren's
-advice or assistance. I have needed neither. All external matters,
-with which alone he could have any concern, have passed along very
-smoothly, nor can I, at present, foresee any possible contingency in
-which it would be necessary for me to apply to him; should any such
-arise, you may rest assured that I shall strictly conform to your
-instructions. It was rather hard for me, my dear husband, to be told
-by that one friend of yours, concerning whom we are not entirely of
-one opinion, that my letters to you were to pass through his hands.
-Did I not know that you are quite above such a futile and foolish
-exercise of power, such experimenting in the pliability of the human
-will, had we not often discussed the contemptible folly of the patient
-Griselda, and quite made up our minds as to what we thought of
-Geraint, I might have supposed for a moment that you had imposed this
-restriction upon me as a sort of test, as well as a significant hint
-to me that thus far and no farther I might go in our domestic
-relations. I might have thought you meant to say, 'I like Warren, you
-don't; you will have to give in to my liking.' This would have been a
-calculation and an act of a domestic tyrant; therefore an
-impossibility to you. I accept the restriction in a perfectly frank
-and candid spirit, and absolute loyalty towards you. Some day you will
-perhaps tell me--when you find that I am capable of being more of a
-companion to you than I have hitherto been--what is the precise nature
-of your present business, and the exact character of the complication
-which has rendered it necessary that my letters should not go direct
-from your own house in New York to your own address in London; and I
-have no doubt that I shall entirely recognise the force of the reason.
-If, however, you should never tell me, if for any reason conceivable
-or unconceivable by me it should remain impossible for you to confide
-this to me, I shall be perfectly satisfied that the motive not to be
-explained is one which does no discredit to you, and is wholly
-uninfluenced with any slight to me. And now, dear Alston, I pass from
-the subject either for ever or until such time as you choose to resume
-it. I wonder if you will be provoked with my pertinacity if I tell you
-that I have discovered that Mr. Warren has very few such partial
-friends as you are. The fact is, he is not much liked by men, and he
-is, generally speaking, as much disliked by their wives as he is by
-me. I think no polish of manner, no external surface, brightness, or
-gallantry of that kind which, when looked into by a keen-eyed woman,
-is much more insulting than complimentary, has ever enabled him to
-conceal from women in general the sentiment which all right-minded
-women must resent, and which would render neglect, even rudeness, from
-Mr. Warren, the most acceptable line of treatment he could adopt
-towards a woman. Mrs. Sinclair was talking of him yesterday. I did not
-introduce the subject, and I kept my own opinion to myself. I should
-regard it as a kind of side wind of disloyalty to you, my dearest, if
-I allowed anybody but yourself to know the difference that exists
-between us on that point, to suspect that your friend was not my
-friend. Mrs. Sinclair spoke of him pretty roundly, and saying a great
-many things which were untrue, I daresay, she said one in which I
-believed. It was that Mr. Warren was, in her opinion, an unsafe friend
-and an exceedingly dangerous enemy. I pray that we may never have him
-for an enemy! I wish to God, and with a growing earnestness, that we
-had never had him for a friend!</p>
-
-<p>At this point in my letter, dearest Alston, I was interrupted by a
-visit, and now I fear that I shall have to finish this up hurriedly in
-time for the mail. My unexpected visitor was Thornton Carey. He sat
-with me a long time. I didn't like to hint to him that his coming was
-a little imprudent, in one sense, as curtailing my time for writing to
-you--that, however, I can take up again; in another sense, his visit
-was exceedingly apropos. You will be delighted to hear how admirably
-your generous intentions towards him have been realised. Can I ever
-thank you sufficiently for all you have done for him, indeed for every
-one dear to me, from my father to the merest acquaintance whom I have
-ever recommended to your good offices? Thornton looks remarkably well,
-and so far from complaining of hard work in his new office, he says he
-hasn't half enough to do but judging from the account he gave me of
-his duties, I should say most men would consider they had a tolerably
-fair share of labour and responsibility in his post of librarian at
-New Orleans. He has taken to his occupation with enthusiasm; in that
-respect (only) he reminded me very strongly of Tom Pinch, when he set
-to work so vehemently about making a catalogue of his unknown
-employer's books in the Temple chambers. He seems to have grown fond
-of the very outside of his charge; and when we were talking of our
-childish days together, and I reminded him of the awful quarrel we had
-because he tore the red-and-gold cover of my <i>Arabian Nights</i>, he
-regarded me with the most comical horror, as though I had suddenly dug
-up and brought to light the corpse of a victim, and produced it in the
-sight of its murderer, after the fashion of, 'You don't mean to say,
-Helen,' he said, 'that even in my most cub-like and uncivilised days I
-ever tore a book?' I laughed as I little thought I should ever laugh
-during your absence; but I thought we were both very near tears
-occasionally during our interview, for, of course, we talked of our
-friendlessness until we respectively found the best of all friends in
-you. I wonder if Thornton Carey has any chance of being a great man
-some day--in his own studious scientific line, I mean? How nice it
-would be if he did turn into a great man, and it was all your
-doing--for so it would be! No man could work without tools; you have
-put his into his hand. Do you know even I had no notion how hopeless
-he was, how severely he felt the restriction of poverty, and that
-narrow sphere from which there seemed no chance of escape, until you
-opened the barrier with the golden key? I suppose I understand most
-things better now; and though I always felt very much for him, and had
-a dim notion that he was a case of what I have heard you call 'wasted
-force,' I have only come to see it clearly since he has been talking
-to me.</p>
-
-<p>How earnestly I thank you for all your goodness to my old friend! It
-seems, he says, the most absurd of all possible ideas that he could
-ever be able to express his feelings otherwise than by, or even by,
-words. There is small chance that he should ever be able to prove his
-gratitude or repay his obligation to you--not that he ever wishes it
-ever to be repaid; I do believe him to be one of those few noble men
-who can bear obligation nobly; but should the opportunity ever come,
-he would snatch at it gladly. He said a great deal to me which I feel
-I cannot repeat, partly because he would not like it, and partly
-because you could not bear it. I never met any one who can so ill
-endure to be thanked as you, my dear Alston. I have seen you carry
-that sometimes to an almost ungracious extent. So when Thornton meets
-you he will not try to thank you--he will leave that to me; you will
-accept the substitute, won't you?</p>
-
-<p>We had one more laugh, he and I, before I had to send him away, in
-order that I might get time just to finish this. It was over our
-recollections of the time when we took great delight in the fable of
-the Lion and the Mouse. He and I differed in opinion in those days--he
-wanted to be the lion, I preferred being the mouse; we agreed just now
-that Fate had turned us both into mice, and put the kindest of lions
-in our way. May God keep him from any net, or any need of nibblers!</p>
-
-<p>Of course I am looking out very anxiously for all sorts of details
-about your daily life. I should like to know that you are exceedingly
-comfortable, very well looked after, and enjoying yourself when you
-are not immersed in business; but I don't think I want to hear that
-you like London very much, that you find the time flies, and that your
-quarters are sufficiently snug to prevent your remembering home very
-constantly, and missing me at every turn. This is not small-minded, is
-it? And even if it were, you would not care, Alston, for it has
-nothing to do with my mind, but everything to do with my heart. I do
-not say, for my own part,</p>
-
-<p class="center">'There is na luck about the house,'</p>
-<br>
-<p class="continue">but there is no joy, and there is a constant sense of waiting;
-nothing seems particularly well worth doing, and my life, comfortable,
-well-ordered, and not useless as it is, has established itself on asize
-very dead level. I am not going to mope, however, or to be
-discontented, or anything but cheerful, than what you would have me,
-until the time comes when the waiting will be over, and I can say,
-once more,</p>
-<div style="margin-left:20%; text-indent:0">
-<p class="continue">'His very foot has music in't<br>
-As he comes up the stair.'</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>And now I must shut this up,' sealing it with a kiss from baby, and one
-from your own HELEN.</p>
-<br>
-
-<p>Helen Griswold sealed her letter, placed it in a large envelope, on
-which she wrote, with a strange shrinking repugnance, Trenton Warren's
-New York address, despatched it by a special messenger to his office,
-and went immediately to her child. A nervous flurry had come upon her
-while writing the last lines of her letter, and it was only by a
-determined struggle with herself that she kept off a passionate fit of
-crying; but she put it down, and went into the nursery with a calm
-face. This woman was growing apace. By what mysterious process? She
-talked cheerfully to Mrs. Jenkins, and taking the baby, who was
-sleepy, in her arms, rocked it to rest. The monotonous movement had a
-quieting influence upon herself, and by degrees her cheerfulness was
-restored.</p>
-
-<p>That night, when Helen Griswold was in her own room, she wrote for a
-while in the private memorandum-book in which we have already seen her
-record the circumstances which had given a double current and meaning
-to her life. Having made a few cursory notes of the main points of her
-letter to her husband, laying special stress upon the mention of
-Trenton Warren, she went on to note in her duplicate chronicle the
-principal event of the day--this was Thornton Carey's visit.</p>
-
-<p>'I wonder,' she wrote, 'why it is that a pure and unmitigated
-pleasure, one totally unassociated with any pain, one perfectly free
-from any drawback, should not avail to crush, at least for a time, the
-oppressing pain and dread which has been troubling me of late. If I
-have, as I believe I have, a relentless enemy in Trenton Warren, I
-have a friend upon whose fidelity I may rely, whose love I can trust
-with all my heart, and accept with all my conscience, to oppose to
-him. My friend is a cleverer man than my enemy; he surpasses him by
-all the distance which makes a gentleman to surpass a man who is not a
-gentleman; his will is as steadfast; his courage is, or I am much
-mistaken, far more high; of his devotion to me I have many years'
-experience; of his devotion to Alston I have the guarantee of a nature
-large enough and good enough to contain that great virtue, gratitude;
-and yet there is no reassurance, there is no consolation, there is no
-rest for me in all this knowledge. I don't think it would come, if
-even I should tell Thornton what is in my heart; and that I could not
-do! I could not bear that lie should know that such a profanation had
-ever overtaken me as the avowal of this man's hideous love; the mere
-remembrance of it seems to stain my soul, as it troubles my repose; it
-has gotten into my life like a bad influence. When I awake in the
-morning, I think not of Alston, but of Warren, and I welcome sleep
-because it shuts out the hateful remembrance. I must shake this off,
-or I shall turn the fancied evil into a real one, and give my own
-fears their worst fulfilment.'</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div2_04" href="#div2Ref_04">CHAPTER IV.</a></h4>
-<h5>'SCOT FREE.'</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p>On the morning after the murder, so much of the daylight as could
-force its way through the begrimed glass, or greased paper acting as
-substitute for absent glass, in the low window of the tramps' home
-struggled in a shame-faced manner into the den, and faintly revealed
-the prostrate forms of its inhabitants.</p>
-
-<p>Most of them were still asleep, but by one man there the advent of
-that streak of light had been long and anxiously looked for. This was
-the man dressed in sailor's clothes, whose dread proceedings on the
-previous night have been at length recounted; he who was called Tom
-Summers by those lying around him, and whose demand for a pillow, and
-complaint of the loss of his bundle, had alternately roused their
-scorn and mirth.</p>
-
-<p>As the first ray penetrated the room, Tom Summers cautiously withdrew
-the arm which, during the night, he had kept drawn across his face,
-and looked round him. So far as he could make out, none of his
-companions were yet awake, and he availed himself of the opportunity
-to take a small looking-glass from his pocket, and propping it against
-the wall, he rapidly surveyed himself in it, pulling his red wig
-further down over his face, and settling the red beard, which had
-become shifted during the night. No stings of conscience, no
-terrifying reminiscences of the foul deed which he had committed,
-disturbed his rest; the strain upon his mental and bodily faculties
-had been so great that he had slept heavily and soundly, without a
-dream, without a movement. Even then, as he surveyed himself in the
-little pocket glass, he felt his eyelids closing, the elbow on which
-he leant giving way under him, and he felt more than half inclined to
-drop down upon his side, and slumber again.</p>
-
-<p>It must not be! He had set himself the task of rousing with daylight,
-and had fulfilled it, and he had too much to do to permit himself to
-relapse into slumber; so, after indulging in one luxurious but silent
-yawn and stretch, he pulled himself together by an effort, and
-staggered to his feet. One or two of the sleepers in his immediate
-neighbourhood, roused by the noise he made, cursed him roundly; but
-beyond this no notice was taken of his proceedings.</p>
-
-<p>Tom Summers stepped quickly down the creaking, rickety staircase, at
-the bottom of which he found the proprietor's 'deputy'--a
-shock-headed, blear-eyed old man, who acted as the porter and boots of
-the establishment; the daylight had not yet penetrated to this part of
-the house, and the old man held a flaring tallow candle in his hand,
-with which he surveyed the sailor.</p>
-
-<p>'O, it's you, Jack, is it?' he said, in a thin piping voice. 'I
-thought it was some of the coves trying to come the double over me,
-but you paid your shot last night--I saw you.'</p>
-
-<p>'Yes, yes, I paid last night,' repeated the sailor quickly. 'Open the
-door, please, and let me out.'</p>
-
-<p>'Why, what's your hurry?' asked the old man, turning towards the hole
-from which he had just emerged, and looking up at the old Dutch clock
-which hung against the wall; 'it has only just gone five, and--'</p>
-
-<p>'I've got to join my ship,' said Summers, 'and I must be off at once.
-Let me out, please.'</p>
-
-<p>The old man unlocked the door, and pulled it open by degrees. As soon
-as there was space enough for him to pass, Tom Summers slipped by
-without a word, and went limping up the court. The old man looked
-after him with bent brows, muttering in a tone of great disgust:
-'That's polite, any way--got to join your ship, have you? I tell you
-what, my lad, I believe your ship is H.M. gunboat Crimp; and that as
-soon as you get on board of her, there will be a muster of all hands
-for punishment parade;' and grumbling thus, he returned to his den,
-closing the door after him.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Tom Summers, when he once found himself clear of the court,
-turned his back on the water-side quarters, and made the best of his
-way towards the Lime-street station. He still walked with an
-apparently painful limp; he still shuffled along with his shoulder
-almost rubbing against the wall; he looked like a sailor just
-recovering from a bad illness, and as such he was compassionated at
-the Lime-street station by an old woman, who gave him sixpence, and
-offered him a pull at the black bottle in her wicker basket, telling
-him, at the same time, that her son was at sea too, and on the west
-coast of Africa; worse luck!</p>
-
-<p>It was for the parliamentary train to Chester, which was about to
-start, that Tom Summers took a third-class ticket; and carefully
-avoiding the carriage into which he watched his recent benefactress,
-climbed into an empty compartment, and curling himself up into a
-corner, scarcely waited for the starting of the train to fall asleep.
-There was no chance of any particular notice being taken of him, for
-scarcely a train left Lime-street which did not carry some liberty-men
-from the great ships in the Mersey going inland for a few days'
-furlough. There was no chance of his being carried beyond his
-destination, for he had purposely selected a carriage which did not go
-farther than Chester; he could enjoy the luxury of a long silent
-sleep, and he did. Once he started forward and groaned, but on waking
-suddenly he could recollect nothing more than that he had been
-striking at something which disappeared beneath his blow; and once
-more he put his feet upon the seat, and went to sleep again.</p>
-
-<p>By the time the slow-going train, which stopped at every station to
-pick up and let out crowds of men and women, carrying baskets of
-country produce, arrived at the Chester station, Tom Summers was
-thoroughly rested. He stepped blithely out of the carriage, exchanged
-a pleasant good-morning with the guard, and made straight for the
-newspaper stall on which the bundle of Liverpool papers, only arriving
-in time at Lime-street to be thrown into the van, were then being
-unpacked. He bought a copy of each morning journal, and seating
-himself on a neighbouring bench, turned one after the other inside
-out, and rapidly ran his eye over their contents. Twice he passed the
-morning journals thus in review before him, occasionally starting as
-his eye caught certain paragraphs with sensation headings, but reading
-rapidly on until he had perused the batch. Then, with a sigh of
-relief, he rose and made his way to the cloak-room. To the porter who
-was in attendance there in the absence of the general functionary, not
-yet arrived, Tom Summers handed a printed ticket, immediately
-receiving for it in exchange a small black bag.</p>
-
-<p>'Here is your kit. Jack,' remarked the porter, handing it to him.</p>
-
-<p>'My skipper's, not mine,' said Tom Summers; 'it's too fine for the
-likes of me;' words which had a hidden humour apparently altogether
-too much for the porter? who kept bursting into loud guffaws of
-laughter long after Tom Summers had left him.</p>
-
-<p>With the small bag swinging upon his hand, Tom Summers walked past the
-Queen's Hotel, and down the broad road, yet unbuilt on, leading to the
-town. On one spot a temporary wooden circus had been erected, and he
-stopped to read the bills of the performance hanging at the door. Then
-he lounged along again; but as soon as he came within the precincts of
-the town, he turned in between two of the old houses up a passage, at
-the end of which was a flight of stone steps leading to the ancient
-city walls. These he ascended, and when he found himself on the walls,
-he hesitated as though in doubt which way to turn.</p>
-
-<p>Beneath him lay the old city, its quaintly fantastic gabled roofs, its
-cathedral tower, its numerous church spires, and its hundred relics of
-mediaeval architecture glowing in the early morning sun. Beyond were
-to be seen the broad silver windings of the Dee, the velvet-turfed
-racecourse, just outlined by its white posts and rails, and far away
-in the distance, heaving up their broad shoulders out of the blue
-haze, the majestic range of the Welsh mountains.</p>
-
-<p>That was the side to which Tom Summers inclined; he sought the
-country, not the city; and turning sharply to his right, he made a
-half circuit of the wall, and descended in a by-lane which gave right
-upon the racecourse.</p>
-
-<p>Once only did he pause in his work, and that was when his steps took
-him in front of the county gaol, a full view of which is commanded
-from the walls; a prison omnibus drew up at the huge outer gate, and
-from it some half-dozen prisoners descended, heavily handcuffed, and
-were marched into the gaol-yard between a file of warders. Tom Summers
-surveyed this little ceremony with great interest, leaning over the
-top of the crumbling wall, and shading his eyes from the sun with his
-hands. When the great gates clanged behind them, an expression, half
-of pity, half of contempt, crossed his face, and after he had
-muttered: 'Poor devils,' he speedily added: 'Stupid fools,' then he
-shrugged his shoulders and went on his way.</p>
-
-<p>When Tom Summers found himself on the flat bare expanse of the
-racecourse, he seemed considerably disappointed, and looked round with
-dismay at the abandoned prospect before him. On one side lay the
-river, but that seemed to offer him no consolation; on the other, the
-town, but on that he had already turned his back. At length, after a
-careful survey, he saw at about the distance of half a mile, on a
-rising ground, a little thicket, not much more indeed than a largish
-clump of trees, and towards that he at once bent his way. The sun by
-this time had attained considerable height, and more than considerable
-strength; and when the wayfarer had skirted the racecourse, and toiled
-across the intervening fields, and up a wooded knoll, he was tired and
-hot. The outermost edge of shade did not, however, content him. He
-paused there and looked round to note the farmer's wain, a dot upon
-the distant turnpike road; the lark singing in high heaven above his
-head; the man and boy at plough-work three fields off, the one intent
-on his furrow, the other on his team. And then, having satisfied
-himself that such human beings as he had seen were unobservant of his
-actions, and that there were none others within range, he plunged
-deeper into the little wood, and opening the bag which he carried with
-a key, drew from it a plain gray suit of morning dress and a soft-felt
-wideawake.</p>
-
-<p>In less time almost than it takes to write, he had divested himself of
-his sailor's clothes, and of the red wig and beard, all of which he
-thrust into the bag; then dressing himself in the gray suit, and
-donning the wideawake, he took the bag in his hand, and left the
-little wood on the opposite side to that on which he had entered it.</p>
-
-<p>The clerk in the cloak-room at the Lime-street station that afternoon
-was more than usually busy, and consequently more than usually
-short-tempered. He was ticking off an enormous number of entries in
-the way-bill, and was well down the third column, when he heard a soft
-voice from the sliding window, which was open, say:</p>
-
-<p>'I beg your pardon.'</p>
-
-<p>'Seven hundred and twenty-three, barrel of oysters marked X.O.,'
-muttered the clerk to himself, giving no heed to the interruption.
-'Seven hundred and twenty-four, crate of live fowls; seven--'</p>
-
-<p>'I beg your pardon,' said the voice again, and the clerk looked up and
-found that it belonged to a slim gentleman in a pale gray suit, and
-with a soft black-felt hat on his head, and carrying a small bag in
-his hand. 'Two days ago I came by the noon express from Euston,' said
-the gentleman, 'and booked my portmanteau to Liverpool; but being
-taken ill, I was compelled to get out at Edge-hill, and so my
-luggage came on without me. A brown portmanteau, bearing the name of
-Dunn--shall I have the good luck to find it here?'</p>
-
-<p>'If it is here you will, sir,' growled the clerk, dying to get back to
-the way-bill. 'Two days ago, you say; brown portmanteau, name of Dunn?
-Here you are.'</p>
-
-<p>'I am very much obliged to you, indeed,' said the gentleman.</p>
-
-<p>'Going by cab or train, sir?' said the clerk shortly.</p>
-
-<p>'By cab, if you please, to--'</p>
-
-<p>'Here, Jim,' called the clerk to a passing porter, 'put this
-portmanteau on a cab for the gentleman. Parson out for a holiday, I
-should think,' he said, muttering to himself, looking after the
-passenger, who was following his luggage; 'they always try to get out
-of uniform, but are frightened to get into anything louder than gray.'</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Dunn saw his portmanteau placed upon the cab, and, giving the
-porter sixpence, bade him tell the driver to go to the Adelphi Hotel.
-He looked hard at the porter's face while he spoke to him, as he had
-looked from under his overhanging brow at the clerk in the cloak-room,
-as he looked at the cabman when, after taking a note of the number of
-the vehicle, he descended in front of the Adelphi.</p>
-
-<p>As he advanced quickly to the glass case in which are enshrined the
-presiding goddesses of the establishment, he was struck with a sudden
-chill; he shivered violently and shrugged his shoulders, and rubbed
-his hands together as he stood asking whether he could be accommodated
-with two rooms--a sitting-room and bedroom--leading out of one
-another.</p>
-
-<p>'Certainly, sir,' was the gracious reply. 'Show ten and eleven,
-Charles. You seem to be very cold, sir?'</p>
-
-<p>'I have taken a chill, I think,' said Mr. Dunn, pausing at the bottom
-of the stairs and looking round. 'I come from a climate where frost
-and east winds are unknown, and if I mistake not, there is a fine
-specimen of the latter raging through your streets just now.'</p>
-
-<p>'Beg your pardon, sir, wind's southwest,' said Sam, the porter, who
-was standing by.</p>
-
-<p>'Well, whatever it is, it seems to have penetrated right through me,'
-said Mr. Dunn, shivering again, 'and I must ask for a good fire in my
-sitting-room. What's this?' He was proceeding up the stairs, but
-paused again as two policemen, followed by a small mob, which remained
-outside, entered the house, and approached the glazed sanctum.</p>
-
-<p>'Beg your pardon, miss,' said one of them, who wore the blue-braided
-frock of an inspector, touching his hat, 'but we have come to make
-some inquiries. The body of a gentleman, evidently a case of murder,
-has been discovered, and it is recognised by a cabman as that of a
-fare whom he drove from this hotel to the docks, and who is supposed
-to have been a visitor here.'</p>
-
-<p>'O my, how dreadful!' says the young lady in the glass shrine.
-'Perhaps you had better see the manager, inspector; just step in here,
-if you please.'</p>
-
-<p>She rang a bell, and Sam and the waiter and the traveller, who had all
-suspended their proceedings, now walked up-stairs, the former bearing
-the portmanteau, and the latter muttering:</p>
-
-<p>'Murder! body! What an unpleasant affair!' Then calling back, said:
-'Please don't forget to send a chambermaid to light the fire at once.'</p>
-
-<p>When the porter had placed the portmanteau in the bedroom, and he and
-the waiter had retired, Mr. Dunn threw himself into an easy-chair, and
-with his arms folded and his legs crossed, fell into a reverie, which
-lasted until he was aroused by a knock at the door. He did not call
-out 'Come in' until he had retired to his bedroom, half closing after
-him the door of communication, and through the crack watched the
-operation of lighting the fire by the kneeling chambermaid.</p>
-
-<p>When the girl had retired, Mr. Dunn emerged from the bedroom, and made
-straight for the window. A great breadth of street between the hotel
-and the opposite houses; no chance of his being overlooked. He walked
-quietly to the door, turned the key, and settled it so in the lock as
-to prevent his being spied upon from the outside; then, with soft
-quick steps, entered the bedroom and immediately came out again,
-bringing with him the hand-bag which he himself carried up the stairs.</p>
-
-<p>A momentary hesitation now, and a stealthy and sharp look round; the
-next minute the bag is open, and Mr. Dunn has taken from it and laid
-upon the table the sailor's dress which Tom Summers wore in the low
-tavern and the tramps' lodging-house, and at the same time has
-produced from his breast-pocket a long shiny pair of scissors. With
-these he makes short work of the sailor's suit, tearing and ripping it
-into strips, and cutting these strips into smaller pieces, which he
-gathers together in a heap in the middle of the table.</p>
-
-<p>Then Mr. Dunn, returning to the bedroom, unlocks the portmanteau which
-he had received from the cloak-room at Lime-street, lays out his
-dressing materials on the table and some clothes on a chair, takes a
-Bradshaw and a Tourist's Guide to Ireland with him into the
-sitting-room, and then, with a sudden effort, gathers the whole heap
-of cut and tattered clothing in his arms, and throws it on to the
-fire, which by this time is blazing brightly. Some of the little bits
-of blue cloth take fire at once, and go eddying up the chimney--others
-smoulder slowly; but Mr. Dunn stands in front of the fireplace, gazing
-at the grate, now and then patting and forming its contents with the
-shovel, until no fragment of the clothes remains visible--only white
-dust and charred ashes. Then he throws back his shoulders and
-stretches out his arms like one rid of an intolerable burden, and
-heaves a great sigh of relief.</p>
-
-<p>Quick now, for the burning cloth has left a pungent, titillating,
-acrid smell, which must be attended to immediately. Mr. Dunn draws an
-easy-chair to the corner of the table close by the fireplace, and
-rumples the antimacassar, which has been laid on by careful hands;
-then takes the Tourist's Guide, places it on the table in close
-proximity to the chair, opens it, and places his gold pencil-case
-between the leaves; lastly, he takes a shovelful of red-hot coals from
-the grate, and deliberately strews them over the hearthrug; then he
-quietly quits the room, leaving the door open behind him.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, Inspector Jeffery and his subordinate. Sergeant Scott, were
-enjoying themselves after their fashion. They had a great triumph of
-popular excitement and curiosity up to the doors of the hotel, and
-once inside, they were destined to still greater distinction, not,
-indeed, at the hands of the young lady in the glass case--she was too
-much in the habit of seeing celebrities of all kinds, military and
-naval heroes, leading lawyers, great authors and actors, all of whom
-were in the habit of putting up at the Adelphi, and addressing polite
-nothings to her, to be particularly moved at the entrance of a couple
-of policemen, even though engaged in investigating a murder mystery.
-When she had turned them over to the manager, her business with them
-was concluded, and she went back to her ledger and to answering the
-numerous applicants at the glass case, without bestowing another
-thought upon the visitors in blue-braided uniform. But the gentleman
-who at that time filled the position of manager was a very different
-kind of person; he delighted in the mysterious and romantic, and the
-word 'murder' sounded pleasantly in his ear. The police officers were
-invited into his private sanctum, were bidden to take seats, and were
-asked what beverage would be most agreeable to them. The inspector, a
-man of travel and of taste, suggested dry sherry; the sergeant, a pure
-and simple Liverpudlian, would have liked to have named gin, but he
-recollected where he was, and asked for brandy.</p>
-
-<p>'And now,' said the manager, as soon as the visitors were comfortably
-seated, with their glasses before them, 'now, inspector, tell us all
-about it.'</p>
-
-<p>'There isn't much to tell, sir,' said Inspector Jeffery, 'though it is
-as bold and, I may say, as clean a job as I have met with in my
-experience.'</p>
-
-<p>'And you mean to say the murdered man was a visitor in this hotel?'
-interrupted the manager. 'Who could it be?'</p>
-
-<p>'I'm coming to that presently, sir,' said the inspector, who always
-delivered himself according to what he called 'the laws of evidence,'
-and who was terribly put out by having his straight story broken in
-upon. 'I said it was a bold and clean job, and I might have added
-clever, for although there was a patrol passing up and down in front
-of the very door of the warehouse where it was committed every half
-hour, to say nothing of sergeants visiting rounds and all that, not a
-trace was seen or heard of anything about it until the people came to
-the warehouse this morning.'</p>
-
-<p>'Warehouse! How did he get in there? It must have been done by one of
-the warehouse hands,' again interrupted the manager.</p>
-
-<p>'When you have done, sir, I will continue,' said the inspector
-testily. 'It was one of those large warehouses close by Water-street,
-which are let in floors, or flats as they call them in Scotland; each
-lock up separate to themselves, with a common stairway, and where,
-there being no porter resident on the place, the front door is always
-kept unfastened. I have spoken to the commissioners about that once or
-twice, suggesting an order should be issued to have some one
-responsible for those doors being locked, and if that had been the
-case there would have been no murder. It was an out-door clerk
-belonging to Triggs and Vyner, wool-staplers, on the third floor, that
-discovered the murder. He came about seven o'clock this morning,
-having forgotten his note-book last night, and being unable to start
-his rounds without it. When he got up to the first-floor landing, he
-found the dead man lying in a heap in the corner. He thought he was
-drunk at first--not a tramp, he could not have been that by his
-clothes, but some gentleman who had been dining out and mistaken his
-road home--but when he bent over him he found that the man was dead.
-There was very little blood on the floor, though his clothes were
-soaked with it. He had been stabbed to the heart with a long-bladed
-knife, more like a dagger, which was lying by his side. Such a stab,
-so straight and sure, I never saw before in my experience, nor our
-divisional surgeon neither. He says, if it weren't for reflecting upon
-the credit of the profession, he could almost swear it had not been
-done by any amateur.'</p>
-
-<p>'Good Lord!' said the manager, by this time intensely interested.
-'Well, what then?'</p>
-
-<p>'Then, I was sent for,' resumed the inspector, 'and I came down, and
-by this time there was a crowd round the place, and my men had some
-difficulty in turning them out. Two or three of them I allowed to
-stop, and among them was old Tom Langman the flyman, who whispered to
-me that he recognised the body as that of the gentleman he had driven
-from this house to the docks, and who, he thought, was one of a large
-theatrical party now staying here.'</p>
-
-<p>'Not now,' cried the manager, 'they're gone; went away yesterday in
-the Cuba. Why, good heavens, it must be number fourteen! He was to
-have gone back to London last night, but Miss Jennings told me he had
-changed his mind, and though he was not at home his things were still
-in his room.'</p>
-
-<p>'Better send and see if they are there now,' said the inspector. 'What
-was the gentleman's name?'</p>
-
-<p>'I cannot say,' said the manager. 'You see I was so taken up with
-listening ta Duval, and looking at Miss Montressor, and laughing at
-that funny fellow in the check suit, that I didn't take much notice of
-the others. I will call somebody to go up to fourteen, and--I beg your
-pardon, sir,' he exclaimed to the gentleman whom he found on the other
-side of the door just as he opened it, 'did you wish for anything?'</p>
-
-<p>'Not at all,' said the gentleman in a soft voice. 'I am Mr. Dunn, a
-visitor at this house occupying number ten, and I heard something as I
-was passing the bar about some murder which had been discovered.'</p>
-
-<p>'Yes, indeed, sir, a dreadful murder of a poor gentleman who
-was staying here, and who seems to have been decoyed into some
-out-of-the-way place and stabbed to the heart.'</p>
-
-<p>'Indeed,' said Mr. Dunn, 'decoyed into an out-of-the-way place? Ah,
-probably some woman in it, I should imagine.'</p>
-
-<p>'That's a very good notion, sir,' said the manager, 'very good indeed;
-the inspector of police is in this room, sir; perhaps you would just
-step in and mention it. Inspector, here is a gentleman staying in the
-house who has got what I consider a very excellent idea about the
-murder.'</p>
-
-<p>'O indeed, sir,' said the inspector gruffly. He greatly disapproved of
-amateur suggestions.</p>
-
-<p>'Not at all a great idea, inspector,' said Mr. Dunn softly; 'our
-friend here is pleased to speak too highly of it--merely a notion
-which has occurred to me, and I have no doubt has previously occurred
-to you, that a--I beg your pardon,' said Mr. Dunn, stopping short and
-sniffing through his nose, 'isn't there a very peculiar smell?'</p>
-
-<p>The manager, the inspector, and the sergeant all sniffed in concert;
-the two latter never smelt anything, but the manager called out at
-once, 'Something burning.'</p>
-
-<p>'So I thought,' said Mr. Dunn; 'something woollen.'</p>
-
-<p>'We must see to this at once,' cried the manager, and rushed out.</p>
-
-<p>The others rushed with him, and after a prolonged amount of sniffing
-made their way up the stairs leading to number ten. As they advanced
-the smell grew stronger, and they came upon a vast quantity of smoke,
-which they soon found proceeded from number ten itself, where the
-atmosphere was so dense that it was impossible to see across the room.
-There was no trace of any flame, but when the windows had been thrown
-open it was discovered that the hearth-rug and a portion of the carpet
-around it were smouldering slowly, and were nearly consumed. Bells
-were rung and water was brought, though long before it arrived the
-inspector and the sergeant had removed any further cause for fear by
-stamping out the fire with their heavy boots.</p>
-
-<p>The manager was very cross; he did not quite see how he could explain
-the matter at the next meeting of the directors, and ask for a new
-carpet. He had intended to show his temper to Mr. Dunn, but that
-gentleman he saw was far too savage himself to brook being spoken to.</p>
-
-<p>'It is most annoying,' said Mr. Dunn. 'I am only here for a day on my
-way to Ireland and this accident occurs. The silly woman who lit the
-fire did not bring a guard for it. I am unused to fires; I live in a
-warm climate; but some friends of mine told me never to sit by a fire
-in England unless it had a guard on it. I looked for a guard before I
-left the room, but could not find one, and I thought it would be all
-right.'</p>
-
-<p>The manager was full of apologies.</p>
-
-<p>'Should they move Mr. Dunn to another suite of rooms? They could do so
-at once.'</p>
-
-<p>'No, thank you,' said Mr. Dunn in reply. 'It is unfortunate, but still
-it is an accident, and could not have been prevented. I will sleep in
-the bedroom to-night, and I should not have used the sitting-room
-much, as I am a stranger in Liverpool, and I want to see all that is
-to be seen on this the only day I have. In the mean time, I shall be
-thankful if you will prepare me a little dinner, some fish and a chop,
-in the coffee-room, and I will come down to it as soon as I have
-washed my hands and face, which seem to be tolerably blackened by the
-smoke.'</p>
-
-<p>When the manager and the servants had taken their departure--the
-inspector and sergeant had gone long since--Mr. Dunn retired to his
-bedroom, and, after turning the key in the door, took off his coat and
-waistcoat, and seated himself on the edge of the bed.</p>
-
-<p>'So far so good,' he soliloquised; 'so far everything that I have done
-has been perfectly successful. My personal identity ceased on my
-leaving America, and no one can have found any traces of Mr. Dolby,
-the cynical millionaire, in Tom Summers, the sailor, or Mr. Dunn, the
-soft-spoken tourist. One night more and I shake the dust of this land
-from my feet, and can fairly consider myself scot free. That was a
-lucky idea of mine to strew those cinders on the hearth-rug; the smell
-of Tom Summers' smouldering rags might have awakened the keen
-suspicions of those police gentry downstairs. That flannel shirt was
-beginning to smoke confoundedly before I left the room, but that is
-now all provided for; the police themselves were the first persons to
-see what had occurred, and helped to extinguish the smouldering
-carpet. Not one precaution has been omitted, and, distrustful of
-myself as I generally am, I begin to look with pride upon my powers of
-organisation as exhibited in this matter. If my orders have only been
-implicitly obeyed in America, all I could have looked for is
-accomplished. One more night of acting and character-playing, and I
-can rest in peace, and return to reap the reward of all I have gone
-through.'</p>
-
-<p>Then Mr. Dunn rose from the edge of the bed, carefully washed his face
-and hands, put on the gray coat and waistcoat, and, looking
-wonderfully simple and respectable, went down to dinner.</p>
-
-<p>The dinner was ready, and as soon as he heard that his visitor was
-seated, the manager was in attendance to give special directions to
-the waiter, and to exhibit the utmost consideration for one who had
-been the victim of such an untoward accident. When Mr. Dunn had
-finished his fish, the manager ventured to attempt a little
-confidential conversation.</p>
-
-<p>'That unfortunate fire, sir,' said he, 'prevented us hearing more
-about the murder from the police. It is a very, very sad affair. I
-have been with the inspector since I saw you, and though we are not
-going to view the body until to-morrow, I have no doubt that the
-unfortunate gentleman was a Mr. Foster, an American gentleman of great
-wealth who had been staying in this house, and who occupied the very
-rooms adjoining yours, where his things still remain.'</p>
-
-<p>'An American was he?' asked Mr. Dunn.</p>
-
-<p>'Yes, sir, American,' replied the manager; 'very rich, and with an
-enormous fancy for theatricals. Beg your pardon, sir; not very much in
-your line, I should say; but Mr. Foster was very fond of them indeed.
-He came down here with the celebrated Bryan Duval, of whom you may
-have heard, and a party of performers who were going across to
-America. Mr. Foster left this house to see them off, and after that we
-never set eyes upon him.'</p>
-
-<p>'That's a strange thing for an inhabitant of such a town as Liverpool
-to confess,' said Mr. Dunn. 'We in the colonies speak of the mother
-country as the home of the rarest civilisation. What with your gas and
-your much-vaunted police arrangement, we are apt to boast of the
-safety of your streets, of the enormous difference between the state
-of things in which law and order prevail and where they are governed
-by a reckless rabble, such as is sometimes found amongst us; and yet
-here is a most wonderfully cool and audacious murder committed in the
-heart of the second city of the empire, and not discovered for a
-certain number of hours afterwards. By the way, is there no trace of
-the wretch who committed the crime?'</p>
-
-<p>'No, sir, not yet; though I don't know what evidence Inspector Jeffery
-may bring forward at the inquest to-morrow morning. Perhaps you would
-like to be present at the inquest, sir? I am sure I should be able to
-get a place for you.'</p>
-
-<p>'You are very good,' said Mr. Dunn, 'and I should much like to be
-present at the scene, as a study of law, of character, and society;
-but my time to return to Jamaica is drawing nigh and I must get
-through the rest of my British visits as soon as I can. The direct
-steamer for Belfast leaves to-morrow morning?'</p>
-
-<p>The manager replied in the affirmative.</p>
-
-<p>'Then I will go by it,' said Mr. Dunn. 'I have heard much of the
-beauties of Ireland, and I wish to see them before I return. Now I
-think I will make my way to bed, for I have had a fatiguing day. I
-wish you good-night.'</p>
-
-<p>The manager bowed his acknowledgment of his politeness, and Mr. Dunn
-retired.</p>
-<br>
-
-<p>As, about noon next day, Mr. Dunn was proceeding to the cab which was
-to convey him to the dock, he saw in the hall of the hotel the
-presiding goddess in the glass case, and the chambermaid, gallantly
-escorted by Inspector Jeffery, one of the waiters, and the porter.</p>
-
-<p>'The witnesses, sir,' whispered the manager, pointing to them. 'The
-body has been removed to the dead-house, the inquest is just over, and
-the jury found a verdict of wilful murder against some person or
-persons unknown.'</p>
-
-<p>'Unknown!' echoed Mr. Dunn. 'Then there is no trace of the murderer?'</p>
-
-<p>'Not at present, sir,' said the manager. 'Inspector Jeffery had
-nothing to bring forward. I wish you good-morning, sir.'</p>
-
-<p>'Good-morning,' said Mr. Dunn, descending the steps.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as the cab drove off, he opened his shoulders, took a long
-respiration, and muttered between his teeth, 'At last! Scot free!'</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div2_05" href="#div2Ref_05">CHAPTER V.</a></h4>
-<h5>A BLAZE OF TRIUMPH.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p>The voyage on board the Cuba was by no means the dreadful experience
-which Miss Montressor had been led to believe; in fact, when they were
-twenty-four hours clear of the coast of Ireland--where it was, as
-usual, very wet and inclement, the weather always, apparently,
-endeavouring to spoil the pleasure prepared by the hospitable
-inhabitants for their visitors--she roused up and enjoyed herself very
-much. At first the mere idea of food upset her, and she declared that
-the constant round of meals was 'disgusting;' but it was soon observed
-that 'when refection bell did call,' Miss Montressor was one of the
-first persons to smilingly take up her position at the board, and one
-of the last to leave it. It was a part of Mr. Bryan Duval's policy
-that everything should be done in the most liberal manner, and there
-was consequently abundance of wine and of very excellent quality, on
-the merits and demerits of which Mr. Duval would descant to the
-admiration of the company.</p>
-
-<p>This was not the only point on which, that eminent artist won renown.
-He expounded his views on certain questions of seamanship to the
-captain with such a wealth of professional phraseology that the worthy
-officer, who was not in the habit of consorting much with his
-theatrical passengers, looked upon him with especial favour, asked him
-constantly into his deckhouse, and ventilated at length--almost, as
-Byran thought, at too great length--his original theories concerning
-currents and wind storms. When, moreover, Mr. Duval had corrected the
-third officer, who was a Yorkshireman, about the exact position of a
-tobacconist's shop in Boar-lane, Leeds, and had demonstrated that a
-Scotch professor of St. Andrew's University, who was looked upon as a
-miracle of learning, was little better than an idiot, he was generally
-allowed to be a man of universal genius, and respected accordingly. As
-for the officers of the ship, they took the greatest fancy to him. He
-was unanimously elected an honorary member of their mess, and the
-deliciously titillating and highly-spiced dishes which, at a late hour
-of the night, he prepared in the purser's cabin, the effervescent
-cooling drinks which he manufactured to go with them, and the romantic
-little Spanish love songs which he sung afterwards to the
-accompaniment of a guitar, formed the theme of conversation for many a
-future voyage.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Skrymshire, the low comedian, who had been seen in the exercise of
-his profession by several of the passengers, both in London and
-Liverpool, and from whom a fund of amusement was expected, did not
-quite come up to popular anticipation, as he passed the principal part
-of the voyage moaning in his berth in the agonies of illness, and
-requesting, as a personal favour, that he might be thrown overboard.
-It was not until the ship had passed Sandy Hook that he put in an
-appearance on deck; and she was safe at anchor in the quarantine
-ground--where, in consequence of her late arrival, she was compelled
-to remain during the night--before he cracked his first joke.</p>
-
-<p>All the party were up on deck very early the next morning, looking
-with admiring eyes at the beauties of Staten Island, and with wonder
-at the steamers and ferry-boats darting in and out. Acting upon the
-private hint given to her by Bryan Duval the night before, Miss
-Montressor had paid a little special attention to her toilette, and
-looked very pretty and fascinating.</p>
-
-<p>'Quite right, my dear,' said Bryan, when lie saw her--he himself was
-arrayed in a high hat with a curly brim, blue body coat, gray trousers,
-and jean boots with patent leather tips--'quite right, my dear; they
-go in immensely for this sort of thing here, and you will find that we
-shall have a few of the press fellows on board before we land, and no
-end of them waiting at the wharf. First impressions are everything,
-and half a column in the <i>Scarifier</i>, a personal paragraph in the
-<i>Growler</i>, and a subleader in the <i>Democrat</i> to-morrow morning, will
-do us good service with our first night's audience; besides, Van Buren
-is a man who fancies himself a lady-killer, and I want him to be
-impressed.'</p>
-
-<p>'And won't you be at all jealous?' asked Miss Montressor, looking up
-coquettishly.</p>
-
-<p>'I jealous?' cried Bryan. 'Of course; stark, staring, raving crazy
-with jealousy. I'd push those side curls a little further back, my
-dear, if I were you; and just let me tighten that pin at the back of
-your collar. That will do nicely. Have you seen anything of
-Skrymshire?'</p>
-
-<p>'The last time he appeared he was looking very melancholy and
-disconsolate,' said Miss Montressor.</p>
-
-<p>'It is most important that Van Buren should not see him until he is in
-better feather,' said Bryan. 'There will be some champagne cocktail
-going on when these press fellows come on board, and I will take care
-that Skrymshire has a dose of that to pick him up. A low comedian with
-a horse's head and that suit of clothes is enough to frighten any
-manager out of an engagement.'</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Duval's predictions were fulfilled. The health officer had
-scarcely rowed off after his interview with the doctor when another
-boat was seen approaching the vessel, containing certain members of
-the press, who quickly appeared on board and were conducted to Mr.
-Duval, by whom they were received with great courtesy. His ability and
-geniality had made him a general favourite during his last visit to
-America, and his return, bringing out a company of whom--notably of
-Miss Montressor--great things were expected, was hailed with delight.
-The literary gentlemen, who had a general air of having been up all
-night, and not having thought it worth while to devote much attention
-to their toilets in the morning, were conducted to the cabin, where
-champagne cocktails and other exhilarating drinks were provided for
-them by Mr. Duval, who, when the liquor had well circulated,
-despatched a trusty emissary to conduct Miss Montressor to their
-presence.</p>
-
-<p>In her fresh morning toilette, with her pleasant smiles and frank
-ingenuous manner, the London actress took by storm the susceptible
-hearts of the literary gentlemen. They had come with the express
-intention of interviewing her, and, lo and behold, the most they could
-do was to utter little compliments and flattery, while most of their
-time was occupied in staring at her. But Mr. Duval, who knew exactly
-what was wanted, was not going to let slip such a golden opportunity,
-and went about from one to the other, answering such questions as he
-thought might have been propounded.</p>
-
-<p>'What should I say her height was? About five feet five, I should
-think--a little taller, perhaps, with those new French heels, which
-set the foot off, but are deuced dangerous for walking. Ah, Willie
-Webster, you rascal,' whispering in the ear of a dirty little man in a
-wideawake, 'you're the lad for the ladies, and you're death on
-complexions, I know. Look at hers; look at the Montressor's. That's
-the real thing--none of your bismuth and pearl powder, but with the
-warm tinge on it which she has caught on her voyage from the sea and
-sun. Natural daughter of a most distinguished man, my dear Carter;
-blue blood, Norman descent, and all that sort of thing--look at it in
-her hands and feet, that's where the real breeding comes out. You
-don't care about noble descent in this country, I know--honesty,
-virtue, simple citizen, and all that kind of thing; but you do admire
-hands and feet, and most of your ladies have them in perfection.'</p>
-
-<p>The press gentlemen went off in their swift-sailing little boat, and
-landing before the huge steamer worked her way to the wharf, so
-aroused the enthusiasm of those waiting there by their description of
-Miss Montressor's charms, that when she was seen on the deck, leaning
-on Bryan Duval's arm, she was greeted with great applause, cheerings,
-and waving of handkerchiefs. Most interested among those assembled on
-the wharf to meet the voyagers was Mr. Van Buren, a strikingly
-handsome man of between forty and fifty, with jet-black hair in crisp
-waves over his well-shaped head, a classic profile, and an excellent
-figure. He was naturally nervous, for the good old British comedies,
-which were the staple attraction at Van Buren's Varieties, had ceased
-to attract, and the manager was looking to the engagement of Duval's
-company to recoup him his losses, and finish his season brilliantly.
-Dogging his heels was his friend and adviser Mr. Morris Jacobs, who
-had entered the service of Mr. Van Buren's father as call-boy at three
-dollars a week, but who was now reputed to be worth half a million,
-and to be the real owner of Van Buren's Varieties and almost of Van
-Buren himself, for the manager-actor was fond of pleasure, and was
-besides a great sportsman. He had always horses in training somewhere,
-and whenever he could get away from the theatre he was rushing off to
-look after them; while Mr. Morris Jacobs had but one thought in life,
-the accumulation of money; and finding that could be best attended to
-at the Varieties, there he remained, and there, morning, noon, and
-night, he was to be found. But when Mr. Van Buren had been presented
-to Miss Montressor by Bryan Duval all his nervousness vanished. He
-bowed his curly head over her daintily gloved hand, and lifted it to
-his lips. Then turning to Mr. Jacobs, he muttered,</p>
-
-<p>'No use shinning about any more, Morris; trump card's found!'</p>
-
-<p>More and more delights were there in store for the newly-arrived
-troupe: banquets in their rooms at the Fifth-avenue Hotel, bushels of
-cards left by distinguished callers, artistic clubs proffering
-receptions, and invitations for all kinds of entertainments. Miss
-Montressor was in the highest state of delight. 'If this is America,'
-she said to Bryan Duval, 'I rather think I am likely to be pleased
-with it.'</p>
-
-<p>Intelligence of the arrival of the star company, and their brilliant
-reception in New York, speedily reached Mrs. Griswold's house. Helen,
-with her usual cordial kindness, sent the newspaper which contained
-the lengthiest and most sensational account of the proceedings of the
-popular reception, and the programme of the performance, to Mrs.
-Jenkins. She would have gone to the nursery to read it all for her,
-and enjoy the pleasure and excitement with which she felt the nurse
-would peruse it, but she happened just then to be detained by callers.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Jenkins clutched the paper from the hand of the servant who
-brought it to her, and read it with the utmost avidity. When, shortly
-afterwards, Mrs. Griswold went up-stairs to pay her customary visit to
-the baby before dressing for lunch, she found the nurse in rather a
-fidgety state; she was absent while Mrs. Griswold talked to her, she
-answered one or two of her questions at random, and altogether her
-manner was so <i>distrait</i> that Helen resolved to find out what it all
-meant.</p>
-
-<p>'Has anything happened to you?' she said; 'have you had any bad news?
-Pray tell me.'</p>
-
-<p>'No, ma'am,' said Mrs. Jenkins, 'I have not had any bad news, but I
-should like very much to go out for a while; there is some one come to
-New York that I know, and I should like to call and see her.'</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps a transitory feeling of surprise crossed Helen's mind at the
-unusual reticence of Mrs. Jenkins, who by this time had become so
-familiarised with her friendly manner and her kindly genial interest
-in all that concerned the dwellers in her house that she would have
-supposed the nurse would at once have told her who the person was, and
-all about it; but Helen's kindness was not of the exacting sort, and
-she received this brief communication with her usual sweet compliance.</p>
-
-<p>'Of course you can go out,' she said. 'I will take care of baby; I can
-take you in the carriage wherever you want to go, and then you can
-leave baby with me.'</p>
-
-<p>'No, thank you,' answered Mrs. Jenkins, with some embarrassment and a
-rising colour, which Helen at once perceived, but passed over quite
-unnoticed, concluding that Mrs. Jenkins's confusion had something to
-do with the good-for-nothingness of her husband--a point on which
-Helen deeply commiserated her lot, because, though she had been told
-no particulars, she felt perfectly convinced that Mr. Jenkins's
-good-for-nothingness, and no other cause, was at the bottom of his
-wife's present dependent situation--'no, thank you, ma'am, I would
-rather go alone, if you please; and if you will allow me, I should
-like very much to take baby. I think you can trust me not to take her
-into any place or to see any person of whom you would disapprove.'</p>
-
-<p>'Indeed, I can,' said Helen cordially. 'I can trust you most
-completely. You shall take baby, and you shall go where you like, and
-stay as long as you like, and,' she added, laying her hand gently on
-Mrs. Jenkins's shoulder, as she stooped over the nursing chair, 'never
-think it necessary to tell me more than you wish, never think that I
-wish to drive your confidence faster than its natural pace.'</p>
-
-<p>Then she immediately left the room, and Mrs. Jenkins, after a few
-minutes, got herself and the child ready and went out.</p>
-<br>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor was very much pleased with the aspect of affairs in
-New York. For the first time in her life, she felt herself a person of
-real and indubitable importance; the reception had pleased her; she
-was charmed with the look of the city, and delighted with her quarters
-at Fifth-avenue Hotel; the largeness and liberality of all the
-arrangements for public comfort, which cannot fail to strike the
-newly-arrived visitor in New York, duly impressed themselves upon Miss
-Montressor, and she had hardly become accustomed to her large and
-pleasant rooms, she was still discovering new perfections in them, and
-finding out points of advantage in everything American over everything
-English, when she was told that a person wished to see her.</p>
-
-<p>Visions of eager strangers bent on obtaining her autograph and
-photograph, dreams of interviewing, even notions of a sharp contention
-between rival managers, flashed in a moment across her lively
-imagination, as she requested that the person--no indication of the
-sex of the applicant had been given--should be invited to walk up.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor was already very handsomely dressed, so that nothing
-remained but for her to assume a statuesque and striking attitude in
-which to await the arrival of her visitor. Half a minute sufficed to
-show her that her preparations were thrown away: no fashionable
-lounger, no splendidly-dressed lady, no eager man of business, was
-this visitor who thus early claimed admittance to her; only a
-plainly-dressed woman, carrying an infant in her arms, who stretched
-her disengaged hand eagerly towards her with a glad cry of, 'Clara!
-Clara!'</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor recoiled--to do her justice, it was only for a
-moment--the next she took the woman's hand, and saying, 'Hush! do not
-speak so loud,' kissed her.</p>
-
-<p>'O, how glad I am to see you, Clara! You see, your grand new name
-comes quite easy to me. I have never forgotten that you told me not to
-call you Matty any more. How glad I was when I heard you were coming
-out, and though at first I took it very unkind that you did not write
-to tell me, I soon knew it was because you were sure I should see it
-in the papers.'</p>
-
-<p>The speaker had seated herself, loosened her shawl, and taken off her
-bonnet before Miss Montressor had recovered from the slight constraint
-of the first surprise.</p>
-
-<p>'Yes,' she said, 'I am very glad, indeed, to see you; but you have put
-me in a mortal fright. I don't want to be unkind, you know--and you're
-a sensible woman--only think how it would ruin me if Jenkins came
-about after me here.'</p>
-
-<p>'Jenkins can't, my dear soul.' said the other. 'He is away, he ain't
-in New York; and if he was he would do nothing to harm you, bless you.
-He and I both understand that we must keep our distance from you
-now--not that you're not a good sister, as you always was and always
-will be, but for your sake and ourselves too--only you must forgive my
-coming to you. I really couldn't bear it, and I knew it was all safe;
-it is such a time since I have seen you, and you have done such a deal
-in the time. Only to think, Clara, of your being a regular star, and
-leading lady at the Thespian.'</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor laughed a good-natured laugh, but with a peculiar
-sound in it, which comes of a superior knowledge of the world and a
-truer test of greatness than that of the speaker.</p>
-
-<p>'My dear, you have got very funny notions about me. I have not done
-badly; but as to the great things, I have not many of them to count up,
-and this is the very first really big chance I have had.'</p>
-
-<p>'Don't be afraid that I shall spoil it,' said Bess, laying the
-sleeping child comfortably in a corner of a luxurious settee, and
-seating herself beside Miss Montressor, with one arm placed fondly
-round her neck, while her honest gray eyes, full of tears, looked
-searchingly in the other's face. 'I would rather never see you for
-half my life than harm you, dear; and I suppose it would harm you,
-even in this country, where everybody is free and equal, they say, if
-you were known to have a servant for a sister?'</p>
-
-<p>'A servant, Bess!' said Miss Montressor with surprise and displeasure.
-'How is that? What do you mean?'</p>
-
-<p>'Just what I say to you. I am a servant. I am a nurse in a very good
-family here in town; it is a good place, and I am happy, trusted,
-useful, and comfortable.'</p>
-
-<p>'Nurse!' said Miss Montressor; 'is that your nurse-child, then? I
-thought it was your own.'</p>
-
-<p>'Mine? O dear no. My baby was a poor little cripple, and he was taken
-away from all his troubles a little while ago. Jenkins was leaving me
-for a profitable job he had got, and I could not stand the loneliness;
-besides we were very poor, and so I took a place. It is Mrs.
-Griswold's, in Fifth-avenue, and I get along very well indeed. Mrs.
-Griswold is alone, like myself. Her husband is in Europe; and she gave
-me leave to come here to-day, and to bring the child, so as I might be
-free, as kind as possible.'</p>
-
-<p>'Fifth-avenue?' said Miss Montressor; 'why, that's a fashionable part
-of New York. I know that much, though I have only been one night in
-the place. I knew it before, however. This lady must be a person of
-importance. My dear Bess, you didn't let out to her where you were
-coming to?'</p>
-
-<p>'I did not,' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'I only told her some one had come to
-New York that I wanted to see, and she never asked another question.
-She is a perfect lady, is Mrs. Griswold, and respects everybody's
-confidence. She will ask me nothing when I get back; and when you meet
-her, I am sure you need not be afraid she will know that the famous
-Miss Montressor is her nurse's sister.'</p>
-
-<p>There was just the slightest tone of hurt feeling in Mrs. Jenkins's
-kindly voice, and Miss Montressor, who was as kindly as herself at
-bottom--only a little overlaid by the affectation of her profession
-and her associations--sympathetically perceived it. 'The gentleman
-talked nonsense, Bess,' she said, bestowing on her sister a hearty
-hug, to which the other responded. 'Here we are now, and here we may
-not be long uninterrupted, so let us have a talk while we may. What's
-Jenkins about?'</p>
-
-<p>'I don't know, darling. No harm, but some business of a private
-nature, which will keep him away for some time--it's only a commission
-agency, but I don't know in what.'</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Jenkins was the most loyal of wives, and even to her beloved
-sister, the pride and delight of her life, would not have betrayed her
-husband's confidence, and Miss Montressor was in reality profoundly
-indifferent to the answer to the question which she had just asked.
-She did not care one straw where Jenkins was, provided he was not in
-New York, or what he was doing, provided his occupation was not of a
-nature to expose her to any risk of contact with him. Satisfied on
-this point, she was quite ready to respond to her sister's
-affectionate inquisitiveness respecting herself and her concerns, and
-the two plunged immediately into an animated and confidential
-conversation, which brought out the best sides of the characters of
-both.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor gave her sister a tolerably correct and exceedingly
-pleasant description of her career during the years which had parted
-them--years which had been very prosperous on the whole for the
-friendless young actress, and not unmarked by acts of generosity
-towards her sister, whose lot had been very different. That Mrs.
-Jenkins was so poor as she had been when we first made her
-acquaintance in Bleeker-street was not Miss Montressor's fault; she
-had frequently assisted her sister and her good-for-nothing husband
-out of her, at first, very moderate means; but when Bess saw that
-Jenkins's good-for-nothingness was an established fact, her honesty of
-purpose and truthfulness of mind made her make a resolution to accept
-no more assistance from Clara. 'I don't mind working hard,' was her
-mental comment on the situation, 'that he may have money to
-waste--I am his wife; but Clara shall not do it. I will never touch a
-shilling of her earnings more;' and she had written to Clara asking
-her to abstain from sending them money.</p>
-
-<p>This, to tell the truth, Miss Montressor, who had had an instinctively
-bad opinion of her brother-in-law, was not sorry to do; and so her
-knowledge of the Jenkinses' circumstances became slight and confused.
-Her sister could not very well keep her informed of them without
-appearing to ask for the aid which she had deprecated; she therefore
-wrote vaguely and seldom, and Miss Montressor had acquiesced in this
-latterly, contenting herself with the reflection that she was now so
-extensively reported in the newspapers as being here or there, and
-playing this or that engagement to more or less appreciative
-audiences, that really Bess would know as much about her from the
-journals as she cared to tell, for there were one or two things she
-did not wish to tell. But she was brimful of news now, and Mrs.
-Jenkins's impression that Miss Montressor was by far the finest
-actress in existence was deepened by the narrative of triumphs which
-her sister poured into her ear. It was not an untrue narrative, it was
-only coloured; and yet, with all their confidence, with all their
-eager talk, there was a reticence on both sides.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor never mentioned Mr. Dolby.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Jenkins made no allusion to Trenton Warren.</p>
-
-<p>Bess had a great deal to say respecting Mrs. Griswold; and here told
-her sister, with lively pleasure, of that lady's promise to take her
-with herself to the play. 'But,' she added, 'she will have the
-satisfaction of seeing you before I shall, Clara. You see, I didn't
-care to press her so much as asking to go on the first or second night
-would have done--I thought it would not seem reasonable, and might
-arouse a suspicion; and if it did not do you harm, it might make you
-angry; and I would rather know you were playing for a whole week to
-all New York, and turning the place upside down about you, and sit at
-home without the chance of seeing you, than vex you; and so I have got
-to wait patiently until my betters are served. But I know she will
-keep her word; and, as I was going to say, she will see you before I
-shall, for she is going to-night.'</p>
-
-<p>'To-night?' said Miss Montressor; 'that's quick! Is she as fond of the
-play as you are?'</p>
-
-<p>'I think she is very fond of it. She tells me she and Mr. Griswold
-always went to see anything that was worth seeing. But now that he is
-away she is very particular indeed. She never goes anywhere except
-amongst old friends, and she does that very sparingly; and as to a
-theatre or concert, she has never put her foot in one since he left.'</p>
-
-<p>'O, then, Mr. Griswold is not at home?' said Miss Montressor.</p>
-
-<p>'O dear no! he went away before I came. I have never seen him.'</p>
-
-<p>'Where is he?'</p>
-
-<p>'He is in London, I believe, doing some business in a very large way.
-People say Griswold is a very rich man; and I suppose he wants to be
-richer, like all the rest of them, and must pay a price for it--pretty
-big price too, going to the other end of the world, and leaving his
-young wife alone so long. She mopes dreadfully; I am quite glad she is
-going to-night, if it is only to cheer her up. She was in great
-spirits at getting so good a place. It was bespoke long before you
-came.'</p>
-
-<p>'You had been talking about me, I suppose?'</p>
-
-<p>'Of course I had. I had just told her you were the finest actress in
-the world, and she had better make haste to see you.'</p>
-
-<p>'Have you any idea in what part of the theatre Mrs. Griswold would be
-sitting?' said Miss Montressor. 'I very seldom try to see any one from
-the stage; and most times, when one does try, one cannot do it. But I
-will have a look at her, if you will tell me where she will sit.'</p>
-
-<p>'I can tell you,' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'She will be right at the end of
-the dress circle, last seat but two, right-hand side; and I know what
-she is going to wear, so that you can tell her by her dress. An old
-gentleman and an old lady and their son are going with her--it is just
-a party of four.'</p>
-
-<p>'Tell me about her dress,' said Miss Montressor, 'and the colour of
-her hair.'</p>
-
-<p>'She has a quantity of very fine brown hair,' said Mrs. Jenkins,
-'which matches her eyes, and she never wears any ornaments in it. The
-dress she is going to wear to-night is pale blue velvet, square cut,
-with turnovers, and very fine guipure lace. She always wears plain
-gold ornaments with that gown, and a blue-and-gold fan.'</p>
-
-<p>'Very well,' said Miss Montressor; 'I will look out for the blue
-velvet and the guipure, for the gold ornaments, and the blue-and-gold
-fan.'</p>
-
-<p>A timepiece rang out the hour.</p>
-
-<p>'Dear me, how late it is!' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'I had no notion I had
-been here so long. I think I must go now, Clara; but I shall get down
-to see you again before long, and you will come to see me, won't you?'</p>
-
-<p>'My dear Bess, what are you thinking of?' replied her sister. 'How do
-you suppose I am to keep the secret, which you see I cannot help
-keeping? It is not unkindness and it is not snobbishness; it is only
-for the sake of the interests which I cannot afford to throw over. If
-I am seen going to Mrs. Griswold's house to visit Mrs. Griswold's
-nurse, why, if she didn't find it out, as I suppose she need not--no
-doubt I could always see you in a room to ourselves--just fancy how
-the servants would talk. There is not one in New York, I suppose, by
-this time who does not know my face; and it would be all over the
-place in a few hours. No, no you must come and see me when you can. It
-is muck safer, and just as easy.'</p>
-
-<p>'I really think you might let me tell Mrs. Griswold,' said Mrs.
-Jenkins; 'you have no notion how kind she is, and how free from
-nonsense and pretence of all sorts. Her heart would be touched if I
-told her how we two were left poor motherless children to the care of
-our old aunt, who pushed us out into the world when we were almost
-babies, to do the best we could each for ourselves, and how you did
-the best, and it was very good, and I did--well, not quite the worst
-after all.'</p>
-
-<p>A sweet smile, though sad, passed over the frank features of the
-speaker, a spark of the ever-burning lamp of life within her, that
-light which glorified even so mean an object as Ephraim Jenkins.</p>
-
-<p>'Good Heavens,' thought Miss Montressor, 'she actually believes in
-that vagabond still, and is as fond of him as ever; she is perfectly
-incorrigible!' She did not give utterance to these sentiments, but
-took a most affectionate leave of her sister, even bestowing some
-transient expressions of admiration upon little Mary Griswold, who was
-wide awake by this time, and staring about her with a greedy curiosity
-which succeeds the first stages of stolid indifference incidental to
-babyhood. She did not kiss the child, she was not quite equal to
-that--Mrs. Jenkins wondered how she could deny herself the
-indulgence--but she patted her and chirped to her, and sent her sister
-away delighted with her amiability and her affability.</p>
-
-<p>How hard it was for Bess to keep from talking of her visit when she
-went to assist at Mrs. Griswold's evening toilette nobody but Bess
-knew. When Mrs. Griswold had gone down-stairs, and driven away in the
-carriage which her friends had brought to fetch her, arrayed and
-looking very handsome in the pale blue velvet gown, with the guipure
-trimming, in the gold ornaments, and carrying her blue-and-gold fan,
-Mrs. Jenkins indemnified herself for the unnatural restraint by
-talking rapturously to the baby.</p>
-<br>
-
-<p>An enormous crowd of well-dressed people was flocking into Van Buren's
-Varieties, to the great delight of Mr. Van Buren himself, who stood at
-the checktaker's wicket, with his friend Mr. Morris Jacobs by his
-side. Mr. Van Buren had that amount of vanity which is inseparable
-from the theatrical profession, and to see himself recognised by
-members of the crowd, to hear the flattering remarks made on his
-personal appearance and his histrionic talents, rendered him supremely
-happy. Mr. Jacobs, who had no pretensions to manly beauty, being a
-short stout man, with an enormous head and an exaggerated Jewish cast
-of countenance, contented himself with silently counting the people as
-they came in, and keeping a wary eye upon the checktaker. It was a
-long time since the Varieties had boasted such an audience; every seat
-was taken, and the large lobbies at the back of the circles were
-inconveniently crowded. There was scarcely one in the many-sided
-phases of New York society which was not represented. The journals had
-done their work so well, and Mr. Van Buren and Mr. Jacobs had worked
-their various agencies with such success, that a desire to see the
-English actress and renew acquaintance with the handsome tragedian had
-been generated amongst people who had not visited the theatre for
-years. Good old Knickerbocker families, prouder of the 'Van' before
-their names than of the enormous fortunes which had accrued to them
-from the sale of the lands which had once formed the gardens and
-grounds of their old red-brick houses, and which now formed avenues
-and streets in the most fashionable districts; steady church-goers,
-whose wildest idea of dissipation was attendance at a lecture or a
-mass meeting; men who passed their days in Wall-street, and their
-evenings at the extemporised exchange in the hall of the Fifth-avenue
-Hotel--all these classes seemed to have caught the infection, and were
-largely represented. The regular attendants at theatrical
-representations--the club men, Fifth-avenue families, the people who
-wished to be thought 'in the style,' and whose newly-gotten wealth has
-made of them a plutocracy as imperious, as intolerant, and as hollow
-as any aristocracy in the Old World--all these were in fullest force.
-Such a reunion was seldom to be seen at so late a period; and the
-buzzing conversation of friends which took place before the
-commencement of the play was not, as usual, about the balls and
-entertainments to which they were invited, but treated rather of their
-intended summer flights; the various merits of style at Saratoga,
-rural quiet at Lake George, boisterous frivolity at Long Branch, or
-sea breezes at Newport being fully discussed.</p>
-
-<p>Behind the scenes, too, there was very great excitement. Bryan Duval
-knew exactly the kind of audience he might expect to welcome his
-return and Miss Montressor's first appearance; he knew that on such an
-occasion his appeal ought to be made rather to the sympathies than the
-intelligence of the people; and so, reserving for a further occasion
-<i>Romeo and Juliet</i>, and other specimens of poetical drama in which he
-knew that he and Miss Montressor could help each other largely, and
-make themselves appreciated by the critical and the educated, he had
-determined upon commencing his campaign with the celebrated Irish
-drama, <i>Cruiskeen Lawn</i>. The American version of this play--it
-underwent considerable modification when acted in the United
-Kingdom--contained a goodly amount of treasonable speeches,
-denunciation of British kings and British government, and therefore
-greatly acceptable to that portion of the New York population which
-made their entry into America through the fair haven of Castle Garden;
-the dialogue, too, was sprinkled with numerous tropes and metaphors
-which Bryan had carefully culled from Tom Moore's poetical works. When
-there is to be added to this that it gave scope for pretty scenery,
-quaint coquettish peasant dresses for Miss Montressor, much
-love-making, and various astonishing feats, such as diving down a well
-and rushing through a blazing cottage, for Mr. Duval himself, it was
-evident that those who loved sensation were likely to be gratified.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Duval had arrived at the theatre early, donned his stage costume,
-and was occupying himself in looking after the members of his troupe.
-He found Mr. Covington, like most novices, in deep distress as regards
-his costume, and assisted that young gentleman to make up his face,
-and showed him how to wear his sword. He gave Mr. Skrymshire a little
-more red eyebrow, and threw a Hibernian expression into the low
-comedian's somewhat long face by the simple process of making two
-thick black streaks under his nose, which imparted to that organ a
-turn-up appearance. With Mrs. Regan, on the contrary, he had to tone
-down the Hibernianism, that worthy old woman being desirous of
-expressing her nationality by entering into a fight with her
-attendant dresser. Finally, Mr. Duval knocked at Miss Montressor's
-dressing-room, and being bidden to come in, stood in the doorway and
-expressed his delight by clapping his hands.</p>
-
-<p>'Nothing could be better, my dear,' said he. 'Why on earth didn't I
-have you for the original Kathleen Mavourneen in London? If I had, I
-should have made 32,000<i>l</i>. by this time. The rouge a little higher up
-on the left cheek, dear, I think, and the right eyebrow, too, a
-hair's-breadth longer--that will do nicely! You must take off your
-rings, dear; peasant girls in Kerry don't wear blue silk stockings
-either, but that's a poetical license; but I do not think the public
-will stand the rings. That's right! Now just remember one thing, that
-the Irish brogue is permanent, and not a temporary affliction, and
-that you are sometimes in the habit of forgetting it, and talking in
-your native Regent-street accent; think of that, and hold to it all
-through; and if you stick at all for words--I don't think you will,
-for you struck me as being letter perfect--but if you do, just say
-&quot;Arrah!&quot; and &quot;Bedad!&quot; until I can get alongside and prompt you. Now,
-then, it is my time to go on.'</p>
-
-<p>Two minutes after, an enormous roar of applause welcomed Mr. Bryan's
-return to the United States, a roar which very speedily was exceeded
-twenty fold by the greeting given to Miss Montressor. There is an idea
-that an American audience is not enthusiastic, but it is a false one,
-for if you please them there is no people so lavish in their favour.
-The ladies waved their handkerchiefs, the gentlemen cheered and
-clapped their hands, the rougher portion of the community roared and
-shrieked until they were hoarse, and Miss Montressor stood curtsying
-and curtsying, her hands crossed over her little blue bodice, and her
-eyes demurely cast upon the ground.</p>
-
-<p>When silence was restored and the business of the play recommenced,
-she took advantage of the first opportunity to look in the direction
-where, according to Bess's information, she expected to see Mrs.
-Griswold. There, accordingly, at the end of the first circle, in the
-last seat but one on the right-hand side, sat a lady with a quantity
-of fine brown hair, dressed in plain blue velvet and guipure lace, and
-bearing a blue-and-gold fan. What caused Miss Montressor to start as
-she gazed upon this face? What rendered her so oblivious for the
-moment that Bryan Duval had to prompt her? Mrs. Griswold had never
-been out of America, and yet Miss Montressor could have sworn she had
-seen her before. Whenever she could she stole a glance at the face,
-and still found it familiar to her; but it was not until nearly the
-close of the play that the right idea came to her.</p>
-
-<p>It came like an inspiration. 'The portrait!' she said to herself; 'the
-portrait! That woman may or may not be Mrs. Griswold, but assuredly
-she is the original of the portrait set in the watch which was shown
-to me on the terrace at Richmond by Mr. Foster.'</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div2_06" href="#div2Ref_06">CHAPTER VI.</a></h4>
-<h5>STARTLING NEWS.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p>The curtain had fallen upon the happy marriage of Kathleen Mavourneen
-and Comether O'Shaughnessy. The talented representatives of the two
-characters had been called forward several times amidst huzzahs, and
-most of the audience had quitted the theatre; and Miss Montressor had
-retired to her dressing-room, where, throwing herself into a chair,
-she fell into a reverie.</p>
-
-<p>'What could be the meaning of that extraordinary resemblance between
-the lady who had sat in the very seat which Bess had assured her had
-been taken by Mrs. Griswold, and the portrait which Mr. Foster had
-shown her on the terrace at Richmond, as that of his wife? There must
-have been some mistake; Bess must have made a blunder about the exact
-position in the circle, or Mrs. Griswold must have been unable to
-obtain the seat on which she had first set her mind!' But then came
-the identity of the costume the lady in the circle wore--the exact
-dress which Bess had described as that which her mistress was about to
-wear; the blue velvet and guipure lace, the plain gold ornaments, the
-blue-and-gold fan--all were there. It was most astonishing--Miss
-Montressor admitted that; but she could not understand why, as she
-admitted it, a sombre presentiment, a sense of some impending
-calamity, seemed to come across her.</p>
-
-<p>She was roused by a knock at the door, following immediately on which
-Mr. Bryan Duval put in his head.</p>
-
-<p>'Clara, my clear,' said he, 'I will get dressed as quickly as
-possible; I have got a room at Delmonico's.'</p>
-
-<p>'Delmonico's!' echoed Miss Montressor. 'What's that?</p>
-
-<p>'Something very nice,' said Mr. Duval; 'the best restaurant in the
-world. The piece has been such a go, that I could not do less than ask
-a few people to an improvised supper--Van Buren and two or three of
-the press people, you know. Of course we must have you, and old Mrs.
-Regan will come as chaperone. It will be remarkably jolly, and I
-shouldn't wonder if there were a few lines about it in to-morrow
-morning's paper, which will be quite worth the expense.'</p>
-
-<p>Supper was a weakness with Miss Montressor. When she was acting she
-didn't care particularly about dinner, invariably refused all
-invitations to that meal, and ate sparingly at a comparatively early
-hour; but supper had always been her favourite amusement. In the early
-days of her stage apprenticeship, long before her Christian name was
-Clara or her surname Montressor, when she was a struggling, raw-boned,
-weak-eyed girl, playing chambermaids and general utility in a
-provincial theatre, with a salary of eighteen shillings a week, she
-used to devote a portion of that modest sum to the purchase of pigs'
-pettitoes and polonies, on which, with a pint of very flat porter, she
-used to regale herself in her wretched garret after her return from
-the theatre. After she had established herself, and made a success in
-later life, she kept up the same practice, the Brompton villa being
-substituted for the garret, boned turkeys, <i>pâté de foie gras</i>, and
-cold game for the delicacies above mentioned, and the society of
-pleasant Bohemians for the cruel solitude. So Miss Montressor
-intimated to Bryan Duval her acceptance of his invitation, and made
-all possible haste to get ready for the scene of action.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as she was dressed she joined Mr. Duval and Mrs. Regan, and
-the three drove off in a carriage together.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor thought there was an air of comfort as she stepped
-across the little garden and entered the bright cheery hall at
-Delmonico's, with its bureau immediately fronting the street, its
-glimpse of well-dressed men and women, attentive waiters, steaming
-dishes, and silver-necked flasks lolling out of ice-pails, in the
-large room on the left, and its broad staircase, up and down which the
-nimble attendants were flitting. But when she found herself on the
-first floor, in the room furnished with extravagant richness, but in
-perfect French taste, and looked through the open folding-doors into
-another room, where the round table for a dozen convives was already
-spread, and shimmering with its accumulation of plate and glass, she
-could not resist clapping and giving a little scream of delight.</p>
-
-<p>'Welcome to the star of the evening,' cried Mr. Van Buren, his hair
-poodled up into a magnificent curling crop, his moustache lacquered
-and pointed in the latest fashion, advancing to do homage. 'I have to
-thank you, my dear young lady, for your performance to-night.'</p>
-
-<p>'If you were pleased,' said Miss Montressor, with a sweet smile, which
-went straight to the heart of the inflammable manager, 'I have every
-reason to be satisfied.'</p>
-
-<p>'Pleased!' cried he. 'I not merely look upon the success as certain,
-but I regard this as the first of a series of visits which you shall
-pay to this country, and by which I shall be enabled to help you to
-realise a fortune; and there is something selfish in the thought,' he
-added, 'for it will not merely give me the assurance of seeing you
-constantly, but enable me to support your absence with the certain
-idea of your return.'</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor smiled upon him again, and Mr. Van Buren immediately
-began to calculate how he could dispose of the thirty-fourth Mrs. Van
-Buren, who was at that moment on his hands, and substitute the new
-favourite for her.</p>
-
-<p>'Now,' said Mr. Duval, bustling about, 'let us get to table as soon as
-possible. Those who have not been introduced to Miss Montressor
-already had better come to me, and I will perform the ceremony. My
-dear Clara, I think you already know Mr. Willy Webster of the
-<i>Democrat</i>' he added, pushing forward a dirty little man with soiled
-shirt, and clothes shining with grease--'not clean, perhaps, but
-decidedly clever,' said Bryan, dropping his voice; 'and you must shake
-hands with him.'</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Looby of the <i>Scarifier</i> and Mr. O'Gog of the <i>Growl</i>, came
-forward and made their obeisance; Henry P. Remington and Samuel D.
-Silliman, two young men about town, who had more money than brains,
-and less manners than either; a gray-headed man, with a thin keen
-face, who seemed to know everything and every one, and who was
-universally addressed as Uncle William, completed the party.</p>
-
-<p>'Now are we all here?' said Bryan Duval, who had seated Miss Montressor
-between himself and Mr. Van Buren, and who was compelled to stand up
-to look round the table, so large and luxurious was the basket of
-flowers in the centre--'are we all here?'</p>
-
-<p>'No,' said Willy Webster from the other side of the table. 'Here, next
-me, is a chair for our good friend Banquo.'</p>
-
-<p>'Who is our good friend Banquo on this occasion? Let me see,' said
-Bryan Duval. 'Looby, O'Gog--'pon my word, I can't recollect.'</p>
-
-<p>'I thought you told me you had sent round to the <i>Globe</i> office to
-tell Brighthurst to come up?' said Van Buren.</p>
-
-<p>'To be sure,' cried Bryan. 'Brighthurst is Banquo. Why on earth is he
-not here?'</p>
-
-<p>'I sincerely hope he will come,' said Willy Webster.</p>
-
-<p>'And I--and I!' cried several others.</p>
-
-<p>'Mr. Brighthurst seems to be a general favourite,' said Miss
-Montressor to her neighbour--'what are his particular attractions?'</p>
-
-<p>'I am sure I don't know,' said Mr. Van Buren, a little piqued; 'he is
-a good sort of fellow, I believe.'</p>
-
-<p>'Brighthurst, my dear,' said Duval, 'is one of the cleverest men on
-the press of this or any other country. He has written everything in
-his time--five-act plays, political pamphlets, orthodox sermons, and
-hymns which would draw tears from a hard-shell Baptist--then he's very
-good-looking and capital talk. I shall be sincerely disappointed if he
-doesn't come soon. I am sure you and he would get on well together.'</p>
-
-<p>'Do you think he would be horrified at seeing me eating these enormous
-oysters?' said Miss Montressor, with a little playfulness, turning to
-her other neighbour.</p>
-
-<p>'I don't know whether <i>he</i> would, but I am not,' said Mr. Van Buren.
-'Everything you do is done with a grace possessed by no other woman in
-the world.'</p>
-
-<p>'O, Mr. Van Buren,' said the actress with an upward glance, 'that
-compliment is even more difficult to swallow than the large oysters.'</p>
-
-<p>'Now, boys,' cried Bryan Duval, as the first crack of the champagne
-corks was heard, 'there must be an exception to the general rule in
-America to-night--we will have no speech-making.'</p>
-
-<p>'We must have one toast,' cried Willy Webster. 'You won't refuse to
-drink this--Success to the <i>Cruiskeen Lawn</i>.'</p>
-
-<p>'Stay!' cried Van Buren, holding up his hand; 'add this to it--And all
-our thanks to the lovely Kathleen!'</p>
-
-<p>The men rose to their feet to drink the toast, and had not resumed
-their seats when the door opened, and a tall middle-aged man, with a
-bald head, aquiline nose, and large grizzled whiskers, entered the
-room. He made straight for Duval, and shook hands with him warmly.</p>
-
-<p>'My dear Brighthurst,' cried the host, 'I am delighted to see you. We
-were all just now regretting your absence, and if you had not been so
-erratic a being, should have wondered at its cause. However, here you
-are--let me present you to Miss Montressor.'</p>
-
-<p>After his introduction, Mr. Brighthurst took the vacant seat, and
-bending over to the young actress, said:</p>
-
-<p>'You must not fully believe all these gentlemen say about my
-Bohemianism and erratic propensities, Miss Montressor; living in
-crystal palaces themselves, they should be the last to throw stones.
-They cannot understand, these frivolous butterflies, that I am a
-steady man, and that I was prevented from coming here by attention to
-my duty.'</p>
-
-<p>'No, we certainly cannot understand that,' said Mr. Looby.</p>
-
-<p>'No, indeed, bedad,' said Mr. O'Gog; 'that is not your usual form,
-Brighthurst, anyhow!'</p>
-
-<p>'It may not be my usual form, sweet flower of Erin,' said Mr.
-Brighthurst; 'but what I say happens to be correct as regards
-to-night. I was detained at the office to write a short editorial upon
-some news which just came in.'</p>
-
-<p>'News!' cried Willy Webster. 'And what was it, pray? Has Tweed been
-nominated for the Presidency, or has A.T. Stewart proved to be nothing
-but a dead head? Has the Commodore issued a new lot of central stock,
-or has John Morrissy joined the Particular Baptists? Speak the word,
-Brighthurst, and ease our impatient minds.'</p>
-
-<p>'What I speak of is English news from the latest files of London
-papers, which were delivered this evening, my dear Willy,' said
-Brighthurst quietly.</p>
-
-<p>'European news!' cried Webster. 'Has Queen Victoria sent for Sam Ward
-at last, or is the Prince Imperial going to be united to Queen
-Isabella, and thus consolidate the two thrones?'</p>
-
-<p>'The news does not treat of any such important personages or
-subjects,' said Brighthurst; 'it simply sends us details of the
-English murder, information of which was cabled some days ago.'</p>
-
-<p>'A murder!' cried Bryan Duval. 'You cannot possibly have the joyful
-news for me that the victim was a tailor living in the neighbourhood
-of Bond-street?'</p>
-
-<p>'No,' said Brighthurst with a slight smile; 'nor was the crime
-committed in London. The victim was an American gentleman of the name
-of Foster.'</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor turned deadly pale, and set down untasted the glass
-she was in the act of raising to her lips.</p>
-
-<p>'What name did you say, Brighthurst?' said Duval, turning quickly to
-him. 'Foster, an American? Where was the murder committed?'</p>
-
-<p>'In Liverpool,' said Brighthurst. 'He had been staying at the Adelphi
-Hotel.'</p>
-
-<p>'Great Heavens,' cried Duval, 'this is most terrific!'</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor buried her face in her handkerchief, and sobbed
-silently.</p>
-
-<p>'What is the meaning of this?' asked Mr. Van Buren, while a look of
-inquiry passed round the table.</p>
-
-<p>'The meaning is simply that this unfortunate gentleman was well known
-to me and all my party. He took a great interest in theatricals, and
-actually accompanied us to Liverpool to see the last of us before we
-sailed. It must have been about that time that his murder took place.'</p>
-
-<p>'It was within a day or two of your sailing,' said Mr. Brighthurst.</p>
-
-<p>'But what was the name of the assassin? What was the motive for his
-crime? For God's sake, my dear fellow, tell us more about it!' cried
-Bryan.</p>
-
-<p>'I am very sorry, my dear Duval, that I cannot give you any
-particulars of your poor friend's fate,' said Brighthurst. 'The
-coroner's jury have returned a verdict of wilful murder against some
-person or persons unknown, and no trace of the assassin had been
-discovered up to the time of the papers going to press. I know this
-much, for I made it the text of my editorial, that the English police
-do not seem more active in discovering the perpetrators of great
-crimes than our detectives here. I shall, however, be able to let you
-know all about it in a few minutes, as I instructed a boy to bring a
-proof of my article here, and with it a copy of the London <i>Times</i>,
-containing the account of the coroner's inquest, which I proposed
-reading in bed tonight.'</p>
-
-<p>'I shall await it with the greatest anxiety,' said Bryan. Then turning
-to Miss Montressor, whose face was still buried in her handkerchief,
-and dropping his voice, he said: 'There is no occasion yet, at all
-events, to be so overwhelmed, my dear Clara. Foster is by no means an
-uncommon American name. Liverpool is even more frequented by Americans
-than London, and all of them who visit Liverpool of course go to the
-Adelphi. The victim in this awful case may not be our poor friend,
-after all.'</p>
-
-<p>'But the date,' whispered poor Miss Montressor; 'the date of the
-murder concurs just with the time when he would be at Liverpool;
-though, by the way, he told me he intended to return to London on the
-evening of our departure. Something, however, may have detained him;
-and, besides, I have a kind of presentiment--something which I cannot
-shake off--that we shall discover it was our friend Mr. Foster, and no
-one else.'</p>
-
-<p>'I confess I feel very uncomfortable and desponding about it myself,'
-said Bryan; 'and I should not be surprised if-- What is this?' he
-cried, as the waiter entered, bringing a packet for Mr. Brighthurst.
-'O, the newspaper at last!'</p>
-
-<p>'Pray take it, my dear Duval, and satisfy yourself at once,' said
-Brighthurst, handing the paper across to Bryan; 'I can fully apprehend
-your anxiety.'</p>
-
-<p>Bryan took the journal, and, in the midst of a sympathetic silence,
-turned it over until he came upon the spot which he was seeking--a
-description of the proceedings at the coroner's inquest. In a broken
-voice he read out certain details with which the readers of this story
-are already familiar: the finding of the body on the landing-place of
-the warehouse, the evidence of the outdoor clerk, the two policemen,
-and the various persons present at the scene, the fly-driver, who
-recognised the victim as one of his customers, and the manager of the
-Adelphi, who gave evidence that the body was that of Mr. Foster, who
-had been staying at the hotel.</p>
-
-<p>'There is no doubt at all about it,' said Bryan Duval, laying down the
-paper for a minute, his eyes filling with tears. 'It was poor Foster;
-it was our poor friend!'</p>
-
-<p>'It is too dreadful to think of,' said Miss Montressor, giving way to
-her grief.</p>
-
-<p>'Who can the murderer be? What can have been the motive for such a
-deed?' cried Duval, after reading a little farther. 'Foster was the
-kindest, gentlest soul in the world--a man who could not possibly have
-had an enemy; besides, he knew but few people in England, and none, I
-should have thought, in Liverpool.'</p>
-
-<p>'Perhaps he was in the habit of sporting his money,' said Mr. O'Gog;
-'there are terrible thieves in them Liverpool taverns.'</p>
-
-<p>'No, that could not have been,' said Bryan, pointing to a passage in
-the paper; 'for it says here that though no papers, cards, or letters
-were found upon the body, his purse, containing several sovereigns and
-some silver, keys, penknife, and pencil, were found in the pockets
-untouched.'</p>
-
-<p>'That's a strange circumstance,' said Mr. Brighthurst, looking at it
-with the professional eye of an editorial writer. 'My experience leads
-me to believe that there are two principal motives which lead to the
-commission of murder--lust of gain or desire for vengeance. By the
-finding of the purse, the first motive is wanting in this instance;
-and as regards the second, you tell me he had very few acquaintances
-in England, and was the last man in the world likely to have any
-enemies, much less one fierce and implacable enough to do such a deed
-as this.'</p>
-
-<p>'He was the kindest-hearted man in the world,' sobbed Miss Montressor;
-'always willing to do everybody a service, and more like a woman than
-a man in the soft sweetness of his disposition.'</p>
-
-<p>'Stay,' said Bryan, who had again taken up the paper; 'here are some
-farther particulars. The manager of the hotel deposed that, on
-examining the room occupied by the deceased, he found a small American
-valise, containing a suit of clothes, some linen, and the usual
-dressing apparatus; a valuable gold watch had been left on the
-dressing-table, which, at the request of the jury, was handed to them.
-Here,' continued Bryan, still reading the newspaper, 'a curious
-incident occurred. One of the jury was our well-known townsman, Mr.
-Hand, the watch and clock maker, who served his time in America. On
-examining this watch, Mr. Hand declared, without hesitation, that a
-certain portion of its works was made under the patent of the
-celebrated house of Tiffany, in New York. All possible search and
-inquiry seems to have been made by the police and others concerned,
-but without any effect. The conclusion of the story is to be found in
-the verdict of wilful murder against some person or persons unknown,
-so we must wait and see what time will bring forth. Poor Foster--poor
-fellow!'</p>
-
-<p>'Poor dear Mr. Foster!' sobbed Miss Montressor, in great agitation. 'I
-declare it is one of the most horrible things I ever knew. What will
-his poor wife say, when she hears the news?'</p>
-
-<p>'Has he a wife?' asked Mr. Brighthurst.</p>
-
-<p>'O dear yes; a sweetly pretty woman, with one young child.'</p>
-
-<p>'It's pretty rough on her, poor thing,' said Mr. Brighthurst, a shadow
-stealing over his handsome features.</p>
-
-<p>'Yes; and the most awful part of it is, that even now she must be in
-complete ignorance of what has happened, for I saw her this very night
-at the theatre.'</p>
-
-<p>'At the theatre?' cried several.</p>
-
-<p>'At the theatre, not two hours since,' cried Miss Montressor. 'I have
-most excellent reasons for believing that the lady I saw was Mrs.
-Foster.'</p>
-
-<p>'My dear Miss Montressor,' said Mr. Brighthurst, leaning forward, 'I
-think, I trust, you are mistaken. The news that an American gentleman
-named Foster had been found murdered in Liverpool was received here by
-cable, without any particulars, several days since, and was published
-in all the newspapers. It would have been impossible that Mrs. Foster,
-or some of her family or friends, should not have seen it.'</p>
-
-<p>'It may be that I am mistaken,' said Miss Montressor. 'I trust I am,
-for it is an awful thing to think of that pretty creature amusing
-herself at the theatre with this awful thunder-cloud ready to break
-over her head.' And Miss Montressor's tears again began to flow.</p>
-
-<p>Bryan Duval, who had been listening silently but most attentively to
-this colloquy, then roused himself.</p>
-
-<p>'I think, my dear Clara, you had better retire for a few minutes, and
-endeavour to compose yourself. Gentlemen, I am sure you will excuse
-Miss Montressor for a time; this news has been too much for her. We
-will rejoin you later.'</p>
-
-<p>All rose as he spoke, and Bryan Duval, taking the actress by the arm,
-led her through the folding-doors into the adjoining apartment, and
-carefully closed the doors behind him.</p>
-
-<p>'Try to quiet yourself,' said Bryan Duval, as he placed her in a chair
-beside an open window, and, seating himself alongside of her, assumed
-a perfectly tranquil air. 'This is a very serious business, and I want
-to speak to you about it without delay, and out of hearing of these
-people. It is better they should not get hold of such facts as may be
-hidden under the surface of this horrible event prematurely. Will you
-tell me as quietly as you can exactly what you mean about the lady
-whom you saw at the theatre to-night? That's right; you are quieter
-now; don't speak for a minute, until you can do so without sobbing;
-try to recollect every circumstance, and to be perfectly exact.'</p>
-
-<p>The purpose-like composure of his manner had its due effect upon the
-excitable but not foolish woman to whom he spoke. She made a steady
-effort, and subdued the rising hysterical agitation, and after a
-minute or two was quite able to speak plainly.</p>
-
-<p>'You remember,' she said, 'the dinner Mr. Foster gave us at Richmond,
-and that I had a good deal of talk with him both down at Richmond and
-in the carriage as we came home?'</p>
-
-<p>Bryan Duval nodded.</p>
-
-<p>'He told me a good deal about himself, and spoke much of his wife, to
-whom he seemed to be quite unusually attached. He said he would
-introduce me to her, as he knew she would like me; that she was very
-fond of the stage, had a passion for artistes' society, and a great
-many other things of the same kind. Of course I asked him what she was
-like, and he gave me a great description of her beauty and grace. I
-suppose I did not keep down a smile of something like incredulity, or
-at least of a suspicion of some exaggeration, in this description, for
-he said, &quot;You shall see for yourself, Miss Montressor, whether I am
-exaggerating like an absent lover my Helen's charms;&quot; and he took out
-a watch--one of a very peculiar construction; I had never seen one
-like it--and opened it by touching a spring so carefully concealed
-that, when he put it into my hands afterwards, and told me to try if I
-could open it, I could not even perceive where the spring lay. The
-cover flew back and disclosed a miniature of a woman who was certainly
-very pretty, and had the kind of face which one does not forget. I
-looked at it for a good while: held it in my hand--for Mr. Foster had
-taken it off his watch-chain--as we walked up and down on the terrace,
-and made myself perfectly familiar with the features; the arrangement
-of the hair particularly struck me, and I remarked to him how well it
-suited the face. He said yes, he had always thought so; that his wife
-had very good taste, and was her own hairdresser. You will see
-presently why I tell you these particulars.'</p>
-
-<p>'I especially wish you to tell me every particular you can recollect,'
-said Bryan Duval.</p>
-
-<p>'I do not think there was anything remarkable except that in what he
-said to me,' said Miss Montressor. 'The subject was again referred to
-during our drive home, and he told me the watch containing the
-portrait was a parting gift from his wife. She had given it to him on
-the very evening before he had left New York, and he had promised
-always to wear it. I thought it a little unusual for a man to speak so
-frankly and so freely of a thing of the kind, and I suppose I said it
-or looked it. I do not remember that, but I do recollect his saying,
-&quot;Out of the fulness of the heart, you know. Miss Montressor, the mouth
-speaketh,&quot; when neither a lack of sympathy nor ridicule was to be
-apprehended. I thought him a man of considerable feeling, and that he
-found his sojourn in England very wearisome, so that he was relieved
-by finding any one, even a stranger, to whom he might talk of his
-home.'</p>
-
-<p>'He was not a reticent man,' said Bryan Duval, 'as I have good reason
-to know; a reason which I shall tell you presently if, as I fear,
-there is more in this matter than meets the eye, and I have to ask
-your help in a painful duty that may fall to my share. But pray go on,
-and tell me what is the connection between Mr. Foster's confidence to
-you and the lady whom you saw tonight.'</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor hesitated for just one moment. Could she explain
-herself fully without the revelation of the family secret she had
-strongly desired to preserve? Not if Bryan Duval were to question her
-very closely on material issues. 'Never mind,' she thought, 'I must
-risk it. I won't tell it unless I am forced, but I cannot hold my
-tongue here--it is too serious.'</p>
-
-<p>'I have a friend in New York,' she said, 'who came to see me
-yesterday, and in the course of some gossip about this place and the
-people in it she happened to mention a certain Mrs. Griswold, who
-holds a high position here, and who is a great admirer of the drama.
-My friend told me that Mrs. Griswold had been particularly anxious to
-see me in one of my best parts, and had taken places for our first
-appearance. This Mrs. Griswold, it appears, was very handsome, very
-charming, and altogether a somebody. I fancied I should like to
-recognise her, if possible, among the audience; and as my friend knew
-where she was going to sit, she gave me a description of her
-appearance and dress, which would have enabled me to recognise her,
-had this lady occupied the place my friend knew she had taken. The
-description was--brown hair, worn plain, without flowers or jewels,
-brown eyes, pale blue velvet dress, gold ornaments, and a
-blue-and-gold fan. Not very distinct, after all, when you come to
-think of it, now that pale blue velvet is so fashionable; but true
-enough, when I looked at the place my friend had directed my attention
-to--the last seat but two, dress circle, right-hand side--I saw a lady
-who was watching the play intently, and whose appearance and dress
-entirely coincided with my friend's description--but the lady was not
-Mrs. Griswold.'</p>
-
-<p>'Not Mrs. Griswold!' exclaimed Bryan Duval. 'How do you know?'</p>
-
-<p>'Because,' returned Miss Montressor impressively, 'the face was the
-face of Mr. Foster's wife, as I saw it in the miniature enclosed in
-the watch-cover; the hair and the eyes were quite unmistakable. That
-she was the woman who had sat for that miniature I cannot entertain
-the smallest doubt. It is Mrs. Foster, and therefore <i>not</i> Mrs.
-Griswold!'</p>
-
-<p>Bryan Duval had listened to the latter part of Miss Montressor's
-narrative with intense, even painful, eagerness. It was evident that
-he attached immense importance to the apparently insignificant mistake
-made by Miss Montressor; a mistake easily to be explained on the
-theory that her friend had given her an erroneous indication of Mrs.
-Griswold's place in the house. Not so did Bryan Duval interpret it.</p>
-
-<p>'You are quite sure,' he repeated, 'that you looked at the place where
-you were told to look for Mrs. Griswold?'</p>
-
-<p>'I am quite sure.'</p>
-
-<p>'You are quite sure that the lady you saw in that place bore a close
-resemblance to the miniature likeness of Mr. Foster's wife?'</p>
-
-<p>'I am perfectly certain of it,' returned Miss Montressor; 'every
-feature and line was identical, and the peculiar unornamented mode in
-which the hair was dressed was a conclusive proof to my mind. Stay a
-moment,' she said, with a start like one catching at a suddenly
-suggested point, and laying her hand upon his arm, 'there is a curious
-coincidence in this. My friend told me that Mrs. Griswold had
-beautiful brown hair, in which she never wore any ornament.'</p>
-
-<p>Bryan Duval rose, walked slowly up and down the room twice, and then
-returned to Miss Montressor's side. His face was very pale, and his
-voice sounded hoarsely, as he said to her:</p>
-
-<p>'There is far more than ordinary villany in this atrocious murder, and
-perhaps the only way by which it can be exposed rests with you and
-with me. I think you will be discreet, and if it be necessary to ask
-you to take any part in this terrible matter, I think you will consent
-to do so, and to act under orders.'</p>
-
-<p>'Certainly,' replied Miss Montressor, looking considerably frightened.
-'I wish you would explain what you mean, and what part in it can
-possibly fall to me.'</p>
-
-<p>'I will explain,' said Bryan Duval. 'I fear I shall soon have to
-violate a dead man's confidence more extensively than by telling the
-story to you. Foster took, as you know, a great fancy to me, and even
-before that day when we went down to Richmond he had told me a great
-deal about himself; but his confidences with me took a different form
-from those in which he indulged on that day with you--they chiefly
-related to business matters. He told me what was the object of his
-journey to London--with which I need not trouble you, it has no
-immediate bearing on the case: he told me how unexpectedly and rapidly
-successful he had been in the accomplishment of that object, and that
-he had good hopes of being able to return to New York at a much
-earlier date than that fixed at his departure. I remember that he did
-say he hadn't as yet announced to his wife that such a prospect had
-opened up to him, preferring to make quite sure rather than run the
-risk of keeping her in suspense, which might possibly end in
-disappointment. The details were rather complicated, and it struck me
-at the time that there was a good deal, not only of fair business
-competition, but of equivocal manoeuvring to be apprehended in the
-carrying through of the enterprise. That it was by no means smooth
-sailing for Foster was particularly borne in upon me by one fact,
-which he communicated to me in the strictest confidence, now unhappily
-dispersed. It was this'--Bryan Duval now spoke in a whisper, and with
-great intentness--'he had come to England under a false name.'</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor looked up wonderingly. 'Under a false name?' she
-repeated. 'His name was not Foster? What was it, then?'</p>
-
-<p>'I do not know,' returned Bryan Duval. 'But an awful surmise as to what
-it might have been came to me with your first words, when this horrid
-news was conveyed to us just now.'</p>
-
-<p>'I don't understand you,' said Miss Montressor, with a somewhat
-confused and wondering look. She had not caught at the chain of
-probabilities which had presented itself to Bryan Duval.</p>
-
-<p>'I have a horrible conviction,' said he, 'that Foster's name really
-was Griswold.'</p>
-
-<p>'My God,' exclaimed Miss Montressor, moved to the exclamation by more
-feelings than the one which could be easily interpreted by her hearer,
-'can it be?'</p>
-
-<p>'It struck me in an instant, and every word that you have spoken has
-confirmed the suspicion. He told me that his wife had no notion that
-he had been obliged to assume a false name; he spoke of her to me only
-casually--with great affection it is true--but my only distinct
-recollection of any quality which he assigned to her was a negative
-one: that she knew nothing about business, and that, therefore, he
-could not have told her that the assumption of a name not his own was
-a necessary precaution without alarming her. He had, not very wisely I
-thought at the time, kept her in ignorance of this detail, and
-arranged for her letters to him passing through the hands of a friend,
-who was to redirect them to him under his assumed appellation, known
-only to this friend. How well I recollect that the whole story struck
-me as the sort of thing which, had it occurred in a play or a book,
-would have been pronounced rather unnatural, and likely to involve so
-much confusion of detail as to hamper rather than aid business
-operations! How little I dreamt of such a complication as that which
-has arisen now! I do not think you see it?'</p>
-
-<p>'I confess I do not,' said Miss Montressor.</p>
-
-<p>'Well, it is simply this: the lady you saw in the theatre to-night was
-Mrs. Griswold, but none the less was she the original of the miniature
-which Mr. Foster showed you as that of his wife. The unhappy woman has
-no conception that the news with which all New York is ringing
-concerns her--that the murdered man is her husband.'</p>
-
-<p>'I see it now, I see it now!' said Miss Montressor.</p>
-
-<p>'You do not see it all even yet,' resumed Bryan Duval impressively.
-'You don't see how it touches us. We two are the only people in this
-city who know the truth--we two are the only people on whom the task
-of making the truth known can possibly devolve, except, indeed, the
-friend through whom Foster received his wife's letters; and I know
-neither his name, his address, nor his business--I have, indeed, no
-clue whatever to him. The position of this unfortunate man's wife is
-one of the most terrible and tragic that can be conceived. What is to
-be done?'</p>
-
-<p>'What, indeed!' said Miss Montressor, whose mind, however, glanced
-rapidly towards her sister. 'I suppose you must communicate with the
-authorities.'</p>
-
-<p>'Of course, of course!' said Bryan Duval. 'But I am not thinking so
-much of the public and official steps to be taken in this horrible
-affair; it is the wife, whose position, poor unconscious creature, is
-so very awful.'</p>
-
-<p>To this Miss Montressor assented with ready sympathy, but it was
-agreed between them, as at that late hour nothing whatever could be
-done until the morning, there was nothing for it but that they should
-keep their own counsel. Bryan Duval impressed upon Miss Montressor the
-absolute necessity of appearing to be totally unconcerned in the
-matter, lest she should expose herself to indiscreet questioning by
-any member of the party, which it had now become necessary they should
-rejoin.</p>
-
-<p>'If I could avoid seeing them at all,' she said, 'it would be better,
-and, indeed, I hardly feel equal to the exertion. I cannot forget the
-face I saw to-night, so full of interest and delight, beaming with
-youth, beauty, and happiness; I cannot forget the pride and pleasure
-with which that poor fellow showed me its miniature presentment in the
-watch, which was his wife's parting gift. The two pictures will haunt
-me all night, and when the morn comes, what shall we do?'</p>
-
-<p>'I do not know,' said Bryan Duval, 'what my part may have to be; I
-must be well advised in that matter: but one grand object would be to
-secure access to Mrs. Griswold. How well I remember poor Foster
-talking of the pleasure it would give his wife to make our
-acquaintance, and telling me that he could not give me a letter of
-introduction to her, because it might lead to the leaking out, through
-some other members of the company, of the fact that they had known him
-as Mr. Foster. If the poor fellow had only made his confidence in me
-complete, if he had told me what was the real name which he had hidden
-under a false one, it might be easier for me now to help in this
-terrible calamity. There is no way of getting at Mrs. Griswold without
-startling her, if, indeed, we must be the persons to reveal the
-truth.'</p>
-
-<p>'Perhaps we may devise one,' said Miss Montressor; 'but we must break
-up now. I am quite worn out.'</p>
-
-<p>'Do not return to the supper-room at all,' said Bryan Duval; 'here is
-a side door by which you can get away. I will apologise for you,
-though, indeed, no apology is needed.'</p>
-
-<p>During the conversation the hum of voices in the next room had been
-distinctly audible. The English actors had suddenly found themselves
-invested with a new importance and interest in New York; the very
-latest intelligence of the murdered man was to be had from them; and
-when Bryan Duval returned, he found his companions the centre of an
-eager group, who were all listening with absorbed avidity to every
-detail which could be furnished by the party concerning their
-acquaintance with Mr. Foster. The telegraph had given accurate
-particulars of the place and time at which the murder had been
-committed, which had so immediately followed the farewell scene on
-board the Cuba, that every utterance of Mr. Foster's which could be
-retailed by his companions on that occasion was regarded and noted
-with all the impressiveness due to last words.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div2_07" href="#div2Ref_07">CHAPTER VII.</a></h4>
-<h5>ONLY TOO TRUE.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p>Mr. Jacobs was as punctual as usual in his early attendance in the
-box-office of the Varieties on the morning after the first appearance
-of the Bryan Duval troupe, when he was lightly touched on the
-shoulder, and, turning round, was astonished to perceive the great
-London star himself.</p>
-
-<p>'Ha, ha, my dear boy, it is you, is it?' cried Mr. Jacobs, with
-unctuous familiarity. 'Looking after business--always got an eye to
-the dollars--come down to see how the places are going? Well, you need
-not look so anxious about it; we're going right ahead, we are, this
-time.'</p>
-
-<p>'It wasn't for that, Jacobs,' said Bryan, with a faint smile. 'I want
-to look at the sheet for last night. I want to see what names certain
-places were taken in.'</p>
-
-<p>'O, that's the game, is it?' said Mr. Jacobs, handing him the sheet
-required. 'Want to see whether any of your old flames came to welcome
-you back. Hallo! what's the matter?' he cried, as Duval uttered a
-short groan.</p>
-
-<p>'Nothing,' said Bryan; 'nothing at all. As Jacobs looked up at him he
-saw his finger resting motionless on a certain portion of the box
-sheet. 'Thank you, I won't intrude upon you any more. Good-morning,
-Jacobs;' and he sauntered off.</p>
-
-<p>'Mrs. Alston E. Griswold,' murmured Jacobs to himself, reading the
-name underneath which Bryan's finger had been fixed. 'That's it;
-there's the mark of his black glove on the sheet now. Alston Griswold?
-Why, that's the name of one of your Wall-street customers, with a fine
-up-town house and--ah, Bryan, my boy, your propensities will get you
-into mischief one of these days.'</p>
-
-<p>'All doubt is at an end now,' said Bryan, as he walked up to the
-hotel, 'and Clara was right. The case seems to me even darker and
-worse than she seems to think at present. It is lucky that she has a
-head upon her shoulders, for I shall have to take her into
-consultation.'</p>
-
-<p>Thereupon he despatched an elderly Irishman to Miss Montressor's room,
-with a message intimating his desire to be allowed access to her as
-soon as possible. Bryan Duval's messenger returned with an affirmatory
-answer to his inquiry whether Miss Montressor could let him see her;
-they had not yet met on that morning, and she was in a high state of
-expectation of what the interview might bring forth.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor had been thinking intently on the subject in
-discussion during all her waking moments since she and Bryan Duval had
-parted on the preceding night. It had not kept her from sleeping; her
-nerves were in too good order and her constitution was too sound for
-her to be subjected to inconveniences of that sort by any abstract
-cause of emotion; but she had thought over it until she fell asleep,
-and it had recurred to her with her first consciousness on waking. She
-had endeavoured, in anticipation of Bryan Duval's possible line of
-interrogation, to recall everything that had been said during the
-conversation between herself and Mr. Foster on the terrace at
-Richmond, and, strangely as she considered it, she found this very
-difficult to do. If Miss Montressor had understood the laws of mental
-processes better, she would have known that this difficulty was of
-ordinary occurrence, and to be anticipated in her case. She was not in
-the habit of thinking about anything systematically, and a beginning
-in this direction is no easier than any other mental process directed
-with intention. So that Miss Montressor had got herself rather into a
-muddle between what had really been said by Mr. Foster and her general
-impression of the interview, when she found Bryan Duval in the small
-ante-room in which the residents at the hotel usually received their
-friends.</p>
-
-<p>Neither was insensible to the gravity and incongruity of the occasion.
-That two strangers, come to New York in the trifling and superficial
-character of actors, should be--to their own almost indubitable
-persuasion, and quite unsuspected by the public--able to supply the
-key of one of the most terrible mysteries of crime which had for a
-long time startled and disturbed society, was a circumstance full of
-oddity and interest that they appreciated to the full. Literally
-nothing could have influenced, impressed, surprised, or agitated Duval
-out of the instincts of the dramatist who combines, and the actor who
-reproduces, the situations supplied by human events. When this story
-should be complete in its reality, it would find its way to the
-pigeon-holes in which Bryan Duval's materials, the pabulum of his
-ever-active brain, were stored up, with the regularity, in order and
-in date, of a privately edited edition of the <i>Annual Register</i>. In
-due, not in undue time--Bryan Duval was never so wanting in taste and
-judgment as to incur the charge of indecent haste--this drama of real
-life would no doubt be put upon the stage, with charming accessories
-of scenery, decoration, and padding-out. Bryan Duval saw his way to it
-already, though as yet the knowledge of the murderer and his motive
-were wanting to the story.</p>
-
-<p>It had occupied his thoughts also almost exclusively; and though he
-had been trained to habits of mental precision, and the following of
-clues to human nature altogether beyond Miss Montressor's ken and
-capacity, he had not reached a much clearer state of mind than that in
-which his fair friend was about to join him. Bryan Duval was a man of
-too much natural keenness and too much acquired experience to accept
-generalities as bases for argument, or to seek conclusions in them.
-While he constructed a system with the skill and minuteness of a
-Procureur Impérial, he did not lend his judgment to one hypothesis,
-and turn the facts to fit it. Without ignoring or depreciating the
-influence of women in all human events, he regarded the 'Who is she?'
-which has become axiomatic as rather smart than sound, and was
-disposed to believe that dollars are quite as often to be found as
-women at the bottom of the crimes, as they assuredly are of the
-misfortunes, of men. In the present instance, if anything could be
-said to induce an explanation in the midst of the mystery of this
-crime, it was Bryan Duval's conviction that money was in question. Mr.
-Foster's private business in London; the disguise about his name,
-which he had avowed, but not explained; the perfectly conceivable
-rivalry and envy which his expedition might have excited--all these
-were plain to the mind of Bryan Duval as he pondered the matter, and
-they pointed each and all to another conclusion than that of 'Who is
-she?' Of Mr. Foster, or, as he had almost come to name the murdered
-man in his thoughts, Alston Griswold, he had not known very much, and
-their term of acquaintance had been short; but it had sufficed to
-create a strong regard for him, and Bryan Duval had formed a pretty
-accurate estimate of the New York merchant's character.</p>
-
-<p>'An honest, true-hearted fellow,' said Duval to himself, 'and
-profoundly in love with his wife, who seems to have been equally
-attached to him. There was no woman in this case--no woman on either
-side the Atlantic. The murderer must be looked for in the ordinary
-category of ruffians, or if it is a put-up job, the wire-puller is
-here in New York among his rivals in business.'</p>
-
-<p>The scene and circumstances of the crime, imperfectly as they could be
-gathered from the newspaper reports, made a very vivid picture to the
-mind's eye of the dramatist, accustomed to seize upon salient points;
-and he thought he discerned in them tokens of a surprise and a
-discovery, rather than of the common assault of a robber.</p>
-
-<p>'Why should he have gone with any man into an empty warehouse?' Bryan
-Duval asked himself. 'May he not have been enticed thither by a
-promise of information of some kind? May he not have been suddenly set
-upon and murdered, because he refused to give certain information?'</p>
-
-<p>The circumstance of Mr. Foster having lingered in Liverpool later than
-the departure of the train by which he mentioned to Duval it was his
-intention to return to London, did not make any impression upon the
-actor's mind.</p>
-
-<p>'Business men have business matters to attend to in many places,' he
-thought. 'If the poor fellow strained a point a little in letting me
-suppose that he had nothing to do and nobody to see in Liverpool, and
-only came down on our account, it was a harmless little bit of
-compliment, and I daresay he did. No man is bound to tell a far closer
-friend than I was <i>all</i> about any matter in which he is concerned, and
-this one may have had an extensive connection in Liverpool, and lots
-to do there for anything I know to the contrary. I have, to be sure,
-no very solid grounds for my belief; but it is certainly more than an
-impression that this poor fellow's business in England lies at the
-root of this matter, and that there is no woman in the case.'</p>
-
-<p>The words were passing through his mind as Miss Montressor entered the
-room.</p>
-
-<p>'You were only too right,' said Bryan Duval, as Miss Montressor
-entered the room with face full of inquiry: 'the lady who occupied the
-seat you described to me last night was indeed Mrs. Alston Griswold;
-here is the memorandum from the box-office, giving the name and
-address. This is certainty on one side of the question; certainty on
-the other will, I fear, be only too readily attained.'</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor sat down and looked, as she felt, very much concerned.
-The condition of the unconscious wife appealed at once to her womanly
-and her artistic feelings; the truth and the situation alike struck
-her as deeply impressive.</p>
-
-<p>'I shall communicate at once with the city authorities,' said Bryan
-Duval; 'it will be impossible for me to keep out of this sad affair,
-and it is manifestly my duty to volunteer all the information it is in
-my power to give. I suppose there will be some person who will be
-deputed to break this terrible news to her?'</p>
-
-<p>'No, no,' said Miss Montressor; 'do not act in the matter in that way.
-What do the ends of justice matter in comparison with the wife who is
-widowed in such a horrible manner, and who knows nothing of the
-calamity which has befallen her? Let them wait; let us first try to
-find some personal friend of the poor thing, and tell him.'</p>
-
-<p>'Of course,' said Bryan Duval, 'that would be the proper line of
-action if we knew anything about a personal friend; but we must first
-discover the identity of a person of the sort, and how am I to do that
-except by communicating with the authorities? Very likely the
-officials with whom it will be my duty to confer may all, or some of
-them, be acquainted with Mrs. Griswold. Full particulars of the murder
-cannot be known until the arrival of the mail, and it is just possible
-that no suspicion may arise, unless I awaken it, that Mr. Foster is
-the well-known Mr. Griswold I now firmly believe him to be. To keep
-the knowledge of such a possibility from the police authorities here
-for a moment longer than it can be avoided may seriously impede action
-on the other side, as it must prevent the supplying of information
-from thence.'</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor had listened to Bryan Duval with a troubled
-countenance and an equally troubled heart. A line of action was
-suggesting itself to her, which had the full consent of her judgment
-and her feelings, but a consideration of self-interest was striving to
-withhold her from propounding it. She knew that the means of acquiring
-the information which would enable Bryan Duval to communicate direct
-with some acquaintance or friend of Mrs. Griswold's lay ready at her
-hand, but she hesitated to use it. Bess was that means--it would cost
-her something to avail herself of Bess. The struggle in Miss
-Montressor's mind was not lasting. The kindly remembrance of the man
-who had treated her with such gentlemanly consideration, with such
-unfeigned respect, a thought of the fair woman whom she had seen on
-the previous night and her pathetic ignorance, overcame her
-misgivings.</p>
-
-<p>'I think,' she said, 'I can supply you with a hint which may change
-your view of the most judicious course for you to pursue. Do you
-remember that I told you yesterday that I had a friend who knew Mrs.
-Griswold, and had given me indications by which I recognised her--or,
-as I thought, recognised Mrs. Foster--at the theatre?'</p>
-
-<p>'Yes, I remember,' said Bryan Duval. 'How stupid I am not to have
-remembered it sooner! I suppose you can put yourself in communication
-with her?'</p>
-
-<p>'Easily,' said Miss Montressor. 'She is'--here she hesitated for one
-last moment--'she is in a very humble station--no higher than that of
-nurse to Mrs. Griswold's child.'</p>
-
-<p>'Capital,' said Bryan Duval, passing over the explanation with an
-absolute carelessness highly reassuring to Miss Montressor; 'nothing
-could be better. She is positively in the house, and knows all about
-them.'</p>
-
-<p>'Well, she has only been in the house since Mr. Griswold's departure;
-but I have no doubt she can give us the information we require.'</p>
-
-<p>'Can you get it from her?' said Bryan Duval, in that curt business
-tone which Miss Montressor had come to know so thoroughly, and which
-had in it something extremely satisfactory to everybody who wanted to
-transact business with the man who spoke thus to the purpose.</p>
-
-<p>'I can,' she replied, 'but it will be a little difficult to do without
-exciting suspicion and precipitating discovery, if indeed the
-discovery is to be made. I cannot send for her to come to me
-openly--such an invitation would astonish Mrs. Griswold, and she might
-meet it with an objection--neither can I go in my proper capacity to
-Mrs. Griswold's house to visit one of Mrs. Griswold's servants.'</p>
-
-<p>'Why can't you go as a servant yourself?' said Bryan Duval. 'Your
-make-up in that line is unexceptionable; try it off the boards at
-once!'</p>
-
-<p>'I will,' said Miss Montressor; 'that is a capital idea. I will go
-disguised, and discover whether the lady at the play really was Mrs.
-Griswold. If I cannot see her, which I may manage to do by some
-contrivance, I shall at least be sure to see a portrait of her. A man
-like her husband was not likely to be satisfied with a mere miniature
-of his wife while a full-length portrait was to be had for money. We
-are, of course, morally certain that the fact is what we take it to
-be, but the first thing to be done is to achieve actual certainty.
-Taking it for granted that I see Mrs. Griswold and identify her with
-the miniature, what will you do next?'</p>
-
-<p>'I cannot decide upon that until I have received your report,' said
-Bryan Duval, 'on these two heads--first, the identity of Mrs. Griswold
-with the portrait Mr. Foster showed you; secondly, the name and
-address of some intimate friend of the family, with whom I may at once
-communicate.'</p>
-
-<p>'I am quite sure there is such a person,' interrupted Miss Montressor.
-'I could not distinctly recall everything that Mr. Foster told me, in
-the hurry and confusion of last night; but since then I have
-remembered a good deal. He mentioned to me, but not by name, one
-friend in particular, in whose charge he had confided not only his
-business interests in New York during his absence, but also his
-household treasures. Poor fellow, he quite amused me--though I am
-conscious now that I did not respond very warmly or graciously--by his
-simple talk about his wife and child. He would try to describe the
-baby to me, and he did describe the mother as well as showing me her
-picture. He was a good soul. But I quite remember now that he told me
-he had this trusty friend.'</p>
-
-<p>'A piece of information which makes your suggestion all the more
-admirable and your aid all the more valuable. We now have some
-definite basis of action. When we discover this friend of Foster's, or
-Griswold's, we shall not only have found the man who will be our best
-guide as to what we ought to do, but we shall have found the man who
-will be sure to hit upon the motive of the crime. And now lose no
-time. Set about your task at once; the sooner it is over, the better
-for you and for what I have to do. I do not say to you, do it well and
-do it delicately--that I feel is unnecessary. We have not had half
-sufficient time to realise how horrid this thing is which has
-happened; and so much the better, since it has so strangely fallen out
-that we have come to this side of the world to act in such a tragedy.'</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor rose and was about to leave the room, when she said:</p>
-
-<p>'Suppose by any possibility I should be wrong, and that this lady is
-not the original of the miniature, consequently that Mr. Griswold, her
-husband, is not the murdered man--what will you do in that case?'</p>
-
-<p>'In that case,' said Bryan Duval, 'I shall simply have to communicate
-with the authorities the fact that Mr. Foster is not the murdered
-man's real name; this on his own authority, and of course it will be
-immediately transmitted to London. Go now. You will find me here on
-your return; I shall not leave the house.'</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor left him, and, going to her own room, made rapid
-preparation for the arduous task she had been set. She hurriedly
-turned over such articles of her wardrobe as had yet been unpacked,
-searching for those most suitable to the part she was to play. While
-doing this, her thoughts reverted to the last unprofessional
-masquerade in which she had indulged, and, by a natural transition, to
-Mr. Dolby. She had thought very little about him during her voyage
-out, but as it approached its termination she had occasionally
-speculated upon whether that gentleman would present himself at the
-wharf, or whether he would wait and pay her a more dignified visit at
-her hotel. She had actually spared him a few moments' recollection in
-all the triumph of her first brilliantly successful appearance on the
-previous evening. 'Was Mr. Dolby in the house?' she had wondered. 'Was
-his hand among the number of those which had flung prodigal floral
-tributes at her feet? Or--was he sulky still?' She had, however,
-completely forgotten him from the announcement of the supper, and in
-all the hurry, agitation, and confusion of the ensuing hours of the
-night, her mind had never once glanced towards him. But now--she
-selected a plain gray skirt, originally intended to fulfil the once
-humble office of petticoat, but which was rather an unduly smart
-morning walking dress for the part she was assuming--she remembered
-the day on which she had gone to the house in Queen-street, and
-inquired ineffectually for her angry lover. Even now it was only a
-passing remembrance; her feelings were unaffectedly and deeply engaged
-in the matter in hand. Miss Montressor's wardrobe contained nothing
-suitable to be worn as an out-door dress of the sort which she
-required; but she remedied the deficiency by putting on a thick dark
-shawl, which she found among the parcel of wraps, and removing the too
-conspicuous feather from her hat, over which she pinned a veil.</p>
-
-<p>As she unfolded the shawl the sharp end of a pin caught her finger.
-'How tiresome of Justine,' she muttered, 'to leave pins stuck in
-shawls! I have so often spoken to her about it;' and she turned over
-the folds of the garment to find the obnoxious object. It was a long
-gold pin with a carved head, rather intended for a gentleman's necktie
-than as a shawl fastener; the stone was a very fine specimen of
-intaglio work, and Miss Montressor looked at it without any
-recognition of whence it came. It was not hers; and as it was a very
-uncommon article, it was not the sort of thing to be picked up on the
-floor or anywhere, as people pick up ordinary pins. 'I wonder whose it
-is, and how I came by it?' she thought, as she mechanically used it to
-fasten the shawl.</p>
-
-<p>She then went quickly clown the stairs, and passed out of the door,
-comparatively unnoticed. It was early in the day, and the customary
-groups of loungers had not yet assembled. On leaving the hotel, Miss
-Montressor turned to the right, and making inquiry of the first person
-whom she met as to the distance which divided her from that portion of
-Fifth-avenue in which Mrs. Griswold's house was situate, learned that
-she would be overtaken in about a minute by a street car, which would
-deposit her close by. She had barely thanked her informant when the
-car came up, and the man to whom she had spoken signalled to the
-conductor; the next moment Miss Montressor was making her first
-experience of the marvellously-convenient and well-arranged street
-locomotion of New York. As she seated herself, a sudden recollection
-flashed across her that the pin which she had been so surprised to
-find in her shawl had belonged to Mr. Foster. With the suddenness of
-the vision, the little circumstance which had placed it in her
-possession returned to her memory--again she felt the slight chill of
-the evening air; she saw Mr. Foster's face, and felt his careful hands
-drawing the warm folds around her; remembering that he held them
-together with one hand, as he removed the pin from his own necktie
-with the other. How came she to have forgotten this pin--to have
-omitted returning it to him? It was a strange oversight. How curious
-and mysterious, should it be now destined to be an important
-coincidence! 'His wife will remember it,' she thought. 'If we are
-right in our terrible belief, my bringing it to her, my requesting her
-to identify it, will enable me to prove my sad story to the poor lady.'
-What was it Mr. Foster had told her about this pin? She must try to
-recollect all he had said very exactly; she must not add a word or
-subtract a word if possible. He had said that it was a sleeve button
-that had belonged to his wife; that on his arrival in London he had
-found it among his things, where it had no doubt been put by accident,
-and that he had had it made into a pin--yes, that was exactly what he
-had said. She took out her pocket-book, and in the few minutes
-occupied by the transit she wrote down, with all the accuracy
-attainable by her memory, the words in which Mr. Foster had told her
-these facts.</p>
-
-<p>She had hardly concluded the memorandum when she was set down, and in
-a few minutes found herself at the door of Mrs. Griswold's house. A
-good-humoured coloured servant answered the summons of the bell, and,
-on her inquiry for Mrs. Jenkins, ushered her into a small waiting-room
-on the right of the hall. Several newspapers lay upon the table; she
-turned them over hurriedly, and found in each great prominence given
-to the appalling murder in Liverpool of an American gentleman. She had
-no time to read the details, which were afforded in every variety of
-type, and embellished with every device to attract curiosity and
-direct attention, for she was joined by her sister within a few
-moments. 'Civil people these,' she thought, in the way that people
-will think of trifles amid the most serious occupations of the mind;
-'civil people these, to give a message to a servant with such
-celerity.'</p>
-
-<p>'You see I have come to visit you, Bess, after all'</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Jenkins received her sister with unbounded delight, but had
-hardly greeted her and recounted with what eloquent praises Mrs.
-Griswold had spoken of the performance, and especially of Clara's part
-in it, that morning, when she was helping to dress her, when she broke
-off to ask about the very subject which was occupying Miss
-Montressor's thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>'My dear,' she said, 'of course you have heard of this horrible
-murder? It gave me a dreadful turn last night, when I heard the boys
-crying out, about an hour after Mrs. Griswold went to the play, and
-Jim went out to find out all about it. Mrs. Griswold hadn't heard
-anything of it when she came in, and I was very glad; for really it is
-enough to make one nervous. You heard all about it, of course?'</p>
-
-<p>'O, yes,' said Miss Montressor; 'we have heard all about it. It
-happened the very day after we sailed. Does every one know about it in
-the house now?'</p>
-
-<p>'Of course,' said Mrs. Jenkins.</p>
-
-<p>'I didn't mean to ask that,' said Miss Montressor; 'my mind is
-wandering. I meant to say, was Mrs. Griswold acquainted with Mr.
-Foster?'</p>
-
-<p>'Lor' bless you! no, Clara,' said her sister, laughing. 'I think you
-Londoners imagine London is the only big place in the world, and think
-people who live anywhere else must know everybody who ever came from
-the place where they live. There are lots of Fosters in New York, I
-hould think, and there is not anything known about this poor gentleman
-except that his name is Foster. Mrs. Griswold saw it this morning, and
-she said she did not think Mr. Griswold knew any one of the name; but
-it made her quite downhearted--set her off thinking of Mr. Griswold, I
-suppose.'</p>
-
-<p>'Well, I am glad she hadn't heard it before she left the theatre,'
-said Miss Montressor; 'it isn't pleasant news to wind up the evening
-with, even when one knows nothing at all of the parties concerned, a
-dreary epilogue to the play. I saw Mrs. Griswold last night, Bess.'</p>
-
-<p>'I am glad you did. What do you think of her--though I suppose you
-couldn't judge very well at that distance?'</p>
-
-<p>'Well, in the first place, I should like to be sure that it was Mrs.
-Griswold. People change places occasionally, you know, at the theatre,
-and I didn't catch sight of her until the third act, nor see her very
-distinctly then; but I could make out the gown, and that she wore gold
-ornaments of the new fashion--warming-pan style, all clink and clatter
-when you are near them, and very like harness when you are not. I saw
-the blue-and-gold fan, too; so I suppose there is no doubt that was
-the lady?'</p>
-
-<p>'No doubt at all,' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'She was in the seat I told you
-to look at, and said how comfortable it was, and what a capital view
-of the stage she had from it. She was highly delighted, I can tell
-you, Clara, and said she liked your acting better than any she had
-ever seen. I told her it was not your best part, that it was nothing
-to your Juliet; but she said she was afraid she was too stupid to care
-about Shakespeare--not that she is stupid. I am sure I don't set
-myself up for a judge, but I think she is as bright as she is pretty.'</p>
-
-<p>'I don't exactly know whether she is pretty or not,' said Miss
-Montressor, 'and I take a great interest in your Mrs. Griswold: a lady
-who is so kind to her dependents as you make her out to be, and has
-the good sense and the good taste to be an admirer of the drama, is a
-legitimate subject of interest. I am sorry I did not see her face more
-distinctly; could you give me a sight of her now?'</p>
-
-<p>'Now,' said Mrs. Jenkins, 'and in that dress, Clara! What would she
-think?'</p>
-
-<p>'Why, my dear Bess, you do not imagine I want you to introduce me as
-Miss Montressor in this costume, and thus deliberately tell on myself
-the very thing which I have been impressing upon you must be kept
-profoundly secret? Not at all. But nursery visitors are not
-impossibilities in a house of this sort, I suppose? Couldn't I be a
-humble friend, a former fellow-servant somewhere--I suppose she thinks
-you were a servant before you came to her--who has just dropped in to
-have a look at baby?'</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Jenkins laughed. 'It would be good fun to have a private play of
-that sort on our own account, Clara, but unfortunately it cannot be
-done, for Mrs. Griswold is not in the nursery, and she is not likely
-to come to it. She caught cold last night at the play, and I could not
-persuade her not to get up this morning; but she felt very tired after
-breakfast, and I did persuade her to go and lie down: she is lying
-down in her own room, and the orders are that she is not to be
-disturbed for anything less important than a cable message from Mr.
-Griswold. She is always expecting one, though, as far as I can see, he
-is too sensible to waste money in them, and satisfies himself with
-writing by the mail--precious long letters they are, and doesn't she
-prize them just! However, she is lying down, and I cannot disturb her,
-above all by taking a stranger into the room; so you cannot see her at
-present.'</p>
-
-<p>'O, never mind,' said Miss Montressor; 'so much the better that she is
-in the room. I shall have plenty of chances of seeing her. And now I
-should like a look at the house, Bess. It is the first house I have
-been in in New York, and I have a fancy for that sort of thing, and I
-like to get hints about carpets and curtains and drawing-room fixings.
-Can't you take me round--it is allowed, I suppose?'</p>
-
-<p>'O, certainly, it is allowed,' said Mrs. Jenkins; 'we are under no
-restraint here. Come along up-stairs;' and the unsuspecting woman led
-Miss Montressor up the broad staircase to the white-and-gold
-folding-doors which gave access to the reception-rooms.</p>
-
-<p>'What a simple creature it is,' thought Miss Montressor, 'that it has
-never occurred to her to ask me why I have so decidedly changed mv
-mind as to come here to see her, that being the very exact thing which
-I so positively assured her yesterday I could not do! Very handsome
-rooms, indeed,' she said aloud; 'fitted up in capital taste, and
-evidently quite regardless of expense. That's a fine picture on the
-wall opposite.'</p>
-
-<p>She stepped across the floor rapidly, and stood still in front of it.
-It was a fine picture; an admirably executed portrait of Helen
-Griswold. The artist had painted her in an unconventional attitude,
-and the whole picture was pleasing to the general eye, interested in
-the work of art rather than in the likeness. It represented a slight,
-almost girlish figure, in soft white muslin robes slightly trimmed
-with lace, touched here and there with a knot of ribbon, a lace veil
-being loosely tied over the rich chestnut-brown hair, softening its
-masses, but hiding neither its richness nor its colour; the hands were
-clad in gardening-gloves; in the right was a large pair of scissors,
-just about to be applied to a rose-bush, one blossom of which was held
-apart from the stem by the left; a basket of roses already cut stood
-at the feet, and the scene of the picture was a conservatory, the
-original of which Miss Montressor had caught a glimpse of on the first
-floor of the house.</p>
-
-<p>'That is Mrs. Griswold's portrait,' said Mrs. Jenkins, in reply to her
-sister's observation, 'and it is not at all flattered; so now you can
-see, if you had got a near view of her last night, you would have
-agreed with me about her beauty.'</p>
-
-<p>'Yes,' said Miss Montressor slowly, 'that is a pretty face, and one
-cannot say of it, as one does of so many pretty faces, that there is
-nothing in it. I should think she was a very sensible woman, as well
-as a very kind-hearted one?'</p>
-
-<p>'She is just that,' said Mrs. Jenkins enthusiastically. 'Sit down
-here, Clara, and have a good look at it.'</p>
-
-<p>The sisters placed themselves side by side upon an ottoman which
-commanded a good view of the portrait, at which Miss Montressor
-continued steadfastly to gaze. All doubt was over now, all hope that
-she had been mistaken was at an end; the miniature she had seen in the
-watch that day as she paced the terrace at Richmond was but a reduced
-copy without the veil, and the face that looked mildly, beaming down
-upon her out of its gilded frame, was as fresh and fair as the roses
-in the feet. Miss Montressor was not of a classic turn of mind; her
-education had not gone far in any direction, nor at all in that; she
-did not refer the suggestiveness of the open scissors in the woman's
-hand, about to snip the fresh young life of the beautiful rose, to any
-recollection of the Pareae; but it had a certain something in it which
-impressed her, something of suspicion which filled her eyes with tears
-unseen by Mrs. Jenkins.</p>
-
-<p>'Is there a portrait of Mr. Griswold?' she asked.</p>
-
-<p>'Only a small one, half-sized, and since he went away Mrs. Griswold
-has had it moved to her bedroom. It hangs on the wall just over her
-dressing-table, and opposite the foot of her bed. It is the first
-thing she must see in the morning when she opens her eyes. They say it
-is uncommonly like him; it is painted by the same artist who did this
-one; but Mrs. Griswold will have it the picture in her bracelet--much
-handsomer and much younger--is more like Mr. Griswold.'</p>
-
-<p>'Does any one of her family stay with her while he is away?' was Miss
-Montressor's next question.</p>
-
-<p>'There is not any family. She has no relatives, I am told, not only in
-New York, but in all the world; she was an orphan when Mr. Griswold
-married her, and I do not believe he has any relatives; for I have
-never seen any nor heard them spoken of, either by her or among the
-servants.'</p>
-
-<p>'That's lonely for Mrs. Griswold. Has she much company while he is
-away? But I think you said not yesterday?'</p>
-
-<p>'O dear, no she leads the quietest life that any lady could live. Many
-a one would think it very dull; but she doesn't, what with her books,
-and music, and baby, and her letters to Mr. Griswold. She is sometimes
-sorrowful, but never dull. She has some visitors at times, but I don't
-think she cares for them--one person is pretty much the same to her as
-another, when it is not Mr. Griswold--and one day she said to me, &quot;I
-have no intimates, and my husband has very few for so wonderfully
-sociable a man, and such a general favourite as he is.&quot;'</p>
-
-<p>'Then there is no one to take care of her in particular?' said Miss
-Montressor; 'for she is young, you know, to be left alone with so
-much to look after and to do as there must be in the care of all
-this,'--with a comprehensive sweep of her arm, intended to take in all
-the household goods at once.</p>
-
-<p>'O, no, there is no one to take care of her,' said Mrs. Jenkins; 'but
-she can take very good care of herself. She always wishes to do, and
-she always does, what is right and good and kind towards every one.'</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor was profoundly discouraged. Her embassy was not
-prospering; the worst that they feared was true, and the aid on which
-they had speculated did not seem to be forthcoming. Mrs. Griswold had
-no relatives and no intimates. Mr. Griswold had no relatives, and if
-he had any intimates, Mrs. Jenkins could evidently have no information
-concerning them. What was to be done now? Miss Montressor dared not
-pursue her questioning of her sister any further, and hastily decided
-that the best thing she could do would be to return to the hotel and
-narrate to Bryan Duval exactly what had passed. She felt that her
-mission was but imperfectly executed; but its solemnity and importance
-had grown upon her with every moment since she had entered Mrs.
-Griswold's house, and she was now strongly actuated by a nervous
-desire to get out of it as soon as possible. She looked at her watch
-and started up in a hurry.</p>
-
-<p>'I must be going, Bess,' she said; 'I had no notion it was so late. I
-am overdue at rehearsal, and here I have stayed talking about other
-people, and not said anything of all I wanted to say to you. Come
-along down-stairs with me.'</p>
-
-<p>'You will come again, Clara?' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'Nobody will ever
-suspect you in that gown and with that great shawl--it spoils your
-figure, dear, but never mind.'</p>
-
-<p>'I will try,' said Miss Montressor, 'I will see about it; if not, you
-can come to me. Good-bye now.'</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Jenkins had come to the door with her; the hall was empty as the
-sisters spoke their last few words there. Mrs. Jenkins's hand was upon
-the lock of the street door when the bell was rung. She mechanically
-drew back the lock, and a gentleman presented himself. He was a young
-man, tall, slight, and upright, with bright black eyes and dark
-complexion, fine curly black hair, and a dark moustache.</p>
-
-<p>'Is Mrs. Griswold at home?' he said.</p>
-
-<p>'She is at home, sir,' said Mrs. Jenkins, 'but she is very tired and
-not very well, and she is lying down.'</p>
-
-<p>'O, then,' said the stranger, passing into the hall, 'I will content
-myself with a visit to your quarters, Mrs. Jenkins, and a look at the
-baby.' He had lifted his hat to Miss Montressor, who by this time was
-on the outside of the door. 'And,' he now added, 'I will just write a
-line in the waiting-room before you take me up-stairs, Mrs. Jenkins,
-and ask you to give it to Mrs. Griswold when she awakes.' The sisters
-parted with a wave of the hand, and Mrs. Jenkins shut the door.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor walked slowly and thoughtfully down the street. She
-felt sure that the gentleman whom she had just seen, and who spoke so
-familiarly to her sister, must be at least an intimate acquaintance of
-Mrs. Griswold's--the early hour of his visit, his familiar manner, the
-fact that he was going to be taken up to see the child, the very tone
-of her sister's voice as she answered his question, all indicated that
-he was no stranger. Bess had said Mrs. Griswold had no intimate
-friends. Perhaps she had forgotten this one, or the intimacy might be
-between him and Mr. Griswold. From that, may be, Miss Montressor felt
-instinctively that here was a resource--an instrument put into her
-hands. There could be no risk in the using of it.</p>
-
-<p>By the time she had arrived at this conclusion she was well out of
-sight from the windows of Mrs. Griswold's house; but no one could
-leave that house and turn to either side without her perceiving the
-fact. She crossed the street and waited on the opposite side. She was
-quite alone, as it happened, throughout its long length, and might
-pass slowly back and forward a few steps in each direction without
-attracting attention.</p>
-
-<p>The minutes during which she was thus engaged seemed very long to Miss
-Montressor. Would Bryan Duval approve of what she was going to do? It
-might be a great blunder; it might be the best thing under the
-circumstances. She was forced to use her discretion in the matter;
-there seemed the one way in which she could fulfil the promise with
-which she had left Duval. After an interval of at least a quarter of
-an hour the door of Mrs. Griswold's house opened, and the young man
-for whom Miss Montressor was watching appeared on the threshold,
-attended by the coloured servant, to whom he was speaking pleasantly,
-and who was receiving a communication with the most expressive grin.
-In another moment he came down the steps, and advanced briskly in the
-same direction which she had taken. She stood perfectly still until he
-was nearly opposite to her. Then she crossed the street rapidly, went
-up to him, and, without giving herself a moment to consider, said:</p>
-
-<p>'You are a friend of Mrs. Griswold's? In her interest may I speak with
-you?'</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div2_08" href="#div2Ref_08">CHAPTER VIII.</a></h4>
-<h5>THORNTON CAREY.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p>Thornton Carey, who was much surprised at this sudden address,
-stopped, hesitated, and looked somewhat embarrassed. Another man,
-accustomed to what are called 'adventures,' would not have been in the
-least thrown off his balance, either by the suddenness or the style of
-the address; he would have accepted it as a matter of course, and done
-his best to make himself pleasant to the speaker. Thornton Carey,
-however, was not this style of man, and, even if he had been, there
-was something in the earnestness of Miss Montressor's voice and manner
-which would have stopped his flippancy. Had she not, moreover,
-mentioned the name of Helen, and declared herself to be about to speak
-in Mrs. Griswold's interests? That would have been quite enough at any
-time to command Thornton Carey's sympathy and attention.</p>
-
-<p>'I am a friend of Mrs. Griswold's,' he replied, looking keenly at his
-interlocutor, 'and, for the matter of that, of Mr. Griswold's too, I
-hope.'</p>
-
-<p>'What I have to say concerns them both most nearly,' said Miss
-Montressor, frankly meeting his gaze. 'Will you, in the exercise of
-your friendship for them, trust me so far as to accompany me in a
-carriage to the Fifth-avenue Hotel?'</p>
-
-<p>Again Thornton Carey hesitated. He went very little into female
-society, and, under any other circumstances, the idea of being shut up
-in a carriage with a strange lady would certainly have frightened him;
-and again he suffered himself to be persuaded by Miss Montressor's
-manner and the object of her mission.</p>
-
-<p>'I will do so willingly,' he said; and ordering the coachman to drive
-to the hotel, he entered the vehicle, and took his place by his fair
-companion's side.</p>
-
-<p>As they drove through the crowded streets, Thornton Carey thought with
-wonder upon his strange position. Here was he, the hermit, the
-recluse, who so seldom emerged from his lettered seclusion far away in
-the city of the South, who seldom sought for any company beyond that
-of the distinguished dead who gathered around him as he pored over his
-books--here he was, rattling over the stones of New York, bound for
-the most luxurious hotel in the city, and with a very handsome,
-dashing young woman by his side. In the course of the desultory
-reading which, like most young men, he had indulged in before
-permanently settling down to valuable study, he had, he remembered,
-come across the description of certain adventures, such as he was then
-going through; and the idea that he, whom all his coevals looked upon
-as a model of sageness and sobriety, should be found under such
-circumstances, would have amused him, had he not at the same time
-remembered that the errand on which he was bound was, according to his
-companion's words, one in which Helen's happiness was deeply
-interested.</p>
-
-<p>The carriage stopped at the ladies' entrance of the hotel, and Miss
-Montressor, on being handed out by Thornton Carey, requested him to
-follow her. They passed up the staircase to the first floor, and
-finding one of the smaller parlours disengaged, his companion
-requested Mr. Carey to be seated, while she sent one of the servants
-to call Mr. Bryan Duval.</p>
-
-<p>'Bryan Duval!' echoed Carey in astonishment. 'Why, surely that is the
-name of a famous actor? Even I, though not much given to dramatic
-literature or theatre-going, have heard of him.'</p>
-
-<p>'It is the same,' said Miss Montressor.</p>
-
-<p>'But how can he be mixed up in any matter concerning Mrs. Griswold?'
-asked Carey.</p>
-
-<p>'It is as much in his power as in mine,' said Miss Montressor, 'to
-give information upon a subject in which Mrs. Griswold is most deeply
-and most unhappily interested.'</p>
-
-<p>'Unhappily!' interrupted Thornton Carey, turning pale.</p>
-
-<p>'Most unhappily, as you will agree when you know all,' said Miss
-Montressor. 'Here, however, is Mr. Duval; he will explain matters to
-you much better than I can.'</p>
-
-<p>She introduced the gentlemen, and was pleased to notice that, so far
-as she could see, each liked the look of the other's appearance. Duval
-was pleased with Thornton Carey's frank honest expression, while Carey
-himself recognised the keen acumen and subtle intelligence displayed
-in the broad brow and bright eves of the dramatist.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor commenced the conversation by rapidly explaining to
-Duval, so far as she thought necessary, and without, of course, any
-allusion to Bess, the failure of her mission to Mrs. Griswold's house,
-adding that she there had met Mr. Carey, and learning that he was an
-intimate friend of the family, she had thought it best to ask his kind
-assistance, and had brought him there in order that the matter might
-be explained to him.</p>
-
-<p>'You have acted perfectly right, my dear Miss Montressor,' said Bryan,
-avoiding his usual familiarity, under the idea that it would prove
-surprising, if not displeasing, to their new ally. 'And now, sir,' he
-added, turning to Carey, 'I will keep you no longer in suspense. You
-have, of course, heard of this terrible murder of the American
-gentleman in Liverpool, the news of which is ringing through all New
-York.'</p>
-
-<p>'I have indeed,' replied Carey; 'and though the victim, whose name I
-believe was Foster, was personally unknown to me, the fact of his
-being a stranger, apparently without friends or connections at the
-scene of the assassination, seems to render the tragedy doubly
-dreadful.'</p>
-
-<p>'That he had no friends or relatives at the scene of the murder is, I
-have no doubt, perfectly true,' said Bryan Duval; 'but I have too much
-reason to believe, not merely that his name was not Foster, but, from
-what we now learn, that he was an intimate friend of yours.'</p>
-
-<p>'Good God!' cried Thornton Carey, upon whom a light suddenly broke.
-'And you say that Helen Griswold is also deeply interested in the
-matter? You cannot imagine for an instant--' and he stopped, for his
-voice suddenly failed him.</p>
-
-<p>'I do not merely imagine,' said Bryan Duval, speaking deliberately,
-'but in my own mind I no longer entertain any doubt that the man, the
-news of whose murder has caused such a shock in New York society, was
-Mr. Griswold, the husband of the lady whom you went to see this
-morning.'</p>
-
-<p>'It is too terrible,' said Thornton Carey, covering his face with his
-hands. 'You seem to speak with certainty. Mr. Griswold was in
-Europe--might have been in Liverpool at the very time--and yet why
-this assumption of a false name?'</p>
-
-<p>'That is exactly what we want you to explain to us,' said Bryan
-quickly; 'but before you attempt to do so, let me explain to you as
-shortly as possible the story of my acquaintance with Griswold, and
-the reason I have for coming to this sad conclusion.'</p>
-
-<p>Then Bryan Duval succinctly, and in as few words as possible, sketched
-the story of their acquaintance with Griswold in London--narrated the
-particulars of the Richmond dinner, the conversation which the
-unfortunate man had had with Miss Montressor, the devoted manner in
-which he had spoken of his wife, and in which he had exhibited her
-portrait set in the watch; the melancholy which had overcome him at
-Liverpool at the knowledge that they were about to proceed to New
-York, while his business must detain him some little time longer in
-England; told him, in fact, the whole story, without concealment or
-curtailment, down to Miss Montressor's recognition of the lady in the
-stalls on the previous evening as the original of the portrait which
-the so-called Mr. Foster had shown her, and the terrible dread which
-had then fallen upon her and Duval, that the murdered man was Mr.
-Griswold, who, for some object of his own unknown to them, had chosen,
-while away from home, to pass under an assumed name.</p>
-
-<p>'But what that object was,' said Bryan Duval, in conclusion, 'we want
-you to tell us.'</p>
-
-<p>After a pause of a few minutes, during which he had remained buried in
-abstraction, Thornton Carey spoke. 'You have given me a task which I
-am quite unable to fulfil,' he said, shaking his head. 'There is
-probably no man in the world who understands so little of business, by
-which I mean commercial matters, as myself. Mr. Griswold never spoke
-to me about them, and if he had I should have been unable to
-understand them; and, fond of me as I am sure he was, I should have
-been one of the last persons in the world to whom he would have made
-any business confidence.'</p>
-
-<p>'You believe, then,' said Bryan Duval, 'that this taking of an assumed
-name was really done for business purposes?'</p>
-
-<p>'I have not the least doubt of it,' said Thornton Carey earnestly.</p>
-
-<p>'I am myself inclined to that belief,' said Bryan. 'There was a
-singular frankness and honesty about the man, and the way in which he
-spoke about his wife, both to myself and Miss Montressor here, was
-evidently genuine; though,' he continued, with a touch of that worldly
-cynicism which sometimes came upon him, as it were, in spite of
-himself, 'these are matters in which one must never be led away by
-what one either sees or hears. There are men who love their wives very
-deeply, and who yet, when away from them, urged on by vanity or
-passion, or whatever they may choose to call it--'</p>
-
-<p>'I know what you would say,' said Thornton Carey, holding up his hand,
-'and I suppose, as regards the generality of men, you are right. But,
-believe me, this was not the case with Alston Griswold--his was not a
-mere mouth worship of his wife; no other woman, be she who she might,
-would have been able for an instant to make him forget her whom he so
-dearly loved.'</p>
-
-<p>'I believe you, Mr. Carey,' said Bryan, 'and in any case I honour you
-for your championship; but in this case I think you are right. From
-the little I saw of him, I have no doubt that your friend was all you
-say. We will allow, then, that he dropped his own name and called
-himself Foster for the furtherance of certain business transactions.
-To obtain anything like a clue to this murder, it is necessary for us
-to know what those business transactions were, and whence this
-necessity for concealment arose; until we can obtain that, we shall
-still be in the dark as to the motives of the murderer.'</p>
-
-<p>'I cannot help you,' said Thornton Carey, shaking his head ruefully.
-'As I said before, I only knew Mr. Griswold in his domestic capacity
-as my friend, and the word business was never even mentioned between
-us.'</p>
-
-<p>'You may yet be able to help us,' said Miss Montressor, leaning
-forward. 'This unfortunate Mr. Foster--Mr. Griswold as we must now
-think of him--told me that evening in the garden at Richmond that he
-had an intimate friend and confidant in New York, to whom during his
-absence he had not merely intrusted the conduct and supervision of his
-affairs and correspondence, but he had also placed his wife in this
-man's charge. Now, knowing the Griswolds as you do, you will probably
-be able to tell us if there is any man who stood in this relation with
-them and if so, what is his name?'</p>
-
-<p>'This declaration goes further to corroborate your idea that the
-murdered man was indeed poor Griswold,' said Thornton Carey, with a
-sigh. 'There was a man exactly fulfilling those functions, who was
-understood to be a sort of partner of Griswold's in certain matters,
-and from whom he was never separated. I did not know that he carried
-the intimacy into his domestic life, and, indeed, I should have
-thought the person I mean was one for whom Mrs. Griswold would have
-had but little liking.'</p>
-
-<p>'What was the name?' asked Duval eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>'His name was Warren--Trenton Warren,' replied Carey. 'He was a man
-much thought of for his foresight and acuteness in commercial matters,
-and he had an office down town in Broad-street, not far from
-Griswold's own place of business.'</p>
-
-<p>'The thing to be done, then, is to see this Mr. Warren at once,' said
-Bryan Duval. 'If we prove to him, as we shall be able to do, that we
-were friends of Mr. Griswold's, he will doubtless be able to clear up
-the whole mystery of the change of names.'</p>
-
-<p>'Even in this we are baffled for the time being,' said Thornton Carey.
-'I heard accidentally that Mr. Warren was at Chicago.'</p>
-
-<p>'Is that far distant?' asked Miss Montressor.</p>
-
-<p>'Thirty-six hours' journey at least,' said Duval; 'and being, as I
-understand, essentially a man of business, Mr. Warren might not be
-able to leave at once, however earnestly we might venture to recall
-him.'</p>
-
-<p>'You would be right, under ordinary circumstances,' said Thornton
-Carey; 'but I think if you were to let him know that it was of great
-importance that Mrs. Griswold should see him at once, he would
-return.'</p>
-
-<p>'And what shall we say to him when he comes?' asked Miss Montressor.</p>
-
-<p>'Rather what shall he say to us?' said Carey. 'Mixed up as he is with
-Griswold's affairs, he will be able to see at a glance to whose
-interest it would be that this unfortunate man should be unfairly
-gotten rid of.'</p>
-
-<p>'You seem disposed to take my view of this affair, Mr. Carey,' said
-Bryan Duval: 'that robbery was not the motive cause for this murder,
-but some ulterior object.'</p>
-
-<p>'Unquestionably,' said Carey, 'robbery was not the object, because, if
-the papers be correct, the unfortunate man's watch and money were left
-undisturbed. Some other motive, doubtless connected with the business
-which took him on his fatal journey, and which he was at such pains to
-keep secret--perhaps even dictated from this side of the water--must
-be at the bottom of it.'</p>
-
-<p>'Your views coincide exactly with mine,' said Bryan Duval. 'It is
-useless for us, however, further to speculate on this matter, more
-especially since we know nothing at all approaching certainty, until
-Mr. Warren helps us with his experience. The one thing that confronts
-us and that cannot be blinked at is, that no matter from what reason
-or other the poor fellow has been murdered, the fact, sooner or later,
-must be broken to his wife.'</p>
-
-<p>'That is what I feel so deeply,' said Carey. 'There is a mail from
-Europe due to-morrow; she will know of its arrival; and after that the
-truth can no longer be kept from her.'</p>
-
-<p>'All that will remain, then, for us,' said Bryan, 'will be to break it
-to her in the most delicate manner possible, and it is most lucky that
-we have found you to aid us in that difficult task.'</p>
-
-<p>'I will do my best most willingly,' said Carey; 'and after I have
-settled upon the matter, I may be of some use. At present, I confess
-that the news has come upon me so suddenly, my obligation to this
-unfortunate gentleman is so great, and my regard for him and his wife
-so essentially a portion of my life, that I cannot trust myself to
-give anything like clear advice or reliable aid.'</p>
-
-<p>'I perfectly comprehend your feelings,' said Bryan Duval, 'and there
-is no need for us to prolong this painful interview--in fact, Miss
-Montressor and myself have our duties to attend to at the theatre, and
-we must go to them. We may, however, rely upon you to take the one
-step immediately necessary--namely, to apprise Mr. Warren by telegraph
-that his presence is most desirable in New York.'</p>
-
-<p>'You may depend upon my doing so,' said Carey, 'and upon my being here
-tomorrow to take my part in any further consultation.'</p>
-
-<p>So they parted.</p>
-
-<p>Thornton Carey was completely overwhelmed by the news he had just
-heard. He would have disbelieved it, but he was never in the habit of
-allowing his common sense to be over-ridden by his sympathies; and
-that rare and inestimable quality told him that Mr. Bryan Duval had,
-indeed, good foundation for the deductions he had drawn. The more he
-thought over it, the less real doubt had he that the <i>soi-disant</i>
-Foster and his friend and benefactor, Alston Griswold, were one. He
-knew that Griswold's one idea in life had been to achieve such a
-fortune as would enable him to vie with the proudest millionaire in
-New York, and to retire altogether from business. It was evident that,
-in this endeavour, he had gone in for some great stake; so great as to
-require the exercise of what in the commercial world is known as tact,
-but in free-spoken circles, outside the commercial world, is called
-duplicity. This change of name, for instance--it could be easily
-learned whether the secret had been confided to Warren alone, or was
-known to the clerks in Griswold's house of business--that could be
-learned from the clerks themselves; and Thornton Carey determined at
-once to inquire of them.</p>
-
-<p>Wall-street, hot, rushing, and demented as usual; closing hour just at
-hand, and everybody anxious to make a few hundred or thousand more
-dollars before returning up-town for the day; telegraphs ticking from
-attic to basement in each of the enormous houses between Canal-street
-and Bowling-green; messengers rushing about in frantic haste, and the
-bar at Delmonico's at the corner of Chambers-street actually for five
-minutes without an occupant. Hustled on all sides, and swayed hither
-and thither by the fluctuating crowd, Thornton Carey at last made his
-way into Griswold's office. Telegraph instrument madly clicking in one
-corner, and white serpents winding out from it and covering the floor
-with their tortuous folds; clerks running races with the telegraph
-instrument, and endeavouring to drown its noise with the scratching of
-their pens over the paper; men in shiny hats tumbling in and out, and
-adding to the general confusion.</p>
-
-<p>After some delay, Thornton Carey was recognised by one of the
-principal clerks, who vouchsafed him three minutes' conversation. 'Mr.
-Griswold still in Europe; hoped he would be back very shortly; should
-be able to say more to-morrow, as letters were expected by the morning
-mail, giving the date of his return.'</p>
-
-<p>Plainly everybody there was wholly unconscious of any evil having
-befallen the head of the establishment. 'That argued nothing,'
-Thornton Carey thought to himself, 'save that Griswold had placed no
-confidence in his servants.' He must try Warren's office next.</p>
-
-<p>Being a partner of Mr. Griswold's, Trenton Warren had the use of the
-clerks and appliances of his friend's office. For his own particular
-service he kept but one quiet, silent, trustworthy individual, who
-looked up when Carey entered, and in reply to his inquiry, announced
-that Mr. Warren was at Chicago. 'I forward his letters to him every
-day,' said the man, 'and if you have anything to send, it can go with
-my lot.'</p>
-
-<p>Thornton Carey reflected for a moment.</p>
-
-<p>'No, thank you,' he said; 'my business is important, and I must wire
-Mr. Warren at once. What is his address?'</p>
-
-<p>'Three Bryan's Block, Chicago, will find him,' said the clerk, and
-immediately whirled round on his stool to continue his writing.</p>
-
-<p>On Thornton Carey leaving Warren's office, he stepped at once into the
-Western Union Telegraph, and sent the following message:</p>
-<br>
-
-<p>'Trenton Warren, 3 Bryan's Block, Chicago.--I most earnestly request
-you to come to New York without delay; it is of the utmost importance
-that I should see you; a great calamity has occurred.</p>
-<h4>'HELEN GRISWOLD.'</h4>
-<br>
-
-<p>'Now we must trust to Providence for the rest,' said Thornton Carey,
-as he walked away.</p>
-
-<p>Having despatched the telegram, Thornton Carey returned to Mrs.
-Griswold's house, to which he was admitted by Jim. He ascertained from
-Mrs. Jenkins and from Helen's maid that there was not any danger of
-her proposing to go out when she should leave her room. On this point
-he was extremely anxious. He knew it would have been impossible for
-her to have passed a street corner, any public building, or any group
-of talkers without seeing the announcement of the latest news from
-England of the murder which was occupying the attention of every
-intelligent person in New York at that moment, or hearing it
-discussed. It was everything to those who were now engaged in
-considering how best the awful truth should be broken to the
-unconsciously bereaved woman, that no uneasiness should be created in
-her mind through any indirect source.</p>
-
-<p>'You are quite sure,' Thornton Carey asked of Mrs. Jenkins, 'that she
-has not ordered the carriage for this afternoon?'</p>
-
-<p>'I am quite sure,' returned Mrs. Jenkins. 'About an hour ago she sent
-a note down to Mrs. Villiers to excuse herself from a dinner
-engagement for to-day, which was made at the play last night; and,
-indeed, I should not be surprised if she did not leave her room all
-day--her cold is very heavy.'</p>
-
-<p>It was impossible that Thornton Carey could have thus questioned the
-two women servants without exciting some suspicion, some uneasiness in
-their minds. He saw very plainly that he had done so, and he thought
-he might just venture to give them a hint of the origin of the
-caution, to endeavour to impress it upon them, and thereby render them
-more certain to observe it.</p>
-
-<p>'I daresay you wonder,' he continued, 'why I am so anxious to know
-about Mrs. Griswold's probable movements of to-day; and, as I am sure
-I may trust you, and that you are both faithful friends to her'--the
-women exchanged looks with each other, and each bestowed an inquiring
-nod upon Thornton Carey, while they drew closer to him in their
-eagerness--'I will tell you that there is a rumour of an accident
-having occurred in England, in which it is just possible that Mr.
-Griswold may have been injured.'</p>
-
-<p>'A railway accident, sir?' the two women exclaimed simultaneously.</p>
-
-<p>'No,' he answered, with some confusion, 'not a railway accident; it
-is, I believe, a case of supposed malicious injury. I cannot enter
-into the particulars now. I am not, indeed, fully aware of them. As
-soon as I am, and that I know for certain whether Mr. Griswold is or
-is not injured, I will tell you. In the mean time, you will understand
-that it is of immense importance that Mrs. Griswold should not be
-alarmed. If what we fear is true, she must know it soon enough. If it
-is not true, it will be most cruel to subject her to the excitement
-and suspense of knowing anything about it until all is known. I want
-you, Mrs. Jenkins, and you, Annette,' addressing Helen's maid, 'to
-make me the same promise that I have also secured from Jim.'</p>
-
-<p>'I will do anything you wish, sir,' said Mrs. Jenkins; 'and I am sure
-Annette will say the same.'</p>
-
-<p>'Mais oui, mais oui,' assented Annette eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>'Well, then, you promise to be very cautious in your own manner,
-looks, and speech--not to let Mrs. Griswold hear you talking to one
-another in any unusual way; not to go into her room with frightened
-faces, or with anything in your look which could lead her to think
-that this day is different from any other day in any respect. Will you
-promise me to keep a perpetual watch over yourselves, and to remember
-that all we want is a few hours' interval, during which I and other
-friends of Mrs. Griswold's may be quite sure that no one will be
-allowed to see her who can talk to her about the distressing rumour
-which has just reached New York, and yet that she will not suspect
-that any such watchfulness is being observed?'</p>
-
-<p>Again he received assuring nods from the two women.</p>
-
-<p>'I must also beg you,' he continued, 'to be very particular to keep
-every newspaper out of your mistress's sight until after the next time
-I shall have been here; make any excuse and every excuse that comes in
-your heads, but don't permit her to get hold of a single evening paper
-or any morning paper of to-day. I hope none have found their way to
-her room this morning?'</p>
-
-<p>'No, I think not,' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'You haven't seen any newspapers
-about, Annette?'</p>
-
-<p>'No,' Annette replied; 'madame had not asked for any newspapers, and
-she had taken none up to her.'</p>
-
-<p>'You need not be frightened on that point,' said Mrs. Jenkins; 'for I
-never saw a lady with so little curiosity about news as Mrs. Griswold.
-She reads the weeklies sometimes, when they are all about books and
-interesting things that are happening in the world; but I have known
-her go a whole week without looking into a daily; and we will keep
-them out of her way, if by any perverse chance she should take it into
-her head to want to see them. She is not given to scolding, but I
-daresay Jim would not mind taking a scolding from her for not having
-thought of fetching an evening paper, if it is for her.'</p>
-
-<p>'Don't make yourself uneasy, sir; not but what we should like to have
-a look at what they say.'</p>
-
-<p>'They don't say anything,' said Thornton Carey; 'at least, they have
-not said it yet. The news has come by private cable message, and I am
-only afraid of its getting into the later editions. I shall be here
-tomorrow early, and implicitly trust you in this matter. There is
-another thing, too, you will have to be very careful about, if you
-please.'</p>
-
-<p>'Certainly, sir,' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'What is that?'</p>
-
-<p>'It is just possible that a telegram may come, directed to Mrs.
-Griswold.'</p>
-
-<p>'From Europe, sir?'</p>
-
-<p>'No,' said Thornton Carey; 'from Chicago.'</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Jenkins started slightly, and said:</p>
-
-<p>'Chicago! Is there anything wrong there?'</p>
-
-<p>'O, no, there is nothing wrong; only Mrs. Griswold has been sending a
-message on business to a friend of Mr. Griswold's, and it is better,
-until we are sure that Mr. Griswold is all right, that she should not
-see the answer. Will you therefore, Mrs. Jenkins, undertake, if this
-telegram should come, to have it sent at once to me at the
-Fifth-avenue Hotel? You need not be alarmed at undertaking the
-responsibility--the giving the message to one to whom it is not
-addressed. I can give you my word of honour for that, and you will
-know why almost as soon as I do. I cannot tell you more just now,
-because I do not know more.'</p>
-
-<p>'I will have the message sent, sir,' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'Up to what
-hour shall you expect it?'</p>
-
-<p>'I mean to remain at the hotel all day--at least until it comes,' said
-Thornton Carey. 'There is an almost absolute certainty that it will
-come.'</p>
-
-<p>'There will be no difficulty about it, sir,' said Mrs. Jenkins; 'but
-may I ask you if we are to be as particular about letters as about
-telegrams and newspapers?'</p>
-
-<p>'Certainly,' said Thornton Carey; 'my injunctions refer to every kind
-of communication which could possibly reach Mrs. Griswold between this
-time and my next visit.'</p>
-
-<p>'I don't see how we are to manage that, sir,' said Mrs. Jenkins. 'She
-doesn't mind about newspapers, and she does not expect any telegrams
-from any part of the States; but she will be looking out for English
-letters in the morning--they ought to be in--and it won't be possible,
-I am afraid, to keep her quiet then, to prevent her coming downstairs,
-or to hide the letters from her, if they come. What are we to do in
-that case?'</p>
-
-<p>'It will not matter about English letters,' he replied. 'Any she could
-get tomorrow morning must have been written before the accident which
-is reported, so you need not trouble about that; besides, I will be
-here almost as soon as the mail can be delivered.'</p>
-
-<p>He received an earnest assurance from the two women that all his
-requests should be scrupulously observed, and he left the house
-feeling that, as far as human precaution could be taken towards
-securing her from a premature shock, Helen was safe, at all events,
-for a few hours.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Jenkins and Annette retired to the waiting-room of the hall, and
-earnestly discussed the strange directions which they had just
-received. As a matter of course, they immediately seized on the
-morning paper of that day; for it had not escaped Mrs. Jenkins's
-characteristic acuteness that there was a decided inconsistency
-between Thornton Carey's statement that the news which he apprehended
-reaching Mrs. Griswold had come in private telegram, and his question
-as to whether any newspapers had been taken to her room that day.
-'Depend upon it,' said she to Justine, 'whatever it is, there is some
-hint of it in the dailies for to-day. Let us have a look.'</p>
-
-<p>The papers lay, as they had done on the previous day, on the table in
-the waiting-room; the two women turned them over eagerly, but found
-nothing which they could suppose to have reference to the mysterious
-rumour to which Thornton Carey had vaguely alluded--the murder at
-Liverpool was still the leading theme.</p>
-
-<p>'I cannot,' said Mrs. Jenkins, 'find out that anybody has come to
-grief except that unlucky Mr. Foster.'</p>
-
-<p>Thornton Carey returned to the Fifth-avenue Hotel, where he found
-Bryan Duval, looking weary and dejected. The actor said little in
-reply to the narrative of the steps which he had taken. The little he
-did say was in approval, and then he made a dreary effort to get away
-for a while from the terrible subject which was occupying them.</p>
-
-<p>'I shall stay here all day,' said Thornton Carey, 'and wait for the
-telegram, and I really don't see that there is anything else to be
-done. But you had better go out and get a little fresh air to string
-yourself up for to-night's work--it will be hard to get through, I
-fancy.'</p>
-
-<p>'Deuced hard,' said Bryan Duval. 'It is not the first time I have
-comedied on the beards and tragedied behind the scenes, but I do not
-know that I ever found the contrast so great a pull as this time--it
-is the unconsciousness of the woman that is so horrid; when she knows
-the worst, it will not be so bad. Good Heavens! only think, if she
-took it into her head to come to the theatre to-night!'</p>
-
-<p>'There is not the slightest danger of that,' said Thornton Carey. 'I
-forgot to tell you that she has a heavy cold.'</p>
-
-<p>But little more was said between them, and Bryan Duval took the young
-man's advice. He went out until it was time to go down to the theatre.
-About two hours later than the time at which Thornton Carey had
-rejoined him they met for a moment before the performance, and
-Thornton told him that no news had come; a message to the same effect
-was conveyed to Bryan Duval in a twisted note on his return after the
-play, but Thornton Carey made no attempt to see him again that night.</p>
-
-<p>Once more the house had been crowded by an enthusiastic audience;
-again the performance had realised public expectation to the fullest
-extent. If possible, Bryan Duval had been more exquisitely humorous,
-had thrown more of his characteristic acuteness into his part, than on
-the previous evening. Miss Montressor had charmed all the spectators;
-but some of those who had been present at the first performance
-noticed that she was slightly nervous, which she had not been on that
-occasion, and that she wore a little more rouge.</p>
-
-<p>During the whole of that night Thornton Carey did not undress or lie
-down; the hours passed drearily away, and no message came to interrupt
-them. Just before the time at which Mrs. Griswold's house was usually
-closed and her servants retired, Jim had 'slipped round,' as he
-phrased it, to Fifth-avenue Hotel, and told Mr. Carey that his orders
-had been strictly observed; no callers, no news, no newspapers, no
-messages had been suffered to reach Mrs. Griswold, who was better, had
-got up rather late in the evening, and passed an hour in the nursery;
-but she had asked no dangerous questions, she had displayed no
-imprudent curiosity. She was in bed, and asleep, old Jim said, on the
-authority of Mrs. Jenkins, when he came out to report to Thornton
-Carey; but no telegram had been received.</p>
-
-<p>This inexplicable circumstance sorely troubled and beset the mind of
-Thornton Carey. Advice, assistance from Warren, if not his actual
-presence, was entirely indispensable under the circumstances; but when
-the morning dawned, and when the letter-post hour was near, Thornton
-knew that the moment he dreaded so intensely had arrived, that no
-further delay was possible, and that that advice and assistance must
-be dispensed with.</p>
-
-<p>At the early hour which had previously been agreed upon, Bryan Duval,
-Thornton Carey, and Miss Montressor--the trio had by this time become
-quite friends--left the hotel and proceeded on foot to Helen
-Griswold's house. As they reached it, the postman came up, with his
-usual quick important step, and delivered a few unimportant notes,
-which Jim, with a glance at Thornton Carey, who was ascending the
-steps, took from his hand. The three entered the house, the door was
-shut behind them, and the letters just received were handed by the
-docile Jim to Carey.</p>
-
-<p>'There is nothing here,' he remarked, laying them on the table in the
-waiting-room. 'Jim, ring for the women.'</p>
-
-<p>In answer to the customary summons, both Mrs. Jenkins and Annette came
-downstairs. The first thing to be done was to send up word, in reply
-to Mrs. Griswold's eager inquiry (made, as Mrs. Jenkins told them, the
-moment she awoke, only a few instants ago) as to whether letters from
-England were yet delivered, 'that they had not yet come.'</p>
-
-<p>'Tell her this,' said Thornton Carey, 'and then tell her that I am
-here, and that I beg she will see me as soon as is convenient. If she
-asks why I come so early, say you do not know. It is too late to make
-any excuse now.'</p>
-
-<p>'Is it true, sir,' said Mrs. Jenkins--'has anything really happened to
-Mr. Griswold?'</p>
-
-<p>'It is too true,' said Duval, addressing the wondering woman, whose
-eager interest and curiosity about him showed in every feature of her
-face, even in this crisis; 'it is too true--you will soon know all! In
-the mean time be more cautious than ever.'</p>
-
-<p>Without a word Mrs. Jenkins returned up-stairs, whither Annette had
-preceded her, and Thornton Carey led the way into the dining-room,
-where the three sat in profound silence, interrupted after the
-interval of a few minutes by Mrs. Jenkins, who entered the room with a
-very pale face, and addressed Thornton Carey.</p>
-
-<p>'She will see you, sir; she is just getting up, and Annette is
-dressing her as fast as she can. But--I hope you won't be angry, sir,
-or think it was my fault--I gave my message as matter-of-fact as could
-be, and the curtain was between me and her, so she could not see my
-face; but the very moment she heard you wanted to see her at this hour
-of the morning, she took fright. I suppose it was because she had not
-had the English letters that she expected, and that disappointment had
-told upon her nerves, and helped to make her suspicious. She said she
-knew there was something wrong. &quot;Go down,&quot; said she, &quot;and say I will
-see him. Bring him up to the boudoir, and let him tell me whatever I
-have got to hear and bear.&quot; Not another word, sir, but she is as white
-as a corpse.'</p>
-
-<p>Thornton Carey had started up before Mrs. Jenkins had got through her
-first sentence, and turned a face of wild distress upon the other two.</p>
-
-<p>'It cannot be helped,' said Bryan Duval, 'and it is better so. Go up
-with the good woman at once--for God's sake get it over.'</p>
-
-<p>He, too, rose as he spoke, and turning abruptly towards the
-chimneypiece, laid his arms upon it, and hid his face in them.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Montressor sat profoundly still, but the description her sister
-had just given of Helen might have been repeated of her--she, too, was
-as pale as a corpse.</p>
-
-<p>Thornton Carey and Mrs. Jenkins went up-stairs without exchanging a
-single word. The door of Helen's boudoir opened in the corridor
-outside her bedroom. Mrs. Jenkins merely threw it open in passing, and
-the young man went in, while she entered the bedroom by the other
-door. No sound reached his strained ear for the few minutes during
-which he waited. At their expiration Helen came in. She wore a white
-muslin dressing-gown, and her hair was simply brushed behind her ears,
-and hung loose upon her shoulders. As she came through the door of her
-bedroom into the boudoir, she faced Thornton Carey directly, and her
-first glance at him told her that her fears had been prophetic--that
-he had bad news to tell.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4>END OF VOL. II.</h4>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h5>LONDON:<br>
-ROBSON AND SONS, PRINTERS, PANCRAS ROAD, N.W.</h5>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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