In a state of mind bordering as closely on frenzy as was possible in so very cold and calculating a nature, Conseltine made his way to the neighbouring village of Cor-dale, where, in a disreputable inn bearing the pretentious title ‘Hotel,’ his confederate Feagus was waiting the issue of events. He found the worthy seated in a parlour leading off the main chamber, or taproom, playing cards with the landlord, a truculent-looking ruffian in shirt-sleeves.
As Conseltine entered, Feagus looked up with a grin, but, seeing at a glance by the expression of Conseltine’s face that something unusual had occurred, he threw down his cards and rose to his feet.
‘Business before pleasure, Pat Linney,’ he said. ‘Here’s a client, good luck to him! Will ye be seated, Mr. Conseltine?’
‘No, no,’ was the reply. ‘Come out into the fresh air; this place is stifling’—as indeed it was, from the combined effects of bad ventilation, bad tobacco, and bad whiskey.
‘What’s the matter now?’ sharply demanded the lawyer, as they stood together in the open street. An Irish ‘mist’ was falling from skies dark with heavy clouds, and the prospect all around the few miserable huts which constituted the ‘village’ was miserable in the extreme.
In a few hurried words Conseltine recounted the facts of the interview’ with Peebles.
‘So that’s it, is it?’ cried the lawyer, scowling savagely. ‘If I’d been in your place, I’d have coaxed the ould villain into some convanient corner, and knocked him on the head.’
‘Nonsense!’ said Conseltine.
‘Nonsense, ye call it?’ snapped Feagus, showing his teeth like a savage dog about to bite. ‘When you’re cooling your heels in gaol ye’ll pipe to a different tune.’
‘And you?’
‘Don’t couple my name with yours in that connection, Conseltine. I forbid ye. My hands are clane, and the only thing on my conscience is that I didn’t inform against ye.’
Conseltine’s face was livid with anger, as the other continued:
‘And it’s nice of ye to bring me put into the wet to talk with me, as if I wasn’t a dacent man, except for my dealing with the likes of you. I’m tired of doing dirty work for one that hasn’t the brains of a brent goose, or the pluck of a louse—I am, sir! How will ye get out of it all? tell me that.’
‘We sink or swim together,’ answered Conseltine. ‘I didn’t come here to listen to abuse. I want your advice.’
‘Then come in to the fireside,’ snarled Feagus, moving towards the inn.
‘No! Can’t you understand that something must be done at once? That old fool is against us, so is Blake; and when Desmond Macartney hears that we’re concerned in his mother’s death, he’ll never rest till he’s hunted us down. Come away with me to Blake’s at once, and see what can be done with him.’
For some time Feagus was obdurate, but at last he listened to his companion’s arguments, and agreed to accompany him to Blake’s Hall. The way thither led by a track across the open moor or ‘mountain,’ and, after refreshing himself with one stiff tumbler of Jamieson at the inn, Feagus followed Conseltine through the drizzling rain.
A dreary day, a dreary prospect. The ground was covered with a soft, soaked blanket of mud, moss, and heather, and low, gray vapours were trailing on every side across the rain-washed hills. Not one ray of sunlight broke the gloom, but far away to seaward moved a white mass like smoke, ever shifting and changing. The air was strangely still, for the rain was too thin and mist-like to produce the slightest sound.
It was a miserable walk of three Irish miles from the village of Cordale to the valley inhabited by Blake. The two men hastened along in gloomy silence until they had covered half the distance. Then Feagus paused with an oath, and looked fiercely into the pale, determined face of his companion.
‘I’m a fool to follow ye!’ he cried. ‘I’d be a wiser man if I took the car to Sligo, and left ye here to fight the devils you’ve raised.’
‘I tell you that we stand or fall together,’ said Conseltine.
‘That’s a lie! If I was an accessory before the fact, I can plade insufficiency of motive, and turn Queen’s evidence. What d’ye say to that, now?’
Conseltine’s face went a shade whiter, and its expression a shade uglier, as he glanced down at Feagus, and then surveyed the gloomy prospect surrounding him. For the moment his impulse was to spring upon his accomplice, and strangle him then and there; but Feagus, though small, was wiry, and fierce as a wild cat, and would have taken a great deal of killing. Momentary as the impulse was, it expressed itself clearly on his countenance, and was at once understood and appreciated by Feagus, who said with a savage and spiteful grin:
‘Wouldn’t ye like to get rid of me now, as ye got rid of poor Moya Macartney? So I’m a thorn in your side, Dick Conseltine? By the powers, I’ll be a bigger thorn yet, if ye don’t mind what you’re after!’
‘You’re drunk,’ returned Conseltine, ‘and you talk like a child. Come along!’
And he walked slowly on.
‘A child, am I, and drunk?’ muttered Feagus, irresolute whether to follow or turn back. ‘Well, I’m neither too young nor too drunk to guess what game you’re after, my fine gintleman. If I’m not before ye, ’tis you that will be blowing the gaff, and denouncing me, to save your own skin. So I won’t leave ye yet awhile, I’m thinking.’
He followed Conseltine at a short distance, grumbling and cursing at every footstep of the way. From time to time Conseltine glanced back to assure himself that he was following.
At last, soaked to the skin and splashed with mud, they came in view of Blake’s Hall. By this time the rain had almost ceased, but above the heights which rose seaward, beyond the flat valley in which the Hall lay, a great mass of vaporous cumuli, black and ominous, hung like a pall. Between this mass and the hill summits was a white space filled with smoke-like vapour, with gleams of shimmering silver. The silence had grown deeper, but when the slightest sound arose it travelled with startling distinctness for miles. Here and there, between the valley and the hills, were scattered cottages, bright patches of green pasture, and clumps of woodland. From these, at intervals, came the lowing of cattle, the crowing of a cock, the cry of a solitary human voice—each and all of which seemed to make the silence more intense.
Down to the cottage, or hall, went the two men, only to find that they had come upon a useless errand. The door stood open, but when they entered there was no sign of anybody within. Tired with his long walk, Feagus threw himself on a stool, and, lighting his pipe, began smoking furiously, while Conseltine, returning to the door, searched the prospect in vain for any trace of the man he sought.
A hundred yards from the threshold ran the river, a narrow and shallow stream in ordinary weather, but now broadened and deepened by the rain. It was boiling along at lightning speed, stained deep brown by the clay and peat of the moorlands whence it flowed. The stepping-stones at the ford, by which one gained the road to Castle Fitzpatrick, were covered, and to cross at all a man would have had to wade nearly waist-deep, at the risk of being carried away by the current.
Like a man lost in thought, Conseltine walked over to the bank, and stood looking at the water. His mind was in as great a tumult as the raging stream. All his plans had failed, the whole world seemed leagued against him, and he was now full of a nameless dread, a horror of discovery, of punishment, and of the accompanying shame. Recent events had developed everything that was harsh and even savage in his nature. He had passed from one crime to another, till the blackest of all crimes cast its shadow on his soul; not that he felt any pity for the victim of his evil deed—his dominant feeling was one of fierce rage that the deed had been done in vain. How to act now he knew not. His only hope was in the silence of Peebles, whose regard for the honour of the family he well knew. His greatest fear was of Desmond, should the Squireen learn that his mother’s life had been attempted.
He stood so long brooding there, that Feagus grew impatient, and came to the door to look after him.
‘What the devil are ye doing there?’ shouted the lawyer.
Conseltine looked round, and made no reply. At that moment a strange sound, like the faint shock of an earthquake, came from the distant hills. Both men instinctively glanced thither, and saw, stretching from the black mass or pile of cloud behind the hill-tops, a silhouette of solid black, in the form of an enormous waterspout, its apex in the clouds, its base hidden somewhere in the unseen ocean. Even as they gazed it burst, and for a moment it seemed as if night had come, the whole skies being wrapt in blackness, and the rain falling in a deluge, lashing the ground.
‘Powers of heaven!’ cried Feagus, clinging to the lintel of the open door, and feeling, almost for the first time in his life, a ghastly sense of fear. Before he could realize his own dread, Conseltine stood by him, panting for breath.
‘Look yonder!’ Conseltine gasped, gripping his companion by the arm, and pointing up the mountains.
Light now broke from the clouds—gloomy light with livid rays; and it fell full on a great green stretch of bogland covering the mountain side. The mountain itself seemed rocking as if with earthquake, and simultaneously the bog itself, like thick and slimy lava, seemed to be moving downward!
‘Holy saints defend us!’ cried Feagus.
As he spoke, the sound of human cries came from the distance, and figures were seen wildly moving to and fro. A white cottage of stone rocked, crumbled like sugar in water, and disappeared from sight, washed over by the moving earth.
Tempest on sea and earthquake are dreadful enough, but there is no phenomenon more portentous than that of the moving bog, when the very earth seems to become liquid lava, shifting and changing, obliterating landmarks, and swallowing up whatever stands in the way of its fatal course. Such was the phenomenon the two men were now contemplating—a whole hillside shifting from its place and moving downward like a great slow, ever-broadening stream, engulfing rocks, trees, and human dwellings, bearing fragments of these in its course, urging stones and rocks along like a river in full flood, now halting and pausing to destroy obstacles, again rolling relentlessly on.
In the present case, it was fed with the rain of a thousand torrents, which gushed along with it and hastened it along.
Louder and shriller cries soon broke upon the air, and groups of men, women, and children were seen flying down the valley, some driving before them cattle as terror-stricken as themselves, many bearing blankets, bedding, and domestic utensils, all moaning and shrieking in fear. Very slowly, but surely and terribly, the bog crept behind them, devouring and destroying, yet now and then, as if in caprice, leaving some dwelling or clump of trees untouched, like an island in a slimy, moving pool.
As emotion spreads from one to another in a crowd of living beings, so does trouble grow by some elemental sympathy of nature among inanimate things. The terror and the tumult of the scene we are describing seemed to communicate itself to the whole landscape. The very river, flowing from the opposite direction, and winding away seaward by the base of the mountains, seemed to boil up ominously, surging tumultuously along. A mile away there was a wooden bridge, over which many of the panic-stricken peasants had now crossed, gaining the open vale beyond. Suddenly, the supports of this bridge yielded to the fury of the waters; the bridge, covered with sheep and cattle, with men and women about to follow, tottered, yielded, and was swept away with its load.
All this time Feagus and Conseltine had stood fascinated, forgetful of themselves in the extraordinary scene they were contemplating; but now, as the excitement culminated, they realized their own danger.
‘We must get out of this,’ said Feagus. ‘If we don’t cross the ford, we’ll be buried alive!’
He flew rather than ran towards the river, and reached the place of crossing, only to stand in abject terror above a boiling torrent.
‘Saints save us!’ he groaned. ‘No man can cross here.’
He turned trembling, and saw Conseltine standing by his side, pale but comparatively calm.
‘What’s to be done?’ gasped Feagus.
Conseltine smiled grimly.
‘Plunge in, man, wade to the other side, or swim to it! It’s not twenty yards from bank to bank.’
‘I should drown!’ cried the lawyer.
‘Better that than live to betray the man that has fed and kept you so many years. You talked of turning Queen’s evidence—go and do it!’
Feagus recoiled.
‘I didn’t mane it, Conseltine—’Twas only my little joke. For God’s sake, tell me what’s to be done!’
‘I neither know nor care,’ returned the other. ‘Perhaps it’s God’s vengeance upon us for what we’ve done. Are you afraid to die?’
Without replying, Feagus looked round in despair. The whole mountain-side seemed now descending on that portion of the valley where he stood, while the river wound round and round, between Blake’s Hall and the open moor by which they had gained the lonely vale. There was only one way of escape—to gain the opposite bank of the river.
‘Tell me this—if we escape out of this alive, do you mean to stand by me or to turn against me?’
‘To stand by ye, to stand by ye!’ cried Feagus.
‘Then strip off your coat, and follow me!’ said Conseltine. ‘I’m going across. If the water takes me off my feet, I shall swim to the point below yonder—the current swirls that way, and it’s shallow close to the bank. You’d better come—it’s your only chance.’
Suiting the action to the word, Conseltine took off his outer garments, and stood in trousers and shirtsleeves; then, stooping down, he unlaced his mud-clogged boots, and threw them off. Trembling with fear, Feagus followed his example.
Conseltine crept down to the water’s edge, and leaning forward, tried the depth with a heavy blackthorn stick which he carried.
‘We can do it,’ he said. ‘Mind you stand firm against the current, or you’re a dead man.’
Feagus groaned and prayed. All his natural courage had deserted him, and he looked an abject picture of human wretchedness.
‘Stop a minute,’ he cried; ‘I’m out o’ breath!’
‘Stop if you please,’ returned Conseltine contemptuously. ‘I’m going across!’
Then steadying himself for the struggle, and using his stick as a partial support, he stepped into the stream, and in a moment was fighting with the current. With slow, long strides he moved from the bank, his feet set upon the slippery bottom. For several yards the water reached no higher than his knees, but gradually deepened; it at last surged wildly to his waist; but he was a tall man of unusual strength, and nature favoured him. For a few moments, as he stood in mid-stream, it seemed as if he must be swept away, but, facing the current and leaning forward, he held his own—then, putting out all his strength, he leaped rather than walked until he gained the shallower water on the farther side. He had passed safely, and stood soaked and dripping, but secure, upon the further bank.
Feagus, who had watched his progress with wondering eyes, but with an increasing sense of hope, still stood crouching by the riverside.
‘Come,’ cried Conseltine, waving his stick and laughing; ‘it’s easier than I thought!’
‘Your staff! Throw me your staff!’ shrieked Feagus, and glancing round he saw the bog descending like a snake towards Blake’s Hall. Then an extraordinary phenomenon took place. The bog, meeting the river just where the bridge had fallen, blocked it like an enormous dam and then crawled like a monster over it. The result was instantaneous. The river, arrested in its course, began to swell up, deepen, and push backward on itself. There was not a moment to be lost if it was to be crossed again.
‘Throw me your staff, for the love of God!’ cried Feagus.
Conseltine hesitated for a moment, then cast the stick across the flood with all his might; it fell close to Feagus, who gripped it eagerly, and then, with a cry, plunged forward into the water. His progress was at first comparatively easy, but as the water deepened, it became more and more difficult to keep his foothold. With face set hard and eyes protruding, he struggled on.
After watching him for a moment, Conseltine ran from the bank, followed the side of the stream, and stood on the point of land of which he had spoken, some forty yards below. Standing there, he waited for results.
Straining every nerve, and praying aloud, the lawyer reached the middle of the stream, and paused for a moment, gasping for breath. Then the roar of the flood, and the rush of water and wind, seemed to blind and confuse him, and he seemed giving way. But with a mighty effort he kept his feet, and even then all might have gone well with him but for an accidental impediment—the half-submerged trunk of a tree, which rolled over and over, struck the staff from his hands and took him off his feet. With a shriek, he was swept headlong into the flood, and disappeared.
Only for a few moments—then, haggard and ghastly, his head re-emerged, drifting towards the point where Conseltine stood. A good swimmer, he struck boldly out, and was helped by the current. All he was conscious of was the rushing water around him, and the figure of Conseltine coming nearer and nearer.
As Conseltine had explained, the current swept right to the point, close to which there was some shallow water. Strong and wiry as a terrier, Feagus made his way thither, fighting for his life. He was close to the point, his feet touched solid ground, and he could see Conseltine close to him, looking calmly down, when his force foiled him and he was whirled round like a straw.
‘Save me!’ he shrieked, reaching out his hands.
By wading forward, and gripping the hands so outstretched, Conseltine, with little or no danger to himself, could have drawn him into the shallows, but, instead of so doing, he looked at the miserable man and made no effort to assist him. The opportunity of the moment passed, and with a shriek of despair Feagus was swept away.
Pale as death, Conseltine watched him until he disappeared altogether, and then, pale as a spectre, walked up the riverside. He was safe now, and the only man who could denounce him and bring any certain proof of his guilt was silenced for ever.
‘The drunken fool!’ he muttered. ‘That threat has cost him his life. Had he lived, he would have done what he threatened to do—so he’s better where he is!’
He looked back across the river. Blake’s Hall stood untouched, but all around it was the dark mass of the moving bog, still creeping across the vale. Where the bridge had fallen, a great lake of water, fed by the river, was spreading and spreading. The rain still fell heavily, adding to the general desolation.
He turned and hastened till he reached the road leading to the village and Castle of Kilpatrick. As he strode along, he passed numbers of men, women, and children hurrying in the same direction, but spoke to none and was heeded by none, until he was close upon the village, when he came suddenly face to face with his son.
‘Father!’ cried Richard, aghast at the wild figure before him. ‘I’ve been looking for you everywhere. What has happened?’
In a few brief words, Conseltine related what had occurred—the search for Blake, the strange convulsion of nature, his own escape, and the death of Feagus. Then Richard, on his side, had something to tell which made Conseltine sick with rage and dread. What that ‘something’ was will be known in the sequel. The result of the communication was that father and son made no attempt to return to Kilpatrick Castle, but within a few hours of their meeting had gained the nearest railway-station and were on their way to Dublin.
It was not till Blake was half-way on the road to Maguire’s cottage that the personal significance to himself of the errand with which Peebles had entrusted him dawned upon him. His first impulse was to tell the driver to return to the Castle, and to request Peebles to find another messenger.
‘By the Saints, but ’tis a fine business I’m in for—a two-mile ride with Moya Macartney and Desmond—and ’tis a comfortable quarter of an hour I’ll be after having.’
His habitual recklessness prevailed, however, aided by the thought that, as the bearer of the message of peace, he might have a better chance of pardon for past peccadilloes. He arrived at Maguire’s cottage, which had a lonely and deserted aspect, in the bright mid-day sunshine. No curl of smoke from the chimney announced the presence of an occupant, and the door was fast shut. It opened at his knock, and disclosed Moya.
‘God save all here!’ said Blake, with his customary swagger rather broadened.
‘Amen to that, Patrick Blake,’ said Moya calmly, ‘for some of us need His mercy. What is it ye want here?’
‘Just yourself,’ said Blake. ‘I’m from the Castle with a message from Mr. Peebles. Ye’re asked for there.’
Moya turned a shade paler.
‘Is he there—Desmond?’
‘I’m going on to Doolan’s farm to take him,’ said Blake. ‘I’ve the carriage waitin’ here.’ He hesitated for a moment, and then added, with more show of feeling than was common with him: ‘I’m a quare sort o’ messenger to send on this errand, and God knows ye’re little likely to relish my society. It’s no sort o’ use in the world to say I’m sorry, or to offer apologies for what’s past, but I hope it’s good news I’m bringin’ ye. In fact, Iknowit’s good news.’ He took off his hat with a gesture that was almost dignified. ‘Will ye do me the honour to accompany me, Lady Kilpatrick?’
Moya drew her shawl about her face and walked to the carriage, the door of which Blake held open for her. He mounted beside the driver, and another ten minutes saw them at the farm. Desmond was in the yard, seated on a bench and engaged in splicing a fishing-rod. At the sound of the approaching wheels he checked the pensive whistle with which he accompanied his work; and at the sight of Blake on the box of the carriage, he dropped the rod to the ground and strode forward at a quickened pace and with heightened colour. Blake descended and confronted him.
‘Tell me this, Mr. Blake,’ said the boy; ‘I’m in a bit of a quandary. There is a man I know who’s a villain, but he’s old enough to be my father, and I hear that he’s a clergyman, so I can neither call him out nor lay a stick across his back. What would ye do in my place?’
‘Faith,’ answered Blake, ‘’tis a troublesome question. ’Twill take thinking over. In the mean time, I’ve news for ye. Ye’re wanted at the Castle.’
‘Am I?’ said Desmond. ‘And who wants me?’
‘Mr. Peebles.’
‘Then tell him,’ said Desmond, ‘that when I enter my father’s doors again ’twill be either to find my mother there, or with her on my arm.’
‘Sure,’ said Blake, ‘she’s in the carriage at this minute, and going to the Castle with ye. Your troubles are over, Desmond—and hers.’
‘Youhave a right to congratulate me on that, haven’t ye?’ asked the boy with scornful anger.
‘Faith! and ifIhaven’t, who has?’ replied Blake unabashed. ‘And look here, Desmond Conseltine; in regard to the matter ye mentioned just now, sure there’ll be no difficulty whatever. ’Tis not myself that’ll take refuge behind a black coat and a white choker. Twenty paces or a six-foot ring will do for me, and so, my service to ye. ’Twould ease your heart and end the bad blood between us, maybe. But there’s things more important than divarsions o’ that sort on hand.’
Moya’s white face appeared at the carriage window, and Desmond, with a final angry look at Blake, joined her. Blake remounted the box and gave the word for home. The coachman, who had received his instructions from Peebles, made a detour in order to approach the Castle from the back. Moya trembled like a leaf as they approached the house, and clung tight to Desmond’s hand.
They found Peebles standing bareheaded at the back door, waiting to receive them.
‘Moya,’ he said—‘I beg your pardon, Lady Kilpatrick, but the old name comes easiest—his lordship has asked for Desmond. He kens that he is his lawful son, and the way he took the news was just joyful to see. He repents his past sin, he’ll welcome the boy back to his hearth and home. But he doesna ken—I hadna the courage to tell him—that you are living. I thought ’twould come best from Desmond. Desmond, lad, be gentle wi’ him! We a’ hae much to forgive each other, and—he’s your father, man, when a’ is said and done. Mak’ your peace wi’ him, and then break it to him as gently as ye can.
He’s in the library. I’ll get your mother upstairs cannily into the anteroom, to be at hand. Eh?’ he cried, with a quiver in his voice and a flash of moisture in his eyes which did more than all his entreaties to soften Desmond. ‘Hech, laddie,’ but this is a grand day! I can lay down my old bones in thankfulness, praising God for his mercies. It’s a grand day this, and I never thought to live to see the like!’
The old man fairly broke down. Desmond took his hand and pressed it, with the tears in his own eyes, and it was in a much kindlier mood than that in which he had entered the house that he mounted the stairs leading to the library. He stood for a minute outside the door. His breath was heavy, and the beating of his heart filled his ears like the pulse of a muffled drum. When he knocked, Kilpatrick’s voice answered from within, bidding him enter.
The old man was standing near the window, with the light streaming on his face, which was very worn and haggard. Desmond thought even that his hair had whitened a little since he last saw him, though so short a time had elapsed. Kilpatrick advanced a pace or two with outstretched hands, and then paused with bent head. A strange mingling of many nameless and some nameable emotions welled up in Desmond’s heart—memories of a thousand kindnesses and generosities, pity for the proud man humbled—and before he knew it his arms were round the old man’s neck, and they were mingling their tears together. Kilpatrick was terribly agitated.
‘My son, my son!’ was all he could say for a time. He repeated the words again and again, each time more passionately, as if at this moment their wonderful significance had become dear to him for the first time. ‘You forgive me, Desmond?’
The boy took the gray head between his hands, and kissed his father on the forehead, wetting his face with his tears.
‘It is more than I deserve,’ said the old man. ‘I was a scoundrel, a villain! I broke your mother’s heart, Desmond, the sweetest, purest heart that ever beat. Ye can’t forgive me for that! Nothing can ever take that load from my heart, nothing, till I die and she asks God to pardon me.’
‘Father!’ said Desmond. ‘I have strange news for you. Are you well and strong enough to bear it?
‘Nothing can hurt me now,’ replied Kilpatrick.
‘You don’t know what it is,’ replied Desmond. ‘I’m afraid ’twill be a dreadful shock to you at first, but a happy one after, I hope.’
‘Well,’ said the father, with a faint touch of his old quickness of temper, ‘what is it? Speak out, my boy, and tell me. Some scrape you’ve got into, eh? Well, that’s forgiven before you tell me.’
‘You regret the past?’ asked Desmond. ‘You would make amends for it to the utmost extent in your power?’
‘Iwillmake amends for it, Desmond. There is nothing you can ask me I will not do, no burden that you can lay upon me that I will not gladly bear.’
‘I hope,’ said Desmond, after a short pause, ‘that you won’t think what I’m going to tell ye is a burden. Faith, ’tis hard to know where to begin! Supposing—mind, I only say supposing—supposing my mother were not dead at all, supposing she were alive, and came back here, would you make the same amends to her as you say you’ll make to me?’ ‘You—you torture me!’ cried Kilpatrick. ‘Why rake up these painful recollections? Why ask questions of this sort, when they can do no good? Every day of my life, for eighteen years past, I have repented the wrong I did. God knows, if it were possible, I would repair it.’
‘Ye mean that?’ cried Desmond.
‘God knows I do!’ said Kilpatrick, ‘but of what avail is it to speak of such things now?’
‘Of more avail than you may think, father. Strange things have happened this last day or two.’
Kilpatrick searched his son’s face with distending eyes.
‘Desmond! For God’s sake, tell me what you mean!’
‘I mean,’ said Desmond, taking his father’s hand, ‘that God has been very good to us both, father. If I tell it to you too suddenly, forgive me—I don’t know how to break it properly. My mother is alive!’
Kilpatrick staggered as if the words had shot him.
‘Alive!’ he gasped. ‘Moya Macartney alive!’
‘Yes, sure,’ said Desmond, ‘and in a little while she’ll be here, in Ireland.’
Kilpatrick sank into a seat, and sat trembling like a man ague-struck.
‘In fact,’ said Desmond, ‘she is in Ireland already, and on her way here.’
The old man sprang to his feet.
‘She is here—she is in the house!’
Desmond walked to the ante-room door, and made a sign. Moya advanced into the library, and let slip the shawl from her face.
‘God of Heaven!’ cried Kilpatrick, falling to his knees. ‘Moya!’
She stood still, looking down on him, the broad light falling on her wrinkled face and whitening hair. Kilpatrick bent his head beneath her gaze, an awful sob broke from his throat. Desmond closed the door, leaving them together: the meeting was too sacred to be witnessed even by him.
A long time had gone by, and the shadow of the Castle had blotted out the shaft of sunshine which had spread its glory of golden green on the lawn when the carriage had reached the Castle. Desmond still sat alone as a light step crossed the floor, and a soft arm was slipped round his neck. He looked up and saw Dulcie.
‘You needn’t say anything, Desmond,’ she said. ‘Peebles has told me. I am so happy, dear, for your sake.’
He drew her to his side.
‘You loved me, Dulcie, when I was the poor Squireen: will you love me the less now that I’m to be the next Lord Kilpatrick?’
‘Not less,’ answered Dulcie, ‘nor more. Sure,’ she added, with the most musical of brogues, ‘’twould be impossible!’