Volume Three—Chapter Seven.Haunted.“Leo, how could you do so foolish a thing?” said Mary Salis, a few days later, as she sat by her sister’s couch.“What do you mean?” said Leo feebly.“You know what I mean, dear. Is life so valueless that in a rash moment you would have cast it away?”“Do you suppose, then, that I tried to take my life?” cried Leo, in a low, weak voice.“Don’t let’s talk about it,” said Mary, with a shudder; “unless it is in sorrow.”“Why was it placed there?” said Leo, catching her sister’s wrist.“Placed there?”“Yes. Was it Hartley’s doing?”“Hartley’s doing?”“Yes; the glass standing on my table as if it held water. Did Hartley do it, Mary?”“Is your mind wandering, dear?” said Mary, laying her cool hand upon her sister’s white forehead.“No; I’m as calm as you are. Hartley must have placed it ready for me—to get rid of his wicked sister, I suppose.”“Leo! Don’t speak like that. How can you, dear? Hartley place a glass for you!”“Yes. I thought it was water, and I drank it.”“Hush, Leo, dear!”“You don’t believe me! Very well; I cannot help it. The stuff was placed ready for me on the table, and I drank it.”Mary sighed, but she kept her cool, soft hand pressed upon her sister’s brow.“Why do you stop here?” said Leo, at last.“Because I wish to talk to you—to try and be of some help.”There was a silence which lasted some minutes, and then Leo turned her fierce dark eyes sharply on her sister.“You have kept back his letters,” she said sternly.“His letters!”“Yes; he has written to me since I have been ill.”Mary shook her head, and Leo gazed full in her eyes to satisfy herself that this was the truth.“Has he sent to ask how I am?”“No.”Leo closed her eyes, and lay back with her lips moving slightly, while Mary watched and wondered whether North would come and see her sister again, and whether any fresh eccentricity had been noticed.Had she known all she would have been less calm.That morning Cousin Thompson had come down, gone straight to the Manor, and saluted Mrs Milt.“Doctor in his room?”“No, sir; master’s ill.”“Not seriously?” said Cousin Thompson, with thoughts of being next of kin.“I don’t know, sir,” said the housekeeper. “Master certainly don’t seem as I should like to see him.”“Dear me!” said Cousin Thompson thoughtfully. “That’s bad, Mrs Milt; that’s bad. However, I’ll go up and see him.”The housekeeper shook her head.“What do you mean, Mrs Milt?”“I mean that I don’t think he’ll see you, sir.”“Oh, stuff and nonsense! Go and tell him I’m here.”The housekeeper went away, and came back in five minutes, looking troubled.“Master says you must excuse him, sir. That you are to please ask for what you want, but he is too unwell to see you.”“Dear me, Mrs Milt; I’m sorry to hear this,” said the solicitor, with a look of commiseration. “But, then, he is a doctor, and must know his symptoms. Has he had any one to see him?”“No, sir.”“Then he is not very bad. I mean no doctor?”“No, sir; no doctor.”“I didn’t mean solicitor, Mrs Milt,” said Cousin Thompson, laughing unpleasantly. “Of course, if he required a solicitor he would send for me, eh?”“I suppose so, sir.”“He has not sent for a solicitor, of course—to make his will, eh?” jocularly. “No, no; of course not.”“Perhaps you had better ask master about such things as that, sir,” said Mrs Milt, with asperity. “I know nothing about that.”“You do, you hag!” said Cousin Thompson to himself: “you do, or you wouldn’t be so eager to disclaim all knowledge of such an act—and deed. This must be seen to, for I can’t afford to have you coming between me and my rights, madam. This must be seen to.”“What would you like to take, sir?”“Anything, my dear Mrs Milt, anything. Too busy a man to trouble about food. I’m going to see a client, and while I’m gone perhaps you will get a snack ready for me.”“You will not sleep here, I suppose?”“But I will sleep here, Mrs Milt,” said Cousin Thompson, smiling. “I do not feel as if I could go back to town without being able to take with me the knowledge that my cousin is in better health.”“And not at the mercy of thieves and scheming people,” he muttered, as he went off to see Mrs Berens, as he put it, “reshares.”North’s bedroom bell rang violently as Cousin Thompson disappeared down the road, and Mrs Milt went up to the door and knocked.“Has that man gone?” came from within.“Yes, sir.”“Bring up the brandy.”Mrs Milt uttered a sigh.“May I bring you up a little broth, sir, too?” she whispered, with her face close to the panel. “You’ve had nothing to-day, sir, and you must be growing faint.”“Bring up the brandy!” roared North fiercely. “Do you hear?”“And him to speak to me like that!” sighed the housekeeper, as she went down for the spirit decanter; “and for him, too, who never took anything but tea for days together, to be asking for brandy in this reckless way. Five times have I filled up the spirit decanter this week.”She returned with the brandy and knocked.No answer.“I’ve brought the brandy, sir.”“Set it down.”“Can I speak to you, sir?”There was a fierce stamp of the foot which made the jug rattle in the basin on the washstand, and Mrs Milt set down the decanter close to the door, and went down again, raising her apron to her eyes.“I wouldn’t have any one know how bad he is for the world,” she sighed; and, resisting the temptation to stand and watch the opening of the door, the old lady went into her own room and shut herself in.As the sound of the closing door rose to the upstair rooms, that of North’s chamber was cautiously opened and a hand was thrust out to go on feeling about till it came in contact with the decanter, which it seized and bore in, the door being reclosed as the hand and arm disappeared.The room within was darkened, and the figure of Horace North looked shadowy and strange as he walked hastily to and fro, now here, now there, as some wild animal restlessly parades the sides of his cage.He held the decanter in his hand, and seemed in no hurry to use the spirit; but at last he set it down upon the dressing-table, drew the curtain a little on one side, and went to the washstand, from which he brought the water-bottle and tumbler.As he poured out some of the spirit into a glass, the light shone full upon his face, and he blinked as if his eyes were dazzled by the glare.The decanter made a chattering noise against the glass till he rested his trembling hand upon the side, ceased pouring, and closed his eyes for a few moments to rest.As he opened them again his gaze fell upon his reflection in the dressing-glass upon the table, and he stood fixed to the spot, glaring at the wild-looking object before him, with its sunken eyes, wrinkled brow, and horrified, hunted, and frightened look.He had seen such a face as that hundreds of times in the case of patients suffering from some form of mania, generally in connection with drink, and it petrified him for the time, for his brain refused to accept the fact that he was gazing at his own reflection.It was a strange scene in that darkened room, with the one broad band of light shining in through the half-drawn curtain, falling upon that haggard and ghastly face gazing at its counterpart, each displaying a haunted look of horror—a dread so terrible that it explained North’s next action, which was to let fall decanter and glass with a crash upon the floor, before slowly backing away right to the furthest portion of the room, where he stood against the wall, panting heavily.The curtain fell back, as if an invisible hand had held it for a time, and once more the room was in semi-gloom, while the faint, sick odour of the brandy gradually diffused itself through the place till it reached the trembling man’s nostrils and made him shudder.“Like the smell of that place—like the smell of that place! Is this to go on for ever?”Again he determinedly argued the question, and felt that, failing to arrest the decay of Luke Candlish, he had imbibed the essence of the man which, needing a fleshy body in which to live, had possessed him, so that his fate seemed to be that he must evermore lead a double life, in which there was one soul under the control of his well-schooled brain; the other wild, independent, and for whose words and actions he must respond.“I cannot bear it,” he muttered, as he stood back against the wall, as far from the faint light as the room would allow. “It must be like madness in others’ eyes, and yet I am sane. I feel like a man haunted by a shadow, and yet it is a fancy—a terrible waking dream. But I will—Heaven help me!—I will look at it from a scientific point of view; say it is so—that I have arrested spirit and not body. Well, what then? Is there anything to fear?“No; and I will not fear it,” he muttered, “any more than I would the dead; but,” he added, after a pause, “it is the living I fear. I cannot explain—I cannot control—this horror—bah! this essence—when it speaks, and the living give me the blame. No, I cannot, I dare not, explain. Who would believe? No one. They would say I was mad.”A gentle tap at the door, but no response. A louder tapping, and no answer.“Mr Thompson, sir, says he must see you on very particular business.”North heard the words. His crafty, keen-eyed cousin was there. How could he see him now? It was impossible. He had declined before, and he was persisting again.“Will you come down and see him, sir?”“No: don’t do that, Horace, if you are ill. Open the door and I’ll come and chat to you there.”No sound in reply; but directly after there was a loud noise of mocking laughter from within the room, a boisterous shout, and a partly-heard speech.“Oh, my dear master!” cried Mrs Milt. “Ah!” ejaculated Cousin Thompson, across whose imagination glided the fair prospect of the beautiful Manor House estate, and his eyes glistened as he said softly, “I’m afraid he is very ill.”
“Leo, how could you do so foolish a thing?” said Mary Salis, a few days later, as she sat by her sister’s couch.
“What do you mean?” said Leo feebly.
“You know what I mean, dear. Is life so valueless that in a rash moment you would have cast it away?”
“Do you suppose, then, that I tried to take my life?” cried Leo, in a low, weak voice.
“Don’t let’s talk about it,” said Mary, with a shudder; “unless it is in sorrow.”
“Why was it placed there?” said Leo, catching her sister’s wrist.
“Placed there?”
“Yes. Was it Hartley’s doing?”
“Hartley’s doing?”
“Yes; the glass standing on my table as if it held water. Did Hartley do it, Mary?”
“Is your mind wandering, dear?” said Mary, laying her cool hand upon her sister’s white forehead.
“No; I’m as calm as you are. Hartley must have placed it ready for me—to get rid of his wicked sister, I suppose.”
“Leo! Don’t speak like that. How can you, dear? Hartley place a glass for you!”
“Yes. I thought it was water, and I drank it.”
“Hush, Leo, dear!”
“You don’t believe me! Very well; I cannot help it. The stuff was placed ready for me on the table, and I drank it.”
Mary sighed, but she kept her cool, soft hand pressed upon her sister’s brow.
“Why do you stop here?” said Leo, at last.
“Because I wish to talk to you—to try and be of some help.”
There was a silence which lasted some minutes, and then Leo turned her fierce dark eyes sharply on her sister.
“You have kept back his letters,” she said sternly.
“His letters!”
“Yes; he has written to me since I have been ill.”
Mary shook her head, and Leo gazed full in her eyes to satisfy herself that this was the truth.
“Has he sent to ask how I am?”
“No.”
Leo closed her eyes, and lay back with her lips moving slightly, while Mary watched and wondered whether North would come and see her sister again, and whether any fresh eccentricity had been noticed.
Had she known all she would have been less calm.
That morning Cousin Thompson had come down, gone straight to the Manor, and saluted Mrs Milt.
“Doctor in his room?”
“No, sir; master’s ill.”
“Not seriously?” said Cousin Thompson, with thoughts of being next of kin.
“I don’t know, sir,” said the housekeeper. “Master certainly don’t seem as I should like to see him.”
“Dear me!” said Cousin Thompson thoughtfully. “That’s bad, Mrs Milt; that’s bad. However, I’ll go up and see him.”
The housekeeper shook her head.
“What do you mean, Mrs Milt?”
“I mean that I don’t think he’ll see you, sir.”
“Oh, stuff and nonsense! Go and tell him I’m here.”
The housekeeper went away, and came back in five minutes, looking troubled.
“Master says you must excuse him, sir. That you are to please ask for what you want, but he is too unwell to see you.”
“Dear me, Mrs Milt; I’m sorry to hear this,” said the solicitor, with a look of commiseration. “But, then, he is a doctor, and must know his symptoms. Has he had any one to see him?”
“No, sir.”
“Then he is not very bad. I mean no doctor?”
“No, sir; no doctor.”
“I didn’t mean solicitor, Mrs Milt,” said Cousin Thompson, laughing unpleasantly. “Of course, if he required a solicitor he would send for me, eh?”
“I suppose so, sir.”
“He has not sent for a solicitor, of course—to make his will, eh?” jocularly. “No, no; of course not.”
“Perhaps you had better ask master about such things as that, sir,” said Mrs Milt, with asperity. “I know nothing about that.”
“You do, you hag!” said Cousin Thompson to himself: “you do, or you wouldn’t be so eager to disclaim all knowledge of such an act—and deed. This must be seen to, for I can’t afford to have you coming between me and my rights, madam. This must be seen to.”
“What would you like to take, sir?”
“Anything, my dear Mrs Milt, anything. Too busy a man to trouble about food. I’m going to see a client, and while I’m gone perhaps you will get a snack ready for me.”
“You will not sleep here, I suppose?”
“But I will sleep here, Mrs Milt,” said Cousin Thompson, smiling. “I do not feel as if I could go back to town without being able to take with me the knowledge that my cousin is in better health.”
“And not at the mercy of thieves and scheming people,” he muttered, as he went off to see Mrs Berens, as he put it, “reshares.”
North’s bedroom bell rang violently as Cousin Thompson disappeared down the road, and Mrs Milt went up to the door and knocked.
“Has that man gone?” came from within.
“Yes, sir.”
“Bring up the brandy.”
Mrs Milt uttered a sigh.
“May I bring you up a little broth, sir, too?” she whispered, with her face close to the panel. “You’ve had nothing to-day, sir, and you must be growing faint.”
“Bring up the brandy!” roared North fiercely. “Do you hear?”
“And him to speak to me like that!” sighed the housekeeper, as she went down for the spirit decanter; “and for him, too, who never took anything but tea for days together, to be asking for brandy in this reckless way. Five times have I filled up the spirit decanter this week.”
She returned with the brandy and knocked.
No answer.
“I’ve brought the brandy, sir.”
“Set it down.”
“Can I speak to you, sir?”
There was a fierce stamp of the foot which made the jug rattle in the basin on the washstand, and Mrs Milt set down the decanter close to the door, and went down again, raising her apron to her eyes.
“I wouldn’t have any one know how bad he is for the world,” she sighed; and, resisting the temptation to stand and watch the opening of the door, the old lady went into her own room and shut herself in.
As the sound of the closing door rose to the upstair rooms, that of North’s chamber was cautiously opened and a hand was thrust out to go on feeling about till it came in contact with the decanter, which it seized and bore in, the door being reclosed as the hand and arm disappeared.
The room within was darkened, and the figure of Horace North looked shadowy and strange as he walked hastily to and fro, now here, now there, as some wild animal restlessly parades the sides of his cage.
He held the decanter in his hand, and seemed in no hurry to use the spirit; but at last he set it down upon the dressing-table, drew the curtain a little on one side, and went to the washstand, from which he brought the water-bottle and tumbler.
As he poured out some of the spirit into a glass, the light shone full upon his face, and he blinked as if his eyes were dazzled by the glare.
The decanter made a chattering noise against the glass till he rested his trembling hand upon the side, ceased pouring, and closed his eyes for a few moments to rest.
As he opened them again his gaze fell upon his reflection in the dressing-glass upon the table, and he stood fixed to the spot, glaring at the wild-looking object before him, with its sunken eyes, wrinkled brow, and horrified, hunted, and frightened look.
He had seen such a face as that hundreds of times in the case of patients suffering from some form of mania, generally in connection with drink, and it petrified him for the time, for his brain refused to accept the fact that he was gazing at his own reflection.
It was a strange scene in that darkened room, with the one broad band of light shining in through the half-drawn curtain, falling upon that haggard and ghastly face gazing at its counterpart, each displaying a haunted look of horror—a dread so terrible that it explained North’s next action, which was to let fall decanter and glass with a crash upon the floor, before slowly backing away right to the furthest portion of the room, where he stood against the wall, panting heavily.
The curtain fell back, as if an invisible hand had held it for a time, and once more the room was in semi-gloom, while the faint, sick odour of the brandy gradually diffused itself through the place till it reached the trembling man’s nostrils and made him shudder.
“Like the smell of that place—like the smell of that place! Is this to go on for ever?”
Again he determinedly argued the question, and felt that, failing to arrest the decay of Luke Candlish, he had imbibed the essence of the man which, needing a fleshy body in which to live, had possessed him, so that his fate seemed to be that he must evermore lead a double life, in which there was one soul under the control of his well-schooled brain; the other wild, independent, and for whose words and actions he must respond.
“I cannot bear it,” he muttered, as he stood back against the wall, as far from the faint light as the room would allow. “It must be like madness in others’ eyes, and yet I am sane. I feel like a man haunted by a shadow, and yet it is a fancy—a terrible waking dream. But I will—Heaven help me!—I will look at it from a scientific point of view; say it is so—that I have arrested spirit and not body. Well, what then? Is there anything to fear?
“No; and I will not fear it,” he muttered, “any more than I would the dead; but,” he added, after a pause, “it is the living I fear. I cannot explain—I cannot control—this horror—bah! this essence—when it speaks, and the living give me the blame. No, I cannot, I dare not, explain. Who would believe? No one. They would say I was mad.”
A gentle tap at the door, but no response. A louder tapping, and no answer.
“Mr Thompson, sir, says he must see you on very particular business.”
North heard the words. His crafty, keen-eyed cousin was there. How could he see him now? It was impossible. He had declined before, and he was persisting again.
“Will you come down and see him, sir?”
“No: don’t do that, Horace, if you are ill. Open the door and I’ll come and chat to you there.”
No sound in reply; but directly after there was a loud noise of mocking laughter from within the room, a boisterous shout, and a partly-heard speech.
“Oh, my dear master!” cried Mrs Milt. “Ah!” ejaculated Cousin Thompson, across whose imagination glided the fair prospect of the beautiful Manor House estate, and his eyes glistened as he said softly, “I’m afraid he is very ill.”
Volume Three—Chapter Eight.Cousin Thompson’s Duty.“Oh, no; it’s nothing at all, sir—nothing at all,” said Mrs Milt hastily; “and I didn’t know you’d come upstairs behind me, sir.”“It was to save you a journey, my dear Mrs Milt,” said Cousin Thompson smoothly. “Yes, I’m afraid he is very ill. A little delirious, I think.”“Delirious, sir? Oh, nonsense! Master’s often like that.”“Indeed!” said Cousin Thompson, in a tone of voice which made the housekeeper wish she had bitten off her tongue before she had committed herself to such a speech. “You heard him utter that laugh?”“Well, surely to goodness, sir, that don’t signify anything. A laugh! I wish I could laugh.”“But he gave a ‘view halloo!’ and said something about a fox.”“Well, really, sir, what if he did? There’s nothing master likes better after a hard week’s work and a lot of anxiety than a gallop after the hounds. It does him good. Why, a doctor wants taking out of himself sometimes, specially one who works as hard as master does. A medical man’s anxiety sometimes is enough to drive him mad.”“Yes, I suppose so,” said Cousin Thompson smoothly. “Hadn’t you better knock again?”“No, sir, I hadn’t,” said Mrs Milt tartly. “I’m quite sure master don’t want to be disturbed.”“But really, my good woman, it seems to me that he ought to have medical advice.”“And it seems to me, sir, as he oughtn’t to. If master’s not well and can’t do himself good, nobody else can, I’m sure; and if you please, sir, will you come downstairs? He’d be very angry if we stopped here.”“Oh, certainly, Mrs Milt. Pray forgive me. I could not help feeling a little bit anxious about my cousin.”“I haven’t got nothing to forgive, sir,” said the old lady; “only I’d have you know that I’m as anxious about my dear master as anybody.”“Of course, Mrs Milt. Quite natural. Dr North is a remarkable man, and will some day become very famous.”“I dessay, sir,” said Mrs Milt drily. “I think you said you should stop all night?”“Yes, Mrs Milt; and I’m afraid my business here will keep me another day, if it is not troubling you too much.”“Oh, that don’t matter at all, sir. I’m sure master wishes you to be made very comfortable, and as far as in me lies, sir, I shall carry out his wishes.”“Thank you, Mrs Milt. I’m sure you will,” said Cousin Thompson; and Mrs Milt rustled out of the room, looking very hard and determined, but as soon as she was out of sight deep lines of anxiety began to appear about her eyes, and she wrung her hands.“Yes,” said Cousin Thompson, going at once to North’s table and sitting down to write a letter; “I shall sleep here to-night, Mrs Milt, and I shall sleep here to-morrow night, and perhaps a great many other nights. It is no use to be a legal adviser unless I legally look after my sick cousin’s affairs.”Cousin Thompson’s anxiety about his cousin gave his countenance a very happy and contented look.“Things are looking up,” he said, as he finished and fastened his letter. “Everything comes to the man who waits. Even pleasant-looking, plump Mrs Berens may—who knows?”He carefully tore off a stamp from a sheet in the writing-table drawer, moistened it upon a very large, unpleasant-looking tongue, and affixed it to the envelope.“Perhaps she is right, and he will be better without medical advice,” he said, with a pleasant smile upon his countenance. “Why should I interfere? That is where some people make such a mistake: they will dig up a plant to look at its roots. I prefer letting a well-growing plant alone. Yes, things are looking up. Now for my genial baronet.”He walked out into the ball, and took his hat, just as there was a ring at the gate bell.“Who’s this?” he said; and he walked into the dining-room and nearly closed the door, but not quite.The next minute there were steps in the hall, the door was opened, and the curate’s bluff voice rang through the place in an inquiry after the doctor.“He’s very poorly, sir,” said Mrs Milt, in a low and cautious voice. “I don’t really know what to make of him.”“I do,” said Salis. “He wants rest and change, Mrs Milt.”“Yes, sir; I think that’s it, sir.”“I wish I could get him away. I will.”“Will you?” said Cousin Thompson softly.“Here, I’ll go up and see him. In his room, I suppose?”“Excuse me, sir; I think you had better not. It irritates him. Old Moredock came last night about some trifling ailment, and poor master was quite angry about it. Then Mr Thompson went up to his door, and it seemed to irritate him. You know how tetchy and fretful it makes any one when he’s ill.”“I want to see him, Mrs Milt. I want to talk to him.”Cousin Thompson’s eyes twitched.“But I’ll go by your advice.”Mrs Milt said something in reply which the listener missed, and consequently exaggerated largely as to its value, and directly after Salis went away in a new character—to wit, that of Cousin Thompson’s mortal enemy; though Salis himself was in utter ignorance of the fact.“Well, and how are we to-day?” said the lawyer on entering the old library at the Hall.Sir Thomas Candlish was lying back in his chair, with a cigar in his mouth, a sporting paper on his lap, and a soda and brandy—or, rather, two brandies and a soda—at his elbow.“How are we to-day!” he snarled. “Don’t come here talking like a cursed smooth humbug of a doctor about to feel one’s pulse.”“But I am a doctor, and I have come to feel your pulse, my dear sir,” said Cousin Thompson laughingly.“Eh?—what? Again! Why, there’s nothing due yet.”“There, there, there! don’t trouble yourself, my dear Sir Thomas. There is a little amount to meet; but you are not, as you used to be, worried about money matters. You can pay.”“Yes,” snarled Tom Candlish; “and you seem to know it, too.”“Come, that’s unkind. It isn’t generous, my dear sir. Surely if a man lends money he has a right to claim repayment.”“Oh, yes, I know all about that—the old, old jargon of the craft. I don’t want to borrow now. If I did I suppose I should hear all about your friend in the City, eh?—your client who advances the money, eh?”“Ha! ha! ha!” laughed Thompson. “One needn’t ask how you are. The old vein of fun is coming back flushed with health and strength.”“Cursed slowly. Now, then, what do you want?”“Oh, it is a mere trifling business.”“A trifle.”“It would have been serious to you once; but it is a trifle now.”“Well, let’s have it.”“No, no, not yet. There, I’ll take a cigar and a B. and S.”“Ah, do,” said Candlish sarcastically. “Make yourself at home, pray.”“To be sure I will. I’ve come to doctor you and do you good.”“Damn all doctors!” sneered Candlish.“Amen,” said Cousin Thompson merrily, as he took a cigar, lit it, and helped himself to the brandy. “Look here, sir; you sit alone and mope too much. You want exercise.”“How the devil am I to take exercise, when, as soon as I get on a horse, my head begins to swim?”“And a pretty girl or two to see you.”Tom Candlish uttered a low, blackguardly, self-satisfied chuckle.“Eh? I say. Hallo!” cried Cousin Thompson. “Oh, I see. Well, mum’s the word. But, come; you do want change; you’re too much alone. Now I’ve come—”“Oh, yes, you’ve come, and on a deuced friendly visit too.”“Business and friendliness combined, my dear sir. Why, you used not to snub me like this. There, I meant to chat over a little money matter with you. Let’s do it pleasantly. Come up to that capital table, and let’s do it over a friendly game of billiards.”Tom Candlish started from his seat, overturning his glass, which fell to the floor, and was shattered to atoms.“My dear Sir Thomas! what is the matter?”“Nothing—nothing,” he replied hoarsely. “Not well yet. A confounded spasm.”“How unfortunate! Let me refill your glass, or shall I do it upstairs in the billiard-room?”“Curse the billiards! I tell you I don’t play now.”“Not play?”“The sight of the balls rolling makes me giddy,” cried the wretched man, glaring at his visitor.“Why, my dear sir, I’m very sorry I mentioned the game. There, let me give you a light. You’re out. That’s it. Really you ought to have the advice of a doctor.”“Damn all doctors!” growled the baronet again.“I can’t afford to have you ill, my dear Sir Thomas,” said Thompson, with an unpleasant laugh.“No, you can’t afford to have me ill. Too good a cow to milk.”Cousin Thompson laughed, and felt that he had made a mistake.“I cannot advise you to have my cousin up, because he, too, is ill.”Tom Candlish’s lips parted to utter a fierce oath, but he checked it, and swung himself round in his chair.“Is he very ill?” he said eagerly.“Yes; he seems to me to be very ill.”“I’m glad of it—I’m very glad of it,” cried Candlish. “Come, you needn’t stare at me. I wish the beast was dead.”“I was not staring at you,” said Cousin Thompson; “only listening. I think you and he don’t get on well; but he’s a very clever man—my cousin Horace; and if I could get a little advice from him on your case, I’m sure I would.”“I want no advice. Only a little time. I’m coming round, I tell you—fast. But about North. Is he very bad?”“Well, ye-es; I should say he was very bad.”“What’s the matter? Has he caught some fever?”“No. Oh dear, no! It’s mental. He seems a good deal unstrung. A little off his head, perhaps.”“Why, curse it all, Thompson,” cried Candlish excitedly; “you don’t mean that the blackguard is going mad?”“My dear Sir Thomas—my dear Sir Thomas,” said the lawyer, in a voice full of protestation; “I really cannot sit here and listen to you calling my cousin a blackguard.”“Then stand up, man, and hear it. He is a blackguard, and I hate him, and I’d say it to his face if he were here. Now tell me, is he really bad?”“Only a temporary attack. He is suffering, I’m afraid, from overstudy. But now to business.”“Stop a minute, man: let me think. Hang the business! How much is it? I’ll write you a cheque. I can now, Thompson, old chap. Times are altered, eh?”“Ah, and for the better, Sir Thomas.”“Here, hold your tongue. Don’t talk. Let me see: not married; neither chick nor child; no brother. Why, Thompson, if North—curse him!—died, you’d have the Manor House!”“Should I!” said Cousin Thompson, raising his eyebrows thoughtfully. “Well, yes, I suppose I am next of kin. But Horace North will outlive me.”“Is he quite off his head?”“Hush! don’t talk about it, my dear sir. Poor fellow, he is ill; but not so very bad. I shouldn’t like it to get about amongst his patients. People chatter and exaggerate to such an extent.”Tom Candlish smoked furiously for a few moments, and then cast away the end of his cigar, and lit another, biting the end, and frowning at his visitor.“Now about business,” said Thompson, at last.“Curse business!” cried the squire, as he kept on watching the lawyer keenly. “Look here, Thompson, how was it that you two being cousins, he has so much money, and you’re as poor as Job?”“Way of the world, my dear sir—way of the world.”Tom Candlish sat back, chewing the end of his cigar and smoking hard.“Look here, you Thompson! Now out with it; you don’t like Dr North?”“Like him? I hate all doctors; just as you do.”“That’s shuffling out of it,” said Candlish scornfully; “but you needn’t be afraid of me. I’m open enough. I’m not above speaking out and telling you I hate him. I wish you’d make a set on his pocket, and bleed him as you are so precious fond of bleeding me.”“Oh, nonsense, nonsense!” said Cousin Thompson laughingly; and then the two men sat smoking and gazing one at the other in silence till their cigars were finished.“Take another,” said the squire, handing the case lying upon the table.Thompson took another, and Tom Candlish lit his third, to lie back in his chair, smoking very placidly, and staring from time to time at Thompson, who watched him in turn in a very matter-of-fact, amused way.They rarely spoke, and when they did it was upon indifferent themes; but by degrees a mutual understanding seemed to be growing up between them, dealing in some occult way with Horace North’s health and his position in Duke’s Hampton. The Manor House estate, too, seemed to have something to do with their silent communings.This lasted till the lawyer’s second and the squire’s third cigar were finished, and a certain amount of liquid refreshment had been consumed as well. Then Cousin Thompson suddenly threw away the stump of tobacco-leaf he had left.“Now suppose we finish our bit of business?”“All right,” said Candlish sulkily; and after reference to certain memoranda laid before him, he opened a secretary, wrote a cheque, and handed it to the lawyer.“Thanks; that’s right,” said the latter, doubling the slip, and placing it in his pocket-book.“Going back to town to-night?” said Candlish. “No.”“To-morrow?”“No.”“When then?”“Depends on how matters turn out,” said Thompson meaningly. “I suppose if I wanted a friend I might depend on you?”“Of course, of course,” cried the squire eagerly.“Thanks,” said Cousin Thompson. “I shall not forget, but I don’t think I shall want any help. Good-bye.”“Good-bye,” said Tom Candlish warmly.A wish of a mutual character, expressed in a contraction—that God might be with two as utter scoundrels as ever communed together over a half-hatched plot.“Mrs Milt,” said Cousin Thompson, as he entered the Manor that night, “I have been thinking over matters, and you need not say much to your master, but I feel it to be my duty to stay here for the present, and look after his affairs.”“But really, sir—”“Have the goodness to remember who you are, Mrs Milt. Leave the room!”“And him going about in the dark watches of the night like a madman,” sighed Mrs Milt, as soon as she was alone. “If that wretch sees him, what will he think?”“That wretch,” to wit, Cousin Thompson, was biting his nails in North’s library, and listening to a regular tramp upstairs.“Strange thing,” he said, “but as soon as a man’s head is touched, he grows more and more like a four-footed beast.”He smiled and listened. All was very still now, and he set to work searching drawers and the bureau for material that might be useful to him in the settlement of Horace North’s affairs, and as he searched he talked to himself.“Let me see: it was Nebuchadnezzar—wasn’t it?—who used to go about on hands and knees eating grass.”He examined a document or two, but did not seem satisfied with the result.“Hah! poor Horace!” he said. “I’m very sorry for him, but I must do my duty to society, and to him as well.”He started, for the door-handle had been touched, and, quick as lightning, he dropped the papers he held, and blew down the chimney of the lamp.The door cracked, and as it opened slightly he could hear the church clock chiming, and then a deep-tonedoneboomed forth.There was a something beside sound entered, for by the faint light which streamed in over the top of the shutters he could see a dark blotch moving slightly, and, as he felt chilled to the marrow, the dark patch changed slowly to a dimly-seen face of so ghastly a kind that he stood there gazing wildly, and fixed helplessly to the spot.
“Oh, no; it’s nothing at all, sir—nothing at all,” said Mrs Milt hastily; “and I didn’t know you’d come upstairs behind me, sir.”
“It was to save you a journey, my dear Mrs Milt,” said Cousin Thompson smoothly. “Yes, I’m afraid he is very ill. A little delirious, I think.”
“Delirious, sir? Oh, nonsense! Master’s often like that.”
“Indeed!” said Cousin Thompson, in a tone of voice which made the housekeeper wish she had bitten off her tongue before she had committed herself to such a speech. “You heard him utter that laugh?”
“Well, surely to goodness, sir, that don’t signify anything. A laugh! I wish I could laugh.”
“But he gave a ‘view halloo!’ and said something about a fox.”
“Well, really, sir, what if he did? There’s nothing master likes better after a hard week’s work and a lot of anxiety than a gallop after the hounds. It does him good. Why, a doctor wants taking out of himself sometimes, specially one who works as hard as master does. A medical man’s anxiety sometimes is enough to drive him mad.”
“Yes, I suppose so,” said Cousin Thompson smoothly. “Hadn’t you better knock again?”
“No, sir, I hadn’t,” said Mrs Milt tartly. “I’m quite sure master don’t want to be disturbed.”
“But really, my good woman, it seems to me that he ought to have medical advice.”
“And it seems to me, sir, as he oughtn’t to. If master’s not well and can’t do himself good, nobody else can, I’m sure; and if you please, sir, will you come downstairs? He’d be very angry if we stopped here.”
“Oh, certainly, Mrs Milt. Pray forgive me. I could not help feeling a little bit anxious about my cousin.”
“I haven’t got nothing to forgive, sir,” said the old lady; “only I’d have you know that I’m as anxious about my dear master as anybody.”
“Of course, Mrs Milt. Quite natural. Dr North is a remarkable man, and will some day become very famous.”
“I dessay, sir,” said Mrs Milt drily. “I think you said you should stop all night?”
“Yes, Mrs Milt; and I’m afraid my business here will keep me another day, if it is not troubling you too much.”
“Oh, that don’t matter at all, sir. I’m sure master wishes you to be made very comfortable, and as far as in me lies, sir, I shall carry out his wishes.”
“Thank you, Mrs Milt. I’m sure you will,” said Cousin Thompson; and Mrs Milt rustled out of the room, looking very hard and determined, but as soon as she was out of sight deep lines of anxiety began to appear about her eyes, and she wrung her hands.
“Yes,” said Cousin Thompson, going at once to North’s table and sitting down to write a letter; “I shall sleep here to-night, Mrs Milt, and I shall sleep here to-morrow night, and perhaps a great many other nights. It is no use to be a legal adviser unless I legally look after my sick cousin’s affairs.”
Cousin Thompson’s anxiety about his cousin gave his countenance a very happy and contented look.
“Things are looking up,” he said, as he finished and fastened his letter. “Everything comes to the man who waits. Even pleasant-looking, plump Mrs Berens may—who knows?”
He carefully tore off a stamp from a sheet in the writing-table drawer, moistened it upon a very large, unpleasant-looking tongue, and affixed it to the envelope.
“Perhaps she is right, and he will be better without medical advice,” he said, with a pleasant smile upon his countenance. “Why should I interfere? That is where some people make such a mistake: they will dig up a plant to look at its roots. I prefer letting a well-growing plant alone. Yes, things are looking up. Now for my genial baronet.”
He walked out into the ball, and took his hat, just as there was a ring at the gate bell.
“Who’s this?” he said; and he walked into the dining-room and nearly closed the door, but not quite.
The next minute there were steps in the hall, the door was opened, and the curate’s bluff voice rang through the place in an inquiry after the doctor.
“He’s very poorly, sir,” said Mrs Milt, in a low and cautious voice. “I don’t really know what to make of him.”
“I do,” said Salis. “He wants rest and change, Mrs Milt.”
“Yes, sir; I think that’s it, sir.”
“I wish I could get him away. I will.”
“Will you?” said Cousin Thompson softly.
“Here, I’ll go up and see him. In his room, I suppose?”
“Excuse me, sir; I think you had better not. It irritates him. Old Moredock came last night about some trifling ailment, and poor master was quite angry about it. Then Mr Thompson went up to his door, and it seemed to irritate him. You know how tetchy and fretful it makes any one when he’s ill.”
“I want to see him, Mrs Milt. I want to talk to him.”
Cousin Thompson’s eyes twitched.
“But I’ll go by your advice.”
Mrs Milt said something in reply which the listener missed, and consequently exaggerated largely as to its value, and directly after Salis went away in a new character—to wit, that of Cousin Thompson’s mortal enemy; though Salis himself was in utter ignorance of the fact.
“Well, and how are we to-day?” said the lawyer on entering the old library at the Hall.
Sir Thomas Candlish was lying back in his chair, with a cigar in his mouth, a sporting paper on his lap, and a soda and brandy—or, rather, two brandies and a soda—at his elbow.
“How are we to-day!” he snarled. “Don’t come here talking like a cursed smooth humbug of a doctor about to feel one’s pulse.”
“But I am a doctor, and I have come to feel your pulse, my dear sir,” said Cousin Thompson laughingly.
“Eh?—what? Again! Why, there’s nothing due yet.”
“There, there, there! don’t trouble yourself, my dear Sir Thomas. There is a little amount to meet; but you are not, as you used to be, worried about money matters. You can pay.”
“Yes,” snarled Tom Candlish; “and you seem to know it, too.”
“Come, that’s unkind. It isn’t generous, my dear sir. Surely if a man lends money he has a right to claim repayment.”
“Oh, yes, I know all about that—the old, old jargon of the craft. I don’t want to borrow now. If I did I suppose I should hear all about your friend in the City, eh?—your client who advances the money, eh?”
“Ha! ha! ha!” laughed Thompson. “One needn’t ask how you are. The old vein of fun is coming back flushed with health and strength.”
“Cursed slowly. Now, then, what do you want?”
“Oh, it is a mere trifling business.”
“A trifle.”
“It would have been serious to you once; but it is a trifle now.”
“Well, let’s have it.”
“No, no, not yet. There, I’ll take a cigar and a B. and S.”
“Ah, do,” said Candlish sarcastically. “Make yourself at home, pray.”
“To be sure I will. I’ve come to doctor you and do you good.”
“Damn all doctors!” sneered Candlish.
“Amen,” said Cousin Thompson merrily, as he took a cigar, lit it, and helped himself to the brandy. “Look here, sir; you sit alone and mope too much. You want exercise.”
“How the devil am I to take exercise, when, as soon as I get on a horse, my head begins to swim?”
“And a pretty girl or two to see you.”
Tom Candlish uttered a low, blackguardly, self-satisfied chuckle.
“Eh? I say. Hallo!” cried Cousin Thompson. “Oh, I see. Well, mum’s the word. But, come; you do want change; you’re too much alone. Now I’ve come—”
“Oh, yes, you’ve come, and on a deuced friendly visit too.”
“Business and friendliness combined, my dear sir. Why, you used not to snub me like this. There, I meant to chat over a little money matter with you. Let’s do it pleasantly. Come up to that capital table, and let’s do it over a friendly game of billiards.”
Tom Candlish started from his seat, overturning his glass, which fell to the floor, and was shattered to atoms.
“My dear Sir Thomas! what is the matter?”
“Nothing—nothing,” he replied hoarsely. “Not well yet. A confounded spasm.”
“How unfortunate! Let me refill your glass, or shall I do it upstairs in the billiard-room?”
“Curse the billiards! I tell you I don’t play now.”
“Not play?”
“The sight of the balls rolling makes me giddy,” cried the wretched man, glaring at his visitor.
“Why, my dear sir, I’m very sorry I mentioned the game. There, let me give you a light. You’re out. That’s it. Really you ought to have the advice of a doctor.”
“Damn all doctors!” growled the baronet again.
“I can’t afford to have you ill, my dear Sir Thomas,” said Thompson, with an unpleasant laugh.
“No, you can’t afford to have me ill. Too good a cow to milk.”
Cousin Thompson laughed, and felt that he had made a mistake.
“I cannot advise you to have my cousin up, because he, too, is ill.”
Tom Candlish’s lips parted to utter a fierce oath, but he checked it, and swung himself round in his chair.
“Is he very ill?” he said eagerly.
“Yes; he seems to me to be very ill.”
“I’m glad of it—I’m very glad of it,” cried Candlish. “Come, you needn’t stare at me. I wish the beast was dead.”
“I was not staring at you,” said Cousin Thompson; “only listening. I think you and he don’t get on well; but he’s a very clever man—my cousin Horace; and if I could get a little advice from him on your case, I’m sure I would.”
“I want no advice. Only a little time. I’m coming round, I tell you—fast. But about North. Is he very bad?”
“Well, ye-es; I should say he was very bad.”
“What’s the matter? Has he caught some fever?”
“No. Oh dear, no! It’s mental. He seems a good deal unstrung. A little off his head, perhaps.”
“Why, curse it all, Thompson,” cried Candlish excitedly; “you don’t mean that the blackguard is going mad?”
“My dear Sir Thomas—my dear Sir Thomas,” said the lawyer, in a voice full of protestation; “I really cannot sit here and listen to you calling my cousin a blackguard.”
“Then stand up, man, and hear it. He is a blackguard, and I hate him, and I’d say it to his face if he were here. Now tell me, is he really bad?”
“Only a temporary attack. He is suffering, I’m afraid, from overstudy. But now to business.”
“Stop a minute, man: let me think. Hang the business! How much is it? I’ll write you a cheque. I can now, Thompson, old chap. Times are altered, eh?”
“Ah, and for the better, Sir Thomas.”
“Here, hold your tongue. Don’t talk. Let me see: not married; neither chick nor child; no brother. Why, Thompson, if North—curse him!—died, you’d have the Manor House!”
“Should I!” said Cousin Thompson, raising his eyebrows thoughtfully. “Well, yes, I suppose I am next of kin. But Horace North will outlive me.”
“Is he quite off his head?”
“Hush! don’t talk about it, my dear sir. Poor fellow, he is ill; but not so very bad. I shouldn’t like it to get about amongst his patients. People chatter and exaggerate to such an extent.”
Tom Candlish smoked furiously for a few moments, and then cast away the end of his cigar, and lit another, biting the end, and frowning at his visitor.
“Now about business,” said Thompson, at last.
“Curse business!” cried the squire, as he kept on watching the lawyer keenly. “Look here, Thompson, how was it that you two being cousins, he has so much money, and you’re as poor as Job?”
“Way of the world, my dear sir—way of the world.”
Tom Candlish sat back, chewing the end of his cigar and smoking hard.
“Look here, you Thompson! Now out with it; you don’t like Dr North?”
“Like him? I hate all doctors; just as you do.”
“That’s shuffling out of it,” said Candlish scornfully; “but you needn’t be afraid of me. I’m open enough. I’m not above speaking out and telling you I hate him. I wish you’d make a set on his pocket, and bleed him as you are so precious fond of bleeding me.”
“Oh, nonsense, nonsense!” said Cousin Thompson laughingly; and then the two men sat smoking and gazing one at the other in silence till their cigars were finished.
“Take another,” said the squire, handing the case lying upon the table.
Thompson took another, and Tom Candlish lit his third, to lie back in his chair, smoking very placidly, and staring from time to time at Thompson, who watched him in turn in a very matter-of-fact, amused way.
They rarely spoke, and when they did it was upon indifferent themes; but by degrees a mutual understanding seemed to be growing up between them, dealing in some occult way with Horace North’s health and his position in Duke’s Hampton. The Manor House estate, too, seemed to have something to do with their silent communings.
This lasted till the lawyer’s second and the squire’s third cigar were finished, and a certain amount of liquid refreshment had been consumed as well. Then Cousin Thompson suddenly threw away the stump of tobacco-leaf he had left.
“Now suppose we finish our bit of business?”
“All right,” said Candlish sulkily; and after reference to certain memoranda laid before him, he opened a secretary, wrote a cheque, and handed it to the lawyer.
“Thanks; that’s right,” said the latter, doubling the slip, and placing it in his pocket-book.
“Going back to town to-night?” said Candlish. “No.”
“To-morrow?”
“No.”
“When then?”
“Depends on how matters turn out,” said Thompson meaningly. “I suppose if I wanted a friend I might depend on you?”
“Of course, of course,” cried the squire eagerly.
“Thanks,” said Cousin Thompson. “I shall not forget, but I don’t think I shall want any help. Good-bye.”
“Good-bye,” said Tom Candlish warmly.
A wish of a mutual character, expressed in a contraction—that God might be with two as utter scoundrels as ever communed together over a half-hatched plot.
“Mrs Milt,” said Cousin Thompson, as he entered the Manor that night, “I have been thinking over matters, and you need not say much to your master, but I feel it to be my duty to stay here for the present, and look after his affairs.”
“But really, sir—”
“Have the goodness to remember who you are, Mrs Milt. Leave the room!”
“And him going about in the dark watches of the night like a madman,” sighed Mrs Milt, as soon as she was alone. “If that wretch sees him, what will he think?”
“That wretch,” to wit, Cousin Thompson, was biting his nails in North’s library, and listening to a regular tramp upstairs.
“Strange thing,” he said, “but as soon as a man’s head is touched, he grows more and more like a four-footed beast.”
He smiled and listened. All was very still now, and he set to work searching drawers and the bureau for material that might be useful to him in the settlement of Horace North’s affairs, and as he searched he talked to himself.
“Let me see: it was Nebuchadnezzar—wasn’t it?—who used to go about on hands and knees eating grass.”
He examined a document or two, but did not seem satisfied with the result.
“Hah! poor Horace!” he said. “I’m very sorry for him, but I must do my duty to society, and to him as well.”
He started, for the door-handle had been touched, and, quick as lightning, he dropped the papers he held, and blew down the chimney of the lamp.
The door cracked, and as it opened slightly he could hear the church clock chiming, and then a deep-tonedoneboomed forth.
There was a something beside sound entered, for by the faint light which streamed in over the top of the shutters he could see a dark blotch moving slightly, and, as he felt chilled to the marrow, the dark patch changed slowly to a dimly-seen face of so ghastly a kind that he stood there gazing wildly, and fixed helplessly to the spot.
Volume Three—Chapter Nine.Cousin Thompson’s Tooth-ache.Regularly day after day.The restless, wild-beast pace went on upstairs with intervals hour after hour, as, for the first time for many years, Horace North felt the terrible side of his lonely life, and the want of some one in whom he could really confide—mother, wife, sister—who would believe in him fully; but there were none.His life of study had made him self-sustaining until now. He had had no great call made upon him. But now there was the want, and he sat for hours thinking of his state, only to spring up again and tramp his room.To whom could he fly for counsel—Salis? The old housekeeper? The old doctor in London? Thompson, his cousin, then in the place?“No, no, no! How could I explain myself? If I told all my feelings, all I have done, they would say that I was mad.“It is impossible to speak,” he panted.“I am chained—thoroughly chained.”He paused in his wearying tramp, for, like a light, there seemed to come in upon him the soft, sweet face of Mary, with her gentle look and luminous eye. She might help him, poor suffering woman. But no, no, no! It was impossible: he could not speak.The time had come round again when, to relieve the terrible tedium of his life, he went out of his room—waiting always till the house was silent and all asleep.He opened his door and went out cautiously, to descend to the hall, and after hesitating for a few minutes, he laid his hand upon the fastening of the front door, as if to go out, but shook his head and turned away.Going silently into the cheerless drawing-room, he paced that, and then the dining-room in turn, till, wearying of this, he crossed to the study to open the door, paused for a moment or two, startled by the loud crack it gave, for the study seemed associated in his mind with the horror of the position he had brought upon himself.Then, thrusting in his head slowly, it seemed to him that he was at last free, for there before him, embodied for the time, was Luke Candlish rising from a chair, much as we had last seen him at his home; and as he gazed wildly at the face dimly-seen in the dark, it seemed to him the time had indeed come when he could crush his haunting enemy beneath his heel, and, rushing forward, he tried to catch him by the throat.“Now,” shouted North fiercely, “I have given you back your life; take it, and give me back mine in rest and peace, or, as I restored, so will I destroy.”His hands dropped to his side, and he uttered a low moan and shrank away.Not that it was all imagination, for he knew that he had tightly grasped a living, breathing form, which had uttered a cry of dread, and then exclaimed:“Horace—Horace, old fellow, are you mad?”There was a loud rustling, a faint rattling sound, as North staggered to the side of the room and sank upon the couch. Then came a scratching noise, the flash of a match, and the tiny wax light emitting a bluish flame threw up the pale, smooth face of Cousin Thompson, whose eyes were dilated with fear.He hurried to the chimney-piece, and lit one of the candles in a bronze stand.“Why, Horace, old fellow, what are you about?” he cried, trembling. “Thank goodness, it is you.”North muttered some words inaudibly, afraid to trust himself to speak, and covered his face with his hands.“Why, what’s the matter, old fellow?” said Thompson, laughing. “Oh, I see; you’ve been shut up so long, you can’t bear the light. How ridiculous, isn’t it?”North remained silent.“I heard a noise, and knowing you were ill, felt it my duty to come down. I could tell that some one was prowling about, and backed in here with my fist ready doubled to strike, but you were too quick for me. I’m glad I spoke.”Still no answer.“By Jove! what a joke! You took me for a burglar; I took you for one. What a blessing that we were not armed!”“Armed?” said North slowly.“Yes. Why, you might have sent a bullet through me. Well, I am glad that confounded tooth kept me awake. It has given me a chance of seeing you. Why, I had only just lain down in my clothes, after stamping about the room till I was afraid I should disturb the house. Give me something for it, there’s a good fellow.”North hesitated for a few moments, trembling lest he should say words that would excite his cousin’s attention; but at last he rose with one hand across his eyes.“What, are your eyes so bad?” said Cousin Thompson.“Yes,” was the laconic reply; and North went to the surgery, took a small bottle from a drawer, the clink of a stopper or two was heard, and a peculiar smell arose, as Thompson noted, with eager eyes, how his cousin kept his back to him while dropping a small quantity from each of the bottles he took down.“Can you see?” said Cousin Thompson, holding the candle.“Yes, I can see, thank you,” said North, replacing the bottles on the shelf, and fitting a cork to that he held, before labelling it “poison.”“Rub a little of that upon the outside of your face; it will allay the pain.”“It’s awfully good of you,” said Thompson smoothly, “specially now you’re so ill. Thanks. Rub a little outside, don’t you say? I suppose this ‘poison’ is only a scarecrow. It wouldn’t hurt me if I took the lot.”“No,” said North quietly. “It would not hurt you. The sensation would he rather pleasant.”“I thought as much,” said Cousin Thompson, who, while he played with the bottle, watched North narrowly.“But,” added the doctor impressively, “I should make my will first, if I were you.”“Why?”“Because to-morrow morning you would be past the power of doing so.”“Oh, I say, old fellow, is it so bad as that? Make my will, eh? Physician, heal thyself! Why, you haven’t made yours.”“No,” said North quietly; “I have not made mine. Good night, I am going to my room.”“One moment—shall I see you to-morrow?”“No.”“Well, the next day, then?”“Doubtful,” said North hurriedly, and he walked brusquely by his cousin to hurry to the staircase, and up to his own room.“I thought not,” muttered Cousin Thompson. “That was a good bold shot right in the bull’s-eye. Now, Master Horace, the old adage is going to be proved. Every dog has his day, and this dog is going to have his. How many times have you lent him money in a cursed grudging, curmudgeon-like spirit? How often have I come here, worn out with worry and scheming to get an honest living, and you have received me—you rolling in riches—with a churlish hospitality such as I should have thrown back at you if I had not been so poor? Never mind, my dear boy; the world turns round, and those who are down to-day are up to-morrow. I can make Squire Tom squeak to a pretty tune whenever I like, and the widow—well, she’s not a bad sort of woman to come and sit in the nest she has helped to line. ‘Manor House, Duke’s Hampton: Manor House, Duke’s Hampton!’ Not a bad address. There are worse things than being a country gentleman—county magistrate is the proper term. Yes, my dear cousin, things look brighter than they have looked for years. What a blessed thing is the British law, especially where a medical question comes in. The fruit’s about ripe, and if I do not stretch out my hand to pick it, why, I must be a fool.”“Fool!” he said, as he stood there smiling, with the lighted candle in his hand, casting strange shadows upon the lower portions of his countenance. “Fool—fool—fool! No,” he said softly, as he shook his head. “I have a few failings: I am a little weak. I admire a soft, plump, pleasant-looking widow—with money—like Mrs Berens. I like money—plenty of money, and I like Duke’s Hampton; but those are only amiable weaknesses, and I don’t think I’m a fool.”He held up the candle and looked round as if enjoying the sense of possession, and his eyes rested on the good old-fashioned furniture, the choice selection of books, a bronze or two, and a couple of paintings by a master hand: all of which his twinkling eyes seemed to appraise and catalogue at a glance.“Yes,” he said, smiling softly, “things look a good deal brighter now, and I like Duke’s Hampton quite well enough to come and live in—with a wife.”He took a step or two towards the door, and paused once more, evidently enjoying his self-communings.“No! There was a decision about thatnowhich I liked, my dear cousin. No: he has not made his will. But it does not matter, my dear boy—not in the least, for, as far as I know, you are not going to die.”His face lost its smile here, and he took the little bottle he had received softly from his pocket, and held it to the light.“Poison. For outward application only.”He read the words slowly.“Yes,” he said, “that would be a dangerous thing in the hands of some men who saw a life standing between them and a goodly property. But no, my pretty drops! You may go back again. Not for me. I am a lawyer, and I know the law. What idiots some men have been, and at what cost to themselves! But, then, they were not lawyers, and did not know the law. Now, then, for a good night’s rest. And to-morrow. Hah!”
Regularly day after day.
The restless, wild-beast pace went on upstairs with intervals hour after hour, as, for the first time for many years, Horace North felt the terrible side of his lonely life, and the want of some one in whom he could really confide—mother, wife, sister—who would believe in him fully; but there were none.
His life of study had made him self-sustaining until now. He had had no great call made upon him. But now there was the want, and he sat for hours thinking of his state, only to spring up again and tramp his room.
To whom could he fly for counsel—Salis? The old housekeeper? The old doctor in London? Thompson, his cousin, then in the place?
“No, no, no! How could I explain myself? If I told all my feelings, all I have done, they would say that I was mad.
“It is impossible to speak,” he panted.
“I am chained—thoroughly chained.”
He paused in his wearying tramp, for, like a light, there seemed to come in upon him the soft, sweet face of Mary, with her gentle look and luminous eye. She might help him, poor suffering woman. But no, no, no! It was impossible: he could not speak.
The time had come round again when, to relieve the terrible tedium of his life, he went out of his room—waiting always till the house was silent and all asleep.
He opened his door and went out cautiously, to descend to the hall, and after hesitating for a few minutes, he laid his hand upon the fastening of the front door, as if to go out, but shook his head and turned away.
Going silently into the cheerless drawing-room, he paced that, and then the dining-room in turn, till, wearying of this, he crossed to the study to open the door, paused for a moment or two, startled by the loud crack it gave, for the study seemed associated in his mind with the horror of the position he had brought upon himself.
Then, thrusting in his head slowly, it seemed to him that he was at last free, for there before him, embodied for the time, was Luke Candlish rising from a chair, much as we had last seen him at his home; and as he gazed wildly at the face dimly-seen in the dark, it seemed to him the time had indeed come when he could crush his haunting enemy beneath his heel, and, rushing forward, he tried to catch him by the throat.
“Now,” shouted North fiercely, “I have given you back your life; take it, and give me back mine in rest and peace, or, as I restored, so will I destroy.”
His hands dropped to his side, and he uttered a low moan and shrank away.
Not that it was all imagination, for he knew that he had tightly grasped a living, breathing form, which had uttered a cry of dread, and then exclaimed:
“Horace—Horace, old fellow, are you mad?”
There was a loud rustling, a faint rattling sound, as North staggered to the side of the room and sank upon the couch. Then came a scratching noise, the flash of a match, and the tiny wax light emitting a bluish flame threw up the pale, smooth face of Cousin Thompson, whose eyes were dilated with fear.
He hurried to the chimney-piece, and lit one of the candles in a bronze stand.
“Why, Horace, old fellow, what are you about?” he cried, trembling. “Thank goodness, it is you.”
North muttered some words inaudibly, afraid to trust himself to speak, and covered his face with his hands.
“Why, what’s the matter, old fellow?” said Thompson, laughing. “Oh, I see; you’ve been shut up so long, you can’t bear the light. How ridiculous, isn’t it?”
North remained silent.
“I heard a noise, and knowing you were ill, felt it my duty to come down. I could tell that some one was prowling about, and backed in here with my fist ready doubled to strike, but you were too quick for me. I’m glad I spoke.”
Still no answer.
“By Jove! what a joke! You took me for a burglar; I took you for one. What a blessing that we were not armed!”
“Armed?” said North slowly.
“Yes. Why, you might have sent a bullet through me. Well, I am glad that confounded tooth kept me awake. It has given me a chance of seeing you. Why, I had only just lain down in my clothes, after stamping about the room till I was afraid I should disturb the house. Give me something for it, there’s a good fellow.”
North hesitated for a few moments, trembling lest he should say words that would excite his cousin’s attention; but at last he rose with one hand across his eyes.
“What, are your eyes so bad?” said Cousin Thompson.
“Yes,” was the laconic reply; and North went to the surgery, took a small bottle from a drawer, the clink of a stopper or two was heard, and a peculiar smell arose, as Thompson noted, with eager eyes, how his cousin kept his back to him while dropping a small quantity from each of the bottles he took down.
“Can you see?” said Cousin Thompson, holding the candle.
“Yes, I can see, thank you,” said North, replacing the bottles on the shelf, and fitting a cork to that he held, before labelling it “poison.”
“Rub a little of that upon the outside of your face; it will allay the pain.”
“It’s awfully good of you,” said Thompson smoothly, “specially now you’re so ill. Thanks. Rub a little outside, don’t you say? I suppose this ‘poison’ is only a scarecrow. It wouldn’t hurt me if I took the lot.”
“No,” said North quietly. “It would not hurt you. The sensation would he rather pleasant.”
“I thought as much,” said Cousin Thompson, who, while he played with the bottle, watched North narrowly.
“But,” added the doctor impressively, “I should make my will first, if I were you.”
“Why?”
“Because to-morrow morning you would be past the power of doing so.”
“Oh, I say, old fellow, is it so bad as that? Make my will, eh? Physician, heal thyself! Why, you haven’t made yours.”
“No,” said North quietly; “I have not made mine. Good night, I am going to my room.”
“One moment—shall I see you to-morrow?”
“No.”
“Well, the next day, then?”
“Doubtful,” said North hurriedly, and he walked brusquely by his cousin to hurry to the staircase, and up to his own room.
“I thought not,” muttered Cousin Thompson. “That was a good bold shot right in the bull’s-eye. Now, Master Horace, the old adage is going to be proved. Every dog has his day, and this dog is going to have his. How many times have you lent him money in a cursed grudging, curmudgeon-like spirit? How often have I come here, worn out with worry and scheming to get an honest living, and you have received me—you rolling in riches—with a churlish hospitality such as I should have thrown back at you if I had not been so poor? Never mind, my dear boy; the world turns round, and those who are down to-day are up to-morrow. I can make Squire Tom squeak to a pretty tune whenever I like, and the widow—well, she’s not a bad sort of woman to come and sit in the nest she has helped to line. ‘Manor House, Duke’s Hampton: Manor House, Duke’s Hampton!’ Not a bad address. There are worse things than being a country gentleman—county magistrate is the proper term. Yes, my dear cousin, things look brighter than they have looked for years. What a blessed thing is the British law, especially where a medical question comes in. The fruit’s about ripe, and if I do not stretch out my hand to pick it, why, I must be a fool.”
“Fool!” he said, as he stood there smiling, with the lighted candle in his hand, casting strange shadows upon the lower portions of his countenance. “Fool—fool—fool! No,” he said softly, as he shook his head. “I have a few failings: I am a little weak. I admire a soft, plump, pleasant-looking widow—with money—like Mrs Berens. I like money—plenty of money, and I like Duke’s Hampton; but those are only amiable weaknesses, and I don’t think I’m a fool.”
He held up the candle and looked round as if enjoying the sense of possession, and his eyes rested on the good old-fashioned furniture, the choice selection of books, a bronze or two, and a couple of paintings by a master hand: all of which his twinkling eyes seemed to appraise and catalogue at a glance.
“Yes,” he said, smiling softly, “things look a good deal brighter now, and I like Duke’s Hampton quite well enough to come and live in—with a wife.”
He took a step or two towards the door, and paused once more, evidently enjoying his self-communings.
“No! There was a decision about thatnowhich I liked, my dear cousin. No: he has not made his will. But it does not matter, my dear boy—not in the least, for, as far as I know, you are not going to die.”
His face lost its smile here, and he took the little bottle he had received softly from his pocket, and held it to the light.
“Poison. For outward application only.”
He read the words slowly.
“Yes,” he said, “that would be a dangerous thing in the hands of some men who saw a life standing between them and a goodly property. But no, my pretty drops! You may go back again. Not for me. I am a lawyer, and I know the law. What idiots some men have been, and at what cost to themselves! But, then, they were not lawyers, and did not know the law. Now, then, for a good night’s rest. And to-morrow. Hah!”
Volume Three—Chapter Ten.A Visit in the Dark.“I don’t like it, Mary. North has completely shut himself up. He will not even see Mrs Milt, so she tells me, and she is getting very uneasy about his state.”Mary looked up at her brother. She could not trust herself to speak.“I pity him, and yet I feel annoyed and hurt, for I gave him credit for greater strength of mind.”Mary felt that she knew what was coming, but she dared not open her lips.“Of course it was very painful to find out the woman he had made his idol was trifling with him, but I should have thought that Horace North would have proved himself to be a man of the world, borne his burden patiently, and been enough of a philosopher to go on his way without breaking down.”“But he is very ill.”“Ill!” said Salis. “I feel disposed to go and shake him, and rouse him up. To tell him that this is not manly on his part.”“And yet you own that he is suffering, Hartley.”“Suffering? Yes; but he has no business to be suffering about a woman like—there, there, I am forgetting myself. Poor fellow! he must be very ill. You see, the upset came when he was worn out with the study and intricacies of that pet theory of his, and hence it is that he is now so low.”Mary lay back with her eyes half closed for some time, and there was silence in the room.“Where is Leo?” said Salis, at length.“In her room—reading.”“Thank Heaven she seems to be settling down calmly now. Surely this life-storm is past, Mary.”“I pray that it may be, Hartley,” she said softly; but there was a shadow of doubt in her words.“Well,” said Salis, rising, “I must go and have a look round.”“Going out, dear?”“Yes. I seem to have been very neglectful of the people lately.”“Stop a minute, Hartley,” said Mary, with a vivid colour in her cheeks.“You want to say something?”“Yes, dear; I wish—I wish to speak to you about Dr North.”“Well, what about him, my child?”“Hartley, when we were ill, he was always here. No pains seemed to be too great for him to take.”“Yes, no man could have been more attentive.”“And now, Hartley, he, too, is ill—seriously ill.”“Yes, I’m afraid so.”“Then don’t you think it is a duty to try everything possible to help him in turn?”“Of course, and I have tried; but what can I do? He will not see me, and that cousin of his, who, by the way, seems to have a great deal of business with Mrs Berens, evidently does not want me there.”“But ought you to study that, Hartley, when your friend is ill?”“I have thought all this out, Mary, and I feel sometimes as if I could do nothing. You see it is like this: I feel certain that North does not want to see me.”“Why, dear?” said Mary earnestly.“Because it reminds him too much of his trouble with Leo. He feels that very bitterly, and I know my presence would bring it up. Would it not be better to keep away, and let his nerves settle themselves?”“No,” said Mary, in a quiet, firm way. “It was no fault of yours. It was Dr North’s own seeking, and he needs help. Go to him, Hartley.”“Go to him?”“Yes. He must be in sore trouble in every way. You say his cousin is there?”“Yes, and if I went much I should quarrel with that man.”“No, no; you must not quarrel. But recollect how Horace North used to say that he felt obliged to be civil to him, but he wished he would not come.”“Yes: I remember.”“Then go to him, and be at his side, dear, in case he requires help and counsel. Remember you are his friend. Even if he seemed querulous and fretful, I should stay.”“You are right, Mary; I’ll go. I shall have some one to help me in Mrs Milt. I will stand by him.”Mary’s eyes brightened, and she held out her hand.“He will thank you some day, dear; even if he seems strange now.”“He may say what he likes and do what he likes,” said Salis warmly. “I ought not to have needed telling this; but I’m going to make up for past neglect now and play the part of dog.”Salis was a little late in his promise to play the part of watch-dog for his friend, for as he walked up to the Manor House it was to meet a carriage just driving out.“The fly from the ‘Bull’ at King’s Hampton and a pair of horses,” said Salis as he walked on, apparently paying no heed to the inmates of the carriage. “Now, whoever would these be? White cravat, one of them; the other thin, spare, and dark. Doctors, for a sovereign, I’d say, if I were not a parson.”Mrs Milt opened the door to him, and showed him into the drawing-room, whose window looked down the back-garden with its great clump of evergreens and shady walks, beyond which were the meadows through which the river ran.“I’m very glad,” said Salis eagerly; “your master has had a couple of doctors to see him, has he not?”“No, sir; oh, dear, no!” said the housekeeper sadly. “If you would only see him, and persuade him to, and get him to see a clever man, sir, it would be the best day’s work you ever did.”“I’ll try, Mrs Milt,” said Salis; “but I’m disappointed.”“So am I, sir. He wants doing good to, instead of trying to do good to other people. Those are some friends of Mr Thompson, sir. One of them’s got a very curious complaint that Mr Thompson said master was almost the only man who knew how to cure.”“And did he see them?”“Yes, sir, after a great deal of persuasion, and almost a quarrel, sir. I could hear master and Mr Thompson, sir, talking through the door, and he said master ought to be ashamed of himself if he let a gentleman who was suffering come down from town and drive all the way across from King’s Hampton in the hope of being cured, and then let him go back without seeing him.”“Yes, Mrs Milt; go on,” said the curate eagerly.“Well, sir, after a long fight Mr Thompson went away, but he went and tried again and master gave way directly, and went down in his dressing-gown, looking all white and scared, and saw those two gentlemen who have just gone away.”“Well, I’m glad of that—heartily glad,” said Salis. “It is the thin end of the wedge, Mrs Milt, and we have good cause to be grateful to Mr Thompson for what he has done. Seeing patients again! This is good news indeed. He will see me now.”Mrs Milt shook her head.“I’m afraid not, sir.”“I must be a patient.”“You, sir? Why, you look the picture of health.”“But I have been very patient, Mrs Milt,” said Salis, laughing.“Ah, sir, and so have I,” said the housekeeper dolefully: “and a deal I’ve suffered, what with master’s illness, and my conscience.”The old lady put her apron to her eyes, and gave vent to a low sob.“Your conscience, Mrs Milt,” said Salis, smiling. “Why, I should have thought that was clear enough.”“Clear, sir? Oh, no! It’s many a bitter night I’ve spent thinking of my temper, and the way I’ve worried poor master when he’s had all his work on his shoulders. I’ve helped to make him what he is. Oh, there’s that man, sir!”She drew the curate within and closed the door, for steps were heard, and Cousin Thompson passed round from the back-garden to go down to the gate.“He’s gone out, sir; and I’ll try now if master will see you. It worries him dreadfully his cousin being here, and it always did.”Closing and fastening the door the housekeeper led the way to the first-floor landing, and, signing to Salis to be silent, she tapped gently at the doctor’s door.The moment before they had faintly heard the sound of some one pacing to and fro, but at the first tap on the door this ceased. There was no answer.The housekeeper knocked again, and in simple, old English, country fashion called gently:“Master, master!”Still there was no response; but she persevered, and knocked again.“Master, master!”“Yes, what is it?” came from within; and Mrs Milt turned and gave the curate a satisfied nod, as she said:“Mr Salis, sir. He would like to see you.”There was a pause, and then hoarsely: “Tell Mr Salis I am ill, and can see no one.”The curate was about to speak, but Mrs Milt hastily raised her hand.“But I’m sure he’d like to see you very much, sir. Mr Thompson’s gone out.”“Tell Mr Salis—”There was a pause, and the curate went close to the door.“North, old fellow,” he said gently; “don’t turn your back on all your friends. What have I done to be treated thus?”There was another pause, during which those on the landing listened anxiously fulsome response from within.But all remained perfectly still, and Salis ventured to appeal again.“I will not stop longer than you like, old fellow,” he said; “but I am uneasy, and—”He was interrupted by the sharp snap made by the lock of the door. Then the handle was turned, and a long slit of darkness was revealed.“Come in,” said a harsh voice; and Salis turned and gave Mrs Milt a satisfied nod and smile, as he entered North’s room and closed the door.The sensation was strange, that passing from broad daylight into intense darkness, and Salis tried to recall the configuration of the room, and the position of window and bed, as he felt North brush past him, and lock the door.For it was evident that an attempt had been made to exclude every ray of light, and not without success.“Well, I am glad—I was going to say to see you, old fellow,” cried Salis. “Hadn’t you better open the curtains and the window? This room smells very faint.”“Brandy spilt,” said North, alluding to his accident of many days before.“Brandy? Why, the place smells of laudanum and chloroform, and goodness knows what besides.”“You wanted to speak to me,” said North.“Yes, I’ve a great deal to say; but I should like to sit down.”“There is a chair on your left.”“Ah, yes. Thanks,” said Salis, feeling about until he touched it, and sitting down. “Where are you?”“Sitting on the bed.”“Well, I suppose you have a reason for this blind-man’s-buff work. Eyes bad?”“Very.”“May I say a few words to you about getting advice?”“Aren’t you afraid of shutting yourself up with me here in the dark? There are razors in that drawer. There’s a bottle of prussic acid on the dressing-table. Why, parson, you’re a fool!”The voice seemed changed, and this speech was followed by a curious mocking laugh which ran through Salis and made him shrink; but he recovered himself directly.“No,” he said stoutly; “I am not afraid.”“No, you are not afraid,” came softly from out of the darkness.“Come, North, old fellow,” continued Salis; “we are old friends. You have helped me when I have been in sore distress; forgive me, now that I know you are in trouble, for thrusting myself upon you.”“I have nothing to forgive.”“Then let me help you. Believe me that Mary and I are both terribly concerned about your health. Tell me what I can do.”There was a pause; then a low, piteous sigh; and from out of the darkness came the word—“Nothing—!”“I can’t understand your complaint, of course, old fellow; but tell me one thing. Are you sufficientlycompos mentisto know what to do for yourself for the best?”“Quite, Salis, quite,” said North slowly.“And you are ill, and are carrying out a definite line of action?”“I am doing what is really—what is for the best.”“And you do not need help—additional advice?”“If I did, a letter or telegram would bring down a couple of London’s most eminent men; but they could do nothing.”Salis sighed.“But can I do nothing?”“Only help me to have perfect rest and peace.”“But about your patients? Moredock is complaining bitterly.”“My patients must go elsewhere,” said North slowly. “I cannot see anybody.”“Don’t think I am moved by curiosity; but are you sure that you are doing what is best for yourself?”“Quite sure. Let me cure myself my own way, and—and—”“Well—what, old fellow?” said Salis, for the doctor had ceased speaking.“Don’t take any notice of what I say at times. I’ve—I’ve been working a little too hard, and—at times—”“Yes, at times?”“I feel a little delirious, and say things I should not say at other times—times I say, at other times.”There was a singularity in his utterance, and his repetitions, which struck Salis; and these broken sentences were strange even to the verge of being terrible, coming as they did out of the darkness before him.“Oh, yes; I understand,” he hastened to say cheerfully. “I know, old fellow. Want a wet towel about your head and rest.”“Yes—and rest,” said North quietly.“Rest and plenty of sleep. I set your disorder down to that,” said Salis, as a feeling of uneasiness which he could not master seemed to increase. At one moment he felt that his friend was not in a proper condition to judge what was best for him; at another he concluded that he was; and that, after all, it was a strange thing that a man could not do as he liked in his own house, even to shutting himself up in a dark room to rest his eyes.A strange silence had fallen upon the place, and, in spite of his efforts, Salis could not bear it. A dozen subjects sprang to his lips, and he was about to utter them, but he felt that they would be inappropriate; and as North remained perfectly silent, and the uneasy feeling consequent upon sitting there in the darkness, conversing, as it were, with the invisible, increasing, Salis rose.“Well,” he said, “I’m glad I came, old fellow. I haven’t bothered you much?”“No.”“And I may come again?” A pause. Then—“Yes.”“And you’ll see me?”“I cannot see you. I shall be glad if you’ll come. I feel safer and better when you are here.”Salis winced a little. Then a thought struck him.“Look here, old fellow. Come and stay with us for a change.”North seemed to start violently, and Salis felt how grave a mistake he had made. For the moment he had forgotten everything about Leo, and he bit his lip at his folly.“No. Go now.”“Will you shake hands?”“No, no,” said North passionately. “Go, man; go now. Don’t come again for some days.”“As you will, North; only remember this—a message will fetch me at any time. You will summon me if I can be of any use?”North seemed to utter some words of assent, and then Salis heard a faint rustling sound approaching in the darkness, which, in spite of his manhood and firmness, made the curate wince, as he felt how much he was at North’s mercy if this complaint took an unpleasant mental turn.But the rustling was explained directly after by the click of the door-lock. Then a pale bar of light shone into the room as the opening enlarged, and as it was evidently held ready Salis passed out, the door closed sharply behind him, the lock snapped into its place, and he shuddered as he heard a low, mocking laugh, followed by the vibration of the floor as the invalid began to pace rapidly up and down.“What ought I to do?” muttered Salis, as he stood irresolutely upon the mat, till he felt a touch upon his arm, and, turning, found that Mrs Milt had evidently been waiting for him to come out.“Well, sir?” she whispered, as they went down.“Well, Mrs Milt?”“You don’t think that he is—a little—you don’t think that is coming on?”“What, lunacy?” The housekeeper nodded. “Absurd, Mrs Milt!” cried Salis, “absurd!”“Thank goodness, sir!”“A little out of order and eccentric. But what made you ask that question?”“Well, sir, it was something Mr Thompson said.”
“I don’t like it, Mary. North has completely shut himself up. He will not even see Mrs Milt, so she tells me, and she is getting very uneasy about his state.”
Mary looked up at her brother. She could not trust herself to speak.
“I pity him, and yet I feel annoyed and hurt, for I gave him credit for greater strength of mind.”
Mary felt that she knew what was coming, but she dared not open her lips.
“Of course it was very painful to find out the woman he had made his idol was trifling with him, but I should have thought that Horace North would have proved himself to be a man of the world, borne his burden patiently, and been enough of a philosopher to go on his way without breaking down.”
“But he is very ill.”
“Ill!” said Salis. “I feel disposed to go and shake him, and rouse him up. To tell him that this is not manly on his part.”
“And yet you own that he is suffering, Hartley.”
“Suffering? Yes; but he has no business to be suffering about a woman like—there, there, I am forgetting myself. Poor fellow! he must be very ill. You see, the upset came when he was worn out with the study and intricacies of that pet theory of his, and hence it is that he is now so low.”
Mary lay back with her eyes half closed for some time, and there was silence in the room.
“Where is Leo?” said Salis, at length.
“In her room—reading.”
“Thank Heaven she seems to be settling down calmly now. Surely this life-storm is past, Mary.”
“I pray that it may be, Hartley,” she said softly; but there was a shadow of doubt in her words.
“Well,” said Salis, rising, “I must go and have a look round.”
“Going out, dear?”
“Yes. I seem to have been very neglectful of the people lately.”
“Stop a minute, Hartley,” said Mary, with a vivid colour in her cheeks.
“You want to say something?”
“Yes, dear; I wish—I wish to speak to you about Dr North.”
“Well, what about him, my child?”
“Hartley, when we were ill, he was always here. No pains seemed to be too great for him to take.”
“Yes, no man could have been more attentive.”
“And now, Hartley, he, too, is ill—seriously ill.”
“Yes, I’m afraid so.”
“Then don’t you think it is a duty to try everything possible to help him in turn?”
“Of course, and I have tried; but what can I do? He will not see me, and that cousin of his, who, by the way, seems to have a great deal of business with Mrs Berens, evidently does not want me there.”
“But ought you to study that, Hartley, when your friend is ill?”
“I have thought all this out, Mary, and I feel sometimes as if I could do nothing. You see it is like this: I feel certain that North does not want to see me.”
“Why, dear?” said Mary earnestly.
“Because it reminds him too much of his trouble with Leo. He feels that very bitterly, and I know my presence would bring it up. Would it not be better to keep away, and let his nerves settle themselves?”
“No,” said Mary, in a quiet, firm way. “It was no fault of yours. It was Dr North’s own seeking, and he needs help. Go to him, Hartley.”
“Go to him?”
“Yes. He must be in sore trouble in every way. You say his cousin is there?”
“Yes, and if I went much I should quarrel with that man.”
“No, no; you must not quarrel. But recollect how Horace North used to say that he felt obliged to be civil to him, but he wished he would not come.”
“Yes: I remember.”
“Then go to him, and be at his side, dear, in case he requires help and counsel. Remember you are his friend. Even if he seemed querulous and fretful, I should stay.”
“You are right, Mary; I’ll go. I shall have some one to help me in Mrs Milt. I will stand by him.”
Mary’s eyes brightened, and she held out her hand.
“He will thank you some day, dear; even if he seems strange now.”
“He may say what he likes and do what he likes,” said Salis warmly. “I ought not to have needed telling this; but I’m going to make up for past neglect now and play the part of dog.”
Salis was a little late in his promise to play the part of watch-dog for his friend, for as he walked up to the Manor House it was to meet a carriage just driving out.
“The fly from the ‘Bull’ at King’s Hampton and a pair of horses,” said Salis as he walked on, apparently paying no heed to the inmates of the carriage. “Now, whoever would these be? White cravat, one of them; the other thin, spare, and dark. Doctors, for a sovereign, I’d say, if I were not a parson.”
Mrs Milt opened the door to him, and showed him into the drawing-room, whose window looked down the back-garden with its great clump of evergreens and shady walks, beyond which were the meadows through which the river ran.
“I’m very glad,” said Salis eagerly; “your master has had a couple of doctors to see him, has he not?”
“No, sir; oh, dear, no!” said the housekeeper sadly. “If you would only see him, and persuade him to, and get him to see a clever man, sir, it would be the best day’s work you ever did.”
“I’ll try, Mrs Milt,” said Salis; “but I’m disappointed.”
“So am I, sir. He wants doing good to, instead of trying to do good to other people. Those are some friends of Mr Thompson, sir. One of them’s got a very curious complaint that Mr Thompson said master was almost the only man who knew how to cure.”
“And did he see them?”
“Yes, sir, after a great deal of persuasion, and almost a quarrel, sir. I could hear master and Mr Thompson, sir, talking through the door, and he said master ought to be ashamed of himself if he let a gentleman who was suffering come down from town and drive all the way across from King’s Hampton in the hope of being cured, and then let him go back without seeing him.”
“Yes, Mrs Milt; go on,” said the curate eagerly.
“Well, sir, after a long fight Mr Thompson went away, but he went and tried again and master gave way directly, and went down in his dressing-gown, looking all white and scared, and saw those two gentlemen who have just gone away.”
“Well, I’m glad of that—heartily glad,” said Salis. “It is the thin end of the wedge, Mrs Milt, and we have good cause to be grateful to Mr Thompson for what he has done. Seeing patients again! This is good news indeed. He will see me now.”
Mrs Milt shook her head.
“I’m afraid not, sir.”
“I must be a patient.”
“You, sir? Why, you look the picture of health.”
“But I have been very patient, Mrs Milt,” said Salis, laughing.
“Ah, sir, and so have I,” said the housekeeper dolefully: “and a deal I’ve suffered, what with master’s illness, and my conscience.”
The old lady put her apron to her eyes, and gave vent to a low sob.
“Your conscience, Mrs Milt,” said Salis, smiling. “Why, I should have thought that was clear enough.”
“Clear, sir? Oh, no! It’s many a bitter night I’ve spent thinking of my temper, and the way I’ve worried poor master when he’s had all his work on his shoulders. I’ve helped to make him what he is. Oh, there’s that man, sir!”
She drew the curate within and closed the door, for steps were heard, and Cousin Thompson passed round from the back-garden to go down to the gate.
“He’s gone out, sir; and I’ll try now if master will see you. It worries him dreadfully his cousin being here, and it always did.”
Closing and fastening the door the housekeeper led the way to the first-floor landing, and, signing to Salis to be silent, she tapped gently at the doctor’s door.
The moment before they had faintly heard the sound of some one pacing to and fro, but at the first tap on the door this ceased. There was no answer.
The housekeeper knocked again, and in simple, old English, country fashion called gently:
“Master, master!”
Still there was no response; but she persevered, and knocked again.
“Master, master!”
“Yes, what is it?” came from within; and Mrs Milt turned and gave the curate a satisfied nod, as she said:
“Mr Salis, sir. He would like to see you.”
There was a pause, and then hoarsely: “Tell Mr Salis I am ill, and can see no one.”
The curate was about to speak, but Mrs Milt hastily raised her hand.
“But I’m sure he’d like to see you very much, sir. Mr Thompson’s gone out.”
“Tell Mr Salis—”
There was a pause, and the curate went close to the door.
“North, old fellow,” he said gently; “don’t turn your back on all your friends. What have I done to be treated thus?”
There was another pause, during which those on the landing listened anxiously fulsome response from within.
But all remained perfectly still, and Salis ventured to appeal again.
“I will not stop longer than you like, old fellow,” he said; “but I am uneasy, and—”
He was interrupted by the sharp snap made by the lock of the door. Then the handle was turned, and a long slit of darkness was revealed.
“Come in,” said a harsh voice; and Salis turned and gave Mrs Milt a satisfied nod and smile, as he entered North’s room and closed the door.
The sensation was strange, that passing from broad daylight into intense darkness, and Salis tried to recall the configuration of the room, and the position of window and bed, as he felt North brush past him, and lock the door.
For it was evident that an attempt had been made to exclude every ray of light, and not without success.
“Well, I am glad—I was going to say to see you, old fellow,” cried Salis. “Hadn’t you better open the curtains and the window? This room smells very faint.”
“Brandy spilt,” said North, alluding to his accident of many days before.
“Brandy? Why, the place smells of laudanum and chloroform, and goodness knows what besides.”
“You wanted to speak to me,” said North.
“Yes, I’ve a great deal to say; but I should like to sit down.”
“There is a chair on your left.”
“Ah, yes. Thanks,” said Salis, feeling about until he touched it, and sitting down. “Where are you?”
“Sitting on the bed.”
“Well, I suppose you have a reason for this blind-man’s-buff work. Eyes bad?”
“Very.”
“May I say a few words to you about getting advice?”
“Aren’t you afraid of shutting yourself up with me here in the dark? There are razors in that drawer. There’s a bottle of prussic acid on the dressing-table. Why, parson, you’re a fool!”
The voice seemed changed, and this speech was followed by a curious mocking laugh which ran through Salis and made him shrink; but he recovered himself directly.
“No,” he said stoutly; “I am not afraid.”
“No, you are not afraid,” came softly from out of the darkness.
“Come, North, old fellow,” continued Salis; “we are old friends. You have helped me when I have been in sore distress; forgive me, now that I know you are in trouble, for thrusting myself upon you.”
“I have nothing to forgive.”
“Then let me help you. Believe me that Mary and I are both terribly concerned about your health. Tell me what I can do.”
There was a pause; then a low, piteous sigh; and from out of the darkness came the word—
“Nothing—!”
“I can’t understand your complaint, of course, old fellow; but tell me one thing. Are you sufficientlycompos mentisto know what to do for yourself for the best?”
“Quite, Salis, quite,” said North slowly.
“And you are ill, and are carrying out a definite line of action?”
“I am doing what is really—what is for the best.”
“And you do not need help—additional advice?”
“If I did, a letter or telegram would bring down a couple of London’s most eminent men; but they could do nothing.”
Salis sighed.
“But can I do nothing?”
“Only help me to have perfect rest and peace.”
“But about your patients? Moredock is complaining bitterly.”
“My patients must go elsewhere,” said North slowly. “I cannot see anybody.”
“Don’t think I am moved by curiosity; but are you sure that you are doing what is best for yourself?”
“Quite sure. Let me cure myself my own way, and—and—”
“Well—what, old fellow?” said Salis, for the doctor had ceased speaking.
“Don’t take any notice of what I say at times. I’ve—I’ve been working a little too hard, and—at times—”
“Yes, at times?”
“I feel a little delirious, and say things I should not say at other times—times I say, at other times.”
There was a singularity in his utterance, and his repetitions, which struck Salis; and these broken sentences were strange even to the verge of being terrible, coming as they did out of the darkness before him.
“Oh, yes; I understand,” he hastened to say cheerfully. “I know, old fellow. Want a wet towel about your head and rest.”
“Yes—and rest,” said North quietly.
“Rest and plenty of sleep. I set your disorder down to that,” said Salis, as a feeling of uneasiness which he could not master seemed to increase. At one moment he felt that his friend was not in a proper condition to judge what was best for him; at another he concluded that he was; and that, after all, it was a strange thing that a man could not do as he liked in his own house, even to shutting himself up in a dark room to rest his eyes.
A strange silence had fallen upon the place, and, in spite of his efforts, Salis could not bear it. A dozen subjects sprang to his lips, and he was about to utter them, but he felt that they would be inappropriate; and as North remained perfectly silent, and the uneasy feeling consequent upon sitting there in the darkness, conversing, as it were, with the invisible, increasing, Salis rose.
“Well,” he said, “I’m glad I came, old fellow. I haven’t bothered you much?”
“No.”
“And I may come again?” A pause. Then—“Yes.”
“And you’ll see me?”
“I cannot see you. I shall be glad if you’ll come. I feel safer and better when you are here.”
Salis winced a little. Then a thought struck him.
“Look here, old fellow. Come and stay with us for a change.”
North seemed to start violently, and Salis felt how grave a mistake he had made. For the moment he had forgotten everything about Leo, and he bit his lip at his folly.
“No. Go now.”
“Will you shake hands?”
“No, no,” said North passionately. “Go, man; go now. Don’t come again for some days.”
“As you will, North; only remember this—a message will fetch me at any time. You will summon me if I can be of any use?”
North seemed to utter some words of assent, and then Salis heard a faint rustling sound approaching in the darkness, which, in spite of his manhood and firmness, made the curate wince, as he felt how much he was at North’s mercy if this complaint took an unpleasant mental turn.
But the rustling was explained directly after by the click of the door-lock. Then a pale bar of light shone into the room as the opening enlarged, and as it was evidently held ready Salis passed out, the door closed sharply behind him, the lock snapped into its place, and he shuddered as he heard a low, mocking laugh, followed by the vibration of the floor as the invalid began to pace rapidly up and down.
“What ought I to do?” muttered Salis, as he stood irresolutely upon the mat, till he felt a touch upon his arm, and, turning, found that Mrs Milt had evidently been waiting for him to come out.
“Well, sir?” she whispered, as they went down.
“Well, Mrs Milt?”
“You don’t think that he is—a little—you don’t think that is coming on?”
“What, lunacy?” The housekeeper nodded. “Absurd, Mrs Milt!” cried Salis, “absurd!”
“Thank goodness, sir!”
“A little out of order and eccentric. But what made you ask that question?”
“Well, sir, it was something Mr Thompson said.”