"Yes," said Leicester, staring at himself in his shaving-glass the morning after the dinner at Coombe Lodge. "That is the question. Do I love her? If not, why when I am awake do I think over every little trivial word she has spoken, recall every expression of her face that accompanied it; and also when I am asleep do I dream of her, see her face, with its deep, pure eyes, all through the night? If I asked Bertie he would say that I do love her, and yet to myself I distrust myself. I cannot bring myself to acknowledge that I, the selfish, egotistical Leicester, truly and madly love a girl, sweet faced, violet-eyed angel though she be. Madly I said; and madly it must be. It is not in me to do or feel anything by halves. I must be hot and eager in action, thought and emotion, notwithstanding my seeming frigidity. Now," and his handsome face frowned, candidly, "I hate Captain Howard Murpoint. It's wicked, I know it is, but I hate him in despite of my principles."
Just then came a knock at the door.
"Come in," said Leicester, thinking it was his valet; "you are a nice, active body servant, William. I'm half dressed, and——Hello! it's you, is it?" he broke off as Bertie entered the room.
"Yes; you've cut your face, old fellow."
"Thank you for nothing; my glass told me that," said Leicester. "I never could shave myself, and Williamhasn't condescended to get up. I couldn't lie in bed such a morning as this, and you couldn't either, evidently."
"No," said Bertie, eagerly. "I say, Les, what a day this would be for the yachting trip."
Leicester smiled.
"Wind's in the right quarter for a good blow," he said.
"I wonder now," said Bertie, hesitatingly, "if Mrs. Mildmay would like a——"
"You mean Lady Ethel," interrupted Leicester, with a smile.
Bertie's frank face flushed.
"Well, both of them," he said. "Suppose you ride over to the lodge and bring Fitz and her over here while I go down to the Park and ask Mrs. Mildmay and the captain, and of course Miss Violet."
"Suppose you ride over yourself," retorted Leicester.
Bertie shook his head with sad significance.
"That wouldn't do," he said. "Do you think Lady Lackland would trust Ethel—I mean Lady Boisdale to me, even though Fitz was with her? No! You go over and she won't say no; but if I go the sun will be too hot, or the trip too much, or something."
"Yes, have your own way, obstinate," said Leicester, and so after breakfast he mounted his hunter and rode over to Coombe Lodge.
When Bertie got over to the Park he found that the captain had gone out on urgent business.
Mrs. Mildmay, when asked if she would take the trip, looked over to Violet, who gave a quiet affirmative, and Bertie, trusting Leicester had been similarly lucky in his embassage, bore the ladies off to the beach.
Bertie hailed the captain's boat, and before it had rowed from the yacht to the shore Lord Fitz's dogcart came rattling down the rural parade.
"Oh, I am so glad!" said Violet, as Ethel sprang lightly down. "I was so afraid you would not come."
When the gentlemen had skillfully assisted the ladies on deck a chorus of delighted admiration rewarded them.
"How beautiful," said Violet. "Why, I thought a ship was always dirty and in disorder. But this is as clean and neat as a lady's workbox."
"Neater, I hope, or I shall have to discharge my sailing master," said Leicester, smiling.
Violet and Ethel went from one end of the little vessel to the other, delighted with the novelty.
"Heave hoy! Heave hoy!" and up came the anchor.
Then at a word from Leicester her white, graceful sails fluttered out to the winds, and the birdlikePetrel, with a graceful toss, as if in laughing delight at her freedom, went off before the summer breeze.
Fitz understood yachting as he did hunting, shooting, and all manly sports, and while Leicester gave the orders and sailed the vessel Fitz explained the different technical terms, taking a great deal of trouble to make the matter clear to Violet.
She was grateful to him, and interested, and as she was not in love with Mr. Leicester Dodson yet, her face was as bright to Fitz as to him, and when the owner of the yacht came with the rugs he found her quite occupied laughing with Fitz.
Bertie had secured Ethel, and at some little distance apart was talking as only he knew how to talk.
Leicester therefore had Mrs. Mildmay left to him, and, like a gallant gentleman, amused her.
He was not of a jealous disposition, and he was satisfied if Violet was happy; but after a little while he came up to Fitz's side.
"Miss Mildmay would like to see how the yacht is steered. Show her the wheel, Fitz."
"You do the honors," said Fitz, good naturedly. "You understand them best."
Mr. Leicester took her to the wheel and explained it.
"How I should like to steer!" she said. "I am ambitious; and ought to be encouraged."
"Yes," said Leicester, "it is a laudable ambition. Take hold of the wheel and I will show you."
The instruction being done more by the hand than the voice it followed that Leicester's strong, firm fingers came in contact with Violet's white, soft ones very frequently.
There arose suddenly upon the flash of the sea, the flap of the sails, and the murmur of the conversation, the musical notes of the ship's bell.
"Luncheon," said Leicester.
So they all "tumbled down," said Bertie, into the saloon, on entering which the ladies were again transfixed with astonishment.
The table glittered with cut glass, plate, flowers, and a luncheon fit for the Caliph of Bagdad himself.
Never had that little bower of luxury ever been filled with sweeter voices or lighter laughter.
It was all delightful, from the lobsters that would roll about as if they were alive to the champagne which popped about the cabin like mimic guns of distress, Violet declared; and Leicester, seated next her, was heard to laugh aloud at one of Bertie's jokes—a thing unknown hitherto.
"Now suppose," said Leicester to Lady Ethel, "we turned out to be pirates, and all this while were carrying you off to the Mediterranean."
As he spoke the sails flapped against the mast, and the vessel rolled suddenly.
He looked up at the sky through the window with a sharp glance.
"The wind is changing," he said, quietly. "We shall have a calm."
"A calm," said Lady Ethel to Bertie. "Then we shall not be able to get on."
"Yes," he said, with a secret thrill of exultation. "I am afraid not. Where are you going, Leicester?"
"On deck," said Leicester, and he sprang up the companionway.
Presently he returned.
"What news?" said Fitz.
"Doubtful," said Leicester, pouring out a glass of wine for Mrs. Mildmay. "A calm, I say—my sailing master says a—storm."
"A storm!" said Mrs. Mildmay, with dismay.
"Only a summer storm," said Leicester, lightly.
He quietly ran up on deck, and they heard his deep voice giving the command to tack round.
Then there followed a hurried trampling on deck and suddenly a voice called out:
"Tumble up! All hands on deck!"
Fitz ran up the gangway, and Bertie would have followed,but Mrs. Mildmay seemed rather alarmed, and he stayed talking and laughing to reassure her.
Presently Leicester came down and with a smile said:
"The rain is coming and some more wind. Mrs. Mildmay, you are in the pirates' clutches, so make yourself comfortable on the sofa."
She obeyed, for she was really frightened.
Violet sat beside her, and Bertie and Lady Ethel did their best to convince her that there was no danger.
Then Violet stole to the door of the cabin and looked longingly toward the dark sky.
As she looked Leicester, passing, saw her.
"Let me come up with you, please," she said.
"I couldn't think of it," he said.
But he called down to ask Mrs. Mildmay if she would permit it, and then handed Violet up.
All the sails were furled, yet the yacht drove along at tremendous pace before the gale.
Leicester's voice was scarcely deep enough to drown the wind, and the little vessel tossed like a nutshell as it forced its way along the breakers.
So anxious had Leicester grown that he seemed to have forgotten the ladies.
But he had not, for presently, after a colloquy with the skipper, he shrugged his shoulders and came up to Violet, who was standing, not in the least wet or frightened, by the forecastle.
"What is the matter?" she asked.
"Nothing much," he said, with a smile. "I have resigned command, that's all. My skipper knows this coast better than I do, and I have left him to steer us right."
"Is there any danger of going wrong, then?" she asked.
"Well——" he hesitated.
At that moment the skipper shouted out something that sounded dreadfully sharp and stern in the wind, Leicester caught Violet's arm and drew her to him, glancing as he did so to Bertie and Fitz, who were both guarding Lady Ethel.
The yacht sprang forward under the press of sail which the skipper had ordered to be put on.
"Right now," said Leicester, cheerily. "We shall fly home to Penruddie; I can almost see the white cliffs.Ah!" he broke off, sharply, "port your helm! Breakers ahead! Great Heaven! we are on the north reef!"
He sprang to the helm, Violet paled with a sudden fear, cowered, and dropped to her knees.
The next instant she felt an arm round her, and a voice in her ear whispered, passionately:
"You are not frightened! We are safe!"
Then she felt herself lifted up and carried down the gangway.
She had not fainted—or had she, and were the words, "Oh, my darling, my Violet!" only creations of fancy?
It is not to be supposed that Captain Howard Murpoint had deserted his post of observation at this critical time on a matter of no moment. The captain had commenced to play his game in earnest, and that he might be able to throw down one of his trump cards he had declared his intention of riding on the chestnut to the market town of Tenby.
Had he even been aware that Mr. Leicester would carry out his yachting intentions on that day it is probable that he would still have kept to his plan, for the captain was a firm believer in the proverb, "Delays are dangerous," and once assured that a step was necessary never hesitated about taking it.
Consequently after breakfast, he mounted the chestnut and rode off, waving his white, well-gloved hand to the ladies, and smiling with the serenity of a mind at ease and a heart innocent of guile.
When he had got beyond the village, the smile disappeared, and the chestnut felt the whip, in which the captain tied three good hard knots, across its sleek sides.
He was in a hurry, and he soon impressed it upon the horse, who tore into Tenby all on fire with surprise and anger at its novel treatment.
The captain stabled his steed, drank a glass of ale at the "Royal George", and then strolled through the town.
It was an old-fashioned place, but there were some good shops, among them an apparently well-stocked stationer's.
To this the captain directed his steps, and, sauntering in, purchased some paper and envelopes, also some ink and pens and pencils, and seemed inclined to purchase anything to which the shopman—an obliging fellow—called his attention.
"Have you any parchment? I am going to make a list of goods—curiosities, and such like—to send over seas, and I am afraid that paper might be destroyed," he explained.
"Oh, parchment is the thing, sair," said the man, and he took a roll of the same from a drawer.
"There is some, sir," said he, "but it is rather faded. The fact is we are not often asked for it, and this has been in the house for some time. If it is of any use to you I will charge you less than the usual price for it."
The captain turned it over indifferently, and separated the sheets with his finger.
"No," he said, "I think paper will do." Then he raised his eyes to a shelf behind the shopkeeper's head and said, suddenly: "Is that sealing wax up there? I think I'll have some."
The man reached a ladder and climbed up for it.
While his back was turned Captain Murpoint skillfully abstracted a sheet of parchment from the heap and slid it into his pocket, coughing the while to cover the sound of the crisp rustle, and flinging his umbrella down upon the remainder so as to account for the sound if his cough had not covered it.
The shopman descended quite unsuspiciously, however, and the captain, having added the sealing wax and some red tape to his purchases, took his leave, refusing all the obliging stationer's offers to send the parcel home, and carrying it in his hand.
From the High Street he then made a slight divergence to one of the smaller thoroughfares, and paused before a small general shop which displayed in its little window a sample of some of its varied stock.
He purchased several small articles and then inquired in the most natural manner for a flour dredger.
"I do not know what it is," he added, with a smile, as the good woman looked rather surprised; "but I have been commissioned to purchase one for a lady."
"Certainly, sir," said the woman; and she produced a flour dredger.
The captain examined it with a smile.
"I suppose it is all right," he said, and he had it packed up with his other purchases.
With a sigh of absolute relief, for, though the incident was seemingly trivial, he had effected a good deal in obtaining a sheet of parchment and a flour dredger without attracting attention, he returned to the "Royal George", and sat down to a nice light luncheon.
Then ordering his horse, he mounted again.
On his way home, a very little distance from his route, lay Coombe Lodge. The captain was a gallant gentleman, and he thought it would only be a delicate piece of attention if he called to inquire after Lady Lackland's health.
After earnest inquiries after her ladyship's headache the captain gave an amusing and highly colored account of his trip to Tenby, introducing and inventing half a dozen little serio-comic incidents, which, though they did not occur, highly amused the countess.
"I am sorry Ethel and Fitz are out," she said as the captain rose to go. "I suppose, however, you did not expect to find them at home?"
She smiled interrogatively.
"No," he said, "I was not aware——"
"Indeed!" said the countess. "Did you not know that they were going yachting with Mr. Leicester Dodson and Mrs. Mildmay?"
The captain certainly did not know it, and shrugged his shoulders with a smile.
"No, indeed," he said. "Ah, my dear Lady Lackland, these very young people are so impulsive! They arranged their little pleasure trip after I had started this morning, seeing that the weather was fine—though," he added, glancing at the window, "I think we may have a storm."
Lady Lackland looked at him thoughtfully.
She thought him a man worth conciliation, and perhaps of confidence.
"Mrs. Mildmay has gone," she said. "Mr. Dodson rode over this morning and fetched Fitz and Ethel."
"Oh!" said the captain, significantly. "Very impulsive young man, my dear lady; very excellent, clever young man, but impulsive. He has been badly brought up, in a selfish circle, and I am afraid has acquired a considerable amount of willfulness, and—shall I add, fickleness?"
"What do you mean?" asked Lady Lackland, with soft abruptness. "Do you think Mr. Leicester is obstinate and a flirt?"
"The very word, my dear lady," said the captain, softly, as he sank into the seat beside her. "I am very interested in Mr. Leicester," he continued, swinging his hat gently and looking up into the countess' face under his deeply penciled eyebrows. "Very. I could tell you why—perhaps you can guess. To be candid, my dear Lady Lackland, as I told you the other evening, I am poor John Mildmay's oldest friend. I was to have been his daughter's legal guardian; and though his sudden death prevented him bequeathing her welfare to my care I still feel for her the affection and anxiety of a father. Ah, how can I do otherwise when by her every look and gesture, by her every smile and tone she reminds me of my dear lost friend?"
Lady Lackland, whose eyes had been averted, sought his face with a mild but astute look of inquiry.
"One cannot suppose for one minute," continued the captain, "that a man of the world like Leicester Dodson can entertain any serious intention of making a proposal to Violet. No, my dear lady; men of his class strike at higher game." He paused, and did not fail to notice the sudden drooping of the wily countess' eyelids. "They, or their fathers, have made money by trade, and with that money they desire—nay, they look to purchase rank. It is their ambition. They have it instilled into them with the food of their infancy; they look forward to it as the final goal of their endeavors. Yes, Leicester Dodson intends to marry rank, and," he continued, in a lower voice and with a subtle significance, "and will do so if some foolish flirtation does not act as a stumbling-block."
The countess raised her face languidly.
She understood the captain, and she began to see that he was on her side.
He meant by his delicate confidence to warn her that if the flirtation between Leicester Dodson, the millionaire's son, and Violet Mildmay, the merchant's daughter, were not stopped, the countess would lose the aforesaid Leicester and his money bags for her daughter, Lady Ethel.
The captain continued:
"I may describe the position of Violet as very similar, yet with a difference. She, my dear lady, though I, so biased and partial, should not give it utterance perhaps, is a most charming and lovable girl; but she is simple—simple in the extreme, unsophisticated. She would be the first to be led away and deceived into thinking a foolish flirtation, a midsummer day's flirtation, a serious love affair and a binding engagement. Now I am sure that must not be. No, she is reserved and intended for a different and may I say a happier and more suitable fate? By the way, did you say that Mr. Leicester Dodson came over himself this morning?"
"Yes," said the countess.
The captain smoothed his hat.
"I hope you will not think the less of him for what I have said, my dear lady."
"Oh, no!" said Lady Lackland, "not in any way. Besides, you have not said much," she added, "only that he is somewhat of a flirt."
"And that you have noticed yourself?" said the captain, with ill-concealed eagerness—"you who have so many better opportunities of observing him in the society which you so much adorn."
"Yes," said Lady Lackland, "I think perhaps that he is a flirt. He would be a very eligible young man if he were a little more steadfast; but one cannot put old heads on young shoulders, Captain Murpoint."
"No, no," said the captain. And with a delicate emphasis he shook hands and took his leave, repeating to himself Lady Lackland's reply as he went. It was not a very important one; but we shall see how by deftlytwisting and turning it Captain Murpoint effected a great deal with it.
As the captain rode home the storm gathered and broke upon him.
The wind nearly blew him from his horse and the rain saturated him.
At the Park he found the servants in a state of confusion and alarm, and learned that the ladies had not yet come home.
Without dismounting he galloped down the steep hill to the beach, which presented a picturesque scene enough, but a sufficiently significant one.
Just within reach of the spray stood a small crowd composed of the fishermen and their wives and children and the principal part of the village.
Lower down, and seemingly in the foremost waves themselves, were Willie Sanderson and two or three of his mates, vainly endeavoring to launch one of the boats.
By their side, in close and agitated conversation with Mr. Starling, was Jemmie, Sanderson's lame brother.
The captain spurred his horse across the stones and shouted, loud enough to be heard above the roar of the waves:
"Has the yacht come in?"
Willie Sanderson shook his head, and significantly pointed seaward.
Jem Starling came up and touched his hat and, bellowing hoarsely in the captain's ear, said:
"No, she ain't come in, sir, and these chaps be all in a regular state about her. They say——"
But the captain was too anxious as to the situation to receive anything second-hand, and beckoned imperiously to Willie Sanderson, who came up to him.
"Do you think there is any danger?" asked the captain, in a voice slightly tremulous.
Willie Sanderson shook his head gravely.
"Can't say exactly, sir. All depends upon where she be. I knows as the skipper said they were to sail south and tack round. If so be they have, why then they're close agin' the North Reef by now, and——"
"Well, well?" asked the captain, with feverish eagerness.
"Well, then, may Heaven help 'em!" said Willie, solemnly.
The captain's white, strong hand clutched the reins tightly, and his thin lips compressed with restrained emotion.
If the yacht were on the North Reef she would be wrecked, and in all probability Violet, her aunt, and Leicester Dodson, Fitz and Lady Ethel would be drowned.
All the eventualities, the results, and the personal consequences of such a fatality rushed through the captain's brain, and Jem, who was standing by the horse's head, watching his master, saw a gleam of fiendish joy flash across the pale, masterful face. Perhaps the captain knew that he had seen it, for the next instant his face had assumed a look of alarm and anxiety, and, with a burst of excitement not altogether feigned, he flung himself from the saddle, shouting:
"Launch the boat! We must go to her. Who volunteers?"
The men looked out to sea, then shook their heads.
"No boat could live in this, sir," shouted Willie Sanderson, "and if she could, by the time we'd got to the North Reef, the storm would be over. Lookee now, it's clearing off a bit to northward."
The storm abated and passed off as rapidly as it had gathered and broken, and the wet crowd, about an hour afterward, had the extreme pleasure of descrying a white speck on the horizon, which soon grew to be the familiar form of thePetrel.
She sailed in, with all her canvas crowded, looking as unconcerned as a swan on a lake after an April shower, and the crowd burst into a cheer of mingled excitement and admiration.
But the captain had determined that there should be a little display of emotion, and therefore when thePetrelran into the little rude harbor he hurried forward and sprang on to her deck, his two hands outstretched to grasp Violet and Mrs. Mildmay with his face pale and grateful.
With soft but emphatic gratitude and anxiety he went from one to the other of the ladies, while Leicester, incommand of the vessel, was seeing that all was made secure.
When he was free he turned to where Fitz and Bertie were assisting the ladies to alight and eyed the captain with a calm, keen scrutiny.
"Alarmed, were you, Captain Murpoint?" he said, in his grand, clear voice. "What would you have been if you had been fated to be with us?" and a slight sneer curled his lip.
"Not so much alarmed or so anxious," said the captain, with a smile that was a finished piece of calm reproach. "For I should at least have had the satisfaction of sharing in the danger of my friends."
Leicester smiled grimly and stooped to lend Violet his hand over the gangway.
"A poor satisfaction, captain. There was not much danger, or if there was it did not last long. The Petrel will see out many a worse summer gale than this. But I am sorry," he added, addressing Mrs. Mildmay with a much more eager tone in his voice, "I am so sorry you should have been so alarmed and made so uncomfortable! And—ah, here is the carriage," he said. And he ran up the beach as the carriage Jem had ordered drove up to the parade.
He held the door as Mrs. Mildmay and Violet entered, but though his dark eyes sought hers Violet's made him no return, and her "good-by" was as dreamy and indistinct as her gaze.
Leicester returned to thePetrelto assist Lady Ethel, in a state of mind not enviable.
"I'll drive you home, Lady Ethel, if you are too tired," he said, "but if you are not my mother will be delighted beyond measure to make you comfortable. What do you say, Fitz? Will you take refuge with us for to-night? I'll ride over to Coombe Lodge and set Lady Lackland's fears at rest."
Now Fitz was very willing to stay so near Violet Mildmay, and Ethel was not unwilling, though she demurred.
But Leicester's strong will decided for them, and it followed that they were on their way to the Cedars while he was galloping toward Coombe Lodge to apprise Lady Lackland of her children's safety and their whereabouts,also to order a box of clothes, which Ethel declared was positively necessary.
The captain's attention continued during the journey home and even to the door of the ladies' rooms, for he insisted that they should take precautions against colds, and in his quiet, unassuming way saw that their comforts were attended to.
So it followed that Violet's maid was waiting with hot water, a fire fit to roast an ox, and an amount of commiseration altogether too much for Violet's patience.
The first thing she did was to throw up the window and lean out upon her white, well-rounded arms, the next, after inhaling a long breath of the storm-freshened air, was to request Marie to suppress the fire as quickly as possible and throw out the hot water.
Marie picked off the coals daintily and walked away. Directly she had gone Violet slipped the bolt on the door and dropped down upon the bed with a long-drawn sigh.
"'My darling! my darling!' Did he say that to me or was I dreaming? Oh, no, he never could have said it. I must have been dreaming, I did nearly faint, and so I must have fancied that he said so. He could not; it is not possible. He has never been anything else but grave and courteous, he would not forget himself in a moment; his is not the kind of nature—no, no, it is absurd!" And she sighed and smiled.
"I cannot think what is coming to me lately. I am all fancies and dreams and nonsensical imaginings. First I fancy I see a villain in my father's oldest friend, then I fancy I see a ghost in the old tower, and now, the maddest thing of all, I fancy I hear a grave, well-bred gentleman like Leicester Dodson address me as 'his darling!' Oh, it is absurd!"
A dinner—partly fresh and partly arechaufféof the ruined one—was served up, and the captain did his best to raise the spirits of the ladies.
Mrs. Mildmay, whose very ignorance of nautical matters had preserved her from alarm, was very cheerful and praised the yacht and all pertaining to it with liberal amiability, and, as for the storm, why, if Violet did not take cold, which after her warm bath she would not be likely to, it only added a zest to the trip.
Violet smiled with grave amusement, and did not think fit to enlighten her aunt as to the fate of the hot water, and the captain chimed in as usual from his leaning post outside the veranda, where he smoked a cigar of an evening within speaking distance of the ladies inside.
"I called at Coombe Lodge this morning," he said, with a pause which he filled up with his cigar.
Violet, who lay on a couch, had closed her eyes, but the captain saw that she was not asleep.
"And how is Lady Lackland?" asked Mrs. Mildmay.
"Better I found her, I am glad to say, much better. The earl had not come down yet; parliamentary duties kept him in town I suppose. Pity, a great pity. The peasant in his cot, beneath the blue sky and on the heather-covered hill, is to be envied by an earl in London this weather. By the way," he continued, glancing at Violet and speaking in a low tone as if he were anxious not to awake her, "I heard of rather a damaging trait in Leicester's character."
"Indeed!" said Mrs. Mildmay, very much interested, and looking up from her knitting.
"Yes; Lady Lackland knows more of him than we do, of course; she sees him at balls and concerts, at friends' houses and parties. Mr. Leicester Dodson, so I hear, is a terrible flirt."
"Oh, dear me, I am sorry to hear that," said Mrs. Mildmay, shaking her head over her knitting and entirely unconscious of the sudden pallor which had fallen upon the motionless face opposite her and which the captain had quickly noted.
"Yes, not very dreadful, is it? It is not fair to accuse the young fellow—as nice a young fellow as ever lived!—behind his back, but I do hear two or three stories of broken hearts and scattered vows—but nothing very tangible. But be sure Lady Lackland would not have mentioned it if she had not some grounds for regretting it."
"Regretting it?" said Mrs. Mildmay, who could never see through hints and inuendoes and always required things to be as plain as plate-glass.
"Don't you see, my dear madam," said the captain, lowering his voice to a musical pitch, which was as distinctas a trumpet call to the ears of the motionless girl, "don't you see that the young fellow is really in love with Lady Ethel and that he would win her but for Lady Lackland's doubt of his steadiness. A flirt, my dear madam, is to be evaded by every prudent mother and every sensible girl——"
Violet rose, white and statuesque.
"I was nearly asleep," she said, looking round the room with a sad, stupefied look in her eyes of dumb pain, like some one roused to a sense of a lifelong misery. "I—I am very tired, aunt, and I think I shall go to bed."
The captain was by her side, ringing for her candle, in a moment, and she smiled—yes, smiled at him as he pressed her hand and murmured a good-night.
Brave Violet! what did that smile cost her?
She had heard every word, and every word rang in her ears and stabbed at her breast when she laid her head on her pillow.
While Violet was lying awake and burning with mortification and a wounded heart Jemmie Sanderson was down on his knees beside his straw pallet in the policeman's cot thanking Heaven for the safe return of his benefactor and greatly worshiped Leicester. He loved Leicester with a love that passed all calculation. He had stood unnoticed in the crowd, close to the ladies and gentlemen, when they had landed and, unseen by Leicester, he had stood close behind him, weeping his childish heart out with happy tears of joy and gratitude.
So the two, woman and boy, were at the same time enduring widely different feelings for the same man.
Life is full of strange contradictions.
Quite unconscious of the stab in the back, so to speak, which the cunning Captain Murpoint had delivered him, Leicester spent the evening in entertaining his guests, Lord Fitz and Lady Ethel.
In the morning Leicester and his guests walked over to the Park.
He would have liked to have been alone, but that was impossible under the circumstances, so he contented himself with hoping that he might get an opportunity of speaking to Violet alone.
But Violet had spent the wakeful night in planning for herself a desperate course of action.
She was, as she told herself at breakfast time, prepared to meet "the flirt" on his own ground.
Nothing would do for Mrs. Mildmay but that she insisted that the Cedars' party should remain all day to dinner, and to see the evening out, and a footman was dispatched with the invitation for Mr. and Mrs. Dodson.
"I am so delighted you have come," said the good-natured lady; "for I do think Violet is quite triste and needs a little excitement."
They were standing on the lawn chatting, and Leicester glanced up at the upper windows expecting to see a blind down.
"Miss Mildmay not well?" he asked.
"Yes," said Mrs. Mildmay. "But a little low spirited, I think. She will brighten up when she hears that you are here. James," and she called to a footman who was passing, "please ask Miss Violet to come down."
But Violet did not need any information.
She saw the group approach from her window, and as Leicester's long limbs strode across the lawn her heart beat violently.
"He has come for another flirtation, has he?" said the mortified, suffering girl. "Well, he shall not be disappointed. He shall see that two can play at his contemptible game."
So saying she thrust a camellia in her glossy hair, called a smile, perhaps the first artificial one she had ever forced, to her beautiful face, and stole down the stairs, bursting upon the group like a vision of Oriental beauty.
Leicester advanced, but Violet passed him and went to kiss Ethel. Then she shook hands cordially with Bertie, added a blush when repeating the salutation for Lord Fitz, and pretended to have forgotten that Leicester had not received a word.
"I'm so small," he said, with a smile, "that no wonder Miss Mildmay overlooks me."
"Did I not shake hands?" said Violet, looking him full in the face, not with coldness, but with a pleasant, indifferent, painfully frank friendship. "Did I not? How stupid of me! But I was overwhelmed with surprise," and she gave him her hand with a cool, self-composed smile which staggered him.
Before three minutes had passed Lord Fitz plucked up courage to say:
"Miss Mildmay, you said you would show me your flowers."
"Did I?" said Violet. "Then I will redeem my promise," and, with a smile, she led him to the conservatory—that very conservatory in which Leicester had lounged but a few days ago, listening to her frank laughter and drinking in the charm of her youth and beauty.
With a blush of pleasure, Fitz walked off with her, and soon his boyish laugh could be heard from the greenhouses, joined with Violet's musical peal.
What had happened to cause her to treat him so?
Yesterday she was all frank delight in his presence.
To-day she treated him with the haughty insolence and indifference of a sultana.
"Ah!" said Leicester, with a growl. "They are all alike. The best of them cannot resist a lord."
He was not in the best of humors for a collision with the captain, but Captain Murpoint greeted him ardently.
"None the worse for your weather yesterday, I see," he said, in his soft, silky voice. "I was just coming after you. Mr. Fairfax, who is the most inventive genius in the way of pleasure I have ever had the happiness of meeting, has set up a target and we are all shooting at it with arrows which remind me of nothing so much as the arrows which the Brahmins give their children to play with."
"Confound the Brahmins!" thought Leicester, but he walked by the side of the captain to where the clever Bertie had set the arrow pastime going, and then the captain left him to order some sherry and soda water.
Mrs. Mildmay begged him to light a cigar, and Leicester, who really wanted one, gave way.
He seated himself on a bench and watched the party, wondering whether Lord Fitz had finished his second wreath, and what the pair in the conservatory were doing now.
Presently he heard their laughing from the back of him, and it stung him to the quick.
"Confound her!" he muttered. "Why should I let her see her wickedness at flirting is cutting me up so? By Jove, I'll show her two can play at that game. I'll make up to Ethel Boisdale." So saying he drew his legs to the ground, pitched his cigar into the shrubbery and went up to Ethel.
"Now, Lady Boisdale," he said, "I am going to enter the lists, and I bet you a box of Jouvin's best—I have your size—that I hit the bull's-eye three times out of six."
"Oh, I shall bet," said Ethel, "because I am sure I shall win. Why, we have been trying ever so long, and have not hit it once."
"There goes then," said Leicester. "Hit or miss. Hit it is. That's once. Twice, I have missed it. Three times, that's a hit. Four times, missed it. Missed it again, missed it again. That's the sixth time, and I've lost."
Then he rattled on as lively and entertaining as Bertie himself, so startling that honest friend that he did not know what to make of it.
All through the glorious afternoon the plot and counterplot were carried on.
At dinner Leicester devoted himself to Lady Ethel, talked to her with an amount of badinage and excitement that was most unusual.
After dinner Fitz went straight up to Violet, who was sitting talking to Ethel, and seated himself in a chair beside them.
Leicester dropped down beside Mrs. Mildmay and Mrs. Dodson and joined in a discussion upon croquet.
But the captain did not let him rest.
"I think there's a frigate coming across," he said. "It's rather misty, but I fancy I can distinguish the masts."
Leicester rose and walked to the window.
From the place where he stood, he could hear, as the captain had intended that he should, every word Fitz and Violet were saying.
The young lord, excited by the wine to an extraordinary pitch of courage, was making love, hot and furious.
Violet, just a little frightened, was laughingly and rather nervously evading him.
Leicester's cheeks flushed, and, his eyes, hidden by the field glass, flashed passionately.
"Consummate coquette!" he murmured, "she is either fooling the boy or angling for a coronet—she whom I thought the soul of purity and disinterestedness. Which is it? By Heaven, I will know!"
And, much to the captain's amusement, he dropped the field glass and said, with an air almost of command:
"Miss Mildmay, your eyes are better than either mine or Captain Murpoint's; pray lend us their aid."
Violet hesitated a moment, then, with a smile which barely covered a peculiar feeling of nervousness, rose and came forward.
"Step outside," said Leicester, in his deep voice, and before she knew what he was going to do he drew her hand within his arm and led her out. "Do you see," he said, "out yonder? or have you no eyes for anything to-night but Lord Fitz Plantagenet Boisdale?"
"Mr. Leicester!" exclaimed Violet, with dignity, still trembling inwardly.
"Pardon me," he said, in a deep whisper, drawing her farther from the window and speaking in an earnest, almost pleading tone, "pardon me. I was wrong to speak so, but let me plead as an excuse some provocation. I have not wounded you, Miss Mildmay, by those few words one-tenth so much as you have me by one of a thousand you have spoken to-day."
Violet tried to draw her hand away, but his strong, hard hand retained it against her will.
"Wait one moment, I implore you," he said. "Wait while you tell me wherein I have offended you."
"Really," said Violet, with a low ripple of amusement which maddened him. "This is like a charade——"
"Tell me," he said, interrupting her almost sternly, "have you forgotten yesterday? Miss Mildmay, speakto me if you can as an honest woman should speak to an honest man. If the assurance of my devoted——"
"Oh, stop—pray stop!" said Violet, with a laugh which was calculated to madden a less passionate and willful temper than Leicester's. "What a contradiction! In one breath you assert your doubt of my honesty and assure me of your devoted—what? Oh, no! no more, Mr. Leicester! Pray be assured that I am not offended—not with any one! I am quite happy, and I don't understand you in the least. Shall we go in?"
She moved toward the window as she spoke, smiling with maddening wickedness, and fanning herself hurriedly, her heart throbbing all the while like a wild animal within her bosom.
Leicester turned with stern courtesy.
"By all means," he said. "I hope you have not caught cold!"
She dropped him a mocking curtsey and passed through the window.
Leicester stood for a moment looking at her as she glided with her peculiar grace into the chatter of voices and the light dance music which Ethel, with Bertie at her side, was evoking at the piano, then turned and strode out onto the terrace.
He leaned his arms on the coping and stared into the night.
"What is she? a flirt, a heartless coquette, a beautiful falsehood, or what?"
As he asked himself the question he heard the bushes stir beneath him.
It did not attract his attention, and he did not glance down until he saw something dark move from beneath the laurels.
Then, with his usual rapidity of resolve, he lightly vaulted over the terrace and dropped close beside the figure.
It rose from the ground surprised and startled.
Leicester's hand grasped a man's shoulder, and turned him round.
It was Captain Murpoint's servant, Mr. Jem.
In a moment Leicester saw part of the hand.
The fellow was not a burglar on the scout, but a skulking eavesdropper.
"You've been listening, my friend," said Leicester, angrily, and with an ominous gathering light in his eyes.
"That's a falsehood!" shouted Jem, who had been imbibing ale—and some quantity of it—at the "Blue Lion".
"Let that teach you greater caution and respect for the future, my friend," said Leicester, and he struck the daring scoundrel a straight blow full of unmitigated scorn.
Jem started, turned livid with rage, fear and hate, then slunk away like a beaten hound and stole off.
After delivering punishment to Jem for his eavesdropping, Leicester walked round to the stables and ordered the Cedars' carriage.
When the carriage was ready he returned to the drawing-room, and, going up to his mother, whispered:
"I have ordered the carriage for you; do not let them think you are surprised."
Mrs. Dodson nodded and looked up at him inquiringly. She saw that something had gone wrong.
At that moment a peal of silvery laughter proceeded from the corner of the room where Lord Fitz and Violet were seated.
Leicester started and frowned and then Mrs. Dodson knew what ailed him. She knew that he was in love with Violet Mildmay.
When Leicester had left, Violet's smiles disappeared.
She answered Lord Fitz at random, and grew cold and even stately.
Lord Fitz hoped when they were saying good-night that she would relapse into her bright amiability, but he was disappointed.
She wished him good-night with a smile that was the perfection of friendly indifference.
All the guests had gone, and Violet sat alone in the now silent drawing-room.
Her heart was heavy, her eyes and her whole frame weary.
As she reached her room she saw a light making its way from the captain's room, and heard the soft hum of his voice as he murmured his favorite air from "Faust."
"How good-natured he seems!" she thought. "He is really my friend, and yet I cannot quite like him."
So she went to bed thoroughly unhappy, dissatisfied with herself for acting the flirt and dissatisfied with Leicester for being one.
Although the captain was humming so carelessly, he was not idle.
No sooner did the sound of Violet's closing door greet his ear than he ceased the humming and drew his chair to his bureau.
He had prepared his pens, ink, etc., on the table; there was every sign of a hard night's work.
He drew from the bureau his strange purchases, the sheet of parchment and the flour dredger, spreading the parchment upon the desk.
It looked very yellow and old, and anything but a nice material for a document.
But for the captain's purpose it was apparently not at all toopassé, for he drew from his pocket a small bottle of cold coffee, and with a paint brush carefully washed the surface of the parchment on both sides.
Then he held it near the candle to dry, and after a close scrutiny nodded with satisfaction.
The ink next underwent manipulation.
It was good black ink, evidently too good, for the captain carefully diluted it with water.
Then he took from his pocket a bundle of letters, and selecting the longest spread it out upon the bureau, lit a cigar and studied the handwriting with the closest attention.
It was the handwriting of John Mildmay, and the letter was one of many he had written to his good and kind friend, Captain Howard Murpoint.
"I can imitate that, I think," muttered the captain; "let me try."
For half an hour he persevered, and at the end of that time he had succeeded in imitating the handwriting of his dear, dead friend so closely that John Mildmay's ghost, if it had risen and peeped over the forger's shoulder, could not have distinguished the forgery from the original.
"There," he muttered. "I'll defy all the lawyers in the world to detect that. Now for the deed."
He drew the parchment toward him, and, proceeding with the greatest care and minuteness, drew up a document, which he signed with the name of John Mildmay.
The deed purported to be witnessed by an old coachman and his wife, both of whom were dead.
Then he took his flour dredger, and poured into it from a box which he had concealed in his dressing-case a quantity of finely powdered dust.
When the box was full he shook a little from the top upon the desk and the table.
Then he unlocked the door and touched the bell which summoned Mr. Starling.
After a few moments the door opened and Jem entered.
The captain looked up and frowned inquiringly.
There was a red mark across Jem's face, an ugly flush which rendered the sullen, ferocious countenance more evil and desperate looking.
"Shut the door and lock it," said the captain.
Jem did so and stood fingering the dressing-gown with shifting eyes and sullen, evil mouth.
"Come here," said the captain. "What's that on your face?"
"What's what?" said Jem, without raising his eyes.
"You know well enough," said the captain, eying him closely. "Are you sober enough to tell me how you came by that blow? If so, out with it. Who gave it to you?"
"It was Mr. Leicester, curse him!" burst out Jem, and with an oath. "He caught me a-listening by the terrace."
"Ah!" exclaimed the captain, with a gleam of malicious delight in his eyes. "My young lad, Leicester, was it? Oh, you must bear it, my dear Jem, grin and bear it. I think it will be black and blue. Never mind, Jem, it will make him laugh in the morning, and he'll ask you how it is."
"Don't, don't!" groaned the infuriated man, hoarsely. "Don't work me up, captain. Don't! I shall go mad! I'll be even with him! I'll make him rue the night he struck me, dog as I am!"
"Do you want revenge, Jem?"
Jem looked up from the floor with savage eyes.
"You do? Then I'll show you how to get so sweet, so rich a one that you'll bless me, Jem. But first I've got a word with you, Mr. Starling. You are getting careless. You'll never make a good servant. You are idle. Look at the dust on that table!"
Jem looked and stared.
"That's a pretty state for a gentleman's writing-desk to be in! You have not dusted that for a week!"
"I dusted it this morning, sir," said Jem, looking round with bewilderment.
Then the captain took up the dredger from beneath the table and held it up with a smile.
"Conjuring, Jem—magic! By this simple contrivance we get the dust of years in one moment. Put it in your pocket and light the lantern."
Jem stared in silence profound and amazed for a minute.
"But," he said, with a troubled face, "you ain't going into that beastly room, captain?"
"I am, and so are you," said the captain. "No words; remember your blow and your revenge. You work for it to-night while you obey me."
Jem caught up the lantern with desperate bravado and lit it.
Meanwhile the captain exchanged his coat for a pea-jacket, and drew a thick pair of stockings over his boots.
Jem, following his instructions, did likewise, and then waited for further orders.
"You could pick locks," said the captain, "one time, Jem; have you forgotten the art?"
Jem grinned.
"Not quite. I dare say I could manage it."
"Good," said the captain. "Have you got the tools?"
"I never goes without 'em," said Jem, "they're very simple, and they don't take up much room, and no gentleman should be without 'em." And as he spoke he drew from his pocket a small piece of steel and a stout piece of wire bent at the end in the form of a hook.
The captain nodded approvingly.
"Quite right, Jem," he said, "and now for the deed. If you feel nervous take a sip of this," and he poured out a glass of brandy.
Jem tossed the dram down eagerly, but, fiery as the liquid was, it did not dispel his dislike and horror of the task before him, and when the captain in his stealthy way opened the window the strong ruffian shuddered.
But spurred on by his new motive—the thirst for revenge—he obeyed the signal from his master and lowered himself from the window without hesitation.
When Jem had reached the broad window ledge he loosened the rope from his waist, and the captain, feeling it slacken, prepared to descend by it in his turn.
It was a perilous attempt, no doubt. Every step had to be taken with the greatest nicety.
At last, after what seemed a terrible time and amount of exertion, he heard the short, spasmodic breathing of his accomplice, and stretching out one hand he felt about until he touched something.
It was Jem's leg, and so suddenly had the captain clutched it that Jem, whose nerves were strained to their utmost pitch, uttered a sharp cry of alarm.
"Hush," said the captain, sternly. "Quiet, you idiot. It is only I! One such another cry and we are lost. Utter a word and I'll drag you down!"
Then, exerting all his strength, he drew himself up to the ledge, and, panting for breath, seated himself beside his accomplice.
"Phew!" he said. "But that was tough work! Turn on the light."
"It is exactly as I imagined it," muttered the captain; "and made for my purpose." Then, after glancing through into the dusty window for a few minutes, he tried to push the lower sash up.
But the window was locked.
Without a moment's hesitation the captain tied his handkerchief round his hand, quickly broke the pane nearest the fastening, then he inserted his hand and pushed the catch back.
"Now, Jem," said the captain, "drop in carefully, and when you reach the floor remain motionless until I am by your side. Remember not to move a step until you get the word from me. It is of the greatest importance, as you will see."
Very sullenly, and with compressed lips as if he werekeeping back his fear and horror with great difficulty, Jem dropped into the room, remaining on the spot which his feet had first touched.
The captain followed his example.
"Now," he said, in a low, firm whisper, "attend to me and pay particular attention. Walk to that bureau in as few steps as possible. You can stride it in three steps. When you reach the bureau stand with your face toward the lock without moving."
Jem nodded, and, lighted by the lantern which the captain held, he strode to the bureau.
The captain followed him, taking care to tread in the same footprints.
"Now," he said, "I will hold the lantern while you try the lock with this bunch of keys. If you can't manage it, it must be picked."
Jem took the bunch and, selecting a skeleton key of the size required, tried it. But the lock was a good one and defied all his efforts.
Then he went on his knees and in a workmanlike manner picked the lock.
Then the captain commenced searching within the bureau.
"I am looking for a secret drawer," he said.
"Why didn't you say so, then?" said Jem. "There it is," and he touched a spring concealed in a part of the beading. "I knows where they are, right enough. All these old-fashioned 'uns is much alike. Why, dang it!" he added, with deep disgust, "it's empty!"
But the captain's smile was anything but one of disappointment.
"So it is, Jem, and suppose we put something in it?"
And as he spoke he took the parchment from his pocket and laid it carefully in the drawer.
Jem stared.
"This is a rum go, capt'n," he said, "to go and take all this 'ere trouble, in risking our necks and a running the chance o' meeting all sorts o' nasty things for the sake of putting a piece of paper in this old concern."
"My good Jem, don't worry yourself about what you cannot understand," retorted the captain. "Now go back,step by step, in the same footprints. Mind, go as slowly as you like, but make no more marks."
Jem obeyed, grumbling and wondering, but he was a little easier when he saw the next step in the captain's movements.
Carefully guarding against stepping into fresh places, he stooped down and shook from his dredger a regular and equal quantity of dust on to the handmarks and footprints which they had made.
Then Jem understood the use of the flour dredger.
Spot by spot the captain pursued his task until he had reached the window, against which Jem leaned, stolidly watching him.
"There," whispered the captain, pointing to the polished floor, which presented an unbroken surface of dust. "If you were obliged to swear that the room had not been entered—that the floor had not been walked across for five years, would you have any objection to say so?"
"Not I, capt'n," retorted Jem, quickly. "Not that that signifies, because I'd swear to anything, but it's right enough. Anybody 'ud say this room hadn't been looked at for years. At least," he added, with a shudder, and in a lower voice, "not by human critturs. There's other sort I have heard don't make no footprints nor no noise, so they don't count."
The captain smiled.
"All right," he said, "I don't care for ghosts, Jem, they only frighten such fools as you. Get up on the sill and shake the dust down on these bare parts."
Jem laid his hand upon the sill and was about to draw himself on to it when he was conscious of a sudden stream of soft blue light in the room.
Without turning round he whispered, warningly:
"Don't turn the light on so full, captain. Somebody might be about and see it at the window."
"What light?" said the captain, who was bending down with his face to the window, powdering the spots from which their feet had removed the dust. "I have turned no light—hah!"
The exclamation which broke the sentence caused Jem to turn his head with a vague sense of alarm.
No sooner had he done so than he fell to the ground in a paroxysm of fear.
There, on his knees, motionless as a statue, and his dark face upturned, was the captain, staring at a misty blue light which seemed growing out of the side of the room.
Jem uttered a groan of dismay and horror as there slipped, or rather floated into the room the dreadful figure which he had seen at the oriel window.
It was the White Nun!
Slowly, and with a floating, gliding motion, the figure advanced.
Then it seemed to see them, for it moved its skull slightly in the direction of the men and stopped.
The captain, shaking off the horrible influence of dread, sprang to his feet.
He was about to advance to the horrid thing, but the blue light suddenly disappeared, the figure glided out of the stream of light flowing from the lantern, and all the captain saw was the fiery eyes and the dull gleam of the white, ghostly drapery.
"Ghost or no ghost," he hissed, "you shall not escape me!" and he sprang forward.
But before he could clutch the apparition it drew back with a gliding motion, and seemed to vanish through the wall.
With a bewildered and daunted air the captain glared around.
The two human beings were once more alone.
White and trembling, the guilty schemer turned to the window and grasped Jem's arm.
"Come," he said, hoarsely. "We've been dreaming."
Without a word, and trembling in every limb, the pair descended one after the other, the captain remaining last, and shudderingly expecting to feel the ghostly hand of bone upon his throat.
But the vision did not appear again, and, exhausted with exertion and horror, the two men stood in their own room staring at each other's white faces.
Notwithstanding the lateness of the hour at which he had retired to rest, the captain was up early in the morningand, with his cheroot in his mouth, strolling round the Park.
Whistling his favorite air, he leaped the old fence which divided the neatly kept rosary of the modern garden from the cold, waste little courtyard of the ruined chapel, and with cautious feet and watchful eyes, entered the broken and crumbling cloisters in the search for more evidence of the apparition which had so startled him on the preceding evening.
Next the cloisters was the chapel, or what remained of it.
The captain stumbled to the middle of it and looked up through its roofless height to the sky above.
In the center of the façade was the large oriel window.
A portion of the old organ-loft clung to it, and was lost on either side in a mass of ruined, moss-covered stone, which was the remains of a flight of stone steps.
"No one but a ghost," muttered the captain, "could walk along there."
With an emphatic exclamation he turned his attention to the wall next the house.
He fancied that he could distinguish the dark outline of a door, but, by the aid of a small opera-glass which he had brought with him, he made out that the ivy had grown over it to such an extent that egress or exit by it was impossible.
He did not believe in ghosts, and yet if the figure he had seen were a human and alive how did it reach the deserted room?
While he pondered a footstep sounded behind him—so suddenly that he turned face to face with Leicester Dodson.
The meeting was so unexpected that both men were, so to speak, off their guard.
For a moment only was the captain's face naked, the next he had resumed his mask, and held out his hand.
"Good-morning; you startled me! This is a place for ghostly meetings, and though the hour is inappropriate, a little surprise is allowable."
All this with a genial smile.
Leicester just touched the hand and nodded.
"I am glad I met you this morning, and so early, CaptainMurpoint," he said, in his grave, clear voice, "for I have some unpleasant information for you."
"Indeed!" said the captain, glancing up at his face for a moment, then raising the opera-glass to his eyes. "Indeed, I am sorry for that. Of what nature?"
"It concerns your man," said Leicester. "I found him eavesdropping near the laurels by the terrace last night."
"No!" exclaimed the captain, with a look of shocked indignation. "The villain! I hope you thrashed him."
"Well," said Leicester, "I am sorry to say that I did strike him. I regret it, though I think it may prove a salutary chastisement."
"The villain," said the captain, with grave displeasure. "I will discharge him this morning! I'll pack him off! Drunk or not, he shall go. I could not have a fellow about me whom I could not implicitly trust."
"Well," said Leicester, "you must do as you think fit; yet I hope you will let the man plead his defence. There are two sides to everything."
The captain shook his head angrily.
"No; he shall go, the rogue," he said, and as he spoke he rose, with a light in his eyes which would have proclaimed to any one who knew him that he had scored a point in his game. "No; he shall go, rest assured. I would not keep him for the world after what you have told me. Are you going on to the Park?"
"No," said Leicester, "if you will make my excuses. Good-morning."
"Good-morning," said the captain, and he shook hands impressively, looking after Leicester's tall, stalwart figure as it passed under the ruined arches, with a pleasant smile.