The Legacy of Cain

by Wilkie Collins




To

MRS. HENRY POWELL BARTLEY:

Permit me to add your name to my name, in publishing this novel.
The pen which has written my books cannot be more agreeably
employed than in acknowledging what I owe to the pen which has
skillfully and patiently helped me, by copying my manuscripts for
the printer.

WILKIE COLLINS.

Wimpole Street, 6th December, 1888.

--------

THE LEGACY OF CAIN.

First Period: 1858-1859.

EVENTS IN THE PRISON, RELATED BY THE GOVERNOR.

----

CHAPTER I.

THE GOVERNOR EXPLAINS.


AT the request of a person who has claims on me that I must not
disown, I consent to look back through a long interval of years
and to describe events which took place within the walls of an
English prison during the earlier period of my appointment as
Governor.

Viewing my task by the light which later experience casts on it,
I think I shall act wisely by exercising some control over the
freedom of my pen.

I propose to pass over in silence the name of the town in which
is situated the prison once confided to my care. I shall observe
a similar discretion in alluding to individuals--some dead, some
living, at the present time.

Being obliged to write of a woman who deservedly suffered the
extreme penalty of the law, I think she will be sufficiently
identified if I call her The Prisoner. Of the four persons
present on the evening before her execution three may be
distinguished one from the other by allusion to their vocations
in life. I here introduce them as The Chaplain, The Minister, and
The Doctor. The fourth was a young woman. She has no claim on my
consideration; and, when she is mentioned, her name may appear.
If these reserves excite suspicion, I declare beforehand that
they influence in no way the sense of responsibility which
commands an honest man to speak the truth.


CHAPTER II.

THE MURDERESS ASKS QUESTIONS.


THE first of the events which I must now relate was the
conviction of The Prisoner for the murder of her husband.

They had lived together in matrimony for little more than two
years. The husband, a gentleman by birth and education, had
mortally offended his relations in marrying a woman of an
inferior rank of life. He was fast declining into a state of
poverty, through his own reckless extravagance, at the time when
he met with his death at his wife's hand.

Without attempting to excuse him, he deserved, to my mind, some
tribute of regret. It is not to be denied that he was profligate
in his habits and violent in his temper. But it is equally true
that he was affectionate in the domestic circle, and, when moved
by wisely applied remonstrance, sincerely penitent for sins
committed under temptation that overpowered him. If his wife had
killed him in a fit of jealous rage--under provocation, be it
remembered, which the witnesses proved--she might have been
convicted of manslaughter, and might have received a light
sentence. But the evidence so undeniably revealed deliberate and
merciless premeditation, that the only defense attempted by her
counsel was madness, and the only alternative left to a righteous
jury was a verdict which condemned the woman to death. Those
mischievous members of the community, whose topsy-turvy
sympathies feel for the living criminal and forget the dead
victim, attempted to save her by means of high-flown petitions
and contemptible correspondence in the newspapers. But the Judge
held firm; and the Home Secretary held firm. They were entirely
right; and the public were scandalously wrong.

Our Chaplain endeavored to offer the consolations of religion to
the condemned wretch. She refused to accept his ministrations in
language which filled him with grief and horror.

On the evening before the execution, the reverend gentleman laid
on my table his own written report of a conversation which had
passed between the Prisoner and himself.

"I see some hope, sir," he said, "of inclining the heart of this
woman to religious belief, before it is too late. Will you read
my report, and say if you agree with me?"

I read it, of course. It was called "A Memorandum," and was thus
written:

"At his last interview with the Prisoner, the Chaplain asked her
if she had ever entered a place of public worship. She replied
that she had occasionally attended the services at a
Congregational Church in this town; attracted by the reputation
of the Minister as a preacher. 'He entirely failed to make a
Christian of me,' she said; 'but I was struck by his eloquence.
Besides, he interested me personally--he was a fine man.'

"In the dreadful situation in which the woman was placed, such
language as this shocked the Chaplain; he appealed in vain to the
Prisoner's sense of propriety. 'You don't understand women,' she
answered. 'The greatest saint of my sex that ever lived likes to
look at a preacher as well as to hear him. If he is an agreeable
man, he has all the greater effect on her. This preacher's voice
told me he was kind-hearted; and I had only to look at his
beautiful eyes to see that he was trustworthy and true.'

"It was useless to repeat a protest which had already failed.
Recklessly and flippantly as she had described it, an impression
had been produced on her. It occurred to the Chaplain that he
might at least make the attempt to turn this result to her own
religious advantage. He asked whether she would receive the
Minister, if the reverend gentleman came to the prison. 'That
will depend,' she said, 'on whether you answer some questions
which I want to put to you first.' The Chaplain consented;
provided always that he could reply with propriety to what she
asked of him. Her first question only related to himself.

"She said: 'The women who watch me tell me that you are a
widower, and have a family of children. Is that true?'

"The Chaplain answered that it was quite true.

"She alluded next to a report, current in the town, that the
Minister had resigned the pastorate. Being personally acquainted
with him, the Chaplain was able to inform her that his
resignation had not yet been accepted. On hearing this, she
seemed to gather confidence. Her next inquiries succeeded each
other rapidly, as follows:

" 'Is my handsome preacher married?'

" 'Yes.'

" 'Has he got any children?'

" 'He has never had any children.'

" 'How long has he been married?'

" 'As well as I know, about seven or eight years.

" 'What sort of woman is his wife?'

" 'A lady universally respected.'

" 'I don't care whether she is respected or not. Is she kind?'

" 'Certainly!'

" 'Is her husband well off?'

" 'He has a sufficient income.'

"After that reply, the Prisoner's curiosity appeared to be
satisfied. She said, 'Bring your friend the preacher to me, if
you like'--and there it ended.

"What her object could have been in putting these questions, it
seems to be impossible to guess. Having accurately reported all
that took place, the Chaplain declares, with heartfelt regret,
that he can exert no religious influence over this obdurate
woman. He leaves it to the Governor to decide whether the
Minister of the Congregational Church may not succeed, where the
Chaplain of the Jail has failed. Herein is the one last hope of
saving the soul of the Prisoner, now under sentence of death!"

In those serious words the Memorandum ended. Although not
personally acquainted with the Minister I had heard of him, on
all sides, as an excellent man. In the emergency that confronted
us he had, as it seemed to me, his own sacred right to enter the
prison; assuming that he was willing to accept, what I myself
felt to be, a very serious responsibility. The first necessity
was to discover whether we might hope to obtain his services.
With my full approval the Chaplain left me, to state the
circumstances to his reverend colleague.

CHAPTER III.

THE CHILD APPEARS.

DURING my friend's absence, my attention was claimed by a sad
incident--not unforeseen.

It is, I suppose, generally known that near relatives are
admitted to take their leave of criminals condemned to death. In
the case of the Prisoner now waiting for execution, no person a
pplied to the authorities for permission to see her. I myself
inquired if she had any relations living, and if she would like
to see them. She answered: "None that I care to see, or that care
to see me--except the nearest relation of all."

In those last words the miserable creature alluded to her only
child, a little girl (an infant, I should say), who had passed
her first year's birthday by a few months. The farewell interview
was to take place on the mother's last evening on earth; and the
child was now brought into my rooms, in charge of her nurse.

I had seldom seen a brighter or prettier little girl. She was
just able to walk alone, and to enjoy the first delight of moving
from one place to another. Quite of her own accord she came to
me, attracted I daresay by the glitter of my watch-chain. Helping
her to climb on my knee, I showed the wonders of the watch, and
held it to her ear. At that past time, death had taken my good
wife from me; my two boys were away at Harrow School; my domestic
life was the life of a lonely man. Whether I was reminded of the
bygone days when my sons were infants on my knee, listening to
the ticking of my watch--or whether the friendless position of
the poor little creature, who had lost one parent and was soon to
lose the other by a violent death, moved me in depths of pity not
easily reached in my later experience--I am not able to say. This
only I know: my heart ached for the child while she was laughing
and listening; and something fell from me on the watch which I
don't deny might have been a tear. A few of the toys, mostly
broken now, which my two children used to play with are still in
my possession; kept, like my poor wife's favorite jewels, for old
remembrance' sake. These I took from their repository when the
attraction of my watch showed signs of failing. The child pounced
on them with her chubby hands, and screamed with pleasure. And
the hangman was waiting for her mother--and, more horrid still,
the mother deserved it!

My duty required me to let the Prisoner know that her little
daughter had arrived. Did that heart of iron melt at last? It
might have been so, or it might not; the message sent back kept
her secret. All that it said to me was: "Let the child wait till
I send for her."

The Minister had consented to help us. On his arrival at the
prison, I received him privately in my study.

I had only to look at his face--pitiably pale and agitated--to
see that he was a sensitive man, not always able to control his
nerves on occasions which tried his moral courage. A kind, I
might almost say a noble face, and a voice unaffectedly
persuasive, at once prepossessed me in his favor. The few words
of welcome that I spoke were intended to compose him. They failed
to produce the impression on which I had counted.

"My experience," he said, "has included many melancholy duties,
and has tried my composure in terrible scenes; but I have never
yet found myself in the presence of an unrepentant criminal,
sentenced to death--and that criminal a woman and a mother. I
own, sir, that I am shaken by the prospect before me."

I suggested that he should wait a while, in the hope that time
and quiet might help him. He thanked me, and refused.

"If I have any knowledge of myself," he said, "terrors of
anticipation lose their hold when I am face to face with a
serious call on me. The longer I remain here, the less worthy I
shall appear of the trust that has been placed in me--the trust
which, please God, I mean to deserve."

My own observation of human nature told me that this was wisely
said. I led the way at once to the cell.

CHAPTER IV.

THE MINISTER SAYS YES.

THE Prisoner was seated on her bed, quietly talking with the
woman appointed to watch her. When she rose to receive us, I saw
the Minister start. The face that confronted him would, in my
opinion, have taken any man by surprise, if he had first happened
to see it within the walls of a prison.

Visitors to the picture-galleries of Italy, growing weary of Holy
Families in endless succession, observe that the idea of the
Madonna, among the rank and file of Italian Painters, is limited
to one changeless and familiar type. I can hardly hope to be
believed when I say that the personal appearance of the murderess
recalled that type. She presented the delicate light hair, the
quiet eyes, the finely-shaped lower features and the correctly
oval form of face, repeated in hundreds on hundreds of the
conventional works of Art to which I have ventured to allude. To
those who doubt me, I can only declare that what I have here
written is undisguised and absolute truth. Let me add that daily
observation of all classes of criminals, extending over many
years, has considerably diminished my faith in physiognomy as a
safe guide to the discovery of character. Nervous trepidation
looks like guilt. Guilt, firmly sustained by insensibility, looks
like innocence. One of the vilest wretches ever placed under my
charge won the sympathies (while he was waiting for his trial) of
every person who saw him, including even the persons employed in
the prison. Only the other day, ladies and gentlemen coming to
visit me passed a body of men at work on the road. Judges of
physiognomy among them were horrified at the criminal atrocity
betrayed in every face that they noticed. They condoled with me
on the near neighborhood of so many convicts to my official place
of residence. I looked out of the window and saw a group of
honest laborers (whose only crime was poverty) employed by the
parish!

Having instructed the female warder to leave the room--but to
take care that she waited within call--I looked again at the
Minister.

Confronted by the serious responsibility that he had undertaken,
he justified what he had said to me. Still pale, still
distressed, he was now nevertheless master of himself. I turned
to the door to leave him alone with the Prisoner. She called me
back.

"Before this gentleman tries to convert me," she said, "I want
you to wait here and be a witness."

Finding that we were both willing to comply with this request,
she addressed herself directly to the Minister. "Suppose I
promise to listen to your exhortations," she began, "what do you
promise to do for me in return?"

The voice in which she spoke to him was steady and clear; a
marked contrast to the tremulous earnestness with which he
answered her.

"I promise to urge you to repentance and the confession of your
crime. I promise to implore the divine blessing on me in the
effort to save your poor guilty soul."

She looked at him, and listened to him, as if he was speaking to
her in an unknown tongue, and went on with what she had to say as
quietly as ever.

"When I am hanged to-morrow, suppose I die without confessing,
without repenting--are you one of those who believe I shall be
doomed to eternal punishment in another life?"

"I believe in the mercy of God."

"Answer my question, if you please. Is an impenitent sinner
eternally punished? Do you believe that?"

"My Bible leaves me no other alternative."

She paused for a while, evidently considering with special
attention what she was about to say next.

"As a religious man," she resumed, "would you be willing to make
some sacrifice, rather than let a fellow-creature go--after a
disgraceful death--to everlasting torment?"

"I know of no sacrifice in my power," he said, fervently, "to
which I would not rather submit than let you die in the present
dreadful state of your mind."

The Prisoner turned to me. "Is the person who watches me waiting
outside?"

"Yes."

"Will you be so kind as to call her in? I have a message for
her."

It was plain that she had been leading the way to the delivery of
that message, whatever it might be, in all that she had said up
to the present time. So far my poor powers of penetration helped
me, and no further.

The warder appeared, and received her message. "Tell the woman
who has come here with my little girl that I want to see the
child."

 Taken completely by surprise, I signed to the attendant to wait
for further instructions.

In a moment more I had sufficiently recovered myself to see the
impropriety of permitting any obstacle to interp ose between the
Minister and his errand of mercy. I gently reminded the Prisoner
that she would have a later opportunity of seeing her child.
"Your first duty," I told her, "is to hear and to take to heart
what the clergyman has to say to you."

For the second time I attempted to leave the cell. For the second
time this impenetrable woman called me back.

"Take the parson away with you," she said. "I refuse to listen to
him."

The patient Minister yielded, and appealed to me to follow his
example. I reluctantly sanctioned the delivery of the message.

After a brief interval the child was brought to us, tired and
sleepy. For a while the nurse roused her by setting her on her
feet. She happened to notice the Minister first. Her bright eyes
rested on him, gravely wondering. He kissed her, and, after a
momentary hesitation, gave her to her mother. The horror of the
situation overpowered him: he turned his face away from us. I
understood what he felt; he almost overthrew my own self-command.

The Prisoner spoke to the nurse in no friendly tone: "You can
go."

The nurse turned to me, ostentatiously ignoring the words that
had been addressed to her. "Am I to go, sir, or to stay?" I
suggested that she should return to the waiting-room. She
returned at once in silence. The Prisoner looked after her as she
went out, with such an expression of hatred in her eyes that the
Minister noticed it.

"What has that person done to offend you?" he asked.

"She is the last person in the whole world whom I should have
chosen to take care of my child, if the power of choosing had
been mine. But I have been in prison, without a living creature
to represent me or to take my part. No more of that; my troubles
will be over in a few hours more. I want you to look at my little
girl, whose troubles are all to come. Do you call her pretty? Do
you feel interested in her?"

The sorrow and pity in his face answered for him.

Quietly sleeping, the poor baby rested on her mother's bosom. Was
the heart of the murderess softened by the divine influence of
maternal love? The hands that held the child trembled a little.
For the first time it seemed to cost her an effort to compose
herself, before she could speak to the Minister again.

"When I die to-morrow," she said, "I leave my child helpless and
friendless--disgraced by her mother's shameful death. The
workhouse may take her--or a charitable asylum may take her." She
paused; a first tinge of color rose on her pale face; she broke
into an outburst of rage. "Think of _my_ daughter being brought
up by charity! She may suffer poverty, she may be treated with
contempt, she may be employed by brutal people in menial work. I
can't endure it; it maddens me. If she is not saved from that
wretched fate, I shall die despairing, I shall die cursing--"

The Minister sternly stopped her before she could say the next
word. To my astonishment she appeared to be humbled, to be even
ashamed: she asked his pardon: "Forgive me; I won't forget myself
again. They tell me you have no children of your own. Is that a
sorrow to you and your wife?"

Her altered tone touched him. He answered sadly and kindly: "It
is the one sorrow of our lives."

The purpose which she had been keeping in view from the moment
when the Minister entered her cell was no mystery now. Ought I to
have interfered? Let me confess a weakness, unworthy perhaps of
my office. I was so sorry for the child--I hesitated.

My silence encouraged the mother. She advanced to the Minister
with the sleeping infant in her arms.

"I daresay you have sometimes thought of adopting a child?" she
said. "Perhaps you can guess now what I had in my mind, when I
asked if you would consent to a sacrifice? Will you take this
wretched innocent little creature home with you?" She lost her
self-possession once more. "A motherless creature to-morrow," she
burst out. "Think of that."

God knows how I still shrunk from it! But there was no
alternative now; I was bound to remember my duty to the excellent
man, whose critical position at that moment was, in some degree
at least, due to my hesitation in asserting my authority. Could I
allow the Prisoner to presume on his compassionate nature, and to
hurry him into a decision which, in his calmer moments, he might
find reason to regret? I spoke to _him._ Does the man live
who--having to say what I had to say--could have spoken to the
doomed mother?

"I am sorry to have allowed this to go on," I said. "In justice
to yourself, sir, don't answer!"

She turned on me with a look of fury.

"He shall answer," she cried.

I saw, or thought I saw, signs of yielding in his face. "Take
time," I persisted--"take time to consider before you decide."

She stepped up to me.

"Take time?" she repeated. "Are you inhuman enough to talk of
time, in my presence?"

She laid the sleeping child on her bed, and fell on her knees
before the Minister: "I promise to hear your exhortations--I
promise to do all a woman can to believe and repent. Oh, I know
myself! My heart, once hardened, is a heart that no human
creature can touch. The one way to my better nature--if I have a
better nature--is through that poor babe. Save her from the
workhouse! Don't let them make a pauper of her!" She sank
prostrate at his feet, and beat her hands in frenzy on the floor.
"You want to save my guilty soul," she reminded him furiously.
"There's but one way of doing it. Save my child!"

He raised her. Her fierce tearless eyes questioned his face in a
mute expectation dreadful to see. Suddenly, a foretaste of
death--the death that was so near now!--struck her with a
shivering fit: her head dropped on the Minister's shoulder. Other
men might have shrunk from the contact of it. That true Christian
let it rest.

Under the maddening sting of suspense, her sinking energies
rallied for an instant. In a whisper, she was just able to put
the supreme question to him.

"Yes? or No?"

He answered: "Yes."

A faint breath of relief, just audible in the silence, told me
that she had heard him. It was her last effort. He laid her,
insensible, on the bed, by the side of her sleeping child. "Look
at them," was all he said to me; "how could I refuse?"

CHAPTER V.

MISS CHANCE ASSERTS HERSELF.


THE services of our medical officer were required, in order to
hasten the recovery of the Prisoner's senses.

When the Doctor and I left the cell together, she was composed,
and ready (in the performance of her promise) to listen to the
exhortations of the Minister. The sleeping child was left
undisturbed, by the mother's desire. If the Minister felt tempted
to regret what he had done, there was the artless influence which
would check him! As we stepped into the corridor, I gave the
female warder her instructions to remain on the watch, and to
return to her post when she saw the Minister come out.

In the meantime, my companion had walked on a little way.

Possessed of ability and experience within the limits of his
profession, he was in other respects a man with a crotchety mind;
bold to the verge of recklessness in the expression of his
opinion; and possessed of a command of language that carried
everything before it. Let me add that he was just and merciful in
his intercourse with others, and I shall have summed him up
fairly enough. When I joined him he seemed to be absorbed in
reflection.

"Thinking of the Prisoner?" I said.

"Thinking of what is going on, at this moment, in the condemned
cell," he answered, "and wondering if any good will come of it."

I was not without hope of a good result, and I said so.

The Doctor disagreed with me. "I don't believe in that woman's
penitence," he remarked; "and I look upon the parson as a poor
weak creature. What is to become of the child?"

There was no reason for concealing from one of my colleagues the
benevolent decision, on the part of the good Minister, of which I
had been a witness. The Doctor listened to me with the first
appearance of downright astonishment that I had ever observed in
his face. When I had done, he made an extraordinary reply:

"Governor, I retract what I said of the parson just now. He is
one of the boldest men that ever stepped into a pulpit."

Was the doctor in e arnest? Strongly in earnest; there could be
no doubt of it. Before I could ask him what he meant, he was
called away to a patient on the other side of the prison. When we
parted at the door of my room, I made it a request that my
medical friend would return to me and explain what he had just
said.

"Considering that you are the governor of a prison," he replied,
"you are a singularly rash man. If I come back, how do you know I
shall not bore you?"

"My rashness runs the risk of that," I rejoined.

"Tell me something, before I allow you to run your risk," he
said. "Are you one of those people who think that the tempers of
children are formed by the accidental influences which happen to
be about them? Or do you agree with me that the tempers of
children are inherited from their parents?"

The Doctor (as I concluded) was still strongly impressed by the
Minister's resolution to adopt a child whose wicked mother had
committed the most atrocious of all crimes. Was some serious
foreboding in secret possession of his mind? My curiosity to hear
him was now increased tenfold. I replied without hesitation:

"I agree with you."

He looked at me with his sense of humor twinkling in his eyes.
"Do you know I rather expected that answer?" he said, slyly. "All
right. I'll come back."

Left by myself, I took up the day's newspaper.

My attention wandered; my thoughts were in the cell with the
Minister and the Prisoner. How would it end? Sometimes, I was
inclined to doubt with the Doctor. Sometimes, I took refuge in my
own more hopeful view. These idle reflections were agreeably
interrupted by the appearance of my friend, the Chaplain.

"You are always welcome," I said; "and doubly welcome just now. I
am feeling a little worried and anxious."

"And you are naturally," the Chaplain added, not at all disposed
to receive a stranger?"

"Is the stranger a friend of yours?" I asked.

"Oh, no! Having occasion, just now, to go into the waiting-room,
I found a young woman there, who asked me if she could see you.
She thinks you have forgotten her, and she is tired of waiting. I
merely undertook, of course, to mention what she had said to me."

The nurse having been in this way recalled to my memory, I felt
some little interest in seeing her, after what had passed in the
cell. In plainer words, I was desirous of judging for myself
whether she deserved the hostile feeling which the Prisoner had
shown toward her. I thanked the Chaplain before he left me, and
gave the servant the necessary instructions. When she entered the
room, I looked at the woman attentively for the first time.

Youth and a fine complexion, a well-made figure and a natural
grace of movement--these were her personal attractions, so far as
I could see. Her defects were, to my mind, equally noticeable.
Under a heavy forehead, her piercing eyes looked out at persons
and things with an expression which was not to my taste. Her
large mouth--another defect, in my opinion--would have been
recommended to mercy, in the estimation of many men, by her
magnificent teeth; white, well-shaped, cruelly regular. Believers
in physiognomy might perhaps have seen the betrayal of an
obstinate nature in the lengthy firmness of her chin. While I am
trying to describe her, let me not forget her dress. A woman's
dress is the mirror in which we may see the reflection of a
woman's nature. Bearing in mind the melancholy and impressive
circumstances under which she had brought the child to the
prison, the gayety of color in her gown and her bonnet implied
either a total want of feeling, or a total want of tact. As to
her position in life, let me confess that I felt, after a closer
examination, at a loss to determine it. She was certainly not a
lady. The Prisoner had spoken of her as if she was a domestic
servant who had forfeited her right to consideration and respect.
And she had entered the prison, as a nurse might have entered it,
in charge of a child. I did what we all do when we are not clever
enough to find the answer to a riddle--I gave it up.

"What can I do for you?" I asked.

"Perhaps you can tell me," she answered, "how much longer I am to
be kept waiting in this prison."

"The decision," I reminded her, "doesn't depend on me."

"Then who does it depend on?"

The Minister had undoubtedly acquired the sole right of deciding.
It was for him to say whether this woman should, or should not,
remain in attendance on the child whom he had adopted. In the
meanwhile, the feeling of distrust which was gaining on my mind
warned me to remember the value of reserve in holding intercourse
with a stranger.

She seemed to be irritated by my silence. "If the decision
doesn't rest with you," she asked, "why did you tell me to stay
in the waiting-room?"

"You brought the little girl into the prison," I said; "was it
not natural to suppose that your mistress might want you--"

"Stop, sir!"

I had evidently given offense; I stopped directly.

"No person on the face of the earth," she declared, loftily, "has
ever had the right to call herself my mistress. Of my own free
will, sir, I took charge of the child."

"Because you are fond of her?" I suggested.

"I hate her."

It was unwise on my part--I protested. "Hate a baby little more
than a year old!" I said.

"_Her_ baby!"

She said it with the air of a woman who had produced an
unanswerable reason. "I am accountable to nobody," she went on.
"If I consented to trouble myself with the child, it was in
remembrance of my friendship--notice, if you please, that I say
friendship--with the unhappy father."

Putting together what I had just heard, and what I had seen in
the cell, I drew the right conclusion at last. The woman, whose
position in life had been thus far an impenetrable mystery to me,
now stood revealed as one, among other objects of the Prisoner's
jealousy, during her disastrous married life. A serious doubt
occurred to me as to the authority under which the husband's
mistress might be acting, after the husband's death. I instantly
put it to the test.

"Do I understand you to assert any claim to the child?" I asked.

"Claim?" she repeated. "I know no more of the child than you do.
I heard for the first time that such a creature was in existence,
when her murdered father sent for me in his dying moments. At his
entreaty I promised to take care of her, while her vile mother
was out of the house and in the hands of the law. My promise has
been performed. If I am expected (having brought her to the
prison) to take her away again, understand this: I am under no
obligation (even if I could afford it) to burden myself with that
child; I shall hand her over to the workhouse authorities."

I forgot myself once more--I lost my temper.

"Leave the room," I said. "Your unworthy hands will not touch the
poor baby again. She is provided for."

"I don't believe you!" the wretch burst out. "Who has taken the
child?"

A quiet voice answered: "_I_ have taken her."

We both looked round and saw the Minister standing in the open
doorway, with the child in his arms. The ordeal that he had gone
through in the condemned cell was visible in his face; he looked
miserably haggard and broken. I was eager to know if his merciful
interest in the Prisoner had purified her guilty soul--but at the
same time I was afraid, after what he had but too plainly
suffered, to ask him to enter into details.

"Only one word," I said. "Are your anxieties at rest?"

"God's mercy has helped me," he answered. "I have not spoken in
vain. She believes; she repents; she has confessed the crime."

After handing the written and signed confession to me, he
approached the venomous creature, still lingering in the room to
hear what passed between us. Before I could stop him, he spoke to
her, under a natural impression that he was addressing the
Prisoner's servant.

"I am afraid you will be disappointed," he said, "when I tell you
that your services will no longer be required. I have reasons for
placing the child under the care of a nurse of my own choosing."

She listened with an evil smile.

"I know who furnished you with your reasons," she answered.
"Apologies are quite needless, so far as I am concerned. If you
had proposed to me t o look after the new member of your family
there, I should have felt it my duty to myself to have refused. I
am not a nurse--I am an independent single lady. I see by your
dress that you are a clergyman. Allow me to present myself as a
mark of respect to your cloth. I am Miss Elizabeth Chance. May I
ask the favor of your name?"

Too weary and too preoccupied to notice the insolence of her
manner, the Minister mentioned his name. "I am anxious," he said,
"to know if the child has been baptized. Perhaps you can
enlighten me?"

Still insolent, Miss Elizabeth Chance shook her head carelessly.
"I never heard--and, to tell you the truth, I never cared to
hear--whether she was christened or not. Call her by what name
you like, I can tell you this--you will find your adopted
daughter a heavy handful."

The Minister turned to me. "What does she mean?"

"I will try to tell you," Miss Chance interposed. "Being a
clergyman, you know who Deborah was? Very well. I am Deborah now;
and _I_ prophesy." She pointed to the child. "Remember what I
say, reverend sir! You will find the tigress-cub take after its
mother."

With those parting words, she favored us with a low curtsey, and
left the room.


CHAPTER VI.

THE DOCTOR DOUBTS.


THE Minister looked at me in an absent manner; his attention
seemed to have been wandering. "What was it Miss Chance said?" he
asked.

Before I could speak, a friend's voice at the door interrupted
us. The Doctor, returning to me as he had promised, answered the
Minister's question in these words:

"I must have passed the person you mean, sir, as I was coming in
here; and I heard her say: 'You will find the tigress-cub take
after its mother.' If she had known how to put her meaning into
good English, Miss Chance--that is the name you mentioned, I
think--might have told you that the vices of the parents are
inherited by the children. And the one particular parent she had
in her mind," the Doctor continued, gently patting the child's
cheek, "was no doubt the mother of this unfortunate little
creature--who may, or may not, live to show you that she comes of
a bad stock and inherits a wicked nature."

I was on the point of protesting against my friend's
interpretation, when the Minister stopped me.

"Let me thank you, sir, for your explanation," he said to the
Doctor. "As soon as my mind is free, I will reflect on what you
have said. Forgive me, Mr. Governor," he went on, "if I leave
you, now that I have placed the Prisoner's confession in your
hands. It has been an effort to me to say the little I have said,
since I first entered this room. I can think of nothing but that
unhappy criminal, and the death that she must die to-morrow."

"Does she wish you to be present?" I asked.

"She positively forbids it. 'After what you have done for me,'
she said, 'the least I can do in return is to prevent your being
needlessly distressed.' She took leave of me; she kissed the
little girl for the last time--oh, don't ask me to tell you about
it! I shall break down if I try. Come, my darling!" He kissed the
child tenderly, and took her away with him.

"That man is a strange compound of strength and weakness," the
Doctor remarked. "Did you notice his face, just now? Nine men out
of ten, suffering as he suffered, would have failed to control
themselves. Such resolution as his _may_ conquer the difficulties
that are in store for him yet."

It was a trial of my temper to hear my clever colleague
justifying, in this way, the ignorant prediction of an insolent
woman.

"There are exceptions to all rules," I insisted. "And why are the
virtues of the parents not just as likely to descend to the
children as the vices? There was a fund of good, I can tell you,
in that poor baby's father--though I don't deny that he was a
profligate man. And even the horrible mother--as you heard just
now--has virtue enough left in her to feel grateful to the man
who has taken care of her child. These are facts; you can't
dispute them."

The Doctor took out his pipe. "Do you mind my smoking?" he asked.
"Tobacco helps me to arrange my ideas."

I gave him the means of arranging his ideas; that is to say, I
gave him the match-box. He blew some preliminary clouds of smoke
and then he answered me:

"For twenty years past, my friend, I have been studying the
question of hereditary transmission of qualities; and I have
found vices and diseases descending more frequently to children
than virtue and health. I don't stop to ask why: there is no end
to that sort of curiosity. What I have observed is what I tell
you; no more and no less. You will say this is a horribly
discouraging result of experience, for it tends to show that
children come into the world at a disadvantage on the day of
their birth. Of course they do. Children are born deformed;
children are born deaf, dumb, or blind; children are born with
the seeds in them of deadly diseases. Who can account for the
cruelties of creation? Why are we endowed with life--only to end
in death? And does it ever strike you, when you are cutting your
mutton at dinner, and your cat is catching its mouse, and your
spider is suffocating its fly, that we are all, big and little
together, born to one certain inheritance--the privilege of
eating each other?"

"Very sad," I admitted. "But it will all be set right in another
world."

"Are you quite sure of that?" the Doctor asked.

"Quite sure, thank God! And it would be better for you if you
felt about it as I do."

"We won't dispute, my dear Governor. I don't scoff at comforting
hopes; I don't deny the existence of occasional compensations.
But I do see, nevertheless, that Evil has got the upper hand
among us, on this curious little planet. Judging by my
observation and experience, that ill-fated baby's chance of
inheriting the virtues of her parents is not to be compared with
her chances of inheriting their vices; especially if she happens
to take after her mother. _There_ the virtue is not conspicuous,
and the vice is one enormous fact. When I think of the growth of
that poisonous hereditary taint, which may come with time--when I
think of passions let loose and temptations lying in ambush--I
see the smooth surface of the Minister's domestic life with
dangers lurking under it which make me shake in my shoes. God!
what a life I should lead, if I happened to be in his place, some
years hence. Suppose I said or did something (in the just
exercise of my parental authority) which offended my adopted
daughter. What figure would rise from the dead in my memory, when
the girl bounced out of the room in a rage? The image of her
mother would be the image I should see. I should remember what
her mother did when _she_ was provoked; I should lock my bedroom
door, in my own house, at night. I should come down to breakfast
with suspicions in my cup of tea, if I discovered that my adopted
daughter had poured it out. Oh, yes; it's quite true that I might
be doing the girl a cruel injustice all the time; but how am I to
be sure of that? I am only sure that her mother was hanged for
one of the most merciless murders committed in our time. Pass the
match-box. My pipe's out, and my confession of faith has come to
an end."

It was useless to dispute with a man who possessed his command of
language. At the same time, there was a bright side to the poor
Minister's prospects which the Doctor had failed to see. It was
barely possible that I might succeed in putting my positive
friend in the wrong. I tried the experiment, at any rate.

"You seem to have forgotten," I reminded him, "that the child
will have every advantage that education can offer to her, and
will be accustomed from her earliest years to restraining and
purifying influences, in a clergyman's household."

Now that he was enjoying the fumes of tobacco, the Doctor was as
placid and sweet-tempered as a man could be.

"Quite true," he said.

"Do you doubt the influence of religion?" I asked sternly.

He answered, sweetly: "Not at all"

"Or the influence of kindness?"

"Oh, dear, no!"

"Or the force of example?"

"I wouldn't deny it for the world."

I had not expected this extraordinary docility. The Doctor had
got the upper hand of me again--a state of thing s that I might
have found it hard to endure, but for a call of duty which put an
end to our sitting. One of the female warders appeared with a
message from the condemned cell. The Prisoner wished to see the
Governor and the Medical Officer.

"Is she ill?" the Doctor inquired.

"No, sir."

"Hysterical? or agitated, perhaps?"

"As easy and composed, sir, as a person can be."

We set forth together for the condemned cell.


CHAPTER VII.

THE MURDERESS CONSULTS THE AUTHORITIES.


THERE was a considerate side to my friend's character, which
showed itself when the warder had left us.

He was especially anxious to be careful of what he said to a
woman in the Prisoner's terrible situation; especially in the
event of her having been really subjected to the influence of
religious belief. On the Minister's own authority, I declared
that there was every reason to adopt this conclusion; and in
support of what I had said I showed him the confession. It only
contained a few lines, acknowledging that she had committed the
murder and that she deserved her sentence. "From the planning of
the crime to the commission of the crime, I was in my right
senses throughout. I knew what I was doing." With that remarkable
disavowal of the defense set up by her advocate, the confession
ended.

My colleague read the paper, and handed it back to me without
making any remark. I asked if he suspected the Prisoner of
feigning conversion to please the Minister.

"She shall not discover it," he answered, gravely, "if I do."

It would not be true to say that the Doctor's obstinacy had
shaken my belief in the good result of the Minister's
interference. I may, however, acknowledge that I felt some
misgivings, which were not dispelled when I found myself in the
presence of the Prisoner.

I had expected to see her employed in reading the Bible. The good
book was closed and was not even placed within her reach. The
occupation to which she was devoting herself astonished and
repelled me.

Some carelessness on the part of the attendant had left on the
table the writing materials that had been needed for her
confession. She was using them now--when death on the scaffold
was literally within a few hours of her--to sketch a portrait of
the female warder, who was on the watch! The Doctor and I looked
at each other; and now the sincerity of her repentance was
something that I began to question, too.

She laid down the pen, and proceeded quietly to explain herself.

"Even the little time that is left to me proves to be a weary
time to get through," she said. "I am making a last use of the
talent for drawing and catching a likeness, which has been one of
my gifts since I was a girl. You look as if you didn't approve of
such employment as this for a woman who is going to be hanged.
Well, sir, I have no doubt you are right." She paused, and tore
up the portrait. "If I have misbehaved myself," she resumed, "I
make amends. To find you in an indulgent frame of mind is of
importance to me just now. I have a favor to ask of you. May the
warder leave the cell for a few minutes?"

Giving the woman permission to withdraw for a while, I waited
with some anxiety to hear what the Prisoner wanted of me.

"I have something to say to you," she proceeded, "on the subject
of executions. The face of a person who is going to be hanged is
hidden, as I have been told, by a white cap drawn over it. Is
that true?"

How another man might have felt, in my place, I cannot, of
course, say. To my mind, such a question--on _her_ lips--was too
shocking to be answered in words. I bowed.

"And the body is buried," she went on, "in the prison?"

I could remain silent no longer. "Is there no human feeling left
in you?" I burst out. "What do these horrid questions mean?"

"Don't be angry with me, sir; you shall hear directly. I want to
know first if I am to be buried in the prison?"

I replied as before, by a bow.

"Now," she said, "I may tell you what I mean. In the autumn of
last year I was taken to see some waxworks. Portraits of
criminals were among them. There was one portrait--" She
hesitated; her infernal self-possession failed her at last. The
color left her face; she was no longer able to look at me firmly.
"There was one portrait," she resumed, "that had been taken after
the execution. The face was so hideous; it was swollen to such a
size in its frightful deformity--oh, sir, don't let me be seen in
that state, even by the strangers who bury me! Use your
influence--forbid them to take the cap off my face when I am
dead--order them to bury me in it, and I swear to you I'll meet
death tomorrow as coolly as the boldest man that ever mounted the
scaffold!" Before I could stop her, she seized me by the hand,
and wrung it with a furious power that left the mark of her grasp
on me, in a bruise, for days afterward. "Will you do it?" she
cried. "You're an honorable man; you will keep your word. Give me
your promise!"

I gave her my promise.

The relief to her tortured spirit expressed itself horribly in a
burst of frantic laughter. "I can't help it," she gasped; "I'm so
happy."

My enemies said of me, when I got my appointment, that I was too
excitable a man to be governor of a prison. Perhaps they were not
altogether wrong. Anyhow, the quick-witted Doctor saw some change
in me, which I was not aware of myself. He took my arm and led me
out of the cell. "Leave her to me," he whispered. "The fine edge
of my nerves was worn off long ago in the hospital."

When we met again, I asked what had passed between the Prisoner
and himself.

"I gave her time to recover," he told me; "and, except that she
looked a little paler than usual, there was no trace left of the
frenzy that you remember. 'I ought to apologize for troubling
you,' she said; 'but it is perhaps natural that I should think,
now and then, of what is to happen to me to-morrow morning. As a
medical man, you will be able to enlighten me. Is death by
hanging a painful death?' She had put it so politely that I felt
bound to answer her. 'If the neck happens to be broken,' I said,
'hanging is a sudden death; fright and pain (if there is any
pain) are both over in an instant. As to the other form of death
which is also possible (I mean death by suffocation), I must own
as an honest man that I know no more about it than you do.' After
considering a little, she made a sensible remark, and followed it
by an embarrassing request. 'A great deal,' she said, 'must
depend on the executioner. I am not afraid of death, Doctor. Why
should I be? My anxiety about my little girl is set at rest; I
have nothing left to live for. But I don't like pain. Would you
mind telling the executioner to be careful? Or would it be better
if I spoke to him myself?' I said I thought it would come with a
better grace from herself. She understood me directly; and we
dropped the subject. Are you surprised at her coolness, after
your experience of her?"

I confessed that I was surprised.

"Think a little," the Doctor said. "The one sensitive place in
that woman's nature is the place occupied by her self-esteem."

I objected to this that she had shown fondness for her child.

My friend disposed of the objection with his customary readiness.

"The maternal instinct," he said. "A cat is fond of her kittens;
a cow is fond of her calf. No, sir, the one cause of that
outbreak of passion which so shocked you--a genuine outbreak,
beyond all doubt--is to be found in the vanity of a fine feminine
creature, overpowered by a horror of looking hideous, even after
her death. Do you know I rather like that woman?"

"Is it possible that you are in earnest?" I asked.

"I know as well as you do," he answered, that this is neither a
time nor a place for jesting. The fact is, the Prisoner carries
out an idea of mine. It is my positive conviction that the worst
murders--I mean murders deliberately planned--are committed by
persons absolutely deficient in that part of the moral
organization which _feels._ The night before they are hanged they
sleep. On their last morning they eat a breakfast. Incapable of
realizing the horror of murder, they are incapable of realizing
the horror of death. Do you remember the last murderer who was
 hanged here--a gentleman's coachman who killed his wife? He had
but two anxieties while he was waiting for execution. One was to
get his allowance of beer doubled, and the other was to be hanged
in his coachman's livery. No! no! these wretches are all alike;
they are human creatures born with the temperaments of tigers.
Take my word for it, we need feel no anxiety about to-morrow. The
Prisoner will face the crowd round the scaffold with composure;
and the people will say, 'She died game.' "

CHAPTER VIII.

THE MINISTER SAYS GOOD-BY.


THE Capital Punishment of the Prisoner is in no respect connected
with my purpose in writing the present narrative. Neither do I
desire to darken these pages by describing in detail an act of
righteous retribution which must present, by the nature of it, a
scene of horror. For these reasons I ask to be excused, if I
limit what I must needs say of the execution within the compass
of a few words--and pass on.

The one self-possessed person among us was the miserable woman
who suffered the penalty of death.

Not very discreetly, as I think, the Chaplain asked her if she
had truly repented. She answered: "I have confessed the crime,
sir. What more do you want?" To my mind--still hesitating between
the view that believes with the Minister, and the view that
doubts with the Doctor--this reply leaves a way open to hope of
her salvation. Her last words to me, as she mounted the steps of
the scaffold, were: "Remember your promise." It was easy for me
to be true to my word. At that bygone time, no difficulties were
placed in my way by such precautions as are now observed in the
conduct of executions within the walls of the prison. From the
time of her death to the time of her burial, no living creature
saw her face. She rests, veiled in her prison grave.

Let me now turn to living interests, and to scenes removed from
the thunder-clouds of crime.

. . . . . . .

On the next day I received a visit from the Minister.

His first words entreated me not to allude to the terrible event
of the previous day. "I cannot escape thinking of it," he said,
"but I may avoid speaking of it." This seemed to me to be the
misplaced confidence of a weak man in the refuge of silence. By
way of changing the subject, I spoke of the child. There would be
serious difficulties to contend with (as I ventured to suggest),
if he remained in the town, and allowed his new responsibilities
to become the subject of public talk.

His reply to this agreeably surprised me. There were no
difficulties to be feared.

The state of his wife's health had obliged him (acting under
medical advice) to try the influence of her native air. An
interval of some months might elapse before the good effect of
the change had sufficiently declared itself; and a return to the
peculiar climate of the town might bring on a relapse. There had
consequently been no alternative to but resign his charge. Only
on that day the resignation had been accepted--with expressions
of regret sincerely reciprocated by himself. He proposed to leave
the town immediately; and one of the objects of his visit was to
bid me good-by.

"The next place I live in," he said, "will be more than a hundred
miles away. At that distance I may hope to keep events concealed
which must be known only to ourselves. So far as I can see, there
are no risks of discovery lurking in this place. My servants
(only two in number) have both been born here, and have both told
my wife that they have no wish to go away. As to the person who
introduced herself to me by the name of Miss Chance, she was
traced to the railway station yesterday afternoon, and took her
ticket for London."

I congratulated the Minister on the good fortune which had
befriended him, so far.

"You will understand how carefully I have provided against being
deceived," he continued, "when I tell you what my plans are. The
persons among whom my future lot is cast--and the child herself,
of course--must never suspect that the new member of my family is
other than my own daughter. This is deceit, I admit; but it is
deceit that injures no one. I hope you see the necessity for it,
as I do."

There could be no doubt of the necessity.

If the child was described as adopted, there would be curiosity
about the circumstances, and inquiries relating to the parents.
Prevaricating replies lead to suspicion, and suspicion to
discovery. But for the wise course which the Minister had decided
on taking, the poor child's life might have been darkened by the
horror of the mother's crime, and the infamy of the mother's
death.

Having quieted my friend's needless scruples by this perfectly
sincere expression of opinion, I ventured to approach the central
figure in his domestic circle, by means of a question relating to
his wife. How had that lady received the unfortunate little
creature, for whose appearance on the home-scene she must have
been entirely unprepared?

The Minister's manner showed some embarrassment; he prefaced what
he had to tell me with praises of his wife, equally creditable no
doubt to both of them. The beauty of the child, the pretty ways
of the child, he said, fascinated the admirable woman at first
sight. It was not to be denied that she had felt, and had
expressed, misgivings, on being informed of the circumstances
under which the Minister's act of mercy had been performed. But
her mind was too well balanced to incline to this state of
feeling, when her husband had addressed her in defense of his
conduct. She then understood that the true merit of a good action
consisted in patiently facing the sacrifices involved. Her
interest in the new daughter being, in this way, ennobled by a
sense of Christian duty, there had been no further difference of
opinion between the married pair.

I listened to this plausible explanation with interest, but, at
the same time, with doubts of the lasting nature of the lady's
submission to circumstances; suggested, perhaps, by the
constraint in the Minister's manner. It was well for both of us
when we changed the subject. He reminded me of the discouraging
view which the Doctor had taken of the prospect before him.

"I will not attempt to decide whether your friend is right or
wrong," he said. "Trusting, as I do, in the mercy of God, I look
hopefully to a future time when all that is brightest and best in
the nature of my adopted child will be developed under my
fostering care. If evil tendencies show themselves, my reliance
will be confidently placed on pious example, on religious
instruction, and, above all, on intercession by prayer. Repeat to
your friend," he concluded, "what you have just heard me say. Let
him ask himself if he could confront the uncertain future with my
cheerful submission and my steadfast hope."

He intrusted me with that message, and gave me his hand. So we
parted.

I agreed with him, I admired him; but my faith seemed to want
sustaining power, as compared with his faith. On his own showing
(as it appeared to me), there would be two forces in a state of
conflict in the child's nature as she grew up--inherited evil
against inculcated good. Try as I might, I failed to feel the
Minister's comforting conviction as to which of the two would
win.

CHAPTER IX.

THE GOVERNOR RECEIVES A VISIT.


A FEW days after the good man had left us, I met with a serious
accident, caused by a false step on the stone stairs of the
prison.

The long illness which followed this misfortune, and my removal
afterward (in the interests of my recovery) to a milder climate
than the climate of England, obliged me to confide the duties of
governor of the prison to a representative. I was absent from my
post for rather more than a year. During this interval no news
reached me from my reverend friend.

Having returned to the duties of my office, I thought of writing
to the Minister. While the proposed letter was still in
contemplation, I was informed that a lady wished to see me. She
sent in her card. My visitor proved to be the Minister's wife.

I observed her with no ordinary attention when she entered the
room.

Her dress was simple; her scanty light hair, so far as I could
see it under her bonnet, was dressed with taste. Th e paleness of
her lips, and the faded color in her face, suggested that she was
certainly not in good health. Two peculiarities struck me in her
personal appearance. I never remembered having seen any other
person with such a singularly narrow and slanting forehead as
this lady presented; and I was impressed, not at all agreeably,
by the flashing shifting expression in her eyes. On the other
hand, let me own that I was powerfully attracted and interested
by the beauty of her voice. Its fine variety of compass, and its
musical resonance of tone, fell with such enchantment on the ear,
that I should have liked to put a book of poetry into her hand,
and to have heard her read it in summer-time, accompanied by the
music of a rocky stream.

The object of her visit--so far as she explained it at the
outset--appeared to be to offer her congratulations on my
recovery, and to tell me that her husband had assumed the charge
of a church in a large town not far from her birthplace.

Even those commonplace words were made interesting by her
delicious voice. But however sensitive to sweet sounds a man may
be, there are limits to his capacity for deceiving
himself--especially when he happens to be enlightened by
experience of humanity within the walls of a prison. I had, it
may be remembered, already doubted the lady's good temper,
judging from her husband's over-wrought description of her
virtues. Her eyes looked at me furtively; and her manner,
gracefully self-possessed as it was, suggested that she had
something of a delicate, or disagreeable, nature to say to me,
and that she was at a loss how to approach the subject so as to
produce the right impression on my mind at the outset. There was
a momentary silence between us. For the sake of saying something,
I asked how she and the Minister liked their new place of
residence.

"Our new place of residence," she answered, "has been made
interesting by a very unexpected event--an event (how shall I
describe it?) which has increased our happiness and enlarged our
family circle."

There she stopped: expecting me, as I fancied, to guess what she
meant. A woman, and that woman a mother, might have fulfilled her
anticipations. A man, and that man not listening attentively, was
simply puzzled.

"Pray excuse my stupidity," I said; "I don't quite understand
you."

The lady's temper looked at me out of the lady's shifting eyes,
and hid itself again in a moment. She set herself right in my
estimation by taking the whole blame of our little
misunderstanding on her own innocent shoulders.

"I ought to have spoken more plainly," she said. "Let me try what
I can do now. After many years of disappointment in my married
life, it has pleased Providence to bestow on me the
happiness--the inexpressible happiness--of being a mother. My
baby is a sweet little girl; and my one regret is that I cannot
nurse her myself."

My languid interest in the Minister's wife was not stimulated by
the announcement of this domestic event.

I felt no wish to see the "sweet little girl"; I was not even
reminded of another example of long-deferred maternity, which had
occurred within the limits of my own family circle. All my
sympathies attached themselves to the sad little figure of the
adopted child. I remembered the poor baby on my knee, enchanted
by the ticking of my watch--I thought of her, peacefully and
prettily asleep under the horrid shelter of the condemned
cell--and it is hardly too much to say that my heart was heavy,
when I compared her prospects with the prospects of her
baby-rival. Kind as he was, conscientious as he was, could the
Minister be expected to admit to an equal share in his love the
child endeared to him as a father, and the child who merely
reminded him of an act of mercy? As for his wife, it seemed the
merest waste of time to put her state of feeling (placed between
the two children) to the test of inquiry. I tried the useless
experiment, nevertheless.

"It is pleasant to think," I began, "that your other daughter--"

She interrupted me, with the utmost gentleness: "Do you mean the
child that my husband was foolish enough to adopt?"

"Say rather fortunate enough to adopt," I persisted. "As your own
little girl grows up, she will want a playfellow. And she will
find a playfellow in that other child, whom the good Minister has
taken for his own."

"No, my dear sir--not if I can prevent it."

The contrast between the cruelty of her intention, and the
musical beauty of the voice which politely expressed it in those
words, really startled me. I was at a loss how to answer her, at
the very time when I ought to have been most ready to speak.

"You must surely understand," she went on, "that we don't want
another person's child, now we have a little darling of our own?"

"Does your husband agree with you in that view?" I asked.

"Oh dear, no! He said what you said just now, and (oddly enough)
almost in the same words. But I don't at all despair of
persuading him to change his mind--and you can help me."

She made that audacious assertion with such an appearance of
feeling perfectly sure of me, that my politeness gave way under
the strain laid on it. "What do you mean?" I asked sharply.

Not in the least impressed by my change of manner, she took from
the pocket of her dress a printed paper. "You will find what I
mean there," she replied--and put the paper into my hand.

It was an appeal to the charitable public, occasioned by the
enlargement of an orphan-asylum, with which I had been connected
for many years. What she meant was plain enough now. I said
nothing: I only looked at her.

Pleased to find that I was clever enough to guess what she meant,
on this occasion, the Minister's wife informed me that the
circumstances were all in our favor. She still persisted in
taking me into partnership--the circumstances were in _our_
favor.

"In two years more," she explained, "the child of that detestable
creature who was hanged--do you know, I cannot even look at the
little wretch without thinking of the gallows?--will be old
enough (with your interest to help us) to be received into the
asylum. What a relief it will be to get rid of that child! And
how hard I shall work at canvassing for subscribers' votes! Your
name will be a tower of strength when I use it as a reference.
Pardon me--you are not looking so pleasantly as usual. Do you see
some obstacles in our way?"

"I see two obstacles."

"What can they possibly be?"

For the second time, my politeness gave way under the strain laid
on it. "You know perfectly well," I said, "what one of the
obstacles is."

"Am I to understand that you contemplate any serious resistance
on the part of my husband?"

"Certainly!"

She was unaffectedly amused by my simplicity.

"Are you a single man?" she asked.

"I am a widower."

"Then your experience ought to tell you that I know every weak
point in the Minister's character. I can tell him, on your
authority, that the hateful child will be placed in competent and
kindly hands--and I have my own sweet baby to plead for me. With
these advantages in my favor, do you actually suppose I can fail
to make _my_ way of thinking _his_ way of thinking? You must have
forgotten your own married life! Suppose we go on to the second
of your two obstacles. I hope it will be better worth considering
than the first."

"The second obstacle will not disappoint you," I answered; "I am
the obstacle, this time."

"You refuse to help me?"

"Positively."

"Perhaps reflection may alter your resolution?"

"Reflection will do nothing of the kind."

"You are rude, sir!"

"In speaking to you, madam, I have no alternative but to speak
plainly."

She rose. Her shifting eyes, for once, looked at me steadily.

"What sort of enemy have I made of you?" she asked. "A passive
enemy who is content with refusing to help me? Or an active enemy
who will write to my husband?"

"It depends entirely," I told her, "on what your husband does. If
he questions me about you, I shall tell him the truth."

"And if not?"

"In that case, I shall hope to forget that you ever favored me
with a visit."

In making this reply I was guiltless of any malicious intention.
What evil interpretation she placed
 on my words it is impossible for me to say; I can only declare
that some intolerable sense of injury hurried her into an
outbreak of rage. Her voice, strained for the first time, lost
its tuneful beauty of tone.

"Come and see us in two years' time," she burst out--"and
discover the orphan of the gallows in our house if you can! If
your Asylum won't take her, some other Charity will. Ha, Mr.
Governor, I deserve my disappointment! I ought to have remembered
that you are only a jailer after all. And what is a jailer?
Proverbially a brute. Do you hear that? A brute!"

Her strength suddenly failed her. She dropped back into the chair
from which she had risen, with a faint cry of pain. A ghastly
pallor stole over her face. There was wine on the sideboard; I
filled a glass. She refused to take it. At that time in the day,
the Doctor's duties required his attendance in the prison. I
instantly sent for him. After a moment's look at her, he took the
wine out of my hand, and held the glass to her lips.

"Drink it," he said. She still refused. "Drink it," he
reiterated, "or you will die."

That frightened her; she drank the wine. The Doctor waited for a
while with his fingers on her pulse. "She will do now," he said.

"Can I go?" she asked.

"Go wherever you please, madam--so long as you don't go upstairs
in a hurry."

She smiled: "I understand you, sir--and thank you for your
advice."

I asked the Doctor, when we were alone, what made him tell her
not to go upstairs in a hurry.

"What I felt," he answered, "when I had my fingers on her pulse.
You heard her say that she understood me."

"Yes; but I don't know what she meant."

"She meant, probably, that her own doctor had warned her as I
did."

"Something seriously wrong with her health?"

"Yes."

"What is it?"

"Heart."


CHAPTER X.

MISS CHANCE REAPPEARS.


A WEEK had passed, since the Minister's wife had left me, when I
received a letter from the Minister himself.

After surprising me, as he innocently supposed, by announcing the
birth of his child, he mentioned some circumstances connected
with that event, which I now heard for the first time.

"Within an easy journey of the populous scene of my present
labors," he wrote, "there is a secluded country village called
Low Lanes. The rector of the place is my wife's brother. Before
the birth of our infant, he had asked his sister to stay for a
while at his house; and the doctor thought she might safely be
allowed to accept the invitation. Through some error in the
customary calculations, as I suppose, the child was born
unexpectedly at the rectory; and the ceremony of baptism was
performed at the church, under circumstances which I am not able
to relate within the limits of a letter: Let me only say that I
allude to this incident without any sectarian bitterness of
feeling--for I am no enemy to the Church of England. You have no
idea what treasures of virtue and treasures of beauty maternity
has revealed in my wife's sweet nature. Other mothers, in her
proud position, might find their love cooling toward the poor
child whom we have adopted. But my household is irradiated by the
presence of an angel, who gives an equal share in her affections
to the two little ones alike."

In this semi-hysterical style of writing, the poor man
unconsciously told me how cunningly and how cruelly his wife was
deceiving him.

I longed to exhibit that wicked woman in her true character--but
what could I do? She must have been so favored by circumstances
as to be able to account for her absence from home, without
exciting the slightest suspicion of the journey which she had
really taken, if I declared in my reply to the Minister's letter
that I had received her in my rooms, and if I repeated the
conversation that had taken place, what would the result be? She
would find an easy refuge in positive denial of the truth--and,
in that case, which of us would her infatuated husband believe?

The one part of the letter which I read with some satisfaction
was the end of it.

I was here informed that the Minister's plans for concealing the
parentage of his adopted daughter had proved to be entirely
successful. The members of the new domestic household believed
the two children to be infant-sisters. Neither was there any
danger of the adopted child being identified (as the oldest child
of the two) by consultation of the registers.

Before he left our town, the Minister had seen for himself that
no baptismal name had been added, after the birth of the daughter
of the murderess had been registered, and that no entry of
baptism existed in the registers kept in places of worship. He
drew the inference--in all probability a true inference,
considering the characters of the parents--that the child had
never been baptized; and he performed the ceremony privately,
abstaining, for obvious reasons, from adding her Christian name
to the imperfect register of her birth. "I am not aware," he
wrote, "whether I have, or have not, committed an offense against
the Law. In any case, I may hope to have made atonement by
obedience to the Gospel."

Six weeks passed, and I heard from my reverend friend once more.

His second letter presented a marked contrast to the first. It
was written in sorrow and anxiety, to inform me of an alarming
change for the worse in his wife's health. I showed the letter to
my medical colleague. After reading it he predicted the event
that might be expected, in two words:--Sudden death.

On the next occasion when I heard from the Minister, the Doctor's
grim reply proved to be a prophecy fulfilled.

When we address expressions of condolence to bereaved friends,
the principles of popular hypocrisy sanction indiscriminate lying
as a duty which we owe to the dead--no matter what their lives
may have been--because they are dead. Within my own little
sphere, I have always been silent, when I could not offer to
afflicted persons expressions of sympathy which I honestly felt.
To have condoled with the Minister on the loss that he had
sustained by the death of a woman, self-betrayed to me as
shamelessly deceitful, and pitilessly determined to reach her own
cruel ends, would have been to degrade myself by telling a
deliberate lie. I expressed in my answer all that an honest man
naturally feels, when he is writing to a friend in distress;
carefully abstaining from any allusion to the memory of his wife,
or to the place which her death had left vacant in his household.
My letter, I am sorry to say, disappointed and offended him. He
wrote to me no more, until years had passed, and time had exerted
its influence in producing a more indulgent frame of mind. These
letters of a later date have been preserved, and will probably be
used, at the right time, for purposes of explanation with which I
may be connected in the future.

. . . . . . .

The correspondent whom I had now lost was succeeded by a
gentleman entirely unknown to me.

Those reasons which induced me to conceal the names of persons,
while I was relating events in the prison, do not apply to
correspondence with a stranger writing from another place. I may,
therefore, mention that Mr. Dunboyne, of Fairmount, on the west
coast of Ireland, was the writer of the letter now addressed to
me. He proved, to my surprise, to be one of the relations whom
the Prisoner under sentence of death had not cared to see, when I
offered her the opportunity of saying farewell. Mr. Dunboyne was
a brother-in-law of the murderess. He had married her sister.

His wife, he informed me, had died in childbirth, leaving him but
one consolation--a boy, who already recalled all that was
brightest and best in his lost mother. The father was naturally
anxious that the son should never become acquainted with the
disgrace that had befallen the family.

The letter then proceeded in these terms:

"I heard yesterday, for the first time, by means of an old
newspaper-cutting sent to me by a friend, that the miserable
woman who suffered the ignominy of public execution has left an
infant child. Can you tell me what has become of the orphan? If
this little girl is, as I fear, not well provided for, I only do
what my wife would have done if she had lived, by offering to
 make the child's welfare my especial care. I am willing to place
her in an establishment well known to me, in which she will be
kindly treated, well educated, and fitted to earn her own living
honorably in later life.

"If you feel some surprise at finding that my good intentions
toward this ill-fated niece of mine do not go to the length of
receiving her as a member of my own family, I beg to submit some
considerations which may perhaps weigh with you as they have
weighed with me.

"In the first place, there is at least a possibility--however
carefully I might try to conceal it--that the child's parentage
would sooner or later be discovered. In the second place (and
assuming that the parentage had been successfully concealed), if
this girl and my boy grew up together, there is another
possibility to be reckoned with: they might become attached to
each other. Does the father live who would allow his son
ignorantly to marry the daughter of a convicted murderess? I
should have no alternative but to part them cruelly by revealing
the truth." The letter ended with some complimentary expressions
addressed to myself. And the question was: how ought I to answer
it?

My correspondent had strongly impressed me in his favor; I could
not doubt that he was an honorable man. But the interest of the
Minister in keeping his own benevolent action secure from the
risk of discovery--increased as that interest was by the filial
relations of the two children toward him, now publicly
established--had, as I could not doubt, the paramount claim on
me. The absolutely safe course to take was to admit no one,
friend or stranger, to our confidence. I replied, expressing
sincere admiration of Mr. Dunboyne's motives, and merely
informing him that the child was already provided for.

After that, I heard no more of the Irish gentleman.

It is perhaps hardly necessary to add that I kept the Minister in
ignorance of my correspondence with Mr. Dunboyne. I was too well
acquainted with my friend's sensitive and self-tormenting nature
to let him know that a relative of the murderess was living, and
was aware that she had left a child.

A last event remains to be related, before I close these pages.

During the year of which I am now writing, our Chaplain added one
more to the many examples that I have seen of his generous
readiness to serve his friends. He had arranged to devote his
annual leave of absence to a tour among the English Lakes, when
he received a letter from a clergyman resident in London, whom he
had known from the time when they had been school-fellows. This
old friend wrote under circumstances of the severest domestic
distress, which made it absolutely necessary that he should leave
London for a while. Having failed to find a representative who
could relieve him of his clerical duties, he applied to the
Chaplain to recommend a clergyman who might be in a position to
help him. My excellent colleague gave up his holiday-plans
without hesitation, and went to London himself.

On his return, I asked if he had seen anything of some
acquaintances of his and of mine, who were then visitors to the
metropolis. He smiled significantly when he answered me.

"I have a card to deliver from an acquaintance whom you have not
mentioned," he said; "and I rather think it will astonish you."

It simply puzzled me. When he gave me the card, this is what I
found printed on it:

"MRS. TENERUGGEN (OF SOUTH BEVELAND)."

"Well?" said the Chaplain.

"Well," I answered; "I never even heard of Mrs. Tenbruggen, of
South Beveland. Who is she?"

"I married the lady to a foreign gentleman, only last week, at my
friend's church," the Chaplain replied. "Perhaps you may remember
her maiden name?"

He mentioned the name of the dangerous creature who had first
presented herself to me, in charge of the Prisoner's
child--otherwise Miss Elizabeth Chance. The reappearance of this
woman on the scene--although she was only represented by her
card--caused me a feeling of vague uneasiness, so contemptibly
superstitious in its nature that I now remember it with shame. I
asked a stupid question:

"How did it happen?"

"In the ordinary course of such things," my friend said. "They
were married by license, in their parish church. The bridegroom
was a fine tall man, with a bold eye and a dashing manner. The
bride and I recognized each other directly. When Miss Chance had
become Mrs. Tenbruggen, she took me aside, and gave me her card.
'Ask the Governor to accept it,' she said, 'in remembrance of the
time when he took me for a nursemaid. Tell him I am married to a
Dutch gentleman of high family. If he ever comes to Holland, we
shall be glad to see him in our residence at South Beveland.'
There is her message to you, repeated word for word."

"I am glad she is going to live out of England."

"Why? Surely you have no reason to fear her?"

"None whatever."

"You are thinking, perhaps, of somebody else?"

I was thinking of the Minister; but it seemed to be safest not to
say so.

-------

My pen is laid aside, and my many pages of writing have been sent
to their destination. What I undertook to do, is now done. To
take a metaphor from the stage--the curtain falls here on the
Governor and the Prison.


Second Period: 1875.

THE GIRLS AND THE JOURNALS.


CHAPTER XI.

HELENA'S DIARY.


WE both said good-night, and went up to our room with a new
object in view. By our father's advice we had resolved on keeping
diaries, for the first time in our lives, and had pledged
ourselves to begin before we went to bed.

Slowly and silently and lazily, my sister sauntered to her end of
the room and seated herself at her writing-table. On the desk lay
a nicely bound book, full of blank pages. The word "Journal" was
printed on it in gold letters, and there was fitted to the covers
a bright brass lock and key. A second journal, exactly similar in
every respect to the first, was placed on the writing-table at my
end of the room. I opened my book. The sight of the blank leaves
irritated me; they were so smooth, so spotless, so entirely ready
to do _their_ duty. I took too deep a dip of ink, and began the
first entry in my diary by making a blot. This was discouraging.
I got up, and looked out of window.

"Helena!"

My sister's voice could hardly have addressed me in a more weary
tone, if her pen had been at work all night, relating domestic
events. "Well!" I said. "What is it?"

"Have you done already?" she asked.

I showed her the blot. My sister Eunice (the strangest as well as
the dearest of girls) always blurts out what she has in her mind
at the time. She fixed her eyes gravely on my spoiled page, and
said: "That comforts me." I crossed the room, and looked at her
book. She had not even summoned energy enough to make a blot.
"What will papa think of us," she said, "if we don't begin
to-night?"

"Why not begin," I suggested, "by writing down what he said, when
he gave us our journals? Those wise words of advice will be in
their proper place on the first page of the new books."

Not at all a demonstrative girl naturally; not ready with her
tears, not liberal with her caresses, not fluent in her talk,
Eunice was affected by my proposal in a manner wonderful to see.
She suddenly developed into an excitable person--I declare she
kissed me. "Oh," she burst out, "how clever you are! The very
thing to write about; I'll do it directly."

She really did it directly; without once stopping to consider,
without once waiting to ask my advice. Line after line, I heard
her noisy pen hurrying to the bottom of a first page, and getting
three-parts of the way toward the end of a second page, before
she closed her diary. I reminded her that she had not turned the
key, in the lock which was intended to keep her writing private.

"It's not worth while," she answered. "Anybody who cares to do it
may read what I write. Good-night."

The singular change which I had noticed in her began to
disappear, when she set about her preparations for bed. I noticed
the old easy indolent movements again, and that regular and
deliberate method of brushing her hair, which I can never
contemplate without feeling a stupefying influence that has
helped me to many a deli cious night's sleep. She said her
prayers in her favorite corner of the room, and laid her head on
the pillow with the luxurious little sigh which announces that
she is falling asleep. This reappearance of her usual habits was
really a relief to me. Eunice in a state of excitement is Eunice
exhibiting an unnatural spectacle.

The next thing I did was to take the liberty which she had
already sanctioned--I mean the liberty of reading what she had
written. Here it is, copied exactly:

"I am not half so fond of anybody as I am of papa. He is always
kind, he is always right. I love him, I love him, I love him.

"But this is not how I meant to begin. I must tell how he talked
to us; I wish he was here to tell it himself.

"He said to me: 'You are getting lazier than ever, Eunice.' He
said to Helena: 'You are feeling the influence of Eunice's
example.' He said to both of us: 'You are too ready, my dear
children, to sit with your hands on your laps, looking at nothing
and thinking of nothing; I want to try a new way of employing
your leisure time.'

"He opened a parcel on the table. He made each of us a present of
a beautiful book, called 'Journal.' He said: 'When you have
nothing to do, my dears, in the evening, employ yourselves in
keeping a diary of the events of the day. It will be a useful
record in many ways, and a good moral discipline for young
girls.' Helena said: 'Oh, thank you!' I said the same, but not so
cheerfully.

"The truth is, I feel out of spirits now if I think of papa; I am
not easy in my mind about him. When he is very much interested,
there is a quivering in his face which I don't remember in past
times. He seems to have got older and thinner, all on a sudden.
He shouts (which he never used to do) when he threatens sinners
at sermon-time. Being in dreadful earnest about our souls, he is
of course obliged to speak of the devil; but he never used to hit
the harmless pulpit cushion with his fist as he does now. Nobody
seems to have seen these things but me; and now I have noticed
them what ought I to do? I don't know; I am certain of nothing,
except what I have put in at the top of page one: I love him, I
love him, I love him."

. . . . . . .

There this very curious entry ended. It was easy enough to
discover the influence which had made my slow-minded sister so
ready with her. memory and her pen--so ready, in short, to do
anything and everything, provided her heart was in it, and her
father was in it.

But Eunice is wrong, let me tell her, in what she says of myself.

I, too, have seen the sad change in my father; but I happen to
know that he dislikes having it spoken of at home, and I have
kept my painful discoveries to myself. Unhappily, the best
medical advice is beyond our reach. The one really competent
doctor in this place is known to be an infidel. But for that
shocking obstacle I might have persuaded my father to see him. As
for the other two doctors whom he has consulted, at different
times, one talked about suppressed gout, and the other told him
to take a year's holiday and enjoy himself on the Continent.

The clock has just struck twelve. I have been writing and copying
till my eyes are heavy, and I want to follow Eunice's example and
sleep as soundly as she does. We have made a strange beginning of
this journalizing experiment. I wonder how long it will go on,
and what will come of it.

SECOND DAY.


I begin to be afraid that I am as stupid--no; that is not a nice
word to use--let me say as simple as dear Eunice. A diary means a
record of the events of the day; and not one of the events of
yesterday appears in my sister's journal or in mine. Well, it is
easy to set that mistake right. Our lives are so dull (but I
would not say so in my father's hearing for the world) that the
record of one day will be much the same as the record of another.

After family prayers and breakfast I suffer my customary
persecution at the hands of the cook. That is to say, I am
obliged, being the housekeeper, to order what we have to eat. Oh,
how I hate inventing dinners! and how I admire the enviable
slowness of mind and laziness of body which have saved Eunice
from undertaking the worries of housekeeping in her turn! She can
go and work in her garden, while I am racking my invention to
discover variety in dishes without overstepping the limits of
economy. I suppose I may confess it privately to myself--how
sorry I am not to have been born a man!

My next employment leads me to my father's study, to write under
his dictation. I don't complain of this; it flatters my pride to
feel that I am helping so great a man. At the same time, I do
notice that here again Eunice's little defects have relieved her
of another responsibility. She can neither keep dictated words in
her memory, nor has she ever been able to learn how to put in her
stops.

After the dictation, I have an hour's time left for practicing
music. My sister comes in from the garden, with her pencil and
paint-box, and practices drawing. Then we go out for a walk--a
delightful walk, if my father goes too. He has something always
new to tell us, suggested by what we pass on the way. Then,
dinner-time comes--not always a pleasant part of the day to me.
Sometimes I hear paternal complaints (always gentle complaints)
of my housekeeping; sometimes my sister (I won't say the greedy
sister) tells me I have not given her enough to eat. Poor father!
Dear Eunice!

Dinner having reached its end, we stroll in the garden when the
weather is fine. When it rains, we make flannel petticoats for
poor old women. What a horrid thing old age is to look at! To be
ugly, to be helpless, to be miserably unfit for all the pleasures
of life--I hope I shall not live to be an old woman. What would
my father say if he saw this? For his sake, to say nothing of my
own feelings, I shall do well if I make it a custom to use the
lock of my journal.

Our next occupation is to join the Scripture class for girls, and
to help the teacher. This is a good discipline for Eunice's
temper, and--oh, I don't deny it!--for my temper, too. I may long
to box the ears of the whole class, but it is my duty to keep a
smiling face and to be a model of patience. From the Scripture
class we sometimes go to my father's lecture. At other times, we
may amuse ourselves as well as we can till the tea is ready.
After tea, we read books which instruct us, poetry and novels
being forbidden. When we are tired of the books we talk. When
supper is over, we have prayers again, and we go to bed. There is
our day. Oh, dear me! there is our day.

. . . . . . .

And how has Eunice succeeded in her second attempt at keeping a
diary? Here is what she has written. It has one merit that nobody
can deny--it is soon read:

"I hope papa will excuse me; I have nothing to write about
to-day."

Over and over again I have tried to point out to my sister the
absurdity of calling her father by the infantile nickname of
papa. I have reminded her that she is (in years, at least) no
longer a child. "Why don't you call him father, as I do?" I asked
only the other day.

She made an absurd reply: "I used to call him papa when I was a
little girl."

"That," I reminded her, "doesn't justify you in calling him papa
now."

And she actually answered: "Yes it does." What a strange state of
mind! And what a charming girl, in spite of her mind!

THIRD DAY.

The morning post has brought with it a promise of some little
variety in our lives--or, to speak more correctly, in the life of
my sister.

Our new and nice friends, the Staveleys, have written to invite
Eunice to pay them a visit at their house in London. I don't
complain at being left at home. It would be unfilial, indeed, if
we both of us forsook our father; and last year it was my turn to
receive the first invitation, and to enjoy the change of scene.
The Staveleys are excellent people--strictly pious members of the
Methodist Connection--and exceedingly kind to my sister and me.
But it was just as well for my moral welfare that I ended my
visit to our friends when I did. With my fondness for music, I
felt the temptation of the Evil One trying me, when I saw
placards in the street announcing that the Italian Opera
 was open. I had no wish to be a witness of the shameful and
sinful dancing which goes on (I am told) at the opera; but I did
feel my principles shaken when I thought of the wonderful singers
and the entrancing music. And this, when I knew what an
atmosphere of wickedness people breathe who enter a theater! I
reflect with horror on what _might_ have happened if I had
remained a little longer in London.

Helping Eunice to pack up, I put her journal into the box.

"You will find something to write about now," I told her. "While
I record everything that happens at home, you will keep your
diary of all that you do in London, and when you come back we
will show each other what we have written." My sister is a dear
creature. "I don't feel sure of being able to do it," she
answered; "but I promise to try." Good Eunice!


CHAPTER XII.

EUNICE'S DIARY.


THE air of London feels very heavy. There is a nasty smell of
smoke in London. There are too many people in London. They seem
to be mostly people in a hurry. The head of a country girl, when
she goes into the streets, turns giddy--I suppose through not
being used to the noise.

I do hope that it is London that has put me out of temper.
Otherwise, it must be I myself who am ill-tempered. I have not
yet been one whole day in the Staveleys' house, and they have
offended me already. I don't want Helena to hear of this from
other people, and then to ask me why I concealed it from her. We
are to read each other's journals when we are both at home again.
Let her see what I have to say for myself here.

There are seven Staveleys in all: Mr. and Mrs. (two); three young
Masters (five); two young Misses (seven). An eldest miss and the
second young Master are the only ones at home at the present
time.

Mr., Mrs., and Miss kissed me when I arrived. Young Master only
shook hands. He looked as if he would have liked to kiss me too.
Why shouldn't he? It wouldn't have mattered. I don't myself like
kissing. What is the use of it? Where is the pleasure of it?

Mrs. was so glad to see me; she took hold of me by both hands.
She said: "My dear child, you are improving. You were wretchedly
thin when I saw you last. Now you are almost as well-developed as
your sister. I think you are prettier than your sister." Mr.
didn't agree to that. He and his wife began to dispute about me
before my face. I do call that an aggravating thing to endure.

Mr. said: "She hasn't got her sister's pretty gray eyes."

Mrs. said; "She has got pretty brown eyes, which are just as
good."

Mr. said: "You can't compare her complexion with Helena's."

Mrs. said: "I like Eunice's pale complexion. So delicate."

Young Miss struck in: "I admire Helena's hair--light brown."

Young Master took his turn: "I prefer Eunice's hair--dark brown."

Mr. opened his great big mouth, and asked a question: "Which of
you two sisters is the oldest? I forget."

Mrs. answered for me: "Helena is the oldest; she told us so when
she was here last."

I really could _not_ stand that. "You must be mistaken," I burst
out.

"Certainly not, my dear."

"Then Helena was mistaken." I was unwilling to say of my sister
that she had been deceiving them, though it did seem only too
likely.

Mr. and Mrs. looked at each other. Mrs. said: "You seem to be
very positive, Eunice. Surely, Helena ought to know."

I said: "Helena knows a good deal; but she doesn't know which of
us is the oldest of the two."

Mr. put in another question: "Do _you_ know?"

"No more than Helena does."

Mrs. said: "Don't you keep birthdays?"

I said: "Yes; we keep both our birthdays on the same day."

"On what day?"

"The first day of the New Year."

Mr. tried again: "You can't possibly be twins?"

"I don't know."

"Perhaps Helena knows?"

"Not she!"

Mrs. took the next question out of her husband's mouth: "Come,
come, my dear! you must know how old you are."

"Yes; I do know that. I'm eighteen."

"And how old is Helena?"

"Helena's eighteen."

Mrs. turned round to Mr.: "Do you hear that?"

Mr. said: "I shall write to her father, and ask what it means."

I said: "Papa will only tell you what he told us--years ago."

"What did your father say?"

"He said he had added our two ages together, and he meant to
divide the product between us. It's so long since, I don't
remember what the product was then. But I'll tell you what the
product is now. Our two ages come to thirty-six. Half thirty-six
is eighteen. I get one half, and Helena gets the other. When we
ask what it means, and when friends ask what it means, papa has
got the same answer for everybody, 'I have my reasons.' That's
all he says--and that's all I say."

I had no intention of making Mr. angry, but he did get angry. He
left off speaking to me by my Christian name; he called me by my
surname. He said: "Let me tell you, Miss Gracedieu, it is not
becoming in a young lady to mystify her elders."

I had heard that it was respectful in a young lady to call an old
gentleman, Sir, and to say, If you please. I took care to be
respectful now. "If you please, sir, write to papa. You will find
that I have spoken the truth."

A woman opened the door, and said to Mrs. Staveley: "Dinner,
ma'am." That stopped this nasty exhibition of our tempers. We had
a very good dinner.

. . . . . . .

The next day I wrote to Helena, asking her what she had really
said to the Staveleys about her age and mine, and telling her
what I had said. I found it too great a trial of my patience to
wait till she could see what I had written about the dispute in
my journal. The days, since then, have passed, and I have been
too lazy and stupid to keep my diary.

To-day it is different. My head is like a dark room with the
light let into it. I remember things; I think I can go on again.

We have religious exercises in this house, morning and evening,
just as we do at home. (Not to be compared with papa's religious
exercises.) Two days ago his answer came to Mr. Staveley's
letter. He did just what I had expected--said I had spoken truly,
and disappointed the family by asking to be excused if he
refrained from entering into explanations. Mr. said: "Very odd;"
and Mrs. agreed with him. Young Miss is not quite as friendly now
as she was at first. And young Master was impudent enough to ask
me if "I had got religion." To conclude the list of my worries, I
received an angry answer from Helena. "Nobody but a simpleton,"
she wrote, "would have contradicted me as you did. Who but you
could have failed to see that papa's strange objection to let it
be known which of us is the elder makes us ridiculous before
other people? My presence of mind prevented that. You ought to
have been grateful, and held your tongue." Perhaps Helena is
right--but I don't feel it so.

On Sunday we went to chapel twice. We also had a sermon read at
home, and a cold dinner. In the evening, a hot dispute on
religion between Mr. Staveley and his son. I don't blame them.
After being pious all day long on Sunday, I have myself felt my
piety give way toward evening.

There is something pleasant in prospect for to-morrow. All London
is going just now to the exhibition of pictures. We are going
with all London.

. . . . . . .

I don't know what is the matter with me tonight. I have
positively been to bed, without going to sleep! After tossing and
twisting and trying all sorts of positions, I am so angry with
myself that I have got up again. Rather than do nothing, I have
opened my ink-bottle, and I mean to go on with my journal.

Now I think of it, it seems likely that the exhibition of works
of art may have upset me.

I found a dreadfully large number of pictures, matched by a
dreadfully large number of people to look at them. It is not
possible for me to write about what I saw: there was too much of
it. Besides, the show disappointed me. I would rather write about
a disagreement (oh, dear, another dispute!) I had with Mrs.
Staveley. The cause of it was a famous artist; not himself, but
his works. He exhibited four pictures--what they call figure
subjects. Mrs. Staveley had a pencil. At every one of the great
man's four pictures, she made a big mark of admiration on her
catalogue. At the fourth one, she spoke to me: "Perfectly
beautiful,
 Eunice, isn't it?"

I said I didn't know. She said: "You strange girl, what do you
mean by that?"

It would have been rude not to have given the best answer I could
find. I said: "I never saw the flesh of any person's face like
the flesh in the faces which that man paints. He reminds me of
wax-work. Why does he paint the same waxy flesh in all four of
his pictures? I don't see the same colored flesh in all the faces
about us." Mrs. Staveley held up her hand, by way of stopping me.
She said: "Don't speak so loud, Eunice; you are only exposing
your own ignorance."

A voice behind us joined in. The voice said: "Excuse me, Mrs.
Staveley, if I expose _my_ ignorance. I entirely agree with the
young lady."

I felt grateful to the person who took my part, just when I was
at a loss what to say for myself, and I looked round. The person
was a young gentleman.

He wore a beautiful blue frock-coat, buttoned up. I like a
frock-coat to be buttoned up. He had light-colored trousers and
gray gloves and a pretty cane. I like light-colored trousers and
gray gloves and a pretty cane. What color his eyes were is more
than I can say; I only know they made me hot when they looked at
me. Not that I mind being made hot; it is surely better than
being made cold. He and Mrs. Staveley shook hands.

They seemed to be old friends. I wished I had been an old
friend--not for any bad reason, I hope. I only wanted to shake
hands, too. What Mrs. Staveley said to him escaped me, somehow. I
think the picture escaped me also; I don't remember noticing
anything except the young gentleman, especially when he took off
his hat to me. He looked at me twice before he went away. I got
hot again. I said to Mrs. Staveley: "Who is he?"

She laughed at me. I said again: "Who is he?" She said: "He is
young Mr. Dunboyne." I said: "Does he live in London?" She
laughed again. I said again: "Does he live in London?" She said:
"He is here for a holiday; he lives with his father at Fairmount,
in Ireland."

Young Mr. Dunboyne--here for a holiday--lives with his father at
Fairmount, in Ireland. I have said that to myself fifty times
over. And here it is, saying itself for the fifty-first time in
my Journal. I must indeed be a simpleton, as Helena says. I had
better go to bed again.

CHAPTER XIII.

EUNICE'S DIARY.


NOT long before I left home, I heard one of our two servants
telling the other about a person who had been "bewitched." Are
you bewitched when you don't understand your own self? That has
been my curious case, since I returned from the picture show.
This morning I took my drawing materials out of my box, and tried
to make a portrait of young Mr. Dunboyne from recollection. I
succeeded pretty well with his frock-coat and cane; but, try as I
might, his face was beyond me. I have never drawn anything so
badly since I was a little girl; I almost felt ready to cry. What
a fool I am!

This morning I received a letter from papa--it was in reply to a
letter that I had written to him--so kind, so beautifully
expressed, so like himself, that I felt inclined to send him a
confession of the strange state of feeling that has come over me,
and to ask him to comfort and advise me. On second thoughts, I
was afraid to do it. Afraid of papa! I am further away from
understanding myself than ever.

Mr. Dunboyne paid us a visit in the afternoon. Fortunately,
before we went out.

I thought I would have a good look at him; so as to know his face
better than I had known it yet. Another disappointment was in
store for me. Without intending it, I am sure, he did what no
other young man has ever done--he made me feel confused. Instead
of looking at him, I sat with my head down, and listened to his
talk. His voice--this is high praise--reminded me of papa's
voice. It seemed to persuade me as papa persuades his
congregation. I felt quite at ease again. When he went away, we
shook hands. He gave my hand a little squeeze. I gave him back
the squeeze--without knowing why. When he was gone, I wished I
had not done it--without knowing why, either.

I heard his Christian name for the first time to-day. Mrs.
Staveley said to me: "We are going to have a dinner-party. Shall
I ask Philip Dunboyne?" I said to Mrs. Staveley: "Oh, do!"

She is an old woman; her eyes are dim. At times, she can look
mischievous. She looked at me mischievously now. I wished I had
not been so eager to have Mr. Dunboyne asked to dinner.

A fear has come to me that I may have degraded myself. My spirits
are depressed. This, as papa tells us in his sermons, is a
miserable world. I am sorry I accepted the Staveleys' invitation.
I am sorry I went to see the pictures. When that young man comes
to dinner, I shall say I have got a headache, and shall stop
upstairs by myself. I don't think I like his Christian name. I
hate London. I hate everybody.

What I wrote up above, yesterday, is nonsense. I think his
Christian name is perfect. I like London. I love everybody.

He came to dinner to-day. I sat next to him. How beautiful a
dress-coat is, and a white cravat! We talked. He wanted to know
what my Christian name was. I was so pleased when I found he was
one of the few people who like it. His hair curls naturally. In
color, it is something between my hair and Helena's. He wears his
beard. How manly! It curls naturally, like his hair; it smells
deliciously of some perfume which is new to me. He has white
hands; his nails look as if he polished them; I should like to
polish my nails if I knew how. Whatever I said, he agreed with
me; I felt satisfied with my own conversation, for the first time
in my life. Helena won't find me a simpleton when I go home. What
exquisite things dinner-parties are!


My sister told me (when we said good-by) to be particular in
writing down my true opinion of the Staveleys. Helena wishes to
compare what she thinks of them with what I think of them.

My opinion of Mr. Staveley is--I don't like him. My opinion of
Miss Staveley is--I can't endure her. As for Master Staveley, my
clever sister will understand that _he_ is beneath notice. But,
oh, what a wonderful woman Mrs. Staveley is! We went out
together, after luncheon today, for a walk in Kensington Gardens.
Never have I heard any conversation to compare with Mrs.
Staveley's. Helena shall enjoy it here, at second hand. I am
quite changed in two things. First: I think more of myself than I
ever did before. Second: writing is no longer a difficulty to me.
I could fill a hundred journals, without once stopping to think.

Mrs. Staveley began nicely; "I suppose, Eunice, you have often
been told that you have a good figure, and that you walk well?"

I said: "Helena thinks my figure is better than my face. But do I
really walk well? Nobody ever told me that."

She answered: "Philip Dunboyne thinks so. He said to me, 'I
resist the temptation because I might be wanting in respect if I
gave way to it. But I should like to follow her when she goes
out--merely for the pleasure of seeing her walk.' "

I stood stockstill. I said nothing. When you are as proud as a
peacock (which never happened to me before), I find you can't
move and can't talk. You can only enjoy yourself.

Kind Mrs. Staveley had more things to tell me. She said: "I am
interested in Philip. I lived near Fairmount in the time before I
was married; and in those days he was a child. I want him to
marry a charming girl, and be happy."

What made me think directly of Miss Staveley? What made me mad to
know if she was the charming girl? I was bold enough to ask the
question. Mrs. Staveley turned to me with that mischievous look
which I have noticed already. I felt as if I had been running at
the top of my speed, and had not got my breath again, yet.

But this good motherly friend set me at my ease. She explained
herself: "Philip is not much liked, poor fellow, in our house. My
husband considers him to be weak and vain and fickle. And my
daughter agrees with her father. There are times when she is
barely civil to Philip. He is too good-natured to complain, but
_I_ see it. Tell me, my dear, do you like Philip?"

"Of course I do!" Out it came in those words, before I could stop
it. Was there something unbecoming to a young lady in
 saying what I had just said? Mrs. Staveley seemed to be more
amused than angry with me. She took my arm kindly, and led me
along with her. "My dear, you are as clear as crystal, and as
true as steel. You are a favorite of mine already."

What a delightful woman! as I said just now. I asked if she
really liked me as well as she liked my sister.

She said: "Better."

I didn't expect that, and didn't want it. Helena is my superior.
She is prettier than I am, cleverer than I am, better worth
liking than I am. Mrs. Staveley shifted the talk back to Philip.
I ought to have said Mr. Philip. No, I won't; I shall call him
Philip. If I had a heart of stone, I should feel interested in
him, after what Mrs. Staveley has told me.

Such a sad story, in some respects. Mother dead; no brothers or
sisters. Only the father left; he lives a dismal life on a lonely
stormy coast. Not a severe old gentleman, for all that. His
reasons for taking to retirement are reasons (so Mrs. Staveley
says) which nobody knows. He buries himself among his books, in
an immense library; and he appears to like it. His son has not
been brought up. like other young men, at school and college. He
is a great scholar, educated at home by his father. To hear this
account of his learning depressed me. It seemed to put such a
distance between us. I asked Mrs. Staveley if he thought me
ignorant. As long as I live I shall remember the reply: "He
thinks you charming."

Any other girl would have been satisfied with this. I am the
miserable creature who is always making mistakes. My stupid
curiosity spoiled the charm of Mrs. Staveley's conversation. And
yet it seemed to be a harmless question; I only said I should
like to know what profession Philip belonged to.

Mrs. Staveley answered: "No profession."

I foolishly put a wrong meaning on this. I said: "Is he idle?"

Mrs. Staveley laughed. "My dear, he is an only son--and his
father is a rich man."

That stopped me--at last.

We have enough to live on in comfort at home--no more. Papa has
told us himself that he is not (and can never hope to be) a rich
man. This is not the worst of it. Last year, he refused to marry
a young couple, both belonging to our congregation. This was very
unlike his usual kind self. Helena and I asked him for his
reasons. They were reasons that did not take long to give. The
young gentleman's father was a rich man. He had forbidden his son
to marry a sweet girl--because she had no fortune.

I have no fortune. And Philip's father is a rich man.

The best thing I can do is to wipe my pen, and shut up my
Journal, and go home by the next train.

. . . . . . .

I have a great mind to burn my Journal. It tells me that I had
better not think of Philip any more.

On second thoughts, I won't destroy my Journal; I will only put
it away. If I live to be an old woman, it may amuse me to open my
book again, and see how foolish the poor wretch was when she was
young.

What is this aching pain in my heart?

I don't remember it at any other time in my life. Is it trouble?
How can I tell?--I have had so little trouble. It must be many
years since I was wretched enough to cry. I don't even understand
why I am crying now. My last sorrow, so far as I can remember,
was the toothache. Other girls' mothers comfort them when they
are wretched. If my mother had lived--it's useless to think about
that. We lost her, while I and my sister were too young to
understand our misfortune.

I wish I had never seen Philip.

This seems an ungrateful wish. Seeing him at the picture-show was
a new enjoyment. Sitting next to him at dinner was a happiness
that I don't recollect feeling, even when Papa has been most
sweet and kind to me. I ought to be ashamed of myself to confess
this. Shall I write to my sister? But how should she know what is
the matter with me, when I don't know it myself? Besides, Helena
is angry; she wrote unkindly to me when she answered my last
letter.

There is a dreadful loneliness in this great house at night. I
had better say my prayers, and try to sleep. If it doesn't make
me feel happier, it will prevent me spoiling my Journal by
dropping tears on it.

. . . . . . .

What an evening of evenings this has been! Last night it was
crying that kept me awake. To-night I can't sleep for joy.

Philip called on us again to-day. He brought with him tickets for
the performance of an Oratorio. Sacred music is not forbidden
music among our people. Mrs. Staveley and Miss Staveley went to
the concert with us. Philip and I sat next to each other.

My sister is a musician--I am nothing. That sounds bitter; but I
don't mean it so. All I mean is, that I like simple little songs,
which I can sing to myself by remembering the tune. There, my
musical enjoyment ends. When voices and instruments burst out
together by hundreds, I feel bewildered. I also get attacked by
fidgets. This last misfortune is sure to overtake me when
choruses are being performed. The unfortunate people employed are
made to keep singing the same words, over and over and over
again, till I find it a perfect misery to listen to them. The
choruses were unendurable in the performance to-night. This is
one of them: "Here we are all alone in the wilderness--alone in
the wilderness--in the wilderness alone, alone, alone--here we
are in the wilderness--alone in the wilderness--all all alone in
the wilderness," and soon, till I felt inclined to call for the
learned person who writes Oratorios, and beg him to give the poor
music a more generous allowance of words.

Whenever I looked at Philip, I found him looking at me. Perhaps
he saw from the first that the music was wearying music to my
ignorant ears. With his usual delicacy he said nothing for some
time. But when he caught me yawning (though I did my best to hide
it, for it looked like being ungrateful for the tickets), then he
could restrain himself no longer. He whispered in my ear:

"You are getting tired of this. And so am I."

"I am trying to like it," I whispered back.

"Don't try," he answered. "Let's talk."

He meant, of course, talk in whispers. We were a good deal
annoyed--especially when the characters were all alone in the
wilderness--by bursts of singing and playing which interrupted us
at the most interesting moments. Philip persevered with a manly
firmness. What could I do but follow his example--at a distance?

He said: "Is it really true that your visit to Mrs. Staveley is
coming to an end?"

I answered: "It comes to an end the day after to-morrow."

"Are you sorry to be leaving your friends in London?"

What I might have said if he had made that inquiry a day earlier,
when I was the most miserable creature living, I would rather not
try to guess. Being quite happy as things were, I could honestly
tell him I was sorry.

"You can't possibly be as sorry as I am, Eunice. May I call you
by your pretty name?"

"Yes, if you please."

"Eunice!"

"Yes."

"You will leave a blank in my life when you go away--"

There another chorus stopped him, just as I was eager for more.
It was such a delightfully new sensation to hear a young
gentleman telling me that I had left a blank in his life. The
next change in the Oratorio brought up a young lady, singing
alone. Some people behind us grumbled at the smallness of her
voice. We thought her voice perfect. It seemed to lend itself so
nicely to our whispers.

He said: "Will you help me to think of you while you are away? I
want to imagine what your life is at home. Do you live in a town
or in the country?"

I told him the name of our town. When we give a person
information, I have always heard that we ought to make it
complete. So I mentioned our address in the town. But I was
troubled by a doubt. Perhaps he preferred the country. Being
anxious about this, I said: "Would you rather have heard that I
live in the country?"

"Live where you may, Eunice, the place will be a favorite place
of mine. Besides, your town is famous. It has a public attraction
which brings visitors to it."

I made another of those mistakes which no sensible girl, in my
position, would have committed. I asked if he alluded to our new
market-place.

He set me right in the sweetest manner: "I alluded  to a building
 hundreds of years older than your market-place--your beautiful
cathedral."

Fancy my not having thought of the cathedral! This is what comes
of being a Congregationalist. If I had belonged to the Church of
England, I should have forgotten the market-place, and remembered
the cathedral. Not that I want to belong to the Church of
England. Papa's chapel is good enough for me.

The song sung by the lady with the small voice was so pretty that
the audience encored it. Didn't Philip and I help them! With the
sweetest smiles the lady sang it all over again. The people
behind us left the concert.

He said: "Do you know, I take the greatest interest in
cathedrals. I propose to enjoy the privilege and pleasure of
seeing _your_ cathedral early next week."

I had only to look at him to see that I was the cathedral. It was
no surprise to hear next that he thought of "paying his respects
to Mr. Gracedieu." He begged me to tell him what sort of
reception he might hope to meet with when he called at our house.
I got so excited in doing justice to papa that I quite forgot to
whisper when the next question came. Philip wanted to know if Mr.
Gracedieu disliked strangers. When I answered, "Oh dear, no!" I
said it out loud, so that the people heard me. Cruel, cruel
people! They all turned round and stared. One hideous old woman
actually said, "Silence!" Miss Staveley looked disgusted. Even
kind Mrs. Staveley lifted her eyebrows in astonishment.

Philip, dear Philip, protected and composed me.

He held my hand devotedly till the end of the performance. When
he put us into the carriage, I was last. He whispered in my ear:
"Expect me next week." Miss Staveley might be as ill-natured as
she pleased, on the way home. It didn't matter what she said. The
Eunice of yesterday might have been mortified and offended. The
Eunice of to-day was indifferent to the sharpest things that
could be said to her.

. . . . . . .

All through yesterday's delightful evening, I never once thought
of Philip's father. When I woke this morning, I remembered that
old Mr. Dunboyne was a rich man. I could eat no breakfast for
thinking of the poor girl who was not allowed to marry her young
gentleman, because she had no money.

Mrs. Staveley waited to speak to me till the rest of them had
left us together. I had expected her to notice that I looked dull
and dismal. No! her cleverness got at my secret in quite another
way.

She said: "How do you feel after the concert? You must be hard to
please indeed if you were not satisfied with the accompaniments
last night."

"The accompaniments of the Oratorio?"

"No, my dear. The accompaniments of Philip."

I suppose I ought to have laughed. In my miserable state of mind,
it was not to be done. I said: "I hope Mr. Dunboyne's father will
not hear how kind he was to me."

Mrs. Staveley asked why.

My bitterness overflowed at my tongue. I said: "Because papa is a
poor man."

"And Philip's papa is a rich man," says Mrs. Staveley, putting my
own thought into words for me. "Where do you get these ideas,
Eunice? Surely, you are not allowed to read novels?"

"Oh no!"

"And you have certainly never seen a play?"

"Never."

"Clear your head, child, of the nonsense that has got into it--I
can't think how. Rich Mr. Dunboyne has taught his heir to despise
the base act of marrying for money. He knows that Philip will
meet young ladies at my house; and he has written to me on the
subject of his son's choice of a wife. 'Let Philip find good
principles, good temper, and good looks; and I promise beforehand
to find the money.' There is what he says. Are you satisfied with
Philip's father, now?"

I jumped up in a state of ecstasy. Just as I had thrown my arms
round Mrs. Staveley's neck, the servant came in with a letter,
and handed it to me.

Helena had written again, on this last day of my visit. Her
letter was full of instructions for buying things that she wants,
before I leave London. I read on quietly enough until I came to
the postscript. The effect of it on me may be told in two words:
I screamed. Mrs. Staveley was naturally alarmed. "Bad news?" she
asked. Being quite unable to offer an opinion, I read the
postscript out loud, and left her to judge for herself.

This was Helena's news from home:

"I must prepare you for a surprise, before your return. You will
find a strange lady established at home. Don't suppose there is
any prospect of her bidding us good-by, if we only wait long
enough. She is already (with father's full approval) as much a
member of the family as we are. You shall form your own unbiased
opinion of her, Eunice. For the present, I say no more."

I asked Mrs. Staveley what she thought of my news from home. She
said: "Your father approves of the lady, my dear. I suppose it's
good news."

But Mrs. Staveley did not look as if she believed in the good
news, for all that.


CHAPTER XIV.

HELENA'S DIARY.


TO-DAY I went as usual to the Scripture-class for girls. It was
harder work than ever, teaching without Eunice to help me.
Indeed, I felt lonely all day without my sister. When I got home,
I rather hoped that some friend might have come to see us, and
have been asked to stay to tea. The housemaid opened the door to
me. I asked Maria if anybody had called.

"Yes, miss; a lady, to see the master."

"A stranger?"

"Never saw her before, miss, in all my life." I put no more
questions. Many ladies visit my father. They call it consulting
the Minister. He advises them in their troubles, and guides them
in their religious difficulties, and so on. They come and go in a
sort of secrecy. So far as I know, they are mostly old maids, and
they waste the Minister's time.

When my father came in to tea, I began to feel some curiosity
about the lady who had called on him. Visitors of that sort, in
general, never appear to dwell on his mind after they have gone
away; he sees too many of them, and is too well accustomed to
what they have to say. On this particular evening, however, I
perceived appearances that set me thinking; he looked worried and
anxious.

"Has anything happened, father, to vex you?" I said.

"Yes."

"Is the lady concerned in it?"

"What lady, my dear?"

"The lady who called on you while I was out."

"Who told you she had called on me?"

"I asked Maria--"

"That will do, Helena, for the present."

He drank his tea and went back to his study, instead of staying a
while, and talking pleasantly as usual. My respect submitted to
his want of confidence in me; but my curiosity was in a state of
revolt. I sent for Maria, and proceeded to make my own
discoveries, with this result:

No other person had called at the house. Nothing had happened,
except the visit of the mysterious lady. "She looked between
young and old. And, oh dear me, she was certainly not pretty. Not
dressed nicely, to my mind; but they do say dress is a matter of
taste."

Try as I might, I could get no more than that out of our stupid
young housemaid.

Later in the evening, the cook had occasion to consult me about
supper. This was a person possessing the advantages of age and
experience. I asked if she had seen the lady. The cook's reply
promised something new: "I can't say I saw the lady; but I heard
her."

"Do you mean that you heard her speaking?"

"No, miss--crying."

"Where was she crying?"

"In the master's study."

"How did you come to hear her?"

"Am I to understand, miss, that you suspect me of listening?"

Is a lie told by a look as bad as a lie told by words? I looked
shocked at the bare idea of suspecting a respectable person of
listening. The cook's sense of honor was satisfied; she readily
explained herself: "I was passing the door, miss, on my way
upstairs."

Here my discoveries came to an end. It was certainly possible
that an afflicted member of my father's congregation might have
called on him to be comforted. But he sees plenty of afflicted
ladies, without looking worried and anxious after they leave him.
Still suspecting something out of the ordinary course of events,
I waited hopefully for our next meeting at supper-time. Nothing
came of it. My father left me by myself again, when the meal was
over. He is always courteous to his daughters; and he made an
apology : "Excuse me, Helena, I want to think."

. . . . . . .

I went to bed in a vile humor, and slept badly; wondering, in the
long wakeful hours, what new rebuff I should meet with on the
next day.

At breakfast this morning I was agreeably surprised. No signs of
anxiety showed themselves in my father's face. Instead of
retiring to his study when we rose from the table, he proposed
taking a turn in the garden: "You are looking pale, Helena, and
you will be the better for a little fresh air. Besides, I have
something to say to you."

Excitement, I am sure, is good for young women. I saw in his
face, I heard in his last words, that the mystery of the lady was
at last to be revealed. The sensation of languor and fatigue
which follows a disturbed night left me directly.

My father gave me his arm, and we walked slowly up and down the
lawn.

"When that lady called on me yesterday," he began, "you wanted to
know who she was, and you were surprised and disappointed when I
refused to gratify your curiosity. My silence was not a selfish
silence, Helena. I was thinking of you and your sister; and I was
at a loss how to act for the best. You shall hear why my children
were in my mind, presently. I must tell you first that I have
arrived at a decision; I hope and believe on reasonable grounds.
Ask me any questions you please; my silence will be no longer an
obstacle in your way."

This was so very encouraging that I said at once: "I should like
to know who the lady is."

"The lady is related to me," he answered. "We are cousins."

Here was a disclosure that I had not anticipated. In the little
that I have seen of the world, I have observed that cousins--when
they happen to be brought together under interesting
circumstances--can remember their relationship, and forget their
relationship, just as it suits them. "Is your cousin a married
lady?" I ventured to inquire.

"No."

Short as it was, that reply might perhaps mean more than appeared
on the surface. The cook had heard the lady crying. What sort of
tender agitation was answerable for those tears? Was it possible,
barely possible, that Eunice and I might go to bed, one night, a
widower's daughters, and wake up the next day to discover a
stepmother?

"Have I or my sister ever seen the lady?" I asked.

"Never. She has been living abroad; and I have not seen her
myself since we were both young people."

My excellent innocent father! Not the faintest idea of what I had
been thinking of was in his mind. Little did he suspect how
welcome was the relief that he had afforded to his daughter's
wicked doubts of him. But he had not said a word yet about his
cousin's personal appearance. There might be remains of good
looks which the housemaid was too stupid to discover.

"After the long interval that has passed since you met," I said,
"I suppose she has become an old woman?"

"No, my dear. Let us say, a middle-aged woman."

"Perhaps she is still an attractive person?"

He smiled. "I am afraid, Helena, that would never have been a
very accurate description of her."

I now knew all that I wanted to know about this alarming person,
excepting one last morsel of information which my father had
strangely forgotten.

"We have been talking about the lady for some time," I said; "and
you have not yet told me her name."

Father looked a little embarrassed "It's not a very pretty name,"
he answered. "My cousin, my unfortunate cousin, is--Miss
Jillgall."

I burst out with such a loud "Oh!" that he laughed. I caught the
infection, and laughed louder still. Bless Miss Jillgall! The
interview promised to become an easy one for both of us, thanks
to her name. I was in good spirits, and I made no attempt to
restrain them. "The next time Miss Jillgall honors you with a
visit," I said, "you must give me an opportunity of being
presented to her."

He made a strange reply: "You may find your opportunity, Helena,
sooner than you anticipate."

Did this mean that she was going to call again in a day or two? I
am afraid I spoke flippantly. I said: "Oh, father, another lady
fascinated by the popular preacher?"

The garden chairs were near us. He signed to me gravely to be
seated by his side, and said to himself: "This is my fault."

"What is your fault?" I asked.

"I have left you in ignorance, my dear, of my cousin's sad story.
It is soon told; and, if it checks your merriment, it will make
amends by deserving your sympathy. I was indebted to her father,
when I was a boy, for acts of kindness which I can never forget.
He was twice married. The death of his first wife left him with
one child--once my playfellow; now the lady whose visit has
excited your curiosity. His second wife was a Belgian. She
persuaded him to sell his business in London, and to invest the
money in a partnership with a brother of hers, established as a
sugar-refiner at Antwerp. The little daughter accompanied her
father to Belgium. Are you attending to me, Helena?"

I was waiting for the interesting part of the story, and was
wondering when he would get to it.

"As time went on," he resumed, "the new partner found that the
value of the business at Antwerp had been greatly overrated.
After a long struggle with adverse circumstances, he decided on
withdrawing from the partnership before the whole of his capital
was lost in a failing commercial speculation. The end of it was
that he retired, with his daughter, to a small town in East
Flanders; the wreck of his property having left him with an
income of no more than two hundred pounds a year."

I showed my father that I was attending to him now, by inquiring
what had become of the Belgian wife. Those nervous quiverings,
which Eunice has mentioned in her diary, began to appear in his
face.

"It is too shameful a story," he said, "to be told to a young
girl. The marriage was dissolved by law; and the wife was the
person to blame. I am sure, Helena, you don't wish to hear any
more of _this_ part of the story."

I did wish. But I saw that he expected me to say No--so I said
it.

"The father and daughter," he went on, "never so much as thought
of returning to their own country. They were too poor to live
comfortably in England. In Belgium their income was sufficient
for their wants. On the father's death, the daughter remained in
the town. She had friends there, and friends nowhere else; and
she might have lived abroad to the end of her days, but for a
calamity to which we are all liable. A long and serious illness
completely prostrated her. Skilled medical attendance, costing
large sums of money for the doctors' traveling expenses, was
imperatively required. Experienced nurses, summoned from a
distant hospital, were in attendance night and day. Luxuries, far
beyond the reach of her little income, were absolutely required
to support her wasted strength at the time of her tedious
recovery. In one word, her resources were sadly diminished, when
the poor creature had paid her debts, and had regained her hold
on life. At that time, she unhappily met with the man who has
ruined her."

It was getting interesting at last. "Ruined her?" I repeated. "Do
you mean that he robbed her?"

"That, Helena, is exactly what I mean--and many and many a
helpless woman has been robbed in the same way. The man of whom I
am now speaking was a lawyer in large practice. He bore an
excellent character, and was highly respected for his exemplary
life. My cousin (not at all a discreet person, I am bound to
admit) was induced to consult him on her pecuniary affairs. He
expressed the most generous sympathy--offered to employ her
little capital in his business--and pledged himself to pay her
double the interest for her money, which she had been in the
habit of receiving from the sound investment chosen by her
father."

"And of course he got the money, and never paid the interest?"
Eager to hear the end, I interrupted the story in those
inconsiderate words. My father's answer quietly reproved me.

"He paid the interest regularly as long as he lived."

"And what happened when he died?"

"He died a bankrupt; the secret profligacy of his life was at
last exposed. Nothing, actually nothing, was left for his
creditors. The unfortunate creature, whose ugly name has amused
you, must get help somewhere, or must go to the workhouse."

If I had been in a state of mind to attend to trifles, this would
have explained the reason why the cook had heard Miss Jillgall
crying. But the prospect before me--the unendurable prospect of
having a strange woman in the house--had showed itself too
plainly to be mistaken. I could think of nothing else. With
infinite difficulty I assumed a momentary appearance of
composure, and suggested that Miss Jillgall's foreign friends
might have done something to help her.

My father defended her foreign friends. "My dear, they were poor
people, and did all they could afford to do. But for their
kindness, my cousin might not have been able to return to
England."

"And to cast herself on your mercy," I added, "in the character
of a helpless woman."

"No, Helena! Not to cast herself on my mercy--but to find my
house open to her, as her father's house was open to me in the
bygone time. I am her only surviving relative; and, while I live,
she shall not be a helpless woman."

I began to wish that I had not spoken out so plainly. My father's
sweet temper--I do so sincerely wish I had inherited it!--made
the kindest allowances for me.

"I understand the momentary bitterness of feeling that has
escaped you," he said; "I may almost say that I expected it. My
only hesitation in this matter has been caused by my sense of
what I owe to my children. It was putting your endurance, and
your sister's endurance, to a trial to expect you to receive a
stranger (and that stranger not a young girl like yourselves) as
one of the household, living with you in the closest intimacy of
family life. The consideration which has decided me does justice,
I hope, to you and Eunice, as well as to myself. I think that
some allowance is due from my daughters to the father who has
always made loving allowance for _them._ Am I wrong in believing
that my good children have not forgotten this, and have only
waited for the occasion to feel the pleasure of rewarding me?"

It was beautifully put. There was but one thing to be done--I
kissed him. And there was but one thing to be said. I asked at
what time we might expect to receive Miss Jillgall.

"She is staying, Helena, at a small hotel in the town. I have
already sent to say that we are waiting to see her. Perhaps you
will look at the spare bedroom?"

"It shall be got ready, father, directly."

I ran into the house; I rushed upstairs into the room that is
Eunice's and mine; I locked the door, and then I gave way to my
rage, before it stifled me. I stamped on the floor, I clinched my
fists, I cast myself on the bed, I reviled that hateful woman by
every hard word that I could throw at her. Oh, the luxury of it!
the luxury of it!

Cold water and my hairbrush soon made me fit to be seen again.

As for the spare room, it looked a great deal too comfortable for
an incubus from foreign parts. The one improvement that I could
have made, if a friend of mine had been expected, was suggested
by the window-curtains. I was looking at a torn place in one of
them, and determined to leave it unrepaired, when I felt an arm
slipped round my waist from behind. A voice, so close that it
tickled my neck, said: "Dear girl, what friends we shall be!" I
turned round, and confronted Miss Jillgall.


CHAPTER XV.

HELENA'S DIARY.


IF I am not a good girl, where is a good girl to be found? This
is in Eunice's style. It sometimes amuses me to mimic my simple
sister.

I have just torn three pages out of my diary, in deference to the
expression of my father's wishes. He took the first opportunity
which his cousin permitted him to enjoy of speaking to me
privately; and his object was to caution me against hastily
relying on first impressions of anybody--especially of Miss
Jillgall. "Wait for a day or two," he said; "and then form your
estimate of the new member of our household."

The stormy state of my temper had passed away, and had left my
atmosphere calm again. I could feel that I had received good
advice; but unluckily it reached me too late.

I had formed my estimate of Miss Jillgall, and had put it in
writing for my own satisfaction, at least an hour before my
father found himself at liberty to speak to me. I don't agree
with him in distrusting first impressions; and I had proposed to
put my opinion to the test, by referring to what I had written
about his cousin at a later time. However, after what he had said
to me, I felt bound in filial duty to take the pages out of my
book, and to let two days pass before I presumed to enjoy the
luxury of hating Miss Jillgall.

On one thing I am determined: Eunice shall not form a hasty
opinion, either. She shall undergo the same severe discipline of
self-restraint to which her sister is obliged to submit. Let us
be just, as somebody says, before we are generous. No more for
to-day.

. . . . . . .

I open my diary again--after the prescribed interval has elapsed.
The first impression produced on me by the new member of our
household remains entirely unchanged.

Have I already made the remark that, when one removes a page from
a book, it does not necessarily follow that one destroys the page
afterward? or did I leave this to be inferred? In either case, my
course of proceeding was the same. I ordered some paste to be
made. Then I unlocked a drawer, and found my poor ill-used
leaves, and put them back in my Journal. An act of justice is
surely not the less praiseworthy because it is an act of justice
done to one's self.

My father has often told me that he revises his writings on
religious subjects. I may harmlessly imitate that good example,
by revising my restored entry. It is now a sufficiently
remarkable performance to be distinguished by a title. Let me
call it:

Impressions of Miss Jillgall.

My first impression was a strong one--it was produced by the
state of this lady's breath. In other words, I was obliged to let
her kiss me. It is a duty to be considerate toward human
infirmity. I will only say that I thought I should have fainted.

My second impression draws a portrait, and produces a striking
likeness.

Figure, little and lean--hair of a dirty drab color which we see
in string--small light gray eyes, sly and restless, and deeply
sunk in the head--prominent cheekbones, and a florid
complexion--an inquisitive nose, turning up at the end--a large
mouth and a servile smile--raw-looking hands, decorated with
black mittens--a misfitting white jacket and a limp
skirt--manners familiar--temper cleverly hidden--voice too
irritating to be mentioned. Whose portrait is this? It is the
portrait of Miss Jillgall, taken in words.

Her true character is not easy to discover; I suspect that it
will only show itself little by little. That she is a born
meddler in other people's affairs, I think I can see already. I
also found out that she trusted to flattery as the easiest means
of making herself agreeable. She tried her first experiment on
myself.

"You charming girl," she began, "your bright face encourages me
to ask a favor. Pray make me useful! The one aspiration of my
life is to be useful. Unless you employ me in that way, I have no
right to intrude myself into your family circle. Yes, yes, I know
that your father has opened his house and his heart to me. But I
dare not found any claim--your name is Helena, isn't it? Dear
Helena, I dare not found any claim on what I owe to your father's
kindness."

"Why not?" I inquired.

"Because your father is not a man--"

I was rude enough to interrupt her: "What is he, then?"

"An angel," Miss Jillgall answered, solemnly. "A destitute
earthly creature like me must not look up as high as your father.
I might be dazzled."

This was rather more than I could endure patiently. "Let us try,"
I suggested, "if we can't understand each other, at starting."

Miss Jillgall's little eyes twinkled in their bony caverns. "The
very thing I was going to propose!" she burst out.

"Very well," I went on; "then, let me tell you plainly that
flattery is not relished in this house."

"Flattery?" She put her hand to her head as she repeated the
word, and looked quite bewildered. "Dear Helena, I have lived all
my life in East Flande rs, and my own language is occasionally
strange to me. Can you tell me what flattery is in Flemish?"

"I don't understand Flemish."

"How very provoking! You don't understand Flemish, and I don't
understand Flattery. I should so like to know what it means. Ah,
I see books in this lovely room. Is there a dictionary among
them?" She darted to the bookcase, and discovered a dictionary.
"Now I shall understand Flattery," she remarked--"and then we
shall understand each other. Oh, let me find it for myself!" She
ran her raw red finger along the alphabetical headings at the top
of each page. " 'FAD.' That won't do. 'FIE.' Further on still.
'FLE.' Too far the other way. 'FLA.' Here we are! 'Flattery:
False praise. Commendation bestowed for the purpose of gaining
favor and influence.' Oh, Helena, how cruel of you!" She dropped
the book, and sank into a chair--the picture, if such a thing can
be, of a broken-hearted old maid.

I should most assuredly have taken the opportunity of leaving her
to her own devices, if I had been free to act as I pleased. But
my interests as a daughter forbade me to make an enemy of my
father's cousin, on the first day when she had entered the house.
I made an apology, very neatly expressed.

She jumped up--let me do her justice; Miss Jillgall is as nimble
as a monkey--and (Faugh!) she kissed me for the second time. If I
had been a man, I am afraid I should have called for that deadly
poison (we are all temperance people in this house) known by the
name of Brandy.

"If you will make me love you," Miss Jillgall explained, "you
must expect to be kissed. Dear girl, let us go back to my poor
little petition. Oh, do make me useful! There are so many things
I can do: you will find me a treasure in the house. I write a
good hand; I understand polishing furniture; I can dress hair
(look at my own hair); I play and sing a little when people want
to be amused; I can mix a salad and knit stockings--who is this?"
The cook came in, at the moment, to consult me; I introduced her.
"And, oh," cried Miss Jillgall, in ecstasy, "I can cook! Do,
please, let me see the kitchen."

The cook's face turned red. She had come to me to make a
confession; and she had not (as she afterward said) bargained for
the presence of a stranger. For the first time in her life she
took the liberty of whispering to me: "I must ask you, miss, to
let me send up the cauliflower plain boiled; I don't understand
the directions in the book for doing it in the foreign way."

Miss Jillgall's ears--perhaps because they are so large--possess
a quickness of hearing quite unparalleled in my experience. Not
one word of the cook's whispered confession had escaped her.

"Here," she declared, "is an opportunity of making myself useful!
What is the cook's name? Hannah? Take me downstairs, Hannah, and
I'll show you how to do the cauliflower in the foreign way. She
seems to hesitate. Is it possible that she doesn't believe me?
Listen, Hannah, and judge for yourself if I am deceiving you.
Have you boiled the cauliflower? Very well; this is what you must
do next. Take four ounces of grated cheese, two ounces of best
butter, the yolks of four eggs, a little bit of glaze,
lemon-juice, nutmeg--dear, dear, how black she looks. What have I
said to offend her?"

The cook passed over the lady who had presumed to instruct her,
as if no such person had been present, and addressed herself to
me: "If I am to be interfered with in my own kitchen, miss, I
will ask you to suit yourself at a month's notice."

Miss Jillgall wrung her hands in despair.

"I meant so kindly," she said; "and I seem to have made mischief.
With the best intentions, Helena, I have set you and your servant
at variance. I really didn't know you had such a temper, Hannah,"
she declared, following the cook to the door. "I'm sure there's
nothing I am not ready to do to make it up with you. Perhaps you
have not got the cheese downstairs? I'm ready to go out and buy
it for you. I could show you how to keep eggs sweet and fresh for
weeks together. Your gown doesn't fit very well; I shall be glad
to improve it, if you will leave it out for me after you have
gone to bed. There!" cried Miss Jillgall, as the cook
majestically left the room, without even looking at her, "I have
done my best to make it up, and you see how my advances are
received. What more could I have done? I really ask you, dear, as
a friend, what more _could_ I have done?"

I had it on the tip of my tongue to say: "The cook doesn't ask
you to buy cheese for her, or to teach her how to keep eggs, or
to improve the fit of her gown; all she wants is to have her
kitchen to herself." But here again it was necessary to remember
that this odious person was my father's guest.

"Pray don't distress yourself," I began; "I am sure you are not
to blame, Miss Jillgall--"

"Oh, don't!"

"Don't--what?"

"Don't call me Miss Jillgall. I call you Helena. Call me Selina."

I had really not supposed it possible that she could be more
unendurable than ever. When she mentioned her Christian name, she
succeeded nevertheless in producing that result. In the whole
list of women's names, is there any one to be found so absolutely
sickening as "Selina"? I forced myself to pronounce it; I made
another neatly-expressed apology; I said English servants were so
very peculiar. Selina was more than satisfied; she was quite
delighted.

"Is that it, indeed? An explanation was all I wanted. How good of
you! And now tell me--is there no chance, in the house or out of
the house, of my making myself useful? Oh, what's that? Do I see
a chance? I do! I do!"

Miss Jillgall's eyes are more than mortal. At one time, they are
microscopes. At another time, they are telescopes. She discovered
(right across the room) the torn place in the window-curtain. In
an instant, she snatched a dirty little leather case out of her
pocket, threaded her needle and began darning the curtain. She
sang over her work. "My heart is light, my will is free--" I can
repeat no more of it. When I heard her singing voice, I became
reckless of consequences, and ran out of the room with my hands
over my ears.


CHAPTER XVI.

HELENA'S DIARY.



WHEN I reached the foot of the stairs, my father called me into
his study.

I found him at his writing-table, with such a heap of torn-up
paper in his waste-basket that it overflowed on to the floor. He
explained to me that he had been destroying a large accumulation
of old letters, and had ended (when his employment began to grow
wearisome) in examining his correspondence rather carelessly. The
result was that he had torn up a letter, and a copy of the reply,
which ought to have been set aside as worthy of preservation.
After collecting the fragments, he had heaped them on the table.
If I could contrive to put them together again on fair sheets of
paper, and fasten them in their right places with gum, I should
be doing him a service, at a time when he was too busy to set his
mistake right for himself.

Here was the best excuse that I could desire for keeping out of
Miss Jillgall's way. I cheerfully set to work on the restoration
of the letters, while my father went on with his writing.

Having put the fragments together--excepting a few gaps caused by
morsels that had been lost--I was unwilling to fasten them down
with gum, until I could feel sure of not having made any
mistakes; especially in regard to some of the lost words which I
had been obliged to restore by guess-work. So I copied the
letters, and submitted them, in the first place, to my father's
approval.

He praised me in the prettiest manner for the care that I had
taken. But, when he began, after some hesitation, to read my
copy, I noticed a change. The smile left his face, and the
nervous quiverings showed themselves again.

"Quite right, my child," he said, in low sad tones.

On returning to my side of the table, I expected to see him
resume his writing. He crossed the room to the window and stood
(with his back to me) looking out.

When I had first discovered the sense of the letters, they failed
to interest me. A tiresome woman, presuming on the kindness of a
good-natured man to beg a favor which she had no right to ask,
and r eceiving a refusal which she had richly deserved, was no
remarkable event in my experience as my father's secretary and
copyist. But the change in his face, while he read the
correspondence, altered my opinion of the letters. There was more
in them evidently than I had discovered. I kept my manuscript
copy--here it is:


From Miss Elizabeth Chance to the Rev. Abel Gracedieu.

(Date of year, 1859. Date of month, missing.)


"DEAR SIR--You have, I hope, not quite forgotten the interesting
conversation that we had last year in the Governor's rooms. I am
afraid I spoke a little flippantly at the time; but I am sure you
will believe me when I say that this was out of no want of
respect to yourself. My pecuniary position being far from
prosperous, I am endeavoring to obtain the vacant situation of
housekeeper in a public institution the prospectus of which I
inclose. You will see it is a rule of the place that a candidate
must be a single woman (which I am), and must be recommended by a
clergyman. You are the only reverend gentleman whom it is my good
fortune to know, and the thing is of course a mere formality.
Pray excuse this application, and oblige me by acting as my
reference.

"Sincerely yours,

"ELIZABETH CHANCE."


"P. S.--Please address: Miss E. Chance, Poste Restante, St.
Martin's-le-Grand, London."


"From the Rev. Abel Gracedieu to Miss Chance.

(Copy.)


"MADAM--The brief conversation to which your letter alludes, took
place at an accidental meeting between us. I then saw you for the
first time, and I have not seen you since. It is impossible for
me to assert the claim of a perfect stranger, like yourself, to
fill a situation of trust. I must beg to decline acting as your
reference.

"Your obedient servant,

"ABEL GRACEDIEU."

. . . . . . .

My father was still at the window.

In that idle position he could hardly complain of me for
interrupting him, if I ventured to talk about the letters which I
had put together. If my curiosity displeased him, he had only to
say so, and there would be an end to any allusions of mine to the
subject. My first idea was to join him at the window. On
reflection, and still perceiving that he kept his back turned on
me, I thought it might be more prudent to remain at the table.

"This Miss Chance seems to be an impudent person?" I said.

"Yes."

"Was she a young woman, when you met with her?"

"Yes."

"What sort of a woman to look at? Ugly?"

"No."

Here were three answers which Eunice herself would have been
quick enough to interpret as three warnings to say no more. I
felt a little hurt by his keeping his back turned on me. At the
same time, and naturally, I think, I found my interest in Miss
Chance (I don't say my friendly interest) considerably increased
by my father's unusually rude behavior. I was also animated by an
irresistible desire to make him turn round and look at me.

"Miss Chance's letter was written many years ago," I resumed. "I
wonder what has become of her since she wrote to you."

"I know nothing about her."

"Not even whether she is alive or dead?"

"Not even that. What do these questions mean, Helena?"

"Nothing, father."

I declare he looked as if he suspected me!

"Why don't you speak out?" he said. "Have I ever taught you to
conceal your thoughts? Have I ever been a hard father, who
discouraged you when you wished to confide in him? What are you
thinking about? Do _you_ know anything of this woman?"

"Oh, father, what a question! I never even heard of her till I
put the torn letters together. I begin to wish you had not asked
me to do it."

"So do I. It never struck me that you would feel such
extraordinary--I had almost said, such vulgar--curiosity about a
worthless letter."

This roused my temper. When a young lady is told that she is
vulgar, if she has any self-conceit--I mean self-respect--she
feels insulted. I said something sharp in my turn. It was in the
way of argument. I do not know how it may be with other young
persons, I never reason so well myself as when I am angry.

"You call it a worthless letter," I said, "and yet you think it
worth preserving."

"Have you nothing more to say to me than that?" he asked.

"Nothing more," I answered.

He changed again. After having looked unaccountably angry, he now
looked unaccountably relieved.

"I will soon satisfy you," he said, "that I have a good reason
for preserving a worthless letter. Miss Chance, my dear, is not a
woman to be trusted. If she saw her advantage in making a bad use
of my reply, I am afraid she would not hesitate to do it. Even if
she is no longer living, I don't know into what vile hands my
letter may not have fallen, or how it might be falsified for some
wicked purpose. Do you see now how a correspondence may become
accidentally important, though it is of no value in itself?"

I could say "Yes" to this with a safe conscience.

But there were some perplexities still left in my mind. It seemed
strange that Miss Chance should (apparently) have submitted to
the severity of my father's reply. "I should have thought," I
said to him, "that she would have sent you another impudent
letter--or perhaps have insisted on seeing you, and using her
tongue instead of her pen."

"She could do neither the one nor the other, Helena. Miss Chance
will never find out my address again; I have taken good care of
that."

He spoke in a loud voice, with a flushed face--as if it was quite
a triumph to have prevented this woman from discovering his
address. What reason could he have for being so anxious to keep
her away from him? Could I venture to conclude that there was a
mystery in the life of a man so blameless, so truly pious? It
shocked one even to think of it.

There was a silence between us, to which the housemaid offered a
welcome interruption. Dinner was ready.

He kissed me before we left the room. "One word more, Helena," he
said, "and I have done. Let there be no more talk between us
about Elizabeth Chance."


CHAPTER XVIL

HELENA'S DIARY.


MISS JILLGALL joined us at the dinner-table, in a state of
excitement, carrying a book in her hand.

I am inclined, on reflection, to suspect that she is quite clever
enough to have discovered that I hate her--and that many of the
aggravating things she says and does are assumed, out of
retaliation, for the purpose of making me angry. That ugly face
is a double face, or I am much mistaken.

To return to the dinner-table, Miss Jillgall addressed herself,
with an air of playful penitence, to my father.

"Dear cousin, I hope I have not done wrong. Helena left me all by
myself. When I had finished darning the curtain, I really didn't
know what to do. So I opened all the bedroom doors upstairs and
looked into the rooms. In the big room with two beds--oh, I am so
ashamed--I found this book. Please look at the first page."

My father looked at the title-page: "Doctor Watts's Hymns. Well,
Selina, what is there to be ashamed of in this?"

"Oh, no! no! It's the wrong page. Do look at the other page--the
one that comes first before that one."

My patient father turned to the blank page.

"Ah," he said quietly, "my other daughter's name is written in
it--the daughter whom you have not seen. Well?"

Miss Jillgall clasped her hands distractedly. "It's my ignorance
I'm so ashamed of. Dear cousin, forgive me, enlighten me. I don't
know how to pronounce your other daughter's name. Do you call her
Euneece?"

The dinner was getting cold. I was provoked into saying: "No, we
don't."

She had evidently not forgiven me for leaving her by herself.
"Pardon me, Helena, when I want information I don't apply to you:
I sit, as it were, at the feet of your learned father. Dear
cousin, is it--"

Even my father declined to wait for his dinner any longer.
"Pronounce it as you like, Selina. Here we say Euni'ce--with the
accent on the 'i' and with the final 'e' sounded: Eu-ni'-see. Let
me give you some soup."

Miss Jillgall groaned. "Oh, how difficult it seems to be! Quite
beyond my poor brains! I shall ask the dear girl's leave to call
her Euneece. What very strong soup! Isn't it rather a waste of
meat? Give me a little more, please."

I discovered another of Miss Jillgall's peculiarities. Her
appetite was enormous , and her ways were greedy. You heard her
eat her soup. She devoured the food on her plate with her eyes
before she put it into her mouth; and she criticised our English
cookery in the most impudent manner, under pretense of asking
humbly how it was done. There was, however, some temporary
compensation for this. We had less of her talk while she was
eating her dinner.

With the removal of the cloth, she recovered the use of her
tongue; and she hit on the one subject of all others which proves
to be the sorest trial to my father's patience.

"And now, dear cousin, let us talk of your other daughter, our
absent Euneece. I do so long to see her. When is she coming
back?"

"In a few days more."

"How glad I am! And do tell me--which is she? Your oldest girl or
your youngest?"

"Neither the one nor the other, Selina."

"Oh, my head! my head! This is even worse than the accent on the
'i' and the final 'e.' Stop! I am cleverer than I thought I was.
You mean that the girls are twins. Are they both so exactly like
each other that I shan't know which is which? What fun!"

When the subject of our ages was unluckily started at Mrs.
Staveley's, I had slipped out of the difficulty easily by
assuming the character of the eldest sister--an example of ready
tact which my dear stupid Eunice doesn't understand. In my
father's presence, it is needless to say that I kept silence, and
left it to him. I was sorry to be obliged to do this. Owing to
his sad state of health, he is easily irritated--especially by
inquisitive strangers.

"I must leave you," he answered, without taking the slightest
notice of what Miss Jillgall had said to him. "My work is waiting
for me."

She stopped him on his way to the door. "Oh, tell me--can't I
help you?"

"Thank you; no."

"Well--but tell me one thing. Am I right about the twins?"

"You are wrong."

Miss Jillgall's demonstrative hands flew up into the air again,
and expressed the climax of astonishment by quivering over her
head. "This is positively maddening," she declared. "What does it
mean?"

"Take my advice, cousin. Don't attempt to find out what it
means."

He left the room. Miss Jillgall appealed to me. I imitated my
father's wise brevity of expression: "Sorry to disappoint you,
Selina; I know no more about it than you do. Come upstairs."

Every step of the way up to the drawing-room was marked by a
protest or an inquiry. Did I expect her to believe that I
couldn't say which of us was the elder of the two? that I didn't
really know what my father's motive was for this extraordinary
mystification? that my sister and I had submitted to be robbed,
as it were, of our own ages, and had not insisted on discovering
which of us had come into the world first? that our friends had
not put an end to this sort of thing by comparing us personally,
and discovering which was the elder sister by investigation of
our faces? To all this I replied: First, that I did certainly
expect her to believe whatever I might say: Secondly, that what
she was pleased to call the "mystification" had begun when we
were both children; that habit had made it familiar to us in the
course of years; and above all, that we were too fond of our good
father to ask for explanations which we knew by experience would
distress him: Thirdly, that friends did try to discover, by
personal examination, which was the elder sister, and differed
perpetually in their conclusions; also that we had amused
ourselves by trying the same experiment before our
looking-glasses, and that Eunice thought Helena was the oldest,
and Helena thought Eunice was the oldest: Fourthly (and finally),
that the Reverend Mr. Gracedieu's cousin had better drop the
subject, unless she was bent on making her presence in the house
unendurable to the Reverend Mr. Gracedieu himself.

I write it with a sense of humiliation; Miss Jillgall listened
attentively to all I had to say--and then took me completely by
surprise. This inquisitive, meddlesome, restless, impudent woman
suddenly transformed herself into a perfect model of amiability
and decorum. She actually said she agreed with me, and was much
obliged for my good advice!

A stupid young woman, in my place, would have discovered that
this was not natural, and that Miss Jillgall was presenting
herself to me in disguise, to reach some secret end of her own. I
am not a stupid young woman; I ought to have had at my service
penetration enough to see through and through Cousin Selina.
Well! Cousin Selina was an impenetrable mystery to me.

The one thing to be done was to watch her. I was at least sly
enough to take up a book, and pretend to be reading it. How
contemptible!

She looked round the room, and discovered our pretty
writing-table; a present to my father from his congregation.
After a little consideration, she sat down to write a letter.

"When does the post go out?" she asked.

I mentioned the hour; and she began her letter. Before she could
have written more than the first two or three lines, she turned
round on her seat, and began talking to me.

"Do you like writing letters, my dear?"

"Yes--but then I have not many letters to write."

"Only a few friends, Helena, but those few worthy to be loved? My
own case exactly. Has your father told you of my troubles? Ah, I
am glad of that. It spares me the sad necessity of confessing
what I have suffered. Oh, how good my friends, my new friends,
were to me in that dull little Belgian town! One of them was
generosity personified--ah, she had suffered, too! A vile husband
who had deceived and deserted her. Oh, the men! When she heard of
the loss of my little fortune, that noble creature got up a
subscription for me, and went round herself to collect. Think of
what I owe to her! Ought I to let another day pass without
writing to my benefactress? Am I not bound in gratitude to make
her happy in the knowledge of _my_ happiness--I mean the refuge
opened to me in this hospitable house?"

She twisted herself back again to the writing-table, and went on
with her letter.

I have not attempted to conceal my stupidity. Let me now record a
partial recovery of my intelligence.

It was not to be denied that Miss Jillgall had discovered a good
reason for writing to her friend; but I was at a loss to
understand why she should have been so anxious to mention the
reason. Was it possible--after the talk which had passed between
us--that she had something mischievous to say in her letter,
relating to my father or to me? Was she afraid I might suspect
this? And had she been so communicative for the purpose of
leading my suspicions astray? These were vague guesses; but, try
as I might, I could arrive at no clearer view of what was passing
in Miss Jillgall's mind. What would I not have given to be able
to look over her shoulder, without discovery!

She finished her letter, and put the address, and closed the
envelope. Then she turned round toward me again.

"Have you got a foreign postage stamp, dear?"

If I could look at nothing else, I was resolved to look at her
envelope. It was only necessary to go to the study, and to apply
to my father. I returned with the foreign stamp, and I stuck it
on the envelope with my own hand.

There was nothing to interest _me_ in the address, as I ought to
have foreseen, if I had not been too much excited for the
exercise of a little common sense. Miss Jillgall's wonderful
friend was only remarkable by her ugly foreign name--MRS.
TENBRUGGEN.


CHAPTER XVIII.

EUNICE'S DIARY.


HERE I am, writing my history of myself, once more, by my own
bedside. Some unexpected events have happened while I have been
away. One of them is the absence of my sister.

Helena has left home on a visit to a northern town by the
seaside. She is staying in the house of a minister (one of papa's
friends), and is occupying a position of dignity in which I
should certainly lose my head. The minister and his wife and
daughters propose to set up a Girls' Scripture Class, on the plan
devised by papa; and they are at a loss, poor helpless people, to
know how to begin. Helena has volunteered to set the thing going.
And there she is now, advising everybody, governing everybody,
encouraging everybody--issuing directions, f inding fault,
rewarding merit--oh, dear, let me put it all in one word, and
say: thoroughly enjoying herself.

Another event has happened, relating to papa. It so distressed me
that I even forgot to think of Philip--for a little while.

Traveling by railway (I suppose because I am not used to it)
gives me the headache. When I got to our station here, I thought
it would do me more good to walk home than to ride in the noisy
omnibus. Half-way between the railway and the town, I met one of
the doctors. He is a member of our congregation; and he it was
who recommended papa, some time since, to give up his work as a
minister and take a long holiday in foreign parts.

"I am glad to have met with you," the doctor said. "Your sister,
I find, is away on a visit; and I want to speak to one of you
about your father."

It seemed that he had been observing papa, in chapel, from what
he called his own medical point of view. He did not conceal from
me that he had drawn conclusions which made him feel uneasy. "It
may be anxiety," he said, "or it may be overwork. In either case,
your father is in a state of nervous derangement, which is likely
to lead to serious results--unless he takes the advice that I
gave him when he last consulted me. There must be no more
hesitation about it. Be careful not to irritate him--but remember
that he must rest. You and your sister have some influence over
him; he won't listen to me."

Poor dear papa! I did see a change in him for the worse--though I
had only been away for so short a time.

When I put my arms round his neck, and kissed him, he turned
pale, and then flushed up suddenly: the tears came into his eyes.
Oh, it was hard to follow the doctor's advice, and not to cry,
too; but I succeeded in controlling myself. I sat on his knee,
and made him tell me all that I have written here about Helena.
This led to our talking next of the new lady, who is to live with
us as a member of the family. I began to feel less uneasy at the
prospect of being introduced to this stranger, when I heard that
she was papa's cousin. And when he mentioned her name, and saw
how it amused me, his poor worn face brightened into a smile. "Go
and find her," he said, "and introduce yourself. I want to hear,
Eunice, if you and my cousin are likely to get on well together."

The servants told me that Miss Jillgall was in the garden.

I searched here, there, and everywhere, and failed to find her.
The place was so quiet, it looked so deliciously pure and bright,
after smoky dreary London, that I sat down at the further end of
the garden and let my mind take me back to Philip. What was he
doing at that moment, while I was thinking of him? Perhaps he was
in the company of other young ladies, who drew all his thoughts
away to themselves? Or perhaps he was writing to his father in
Ireland, and saying something kindly and prettily about me? Or
perhaps he was looking forward, as anxiously as I do, to our
meeting next week.

I have had my plans, and I have changed my plans.

On the railway journey, I thought I would tell papa at once of
the new happiness which seems to have put a new life into me. It
would have been delightful to make my confession to that first
and best and dearest of friends; but my meeting with the doctor
spoiled it all. After what he had said to me, I discovered a
risk. If I ventured to tell papa that my heart was set on a young
gentleman who was a stranger to him, could I be sure that he
would receive my confession favorably? There was a chance that it
might irritate him--and the fault would then be mine of doing
what I had been warned to avoid. It might be safer in every way
to wait till Philip paid his visit, and he and papa had been
introduced to each other and charmed with each other. Could
Helena herself have arrived at a wiser conclusion? I declare I
felt proud of my own discretion.

In this enjoyable frame of mind I was disturbed by a woman's
voice. The tone was a tone of distress, and the words reached my
ears from the end of the garden: "Please, miss, let me in."

A shrubbery marks the limit of our little bit of pleasure-ground.
On the other side of it there is a cottage standing on the edge
of the common. The most good-natured woman in the world lives
here. She is our laundress--married to a stupid young fellow
named Molly, and blessed with a plump baby as sweet-tempered at
herself. Thinking it likely that the piteous voice which had
disturbed me might be the voice of Mrs. Molly, I was astonished
to hear her appealing to anybody (perhaps to me?) to "let her
in." So I passed through the shrubbery, wondering whether the
gate had been locked during my absence in London. No; it was as
easy to open as ever.

The cottage door was not closed.

I saw our amiable laundress in the passage, on her knees, trying
to open an inner door which seemed to be locked. She had her eye
at the keyhole; and, once again, she called out: "Please, miss,
let me in." I waited to see if the door would be opened--nothing
happened. I waited again, to hear if some person inside would
answer--nobody spoke. But somebody, or something, made a sound of
splashing water on the other side of the door.

I showed myself, and asked what was the matter.

Mrs. Molly looked at me helplessly. She said: "Miss Eunice, it's
the baby."

"What has the baby done?" I inquired.

Mrs. Molly got on her feet, and whispered in my ear: "You know
he's a fine child?"

"Yes."

"Well, miss, he's bewitched a lady."

"What lady?"

"Miss Jillgall."

The very person I had been trying to find! I asked where she was.

The laundress pointed dolefully to the locked door: "In there."

"And where is your baby?"

The poor woman still pointed to the door: "I'm beginning to
doubt, miss, whether it is my baby."

"Nonsense, Mrs. Molly. If it isn't yours, whose baby can it be?"

"Miss Jillgall's."

Her puzzled face made this singular reply more funny still. The
splashing of water on the other side of the door began again.
"What is Miss Jillgall doing now?" I said.

"Washing the baby, miss. A week ago, she came in here, one
morning; very pleasant and kind, I must own. She found me putting
on the baby's things. She says: 'What a cherub!' which I took as
a compliment. She says: 'I shall call again to-morrow.' She
called again so early that she found the baby in his crib. 'You
be a good soul,' she says, 'and go about your work, and leave the
child to me.' I says: 'Yes, miss, but please to wait till I've
made him fit to be seen.' She says: 'That's just what I mean to
do myself.' I stared; and I think any other person would have
done the same in my place. 'If there's one thing more than
another I enjoy,' she says, 'it's making myself useful. Mrs.
Molly, I've taken a fancy to your boy-baby,' she says, 'and I
mean to make myself useful to _him._' If you will believe me,
Miss Jillgall has only let me have one opportunity of putting my
own child tidy. She was late this morning, and I got my chance,
and had the boy on my lap, drying him--when in she burst like a
blast of wind, and snatched the baby away from me. 'This is your
nasty temper,' she says; 'I declare I'm ashamed of you!' And
there she is, with the door locked against me, washing the child
all over again herself. Twice I've knocked, and asked her to let
me in, and can't even get an answer. They do say there's luck in
odd numbers; suppose I try again?" Mrs. Molly knocked, and the
proverb proved to be true; she got an answer from Miss Jillgall
at last: "If you don't be quiet and go away, you shan't have the
baby back at all." Who could help it?--I burst out laughing. Miss
Jillgall (as I supposed from the tone of her voice) took severe
notice of this act of impropriety. "Who's that laughing?" she
called out; "give yourself a name." I gave my name. The door was
instantly thrown open with a bang. Papa's cousin appeared, in a
disheveled state, with splashes of soap and water all over her.
She held the child in one arm, and she threw the other arm round
my neck. "Dearest Euneece, I have been longing to see you. How do
you like Our baby?"

To the curious story of my introduction to Miss Jillgall, I ought
perhaps to add that I have got to be  friends with her al ready. I
am the friend of anybody who amuses me. What will Helena say when
she reads this?


CHAPTER XIX.

EUNICE'S DIARY.



WHEN people are interested in some event that is coming, do they
find the dull days, passed in waiting for it, days which they are
not able to remember when they look back? This is my unfortunate
case. Night after night, I have gone to bed without so much as
opening my Journal. There was nothing worth writing about,
nothing that I could recollect, until the postman came to-day. I
ran downstairs, when I heard his ring at the bell, and stopped
Maria on her way to the study. There, among papa's usual handful
of letters, was a letter for me.

"DEAR MISS EUNICE:

. . . . . . .

"Yours ever truly."

I quote the passages in Philip's letter which most deeply
interested me--I am his dear miss; and he is mine ever truly. The
other part of the letter told me that he had been detained in
London, and he lamented it. At the end was a delightful
announcement that he was coming to me by the afternoon train. I
ran upstairs to see how I looked in the glass.

My first feeling was regret. For the thousandth time, I was
obliged to acknowledge that I was not as pretty as Helena. But
this passed off. A cheering reflection occurred to me. Philip
would not have found, in my sister's face, what seems to have
interested him in my face. Besides, there is my figure.

The pity of it is that I am so ignorant about some things. If I
had been allowed to read novels, I might (judging by what papa
said against them in one of his sermons) have felt sure of my own
attractions; I might even have understood what Philip really
thought of me. However, my mind was quite unexpectedly set at
ease on the subject of my figure. The manner in which it happened
was so amusing--at least, so amusing to me--that I cannot resist
mentioning it.

My sister and I are forbidden to read newspapers, as well as
novels. But the teachers at the Girls' Scripture Class are too
old to be treated in this way. When the morning lessons were
over, one of them was reading the newspaper to the other, in the
empty schoolroom; I being in the passage outside, putting on my
cloak.

It was a report of "an application made to the magistrates by the
lady of his worship the Mayor." Hearing this, I stopped to
listen. The lady of his worship (what a funny way of describing a
man's wife!) is reported to be a little too fond of notoriety,
and to like hearing the sound of her own voice on public
occasions. But this is only my writing; I had better get back to
the report. "In her address to the magistrates, the Mayoress
stated that she had seen a disgusting photograph in the shop
window of a stationer, lately established in the town. She
desired to bring this person within reach of the law, and to have
all his copies of the shameless photograph destroyed. The usher
of the court was thereupon sent to purchase the photograph."--On
second thoughts, I prefer going back to my own writing again; it
is so uninteresting to copy other people's writing. Two of the
magistrates were doing justice. They looked at the
photograph--and what did it represent? The famous statue called
the Venus de' Medici! One of the magistrates took this discovery
indignantly. He was shocked at the gross ignorance which could
call the classic ideal of beauty and grace a disgusting work. The
other one made polite allowances. He thought the lady was much to
be pitied; she was evidently the innocent victim of a neglected
education. Mrs. Mayor left the court in a rage, telling the
justices she knew where to get law. "I shall expose Venus," she
said, "to the Lord Chancellor."

When the Scripture Class had broken up for the day, duty ought to
have taken me home. Curiosity led me astray--I mean, led me to
the stationer's window.

There I found our two teachers, absorbed in the photograph;
having got to the shop first by a short cut. They seemed to think
I had taken a liberty whom I joined them. "We are here," they
were careful to explain, "to get a lesson in the ideal of beauty
and grace." There was quite a little crowd of townsfolk collected
before the window. Some of them giggled; and some of them
wondered whether it was taken from the life. For my own part,
gratitude to Venus obliges me to own that she effected a great
improvement in the state of my mind. She encouraged me. If that
stumpy little creature--with no waist, and oh, such uncertain
legs!--represented the ideal of beauty and grace, I had reason
indeed to be satisfied with my own figure, and to think it quite
possible that my sweetheart's favorable opinion of me was not
ill-bestowed.

I was at the bedroom window when the time approached for Philip's
arrival.

Quite at the far end of the road, I discovered him. He was on
foot; he walked like a king. Not that I ever saw a king, but I
have my ideal. Ah, what a smile he gave me, when I made him look
up by waving my handkerchief out of the window! "Ask for papa," I
whispered as he ascended the house-steps.

The next thing to do was to wait, as patiently as I could, to be
sent for downstairs. Maria came to me in a state of excitement.
"Oh, miss, what a handsome young gentleman, and how beautifully
dressed! Is he--?" Instead of finishing what she had to say, she
looked at me with a sly smile. I looked at her with a sly smile.
We were certainly a couple of fools. But, dear me, how happy
sometimes a fool can be!

My enjoyment of that delightful time was checked when I went into
the drawing-room.

I had expected to see papa's face made beautiful by his winning
smile. He was not only serious; he actually seemed to be ill at
ease when he looked at me. At the same time, I saw nothing to
make me conclude that Philip had produced an unfavorable
impression. The truth is, we were all three on our best behavior,
and we showed it. Philip had brought with him a letter from Mrs.
Staveley, introducing him to papa. We spoke of the Staveleys, of
the weather, of the Cathedral--and then there seemed to be
nothing more left to talk about.

In the silence that followed--what a dreadful thing silence
is!--papa was sent for to see somebody who had called on
business. He made his excuses in the sweetest manner, but still
seriously. When he and Philip had shaken hands, would he leave us
together? No; he waited. Poor Philip had no choice but to take
leave of me. Papa then went out by the door that led into his
study, and I was left alone.

Can any words say how wretched I felt?

I had hoped so much from that first meeting--and where were my
hopes now? A profane wish that I had never been born was finding
its way into my mind, when the door of the room was opened
softly, from the side of the passage. Maria, dear Maria, the best
friend I have, peeped in. She whispered: "Go into the garden,
miss, and you will find somebody there who is dying to see you.
Mind you let him out by the shrubbery gate." I squeezed her hand;
I asked if she had tried the shrubbery gate with a sweetheart of
her own. "Hundreds of times, miss."

Was it wrong for me to go to Philip, in the garden? Oh, there is
no end to objections! Perhaps I did it _because_ it was wrong.
Perhaps I had been kept on my best behavior too long for human
endurance.

How sadly disappointed he looked! And how rashly he had placed
himself just where he could be seen from the back windows! I took
his arm and led him to the end of the garden. There we were out
of the reach of inquisitive eyes; and there we sat down together,
under the big mulberry tree.

"Oh, Eunice, your father doesn't like me!"

Those were his first words. In justice to papa (and a little for
my own sake too) I told him he was quite wrong. I said: "Trust my
father's goodness, trust his kindness, as I do."

He made no reply. His silence was sufficiently expressive; he
looked at me fondly.

I may be wrong, but fond looks surely require an acknowledgment
of some kind? Is a young woman guilty of boldness who only
follows her impulses? I slipped my hand into his hand. Philip
seemed to like it. We returned to our conversation.

He began: "Tell me, dear, is Mr. Gracedieu always as serious as
he is to-day?"

"Oh no!"

"When he takes  exercise, does he ri de? or does he walk?"

"Papa always walks."

"By himself?"

"Sometimes by himself. Sometimes with me. Do you want to meet him
when he goes out?"

"Yes."

"When he is out with me?"

"No. When he is out by himself."

Was it possible to tell me more plainly that I was not wanted? I
did my best to express indignation by snatching my hand away from
him. He was completely taken by surprise.

"Eunice! don't you understand me?"

I was as stupid and as disagreeable as I could possibly be: "No;
I don't!"

"Then let me help you," he said, with a patience which I had not
deserved.

Up to that moment I had been leaning against the back of a garden
chair. Something else now got between me and my chair. It stole
round my waist--it held me gently--it strengthened its hold--it
improved my temper--it made me fit to understand him. All done by
what? Only an arm!

Philip went on:

"I want to ask your father to do me the greatest of all
favors--and there is no time to lose. Every day, I expect to get
a letter which may recall me to Ireland."

My heart sank at this horrid prospect; and in some mysterious way
my head must have felt it too. I mean that I found my head
resting on his shoulder. He went on:

"How am I to get my opportunity of speaking to Mr. Gracedieu? I
mustn't call on him again as soon as to-morrow or next day. But I
might meet him, out walking alone, if you will tell me how to do
it. A note to my hotel is all I want. Don't tremble, my sweet. If
you are not present at the time, do you see any objection to my
owning to your father that I love you?"

I felt his delicate consideration for me--I did indeed feel it
gratefully. If he only spoke first, how well I should get on with
papa afterward! The prospect before me was exquisitely
encouraging. I agreed with Philip in everything; and I waited
(how eagerly was only known to myself) to hear what he would say
to me next. He prophesied next:

"When I have told your father that I love you, he will expect me
to tell him something else. Can you guess what it is?"

If I had not been confused, perhaps I might have found the answer
to this. As it was, I left him to reply to himself. He did it, in
words which I shall remember as long as I live.

"Dearest Eunice, when your father has heard my confession, he
will suspect that there is another confession to follow it--he
will want to know if you love me. My angel, will my hopes be your
hopes too, when I answer him?"

What there was in this to make my heart beat so violently that I
felt as if I was being stifled, is more than I can tell. He
leaned so close to me, so tenderly, so delightfully close, that
our faces nearly touched. He whispered: "Say you love me, in a
kiss!"

His lips touched my lips, pressed them, dwelt on them--oh, how
can I tell of it! Some new enchantment of feeling ran deliciously
through and through me. I forgot my own self; I only knew of one
person in the world. He was master of my lips; he was master of
my heart. When he whispered, "kiss me," I kissed. What a moment
it was! A faintness stole over me; I felt as if I was going to
die some exquisite death; I laid myself back away from him--I was
not able to speak. There was no need for it; my thoughts and his
thoughts were one--he knew that I was quite overcome; he saw that
he must leave me to recover myself alone. I pointed to the
shrubbery gate. We took one long last look at each other for that
day; the trees hid him; I was left by myself.


CHAPTER XX.

EUNICE'S DIARY.


How long a time passed before my composure came back to me, I
cannot remember now. It seemed as if I was waiting through some
interval of my life that was a mystery to myself. I was content
to wait, and feel the light evening air in the garden wafting
happiness over me. And all this had come from a kiss! I can call
the time to mind when I used to wonder why people made such a
fuss about kissing.

I had been indebted to Maria for my first taste of Paradise. I
was recalled by Maria to the world that I had been accustomed to
live in; the world that was beginning to fade away in my memory
already. She had been sent to the garden in search of me; and she
had a word of advice to offer, after noticing my face when I
stepped out of the shadow of the tree: "Try to look more like
yourself, miss, before you let them see you at the tea-table."


Papa and Miss Jillgall were sitting together talking, when I
opened the door. They left off when they saw me; and I supposed,
quite correctly as it turned out, that I had been one of the
subjects in their course of conversation. My poor father seemed
to be sadly anxious and out of sorts. Miss Jillgall, if I had
been in the humor to enjoy it, would have been more amusing than
ever. One of her funny little eyes persisted in winking at me;
and her heavy foot had something to say to my foot, under the
table, which meant a great deal perhaps, but which only succeeded
in hurting me.

My father left us; and Miss Jillgall explained herself.

"I know, dearest Euneece, that we have only been acquainted for a
day or two and that I ought not perhaps to have expected you to
confide in me so soon. Can I trust you not to betray me if I set
an example of confidence? Ah, I see I can trust you! And, my
dear, I do so enjoy telling secrets to a friend. Hush! Your
father, your excellent father, has been talking to me about young
Mr. Dunboyne."

She provokingly stopped there. I entreated her to go on. She
invited me to sit on her knee. "I want to whisper," she said. It
was too ridiculous--but I did it. Miss Jillgall's whisper told me
serious news.

"The minister has some reason, Euneece, for disapproving of Mr.
Dunboyne; but, mind this, I don't think he has a bad opinion of
the young man himself. He is going to return Mr. Dunboyne's call.
Oh, I do so hate formality; I really can't go on talking of _Mr._
Dunboyne. Tell me his Christian name. Ah, what a noble name! How
I long to be useful to him! Tomorrow, my dear, after the one
o'clock dinner, your papa will call on Philip, at his hotel. I
hope he won't be out, just at the wrong time."

I resolved to prevent that unlucky accident by writing to Philip.
If Miss Jillgall would have allowed it, I should have begun my
letter at once. But she had more to say; and she was stronger
than I was, and still kept me on her knee.

"It all looks bright enough so far, doesn't it, dear sister? Will
you let me be your second sister? I do so love you, Euneece.
Thank you! thank you! But the gloomy side of the picture is to
come next! The minister--no! now I am your sister I must call him
papa; it makes me feel so young again! Well, then, papa has asked
me to be your companion whenever you go out. 'Euneece is too
young and too attractive to be walking about this great town (in
Helena's absence) by herself.' That was how he put it. Slyly
enough, if one may say so of so good a man. And he used your
sister (didn't he?) as a kind of excuse. I wish your sister was
as nice as you are. However, the point is, why am I to be your
companion? Because, dear child, you and your young gentleman are
not to make appointments and to meet each other alone. Oh,
yes--that's it! Your father is quite willing to return Philip's
call; he proposes (as a matter of civility to Mrs. Staveley) to
ask Philip to dinner; but, mark my words, he doesn't mean to let
Philip have you for his wife."

I jumped off her lap; it was horrible to hear her. "Oh," I said,
"_can_ you be right about it?" Miss Jillgall jumped up too. She
has foreign ways of shrugging her shoulders and making signs with
her hands. On this occasion she laid both hands on the upper part
of her dress, just below her throat, and mysteriously shook her
head.

"When my views are directed by my affections," she assured me, "I
never see wrong. My bosom is my strong point."

She has no bosom, poor soul--but I understood what she meant. It
failed to have any soothing effect on my feelings. I felt grieved
and angry and puzzled, all in one. Miss Jillgall stood looking at
me, with her hands still on the place where her bosom was
supposed to be. She made my temper hotter than ever.

"I mean to marry Philip," I said.

"Certainly, my dear Euneece. But please don't be so fierce about
it."

"If my father does really object to my marriage," I went on, "it
must be because he dislikes Philip. There can be no other
reason."

"Oh, yes, dear--there can."

"What is the reason, then?"

"That, my sweet girl, is one of the things that we have got to
find out."

. . . . . . .

The post of this morning brought a letter from my sister. We were
to expect her return by the next day's train. This was good news.
Philip and I might stand in need of clever Helena's help, and we
might be sure of getting it now.

In writing to Philip, I had asked him to let me hear how papa and
he had got on at the hotel.

I won't say how often I consulted my watch, or how often I looked
out of the window for a man with a letter in his hand. It will be
better to get on at once to the discouraging end of it, when the
report of the interview reached me at last. Twice Philip had
attempted to ask for my hand in marriage--and twice my father had
"deliberately, obstinately" (Philip's own words) changed the
subject. Even this was not all. As if he was determined to show
that Miss Jillgall was perfectly right, and I perfectly wrong,
papa (civil to Philip as long as he did not talk of Me) had asked
him to dine with us, and Philip had accepted the invitation!

What were we to think of it? What were we to do?

I wrote back to my dear love (so cruelly used) to tell him that
Helena was expected to return on the next day, and that her
opinion would be of the greatest value to both of us. In a
postscript I mentioned the hour at which we were going to the
station to meet my sister. When I say "we," I mean Miss Jillgall
as well as myself.

. . . . . . .

We found him waiting for us at the railway. I am afraid he
resented papa's incomprehensible resolution not to give him a
hearing. He was silent and sullen. I could not conceal that to
see this state of feeling distressed me. He showed how truly he
deserved to be loved--he begged my pardon, and he became his own
sweet self again directly. I am more determined to marry him than
ever.

When the train entered the station, all the carriages were full.
I went one way, thinking I had seen Helena. Miss Jillgall went
the other way, under the same impression. Philip was a little way
behind me.

Not seeing my sister, I had just turned back, when a young man
jumped out of a carriage, opposite Philip, and recognized and
shook hands with him. I was just near enough to hear the stranger
say, "Look at the girl in our carriage." Philip looked. "What a
charming creature!" he said, and then checked himself for fear
the young lady should hear him. She had just handed her traveling
bag and wraps to a porter, and was getting out. Philip politely
offered his hand to help her. She looked my way. The charming
creature of my sweetheart's admiration was, to my infinite
amusement, Helena herself.



CHAPTER XXI.

HELENA'S DIARY.


THE day of my return marks an occasion which I am not likely to
forget. Hours have passed since I came home--and my agitation
still forbids the thought of repose.

As I sit at my desk I see Eunice in bed, sleeping peacefully,
except when she is murmuring enjoyment in some happy dream. To
what end has my sister been advancing blindfold, and (who knows?)
dragging me with her, since that disastrous visit to our friends
in London? Strange that there should be a leaven of superstition
in _my_ nature! Strange that I should feel fear of something--I
hardly know what!

I have met somewhere (perhaps in my historical reading) with the
expression: "A chain of events." Was I at the beginning of that
chain, when I entered the railway carriage on my journey home?

Among the other passengers there was a young gentleman,
accompanied by a lady who proved to be his sister. They were both
well-bred people. The brother evidently admired me, and did his
best to make himself agreeable. Time passed quickly in pleasant
talk, and my vanity was flattered--and that was all.

My fellow-travelers were going on to London. When the train
reached our station the young lady sent her brother to buy some
fruit, which she saw in the window of the refreshment-room. The
first man whom he encountered on the platform was one of his
friends; to whom he said something which I failed to hear. When I
handed my traveling bag and my wraps to the porter, and showed
myself at the carriage door, I heard the friend say: "What a
charming creature!" Having nothing to conceal in a journal which
I protect by a lock, I may own that the stranger's personal
appearance struck me, and that what I felt this time was not
flattered vanity, but gratified pride. He was young, he was
remarkably handsome, he was a distinguished-looking man.

All this happened in one moment. In the moment that followed, I
found myself in Eunice's arms. That odious person, Miss Jillgall,
insisted on embracing me next. And then I was conscious of an
indescribable feeling of surprise. Eunice presented the
distinguished-looking gentleman to me as a friend of hers--Mr.
Philip Dunboyne.

"I had the honor of meeting your sister," he said, "in London, at
Mr. Staveley's house." He went on to speak easily and gracefully
of the journey I had taken, and of his friend who had been my
fellow-traveler; and he attended us to the railway omnibus before
he took his leave. I observed that Eunice had something to say to
him confidentially, before they parted. This was another example
of my sister's childish character; she is instantly familiar with
new acquaintances, if she happens to like them. I anticipated
some amusement from hearing how she had contrived to establish
confidential relations with a highly-cultivated man like Mr.
Dunboyne. But, while Miss Jillgall was with us, it was just as
well to keep within the limits of commonplace conversation.

Before we got out of the omnibus I had, however, observed one
undesirable result of my absence from home. Eunice and Miss
Jillgall--the latter having, no doubt, finely flattered the
former--appeared to have taken a strong liking to each other.

Two curious circumstances also caught my attention. I saw a
change to, what I call self -assertion, in my sister's manner;
something seemed to have raised her in her own estimation. Then,
again, Miss Jillgall was not like her customary self. She had
delightful moments of silence; and when Eunice asked how I liked
Mr. Dunboyne, she listened to my reply with an appearance of
interest in her ugly face which was quite a new revelation in my
experience of my father's cousin.

These little discoveries (after what I had already observed at
the railway-station) ought perhaps to have prepared me for what
was to come, when my sister and I were alone in our room. But
Eunice, whether she meant to do it or not, baffled my customary
penetration. She looked as if she had plenty of news to tell
me--with some obstacle in the way of doing it, which appeared to
amuse instead of annoying her. If there is one thing more than
another that I hate, it is being puzzled. I asked at once if
anything remarkable had happened during Eunice's visit to London.

She smiled mischievously. "I have got a delicious surprise for
you, my dear; and I do so enjoy prolonging it. Tell me, Helena,
what did you propose we should both do when we found ourselves at
home again?"

My memory was at fault. Eunice's good spirits became absolutely
boisterous. She called out: "Catch!" and tossed her journal into
my hands, across the whole length of the room. "We were to read
each other's diaries," she said. "There is mine to begin with."

Innocent of any suspicion of the true state of affairs, I began
the reading of Eunice's journal.

If I had not seen the familiar handwriting, nothing would have
induced me to believe that a girl brought up in a pious
household, the well-beloved daughter of a distinguished
Congregational Minister, could have written that shameless record
of passions unknown to young ladies in respectable English life.
What to say, what to do, when I had closed the book, was more
than I felt myself equal to decide. My wretched sister spared me
the anxiety which I might otherwise have felt. It was she who
first opened her lips, after the silence that had fal len on us
while I was reading. These were literally the words that she
said:

"My darling, why don't you congratulate me?"

No argument could have persuaded me, as this persuaded me, that
all sisterly remonstrance on my part would be completely thrown
away.

"My dear Eunice," I said, "let me beg you to excuse me. I am
waiting--"

There she interrupted me--and, oh, in what an impudent manner!
She took my chin between her finger and thumb, and lifted my
downcast face, and looked at me with an appearance of eager
expectation which I was quite at a loss to understand.

"You have been away from home, too." she said. "Do I see in this
serious face some astonishing news waiting to overpower me? Have
_you_ found a sweetheart? Are _you_ engaged to be married?"

I only put her hand away from me, and advised her to return to
her chair. This perfectly harmless proceeding seemed absolutely
to frighten her.

"Oh, my dear," she burst out, "surely you are not jealous of me?"

There was but one possible reply to this: I laughed at it. Is
Eunice's head turned? She kissed me!

"Now you laugh," she said, "I begin to understand you again; I
ought to have known that you are superior to jealousy. But, do
tell me, would it be so very wonderful if other girls found
something to envy in my good luck? Just think of it! Such a
handsome man, such an agreeable man, such a clever man, such a
rich man--and, not the least of his merits, by-the-by, a man who
admires You. Come! if you won't congratulate me, congratulate
yourself on having such a brother-in-law in prospect!"

Her head _was_ turned. I drew the poor soul's attention
compassionately to what I had said a moment since.

"Pardon me, dear, for reminding you that I have not yet refused
to offer my congratulations. I only told you I was waiting."

"For what?"

"Waiting, of course, to hear what my father thinks of your
wonderful good luck."

This explanation, offered with the kindest intentions, produced
another change in my very variable sister. I had extinguished her
good spirits as I might have extinguished a light. She sat down
by me, and sighed in the saddest manner. The heart must be hard
indeed which can resist the distress of a person who is dear to
us. I put my arm round her; she was becoming once more the Eunice
whom I so dearly loved.

"My poor child," I said. "don't distress yourself by speaking of
it; I understand. Your father objects to your marrying Mr.
Dunboyne."

She shook her head. "I can't exactly say, Helena, that papa does
that. He only behaves very strangely."

"Am I indiscreet, dear, if I ask in what way father's behavior
has surprised you?"

She was quite willing to enlighten me. It was a simple little
story which, to my mind, sufficiently explained the strange
behavior that had puzzled my unfortunate sister.

There could indeed be no doubt that my father considered Eunice
far too childish in character, as yet, to undertake the duties of
matrimony. But, with his customary delicacy, and dread of causing
distress to others, he had deferred the disagreeable duty of
communicating his opinion to Mr. Dunboyne. The adverse decision
must, however, be sooner or later announced; and he had arranged
to inflict disappointment, as tenderly as might be, at his own
table.

Considerately leaving Eunice in the enjoyment of any vain hopes
which she may have founded on the event of the dinner-party, I
passed the evening until supper-time came in the study with my
father.

Our talk was mainly devoted to the worthy people with whom I had
been staying, and whose new schools I had helped to found. Not a
word was said relating to my sister, or to Mr. Dunboyne. Poor
father looked so sadly weary and ill that I ventured, after what
the doctor had said to Eunice, to hint at the value of rest and
change of scene to an overworked man. Oh, dear me, he frowned,
and waved the subject away from him impatiently, with a wan, pale
hand.

After supper, I made an unpleasant discovery. Not having
completely finished the unpacking of my boxes, I left Miss
Jillgall and Eunice in the drawing-room, and went upstairs. In
half an hour I returned, and found the room empty. What had
become of them? It was a fine moonlight night; I stepped into the
back drawing-room, and looked out of the window. There they were,
walking arm-in-arm with their heads close together, deep in talk.
With my knowledge of Miss Jillgall, I call this a bad sign.

An odd thought has just come to me. I wonder what might have
happened, if I had been visiting at Mrs. Staveley's, instead of
Eunice, and if Mr. Dunboyne had seen me first.

Absurd! if I was not too tired to do anything more, those last
lines should be scratched out.


CHAPTER XXII.

EUNICE'S DIARY.


I SAID so to Miss Jillgall, and I say it again here. Nothing will
induce me to think ill of Helena.

My sister is a good deal tired, and a little out of temper after
the railway journey. This is exactly what happened to me when I
went to London. I attribute her refusal to let me read her
journal, after she had read mine, entirely to the disagreeable
consequences of traveling by railway. Miss Jillgall accounted for
it otherwise, in her own funny manner: "My sweet child, your
sister's diary is full of abuse of poor me." I humored the joke:
"Dearest Selina, keep a diary of your own, and fill it with abuse
of my sister." This seemed to be a droll saying at the time. But
it doesn't look particularly amusing, now it is written down. We
had ginger wine at supper, to celebrate Helena's return. Although
I only drank one glass, I daresay it may have got into my head.

However that may be, when the lovely moonlight tempted us into
the garden, there was an end to our jokes. We had something to
talk about which still dwells disagreeably on my mind.

Miss Jillgall began it.

"If I trust you, dearest Euneece, with my own precious secrets,
shall I never, never, never live to repent it?"

I told my good little friend that she might depend on me,
provided her secrets did no harm to any person whom I loved.

She clasped her hands and looked up at the moon--I can only
suppose that her sentiments overpowered her. She said, very
prettily, that her heart and my heart beat together in heavenly
harmony. It is needless to add that this satisfied me.

Miss Jillgall's generous confidence in my discretion was, I am
afraid, not rewarded as it ought to have been. I found her
tiresome at first.

She spoke of an excellent friend (a lady), who had helped her, at
the time when she lost her little fortune, by raising a
subscription privately to pay the expenses of her return to
England. Her friend's name--not very attractive to English
ears--was Mrs. Tenbruggen; they had first become acquainted under
interesting circumstances. Miss Jillgall happened to mention that
my father was her only living relative; and it turned out that
Mrs. Tenbruggen was familiar with his name, and reverenced his
fame as a preacher. When he had generously received his poor
helpless cousin under his own roof, Miss Jillgall's gratitude and
sense of duty impelled her to write and tell Mrs. Tenbruggen how
happy she was as a member of our family.

Let me confess that I began to listen more attentively when the
narrative reached this point.

"I drew a little picture of our domestic circle here," Miss
Jillgall said, describing her letter; "and I mentioned the
mystery in which Mr. Gracedieu conceals the ages of you two dear
girls. Mrs. Tenbruggen --shall we shorten her ugly name and call
her Mrs. T.? Very well--Mrs. T. is a remarkably clever woman, and
I looked for interesting results, if she would give her opinion
of the mysterious circumstance mentioned in my letter."

By this time, I was all eagerness to hear more.

"Has she written to you?" I asked.

Miss Jillgall looked at me affectionately, and took the reply out
of her pocket.

"Listen, Euneece; and you shall hear her own words. Thus she
writes:

" 'Your letter, dear Selina, especially interests me by what it
says about the _two_ Miss Gracedieus. '--Look, dear; she
underlines the word Two. Why, I can't explain. Can you? Ah, I
thought not. Well, let us get back to the letter. My accomplished
friend continues in these term s:

" 'I can understand the surprise which you have felt at the
strange course taken by their father, as a means of concealing
the difference which there must be in the ages of these young
ladies. Many years since, I happened to discover a romantic
incident in the life of your popular preacher, which he has his
reasons, as I suspect, for keeping strictly to himself. If I may
venture on a bold guess, I should say that any person who could
discover which was the oldest of the two daughters, would be also
likely to discover the true nature of the romance in Mr.
Gracedieu's life.'--Isn't that very remarkable, Euneece? You
don't seem to see it--you funny child! Pray pay particular
attention to what comes next. These are the closing sentences in
my friend's letter:

" 'If you find anything new to tell me which relates to this
interesting subject, direct your letter as before--provided you
write within a week from the present time. Afterward, my letters
will be received by the English physician whose card I inclose.
You will be pleased to hear that my professional interests call
me to London at the earliest moment that I can spare.' --There.
dear child, the letter comes to an end. I daresay you wonder what
Mrs. T. means, when she alludes to her professional interests?"

No: I was not wondering about anything. It hurt me to hear of a
strange woman exercising her ingenuity in guessing at mysteries
in papa's life.

But Miss Jillgall was too eagerly bent on setting forth the
merits of her friend to notice this. I now heard that Mrs. T.'s
marriage had turned out badly, and that she had been reduced to
earn her own bread. Her manner of doing this was something quite
new to me. She went about, from one place to another, curing
people of all sorts of painful maladies, by a way she had of
rubbing them with her hands. In Belgium she was called a
"Masseuse." When I asked what this meant in English, I was told,
"Medical Rubber," and that the fame of Mrs. T.'s wonderful cures
had reached some of the medical newspapers published in London.

After listening (I must say for myself) very patiently, I was
bold enough to own that my interest in what I had just heard was
not quite so plain to me as I could have wished it to be.

Miss Jillgall looked shocked at my stupidity. She reminded me
that there was a mystery in Mrs. Tenbruggen's letter and a
mystery in papa's strange conduct toward Philip. "Put two and two
together, darling," she said; "and, one of these days, they may
make four."

If this meant anything, it meant that the reason which made papa
keep Helena's age and my age unknown to everybody but himself,
was also the reason why he seemed to be so strangely unwilling to
let me be Philip's wife. I really could not endure to take such a
view of it as that, and begged Miss Jillgall to drop the subject.
She was as kind as ever.

"With all my heart, dear. But don't deceive yourself--the subject
will turn up again when we least expect it."


CHAPTER XXIII.

EUNICE'S DIARY.


ONLY two days now, before we give our little dinner-party, and
Philip finds his opportunity of speaking to papa. Oh, how I wish
that day had come and gone!

I try not to take gloomy views of things; but I am not quite so
happy as I had expected to be when my dear was in the same town
with me. If papa had encouraged him to call again, we might have
had some precious time to ourselves. As it is, we can only meet
in the different show-places in the town--with Helena on one
side, and Miss Jillgall on the other, to take care of us. I do
call it cruel not to let two young people love each other,
without setting third persons to watch them. If I was Queen of
England, I would have pretty private bowers made for lovers, in
the summer, and nice warm little rooms to hold two, in the
winter. Why not? What harm could come of it, I should like to
know?

The cathedral is the place of meeting which we find most
convenient, under the circumstances. There are delightful nooks
and corners about this celebrated building in which lovers can
lag behind. If we had been in papa's chapel I should have
hesitated to turn it to such a profane use as this; the cathedral
doesn't so much matter.

Shall I own that I felt my inferiority to Helena a little keenly?
She could tell Philip so many things that I should have liked to
tell him first. My clever sister taught him how to pronounce the
name of the bishop who began building the cathedral; she led him
over the crypt, and told him how old it was. He was interested in
the crypt; he talked to Helena (not to me) of his ambition to
write a work on cathedral architecture in England; he made a
rough little sketch in his book of our famous tomb of some king.
Helena knew the late royal personage's name, and Philip showed
his sketch to her before he showed it to me. How can I blame him,
when I stood there the picture of stupidity, trying to recollect
something that I might tell him, if it was only the Dean's name?
Helena might have whispered it to me, I think. She remembered it,
not I--and mentioned it to Philip, of course. I kept close by him
all the time, and now and then he gave me a look which raised my
spirits. He might have given me something better than that--I
mean a kiss--when we had left the cathedral, and were by
ourselves for a moment in a corner of the Dean's garden. But he
missed the opportunity. Perhaps he was afraid of the Dean himself
coming that way, and happening to see us. However, I am far from
thinking the worse of Philip. I gave his arm a little
squeeze--and that was better than nothing.

. . . . . . .

He and I took a walk along the bank of the river to-day; my
sister and Miss Jillgall looking after us as usual.

On our way through the town, Helena stopped to give an order at a
shop. She asked us to wait for her. That best of good creatures,
Miss Jillgall, whispered in my ear: "Go on by yourselves, and
leave me to wait for her." Philip interpreted this act of
kindness in a manner which would have vexed me, if I had not
understood that it was one of his jokes. He said to me: "Miss
Jillgall sees a chance of annoying your sister, and enjoys the
prospect."

Well, away we went together; it was just what I wanted; it gave
me an opportunity of saying something to Philip, between
ourselves.

I could now beg of him, in his interests and mine, to make the
best of himself when he came to dinner. Clever people, I told
him, were people whom papa liked and admired. I said: "Let him
see, dear, how clever _you_ are, and how many things you
know--and you can't imagine what a high place you will have in
his opinion. I hope you don't think I am taking too much on
myself in telling you how to behave."

He relieved that doubt in a manner which I despair of describing.
His eyes rested on me with such a look of exquisite sweetness and
love that I was obliged to hold by his arm, I trembled so with
the pleasure of feeling it.

"I do sincerely believe," he said, "that you are the most
innocent girl, the sweetest, truest girl that ever lived. I wish
I was a better man, Eunice; I wish I was good enough to be worthy
of you!"

To hear him speak of himself in that way jarred on me. If such
words had fallen from any other man's lips, I should have been
afraid that he had done something, or thought something, of which
he had reason to feel ashamed. With Philip this was impossible.

He was eager to walk on rapidly, and to turn a corner in the
path, before we could be seen. "I want to be alone with you," he
said.

I looked back. We were too late; Helena and Miss Jillgall had
nearly overtaken us. My sister was on the point of speaking to
Philip, when she seemed to change her mind, and only looked at
him. Instead of looking at her in return, he kept his eyes cast
down and drew figures on the pathway with his stick. I think
Helena was out of temper; she suddenly turned my way. "Why didn't
you wait for me?" she asked.

Philip took her up sharply. "If Eunice likes seeing the river
better than waiting in the street," he said, "isn't she free to
do as she pleases?"

Helena said nothing more; Philip walked on slowly by himself. Not
knowing what to make of it, I turned to Miss Jillgall.

"Surely Phi lip can't have quarreled with Helena?" I said.

Miss Jillgall answered in an odd off-hand manner: "Not he! He is
a great deal more likely to have quarreled with himself."

"Why?"

"Suppose you ask him why?"

It was not to be thought of; it would have looked like prying
into his thoughts. "Selina!" I said, "there is something odd
about you to-day. What is the matter? I don't understand you."

"My poor dear, you will find yourself understanding me before
long." I thought I saw something like pity in her face when she
said that.

"My poor dear?" I repeated. "What makes you speak to me in that
way?"

"I don't know--I'm tired; I'm an old fool-- I'll go back to the
house."

Without another word, she left me. I turned to look for Philip,
and saw that my sister had joined him while I had been speaking
to Miss Jillgall. It pleased me to find that they were talking in
a friendly way when I joined them. A quarrel between Helena and
my husband that is to be--no, my husband that _shall_ be--would
have been too distressing, too unnatural I might almost call it.

Philip looked along the backward path, and asked what had become
of Miss Jillgall. "Have you any objection to follow her example?"
he said to me, when I told him that Selina had returned to the
town. "I don't care for the banks of this river."

Helena, who used to like the river at other times, was as ready
as Philip to leave it now. I fancy they had both been kindly
waiting to change our walk, till I came to them, and they could
study my wishes too. Of course I was ready to go where they
pleased. I asked Philip if there was anything he would like to
see, when we got into the streets again.

Clever Helena suggested what seemed to be a strange amusement to
offer to Philip. "Let's take him to the Girls' School," she said.

It appeared to be a matter of perfect indifference to him; he
was, what they call, ironical. "Oh, yes, of course. Deeply
interesting! deeply interesting!" He suddenly broke into the
wildest good spirits, and tucked my hand under his arm with a
gayety which it was impossible to resist. "What a boy you are!"
Helena said, enjoying his delightful hilarity as I did.


CHAPTER XXIV.

EUNICE'S DIARY.


ON entering the schoolroom we lost our gayety, all in a moment.
Something unpleasant had evidently happened.

Two of the eldest girls were sitting together in a corner,
separated from the rest, and looking most wickedly sulky. The
teachers were at the other end of the room, appearing to be ill
at ease. And there, standing in the midst of them, with his face
flushed and his eyes angry--there was papa, sadly unlike his
gentle self in the days of his health and happiness. On former
occasions, when the exercise of his authority was required in the
school, his forbearing temper always set things right. When I saw
him now, I thought of what the doctor had said of his health, on
my way home from the station.

Papa advanced to us the moment we showed ourselves at the door.

He shook hands--cordially shook hands--with Philip. It was
delightful to see him, delightful to hear him say: "Pray don't
suppose, Mr. Dunboyne, that you are intruding; remain with us by
all means if you like." Then he spoke to Helena and to me, still
excited, still not like himself: "You couldn't have come here, my
dears, at a time when your presence was more urgently needed." He
turned to the teachers. "Tell my daughters what has happened;
tell them why they see me here--shocked and distressed, I don't
deny it."

We now heard that the two girls in disgrace had broken the rules,
and in such a manner as to deserve severe punishment.

One of them had been discovered hiding a novel in her desk. The
other had misbehaved herself more seriously still--she had gone
to the theater. Instead of expressing any regret, they had
actually dared to complain of having to learn papa's improved
catechism. They had even accused him of treating them with
severity, because they were poor girls brought up on charity. "If
we had been young ladies," they were audacious enough to say,
"more indulgence would have been shown to us; we should have been
allowed to read stories and to see plays."

All this time I had been asking myself what papa meant, when he
told us we could not have come to the schoolroom at a better
time. His meaning now appeared. When he spoke to the offending
girls, he pointed to Helena and to me.

"Here are my daughters," he said. "You will not deny that they
are young ladies. Now listen. They shall tell you themselves
whether my rules make any difference between them and you.
Helena! Eunice! do I allow you to read novels? do I allow you to
go to the play?"

We said, "No"--and hoped it was over. But he had not done yet. He
turned to Helena.

"Answer some of the questions," he went on, "from my Manual of
Christian Obligation, which the girls call my catechism." He
asked one of the questions: "If you are told to do unto others as
you would they should do unto you, and if you find a difficulty
in obeying that Divine Precept, what does your duty require?"

It is my belief that Helena has the materials in her for making
another Joan of Arc. She rose, and answered without the slightest
sign of timidity: "My duty requires me to go to the minister, and
to seek for advice and encouragement."

"And if these fail?"

"Then I am to remember that my pastor is my friend. He claims no
priestly authority or priestly infallibility. He is my
fellow-Christian who loves me. He will tell me how he has himself
failed; how he has struggled against himself; and what a blessed
reward has followed his victory--a purified heart, a peaceful
mind."

Then papa released my sister, after she had only repeated two out
of all the answers in Christian Obligation, which we first began
to learn when we were children. He then addressed himself again
to the girls.

"Is what you have just heard a part of my catechism? Has my
daughter been excused from repeating it because she is a young
lady? Where is the difference between the religious education
which is given to my own child, and that given to you?"

The wretched girls still sat silent and obstinate, with their
heads down. I tremble again as I write of what happened next.
Papa fixed his eyes on me. He said, out loud: "Eunice!"--and
waited for me to rise and answer, as my sister had done.

It was entirely beyond my power to get on my feet.

Philip had (innocently, I am sure) discouraged me; I saw
displeasure, I saw contempt in his face. There was a dead silence
in the room. Everybody looked at me. My heart beat furiously, my
hands turned cold, the questions and answers in Christian
Obligation all left my memory together. I looked imploringly at
papa.

For the first time in his life, he was hard on me. His eyes were
as angry as ever; they showed me no mercy. Oh, what had come to
me? what evil spirit possessed me? I felt resentment; horrid,
undutiful resentment, at being treated in this cruel way. My
fists clinched themselves in my lap, my face felt as hot as fire.
Instead of asking my father to excuse me, I said: "I can't do
it." He was astounded, as well he might be. I went on from bad to
worse. I said: "I won't do it."

He stooped over me; he whispered: "I am going to ask you
something; I insist on your answering, Yes or No." He raised his
voice, and drew himself back so that they could all see me.

"Have you been taught like your sister?" he asked. "Has the
catechism that has been her religious lesson, for all her life,
been your religious lesson, for all your life, too?"

I said: "Yes"--and I was in such a rage that I said it out loud.
If Philip had handed me his cane, and had advised me to give the
young hussies who were answerable for this dreadful state of
things a good beating, I believe I should have done it. Papa
turned his back on me and offered the girls a last chance: "Do
you feel sorry for what you have done? Do you ask to be
forgiven?"

Neither the one nor the other answered him. He called across the
room to the teachers: "Those two pupils are expelled the school."

Both the women looked horrified. The elder of the two approached
him, and tried to plead for a milder sentence. He answered in one
stern w ord: "Silence!"--and left the schoolroom, without even a
passing bow to Philip. And this, after he had cordially shaken
hands with my poor dear, not half an hour before.

I ought to have made affectionate allowance for his nervous
miseries; I ought to have run after him, and begged his pardon.
There must be something wrong, I am afraid, in girls loving
anybody but their fathers. When Helena led the way out by another
door, I ran after Philip; and I asked _him_ to forgive me.

I don't know what I said; it was all confusion. The fear of
having forfeited his fondness must, I suppose, have shaken my
mind. I remember entreating Helena to say a kind word for me. She
was so clever, she had behaved so well, she had deserved that
Philip should listen to her. "Oh," I cried out to him
desperately, "what must you think of me?"

"I will tell you what I think of you," he said. "It is your
father who is in fault, Eunice--not you. Nothing could have been
in worse taste than his management of that trumpery affair in the
schoolroom; it was a complete mistake from beginning to end. Make
your mind easy; I don't blame You."

"Are you, really and truly, as fond of me as ever?"

"Yes, to be sure!"

Helena seemed to be hardly as much interested in this happy
ending of my anxieties as I might have anticipated. She walked on
by herself. Perhaps she was thinking of poor papa's strange
outbreak of excitement, and grieving over it.

We had only a little way to walk, before we passed the door of
Philip's hotel. He had not yet received the expected letter from
his father-- the cruel letter which might recall him to Ireland.
It was then the hour of delivery by our second post; he went to
look at the letter-rack in the hall. Helena saw that I was
anxious. She was as kind again as ever; she consented to wait
with me for Philip, at the door.

He came out to us with an open letter in his hand.

"From my father, at last," he said--and gave me the letter to
read. It only contained these few lines:

"Do not be alarmed, my dear boy, at the change for the worse in
my handwriting. I am suffering for my devotion to the studious
habits of a lifetime: my right hand is attacked by the malady
called Writer's Cramp. The doctor here can do nothing. He tells
me of some foreign woman, mentioned in his newspaper, who cures
nervous derangements of all kinds by hand-rubbing, and who is
coming to London. When you next hear from me, I may be in London
too." --There the letter ended.

Of course I knew who the foreign woman, mentioned in the
newspaper, was.

But what does Miss Jillgall's friend matter to me? The one
important thing is, that Philip has not been called back to
Ireland. Here is a fortunate circumstance, which perhaps means
more good luck. I may be Mrs. Philip Dunboyne before the year is
out.


CHAPTER XXV.

HELENA'S DIARY.


THEY all notice at home that I am looking worn and haggard. That
hideous old maid, Miss Jillgall, had her malicious welcome ready
for me when we met at breakfast this morning: "Dear Helena, what
has become of your beauty? One would think you had left it in
your room!" Poor deluded Eunice showed her sisterly sympathy:
"Don't joke about it, Selina: can't you see that Helena is ill?"

I _have_ been ill; ill of my own wickedness.

But the recovery to my tranquillity will bring with it the
recovery of my good looks. My fatal passion for Philip promises
to be the utter destruction of everything that is good in me.
Well! what is good in me may not be worth keeping. There is a
fate in these things. If I am destined to rob Eunice of the one
dear object of her love and hope--how can I resist? The one kind
thing I can do is to keep her in ignorance of what is coming, by
acts of affectionate deceit.

Besides, if she suffers, I suffer too. In the length and breadth
of England, I doubt if there is a much more wicked young woman to
be found than myself. Is it nothing to feel that, and to endure
it as I do?

Upon my word, there is no excuse for me!

Is this sheer impudence? No; it is the bent of my nature. I have
a tendency to self-examination, accompanied by one merit--I don't
spare myself.

There are excuses for Eunice. She lives in a fools' paradise; and
she sees in her lover a radiant creature, shining in the halo
thrown over him by her own self-delusion, Nothing of this sort is
to be said for me. I see Philip as he is. My penetration looks
into the lowest depths of his character--when I am not in his
company. There seems to be a foundation of good, somewhere in his
nature. He despises and hates himself (he has confessed it to
me), when Eunice is with him--still believing in her false
sweetheart. But how long do these better influences last? I have
only to show myself, in my sister's absence, and Philip is mine
body and soul. His vanity and his weakness take possession of him
the moment he sees my face. He is one of those men--even in my
little experience I have met with them--who are born to be led by
women. If Eunice had possessed my strength of character, he would
have been true to her for life.

Ought I not, in justice to myself, to have lifted my heart high
above the reach of such a creature as this? Certainly I ought! I
know it, I feel it. And yet, there is some fascination in having
him which I am absolutely unable to resist.

What, I ask myself, has fed the new flame which is burning in me?
Did it begin with gratified pride? I might well feel proud when I
found myself admired by a man of his beauty, set off by such
manners and such accomplishments as his. Or, has the growth of
this masterful feeling been encouraged by the envy and jealousy
stirred in me, when I found Eunice (my inferior in every respect)
distinguished by the devotion of a handsome lover, and having a
brilliant marriage in view--while I was left neglected, with no
prospect of changing my title from Miss to Mrs.? Vain inquiries!
My wicked heart seems to have secrets of its own, and to keep
them a mystery to me.

What has become of my excellent education? I don't care to
inquire; I have got beyond the reach of good books and religious
examples. Among my other blamable actions there may now be
reckoned disobedience to my father. I have been reading novels in
secret.

At first I tried some of the famous English works, published at a
price within the reach of small purses. Very well written, no
doubt--but with one unpardonable drawback, so far as I am
concerned. Our celebrated native authors address themselves to
good people, or to penitent people who want to be made good; not
to wicked readers like me.

Arriving at this conclusion, I tried another experiment. In a
small bookseller's shop I discovered some cheap translations of
French novels. Here, I found what I wanted--sympathy with sin.
Here, there was opened to me a new world inhabited entirely by
unrepentant people; the magnificent women diabolically beautiful;
the satanic men dead to every sense of virtue, and alive--perhaps
rather dirtily alive--to the splendid fascinations of crime. I
know now that Love is above everything but itself. Love is the
one law that we are bound to obey. How deep! how consoling! how
admirably true! The novelists of England have reason indeed to
hide their heads before the novelists of France. All that I have
felt, and have written here, is inspired by these wonderful
authors.


I have relieved my mind, and may now return to the business of my
diary--the record of domestic events.

An overwhelming disappointment has fallen on Eunice. Our
dinner-party has been put off.

The state of father's health is answerable for this change in our
arrangements That wretched scene at the school, complicated by my
sister's undutiful behavior at the time, so seriously excited him
that he passed a sleepless night, and kept his bedroom throughout
the day. Eunice's total want of discretion added, no doubt, to
his sufferings: she rudely intruded on him to express her regret
and to ask his pardon. Having carried her point, she was at
leisure to come to me, and to ask (how amazingly simple of her!)
what she and Philip were to do next.

"We had arranged it all so nicely," the poor wretch began.
"Philip was to have been so clever and agreeable
 at dinner, and was to have chosen his time so very discreetly,
that papa would have been ready to listen to anything he said.
Oh, we should have succeeded; I haven't a doubt of it! Our only
hope, Helena, is in you. What are we to do now?"

"Wait," I answered.

"Wait?" she repeated, hotly. "Is my heart to be broken? and, what
is more cruel still, is Philip to be disappointed? I expected
something more sensible, my dear, from you. What possible reason
can there be for waiting?"

The reason--if I could only have mentioned it--was beyond
dispute. I wanted time to quiet Philip's uneasy conscience, and
to harden his weak mind against outbursts of violence, on
Eunice's part, which would certainly exhibit themselves when she
found that she had lost her lover, and lost him to me. In the
meanwhile, I had to produce my reason for advising her to wait.
It was easily done. I reminded her of the irritable condition of
our father's nerves, and gave it as my opinion that he would
certainly say No, if she was unwise enough to excite him on the
subject of Philip, in his present frame of mind.

These unanswerable considerations seemed to produce the right
effect on her. "I suppose you know best," was all she said. And
then she left me.

I let her go without feeling any distrust of this act of
submission on her part; it was such a common experience, in my
life, to find my sister guiding herself by my advice. But
experience is not always to be trusted. Events soon showed that I
had failed to estimate Eunice's resources of obstinacy and
cunning at their true value.

Half an hour later I heard the street door closed, and looked out
of the window. Miss Jillgall was leaving the house; no one was
with her. My dislike of this person led me astray once more. I
ought to have suspected her of being bent on some mischievous
errand, and to have devised some means of putting my suspicions
to the test. I did nothing of the kind. In the moment when I
turned my head away from the window, Miss Jillgall was a person
forgotten--and I was a person who had made a serious mistake.


CHAPTER XXVI.

HELENA'S DIARY.



THE event of to-day began with the delivery of a message
summoning me to my father's study. He had decided--too hastily,
as I feared--that he was sufficiently recovered to resume his
usual employments. I was writing to his dictation, when we were
interrupted. Maria announced a visit from Mr. Dunboyne.

Hitherto Philip had been content to send one of the servants of
the hotel to make inquiry after Mr. Gracedieu's health. Why had
he now called personally? Noticing that father seemed to be
annoyed, I tried to make an opportunity of receiving Philip
myself. "Let me see him," I suggested; "I can easily say you are
engaged."

Very unwillingly, as it was easy to see, my father declined to
allow this. "Mr. Dunboyne's visit pays me a compliment," he said;
"and I must receive him." I made a show of leaving the room, and
was called back to my chair. "This is not a private interview,
Helena; stay where you are."

Philip came in--handsomer than ever, beautifully dressed--and
paid his respects to my father with his customary grace. He was
too well-bred to allow any visible signs of embarrassment to
escape him. But when he shook hands with me, I felt a little
trembling in his fingers, through the delicate gloves which
fitted him like a second skin. Was it the true object of his
visit to try the experiment designed by Eunice and himself, and
deferred by the postponement of our dinner-party? Impossible
surely that my sister could have practiced on his weakness, and
persuaded him to return to his first love! I waited, in
breathless interest, for his next words. They were not worth
listening to. Oh, the poor commonplace creature!

"I am glad, Mr. Gracedieu, to see that you are well enough to be
in your study again," he said. The writing materials on the table
attracted his attention. "Am I one of the idle people," he asked,
with his charming smile, "who are always interrupting useful
employment?"

He spoke to my father, and he was answered by my father. Not once
had he addressed a word to me--no, not even when we shook hands.
I was angry enough to force him into taking some notice of me,
and to make an attempt to confuse him at the same time.

"Have you seen my sister?" I asked.

"No."

It was the shortest reply that he could choose. Having flung it
at me, he still persisted in looking at my father and speaking to
my father: "Do you think of trying change of air, Mr. Gracedieu,
when you feel strong enough to travel?"

"My duties keep me here," father answered; "and I cannot honestly
say that I enjoy traveling. I dislike manners and customs that
are strange to me; I don't find that hotels reward me for giving
up the comforts of my own house. How do you find the hotel here?"

"I submit to the hotel, sir. They are sad savages in the kitchen;
they put mushroom ketchup into their soup, and mustard and
cayenne pepper into their salads. I am half-starved at
dinner-time, but I don't complain."

Every word he said was an offense to me. With or without reason,
I attacked him again.

"I have heard you acknowledge that the landlord and landlady are
very obliging people," I said. "Why don't you ask them to let you
make your own soup and mix your own salad?"

I wondered whether I should succeed in attracting his notice,
after this. Even in these private pages, my self-esteem finds it
hard to confess what happened. I succeeded in reminding Philip
that he had his reasons for requesting me to leave the room.

"Will you excuse me, Miss Helena," he said, "if I ask leave to
speak to Mr. Gracedieu in private?"

The right thing for me to do was, let me hope, the thing that I
did. I rose, and waited to see if my father would interfere. He
looked at Philip with suspicion in his face, as well as surprise.
"May I ask," he said, coldly, "what is the object of the
interview?"

"Certainly," Philip answered, "when we are alone." This cool
reply placed my father between two alternatives; he must either
give way, or be guilty of an act of rudeness to a guest in his
own house. The choice reserved for me was narrower still--I had
to decide between being told to go, or going of my own accord. Of
course, I left them together.

The door which communicated with the next room was pulled to, but
not closed. On the other side of it, I found Eunice.

"Listening!" I said, in a whisper.

"Yes," she whispered back. "You listen, too!"

I was so indignant with Philip, and so seriously interested in
what was going on in the study, that I yielded to temptation. We
both degraded ourselves. We both listened.

Eunice's base lover spoke first. Judging by the change in his
voice, he must have seen something in my father's face that
daunted him. Eunice heard it, too. "He's getting nervous," she
whispered; "he'll forget to say the right thing at the right
time."

"Mr. Gracedieu," Philip began, "I wish to speak to you--"

Father interrupted him: "We are alone now, Mr. Dunboyne. I want
to know why you consult me in private?"

"I am anxious to consult you, sir, on a subject--"

"On what subject? Any religious difficulty?"

"No."

"Anything I can do for you in the town?"

"Not at all. If you will only allow me--"

"I am still waiting, sir, to know what it is about."

Philip's voice suddenly became an angry voice. "Once for all, Mr.
Gracedieu," he said, "will you let me speak? It's about your
daughter--"

"No more of it, Mr. Dunboyne!" (My father was now as loud as
Philip.) "I don't desire to hold a private conversation with you
on the subject of my daughter."

"If you have any personal objection to me, sir, be so good as to
state it plainly."

"You have no right to ask me to do that."

"You refuse to do it?"

"Positively."

"You are not very civil, Mr. Gracedieu."

"If I speak without ceremony, Mr. Dunboyne, you have yourself to
thank for it."

Philip replied to this in a tone of savage irony. "You are a
minister of religion, and you are an old man. Two privileges--and
you presume on them both. Good-morning."

I drew back into a corner, just in time to escape discovery in
the character of a listener. Eunice never moved. When Philip
dashed int o the room, banging the door after him, she threw
herself impulsively on his breast: "Oh, Philip! Philip! what have
you done? Why didn't you keep your temper?"

"Did you hear what your father said to me?" he asked.

"Yes, dear; but you ought to have controlled yourself--you ought,
indeed, for my sake."

Her arms were still round him. It struck me that he felt her
influence. "If you wish me to recover myself," he said, gently,
"you had better let me go."

"Oh, how cruel, Philip, to leave me when I am so wretched! Why do
you want to go?"

"You told me just now what I ought to do," he answered, still
restraining himself. "If I am to get the better of my temper, I
must be left alone."

"I never said anything about your temper, darling."

"Didn't you tell me to control myself?"

"Oh, yes! Go back to papa. and beg him to forgive you."

"I'll see him damned first!"

If ever a stupid girl deserved such an answer as this, the girl
was my sister. I had hitherto (with some difficulty) refrained
from interfering. But when Eunice tried to follow Philip out of
the house, I could hesitate no longer; I held her back. "You
fool," I said; "haven't you made mischief enough already?"

"What am I to do?" she burst out, helplessly.

"Do what I told you to do yesterday--wait."

Before she could reply, or I could say anything more, the door
that led to the landing was opened softly and slyly, and Miss
Jillgall peeped in. Eunice instantly left me, and ran to the
meddling old maid. They whispered to each other. Miss Jillgall's
skinny arm encircled my sister's waist; they disappeared
together.

I was only too glad to get rid of them both, and to take the
opportunity of writing to Philip. I insisted on an explanation of
his conduct while I was in the study--to be given within an
hour's time, at a place which I appointed. "You are not to
attempt to justify yourself in writing," I added in conclusion.
"Let your reply merely inform me if you can keep the appointment.
The rest, when we meet."

Maria took the letter to the hotel, with instructions to wait.

Philip's reply reached me without delay. It pledged him to
justify himself as I had desired, and to keep the appointment. My
own belief is that the event of to-day will decide his future and
mine.


CHAPTER XXVII.

EUNICE'S DIARY.


INDEED, I am a most unfortunate creature; everything turns out
badly with me. My good, true friend, my dear Selina, has become
the object of a hateful doubt in my secret mind. I am afraid she
is keeping something from me.

Talking with her about my troubles, I heard for the first time
that she had written again to Mrs. Tenbruggen. The object of her
letter was to tell her friend of my engagement to young Mr.
Dunboyne. I asked her why she had done this. The answer informed
me that there was no knowing, in the present state of my affairs,
how soon I might not want the help of a clever woman. I ought, I
suppose, to have been satisfied with this. But there seemed to be
something not fully explained yet.

Then again, after telling Selina what I heard in the study, and
how roughly Philip had spoken to me afterward, I asked her what
she thought of it. She made an incomprehensible reply: "My sweet
child, I mustn't think of it--I am too fond of you."

It was impossible to make her explain what this meant. She began
to talk of Philip; assuring me (which was quite needless) that
she had done her best to fortify and encourage him, before he
called on papa. When I asked her to help me in another way--that
is to say, when I wanted to find out where Philip was at that
moment--she had no advice to give me. I told her that I should
not enjoy a moment's ease of mind until I and my dear one were
reconciled. She only shook her head and declared that she was
sorry for me. When I hit on the idea of ringing for Maria, this
little woman, so bright, and quick and eager to help me at other
times, said "I leave it to you, dear," and turned to the piano
(close to which I was sitting), and played softly and badly
stupid little tunes.

"Maria, did you open the door for Mr. Dunboyne when he went away
just now?"

"No, miss."

Nothing but ill-luck for me! If I had been left to my own
devices, I should now have let the housemaid go. But Selina
contrived to give me a hint, on a strange plan of her own. Still
at the piano, she began to confuse talking to herself with
playing to herself. The notes went _tinkle, tinkle_--and the
tongue mixed up words with the notes in this way: "Perhaps they
have been talking in the kitchen about Philip?"

The suggestion was not lost on me. I said to Maria--who was
standing at the other end of the room, near the door--" Did you
happen to hear which way Mr. Dunboyne went when he left us?"

"I know where he was, miss, half an hour ago."

"Where was he?"

"At the hotel."

Selina went on with her hints in the same way as before. "How
does she know--ah, how does she know?" was the vocal part of the
performance this time. My clever inquiries followed the vocal
part as before:

"How do you know that Mr. Dunboyne was at the hotel?"

"I was sent there with a letter for him, and waited for the
answer."

There was no suggestion required this time. The one possible
question was: "Who sent you?"

Maria replied, after first reserving a condition: "You won't tell
upon me, miss?"

I promised not to tell. Selina suddenly left off playing.

"Well," I repeated, "who sent you?"

"Miss Helena."

Selina looked round at me. Her little eyes seemed to have
suddenly become big, they stared me so strangely in the face. I
don't know whether she was in a state of fright or of wonder. As
for myself, I simply lost the use of my tongue. Maria, having no
more questions to answer, discreetly left us together.

Why should Helena write to Philip at all--and especially without
mentioning it to me? Here was a riddle which was more than I
could guess. I asked Selina to help me. She might at least have
tried, I thought; but she looked uneasy, and made excuses.

I said: "Suppose I go to Helena, and ask her why she wrote to
Philip?" And Selina said: "Suppose you do, dear."

I rang for Maria once more: "Do you know where my sister is?"

"Just gone out, miss."

There was no help for it but to wait till she came back, and to
get through the time in the interval as I best might. But for one
circumstance, I might not have known what to do. The truth is,
there was a feeling of shame in me when I remembered having
listened at the study door. Curious notions come into one's
head--one doesn't know how or why. It struck me that I might make
a kind of atonement for having been mean enough to listen, if I
went to papa, and offered to keep him company in his solitude. If
we fell into pleasant talk, I had a sly idea of my own--I meant
to put in a good word for poor Philip.

When I confided my design to Selina, she shut up the piano and
ran across the room to me. But somehow she was not like her old
self again, yet.

"You good little soul, you are always right. Look at me again,
Euneece. Are you beginning to doubt me? Oh, my darling, don't do
that! It isn't using me fairly. I can't bear it--I can't bear
it!"

I took her hand; I was on the point of speaking to her with the
kindness she deserved from me. On a sudden she snatched her hand
away and ran back to the piano. When she was seated on the
music-stool, her face was hidden from me. At that moment she
broke into a strange cry--it began like a laugh, and it ended
like a sob.

"Go away to papa! Don't mind me--I'm a creature of impulse--ha!
ha! ha! a little hysterical--the state of the weather--I get rid
of these weaknesses, my dear, by singing to myself. I have a
favorite song: 'My heart is light, my will is free.'--Go away!
oh, for God's sake, go away!"

I had heard of hysterics, of course; knowing nothing about them,
however, by my own experience. What could have happened to
agitate her in this extraordinary manner?

Had Helena's letter anything to do with it? Was my sister
indignant with Philip for swearing in my presence; and had she
written him an angry letter, in her zeal on my behalf? But Selina
could not possibly have seen the letter-- and Helena (who is
often hard on me when I do stupid th ings) showed little
indulgence for me, when I was so unfortunate as to irritate
Philip. I gave up the hopeless attempt to get at the truth by
guessing, and went away to forget my troubles, if I could, in my
father's society.

After knocking twice at the door of the study, and receiving no
reply, I ventured to look in.

The sofa in this room stood opposite the door. Papa was resting
on it, but not in comfort. There were twitching movements in his
feet, and he shifted his arms this way and that as if no restful
posture could he found for them. But what frightened me was this.
His eyes, staring straight at the door by which I had gone in,
had an inquiring expression, as if he actually did not know me! I
stood midway between the door and the sofa, doubtful about going
nearer to him.

He said: "Who is it?" This to me--to his own daughter. He said:
"What do you want?"

I really could _not_ bear it. I went up to him. I said: "Papa,
have you forgotten Eunice?"

My name seemed (if one may say such a thing) to bring him to
himself again. He sat upon the sofa--and laughed as he answered
me.

"My dear child, what delusion has got into that pretty little
head of yours? Fancy her thinking that I had forgotten my own
daughter! I was lost in thought, Eunice. For the moment, I was
what they call an absent man. Did I ever tell you the story of
the absent man? He went to call upon some acquaintance of his;
and when the servant said, 'What name, sir?' He couldn't answer.
He was obliged to confess that he had forgotten his own name. The
servant said, 'That's very strange.' The absent man at once
recovered himself. 'That's it!' he said: 'my name is Strange.'
Droll, isn't it? If I had been calling on a friend to-day, I
daresay _I_ might have forgotten my name, too. Much to think of,
Eunice--too much to think of."

Leaving the sofa with a sigh. as if he was tired of it, he began
walking up and down. He seemed to be still in good spirits.
"Well, my dear," he said, "what can I do for you?"

"I came here, papa to see if there was anything I could do for
You."

He looked at some sheets of paper, strung together, and laid on
the table. They were covered with writing (from his dictation) in
my sister's hand. "I ought to get on with my work," he said.
"Where is Helena?"

I told him that she had gone out, and begged leave to try what I
could do to supply her place.

The request seemed to please him; but he wanted time to think. I
waited; noticing that his face grew gradually worried and
anxious. There came a vacant look into his eyes which it grieved
me to see; he appeared to have quite lost himself again. "Read
the last page," he said, pointing to the manuscript on the table;
"I don't remember where I left off."

I turned to the last page. As well as I could tell, it related to
some publication, which he was recommending to religious persons
of our way of thinking.

Before I had read half-way through it, he began to dictate,
speaking so rapidly that my pen was not always able to follow
him. My handwriting is as bad as bad can be when I am hurried. To
make matters worse still, I was confused. What he was now saying
seemed to have nothing to do with what I had been reading.

Let me try if I can call to mind the substance of it.

He began in the most strangely sudden way by asking: "Why should
there be any fear of discovery, when every possible care had been
taken to prevent it? The danger from unexpected events was far
more disquieting. A man might find himself bound in honor to
disclose what it had been the chief anxiety of his life to
conceal. For example, could he let an innocent person be the
victim of deliberate suppression of the truth--no matter how
justifiable that suppression might appear to be? On the other
hand, dreadful consequences might follow an honorable confession.
There might be a cruel sacrifice of tender affection; there might
be a shocking betrayal of innocent hope and trust."

I remember those last words, just as he dictated them, because he
suddenly stopped there; looking, poor dear, distressed and
confused. He put his hand to his head, and went back to the sofa.

"I'm tired," he said. "Wait for me while I rest."

In a few minutes he fell asleep. It was a deep repose that came
to him now; and, though I don't think it lasted much longer than
half an hour, it produced a wonderful change in him for the
better when he woke. He spoke quietly and kindly; and when he
returned to me at the table and looked at the page on which I had
been writing, he smiled.

"Oh, my dear, what bad writing! I declare I can't read what I
myself told you to write. No! no! don't be downhearted about it.
You are not used to writing from dictation; and I daresay I have
been too quick for you." He kissed me and encouraged me. "You
know how fond I am of my little girl," he said; "I am afraid I
like my Eunice just the least in the world more than I like my
Helena. Ah, you are beginning to look a little happier now!"

He had filled me with such confidence and such pleasure that I
could not help thinking of my sweetheart. Oh dear, when shall I
learn to be distrustful of my own feelings? The temptation to say
a good word for Philip quite mastered any little discretion that
I possessed.

I said to papa: "If you knew how to make me happier than I have
ever been in all my life before, would you do it?"

"Of course I would."

"Then send for Philip, dear, and be a little kinder to him, this
time."

His pale face turned red with anger; he pushed me away from him.

"That man again!" he burst out. "Am I never to hear the last of
him? Go away, Eunice. You are of no use here." He took up my
unfortunate page of writing and ridiculed it with a bitter laugh.
"What is this fit for?" He crumpled it up in his hand and tossed
it into the fire.

I ran out of the room in such a state of mortification that I
hardly knew what I was about. If some hard-hearted person had
come to me with a cup of poison, and had said: "Eunice, you are
not fit to live any longer; take this," I do believe I should
have taken it. If I thought of anything, I thought of going back
to Selina. My ill luck still pursued me; she had disappeared. I
looked about in a helpless way, completely at a loss what to do
next--so stupefied, I may even say, that it was some time before
I noticed a little three-cornered note on the table by which I
was standing. The note was addressed to me:


"EVER-DEAREST EUNEECE--I have tried to make myself useful to you,
and have failed. But how can I see the sad sight of your
wretchedness, and not feel the impulse to try again? I have gone
to the hotel to find Philip, and to bring him back to you a
penitent and faithful man. Wait for me, and hope for great
things. A. hundred thousand kisses to my sweet Euneece.

"S. J."


Wait for her, after reading that note! How could she expect it? I
had only to follow her, and to find Philip. In another minute, I
was on my way to the hotel.


CHAPTER XXVIII.


HELENA'S DIARY.


LOOKING at the last entry in my Journal, I see myself
anticipating that the event of to-day will decide Philip's future
and mine. This has proved prophetic. All further concealment is
now at an end.

Forced to it by fate, or helped to it by chance, Eunice has made
the discovery of her lover's infidelity. "In all human
probability" (as my father says in his sermons), we two sisters
are enemies for life.


I am not suspected, as Eunice is, of making appointments with a
sweetheart. So I am free to go out alone, and to go where I
please. Philip and I were punctual to our appointment this
afternoon.

Our place of meeting was in a secluded corner of the town park.
We found a rustic seat in our retirement, set up (one would
suppose) as a concession to the taste of visitors who are fond of
solitude. The view in front of us was bounded by the park wall
and railings, and our seat was prettily approached on one side by
a plantation of young trees. No entrance gate was near; no
carriage road crossed the grass. A more safe and more solitary
nook for conversation, between two persons desiring to be alone,
it would be hard to find in most public parks. Lovers are said to
know it well, and to be especially fon d of it toward evening. We
were there in broad daylight, and we had the seat to ourselves.

My memory of what passed between us is, in some degree, disturbed
by the formidable interruption which brought our talk to an end.

But among other things, I remember that I showed him no mercy at
the outset. At one time I was indignant; at another I was
scornful. I declared, in regard to my object in meeting him, that
I had changed my mind, And had decided to shorten a disagreeable
interview by waiving my right to an explanation, and bidding him
farewell. Eunice, as I pointed out, had the first claim to him;
Eunice was much more likely to suit him, as a companion for life,
than I was. "In short," I said, in conclusion, "my inclination
for once takes sides with my duty, and leaves my sister in
undisturbed possession of young Mr. Dunboyne." With this
satirical explanation, I rose to say good-by.

I had merely intended to irritate him. He showed a superiority to
anger for which I was not prepared.

"Be so kind as to sit down again," he said quietly.

He took my letter from his pocket, and pointed to that part of it
which alluded to his conduct, when we had met in my father 's
study.

"You have offered me the opportunity of saying a word in my own
defense," he went on. "I prize that privilege far too highly to
consent to your withdrawing it, merely because you have changed
your mind. Let me at least tell you what my errand was, when I
called on your father. Loving you, and you only, I had forced
myself to make a last effort to be true to your sister. Remember
that, Helena, and then say--is it wonderful if I was beside
myself, when I found You in the study?"

"When you tell me you were beside yourself," I said, "do you
mean, ashamed of yourself?"

That touched him. "I mean nothing of the kind," he burst out.
"After the hell on earth in which I have been living between you
two sisters, a man hasn't virtue enough left in him to be
ashamed. He's half mad--that's what he is. Look at my position! I
had made up my mind never to see you again; I had made up my mind
(if I married Eunice) to rid myself of my own miserable life when
I could endure it no longer. In that state of feeling, when my
sense of duty depended on my speaking with Mr. Gracedieu alone,
whose was the first face I saw when I entered the room? If I had
dared to look at you, or to speak to you, what do you think would
have become of my resolution to sacrifice myself?"

"What has become of it now?" I asked.

"Tell me first if I am forgiven," he said-- "and you shall know."

"Do you deserve to be forgiven?"

It has been discovered by wiser heads than mine that weak people
are always in extremes. So far, I had seen Philip in the vain and
violent extreme. He now shifted suddenly to the sad and
submissive extreme. When I asked him if he deserved to be
forgiven, he made the humblest of all replies--he sighed and said
nothing.

"If I did my duty to my sister," I reminded him, "I should refuse
to forgive you, and send you back to Eunice."

"Your father's language and your father's conduct," he answered,
"have released me from that entanglement. I can never go back to
Eunice. If you refuse to forgive me, neither you nor she will see
anything more of Philip Dunboyne; I promise you that. Are you
satisfied now?"

After holding out against him resolutely, I felt myself beginning
to yield. When a man has once taken their fancy, what helplessly
weak creatures women are! I saw through his vacillating
weakness--and yet I trusted him, with both eyes open. My
looking-glass is opposite to me while I write. It shows me a
contemptible Helena. I lied, and said I was satisfied--to please
_him._

"Am I forgiven?" he asked.

It is absurd to put it on record. Of course, I forgave him. What
a good Christian I am, after all!

He took my willing hand. "My lovely darling," he said, "our
marriage rests with you. Whether your father approves of it or
not, say the word; claim me, and I am yours for life."

I must have been infatuated by his voice and his look; my heart
must have been burning under the pressure of his hand on mine.
Was it my modesty or my self-control that deserted me? I let him
take me in his arms. Again, and again, and again I kissed him. We
were deaf to what we ought to have heard; we were blind to what
we ought to have seen. Before we were conscious of a movement
among the trees, we were discovered. My sister flew at me like a
wild animal. Her furious hands fastened themselves on my throat.
Philip started to his feet. When he touched her, in the act of
forcing her back from me, Eunice's raging strength became utter
weakness in an instant. Her arms fell helpless at her sides--her
head drooped--she looked at him in silence which was dreadful, at
such a moment as that. He shrank from the unendurable reproach in
those tearless eyes. Meanly, he turned away from her. Meanly, I
followed him. Looking back for an instant, I saw her step
forward; perhaps to stop him, perhaps to speak to him. The effort
was too much for her strength; she staggered back against the
trunk of a tree. Like strangers, walking separate one from the
other, we left her to her companion--the hideous traitress who
was my enemy and her friend.


CHAPTER XXIX.

HELENA'S DIARY.


ON reaching the street which led to Philip's hotel, we spoke to
each other for the first time.

"What are we to do?" I said.

"Leave this place," he answered.

"Together?" I asked.

"Yes."

To leave us (for a while), after what had happened, might be the
wisest thing which a man, in Philip's critical position, could
do. But if I went with him--unprovided as I was with any friend
of my own sex, whose character and presence might sanction the
step I had taken--I should be lost beyond redemption. Is any man
that ever lived worth that sacrifice? I thought of my father's
house closed to me, and of our friends ashamed of me. I have
owned, in some earlier part of my Journal, that I am not very
patient under domestic cares. But the possibility of Eunice being
appointed housekeeper, with my power, in my place, was more than
I could calmly contemplate. "No," I said to Philip. "Your
absence, at such a time as this, may help us both; but, come what
may of it, I must remain at home."

He yielded, without an attempt to make me alter my mind. There
was a sullen submission in his manner which it was not pleasant
to see. Was he despairing already of himself and of me? Had
Eunice aroused the watchful demons of shame and remorse?

"Perhaps you are right," he said, gloomily. "Good-by."

My anxiety put the all-important question to him without
hesitation.

"Is it good-by forever, Philip?"

His reply instantly relieved me: "God forbid!"

But I wanted more: "You still love me?" I persisted.

"More dearly than ever!"

"And yet you leave me!"

He turned pale. "I leave you because I am afraid."

"Afraid of what?"

"Afraid to face Eunice again."

The only possible way out of our difficulty that I could see, now
occurred to me. "Suppose my sister can be prevailed on to give
you up?" I suggested. "Would you come back to us in that case?"

"Certainly!"

"And you would ask my father to consent to our marriage?"

"On the day of my return, if you like."

"Suppose obstacles get in our way," I said--"suppose time passes
and tries your patience--will you still consider yourself engaged
to me?"

"Engaged to you," he answered, "in spite of obstacles and in
spite of time."

"And while you are away from me," I ventured to add, "we shall
write to each other?"

"Go where I may," he said, "you shall always hear from me."

I could ask no more, and he could concede no more. The impression
evidently left on him by Eunice's terrible outbreak, was far more
serious than I had anticipated. I was myself depressed and ill at
ease. No expressions of tenderness were exchanged between us.
There was something horrible in our barren farewell. We merely
clasped hands, at parting. He went his way--and I went mine.

There are some occasions when women set an example of courage to
men. I was ready to endure whatever might happen to me, when I
got home. What a desperate wretch! some people might say, if they
could look into this di ary!

Maria opened the door; she told me that my sister had already
returned, accompanied by Miss Jillgall. There had been apparently
some difference of opinion between them, before they entered the
house. Eunice had attempted to go on to some other place; and
Miss Jillgall had remonstrated. Maria had heard her say: "No, you
would degrade yourself"--and, with that, she had led Eunice
indoors. I understood, of course, that my sister had been
prevented from following Philip to the hotel. There was probably
a serious quarrel in store for me. I went straight to the
bedroom, expecting to find Eunice there, and prepared to brave
the storm that might burst on me. There was a woman at Eunice's
end of the room, removing dresses from the wardrobe. I could only
see her back, but it was impossible to mistake _that_
figure--Miss Jillgall.

She laid the dresses on Eunice's bed, without taking the
slightest notice of me. In significant silence I pointed to the
door. She went on as coolly with her occupation as if the room
had been, not mine but hers; I stepped up to her, and spoke
plainly.

"You oblige me to remind you," I said, "that you are not in your
own room." There, I waited a little, and found that I had
produced no effect. "With every disposition," I resumed, "to make
allowance for the disagreeable peculiarities of your character, I
cannot consent to overlook an act of intrusion, committed by a
Spy. Now, do you understand me?"

She looked round her. "I see no third person here," she said.
"May I ask if you mean me?"

"I mean you."

"Will you be so good, Miss Helena, as to explain yourself?"

Moderation of language would have been thrown away on this woman.
"You followed me to the park," I said. "It was you who found me
with Mr. Dunboyne, and betrayed me to my sister. You are a Spy,
and you know it. At this very moment you daren't look me in the
face."

Her insolence forced its way out of her at last. Let me record
it--and repay it, when the time comes.

"Quite true," she replied. "If I ventured to look you in the
face, I am afraid I might forget myself. I have always been
brought up like a lady, and I wish to show it even in the company
of such a wretch as you are. There is not one word of truth in
what you have said of me. I went to the hotel to find Mr.
Dunboyne. Ah, you may sneer! I haven't got your good looks--and a
vile use you have made of them. My object was to recall that base
young man to his duty to my dear charming injured Euneece. The
hotel servant told me that Mr. Dunboyne had gone out. Oh, I had
the means of persuasion in my pocket! The man directed me to the
park, as he had already directed Mr. Dunboyne. It was only when I
had found the place, that I heard some one behind me. Poor
innocent Euneece had followed me to the hotel, and had got her
directions, as I had got mine. God knows how hard I tried to
persuade her to go back, and how horribly frightened I was--No! I
won't distress myself by saying a word more. It would be too
humiliating to let _you_ see an honest woman in tears. Your
sister has a spirit of her own, thank God! She won't inhabit the
same room with you; she never desires to see your false face
again. I take the poor soul's dresses and things away--and as a
religious person I wait, confidently wait, for the judgment that
will fall on you!"

She caught up the dresses all together; some of them were in her
arms, some of them fell on her shoulders, and one of them towered
over her head. Smothered in gowns, she bounced out of the room
like a walking milliner's shop. I have to thank the wretched old
creature for a moment of genuine amusement, at a time of
devouring anxiety. The meanest insect, they say, has its use in
this world--and why not Miss Jillgall?

In half an hour more, an unexpected event raised my spirits. I
heard from Philip.

On his return to the hotel he had found a telegram waiting for
him. Mr. Dunboyne the elder had arrived in London; and Philip had
arranged to join his father by the next train. He sent me the
address, and begged that I would write and tell him my news from
home by the next day's post.

Welcome, thrice welcome, to Mr. Dunboyne the elder! If Philip can
manage, under my advice, to place me favorably in the estimation
of this rich old man, his presence and authority may do for us
what we cannot do for ourselves. Here is surely an influence to
which my father must submit, no matter how unreasonable or how
angry he may be when he hears what has happened. I begin already
to feel hopeful of the future.


CHAPTER XXX.

EUNICE'S DIARY.


THROUGH the day, and through the night, I feel a misery that
never leaves me--I mean the misery of fear.

I am trying to find out some harmless means of employing myself,
which will keep evil remembrances from me. If I don't succeed, my
fear tells me what will happen. I shall be in danger of going
mad.

I dare not confide in any living creature. I don't know what
other persons might think of me, or how soon I might find myself
perhaps in an asylum. In this helpless condition, doubt and
fright seem to be driving me back to my Journal. I wonder whether
I shall find harmless employment here.

I have heard of old people losing their memories. What would I
not give to be old! I remember! oh, how I remember! One day after
another I see Philip, I see Helena, as I first saw them when I
was among the trees in the park. My sweetheart's arms, that once
held me, hold my sister now. She kisses him, kisses him, kisses
him.

Is there no way of making myself see something else? I want to
get back to remembrances that don't burn in my head and tear at
my heart. How is it to be done?

I have tried books--no! I have tried going out to look at the
shops--no! I have tried saying my prayers--no! And now I am
making my last effort; trying my pen. My black letters fall from
it, and take their places on the white paper. Will my black
letters help me? Where can I find something consoling to write
down? Where? Where?

Selina--poor Selina, so fond of me, so sorry for me. When I was
happy, she was happy, too. It was always amusing to hear her
talk. Oh, my memory, be good to me! Save me from Philip and
Helena. I want to remember the pleasant days when my kind little
friend and I used to gossip in the garden.

No: the days in the garden won't come back. What else can I think
of?

. . . . . . .

The recollections that I try to encourage keep away from me. The
other recollections that I dread, come crowding back. Still
Philip! Still Helena!

But Selina mixes herself up with them. Let me try again if I can
think of Selina.

How delightfully good to me and patient with me she was, on our
dismal way home from the park! And how affectionately she excused
herself for not having warned me of it, when she first suspected
that my own sister and my worst enemy were one and the same!

"I know I was wrong, my dear, to let my love and pity close my
lips. But remember how happy you were at the time. The thought of
making you miserable was more than I could endure--I am so fond
of you! Yes; I began to suspect them, on the day when they first
met at the station. And, I am afraid, I thought it just likely
that you might be as cunning as I was, and have noticed them,
too."

Oh, how ignorant she must have been of my true thoughts and
feelings! How strangely people seem to misunderstand their
dearest friends! knowing, as I did, that I could never love any
man but Philip, could I be wicked enough to suppose that Philip
would love any woman but me?

I explained to Selina how he had spoken to me, when we were
walking together on the bank of the river. Shall I ever forget
those exquisite words? "I wish I was a better man, Eunice; I wish
I was good enough to be worthy of you." I asked Selina if she
thought he was deceiving me when he said that. She comforted me
by owning that he must have been in earnest, at the time--and
then she distressed me by giving the reason why.

"My love, you must have innocently said something to him, when
you and he were alone, which touched his conscience (when he
_had_ a conscience), and made him ashamed of himself. Ah, you
were too fond of him to see how he  changed for the worse, when yo
ur vile sister joined you, and took possession of him again. It
made my heart ache to see you so unsuspicious of them. You asked
me, my poor dear, if they had quarreled--you believed they were
tired of walking by the river, when it was you they were tired
of--and you wondered why Helena took him to see the school. My
child! she was the leading spirit at the school, and you were
nobody. Her vanity saw the chance of making him compare you at a
disadvantage with your clever sister. I declare, Euneece, I lose
my head if I only think of it! All the strong points in my
character seem to slip away from me. Would you believe it?--I
have neglected that sweet infant at the cottage; I have even let
Mrs. Molly have her baby back again. If I had the making of the
laws, Philip Dunboyne and Helena Gracedieu should be hanged
together on the same gallows. I see I shock you. Don't let us
talk of it! Oh, don't let us talk of it!"

And here am I writing of it! What I had determined not to do, is
what I have done. Am I losing my senses already? The very names
that I was most anxious to keep out of my memory stare me in the
face in the lines that I have just written. Philip again! Helena
again!

. . . . . . .

Another day, and something new that must and will be remembered,
shrink from it as I may. This afternoon, I met Helena on the
stairs.

She stopped, and eyed me with a wicked smile; she held out her
hand. "We are likely to meet often, while we are in the same
house," she said; "hadn't we better consult appearances, and
pretend to be as fond of each other as ever?"

I took no notice of her hand; I took no notice of her shameless
proposal. She tried again: "After all, it isn't my fault if
Philip likes me better than he likes you. Don't you see that?" I
still refused to speak to her. She still persisted. "How black
you look, Eunice! Are you sorry you didn't kill me, when you had
your hands on my throat?"

I said: "Yes."

She laughed, and left me. I was obliged to sit down on the
stair--I trembled so. My own reply frightened me. I tried to find
out why I had said Yes. I don't remember being conscious of
meaning anything. It was as if somebody else had said Yes--not I.
Perhaps I was provoked, and the word escaped me before I could
stop it. Could I have stopped it? I don't know.

. . . . . . .

Another sleepless night.

Did I pass the miserable hours in writing letters to Philip and
then tearing them up? Or did I only fancy that I wrote to him? I
have just looked at the fireplace. The torn paper in it tells me
that I did write. Why did I destroy my letters? I might have sent
one of them to Philip. After what has happened? Oh, no! no!

Having been many days away from the Girls' Scripture Class, it
seemed to be possible that going back to the school and the
teaching might help me to escape from myself.

Nothing succeeds with me. I found it impossible to instruct the
girls as usual; their stupidity soon reached the limit of my
patience--suffocated me with rage. One of them, a poor, fat,
feeble creature, began to cry when I scolded her. I looked with
envy at the tears rolling over her big round cheeks. If I could
only cry, I might perhaps bear my hard fate with submission.

I walked toward home by a roundabout way; feeling as if want of
sleep was killing me by inches.

In the High Street, I saw Helena; she was posting a letter, and
was not aware that I was near her. Leaving the post-office, she
crossed the street, and narrowly escaped being run over. Suppose
the threatened accident had really taken place--how should I have
felt, if it had ended fatally? What a fool I am to be putting
questions to myself about things that have not happened!

The walking tired me; I went straight home.

Before I could ring the bell, the house door opened, and the
doctor came out. He stopped to speak to me. While I had been away
(he said), something had happened at home (he neither knew nor
wished to know what) which had thrown my father into a state of
violent agitation. The doctor had administered composing
medicine. "My patient is asleep now," he told me; "but remember
what I said to you the last time we met; a longer rest than any
doctor's prescription can give him is what he wants. You are not
looking well yourself, my dear. What is the matter?"

I told him of my wretched restless nights; and asked if I might
take some of the composing medicine which he had given to my
father. He forbade me to touch a drop of it. "What is physic for
your father, you foolish child, is not physic for a young
creature like you," he said. "Count a thousand, if you can't
sleep to-night, or turn your pillow. I wish you pleasant dreams."
He went away, amused at his own humor.

I found Selina waiting to speak with me, on the subject of poor
papa.

She had been startled on hearing his voice, loud in anger. In the
fear that something serious had happened, she left her room to
make inquiries, and saw Helena on the landing of the flight of
stairs beneath, leaving the study. After waiting till my sister
was out of the way, Selina ventured to present herself at the
study door, and to ask if she could be of any use. My father,
walking excitedly up and down the room, declared that both his
daughters had behaved infamously, and that he would not suffer
them to speak to him again until they had come to their senses,
on the subject of Mr. Dunboyne. He would enter into no further
explanation; and he had ordered, rather than requested, Selina to
leave him. Having obeyed, she tried next to find me, and had just
looked into the dining-room to see if I was there, when she was
frightened by the sound of a fall in the room above--that is to
say, in the study. Running upstairs again, she had found him
insensible on the floor and had sent for the doctor.

"And mind this," Selina continued, "the person who has done the
mischief is the person whom I saw leaving the study. What your
unnatural sister said to provoke her father--"

"That your unnatural sister will tell you herself," Helena's
voice added. She had opened the door while we were too much
absorbed in our talk to hear her.

Selina attempted to leave the room. I caught her by the hand, and
held her back. I was afraid of what I might do if she left me by
myself. Never have I felt anything like the rage that tortured
me, when I saw Helena looking at us with the same wicked smile on
her lips that had insulted me when we met on the stairs. Have
_we_ anything to be ashamed of?" I said to Selina. "Stay where
you are."

"You may be of some use, Miss Jillgall, if you stay," my sister
suggested. "Eunice seems to be trembling. Is she angry, or is she
ill?"

The sting of this was in the tone of her voice. It was the
hardest thing I ever had to do in my life--but I did succeed in
controlling myself.

"Go on with what you have to say," I answered, "and don't notice
me."

"You are not very polite, my dear, but I can make allowances. Oh,
come! come! putting up your hands to stop your ears is too
childish. You would do better to express regret for having misled
your father. Yes! you did mislead him. Only a few days since, you
left him to suppose that you were engaged to Philip. It became my
duty, after that, to open his eyes to the truth; and if I
unhappily provoked him, it was your fault. I was strictly careful
in the language I used. I said: 'Dear father, you have been
misinformed on a very serious subject. The only marriage
engagement for which your kind sanction is requested, is _my_
engagement. _I_ have consented to become Mrs. Philip Dunboyne.' "

"Stop!" I said.

"Why am I to stop?"

"Because I have something to say. You and I are looking at each
other. Does my face tell you what is passing in my mind?"

"Your face seems to be paler than usual," she answered--"that's
all."

"No," I said; "that is not all. The devil that possessed me, when
I discovered you with Philip, is not cast out of me yet. Silence
the sneering devil that is in You, or we may both live to regret
it."

Whether I did or did not frighten her, I cannot say. This only I
know--she turned away silently to the door, and went out.

I dropped on the sofa. That horrid hungering for revenge, which I
felt for the firs t time when I knew how Helena had wronged me,
began to degrade and tempt me again. In the effort to get away
from this new evil self of mine, I tried to find sympathy in
Selina, and called to her to come and sit by me. She seemed to be
startled when I looked at her, but she recovered herself, and
came to me, and took my hand.

"I wish I could comfort you!" she said, in her kind simple way.

"Keep my hand in your hand," I told her; "I am drowning in dark
water--and I have nothing to hold by but you."

"Oh, my darling, don't talk in that way!"

"Good Selina! dear Selina! You shall talk to Me. Say something
harmless--tell me a melancholy story--try to make me cry."

My poor little friend looked sadly bewildered.

"I'm more likely to cry myself," she said. "This is so
heart-breaking--I almost wish I was back in the time, before you
came home, the time when your detestable sister first showed how
she hated me. I was happy, meanly happy, in the spiteful
enjoyment of provoking her. Oh, Euneece, I shall never recover my
spirits again! All the pity in the world would not be pity enough
for _you._ So hardly treated! so young! so forlorn! Your good
father too ill to help you; your poor mother--"

I interrupted her; she had interested me in something better than
my own wretched self. I asked directly if she had known my
mother.

"My dear child, I never even saw her!"

"Has my father never spoken to you about her?"

"Only once, when I asked him how long she had been dead. He told
me you lost her while you were an infant, and he told me no more.
I was looking at her portrait in the study, only yesterday. I
think it must be a bad portrait; your mother's face disappoints
me."

I had arrived at the same conclusion years since. But I shrank
from confessing it.

"At any rate," Selina continued, "you are not like her. Nobody
would ever guess that you were the child of that lady, with the
long slanting forehead and the restless look in her eyes."

What Selina had said of me and my mother's portrait, other
friends had said. There was nothing that I know of to interest me
in hearing it repeated--and yet it set me pondering on the want
of resemblance between my mother's face and mine, and wondering
(not for the first time) what sort of woman my mother was. When
my father speaks of her, no words of praise that he can utter
seem to be good enough for her. Oh, me, I wish I was a little
more like my mother!

It began to get dark; Maria brought in the lamp. The sudden
brightness of the flame struck my aching eyes, as if it had been
a blow from a knife. I was obliged to hide my face in my
handkerchief. Compassionate Selina entreated me to go to bed.
"Rest your poor eyes, my child, and your weary head--and try at
least to get some sleep." She found me very docile; I kissed her,
and said good-night. I had my own idea.

When all was quiet in the house, I stole out into the passage and
listened at the door of my father's room.

I heard his regular breathing, and opened the door and went in.
The composing medicine, of which I was in search, was not on the
table by his bedside. I found it in the cupboard--perhaps placed
purposely out of his reach. They say that some physic is poison,
if you take too much of it. The label on the bottle told me what
the dose was. I dropped it into the medicine glass, and swallowed
it, and went back to my father.

Very gently, so as not to wake him, I touched poor papa's
forehead with my lips. "I must have some of your medicine," I
whispered to him; "I want it, dear, as badly as you do."

Then I returned to my own room--and lay down in bed, waiting to
be composed.


CHAPTER XXXI.

EUNICE'S DIARY.


My restless nights are passed in Selina's room.

Her bed remains near the window. My bed has been placed opposite,
near the door. Our night-light is hidden in a corner, so that the
faint glow of it is all that we see. What trifles these are to
write about! But they mix themselves up with what I am determined
to set down in my Journal, and then to close the book for good
and all.

I had not disturbed my little friend's enviable repose, either
when I left our bed-chamber, or when I returned to it. The night
was quiet, and the stars were out. Nothing moved but the
throbbing at my temples. The lights and shadows in our
half-darkened room, which at other times suggest strange
resemblances to my fancy, failed to disturb me now. I was in a
darkness of my own making, having bound a handkerchief, cooled
with water, over my hot eyes. There was nothing to interfere with
the soothing influence of the dose that I had taken, if my
father's medicine would only help me.

I began badly. The clock in the hall struck the quarter past the
hour, the half-past, the three-quarters past, the new hour. Time
was awake--and I was awake with Time.

It was such a trial to my patience that I thought of going back
to my father's room, and taking a second dose of the medicine, no
matter what the risk might be. On attempting to get up, I became
aware of a change in me. There was a dull sensation in my limbs
which seemed to bind them down on the bed. It was the strangest
feeling. My will said, Get up--and my heavy limbs said, No.

I lay quite still, thinking desperate thoughts, and getting
nearer and nearer to the end that I had been dreading for so many
days past. Having been as well educated as most girls, my lessons
in history had made me acquainted with assassination and murder.
Horrors which I had recoiled from reading in past happy days, now
returned to my memory; and, this time, they interested instead of
revolting me. I counted the three first ways of killing as I
happened to remember them, in my books of instruction:--a way by
stabbing; a way by poison; a way in a bed, by suffocation with a
pillow. On that dreadful night, I never once called to mind what
I find myself remembering now--the harmless past time, when our
friends used to say: "Eunice is a good girl; we are all fond of
Eunice." Shall I ever be the same lovable creature again?

While I lay thinking, a strange thing happened. Philip, who had
haunted me for days and nights together, vanished out of my
thoughts. My memory of the love which had begun so brightly, and
had ended so miserably, became a blank. Nothing was left but my
own horrid visions of vengeance and death.

For a while, the strokes of the clock still reached my ears. But
it was an effort to count them; I ended in letting them pass
unheeded. Soon afterward, the round of my thoughts began to
circle slowly and more slowly. The strokes of the clock died out.
The round of my thoughts stopped.

All this time, my eyes were still covered by the handkerchief
which I had laid over them.

The darkness began to weigh on my spirits, and to fill me with
distrust. I found myself suspecting that there was some
change--perhaps an unearthly change--passing over the room. To
remain blindfolded any longer was more than I could endure. I
lifted my hand--without being conscious of the heavy sensation
which, some time before, had laid my limbs helpless on the bed--I
lifted my hand, and drew the handkerchief away from my eyes.

The faint glow of the night-light was extinguished.

But the room was not quite dark. There was a ghastly light
trembling over it; like nothing that I have ever seen by day;
like nothing that I have ever seen by night. I dimly discerned
Selina's bed, and the frame of the window, and the curtains on
either side of it--but not the starlight, and not the shadowy
tops of the trees in the garden.

The light grew fainter and fainter; the objects in the room faded
slowly away. Darkness came.

It may be a saying hard to believe--but, when I declare that I
was not frightened, I am telling the truth. Whether the room was
lighted by awful light, or sunk in awful dark, I was equally
interested in the expectation of what might happen next. I
listened calmly for what I might hear: I waited calmly for what I
might feel.

A touch came first. I feel it creeping on my face--like a little
fluttering breeze. The sensation pleased me for a while. Soon it
grew colder, and colder, and colder, till it froze me.

"Oh, no more!" I cried out. "You are killing me with an icy de
ath!"

The dead-cold touches lingered a moment longer--and left me.

The first sound came.

It was the sound of a whisper on my pillow, close to my ear. My
strange insensibility to fear remained undisturbed. The whisper
was welcome, it kept me company in the dark room.

It said to me: "Do you know who I am?"

I answered: "No."

It said.: "Who have you been thinking of this evening?"

I answered: "My mother."

The whisper said: "I am your mother."

"Oh, mother, command the light to come back! Show yourself to
me!"

"No."

"Why not?"

"My face was hidden when I passed from life to death. My face no
mortal creature may see."

"Oh, mother, touch me! Kiss me!"

"No."

"Why not?"

"My touch is poison. My kiss is death."

The sense of fear began to come to me now. I moved my head away
on the pillow. The whisper followed my movement.

"Leave me," I said. "You are an Evil Spirit."

The whisper answered: "I am your mother."

"You come to tempt me."

"I come to harden your heart. Daughter of mine, whose blood is
cool; daughter of mine, who tamely submits--you have loved. Is it
true?"

"It is true."

"The man you loved has deserted you. Is it true?"

"It is true."

"A woman has lured him away to herself. A woman has had no mercy
on you, or on him. Is it true?"

"It is true."

"If she lives, what crime toward you will she commit next?"

"If she lives, she will marry him."

"Will you let her live?"

"Never."

"Have I hardened your heart against her?"

"Yes."

"Will you kill her?"

"Show me how."

There was a sudden silence. I was still left in the darkness;
feeling nothing, hearing nothing. Even the consciousness that I
was lying on my bed deserted me. I had no idea that I was in the
bedroom; I had no knowledge of where I was.

The ghastly light that I had seen already dawned on me once more.
I was no longer in my bed, no longer in my room, no longer in the
house. Without wonder, without even a feeling of surprise, I
looked round. The place was familiar to me. I was alone in the
Museum of our town.

The light flowed along in front of me. I followed, from room to
room in the Museum, where the light led.

First, through the picture-gallery, hung with the works of modern
masters; then, through the room filled with specimens of stuffed
animals. The lion and the tiger, the vulture of the Alps and the
great albatross, looked like living creatures threatening me, in
the supernatural light. I entered the third room, devoted to the
exhibition of ancient armor, and the weapons of all nations. Here
the light rose higher, and, leaving me in darkness where I stood,
showed a collection of swords, daggers, and knives arranged on
the wall in imitation of the form of a star.

The whisper sounded again, close at my ear. It echoed my own
thought, when I called to mind the ways of killing which history
had taught me. It said: "Kill her with the knife."

No. My heart failed me when I thought of the blood. I hid the
dreadful weapons from my view. I cried out: "Let me go! let me
go!"

Again, I was lost in darkness. Again, I had no knowledge in me of
where I was. Again, after an interval, the light showed me the
new place in which I stood.

I was alone in the burial-ground of our parish church. The light
led me on, among the graves, to the lonely corner in which the
great yew tree stands; and, rising higher, revealed the solemn
foliage, brightened by the fatal red fruit which hides in itself
the seeds of death.

The whisper tempted me again. It followed again the train of my
own thought. It said: "Kill her by poison."

No. Revenge by poison steals its way to its end. The base
deceitfulness of Helena's crime against me seemed to call for a
day of reckoning that hid itself under no disguise. I raised my
cry to be delivered from the sight of the deadly tree, The
changes which I have tried to describe followed once more the
confession of what I felt; the darkness was dispelled for the
third time.

I was standing in Helena's room, looking at her as she lay asleep
in her bed.

She was quite still now; but she must have been restless at some
earlier time. The bedclothes were disordered, her head had sunk
so low that the pillow rose high and vacant above her. There,
colored by a tender flush of sleep, was the face whose beauty put
my poor face to shame. There, was the sister who had committed
the worst of murders--the wretch who had killed in me all that
made life worth having. While that thought was in my mind, I
heard the whisper again. "Kill her openly," the tempter mother
said. "Kill her daringly. Faint heart, do you still want courage?
Rouse your spirit; look! see yourself in the act!"

The temptation took a form which now tried me for the first time.

As if a mirror had reflected the scene, I saw myself standing by
the bedside, with the pillow that was to smother the sleeper in
my hands. I heard the whispering voice telling me how to speak
the words that warned and condemned her: "Wake! you who have
taken him from me! Wake! and meet your doom."

I saw her start up in bed. The sudden movement disordered the
nightdress over her bosom and showed the miniature portrait of a
man, hung round her neck.

The man was Philip. The likeness was looking at me.

So dear, so lovely--those eyes that had once been the light of my
heart, mourned for me and judged me now. They saw the guilty
thought that polluted me; they brought me to my knees, imploring
him to help me back to my better self: "One last mercy, dear, to
comfort me under the loss of you. Let the love that was once my
life, be my good angel still. Save me, Philip, even though you
forsake me--save me from myself!"

. . . . . . .

There was a sudden cry.

The agony of it pierced my brain--drove away the ghastly
light--silenced the tempting whispers. I came to myself. I
saw--and not in a dream.

Helena _had_ started up in her bed. That cry of terror, at the
sight of me in her room at night, _had_ burst from her lips. The
miniature of Philip hung round her neck, a visible reality.
Though my head was dizzy, though my heart was sinking, I had not
lost my senses yet. All that the night lamp could show me, I
still saw; and I heard the sound, faintly, when the door of the
bed-chamber was opened. Alarmed by that piercing cry, my father
came hurrying into the room.

Not a word passed between us three. The whispers that I had heard
were wicked; the thoughts that had been in my mind were vile. Had
they left some poison in the air of the room, which killed the
words on our lips?

My father looked at Helena. With a trembling hand she pointed to
me. He put his arm round me and held me up. I remember his
leading me away--and I remember nothing more.

My last words are written. I lock up this journal of
misery--never, I hope and pray, to open it again.

-----

Second Period (continued).

EVENTS IN THE FAMILY, RELATED BY THE GOVERNOR.

-----

CHAPTER XXXII.

THE MIDDLE-AGED LADY.


IN the year 1870 I found myself compelled to submit to the
demands of two hard task-masters.

Advancing age and failing health reminded the Governor of the
Prison of his duty to his successor, in one unanswerable
word--Resign.

When they have employed us and interested us, for the greater
part of our lives, we bid farewell to our duties--even to the
gloomy duties of a prison--with a sense of regret. My view of the
future presented a vacant prospect indeed, when I looked at my
idle life to come, and wondered what I should do with it. Loose
on the world--at my age!--I drifted into domestic refuge, under
the care of my two dear and good sons. After a while (never mind
how long a while) I began to grow restless under the heavy burden
of idleness. Having nothing else to complain of, I complained of
my health, and consulted a doctor. That sagacious man hit on the
right way of getting rid of me--he recommended traveling.

This was unexpected advice. After some hesitation, I accepted it
reluctantly.

The instincts of age recoil from making new acquaintances,
contemplating new places, and adopting new habits. Besides, I
hate railway traveling. However, I contrived to get as far as
Italy, and stopped to rest at Florence. Here, I found pictures by
the old masters that I could really
 enjoy, a public park that I could honestly admire, and an
excellent friend and colleague of former days; once chaplain to
the prison, now clergyman in charge of the English Church. We met
in the gallery of the Pitti Palace; and he recognized me
immediately. I was pleased to find that the lapse of years had
made so little difference in my personal appearance.

The traveler who advances as far as Florence, and does not go on
to Rome, must be regardless indeed of the opinions of his
friends. Let me not attempt to conceal it--I am that insensible
traveler. Over and over again, I said to myself: "Rome must be
done"; and over and over again I put off doing it. To own the
truth, the fascinations of Florence, aided by the society of my
friend, laid so strong a hold on me that I believe I should have
ended my days in the delightful Italian city, but for the
dangerous illness of one of my sons. This misfortune hurried me
back to England, in dread, every step of the way, of finding that
I had arrived too late. The journey (thank God!) proved to have
been taken without need. My son was no longer in danger, when I
reached London in the year 1875.

At that date I was near enough to the customary limit of human
life to feel the necessity of rest and quiet. In other words, my
days of travel had come to their end.

Having established myself in my own country, I did not forget to
let old friends know where they might find me. Among those to
whom I wrote was another colleague of past years, who still held
his medical appointment in the prison. When I received the
doctor's reply, it inclosed a letter directed to me at my old
quarters in the Governor's rooms. Who could possibly have sent a
letter to an address which I had left five years since? My
correspondent proved to be no less a person than the
Congregational Minister--the friend whom I had estranged from me
by the tone in which I had written to him, on the long-past
occasion of his wife's death.

It was a distressing letter to read. I beg permission to give
only the substance of it in this place.

Entreating me, with touching expressions of humility and sorrow,
to forgive his long silence, the writer appealed to my friendly
remembrance of him. He was in sore need of counsel, under serious
difficulties; and I was the only person to whom he could apply
for help. In the disordered state of his health at that time, he
ventured to hope that I would visit him at his present place of
abode, and would let him have the happiness of seeing me as
speedily as possible. He concluded with this extraordinary
postscript:

"When you see my daughters, say nothing to either of them which
relates, in any way, to the subject of their ages. You shall hear
why when we meet."

The reading of this letter naturally reminded me of the claims
which my friend's noble conduct had established on my admiration
and respect, at the past time when we met in the prison. I could
not hesitate to grant his request--strangely as it was expressed,
and doubtful as the prospect appeared to be of my answering the
expectations which he had founded on the renewal of our
intercourse. Answering his letter by telegraph, I promised to be
with him on the next day.

On arriving at the station, I found that I was the only traveler,
by a first-class carriage, who left the train. A young lady,
remarkable by her good looks and good dressing, seemed to have
noticed this trifling circumstance. She approached me with a
ready smile. "I believe I am speaking to my father's friend," she
said; "my name is Helena Gracedieu."

Here was one of the Minister's two "daughters"; and that one of
the two--as I discovered the moment I shook hands with her--who
was my friend's own child. Miss Helena recalled to me her
mother's face, infinitely improved by youth and health, and by a
natural beauty which that cruel and deceitful woman could never
have possessed. The slanting forehead and the shifting, flashing
eyes, that I recollected in the parent, were reproduced (slightly
reproduced, I ought to say) in the child. As for the other
features, I had never seen a more beautiful nose and mouth, or a
more delicately-shaped outline, than was presented by the lower
part of the face. But Miss Helena somehow failed to charm me. I
doubt if I should have fallen in love with her, even in the days
when I was a foolish young man.

The first question that I put, as we drove from the station to
the house, related naturally to her father.

"He is very ill," she began; "I am afraid you must prepare
yourself to see a sad change. Nerves. The mischief first showed
itself, the doctor tells us, in derangement of his nervous
system. He has been, I regret to tell you, obstinate in refusing
to give up his preaching and pastoral work. He ought to have
tried rest at the seaside. Things have gone on from bad to worse.
Last Sunday, at the beginning of his sermon, he broke down. Very,
very sad, is it not? The doctor says that precious time has been
lost, and he must make up his mind to resign his charge. He won't
hear of it. You are his old friend. Please try to persuade him."

Fluently spoken; the words well chosen; the melodious voice
reminding me of the late Mrs. Gracedieu's advantages in that
respect; little sighs judiciously thrown in here and there, just
at the right places; everything, let me own, that could present a
dutiful daughter as a pattern of propriety--and nothing, let me
add, that could produce an impression on my insensible
temperament. If I had not been too discreet to rush at a hasty
conclusion, I might have been inclined to say: her mother's
child, every inch of her!

The interest which I was still able to feel in my friend's
domestic affairs centered in the daughter whom he had adopted.

In her infancy I had seen the child, and liked her; I was the one
person living (since the death of Mrs. Gracedieu) who knew how
the Minister had concealed the sad secret of her parentage; and I
wanted to discover if the hereditary taint had begun to show
itself in the innocent offspring of the murderess. Just as I was
considering how I might harmlessly speak of Miss Helena's
"sister," Miss Helena herself introduced the subject.

"May I ask," she resumed, "if you were disappointed when you
found nobody but me to meet you at our station?"

Here was an opportunity of paying her a compliment, if I had been
a younger man, or if she had produced a favorable impression on
me. As it was, I hit--if I may praise myself--on an ingenious
compromise.

"What excuse could I have," I asked, "for feeling disappointed?"

"Well, I hear you are an official personage--I ought to say,
perhaps, a retired official personage. We might have received you
more respectfully, if _both_ my father's daughters had been
present at the station. It's not my fault that my sister was not
with me."

The tone in which she said this strengthened my prejudice against
her. It told me that the two girls were living together on no
very friendly terms; and it suggested--justly or unjustly I could
not then decide--that Miss Helena was to blame.

"My sister is away from home."

"Surely, Miss Helena, that is a good reason for her not coming to
meet me?"

"I beg your pardon--it is a bad reason. She has been sent away
for the recovery of her health--and the loss of her health is
entirely her own fault."

What did this matter to me? I decided on dropping the subject. My
memory reverted, however, to past occasions on which the loss of
_my_ health had been entirely my own fault. There was something
in these personal recollections, which encouraged my perverse
tendency to sympathize with a young lady to whom I had not yet
been introduced. The young lady's sister appeared to be
discouraged by my silence. She said: "I hope you don't think the
worse of me for what I have just mentioned?"

"Certainly not."

"Perhaps you will fail to see any need of my speaking of my
sister at all? Will you kindly listen, if I try to explain
myself?"

"With pleasure."

She slyly set the best construction on my perfectly commonplace
reply.

"Thank you," she said. "The fact is, my father (I can't imagine
why) wishes you to see my sister as well as me. He has written to
the fa rmhouse at which she is now staying, to tell her to come
home to-morrow. It is possible--if your kindness offers me an
opportunity--that I may ask to be guided by your experience, in a
little matter which interests me. My sister is rash, and
reckless, and has a terrible temper. I should be very sorry
indeed if you were induced to form an unfavorable opinion of me,
from anything you might notice if you see us together. You
understand me, I hope?"

"I quite understand you."

To set me against her sister, in her own private
interests--there, as I felt sure, was the motive under which she
was acting. As hard as her mother, as selfish as her mother, and,
judging from those two bad qualities, probably as cruel as her
mother. That was how I understood Miss Helena Gracedieu, when our
carriage drew up at her father's house.

A middle-aged lady was on the doorstep, when we arrived, just
ringing the bell. She looked round at us both; being evidently as
complete a stranger to my fair companion as she was to me. When
the servant opened the door, she said:

"Is Miss Jillgall at home?"

At the sound of that odd name, Miss Helena tossed her head
disdainfully. She took no sort of notice of the stranger-lady who
was at the door of her father's house. This young person's
contempt for Miss Jillgall appeared to extend to Miss Jillgall's
friends.

In the meantime, the servant's answer was: "Not at home."

The middle aged lady said: "Do you expect her back soon?"

"Yes, ma'am."

"I will call again, later in the day."

"What name, if you please?"

The lady stole another look at me, before she replied.

"Never mind the name," she said--and walked away.


CHAPTER XXXIII.

THE MINISTER'S MISFORTUNE.


"Do you know that lady?" Miss Helena asked, as we entered the
house.

"She is a perfect stranger to me," I answered.

"Are you sure you have not forgotten her?"

"Why do you think I have forgotten her?"

"Because she evidently remembered you."

The lady had no doubt looked at me twice. If this meant that my
face was familiar to her, I could only repeat what I have already
said. Never, to my knowledge, had I seen her before.

Leading the way upstairs, Miss Helena apologized for taking me
into her father's bedroom. "He is able to sit up in an armchair,"
she said; "and he might do more, as I think, if he would exert
himself. He won't exert himself. Very sad. Would you like to look
at your room, before you see my father? It is quite ready for
you. We hope"--she favored me with a fascinating smile, devoted
to winning my heart when her interests required it--"we hope you
will pay us a long visit; we look on you as one of ourselves."

I thanked her, and said I would shake hands with my old friend
before I went to my room. We parted at the bedroom door.

It is out of my power to describe the shock that overpowered me
when I first saw the Minister again, after the long interval of
time that had separated us. Nothing that his daughter said,
nothing that I myself anticipated, had prepared me for that
lamentable change. For the moment, I was not sufficiently master
of myself to be able to speak to him. He added to my
embarrassment by the humility of his manner, and the formal
elaboration of his apologies.

"I feel painfully that I have taken a liberty with you," he said,
"after the long estrangement between us--for which my want of
Christian forbearance is to blame. Forgive it, sir, and forget
it. I hope to show that necessity justifies my presumption, in
subjecting you to a wearisome journey for my sake."

Beginning to recover myself, I begged that he would make no more
excuses. My interruption seemed to confuse him.

"I wished to say," he went on, "that you are the one man who can
understand me. There is my only reason for asking to see you, and
looking forward as I do to your advice. You remember the
night--or was it the day?--before that miserable woman was
hanged? You were the only person present when I agreed to adopt
the poor little creature, stained already (one may say) by its
mother's infamy. I think your wisdom foresaw what a terrible
responsibility I was undertaking; you tried to prevent it. Well!
well! you have been in my confidence--you only. Mind! nobody in
this house knows that one of the two girls is not really my
daughter. Pray stop me, if you find me wandering from the point.
My wish is to show that you are the only man I can open my heart
to. She--" He paused, as if in search of a lost idea, and left
the sentence uncompleted. "Yes," he went on, "I was thinking of
my adopted child. Did I ever tell you that I baptized her myself?
and by a good Scripture name too--Eunice. Ah, sir, that little
helpless baby is a grown-up girl now; of an age to inspire love,
and to feel love. I blush to acknowledge it; I have behaved with
a want of self-control, with a cowardly weakness.--No! I am,
indeed, wandering this time. I ought to have told you first that
I have been brought face to face with the possibility of Eunice's
marriage. And, to make it worse still, I can't help liking the
young man. He comes of a good family--excellent manners, highly
educated, plenty of money, a gentleman in every sense of the
word. And poor little Eunice is so fond of him! Isn't it dreadful
to be obliged to check her dearly-loved Philip? The young
gentleman's name is Philip. Do you like the name? I say I am
obliged to cheek her sweetheart in the rudest manner, when all he
wants to do is to ask me modestly for my sweet Eunice's hand. Oh,
what have I not suffered, without a word of sympathy to comfort
me, before I had courage enough to write to you! Shall I make a
dreadful confession? If my religious convictions had not stood in
my way, I believe I should have committed suicide. Put yourself
in my place. Try to see yourself shrinking from a necessary
explanation, when the happiness of a harmless girl--so dutiful,
so affectionate--depended on a word of kindness from your lips.
And that word you are afraid to speak! Don't take offense, sir; I
mean myself, not you. Why don't you say something?" he burst out
fiercely, incapable of perceiving that he had allowed me no
opportunity of speaking to him. "Good God! don't you understand
me, after all?"

The signs of mental confusion in his talk had so distressed me,
that I had not been composed enough to feel sure of what he
really meant, until he described himself as "shrinking from a
necessary explanation." Hearing those words, my knowledge of the
circumstances helped me; I realized what his situation really
was.

"Compose yourself," I said, "I understand you at last."

He had suddenly become distrustful.

"Prove it," he muttered, with a furtive look at me. "I want to be
satisfied that you understand my position."

"This is your position," I told him. "You are placed between two
deplorable alternatives. If you tell this young gentleman that
Miss Eunice's mother was a criminal hanged for murder, his
family--even if he himself doesn't recoil from it--will
unquestionably forbid the marriage; and your adopted daughter's
happiness will be the sacrifice."

"True!" he said. "Frightfully true! Go on."

"If, on the other hand, you sanction the marriage, and conceal
the truth, you commit a deliberate act of deceit; and you leave
the lives of the young couple at the mercy of a possible
discovery, which might part husband and wife--cast a slur on
their children--and break up the household."

He shuddered while he listened to me. "Come to the end of it," he
cried.

I had no more to say, and I was obliged to answer him to that
effect.

"No more to say?" he replied. "You have not told me yet what I
most want to know."

I did a rash thing; I asked what it was that he most wanted to
know.

"Can't you see it for yourself?" he demanded indignantly.
"Suppose you were put between those two alternatives which you
mentioned just now."

"Well?"

"What would you do, sir, in my place? Would you own the
disgraceful truth--before the marriage--or run the risk, and keep
the horrid story to yourself?"

Either way, my reply might lead to serious consequences. I
hesitated.

He threatened me with his poor feeble hand. It was only the anger
of a moment;  his humor changed to supplication. He reminded me
piteously of bygone days: "You used to be a kind-hearted man. Has
age hardened you? Have you no pity left for your old friend? My
poor heart is sadly in want of a word of wisdom, spoken kindly."

Who could have resisted this? I took his hand: "Be at ease, dear
Minister. In your place I should run the risk, and keep that
horrid story to myself."

He sank back gently in his chair. "Oh, the relief of it!" he
said. "How can I thank you as I ought for quieting my mind?"

I seized the opportunity of quieting his mind to good purpose by
suggesting a change of subject. "Let us have done with serious
talk for the present," I proposed. "I have been an idle man for
the last five years, and I want to tell you about my travels."

His attention began to wander, he evidently felt no interest in
my travels. "Are you sure," he asked anxiously, "that we have
said all we ought to say? No!" he cried, answering his own
question. "I believe I have forgotten something--I am certain I
have forgotten something. Perhaps I mentioned it in the letter I
wrote to you. Have you got my letter?"

I showed it to him. He read the letter, and gave it back to me
with a heavy sigh. "Not there!" he said despairingly. "Not
there!"

"Is the lost remembrance connected with anybody in the house?" I
asked, trying to help him. "Does it relate, by any chance, to one
of the young ladies?"

"You wonderful man! Nothing escapes you. Yes; the thing I have
forgotten concerns one of the girls. Stop! Let me get at it by
myself. Surely it relates to Helena?" He hesitated; his face
clouded over with an expression of anxious thought. "Yes; it
relates to Helena," he repeated "but how?" His eyes filled with
tears. "I am ashamed of my weakness," he said faintly. "You don't
know how dreadful it is to forget things in this way."

The injury that his mind had sustained now assumed an aspect that
was serious indeed. The subtle machinery, which stimulates the
memory, by means of the association of ideas, appeared to have
lost its working power in the intellect of this unhappy man. I
made the first suggestion that occurred to me, rather than add to
his distress by remaining silent.

"If we talk of your daughter," I said, "the merest accident--a
word spoken at random by. you or me--may be all your memory wants
to rouse it."

He agreed eagerly to this: "Yes! Yes! Let me begin. Helena met
you, I think, at the station. Of course, I remember that; it only
happened a few hours since. Well?" he went on, with a change in
his manner to parental pride, which it was pleasant to see, "did
you think my daughter a fine girl? I hope Helena didn't
disappoint you?"

"Quite the contrary." Having made that necessary reply, I saw my
way to keeping his mind occupied by a harmless subject. "It must,
however, be owned," I went on, "that your daughter surprised me."

"In what way?"

"When she mentioned her name. Who could have supposed that
you--an inveterate enemy to the Roman Catholic Church--would have
christened your daughter by the name of a Roman Catholic Saint?"

He listened to this with a smile. Had I happily blundered on some
association which his mind was still able to pursue?

"You happen to be wrong this time," he said pleasantly. "I never
gave my girl the name of Helena; and, what is more, I never
baptized her. You ought to know that. Years and years ago, I
wrote to tell you that my poor wife had made me a proud and happy
father. And surely I said that the child was born while she was
on a visit to her brother's rectory. Do you remember the name of
the place? I told you it was a remote little village, called--
Suppose we put _your_ memory to a test? Can you remember the
name?" he asked, with a momentary appearance of triumph showing
itself, poor fellow, in his face.

After the time that had elapsed, the name had slipped my memory.
When I confessed this, he exulted over me, with an unalloyed
pleasure which it was cheering to see.

"_Your_ memory is failing you now," he said. "The name is Long
Lanes. And what do you think my wife did--this is so
characteristic of her!--when I presented myself at her bedside.
Instead of speaking of our own baby, she reminded me of the name
that I had given to our adopted daughter when I baptized the
child. 'You chose the ugliest name that a girl can have,' she
said. I begged her to remember that 'Eunice' was a name in
Scripture. She persisted in spite of me. (What firmness of
character!) 'I detest the name of Eunice!' she said; 'and now
that I have a girl of my own, it's my turn to choose the name; I
claim it as my right.' She was beginning to get excited; I
allowed her to have her own way, of course. 'Only let me know,' I
said, 'what the name is to be when you have thought of it.' My
dear sir, she had the name ready, without thinking about it: 'My
baby shall be called by the name that is sweetest in my ears, the
name of my dear lost mother.' We had--what shall I call it?--a
slight difference of opinion when I heard that the name was to be
Helena. I really could _not_ reconcile it to my conscience to
baptize a child of mine by the name of a Popish saint. My wife's
brother set things right between us. A worthy good man; he died
not very long ago--I forget the date. Not to detain you any
longer, the rector of Long Lanes baptized our daughter. That is
how she comes by her un-English name; and so it happens that her
birth is registered in a village which her father has never
inhabited. I hope, sir, you think a little better of my memory
now?"

I was afraid to tell him what I really did think.

He was not fifty years old yet; and he had just exhibited one of
the sad symptoms which mark the broken memory of old age. Lead
him back to the events of many years ago, and (as he had just
proved to me) he could remember well and relate coherently. But
let him attempt to recall circumstances which had only taken
place a short time since, and forgetfulness and confusion
presented the lamentable result, just as I have related it.

The effort that he had made, the agitation that he had undergone
in talking to me, had confirmed my fears that he would overtask
his wasted strength. He lay back in his chair. "Let us go on with
our conversation," he murmured. "We haven't recovered what I had
forgotten, yet." His eyes closed, and opened again languidly.
"There was something I wanted to recall--" he resumed, "and you
were helping me." His weak voice died away; his weary eyes closed
again. After waiting until there could be no doubt that he was
resting peacefully in sleep, I left the room.


CHAPTER XXXIV.

THE LIVELY OLD MAID.

A PERFECT stranger to the interior of the house (seeing that my
experience began and ended with the Minister's bedchamber), I
descended the stairs, in the character of a guest in search of
domestic information.

On my way down, I heard the door of a room on the ground floor
opened, and a woman' s voice below, speaking in a hurry: "My
dear, I have not a moment to spare; my patients are waiting for
me." This was followed by a confidential communication, judging
by the tone. "Mind! not a word about me to that old gentleman!"
Her patients were waiting for her--had I discovered a female
doctor? And there was some old gentleman whom she was not willing
to trust--surely I was not that much-injured man?

Reaching the hall just as the lady said her last words, I caught
a glimpse of her face, and discovered the middle-aged stranger
who had called on "Miss Jillgall," and had promised to repeat her
visit. A second lady was at the door, with her back to me, taking
leave of her friend. Having said good-by, she turned round--and
we confronted each other.

I found her to be a little person, wiry and active; past the
prime of life, and ugly enough to encourage prejudice, in persons
who take a superficial view of their fellow-creatures. Looking
impartially at the little sunken eyes which rested on me with a
comical expression of embarrassment, I saw signs that said: There
is some good here, under a disagreeable surface, if you can only
find it.

She saluted me with a carefully-performed curtsey, and threw open
the door of a room on the ground floor.

"Pray walk in, sir, and permit me to introduce myself. I am Mr.
Gracedieu's cousin--Miss Jillgall. Proud indeed to make the
acquaintance of a gentleman distinguished in the service of his
country--or perhaps I ought to say, in the service of the Law.
The Governor offers hospitality to prisoners. And who introduces
prisoners to board and lodging with the Governor?--the Law.
Beautiful weather for the time of year, is it not? May I
ask--have you seen your room?"

The embarrassment which I had already noticed had extended by
this time to her voice and her manner. She was evidently trying
to talk herself into a state of confidence. It seemed but too
probable that I was indeed the person mentioned by her prudent
friend at the door.

Having acknowledged that I had not seen my room yet, my
politeness attempted to add that there was no hurry. The wiry
little lady was of the contrary opinion; she jumped out of her
chair as if she had been shot out of it. "Pray let me make myself
useful. The dream of my life is to make myself useful to others;
and to such a man as you--I consider myself honored. Besides, I
do enjoy running up and down stairs. This way, dear sir; this way
to your room."

She skipped up the stairs, and stopped on the first landing. "Do
you know, I am a timid person, though I may not look like it.
Sometimes, curiosity gets the better of me--and then I grow bold.
Did you notice a lady who was taking leave of me just now at the
house door?"

I replied that I had seen the lady for a moment, but not for the
first time. "Just as I arrived here from the station," I said, "I
found her paying a visit when you were not at home."

"Yes--and do tell me one thing more." My readiness in answering
seemed to have inspired Miss Jillgall with confidence. I heard no
more confessions of overpowering curiosity. "Am I right," she
proceeded, "in supposing that Miss Helena accompanied you, on
your way here from the station?"

"Quite right."

"Did she say anything particular, when she saw the lady asking
for me at the door?"

"Miss Helena thought," I said, "that the lady recognized me as a
person whom she had seen before."

"And what did you think yourself?"

"I thought Miss Helena was wrong."

"Very extraordinary!" With that remark, Miss Jillgall dropped the
subject. The meaning of her reiterated inquiries was now, as it
seemed to me, clear enough. She was eager to discover how I could
have inspired the distrust of me, expressed in the caution
addressed to her by her friend.

When we reached the upper floor, she paused before the Minister's
room.

"I believe many years have passed," she said, "since you last saw
Mr. Gracedieu. I am afraid you have found him a sadly changed
man? You won't be angry with me, I hope, for asking more
questions? I owe Mr. Gracedieu a debt of gratitude which no
devotion, on my part, can ever repay. You don't know what a favor
I shall consider it, if you will tell me what you think of him.
Did it seem to you that he was not quite himself? I don't mean in
his looks, poor dear--I mean in his mind."

There was true sorrow and sympathy in her face. I believe I
should hardly have thought her ugly, if we had first met at that
moment. Thus far, she had only amused me. I began really to like
Miss Jillgall now.

"I must not conceal from you," I replied, "that the state of Mr.
Gracedieu's mind surprised and distressed me. But I ought also to
tell you that I saw him perhaps at his worst. The subject on
which he wished to speak with me would have agitated any man, in
his state of health. He consulted me about his daughter's
marriage."

Miss Jillgall suddenly turned pale.

"His daughter's marriage?" she repeated. "Oh, you frighten me!"

"Why should I frighten you?"

She seemed to find some difficulty in expressing herself. "I
hardly know how to put it, sir. You will excuse me (won't you?)
if I say what I feel. You have influence--not the sort of
influence that finds places for people who don't deserve them,
and gets mentioned in the newspapers--I only mean influence over
Mr. Gracedieu. That's what frightens me. How do I know--? Oh,
dear, I'm asking another question! Allow me, for once, to be
plain and positive. I'm afraid, sir, you have encouraged the
Minister to consent to Helena's marriage."

"Pardon me," I answered, "you mean Eunice's marriage."

"No, sir! Helena."

"No, madam! Eunice."

"What does he mean?" said Miss Jillgall to herself.

I heard her. "This is what I mean," I asserted, in my most
positive manner. "The only subject on which the Minister has
consulted me is Miss Eunice's marriage."

My tone left her no alternative but to believe me. She looked not
only bewildered, but alarmed. "Oh, poor man, has he lost himself
in such a dreadful way as that?" she said to herself. "I daren't
believe it!" She turned to me. "You have been talking with him
for some time. Please try to remember. While Mr. Gracedieu was
speaking of Euneece, did he say nothing of Helena's infamous
conduct to her sister?"

Not the slightest hint of any such thing, I assured her, had
reached my ears.

"Then," she cried, "I can tell you what he has forgotten! We kept
as much of that miserable story to ourselves as we could, in
mercy to him. Besides, he was always fondest of Euneece; she
would live in his memory when he had forgotten the other--the
wretch, the traitress, the plotter, the fiend!" Miss Jillgall's
good manners slipped, as it were, from under her; she clinched
her fists as a final means of expressing her sentiments. "The
wretched English language isn't half strong enough for me," she
declared with a look of fury.

I took a liberty. "May I ask what Miss Helena has done?" I said.

"_May_ you ask? Oh, Heavens! you must ask, you shall ask. Mr.
Governor, if your eyes are not opened to Helena's true character,
I can tell you what she will do; she will deceive you into taking
her part. Do you think she went to the station out of regard for
the great man? Pooh! she went with an eye to her own interests;
and she means to make the great man useful. Thank God, I can stop
that!"

She checked herself there, and looked suspiciously at the door of
Mr. Gracedieu's room.

"In the interest of our conversation," she whispered, "we have
not given a thought to the place we have been talking in. Do you
think the Minister has heard us?"

"Not if he is asleep--as I left him,"

Miss Jillgall shook her head ominously. "The safe way is this
way," she said. "Come with me."


CHAPTER XXXV.

THE FUTURE LOOKS GLOOMY.


MY ever-helpful guide led me to my room--well out of Mr.
Gracedieu's hearing, if he happened to be awake--at the other end
of the passage. Having opened the door, she paused on the
threshold. The decrees of that merciless English despot,
Propriety, claimed her for their own. "Oh, dear!" she said to
herself, "ought I to go in?"

My interest as a man (and, what is more, an old man) in the
coming disclosure was too serious to be trifled with in this way.
I took her arm, and led her into my room as if I was at a
dinner-party, leading her to the table. Is it the good or the
evil fortune of mortals that the comic side of life, and the
serious side of life, are perpetually in collision with each
other? We burst out laughing, at a moment of grave importance to
us both. Perfectly inappropriate, and perfectly natural. But we
were neither of us philosophers, and we were ashamed of our own
merriment the moment it had ceased.

"When you hear what I have to tell you," Miss Jillgall began, "I
hope you will think as I do. What has slipped Mr. Gracedieu' s
memory, it may be safer to say--for he is sometimes irritable,
poor dear--where he won't know anything about it."

With that she told the lamentable story of the desertion of
Eunice.

In silence I listened, from first to last. How could I trust
myself to speak, as I must have spoken, in the presence of a
woman? The cruel injury inflicted on the poor girl, who had
interested and touched me in the first innocent year of her
life--who had grown to womanhood to be the victim of two
wretches, both trusted by her, both bound to her by the sacred
debt of love--so fired my temper that I longed to be within reach
of the man, with a horsewhip in my hand. Seeing in my face, as I
suppose, what was passing in my mind, Miss Jillgall expressed
sympathy and admiration in her own quaint way: "Ah, I like to see
you so angry! It's grand to know that a man who has governed
prisoners has got such a pitying heart. Let me tell you one
thing, sir. You will be more angry than ever, when you see my
sweet girl to-morrow. And mind this--it is Helena's devouring
vanity, Helena's wicked jealousy of her sister's good fortune,
that has done the mischief. Don't be too hard on Philip? I do
believe, if the truth was told, he is ashamed of himself."

I felt inclined to be harder on Philip than ever. "Where is he?"
I asked.

Miss Jillgall started. "Oh, Mr. Governor, don't show the severe
side of yourself, after the pretty compliment I have just paid to
you! What a masterful voice! and what eyes, dear sir; what
terrifying eyes! I feel as if I was one of your prisoners, and
had misbehaved myself."

I repeated my question with improvement, I hope, in my looks and
tones: "Don't think me obstinate, my dear lady. I only want to
know if he is in this town."

Miss Jillgall seemed to take a curious pleasure in disappointing
me; she had not forgotten my unfortunate abruptness of look and
manner. "You won't find him here," she said.

"Perhaps he has left England?"

"If you must know, sir, he is in London--with Mr. Dunboyne."

The name startled me.

In a moment more it recalled to my memory a remarkable letter,
addressed to me many years ago, which will be found in my
introductory narrative. The writer--an Irish gentleman, named
Dunboyne confided to me that his marriage had associated him with
the murderess, who had then been recently executed, as
brother-in-law to that infamous woman. This circumstance he had
naturally kept a secret from every one, including his son, then a
boy. I alone was made an exception to the general rule, because I
alone could tell him what had become of the poor little girl, who
in spite of the disgraceful end of her mother was still his
niece. If the child had not been provided for, he felt it his
duty to take charge of her education, and to watch over her
prospects in the future. Such had been his object in writing to
me; and such was the substance of his letter. I had merely
informed him, in reply, that his kind intentions had been
anticipated, and that the child's prosperous future was assured.

Miss Jillgall's keen observation noticed the impression that had
been produced upon me. "Mr. Dunboyne's name seems to surprise
you." she said.

"This is the first time I have heard you mention it," I answered.

She looked as if she could hardly believe me. "Surely you must
have heard the name," she said, "when I told you about poor
Euneece?"

"No."

"Well, then, Mr. Gracedieu must have mentioned it?"

"No."

This second reply in the negative irritated her.

"At any rate," she said, sharply, "you appeared to know Mr.
Dunboyne's name, just now."

"Certainly!"

"And yet," she persisted, "the name seemed to come upon you as a
surprise. I don't understand it. If I have mentioned Philip's
name once, I have mentioned it a dozen times."

We were completely at cross-purposes. She had taken something for
granted which was an unfathomable mystery to me.

"Well," I objected, "if you did mention his name a dozen
times--excuse me for asking the question---what then?"

"Good heavens!" cried Miss Jillgall, "do you mean to say you
never guessed that Philip was Mr. Dunboyne's son?"

I was petrified.

His son! Dunboyne's son! How could I have guessed it?

At a later time only, the good little creature who had so
innocently deceived me, remembered that the mischief might have
been wrought by the force of habit. While he had still a claim on
their regard the family had always spoken of Eunice's unworthy
lover by his Christian name; and what had been familiar in their
mouths felt the influence of custom, before time enough had
elapsed to make them think as readily of the enemy as they had
hitherto thought of the friend.

But I was ignorant of this: and the disclosure by which I found
myself suddenly confronted was more than I could support. For the
moment, speech was beyond me.

His son! Dunboyne's son!

What a position that young man had occupied, unsuspected by his
father, unknown to himself! kept in ignorance of the family
disgrace, he had been a guest in the house of the man who had
consoled his infamous aunt on the eve of her execution--who had
saved his unhappy cousin from poverty, from sorrow, from shame.
And but one human being knew this. And that human being was
myself!

Observing my agitation, Miss Jillgall placed her own construction
on it.

"Do you know anything bad of Philip?" she asked eagerly. "If it's
something that will prevent Helena from marrying him, tell me
what it is, I beg and pray."

I knew no more of "Philip" (whom she still called by his
Christian name!) than she had told me herself: there was no help
for it but to disappoint her. At the same time I was unable to
conceal that I was ill at ease, and that it might be well to
leave me by myself. After a look round the bedchamber to see that
nothing was wanting to my comfort, she made her quaint curtsey,
and left me with her own inimitable form of farewell.

"Oh, indeed, I have been here too long! And I'm afraid I have
been guilty, once or twice, of vulgar familiarity. You will
excuse me, I hope. This has been an exciting interview--I think I
am going to cry."

She ran out of the room; and carried away with her some of my
kindliest feelings, short as the time of our acquaintance had
been. What a wife and what a mother was lost there--and all for
want of a pretty face!

Left alone, my thoughts inevitably reverted to Dunboyne the
elder, and to all that had happened in Mr. Gracedieu's family
since the Irish gentleman had written to me in bygone years.

The terrible choice of responsibilities which had preyed on the
Minister's mind had been foreseen by Mr. Dunboyne, when he first
thought of adopting his infant niece, and had warned him to dread
what might happen in the future, if he brought her up as a member
of the family with his own boy, and if the two young people
became at a later period attached to each other. How had the wise
foresight, which offered such a contrast to the poor Minister's
impulsive act of mercy, met with its reward? Fate or Providence
(call it which we may) had brought Dunboyne's son and the
daughter of the murderess together; had inspired those two
strangers with love; and had emboldened them to plight their
troth by a marriage engagement. Was the man's betrayal of the
trust placed in him by the faithful girl to be esteemed a
fortunate circumstance by the two persons who knew the true story
of her parentage, the Minister and myself? Could we rejoice in an
act of infidelity which had embittered and darkened the gentle
harmless life of the victim? Or could we, on the other hand,
encourage the ruthless deceit, the hateful treachery, which had
put the wicked Helena--with no exposure to dread if _she_
married--into her wronged sister's place? Impossible! In the one
case as in the other, impossible!

Equally hopeless did the prospect appear, when I tried to
determine what my own individual course of action ought to be.

In my calmer moments, the idea had occurred to my mind of going
to Dunboyne the younger, and, if he had any sense of shame left,
exerting my influence to lead him back to his betrothed wife. How
could I now do this, consistently with my duty to the young man's
father; knowing what I knew, and not forgetting that I had myself
advised Mr. Gracedieu to keep the truth concealed, when I was
equally ignorant of Philip Dunboyne's parentage and of Helena
Gracedieu's treachery?

Even if events so ordered it that the marriage of Eunice might
yet take place--without any interference exerted to produce that
result, one way or the other, on my part--it would be just as
impossible for me to speak out now, as it had been in the
long-past years when I had so cautiously answered Mr. Dunboyne's
letter. But what would he think of me if accident led, sooner or
later, to the disclosure which I had felt bound to conceal? The
more I tried to forecast the chances of the future, the darker
and the darker was the view that faced me.

To my sinking heart and wearied mind, good Dame Nature presented
a more acceptable prospect, when I happened to look out of the
window of my room. There I saw the trees and flowerbeds of a
garden, tempting me irresistibly under the cloudless sunshine of
a fine day. I was on my way out, to recover heart and hope, when
a knock at the door stopped me.

Had Miss Jillgall returned? When I said "Come in," Mr. Gracedieu
opened the door, and entered the room.

He was so weak that he staggered as he approached me. Leading him
to a chair, I noticed a wild look in his eyes, and a flush on his
haggard cheeks. Something had happened.

"When you were with me in my room," he began, "did I not tell you
that I had forgotten something?"

"Certainly you did."

"Well, I have found the lost remembrance. My misfortune--I ought
to call it the punishment for my sins, is recalled to me now. The
worst curse that can fall on a father is the curse that has come
to me. I have a wicked daughter. My own child, sir! my own
child!"

Had he been awake, while Miss Jillgall and I had been talking
outside his door? Had he heard her ask me if Mr. Gracedieu had
said nothing of Helena's infamous conduct to her sister, while he
was speaking of Eunice? The way to the lost remembrance had
perhaps been found there. In any case, after that bitter allusion
to his "wicked daughter" some result must follow. Helena
Gracedieu and a day of reckoning might be nearer to each other
already than I had ventured to hope.

I waited anxiously for what he might say to me next.


CHAPTER XXXVI.

THE WANDERING MIND.

FOR the moment, the Minister disappointed me.

Without speaking, without even looking up, he took out his
pocketbook, and began to write in it. Constantly interrupted
either by a trembling in the hand that held the pencil, or by a
difficulty (as I imagined) in expressing thoughts imperfectly
realized--his patience gave way; he dashed the book on the floor.

"My mind is gone!" he burst out. "Oh, Father in Heaven, let death
deliver me from a body without a mind!"

Who could hear him, and be guilty of the cruelty of preaching
self-control? I picked up the pocketbook, and offered to help
him.

"Do you think you can?" he asked.

"I can at least try."

"Good fellow! What should I do without you? See now; here is my
difficulty. I have got so many things to say, I want to separate
them--or else they will all run into each other. Look at the
book," my poor friend said mournfully; "they have run into each
other in spite of me."

The entries proved to be nearly incomprehensible. Here and there
I discovered some scattered words, which showed themselves more
or less distinctly in the midst of the surrounding confusion. The
first word that I could make out was "Education." Helped by that
hint, I trusted to guess-work to guide me in speaking to him. It
was necessary to be positive, or he would have lost all faith in
me.

"Well?" he said impatiently.

"Well," I answered, "you have something to say to me about the
education which you have given to your daughters."

"Don't put them together!" he cried. "Dear, patient, sweet Eunice
must not be confounded with that she-devil--"

"Hush, hush, Mr. Gracedieu! Badly as Miss Helena has behaved, she
is your own child."

"I repudiate her, sir! Think for a moment of what she has
done--and then think of the religious education that I have given
her. Heartless! Deceitful! The most ignorant creature in the
lowest dens of this town could have done nothing more basely
cruel. And this, after years on years of patient Christian
instruction on my part! What is religion? What is education? I
read a horrible book once (I forget who was the author); it
called religion superstition, and education empty form. I don't
know; upon my word I don't know that the book may not--Oh, my
tongue! Why don't I keep a guard over my tongue? Are you a
father, too? Don't interrupt me. Put yourself in my place, and
think of it. Heartless, deceitful, and _my_ daughter. Give me the
pocketbook; I want to see which memorandum comes first."

He had now wrought himself into a state of excitement, which
relieved his spirits of the depression that had weighed on them
up to this time. His harmless vanity, always, as I suspect, a
latent quality in his kindly nature, had already restored his
confidence. With a self-sufficient smile he consulted his own
unintelligible entries, and made his own wild discoveries.

"Ah, yes; 'M' stands for Minister; I come first. Am I to blame?
Am I--God forgive me my many sins--am I heartless? Am I
deceitful?"

"My good friend, not even your enemies could say that!"

"Thank you. Who comes next?" He consulted the book again. "Her
mother, her sainted mother, comes next. People say she is like
her mother. Was my wife heartless? Was the angel of my life
deceitful?"

("That," I thought to myself, "is exactly what your wife was--and
exactly what reappears in your wife's child.")

"Where does her wickedness come from?" he went on. "Not from her
mother; not from me; not from a neglected education." He suddenly
stepped up to me and laid his hands on my shoulders; his voice
dropped to hoarse, moaning, awestruck tones. "Shall I tell you
what it is? A possession of the devil."

It was so evidently desirable to prevent any continuation of such
a train of thought as this, that I could feel no hesitation in
interrupting him.

"Will you hear what I have to say?" I asked bluntly.

His humor changed again; he made me a low bow, and went back to
his chair. "I will hear you with pleasure," he answered politely.
"You are the most eloquent man I know, with one
exception--myself. Of course--myself."

"It is mere waste of time," I continued, "to regret the excellent
education which your daughter has misused." Making that reply, I
was tempted to add another word of truth. All education is at the
mercy of two powerful counter-influences: the influence of
temperament, and the influence of circumstances. But this was
philosophy. How could I expect him to submit to philosophy? "What
we know of Miss Helena," I went on, "must be enough for us. She
has plotted, and she means to succeed. Stop her."

"Just my idea!" he declared firmly. "I refuse my consent to that
abominable marriage."

In the popular phrase, I struck while the iron was hot. "You must
do more than that, sir," I told him.

His vanity suddenly took the alarm--I was leading him rather too
undisguisedly. He handed his book back to me. "You will find," he
said loftily, "that I have put it all down there."

I pretended to find it, and read an imaginary entry to this
effect: "After what she has already done, Helena is capable of
marrying in defiance of my wishes and commands. This must be
considered and provided against." So far, I had succeeded in
flattering him. But when (thinking of his paternal authority) I
alluded next to his daughter's age, his eyes rested on me with a
look of downright terror.

"No more of that!" he said. "I won't talk of the girls' ages even
with you."

What did he mean? It was useless to ask. I went on with the
matter in hand--still deliberately speaking to him, as I might
have spoken to a man with an intellect as clear as my own. In my
experience, this practice generally stimulates a weak
intelligence to do its best. We all know how children receive
talk that is lowered, or books that are lowered, to their
presumed level.

"I shall take it for granted," I continued, "that Miss Helena is
still under your lawful authority. She can only arrive at her
ends by means of a runaway marriage. In that case, much depends
on the man. You told me you couldn't help liking him. This was,
of course, before you knew of the infamous manner in which he has
behaved. You must have changed your opinion now."

He seemed to be at a loss how to reply. "I am afraid," he said,
"the young man was drawn into it by Helena."

Here was Miss Jillgall's apology for Philip Dunboyne repeated in
other words. Despising and detesting the fellow as I did, I was
forced to admit to myself that he must be recommended by personal
attractions which it would be necessary to reckon with. I tried
to get s ome more information from Mr. Gracedieu.

"The excuse you have just made for him," I resumed, "implies that
he is a weak man; easily persuaded, easily led."

The Minister answered by nodding his head.

"Such weakness as that," I persisted, "is a vice in itself. It
has led already, sir, to the saddest results."

He admitted this by another nod.

"I don't wish to shock you, Mr. Gracedieu; but I must recommend
employing the means that present themselves. You must practice on
this man's weakness, for the sake of the good that may come of
it. I hear he is in London with his father. Try the strong
influence, and write to his father. There is another reason
besides for doing this. It is quite possible that the truth has
been concealed from Mr. Dunboyne the elder. Take care that he is
informed of what has really happened. Are you looking for pen,
ink, and paper? Let me offer you the writing materials which I
use in traveling."

I placed them before him. He took up the pen; he arranged the
paper; he was eager to begin.

After writing a few words, he stopped--reflected--tried
again--stopped again--tore up the little that he had done--and
began a new letter, ending in the same miserable result. It was
impossible to witness his helplessness, to see how pitiably
patient he was over his own incapacity, and to let the melancholy
spectacle go on. I proposed to write the letter; authenticating
it, of course, by his signature. When he allowed me to take the
pen, he turned away his face, ashamed to let me see what he
suffered. Was this the same man, whose great nature had so nobly
asserted itself in the condemned cell? Poor mortality!

The letter was easily written.

I had only to inform Mr. Dunboyne of his son's conduct;
repeating, in the plainest language that I could use, what Miss
Jillgall had related to me. Arrived at the conclusion, I
contrived to make Mr. Gracedieu express himself in these strong
terms: "I protest against the marriage in justice to you, sir, as
well as to myself. We can neither of us content to be accomplices
in an act of domestic treason of the basest kind."

In silence, the Minister read the letter, and attached his
signature to it. In silence, he rose and took my arm. I asked if
he wished to go to his room. He only replied by a sign. I offered
to sit with him, and try to cheer him. Gratefully, he pressed my
hand: gently, he put me back from the door. Crushed by the
miserable discovery of the decay of his own faculties! What could
I do? what could I say? Nothing!



Miss Jillgall was in the drawing-room. With the necessary
explanations, I showed her the letter. She read it with
breathless interest. "It terrifies one to think how much depends
on old Mr. Dunboyne," she said. "You know him. What sort of man
is he?"

I could only assure her (after what I remembered of his letter to
me) that he was a man whom we could depend upon.

Miss Jillgall possessed treasures of information to which I could
lay no claim. Mr. Dunboyne, she told me, was a scholar, and a
writer, and a rich man. His views on marriage were liberal in the
extreme. Let his son find good principles, good temper, and good
looks, in a wife, and he would promise to find the money.

"I get these particulars," said Miss Jillgall, "from dear
Euneece. They are surely encouraging? That Helena may carry out
Mr. Dunboyne's views in her personal appearance is, I regret to
say, what I can't deny. But as to the other qualifications, how
hopeful is the prospect! Good principles, and good temper? Ha!
ha! Helena has the principles of Jezebel, and the temper of Lady
Macbeth."

After dashing off this striking sketch of character, the fair
artist asked to look at my letter again, and observed that the
address was wanting. "I can set this right for you," she resumed,
"thanks, as before, to my sweet Euneece. And (don't be in a
hurry) I can make myself useful in another way. Oh, how I do
enjoy making myself useful! If you trust your letter to the
basket in the hall, Helena's lovely eyes--capable of the meanest
conceivable actions--are sure to take a peep at the address. In
that case, do you think your letter would get to London? I am
afraid you detect a faint infusion of spitefulness in that
question. Oh, for shame! I'll post the letter myself."


CHAPTER XXXVII.

THE SHAMELESS SISTER.


FOR some reason, which my unassisted penetration was unable to
discover, Miss Helena Gracedieu kept out of my way.

At dinner, on the day of my arrival, and at breakfast on the next
morning, she was present of course; ready to make herself
agreeable in a modest way, and provided with the necessary supply
of cheerful small-talk. But the meal having come to an end, she
had her domestic excuse ready, and unostentatiously disappeared
like a well-bred young lady. I never met her on the stairs, never
found myself intruding on her in the drawing-room, never caught
her getting out of my way in the garden. As much at a loss for an
explanation of these mysteries as I was, Miss Jillgall's interest
in my welfare led her to caution me in a vague and general way.

"Take my word for it, dear Mr. Governor, she has some design on
you. Will you allow an insignificant old maid to offer a
suggestion? Oh, thank you; I will venture to advise. Please look
back at your experience of the very worst female prisoner you
ever had to deal with--and be guided accordingly if Helena
catches you at a private interview."

In less than half an hour afterward, Helena caught me. I was
writing in my room, when the maidservant came in with a message:
"Miss Helena's compliments, sir, and would you please spare her
half an hour, downstairs?"

My first excuse was of course that I was engaged. This was
disposed of by a second message, provided beforehand, no doubt,
for an anticipated refusal: "Miss Helena wished me to say, sir,
that her time is your time." I was still obstinate; I pleaded
next that my day was filled up. A third message had evidently
been prepared, even for this emergency: "Miss Helena will regret,
sir, having the pleasure deferred, but she will leave you to make
your own appointment for to-morrow." Persistency so inveterate as
this led to a result which Mr. Gracedieu's cautious daughter had
not perhaps contemplated: it put me on my guard. There seemed to
be a chance, to say the least of it, that I might serve Eunice's
interests if I discovered what the enemy had to say. I locked up
my writing--declared myself incapable of putting Miss Helena to
needless inconvenience--and followed the maid to the lower floor
of the house.

The room to which I was conducted proved to be empty. I looked
round me.

If I had been told that a man lived there who was absolutely
indifferent to appearances, I should have concluded that his
views were faithfully represented by his place of abode. The
chairs and tables reminded me of a railway waiting-room. The
shabby little bookcase was the mute record of a life indifferent
to literature. The carpet was of that dreadful drab color, still
the cherished favorite of the average English mind, in spite of
every protest that can be entered against it, on behalf of Art.
The ceiling, recently whitewashed; made my eyes ache when they
looked at it. On either side of the window, flaccid green
curtains hung helplessly with nothing to loop them up. The
writing-desk and the paper-case, viewed as specimens of woodwork,
recalled the ready-made bedrooms on show in cheap shops. The
books, mostly in slate-colored bindings, were devoted to the
literature which is called religious; I only discovered three
worldly publications among them--Domestic Cookery, Etiquette for
Ladies, and Hints on the Breeding of Poultry. An ugly little
clock, ticking noisily in a black case, and two candlesticks of
base metal placed on either side of it, completed the ornaments
on the chimney-piece. Neither pictures nor prints hid the
barrenness of the walls. I saw no needlework and no flowers. The
one object in the place which showed any pretensions to beauty
was a looking-glass in an elegant gilt frame--sacred to vanity,
and worthy of the office that it filled. Such was Helena
Gracedieu's sitting-room. I really could not help thinking: How
like her!

She came in with a face perfectly adapted to the
circumstances--pleased and smiling; amiably deferential, in
consideration of the claims of her father's guest--and, to my
surprise, in some degree suggestive of one of those incorrigible
female prisoners, to whom Miss Jillgall had referred me when she
offered a word of advice.

"How kind of you to come so soon! Excuse my receiving you in my
housekeeping-room; we shall not be interrupted here. Very plainly
furnished, is it not? I dislike ostentation and display.
Ornaments are out of place in a room devoted to domestic
necessities. I hate domestic necessities. You notice the
looking-glass? It's a present. I should never have put such a
thing up. Perhaps my vanity excuses it."

She pointed the last remark by a look at herself in the glass;
using it, while she despised it. Yes: there was a handsome face,
paying her its reflected compliment--but not so well matched as
it might have been by a handsome figure. Her feet were too large;
her shoulders were too high; the graceful undulations of a
well-made girl were absent when she walked; and her bosom was, to
my mind, unduly developed for her time of life.

She sat down by me with her back to the light. Happening to be
opposite to the window, I offered her the advantage of a clear
view of my face. She waited for me, and I waited for her--and
there was an awkward pause before we spoke. She set the example.

"Isn't it curious?" she remarked. "When two people have something
particular to say to each other, and nothing to hinder them, they
never seem to know how to say it. You are the oldest, sir. Why
don't you begin?"

"Because I have nothing particular to say."

"In plain words, you mean that I must begin?"

"If you please."

"Very well. I want to know whether I have given you (and Miss
Jillgall, of course) as much time as you want, and as many
opportunities as you could desire?"

"Pray go on, Miss Helena."

"Have I not said enough already?"

"Not enough, I regret to say, to convey your meaning to me."

She drew her chair a little further away from me. "I am sadly
disappointed," she said. "I had such a high opinion of your
perfect candor. I thought to myself: There is such a striking
expression of frankness in his face. Another illusion gone! I
hope you won't think I am offended, if I say a bold word. I am
only a young girl, to be sure; but I am not quite such a fool as
you take me for. Do you really think I don't know that Miss
Jillgall has been telling you everything that is bad about me;
putting every mistake that I have made, every fault that I have
committed, in the worst possible point of view? And you have
listened to her--quite naturally! And you are prejudiced,
strongly prejudiced, against me--what else could you be, under
the circumstances? I don't complain; I have purposely kept out of
your way, and out of Miss Jillgall's way; in short, I have
afforded you every facility, as the prospectuses say. I only want
to know if my turn has come at last. Once more, have I given you
time enough, and opportunities enough?"

"A great deal more than enough."

"Do you mean that you have made up your mind about me without
stopping to think?"

"That is exactly what I mean. An act of treachery, Miss Helena,
_is_ an act of treachery; no honest person need hesitate to
condemn it. I am sorry you sent for me."

I got up to go. With an ironical gesture of remonstrance, she
signed to me to sit down again.

"Must I remind you, dear sir, of our famous native virtue? Fair
play is surely due to a young person who has nobody to take her
part. You talked of treachery just how. I deny the treachery.
Please give me a hearing."

I returned to my chair.

"Or would you prefer waiting," she went out, "till my sister
comes here later in the day, and continues what Miss Jillgall has
begun, with the great advantage of being young and nice-looking?"

When the female mind gets into this state, no wise man answers
the female questions.

"Am I to take silence as meaning Go on?" Miss Helena inquired.

I begged her to interpret my silence in the sense most agreeable
to herself.

This naturally encouraged her. She made a proposal:

"Do you mind changing places, sir?"

"Just as you like, Miss Helena."

We changed chairs; the light now fell full on her face. Had she
deliberately challenged me to look into her secret mind if I
could? Anything like the stark insensibility of that young girl
to every refinement of feeling, to every becoming doubt of
herself, to every customary timidity of her age and sex in the
presence of a man who had not disguised his unfavorable opinion
of her, I never met with in all my experience of the world and of
women.

"I wish to be quite mistress of myself," she explained; "your
face, for some reason which I really don't know, irritates me.
The fact is, I have great pride in keeping my temper. Please make
allowances. Now about Miss Jillgall. I suppose she told you how
my sister first met with Philip Dunboyne?"

"Yes."

"She also mentioned, perhaps, that he was a highly-cultivated
man?"

"She did."

"Now we shall get on. When Philip came to our town here, and saw
me for the first time--Do you object to my speaking familiarly of
him, by his Christian name?"

"In the case of any one else in your position, Miss Helena, I
should venture to call it bad taste."

I was provoked into saying that. It failed entirely as a
well-meant effort in the way of implied reproof. Miss Helena
smiled.

"You grant me a liberty which you would not concede to another
girl." That was how she viewed it. "We are getting on better
already. To return to what I was saying. When Philip first saw
me--I have it from himself, mind--he felt that I should have been
his choice, if he had met with me before he met with my sister.
Do you blame him?"

"If you will take my advice," I said, "you will not inquire too
closely into my opinion of Mr. Philip Dunboyne."

"Perhaps you don't wish me to say anymore?" she suggested.

"On the contrary, pray go on, if you like."

After that concession, she was amiability itself. "Oh, yes," she
assured me, "that's easily done." And she went on accordingly:
"Philip having informed me of the state of his affections, I
naturally followed his example. In fact, we exchanged
confessions. Our marriage engagement followed as a matter of
course. Do you blame me?"

"I will wait till you have done."

"I have no more to say."

She made that amazing reply with such perfect composure, that I
began to fear there must have been some misunderstanding between
us. "Is that really all you have to say for yourself?" I
persisted.

Her patience with me was most exemplary. She lowered herself to
my level. Not trusting to words only on this occasion, she (so to
say) beat her meaning into my head by gesticulating on her
fingers, as if she was educating a child.

"Philip and I," she began, "are the victims of an accident, which
kept us apart when we ought to have met together--we are not
responsible for an accident." She impressed this on me by
touching her forefinger. "Philip and I fell in love with each
other at first sight--we are not responsible for the feelings
implanted in our natures by an all-wise Providence." She assisted
me in understanding this by touching her middle finger. "Philip
and I owe a duty to each other, and accept a responsibility under
those circumstances--the responsibility of getting married." A
touch on her third finger, and an indulgent bow, announced that
the lesson was ended. "I am not a clever man like you," she
modestly acknowledged, "but I ask you to help us, when you next
see my father, with some confidence. You know exactly what to say
to him, by this time. Nothing has been forgotten."

"Pardon me," I said, "a person has been forgotten."

"Indeed? What person?"

"Your sister."

A little perplexed at first, Miss Helena reflected, and recovered
herself.

"Ah, yes," she said; "I was afraid I might be obliged to trouble
you for an explanation--I see it now. You are shocked (very
properly) when feelings of enmity exist between near relations;
and you wish to be assured that I bear no malice toward Eunice.
She is violent, she is  sulky, she is stupid, she is selfish ; and
she cruelly refuses to live in the same house with me. Make your
mind easy, sir, I forgive my sister."

Let me not attempt to disguise it--Miss Helena Gracedieu
confounded me.

Ordinary audacity is one of those forms of insolence which mature
experience dismisses with contempt. This girl's audacity struck
down all resistance, for one shocking reason: it was
unquestionably sincere. Strong conviction of her own virtue
stared at me in her proud and daring eyes. At that time, I was
not aware of what I have learned since. The horrid hardening of
her moral sense had been accomplished by herself. In her diary,
there has been found the confession of a secret course of
reading--with supplementary reflections flowing from it, which
need only to be described as worthy of their source.

A person capable of repentance and reform would, in her place,
have seen that she had disgusted me. Not a suspicion of this
occurred to Miss Helena. "I see you are embarrassed," she
remarked, "and I am at no loss to account for it. You are too
polite to acknowledge that I have not made a friend of you yet.
Oh, I mean to do it!"

"No," I said, "I think not."

"We shall see," she replied. "Sooner or later, you will find
yourself saying a kind word to my father for Philip and me." She
rose, and took a turn in the room--and stopped, eying me
attentively. "Are you thinking of Eunice?" she asked.

"Yes."

"She has your sympathy, I suppose?"

"My heart-felt sympathy."

"I needn't ask how I stand in your estimation, after that. Pray
express yourself freely. Your looks confess it--you view me with
a feeling of aversion."

"I view you with a feeling of horror."

The exasperating influences of her language, her looks, and her
tones would, as I venture to think, have got to the end of
another man's self-control before this. Anyway, she had at last
irritated me into speaking as strongly as I felt. What I said had
been so plainly (perhaps so rudely) expressed, that
misinterpretation of it seemed to be impossible. She mistook me,
nevertheless. The most merciless disclosure of the dreary side of
human destiny is surely to be found in the failure of words,
spoken or written, so to answer their purpose that we can trust
them, in our attempts to communicate with each other. Even when
he seems to be connected, by the nearest and dearest relations,
with his fellow-mortals, what a solitary creature, tried by the
test of sympathy, the human being really is in the teeming world
that he inhabits! Affording one more example of the impotence of
human language to speak for itself, my misinterpreted words had
found their way to the one sensitive place in Helena Gracedieu's
impenetrable nature. She betrayed it in the quivering and
flushing of her hard face, and in the appeal to the looking-glass
which escaped her eyes the next moment. My hasty reply had roused
the idea of a covert insult addressed to her handsome face. In
other words, I had wounded her vanity. Driven by resentment, out
came the secret distrust of me which had been lurking in that
cold heart, from the moment when we first met.

"I inspire you with horror, and Eunice inspires you with
compassion," she said. "That, Mr. Governor, is not natural."

"May I ask why?"

"You know why."

"No."

"You will have it?"

"I want an explanation, Miss Helena, if that is what you mean."

"Take your explanation, then! You are not the stranger you are
said to be to my sister and to me. Your interest in Eunice is a
personal interest of some kind. I don't pretend to guess what it
is. As for myself, it is plain that somebody else has been
setting you against me, before Miss Jillgall got possession of
your private ear."

In alluding to Eunice, she had blundered, strangely enough, on
something like the truth. But when she spoke of herself, the
headlong malignity of her suspicions--making every allowance for
the anger that had hurried her into them--seemed to call for some
little protest against a false assertion. I told her that she was
completely mistaken.

"I am completely right," she answered; "I saw it."

"Saw what?"

"Saw you pretending to be a stranger to me."

"When did I do that?"

"You did it when we met at the station."

The reply was too ridiculous for the preservation of any control
over my own sense of humor. It was wrong; but it was
inevitable--I laughed. She looked at me with a fury, revealing a
concentration of evil passion in her which I had not seen yet. I
asked her pardon; I begged her to think a little before she
persisted in taking a view of my conduct unworthy of her, and
unjust to myself.

"Unjust to You!" she burst out. "Who are you? A man who has
driven your trade has spies always at his command--yes! and knows
how to use them. You were primed with private information--you
had, for all I know, a stolen photograph of me in your
pocket--before ever you came to our town. Do you still deny it?
Oh, sir, why degrade yourself by telling a lie?"

No such outrage as this had ever been inflicted on me, at any
time in my life. My forbearance must, I suppose, have been more
severely tried than I was aware of myself. With or without excuse
for me, I was weak enough to let a girl's spiteful tongue sting
me, and, worse still, to let her see that I felt it.

"You shall have no second opportunity, Miss Gracedieu, of
insulting me." With that foolish reply, I opened the door
violently and went out.

She ran after me, triumphing in having roused the temper of a man
old enough to have been her grandfather, and caught me by the
arm. "Your own conduct has exposed you." (That was literally how
she expressed herself.) "I saw it in your eyes when we met at the
station. You, the stranger--you who allowed poor ignorant me to
introduce myself--you knew me all the time, knew me by sight!"

I shook her hand off with an inconsiderable roughness,
humiliating to remember. "It's false!" I cried. "I knew you by
your likeness to your mother."

The moment the words had passed my lips, I came to my senses
again; I remembered what fatal words they might prove to be, if
they reached the Minister's ears.

Heard only by his daughter, my reply seemed to cool the heat of
her anger in an instant.

"So you knew my mother?" she said. "My father never told us that,
when he spoke of your being such a very old friend of his.
Strange, to say the least of it."

I was wise enough--now when wisdom had come too late--not to
attempt to explain myself, and not to give her an opportunity of
saying more. "We are neither of us in a state of mind," I
answered, "to allow this interview to continue. I must try to
recover my composure; and I leave you to do the same."

In the solitude of my room, I was able to look my position fairly
in the face.

Mr. Gracedieu's wife had come to me, in the long-past time,
without her husband's knowledge. Tempted to a cruel resolve by
the maternal triumph of having an infant of her own, she had
resolved to rid herself of the poor little rival in her husband's
fatherly affection, by consigning the adopted child to the
keeping of a charitable asylum. She had dared to ask me to help
her. I had kept the secret of her shameful visit--I can honestly
say, for the Minister's sake. And now, long after time had doomed
those events to oblivion, they were revived--and revived by me.
Thanks to my folly, Mr. Gracedieu's daughter knew what I had
concealed from Mr. Gracedieu himself.

What course did respect for my friend, and respect for myself,
counsel me to take?

I could only see before me a choice of two evils. To wait for
events--with the too certain prospect of a vindictive betrayal of
my indiscretion by Helena Gracedieu. Or to take the initiative
into my own hands, and risk consequences which I might regret to
the end of my life, by making my confession to the Minister.

Before I had decided, somebody knocked at the door. It was the
maid-servant again. Was it possible she had been sent by Helena?

"Another message?"

"Yes, sir. My master wishes to see you."


CHAPTER XXXVIII.

THE GIRLS' AGES.


HAD the Minister's desire to see me been inspired by his
daughter's betrayal of what I had unfortunately said to her?
Although he would certainly not consent to receive her
personally, she would be at liberty to adopt a written method of
communication with him, and the letter might be addressed in such
a manner as to pique his curiosity. If Helena's vindictive
purpose had been already accomplished--and if Mr. Gracedieu left
me no alternative but to present his unworthy wife in her true
character--I can honestly say that I dreaded the consequences,
not as they might affect myself, but as they might affect my
unhappy friend in his enfeebled state of body and mind.

When I entered his room, he was still in bed.

The bed-curtains were so drawn, on the side nearest to the
window, as to keep the light from falling too brightly on his
weak eyes. In the shadow thus thrown on him, it was not possible
to see his face plainly enough, from the open side of the bed, to
arrive at any definite conclusion as to what might be passing in
his mind. After having been awake for some hours during the
earlier part of the night, he had enjoyed a long and undisturbed
sleep. "I feel stronger this morning," he said, "and I wish to
speak to you while my mind is clear."

If the quiet tone of his voice was not an assumed tone, he was
surely ignorant of all that had passed between his daughter and
myself.

"Eunice will be here soon," he proceeded, "and I ought to explain
why I have sent for her to come and meet you. I have reasons,
serious reasons, mind, for wishing you to compare her personal
appearance with Helena's personal appearance, and then to tell me
which of the two, on a fair comparison, looks the eldest. Pray
bear in mind that I attach the greatest importance to the
conclusion at which you may arrive."

He spoke more clearly and collectedly than I had heard him speak
yet.

Here and there I detected hesitations and repetitions, which I
have purposely passed over. The substance of what he said to me
is all that I shall present in this place. Careful as I have been
to keep my record of events within strict limits, I have written
at a length which I was far indeed from contemplating when I
accepted Mr. Gracedieu's invitation.

Having promised to comply with the strange request which he had
addressed to me, I ventured to remind him of past occasions on
which he had pointedly abstained, when the subject presented
itself, from speaking of the girls' ages. "You have left it to my
discretion," I added, "to decide a question in which you are
seriously interested, relating to your daughters. Have I no
excuse for regretting that I have not been admitted to your
confidence a little more freely?"

"You have every excuse," he answered. "But you trouble me all the
same. There was something else that I had to say to you--and your
curiosity gets in the way."

He said this with a sullen emphasis. In my position, the worst of
evils was suspense. I told him that my curiosity could wait; and
I begged that he would relieve his mind of what was pressing on
it at the moment.

"Let me think a little," he said.

I waited anxiously for the decision at which he might arrive.
Nothing came of it to justify my misgivings. "Leave what I have
in my mind to ripen in my mind," he said. "The mystery about the
girls' ages seems to irritate you. If I put my good friend's
temper to any further trial, he will be of no use to me. Never
mind if my head swims; I'm used to that. Now listen!"

Strange as the preface was, the explanation that followed was
stranger yet. I offer a shortened and simplified version, giving
accurately the substance of what I heard.

The Minister entered without reserve on the mysterious subject of
the ages. Eunice, he informed me, was nearly two years older than
Helena. If she outwardly showed her superiority of age, any
person acquainted with the circumstances under which the adopted
infant had been received into Mr. Gracedieu's childless
household, need only compare the so-called sisters in after-life,
and would thereupon identify the eldest-looking young lady of the
two as the offspring of the woman who had been hanged for murder.
With such a misfortune as this presenting itself as a possible
prospect, the Minister was bound to prevent the girls from
ignorantly betraying each other by allusions to their ages and
their birthdays. After much thought, he had devised a desperate
means of meeting the difficulty--already made known, as I am
told, for the information of strangers who may read the pages
that have gone before mine. My friend's plan of proceeding had,
by the nature of it, exposed him to injurious comment, to
embarrassing questions, and to doubts and misconceptions, all
patiently endured in consideration of the security that had been
attained. Proud of his explanation, Mr. Gracedieu's vanity called
upon me to acknowledge that my curiosity had been satisfied, and
my doubts completely set at rest.

No: my obstinate common sense was not reduced to submission, even
yet. Looking back over a lapse of seventeen years, I asked what
had happened, in that long interval, to justify the anxieties
which still appeared to trouble my friend.

This time, my harmless curiosity could be gratified by a reply
expressed in three words--nothing had happened.

Then what, in Heaven's name, was the Minister afraid of?

His voice dropped to a whisper. He said: "I am afraid of the
women."

Who were the women?

Two of them actually proved to be the servants employed in Mr.
Gracedieu's house, at the bygone time when be had brought the
child home with him from the prison! To point out the absurdity
of the reasons that he gave for fearing what female curiosity
might yet attempt, if circumstances happened to encourage it,
would have been a mere waste of words. Dismissing the subject, I
next ascertained that the Minister's doubts extended even to the
two female warders, who had been appointed to watch the murderess
in turn, during her last days in prison. I easily relieved his
mind in this case. One of the warders was dead. The other had
married a farmer in Australia. Had we exhausted the list of
suspected persons yet? No: there was one more left; and the
Minister declared that he had first met with her in my official
residence, at the time when I was Governor of the prison.

"She presented herself to me by name," he said; "and she spoke
rudely. A Miss--" He paused to consult his memory, and this time
(thanks perhaps to his night's rest) his memory answered the
appeal. "I have got it!" he cried--"Miss Chance."

My friend had interested me in his imaginary perils at last. It
was just possible that he might have a formidable person to deal
with now.

During my residence at Florence, the Chaplain and I had taken
many a retrospective look (as old men will) at past events in our
lives. My former colleague spoke of the time when he had
performed clerical duty for his friend, the rector of a parish
church in London. Neither he nor I had heard again of the "Miss
Chance" of our disagreeable prison experience, whom he had
married to the dashing Dutch gentleman, Mr. Tenbruggen. We could
only wonder what had become of that mysterious married pair.

Mr. Gracedieu being undoubtedly ignorant of the woman's marriage,
it was not easy to say what the consequence might be, in his
excitable state, if I informed him of it. He would, in all
probability, conclude that I knew more of the woman than he did.
I decided on keeping my own counsel, for the present at least.

Passing at once, therefore, to the one consideration of any
importance, I endeavored to find out whether Mr. Gracedieu and
Mrs. Tenbruggen had met, or had communicated with each other in
any way, during the long period of separation that had taken
place between the Minister and myself. If he had been so unlucky
as to offend her, she was beyond all doubt an enemy to be
dreaded. Apart, however, from a misfortune of this kind, she
would rank, in my opinion, with the other harmless objects of Mr.
Gracedieu's distrust.

In making my inquiries, I found that I had an obstacle to contend
with.

While he felt the renovating influence of the repose that he
enjoyed, the Minister had been able to think and to express
himself with less difficulty than usual. But the reserves of
strength, on which the useful exercise of his memory depe nded,
began to fail him as the interview proceeded. He distinctly
recollected that "something unpleasant had passed between that
audacious woman and himself." But at what date--and whether by
word of mouth or by correspondence--was more than his memory
could now recall. He believed be was not mistaken in telling me
that he "had been in two minds about her." At one time, he was
satisfied that he had taken wise measures for his own security,
if she attempted to annoy him. But there was another and a later
time, when doubts and fears had laid hold of him again. If I
wanted to know how this had happened, he fancied it was through a
dream; and if I asked what the dream was, he could only beg and
pray that I would spare his poor head.

Unwilling even yet to submit unconditionally to defeat, it
occurred to me to try a last experiment on my friend, without
calling for any mental effort on his own part. The "Miss Chance"
of former days might, by a bare possibility, have written to him.
I asked accordingly if he was in the habit of keeping his
letters, and if he would allow me (when he had rested a little)
to lay them open before him, so that he could look at the
signatures. "You might find the lost recollection in that way," I
suggested, "at the bottom of one of your letters."

He was in that state of weariness, poor fellow, in which a man
will do anything for the sake of peace. Pointing to a cabinet in
his room, he gave me a key taken from a little basket on his bed.
"Look for yourself," he said. After some hesitation--for I
naturally recoiled from examining another man's correspondence--I
decided on opening the cabinet, at any rate.

The letters--a large collection--were, to my relief, all neatly
folded, and indorsed with the names of the writers. I could run
harmlessly through bundle after bundle in search of the one name
that I wanted, and still respect the privacy of the letters. My
perseverance deserved a reward--and failed to get it. The name I
wanted steadily eluded my search. Arriving at the upper shelf of
the cabinet, I found it so high that I could barely reach it with
my hand. Instead of getting more letters to look over, I pulled
down two newspapers.

One of them was an old copy of the _Times,_ dating back as far as
the 13th December, 1858. It was carefully folded, longwise, with
the title-page uppermost. On the first column, at the left-hand
side of the sheet, appeared the customary announcements of
Births. A mark with a blue pencil, against one of the
advertisements, attracted my attention. I read these lines:

"On the 10th inst., the wife of the Rev. Abel Gracedieu, of a
daughter."

The second newspaper bore a later date, and contained nothing
that interested me. I naturally assumed that the advertisement in
the _Times_ had been inserted at the desire of Mrs. Gracedieu;
and, after all that I had heard, there was little difficulty in
attributing the curious omission of the place in which the child
had been born to the caution of her husband. If Mrs. Tenbruggen
(then Miss Chance) had happened to see the advertisement in the
great London newspaper, Mr. Gracedieu might yet have good reason
to congratulate himself on his prudent method of providing
against mischievous curiosity.

I turned toward the bed and looked at him. His eyes were closed.
Was he sleeping? Or was he trying to remember what he had desired
to say to me, when the demands which I made on his memory had
obliged him to wait for a later opportunity?

Either way, there was something that quickened my sympathies, in
the spectacle of his helpless repose. It suggested to me personal
reasons for his anxieties, which he had not mentioned, and which
I had not thought of, up to this time. If the discovery that he
dreaded took place, his household would be broken up, and his
position as pastor would suffer in the estimation of the flock.
His own daughter would refuse to live under the same roof with
the daughter of an infamous woman. Popular opinion, among his
congregation, judging a man who had passed off the child of other
parents as his own, would find that man guilty of an act of
deliberate deceit.

Still oppressed by reflections which pointed to the future in
this discouraging way, I was startled by a voice outside the
door--a sweet, sad voice--saying, "May I come in?"

The Minister's eyes opened instantly: he raised himself in his
bed.

"Eunice, at last!" he cried. "Let her in."


CHAPTER XXXIX.

THE ADOPTED CHILD


I OPENED the door.

Eunice passed me with the suddenness almost of a flash of light.
When I turned toward the bed, her arms were round her father's
neck. "Oh, poor papa, how ill you look!" Commonplace expressions
of fondness, and no more; but the tone gave them a charm that
subdued me. Never had I felt so indulgent toward Mr. Gracedieu's
unreasonable fears as when I saw him in the embrace of his
adopted daughter. She had already reminded me of the bygone day
when a bright little child had sat on my knee and listened to the
ticking of my watch.

The Minister gently lifted her head from his breast. "My
darling," he said, "you don't see my old friend. Love him, and
look up to him, Eunice. He will be your friend, too, when I am
gone."

She came to me and offered her cheek to be kissed. It was sadly
pale, poor soul--and I could guess why. But her heart was now
full of her father. "Do you think he is seriously ill?" she
whispered. What I ought to have said I don't know. Her eyes, the
sweetest, truest, loveliest eyes I ever saw in a human face, were
pleading with me. Let my enemies make the worst of it, if they
like--I did certainly lie. And if I deserved my punishment, I got
it; the poor child believed me! "Now I am happier," she said,
gratefully. "Only to hear your voice seems to encourage me. On
our way here, Selina did nothing but talk of you. She told me I
shouldn't have time to feel afraid of the great man; he would
make me fond of him directly. I said, 'Are you fond of him?' She
said, 'Madly in love with him, my dear.' My little friend really
thinks you like her, and is very proud of it There are some
people who call her ugly. I hope you don't agree with them?"

I believe I should have lied again, if Mr. Gracedieu had not
called me to the bedside

"How does she strike you?" he whispered, eagerly. "Is it too soon
to ask if she shows her age in her face?"

"Neither in her face nor her figure," I answered: "it astonishes
me that you can ever have doubted it. No stranger, judging by
personal appearance, could fail to make the mistake of thinking
Helena the oldest of the two."

He looked fondly at Eunice. "Her figure seems to bear out what
you say," he went on. "Almost childish, isn't it?"

I could not agree to that. Slim, supple, simply graceful in every
movement, Eunice's figure, in the charm of first youth, only
waited its perfect development. Most men, looking at her as she
stood at the other end of the room with her back toward us, would
have guessed her age to be sixteen.

Finding that I failed to agree with him, Mr. Gracedieu's
misgivings returned. "You speak very confidently," he said,
"considering that you have not seen the girls together. Think
what a dreadful blow it would be to me if you made a mistake."

I declared, with perfect sincerity, that there was no fear of a
mistake. The bare idea of making the proposed comparison was
hateful to me. If Helena and I had happened to meet at that
moment, I should have turned away from her by instinct--she would
have disturbed my impressions of Eunice.

The Minister signed to me to move a little nearer to him. "I must
say it," he whispered, "and I am afraid of her hearing me. Is
there anything in her face that reminds you of her miserable
mother?"

I had hardly patience to answer the question: it was simply
preposterous. Her hair was by many shades darker than her
mother's hair; her eyes were of a different color. There was an
exquisite tenderness and sincerity in their expression--made
additionally beautiful, to my mind, by a gentle, uncomplaining
sadness. It was impossible even to think of the eyes of the
murderess when I looked at her child. Eunice's lower features,
again, had none of her mother's regularity of p roportion. Her
smile, simple and sweet, and soon passing away, was certainly not
an inherited smile on the maternal side. Whether she resembled
her father, I was unable to conjecture--having never seen him.
The one thing certain was, that not the faintest trace, in
feature or expression, of Eunice's mother was to be seen in
Eunice herself. Of the two girls, Helena--judging by something in
the color of her hair, and by something in the shade of her
complexion--might possibly have suggested, in those particulars
only, a purely accidental resemblance to my terrible prisoner of
past times.

The revival of Mr. Gracedieu's spirits indicated a temporary
change only, and was already beginning to pass away. The eyes
which had looked lovingly at Eunice began to look languidly now:
his head sank on the pillow with a sigh of weak content. "My
pleasure has been almost too much for me," he said. "Leave me for
a while to rest, and get used to it."

Eunice kissed his forehead--and we left the room.


CHAPTER XL.

THE BRUISED HEART.


WHEN we stepped out on the landing, I observed that my companion
paused. She looked at the two flights of stairs below us before
she descended them. It occurred to me that there must be somebody
in the house whom she was anxious to avoid.

Arrived at the lower hall, she paused again, and proposed in a
whisper that we should go into the garden. As we advanced along
the backward division of the hall, I saw her eyes turn
distrustfully toward the door of the room in which Helena had
received me. At last, my slow perceptions felt with her and
understood her. Eunice's sensitive nature recoiled from a chance
meeting with the wretch who had laid waste all that had once been
happy and hopeful in that harmless young life.

"Will you come with me to the part of the garden that I am
fondest of?" she asked.

I offered her my arm. She led me in silence to a rustic seat,
placed under the shade of a mulberry tree. I saw a change in her
face as we sat down--a tender and beautiful change. At that
moment the girl's heart was far away from me. There was some
association with this corner of the garden, on which I felt that
I must not intrude.

"I was once very happy here," she said. "When the time of the
heartache came soon after, I was afraid to look at the old tree
and the bench under it. But that is all over now. I like to
remember the hours that were once dear to me, and to see the
place that recalls them. Do you know who I am thinking of? Don't
be afraid of distressing me. I never cry now."

"My dear child, I have heard your sad story--but I can't trust
myself to speak of it."

"Because you are so sorry for me?"

"No words can say how sorry I am!"

"But you are not angry with Philip?"

"Not angry! My poor dear, I am afraid to tell you how angry I am
with him."

"Oh, no! You mustn't say that. If you wish to be kind to me--and
I am sure you do wish it--don't think bitterly of Philip."

When I remember that the first feeling she roused in me was
nothing worthier of a professing Christian than astonishment, I
drop in my own estimation to the level of a savage. "Do you
really mean," I was base enough to ask, "that you have forgiven
him?"

She said, gently: "How could I help forgiving him?"

The man who could have been blessed with such love as this, and
who could have cast it away from him, can have been nothing but
an idiot. On that ground--though I dared not confess it to
Eunice--I forgave him, too.

"Do I surprise you?" she asked simply. "Perhaps love will bear
any humiliation. Or perhaps I am only a poor weak creature. You
don't know what a comfort it was to me to keep the few letters
that I received from Philip. When I heard that he had gone away,
I gave his letters the kiss that bade him good-by. That was the
time, I think, when my poor bruised heart got used to the pain; I
began to feel that there was one consolation still left for me--I
might end in forgiving him. Why do I tell you all this? I think
you must have bewitched me. Is this really the first time I have
seen you?"

She put her little trembling hand into mine; I lifted it to my
lips, and kissed it. Sorely was I tempted to own that I had
pitied and loved her in her infancy. It was almost on my lips to
say: "I remember you an easily-pleased little creature, amusing
yourself with the broken toys which were once the playthings of
my own children." I believe I should have said it, if I could
have trusted myself to speak composedly to her. This was not to
be done. Old as I was, versed as I was in the hard knowledge of
how to keep the mask on in the hour of need, this was not to be
done.

Still trying to understand that I was little better than a
stranger to her, and still bent on finding the secret of the
sympathy that united us, Eunice put a strange question to me.

"When you were young yourself," she said, "did you know what it
was to love, and to be loved--and then to lose it all?"

It is not given to many men to marry the woman who has been the
object of their first love. My early life had been darkened by a
sad story; never confided to any living creature; banished
resolutely from my own thoughts. For forty years past, that part
of my buried self had lain quiet in its grave--and the chance
touch of an innocent hand had raised the dead, and set us face to
face again! Did I know what it was to love, and to be loved, and
then to lose it all? "Too well, my child; too well!"

That was all I could say to her. In the last days of my life, I
shrank from speaking of it. When I had first felt that calamity,
and had felt it most keenly, I might have given an answer
worthier of me, and worthier of her.

She dropped my hand, and sat by me in silence, thinking. Had
I--without meaning it, God knows!--had I disappointed her?

"Did you expect me to tell my own sad story," I said, "as frankly
and as trustfully as you have told yours?"

"Oh, don't think that! I know what an effort it was to you to
answer me at all. Yes, indeed! I wonder whether I may ask
something. The sorrow you have just told me of is not the only
one--is it? You have had other troubles?"

"Many of them."

"There are times," she went on, "when one can't help thinking of
one's own miserable self. I try to be cheerful, but those times
come now and then."

She stopped, and looked at me with a pale fear confessing itself
in her face.

"You know who Selina is?" she resumed. "My friend! The only
friend I had, till you came here."

I guessed that she was speaking of the quaint, kindly little
woman, whose ugly surname had been hitherto the only name known
to me.

"Selina has, I daresay, told you that I have been ill," she
continued, "and that I am staying in the country for the benefit
of my health."

It was plain that she had something to say to me, far more
important than this, and that she was dwelling on trifles to gain
time and courage. Hoping to help her, I dwelt on trifles, too;
asking commonplace questions about the part of the country in
which she was staying. She answered absently--then, little by
little, impatiently. The one poor proof of kindness that I could
offer, now, was to say no more.

"Do you know what a strange creature I am?" she broke out. "Shall
I make you angry with me? or shall I make you laugh at me? What I
have shrunk from confessing to Selina--what I dare not confess to
my father--I must, and will, confess to You."

There was a look of horror in her face that alarmed me. I drew
her to me so that she could rest her head on my shoulder. My own
agitation threatened to get the better of me. For the first time
since I had seen this sweet girl, I found myself thinking of the
blood that ran in her veins, and of the nature of the mother who
had borne her.

"Did you notice how I behaved upstairs?" she said. "I mean when
we left my father, and came out on the lauding."

It was easily recollected; I begged her to go on.

"Before I went downstairs," she proceeded, "you saw me look and
listen. Did you think I was afraid of meeting some person? and
did you guess who it was I wanted to avoid?"

"I guessed that--and I understood you."

"No! You are not wicked enough to understand me. Will you do me a
favor? I want you to lo ok at me."

It was said seriously. She lifted her head for a moment, so that
I could examine her face.

"Do you see anything," she asked, "which makes you fear that I am
not in my right mind?"

"Good God! how can you ask such a horrible question?

She laid her head back on my shoulder with a sad little sigh of
resignation. "I ought to have known better," she said; "there is
no such easy way out of it as that. Tell me--is there one kind of
wickedness more deceitful than another? Can it be hid in a person
for years together, and show itself when a time of suffering--no;
I mean when a sense of injury comes? Did you ever see that, when
you were master in the prison?"

I had seen it--and, after a moment's doubt, I said I had seen it.

"Did you pity those poor wretches?"

"Certainly! They deserved pity."

"I am one of them!" she said. "Pity _me._ If Helena looks at
me--if Helena speaks to me--if I only see Helena by accident--do
you know what she does? She tempts me! Tempts me to do dreadful
things! Tempts me--" The poor child threw her arms round my neck,
and whispered the next fatal words in my ear.

The mother! Prepared as I was for the accursed discovery, the
horror of it shook me.

She left me, and started to her feet. The inherited energy showed
itself in furious protest against the inherited evil. "What does
it mean?" she cried. "I'll submit to anything. I'll bear my hard
lot patiently, if you will only tell me what it means. Where does
this horrid transformation of me out of myself come from? Look at
my good father. In all this world there is no man so perfect as
he is. And oh, how he has taught me! there isn't a single good
thing that I have not learned from him since I was a little
child. Did you ever hear him speak of my mother? You must have
heard him. My mother was an angel. I could never be worthy of her
at my best--but I have tried! I have tried! The wickedest girl in
the world doesn't have worse thoughts than the thoughts that have
come to me. Since when? Since Helena--oh, how can I call her by
her name as if I still loved her? Since my sister--can she be my
sister, I ask myself sometimes! Since my enemy--there's the word
for her--since my enemy took Philip away from me. What does it
mean? I have asked in my prayers--and have got no answer. I ask
you. What does it mean? You must tell me! You shall tell me! What
does it mean?"

Why did I not try to calm her? I had vainly tried to calm her--I
who knew who her mother was, and what her mother had been.

At last, she had forced the sense of my duty on me. The simplest
way of calming her was to put her back in the place by my side
that she had left. It was useless to reason with her, it was
impossible to answer her. I had my own idea of the one way in
which I might charm Eunice back to her sweeter self.

"Let us talk of Philip," I said.

The fierce flush on her face softened, the swelling trouble of
her bosom began to subside, as that dearly-loved name passed my
lips! But there was some influence left in her which resisted me.

"No," she said; "we had better not talk of him."

"Why not?"

"I have lost all my courage. If you speak of Philip, you will
make me cry."

I drew her nearer to me. If she had been my own child, I don't
think I could have felt for her more truly than I felt at that
moment. I only looked at her; I only said:

"Cry!"

The love that was in her heart rose, and poured its tenderness
into her eyes. I had longed to see the tears that would comfort
her. The tears came.

There was silence between us for a while. It was possible for me
to think.

In the absence of physical resemblance between parent and child,
is an unfavorable influence exercised on the tendency to moral
resemblance? Assuming the possibility of such a result as this,
Eunice (entirely unlike her mother) must, as I concluded, have
been possessed of qualities formed to resist, as well as of
qualities doomed to undergo, the infection of evil. While,
therefore, I resigned myself to recognize the existence of the
hereditary maternal taint, I firmly believed in the
counterbalancing influences for good which had been part of the
girl's birthright. They had been derived, perhaps, from the
better qualities in her father's nature; they had been certainly
developed by the tender care, the religious vigilance, which had
guarded the adopted child so lovingly in the Minister's
household; and they had served their purpose until time brought
with it the change, for which the tranquil domestic influences
were not prepared. With the great, the vital transformation,
which marks the ripening of the girl into the woman's maturity of
thought and passion, a new power for Good, strong enough to
resist the latent power for Evil, sprang into being, and
sheltered Eunice under the supremacy of Love. Love ill-fated and
ill-bestowed--but love that no profanation could stain, that no
hereditary evil could conquer--the True Love that had been, and
was, and would be, the guardian angel of Eunice's life.

If I am asked whether I have ventured to found this opinion on
what I have observed in one instance only, I reply that I have
had other opportunities of investigation, and that my conclusions
are derived from experience which refers to more instances than
one.

No man in his senses can doubt that physical qualities are
transmitted from parents to children. But inheritance of moral
qualities is less easy to trace. Here, the exploring mind finds
its progress beset by obstacles. That those obstacles have been
sometimes overcome I do not deny. Moral resemblances have been
traced between parents and children. While, however, I admit
this, I doubt the conclusion which sees, in inheritance of moral
qualities, a positive influence exercised on moral destiny. There
are inherent emotional forces in humanity to which the inherited
influences must submit; they are essentially influences under
control--influences which can be encountered and forced back.
That we, who inhabit this little planet, may be the doomed
creatures of fatality, from the cradle to the grave, I am not
prepared to dispute. But I absolutely refuse to believe that it
is a fatality with no higher origin than can be found in our
accidental obligation to our fathers and mothers.



Still absorbed in these speculations, I was disturbed by a touch
on my arm.

I looked up. Eunice's eyes were fixed on a shrubbery, at some
little distance from us, which closed the view of the garden on
that side. I noticed that she was trembling. Nothing to alarm her
was visible that I could discover. I asked what she had seen to
startle her. She pointed to the shrubbery.

"Look again," she said.

This time I saw a woman's dress among the shruhs. The woman
herself appeared in a moment more. It was Helena. She carried a
small portfolio, and she approached us with a smile.


CHAPTER XLI.

THE WHISPERING VOICE.


I LOOKED at Eunice. She had risen, startled by her first
suspicion of the person who was approaching us through the
shrubbery; but she kept her place near me, only changing her
position so as to avoid confronting Helena. Her quickened
breathing was all that told me of the effort she was making to
preserve her self-control.

Entirely free from unbecoming signs of hurry and agitation,
Helena opened her business with me by means of an apology.

"Pray excuse me for disturbing you. I am obliged to leave the
house on one of my tiresome domestic errands. If you will kindly
permit it, I wish to express, before I go, my very sincere regret
for what I was rude enough to say, when I last had the honor of
seeing you. May I hope to be forgiven? How-do-you-do, Eunice?
Have you enjoyed your holiday in the country?"

Eunice neither moved nor answered. Having some doubt of what
might happen if the two girls remained together, I proposed to
Helena to leave the garden and to let me hear what she had to
say, in the house.

"Quite needless," she replied; "I shall not detain you for more
than a minute. Please look at this."

She offered to me the portfolio that she had been carrying, and
pointed to a morsel of paper attached to it, which contained this
inscription:


"Philip's Letters To Me. Private. Helena Gracedieu."


"I have a favor to ask," she said, "and a proof of confidence in
you to offer. Will you be so good as to look over what you find
in my portfolio? I am unwilling to give up the hopes that I had
founded on our interview, when I asked for it. The letters will,
I venture to think, plead my cause more convincingly than I was
able to plead it for myself. I wish to forget what passed between
us, to the last word. To the last word," she repeated
emphatically--with a look which sufficiently informed me that I
had not been betrayed to her father yet. "Will you indulge me?"
she asked, and offered her portfolio for the second time.

A more impudent bargain could not well have been proposed to me.

I was to read, and to be favorably impressed by, Mr. Philip
Dunboyne's letters; and Miss Helena was to say nothing of that
unlucky slip of the tongue, relating to her mother, which she had
discovered to be a serious act of self-betrayal--thanks to my
confusion at the time. If I had not thought of Eunice, and of the
desolate and loveless life to which the poor girl was so
patiently resigned, I should have refused to read Miss
Gracedieu's love-letters.

But, as things were, I was influenced by the hope (innocently
encouraged by Eunice herself) that Philip Dunboyne might not be
so wholly unworthy of the sweet girl whom he had injured as I had
hitherto been too hastily disposed to believe. To act on this
view with the purpose of promoting a reconciliation was
impossible, unless I had the means of forming a correct estimate
of the man's character. It seemed to me that I had found the
means. A fair chance of putting his sincerity to a trustworthy
test, was surely offered by the letters (the confidential
letters) which I had been requested to read. To feel this as
strongly as I felt it, brought me at once to a decision. I
consented to take the portfolio--on my own conditions.

"Understand, Miss Helena," I said, "that I make no promises. I
reserve my own opinion, and my own right of action."

"I am not afraid of your opinions or your actions," she answered
confidently, "if you will only read the letters. In the meantime,
let me relieve my sister, there, of my presence. I hope you will
soon recover, Eunice, in the country air."

If the object of the wretch was to exasperate her victim, she had
completely failed. Eunice remained as still as a statue. To all
appearance, she had not even heard what had been said to her.
Helena looked at me, and touched her forehead with a significant
smile. "Sad, isn't it?" she said--and bowed, and went briskly
away on her household errand.

We were alone again.

Still, Eunice never moved. I spoke to her, and produced no
impression. Beginning to feel alarmed, I tried the effect of
touching her. With a wild cry, she started into a state of
animation. Almost at the same moment, she weakly swayed to and
fro as if the pleasant breeze in the garden moved her at its
will, like the flowers. I held her up, and led her to the seat.

"There is nothing to be afraid of," I said. "She has gone."

Eunice's eyes rested on me in vacant surprise. "How do you know?"
she asked. "I hear her; but I never see her. Do you see her?"

"My dear child! of what person are you speaking?"

She answered: "Of no person. I am speaking of a Voice that
whispers and tempts me, when Helena is near."

"What voice, Eunice?"

"The whispering Voice. It said to me, 'I am your mother;' it
called me Daughter when I first heard it. My father speaks of my
mother, the angel. That good spirit has never come to me from the
better world. It is a mock-mother who comes to me--some spirit of
evil. Listen to this. I was awake in my bed. In the dark I heard
the mock-mother whispering, close at my ear. Shall I tell you how
she answered me, when I longed for light to see her by, when I
prayed to her to show herself to me? She said: 'My face was
hidden when I passed from life to death; my face no mortal
creature may see.' I have never seen her--how can _you_ have seen
her? But I heard her again, just now. She whispered to me when
Helena was standing there--where you are standing. She freezes
the life in me. Did she freeze the life in _you?_ Did you hear
her tempting me? Don't speak of it, if you did. Oh, not a word!
not a word!"

A man who has governed a prison may say with Macbeth, "I have
supped full with horrors." Hardened as I was--or ought to have
been--the effect of what I had just heard turned me cold. If I
had not known it to be absolutely impossible, I might have
believed that the crime and the death of the murderess were known
to Eunice, as being the crime and the death of her mother, and
that the horrid discovery had turned her brain. This was simply
impossible. What did it mean? Good God! what did it mean?

My sense of my own helplessness was the first sense in me that
recovered. I thought of Eunice's devoted little friend. A woman's
sympathy seemed to be needed now. I rose to lead the way out of
the garden.

"Selina will think we are lost," I said. "Let us go and find
Selina."

"Not for the world," she cried.

"Why not?"

"Because I don't feel sure of myself. I might tell Selina
something which she must never know; I should be so sorry to
frighten her. Let me stop here with you."

I resumed my place at her side.

"Let me take your hand."

I gave her my hand. What composing influence this simple act may,
or may not, have exercised, it is impossible to say. She was
quiet, she was silent. After an interval, I heard her breathe a
long-drawn sigh of relief.

"I am afraid I have surprised you," she said. "Helena brings the
dreadful time back to me--" She stopped and shuddered.

"Don't speak of Helena, my dear."

"But I am afraid you will think--because I have said strange
things--that I have been talking at random," she insisted. "The
doctor will say that, if you meet with him. He believes I am
deluded by a dream. I tried to think so myself. It was of no use;
I am quite sure he is wrong."

I privately determined to watch for the doctor's arrival, and to
consult with him. Eunice went on:

"I have the story of a terrible night to tell you; but I haven't
the courage to tell it now. Why shouldn't you come back with me
to the place that I am staying at? A pleasant farm-house, and
such kind people. You might read the account of that night in my
journal. I shall not regret the misery of having written it, if
it helps you to find out how this hateful second self of mine has
come to me. Hush! I want to ask you something. Do you think
Helena is in the house?"

"No--she has gone out."

"Did she say that herself? Are you sure?"

"Quite sure."

She decided on going back to the farm, while Helena was out of
the way. We left the garden together. For the first time, my
companion noticed the portfolio. I happened to be carrying it in
the hand that was nearest to her, as she walked by my side.

"Where did you get that?" she asked.

It was needless to reply in words. My hesitation spoke for me.

"Carry it in your other hand," she said--"the hand that's
furthest away from me. I don't want to see it! Do you mind
waiting a moment while I find Selina? You will go to the farm
with us, won't you?"

I had to look over the letters, in Eunice's own interests; and I
begged her to let me defer my visit to the farm until the next
day. She consented, after making me promise to keep my
appointment. It was of some importance to her, she told me, that
I should make acquaintance with the farmer and his wife and
children, and tell her how I liked them. Her plans for the future
depended on what those good people might be willing to do. When
she had recovered her health, it was impossible for her to go
home again while Helena remained in the house. She had resolved
to earn her own living, if she could get employment as a
governess. The farmer's children liked her; she had already
helped their mother in teaching them; and there was reason to
hope that their father would see his way to employing her
permanently. His house offered the great advantage of being near
enough to the town to enable her to hear news of the Minister's
progress toward recovery, and to see him herself when safe
opportunities offered, from time to ti me. As for her salary,
what did she care about money? Anything would be acceptable, if
the good man would only realize her hopes for the future.

It was disheartening to hear that hope, at her age, began and
ended within such narrow limits as these. No prudent man would
have tried to persuade her, as I now did, that the idea of
reconciliation offered the better hope of the two.

"Suppose I see Mr. Philip Dunboyne when I go back to London," I
began, "what shall I say to him?"

"Say I have forgiven him."

"And suppose," I went on, "that the blame really rests, where you
all believe it to rest, with Helena. If that young man returns to
you, truly ashamed of himself, truly penitent, will you--?"

She resolutely interrupted me: "No!"

"Oh, Eunice, you surely mean Yes?"

"I mean No!"

"Why?"

"Don't ask me! Good-by till to-morrow."


CHAPTER XLII.

THE QUAINT PHILOSOPHER.


No person came to my room, and nothing happened to interrupt me
while I was reading Mr. Philip Dunboyne's letters.

One of them, let me say at once, produced a very disagreeable
impression on me. I have unexpectedly discovered Mrs.
Tenbruggen--in a postscript. She is making a living as a Medical
Rubber (or Masseuse), and is in professional attendance on Mr.
Dunboyne the elder. More of this, a little further on.

Having gone through the whole collection of young Dunboyne's
letters, I set myself to review the differing conclusions which
the correspondence had produced on my mind.

I call the papers submitted to me a correspondence, because the
greater part of Philip's letters exhibit notes in pencil,
evidently added by Helena. These express, for the most part, the
interpretation which she had placed on passages that perplexed or
displeased her; and they have, as Philip's rejoinders show, been
employed as materials when she wrote her replies.

On reflection, I find myself troubled by complexities and
contradictions in the view presented of this young man's
character. To decide positively whether I can justify to myself
and to my regard for Eunice, an attempt to reunite the lovers,
requires more time for consideration than I can reasonably expect
that Helena's patience will allow. Having a quiet hour or two
still before me, I have determined to make extracts from the
letters for my own use; with the intention of referring to them
while I am still in doubt which way my decision ought to incline.
I shall present them here, to speak for themselves. Is there any
objection to this? None that I can see.

In the first place, those extracts have a value of their own.
They add necessary information to the present history of events.

In the second place, I am under no obligation to Mr. Gracedieu's
daughter which forbids me to make use of her portfolio. I told
her that I only consented to receive it, under reserve of my own
right of action--and her assent to that stipulation was expressed
in the clearest terms.


EXTRACTS FROM MR. PHILIP DUNBOYNE'S LETTERS.

First Extract.

You blame me, dear Helena, for not having paid proper attention
to the questions put to me in your last letter. I have only been
waiting to make up my mind, before I replied.

First question: Do I think it advisable that you should write to
my father? No, my dear; I beg you will defer writing, until you
hear from me again.

Second question: Considering that he is still a stranger to you,
is there any harm in your asking me what sort of man my father
is? No harm, my sweet one; but, as you will presently see, I am
afraid you have addressed yourself to the wrong person.

My father is kind, in his own odd way--and learned, and rich--a
more high-minded and honorable man (as I have every reason to
believe) doesn't live. But if you ask me which he prefers, his
books or his son, I hope I do him no injustice when I answer, his
books. His reading and his writing are obstacles between us which
I have never been able to overcome. This is the more to be
regretted because he is charming, on the few occasions when I
find him disengaged. If you wish I knew more about my father, we
are in complete agreement as usual--I wish, too.

But there is a dear friend of yours and mine, who is just the
person we want to help us. Need I say that I allude to Mrs.
Staveley?

I called on her yesterday, not long after she had paid a visit to
my father. Luck had favored her. She arrived just at the time
when hunger had obliged him to shut up his books, and ring for
something to eat. Mrs. Staveley secured a favorable reception
with her customary tact and delicacy. He had a fowl for his
dinner. She knows his weakness of old; she volunteered to carve
it for him.

If I can only repeat what this clever woman told me of their
talk, you will have a portrait of Mr. Dunboyne the elder--not
perhaps a highly-finished picture, but, as I hope and believe, a
good likeness.

Mrs. Staveley began by complaining to him of the conduct of his
son. I had promised to write to her, and I had never kept my
word. She had reasons for being especially interested in my plans
and prospects, just then; knowing me to be attached (please take
notice that I am quoting her own language) to a charming friend
of hers, whom I had first met at her house. To aggravate the
disappointment that I had inflicted, the young lady had neglected
her, too. No letters, no information. Perhaps my father would
kindly enlighten her? Was the affair going on? or was it broken
off?

My father held out his plate and asked for the other wing of the
fowl. "It isn't a bad one for London," he said; "won't you have
some yourself?"

"I don't seem to have interested you," Mrs. Staveley remarked.

"What did you expect me to be interested in?" my father inquired.
"I was absorbed in the fowl. Favor me by returning to the
subject."

Mrs. Staveley admits that she answered this rather sharply: "The
subject, sir, was your son's admiration for a charming girl: one
of the daughters of Mr. Gracedieu, the famous preacher."

My father is too well-bred to speak to a lady while his attention
is absorbed by a fowl. He finished the second wing, and then he
asked if "Philip was engaged to be married."

"I am not quite sure," Mrs. Staveley confessed.

"Then, my dear friend, we will wait till we _are_ sure."

"But, Mr. Dunboyne, there is really no need to wait. I suppose
your son comes here, now and then, to see you?"

"My son is most attentive. In course of time he will contrive to
hit on the right hour for his visit. At present, poor fellow, he
interrupts me every day."

"Suppose he hits upon the right time to-morrow?"

"Yes?"

"You might ask him if he is engaged?"

"Pardon me. I think I might wait till Philip mentions it without
asking."

"What an extraordinary man you are!"

"Oh, no, no--only a philosopher."

This tried Mrs. Staveley's temper. You know what a perfectly
candid person our friend is. She owned to me that she felt
inclined to make herself disagreeable. "That's thrown away upon
me," she said: "I don't know what a philosopher is."

Let me pause for a moment, dear Helena. I have inexcusably
forgotten to speak of my father's personal appearance. It won't
take long. I need only notice one interesting feature which, so
to speak, lifts his face out of the common. He has an eloquent
nose. Persons possessing this rare advantage are blest with
powers of expression not granted to their ordinary
fellow-creatures. My father's nose is a mine of information to
friends familiarly acquainted with it. It changes color like a
modest young lady's cheek. It works flexibly from side to side
like the rudder of a ship. On the present occasion, Mrs. Staveley
saw it shift toward the left-hand side of his face. A sigh
escaped the poor lady. Experience told her that my father was
going to hold forth.

"You don't know what a philosopher is!" he repeated. "Be so kind
as to look at Me. I am a philosopher."

Mrs. Staveley bowed.

"And a philosopher, my charming friend, is a man who has
discovered a system of life. Some systems assert themselves in
volumes--my system asserts itself in two words: Never think of
anything until you have first asked yourself if there is an
absolute necessity for doing it, at that particular moment.
Thinking of things, when things needn't be thought of, is
offering an opportunity to Worry; and Worry is the favorite agent
of Death when the destroyer handles his work in a lingering way,
and achieves premature results. Never look back, and never look
forward, as long as you can possibly help it. Looking back leads
the way to sorrow. And looking forward ends in the cruelest of
all delusions: it encourages hope. The present time is the
precious time. Live for the passing day: the passing day is all
that we can be sure of. You suggested, just now, that I should
ask my son if he was engaged to be married. How do we know what
wear and tear of your nervous texture I succeeded in saving when
I said. 'Wait till Philip mentions it without asking?' There is
the personal application of my system. I have explained it in my
time to every woman on the list of my acquaintance, including the
female servants. Not one of them has rewarded me by adopting my
system. How do you feel about it?"

Mrs. Staveley declined to tell me whether she had offered a
bright example of gratitude to the rest of the sex. When I asked
why, she declared that it was my turn now to tell her what I had
been doing.

You will anticipate what followed. She objected to the mystery in
which my prospects seemed to be involved. In plain English, was
I, or was I not, engaged to marry her dear Eunice? I said, No.
What else could I say? If I had told Mrs. Staveley the truth,
when she insisted on my explaining myself, she would have gone
back to my father, and would have appealed to his sense of
justice to forbid our marriage. Finding me obstinately silent,
she has decided on writing to Eunice. So we parted. But don't be
disheartened. On my way out of the house, I met Mr. Staveley
coming in, and had a little talk with him. He and his wife and
his family are going to the seaside, next week. Mrs. Staveley
once out of our way, I can tell my father of our engagement
without any fear of consequences. If she writes to him, the
moment he sees my name mentioned, and finds violent language
associated with it, he will hand the letter to me. "Your
business, Philip: don't interrupt me." He will say that, and go
back to his books. There is my father, painted to the life!
Farewell, for the present.

. . . . . . .

Remarks by H. G.--Philip's grace and gayety of style might be
envied by any professional Author. He amuses me, but he rouses my
suspicion at the same time. This slippery lover of mine tells me
to defer writing to his father, and gives no reason for offering
that strange advice to the young lady who is soon to be a member
of the family. Is this merely one more instance of the weakness
of his character? Or, now that he is away from my influence, is
he beginning to regret Eunice already?

Added by the Governor.--I too have my doubts. Is the flippant
nonsense which Philip has written inspired by the effervescent
good spirits of a happy young man? Or is it assumed for a
purpose? In this latter case, I should gladly conclude that he
was regarding his conduct to Eunice with becoming emotions of
sorrow and shame.


CHAPTER XLIII.

THE MASTERFUL MASSEUSE.


My next quotations will suffer a process of abridgment. I intend
them to present the substance of three letters, reduced as
follows:


Second Extract.

Weak as he may be, Mr. Philip Dunboyne shows (in his second
letter) that he can feel resentment, and that he can express his
feelings, in replying to Miss Helena. He protests against
suspicions which he has not deserved. That he does sometimes
think of Eunice he sees no reason to deny. He is conscious of
errors and misdeeds, which--traceable as they are to Helena's
irresistible fascinations--may perhaps be considered rather his
misfortune than his fault. Be that as it may, he does indeed feel
anxious to hear good accounts of Eunice's health. If this honest
avowal excites her sister's jealousy, he will be disappointed in
Helena for the first time.

His third letter shows that this exhibition of spirit has had its
effect.

The imperious young lady regrets that she has hurt his feelings,
and is rewarded for the apology by receiving news of the most
gratifying kind. Faithful Philip has told his father that he is
engaged to be married to Miss Helena Gracedieu, daughter of the
celebrated Congregational preacher--and so on, and so on. Has Mr.
Dunboyne the elder expressed any objection to the young lady?
Certainly not! He knows nothing of the other engagement to
Eunice; and he merely objects, on principle, to looking forward.
"How do we know," says the philosopher, "what accidents may
happen, or what doubts and hesitations may yet turn up? I am not
to burden my mind in this matter, till I know that I must do it.
Let me hear when she is ready to go to church, and I will be
ready with the settlements. My compliments to Miss and her papa,
and let us wait a little." Dearest Helena--isn't he funny?

The next letter has been already mentioned.

In this there occurs the first startling reference to Mrs.
Tenbruggen, by name. She is in London, finding her way to
lucrative celebrity by twisting, turning, and pinching the flesh
of credulous persons, afflicted with nervous disorders; and she
has already paid a few medical visits to old Mr. Dunboyne. He
persists in poring over his books while Mrs. Tenbruggen operates,
sometimes on his cramped right hand, sometimes (in the fear that
his brain may have something to do with it) on the back of his
neck. One of them frowns over her rubbing, and the other frowns
over his reading. It would be delightfully ridiculous, but for a
drawback; Mr. Philip Dunboyne's first impressions of Mrs.
Tenbruggen do not incline him to look at that lady from a
humorous point of view.

Helena's remarks follow, as usual. She has seen Mrs. Tenbruggen's
name on the address of a letter written by Miss Jillgall--which
is quite enough to condemn Mrs. Tenbruggen. As for Philip
himself, she feels not quite sure of him, even yet. No more do I.

Third Extract.

The letter that follows must be permitted to speak for itself:

I have flown into a passion, dearest Helena; and I am afraid I
shall make you fly into a passion, too. Blame Mrs. Tenbruggen;
don't blame me.

On the first occasion when I found my father under the hands of
the Medical Rubber, she took no notice of me. On the second
occasion--when she had been in daily attendance on him for a
week, at an exorbitant fee--she said in the coolest manner: "Who
is this young gentleman?" My father laid down his book, for a
moment only: "Don't interrupt me again, ma'am. The young
gentleman is my son Philip." Mrs. Tenbruggen eyed me with an
appearance of interest which I was at a loss to account for. I
hate an impudent woman. My visit came suddenly to an end.

The next time I saw my father, he was alone.

I asked him how he got on with Mrs. Tenbruggen. As badly as
possible, it appeared. "She takes liberties with my neck; she
interrupts me in my reading; and she does me no good. I shall
end, Philip, in applying a medical rubbing to Mrs. Tenbruggen."

A few days later, I found the masterful "Masseuse" torturing the
poor old gentleman's muscles again. She had the audacity to say
to me: "Well, Mr. Philip, when are you going to marry Miss Eunice
Gracedieu?" My father looked up. "Eunice?" he repeated. "When my
son told me he was engaged to Miss Gracedieu, he said 'Helena'!
Philip, what does this mean?" Mrs. Tenbruggen was so obliging as
to answer for me. "Some mistake, sir; it's Eunice he is engaged
to." I confess I forgot myself. "How the devil do you know that?"
I burst out. Mrs. Tenbruggen ignored me and my language. "I am
sorry to see, sir, that your son's education has been neglected;
he seems to be grossly ignorant of the laws of politeness."
"Never mind the laws of politeness," says my father. "You appear
to be better acquainted with my son's matrimonial prospects than
he is himself. How is that?" Mrs. Tenbruggen favored him with
another ready reply: "My authority is a letter, addressed to me
by a relative of Mr. Gracedieu--my dear and intimate friend, Miss
Jillgall." My father's keen eyes traveled backward and forward
between his female surgeon and his son. "Which am I to believ e?"
he inquired. "I am surprised at your asking the question," I
said. Mrs. Tenbruggen pointed to me. "Look at Mr. Philip,
sir--and you will allow him one merit. He is capable of showing
it, when he knows he has disgraced himself." Without intending
it, I am sure, my father infuriated me; he looked as if he
believed her. Out came one of the smallest and strongest words in
the English language before I could stop it: "Mrs. Tenbruggen,
you lie!" The illustrious Rubber dropped my father's hand--she
had been operating on him all the time--and showed us that she
could assert her dignity when circumstances called for the
exertion: "Either your son or I, sir, must leave the room. Which
is it to be?" She met her match in my father. Walking quietly to
the door, he opened it for Mrs. Tenbruggen with a low bow. She
stopped on her way out, and delivered her parting words:
"Messieurs Dunboyne, father and son, I keep my temper, and merely
regard you as a couple of blackguards." With that pretty
assertion of her opinion, she left us.

When we were alone, there was but one course to take; I made my
confession. It is impossible to tell you how my father received
it--for he sat down at his library table with his back to me. The
first thing he did was to ask me to help his memory.

"Did you say that the father of these girls was a parson?"

"Yes--a Congregational Minister."

"What does the Minister think of you?"

"I don't know, sir."

"Find out."

That was all; not another word could I extract from him. I don't
pretend to have discovered what he really has in his mind. I only
venture on a suggestion. If there is any old friend in your town,
who has some influence over your father, leave no means untried
of getting that friend to say a kind word for us. And then ask
your father to write to mine. This is, as I see it, our only
chance.

. . . . . . .

There the letter ends. Helena's notes on it show that her pride
is fiercely interested in securing Philip as a husband. Her
victory over poor Eunice will, as she plainly intimates, be only
complete when she is married to young Dunboyne. For the rest, her
desperate resolution to win her way to my good graces is
sufficiently intelligible, now.

My own impressions vary. Philip rather gains upon me; he appears
to have some capacity for feeling ashamed of himself. On the
other hand, I regard the discovery of an intimate friendship
existing between Mrs. Tenbruggen and Miss Jillgall with the
gloomiest views. Is this formidable Masseuse likely to ply her
trade in the country towns? And is it possible that she may come
to this town? God forbid!


Of the other letters in the collection, I need take no special
notice. I returned the whole correspondence to Helena, and waited
to hear from her.

The one recent event in Mr. Gracedieu's family, worthy of record,
is of a melancholy nature. After paying his visit to-day, the
doctor has left word that nobody but the nurse is to go near the
Minister. This seems to indicate, but too surely, a change for
the worse.

Helena has been away all the evening at the Girls' School. She
left a little note, informing me of her wishes: "I shall expect
to be favored with your decision to-morrow morning, in my
housekeeping room."

At breakfast time, the report of the poor Minister was still
discouraging. I noticed that Helena was absent from the table.
Miss Jillgall suspected that the cause was bad news from Mr.
Philip Dunboyne, arriving by that morning's post. "If you will
excuse the use of strong language by a lady," she said, "Helena
looked perfectly devilish when she opened the letter. She rushed
away, and locked herself up in her own shabby room. A serious
obstacle, as I suspect, in the way of her marriage. Cheering,
isn't it?" As usual, good Selina expressed her sentiments without
reserve.

I had to keep my appointment; and the sooner Helena Gracedieu and
I understood each other the better.

I knocked at the door. It was loudly unlocked, and violently
thrown open. Helena's temper had risen to boiling heat; she
stammered with rage when she spoke to me.

"I mean to come to the point at once," she said.

"I am glad to hear it, Miss Helena."

"May I count on your influence to help me? I want a positive
answer."

I gave her what she wanted. I said: "Certainly not."

She took a crumpled letter from her pocket, opened it, and
smoothed it out on the table with a blow of her open hand.

"Look at that," she said.

I looked. It was the letter addressed to Mr. Dunboyne the elder,
which I had written for Mr. Gracedieu--with the one object of
preventing Helena's marriage.

"Of course, I can depend on you to tell me the truth?" she
continued.

"Without fear or favor," I answered, "you may depend on _that._"

"The signature to the letter, Mr. Governor, is written by my
father. But the letter itself is in a different hand. Do you, by
any chance, recognize the writing?"

"I do."

"Whose writing is it?"

"Mine."


CHAPTER XLIV.

THE RESURRECTION OF THE PAST.


AFTER having identified my handwriting, I waited with some
curiosity to see whether Helena would let her anger honestly show
itself, or whether she would keep it down. She kept it down.

"Allow me to return good for evil." (The evil was uppermost,
nevertheless, when Miss Gracedieu expressed herself in these
self-denying terms.) "You are no doubt anxious to know if
Philip's father has been won over to serve your purpose. Here is
Philip's own account of it: the last of his letters that I shall
trouble you to read."

I looked it over. The memorandum follows which I made for my own
use:

An eccentric philosopher is as capable as the most commonplace
human being in existence of behaving like an honorable man. Mr.
Dunboyne read the letter which bore the Minister's signature, and
handed it to his son. "Can you answer that?" was all he said.
Philip's silence confessed that he was unable to answer it--and
Philip himself, I may add, rose accordingly in my estimation. His
father pointed to the writing-desk. "I must spare my cramped
hand," the philosopher resumed, "and I must answer Mr.
Gracedieu's letter. Write, and leave a place for my signature."
He began to dictate his reply. "Sir--My son Philip has seen your
letter, and has no defense to make. In this respect he has set an
example of candor which I propose to follow. There is no excuse
for him. What I can do to show that I feel for you, and agree
with you, shall be done. At the age which this young man has
reached, the laws of England abolish the authority of his father.
If he is sufficiently infatuated to place his honor and his
happiness at the mercy of a lady, who has behaved to her sister
as your daughter has behaved to Miss Eunice, I warn the married
couple not to expect a farthing of my money, either during my
lifetime or after my death. Your faithful servant, DUNBOYNE,
SENIOR." Having performed his duty as secretary, Philip received
his dismissal: "You may send my reply to the post," his father
said; "and you may keep Mr. Gracedieu's letter. Morally speaking,
I regard that last document as a species of mirror, in which a
young gentleman like yourself may see how ugly he looks." This,
Philip declared, was his father's form of farewell.

I handed back the letter to Helena. Not a word passed between us.
In sinister silence she opened the door and left me alone in the
room.

That Mrs. Gracedieu and I had met in the bygone time, and--this
was the only serious part of it--had met in secret, would now be
made known to the Minister. Was I to blame for having shrunk from
distressing my good friend, by telling him that his wife had
privately consulted me on the means of removing his adopted child
from his house? And, even if I had been cruel enough to do this,
would he have believed my statement against the positive denial
with which the woman whom he loved and trusted would have
certainly met it? No! let the consequences of the coming
disclosure be what they might, I failed to see any valid reason
for regretting my conduct in the past time.

I found Miss Jillgall waiting in the passage to see me come out.

Before I could tell her what had happened, there was a ring at
the house-bell. The visitor proved to be Mr. Wellwood, the
doctor. I was anxious to speak to him on the subject of Mr.
Gracedieu's health. Miss Jillgall introduced me, as an old and
dear friend of the Minister, and left us together in the
dining-room.

"What do I think of Mr. Gracedieu?" he said, repeating the first
question that I put. "Well, sir, I think badly of him."

Entering into details, after that ominous reply, Mr. Wellwood did
not hesitate to say that his patient's nerves were completely
shattered. Disease of the brain had, as he feared, been already
set up. "As to the causes which have produced this lamentable
break-down," the doctor continued, "Mr. Gracedieu has been in the
habit of preaching extempore twice a day on Sundays, and
sometimes in the week as well--and has uniformly refused to spare
himself when he was in most urgent need of rest. If you have ever
attended his chapel, you have seen a man in a state of fiery
enthusiasm, feeling intensely every word that he utters. Think of
such exhaustion as that implies going on for years together, and
accumulating its wasting influences on a sensitively organized
constitution. Add that he is tormented by personal anxieties,
which he confesses to no one, not even to his own children and
the sum of it all is that a worse case of its kind, I am grieved
to say, has never occurred in my experience."

Before the doctor left me to go to his patient, I asked leave to
occupy a minute more of his time. My object was, of course, to
speak about Eunice.

The change of subject seemed to be agreeable to Mr. Wellwood. He
smiled good-humoredly.

"You need feel no alarm about the health of that interesting
girl," he said. "When she complained to me--at her age!--of not
being able to sleep, I should have taken it more seriously if I
had been told that she too had her troubles, poor little soul.
Love-troubles, most likely--but don't forget that my professional
limits keep me in the dark! Have you heard that she took some
composing medicine, which I had prescribed for her father? The
effect (certain, in any case, to be injurious to a young girl)
was considerably aggravated by the state of her mind at the time.
A dream that frightened her, and something resembling delirium,
seems to have followed. And she made matters worse, poor child,
by writing in her diary about the visions and supernatural
appearances that had terrified her. I was afraid of fever, on the
day when they first sent for me. We escaped that complication,
and I was at liberty to try the best of all remedies--quiet and
change of air. I have no fears for Miss Eunice."

With that cheering reply he went up to the Minister's room.

All that I had found perplexing in Eunice was now made clear. I
understood how her agony at the loss of her lover, and her keen
sense of the wrong that she had suffered, had been strengthened
in their disastrous influence by her experiment on the sleeping
draught intended for her father. In mind and body, both, the poor
girl was in the condition which offered its opportunity to the
lurking hereditary taint. It was terrible to think of what might
have happened, if the all-powerful counter-influence had not been
present to save her.

Before I had been long alone the servant-maid came in, and said
the doctor wanted to see me.

Mr. Wellwood was waiting in the passage, outside the Minister's
bedchamber. He asked if he could speak to me without
interruption, and without the fear of being overheard. I led him
at once to the room which I occupied as a guest.

"At the very time when it is most important to keep Mr. Gracedieu
quiet," he said, "something has happened to excite--I might
almost say to infuriate him. He has left his bed, and is walking
up and down the room; and, I don't scruple to say, he is on the
verge of madness. He insists on seeing you. Being wholly unable
to control him in any other way, I have consented to this. But I
must not allow you to place yourself in what may be a
disagreeable position, without a word of warning. Judging by his
tones and his looks, he seems to have no very friendly motive for
wishing to see you."

Knowing perfectly well what had happened, and being one of those
impatient people who can never endure suspense--I offered to go
at once to Mr. Gracedieu's room. The doctor asked leave to say
one word more.

"Pray be careful that you neither say nor do anything to thwart
him," Mr. Wellwood resumed. "If he expresses an opinion, agree
with him. If he is insolent and overbearing, don't answer him. In
the state of his brain, the one hopeful course to take is to let
him have his own way. Pray remember that. I will be within call,
in case of your wanting me."



CHAPTER XLV.

THE FATAL PORTRAIT.



I KNOCKED at the bedroom door.

"Who's there?"

Only two words--but the voice that uttered them, hoarse and
peremptory, was altered almost beyond recognition. If I had not
known whose room it was, I might have doubted whether the
Minister had really spoken to me.

At the instant when I answered him, I was allowed to pass in.
Having admitted me, he closed the door, and placed himself with
his back against it. The customary pallor of his face had
darkened to a deep red; there was an expression of ferocious
mockery in his eyes. Helena's vengeance had hurt her unhappy
father far more severely than it seemed likely to hurt me. The
doctor had said he was on the verge of madness. To my thinking,
he had already passed the boundary line.

He received me with a boisterous affectation of cordiality.

"My excellent friend! My admirable, honorable, welcome guest, you
don't know how glad I am to see you. Stand a little nearer to the
light; I want to admire you."

Remembering the doctor's advice, I obeyed him in silence.

"Ah, you were a handsome fellow when I first knew you," he said,
"and you have some remains of it still left. Do you remember the
time when you were a favorite with the ladies? Oh, don't pretend
to be modest; don't turn your back, now you are old, on what you
were in the prime of your life. Do you own that I am right?"

What his object might be in saying this--if, indeed, he had an
object--it was impossible to guess. The doctor's advice left me
no alternative; I hastened to own that he was right. As I made
that answer, I observed that he held something in his hand which
was half hidden up the sleeve of his dressing-gown. What the
nature of the object was I failed to discover.

"And when I happened to speak of you somewhere," he went on, "I
forget where--a member of my congregation--I don't recollect who
it was--told me you were connected with the aristocracy. How were
you connected?"

He surprised me; but, however he had got his information, he had
not been deceived. I told him that I was connected, through my
mother, with the family to which he had alluded.

"The aristocracy!" he repeated. "A race of people who are rich
without earning their money, and noble because their
great-grandfathers were noble before them. They live in idleness
and luxury--profligates who gratify their passions without shame
and without remorse. Deny, if you dare, that this is a true
description of them."

It was really pitiable. Heartily sorry for him, I pacified him
again.

"And don't suppose I forget that you are one of them. Do you hear
me, my noble friend?"

There was no help for it--I made another conciliatory reply.

"So far," he resumed, "I don't complain of you. You have not
attempted to deceive me--yet. Absolute silence is what I require
next. Though you may not suspect it, my mind is in a ferment; I
must try to think."

To some extent at least, his thoughts betrayed themselves in his
actions. He put the object that I had half seen in his hand into
the pocket of his dressing-gown, and moved to the toilet-table.
Opening one of the drawers, he took from it a folded sheet of
paper, and came back to me.

"A minister of the Gospel," he said, "is a sacred man, and has a
horror of crime. You are safe, so far--provided you obey me. I
have a solemn and terrible duty to perform. This is not the right
place for it. Follow me downstairs."

He led the way out. The doctor, waiting in the passage, was not
near the stairs,  and so escaped notice. "What is it?" Mr. W
ellwood whispered. In the same guarded way, I said: "He has not
told me yet; I have been careful not to irritate him." When we
descended the stairs, the doctor followed us at a safe distance.
He mended his pace when the Minister opened the door of the
study, and when he saw us both pass in. Before he could follow,
the door was closed and locked in his face. Mr. Gracedieu took
out the key and threw it through the open window, into the garden
below.

Turning back into the room, he laid the folded sheet of paper on
the table. That done, he spoke to me.

"I distrust my own weakness," he said. "A dreadful necessity
confronts me--I might shrink from the horrid idea, and, if I
could open the door, might try to get away. Escape is impossible
now. We are prisoners together. But don't suppose that we are
alone. There is a third person present, who will judge between
you and me. Look there!"

He pointed solemnly to the portrait of his wife. It was a small
picture, very simply framed; representing the face in a
"three-quarter" view, and part of the figure only. As a work of
art it was contemptible; but, as a likeness, it answered its
purpose. My unhappy friend stood before it, in an attitude of
dejection, covering his face with his hands.

In the interval of silence that followed, I was reminded that an
unseen friend was keeping watch outside.

Alarmed by having heard the key turned in the lock, and realizing
the embarrassment of the position in which I was placed, the
doctor had discovered a discreet way of communicating with me. He
slipped one of his visiting-cards under the door, with these
words written on it: "How can I help you?"

I took the pencil from my pocketbook, and wrote on the blank side
of the card: "He has thrown the key into the garden; look for it
under the window." A glance at the Minister, before I returned my
reply, showed that his attitude was unchanged. Without being seen
or suspected, I, in my turn, slipped the card under the door.

The slow minutes followed each other--and still nothing happened.

My anxiety to see how the doctor's search for the key was
succeeding, tempted me to approach the window. On my way to it,
the tail of my coat threw down a little tray containing pens and
pencils, which had been left close to the edge of the table.
Slight as the noise of the fall was, it disturbed Mr. Gracedieu.
He looked round vacantly.

"I have been comforted by prayer," he told me. "The weakness of
poor humanity has found strength in the Lord." He pointed to the
portrait once more: "My hands must not presume to touch it, while
I am still in doubt. Take it down."

I removed the picture and placed it, by his directions, on a
chair that stood midway between us. To my surprise his tones
faltered; I saw tears rising in his eyes. "You may think you see
a picture there," he said. "You are wrong. You see my wife
herself. Stand here, and look at my wife with me."

We stood together, with our eyes fixed on the portrait.

Without anything said or done on my part to irritate him, he
suddenly turned to me in a state of furious rage. "Not a sign of
sorrow!" he burst out. "Not a blush of shame! Wretch, you stand
condemned by the atrocious composure that I see in your face!"

A first discovery of the odious suspicion of which I was the
object, dawned on my mind at that moment. My capacity for
restraining myself completely failed me. I spoke to him as if he
had been an accountable being. "Once for all," I said, "tell me
what I have a right to know. You suspect me of something. What is
it?"

Instead of directly replying, he seized my arm and led me to the
table. "Take up that paper," he said. "There is writing on it.
Read--and let Her judge between us. Your life depends on how you
answer me."

Was there a weapon concealed in the room? or had he got it in the
pocket of his dressing-gown? I listened for the sound of the
doctor's returning footsteps in the passage outside, and heard
nothing. My life had once depended, years since, on my success in
heading the arrest of an escaped prisoner. I was not conscious,
then, of feeling my energies weakened by fear. But _that_ man was
not mad; and I was younger, in those days, by a good twenty years
or more. At my later time of life, I could show my old friend
that I was not afraid of him--but I was conscious of an effort in
doing it.

I opened the paper. "Am I to read this to myself?" I asked. "Or
am I to read it aloud?"

"Read it aloud!"

In these terms, his daughter addressed him:


"I have been so unfortunate, dearest father, as to displease you,
and I dare not hope that you will consent to receive me. What it
is my painful duty to tell you, must be told in writing.

"Grieved as I am to distress you, in your present state of
health, I must not hesitate to reveal what it has been my
misfortune--I may even say my misery, when I think of my
mother--to discover.

"But let me make sure, in such a serious matter as this is, that
I am not mistaken.

"In those happy past days, when I was still dear to my father,
you said you thought of writing to invite a dearly-valued friend
to pay a visit to this house. You had first known him, as I
understood, when my mother was still living. Many interesting
things you told me about this old friend, but you never mentioned
that he knew, or that he had even seen, my mother. I was left to
suppose that those two had remained strangers to each other to
the day of her death.

"If there is any misinterpretation here of what you said, or
perhaps of what you meant to say, pray destroy what I have
written without turning to the next page; and forgive me for
having innocently startled you by a false alarm."


Mr. Gracedieu interrupted me.

"Put it down!" he cried; "I won't wait till you have got to the
end--I shall question you now. Give me the paper; it will help me
to keep this mystery of iniquity clear in my own mind."

I gave him the paper.

He hesitated--and looked at the portrait once more. "Turn her
away from me," he said; "I can't face my wife."

I placed the picture with its back to him.

He consulted the paper, reading it with but little of the
confusion and hesitation which my experience of him had induced
me to anticipate. Had the mad excitement that possessed him
exercised an influence in clearing his mind, resembling in some
degree the influence exercised by a storm in clearing the air?
Whatever the right explanation may be, I can only report what I
saw. I could hardly have mastered what his daughter had written
more readily, if I had been reading it myself.

"Helena tells me," he began, "that you said you knew her by her
likeness to her mother. Is that true?"

"Quite true."

"And you made an excuse for leaving her--see! here it is, written
down. You made an excuse, and left her when she asked for an
explanation."

"I did."

He consulted the paper again.

"My daughter says--No! I won't be hurried and I won't be
interrupted--she says you were confused. Is that so?"

"It is so. Let your questions wait for a moment. I wish to tell
you why I was confused."

"Haven't I said I won't be interrupted? Do you think you can
shake _my_ resolution?" He referred to the paper again. "I have
lost the place. It's your fault--find it for me."

The evidence which was intended to convict me was the evidence
which I was expected to find! I pointed it out to him.

His natural courtesy asserted itself in spite of his anger. He
said "Thank you," and questioned me the moment after as fiercely
as ever. "Go back to the time, sir, when we met in your rooms at
the prison. Did you know my wife then?"

"Certainly not."

"Did you and she see each other--ha! I've got it now--did you see
each other after I had left the town? No prevarication! You own
to telling Helena that you knew her by her likeness to her
mother. You must have seen her mother. Where?"

I made another effort to defend myself. He again refused
furiously to hear me. It was useless to persist. Whatever the
danger that threatened me might be, the sooner it showed itself
the easier I should feel. I told him that Mrs. Gracedieu had
called on me, after he and his wife had left the town.

"Do you mean  to tell me," he cried, "that She came to Yo u?"

"I do."

After that answer, he no longer required the paper to help him.
He threw it from him on the floor.

"And you received her," he said, "without inquiring whether I
knew of her visit or not? Guilty deception on your part--guilty
deception on her part. Oh, the hideous wickedness of it!"

When his mad suspicion that I had been his wife's lover betrayed
itself in this way, I made a last attempt, in the face of my own
conviction that it was hopeless, to place my conduct and his
wife's conduct before him in the true light.

"Mrs. Gracedieu's object was to consult me--" Before I could say
the next words, I saw him put his hand into the pocket of his
dressing-gown.

"An innocent man," he sternly declared, "would have told me that
my wife had been to see him--you kept it a secret. An innocent
woman would have given me a reason for wishing to go to you--she
kept it a secret, when she left my house; she kept it a secret
when she came back."

"Mr. Gracedieu, I insist on being heard! Your wife's motive--"

He drew from his pocket the thing that he had hidden from me.
This time, there was no concealment; he let me see that he was
opening a razor. It was no time for asserting my innocence; I had
to think of preserving my life. When a man is without firearms,
what defense can avail against a razor in the hands of a madman?
A chair was at my side; it offered the one poor means of guarding
myself that I could see. I laid my hand on it, and kept my eye on
him.

He paused, looking backward and forward between the picture and
me.

"Which of them shall I kill first?" he said to himself. "The man
who was my trusted friend? Or the woman whom I believed to be an
angel on earth?" He stopped once more, in a state of fierce
self-concentration, debating what he should do. "The woman," he
decided. "Wretch! Fiend! Harlot! How I loved her!!!"

With a yell of fury, he pounced on the picture--ripped the canvas
out of the frame--and cut it malignantly into fragments. As they
dropped from the razor on the floor, he stamped on them, and
ground them under his foot. "Go, wife of my bosom," he cried,
with a dreadful mockery of voice and look--"go, and burn
everlastingly in the place of torment!" His eyes glared at me.
"Your turn now," he said--and rushed at me with his weapon ready
in his hand. I hurled the chair at his right arm. The razor
dropped on the floor. I caught him by the wrist. Like a wild
animal he tried to bite me. With my free hand--if I had known how
to defend myself in any other way, I would have taken that
way--with my free hand I seized him by the throat; forced him
back; and held him against the wall. My grasp on his throat kept
him quiet. But the dread of seriously injuring him so completely
overcame me, that I forgot I was a prisoner in the room, and was
on the point of alarming the household by a cry for help.

I was still struggling to preserve my self-control, when the
sound of footsteps broke the silence outside. I heard the key
turn in the lock, and saw the doctor at the open door.


CHAPTER XLVI.

THE CUMBERSOME LADIES.


I CANNOT prevail upon myself to dwell at any length on the events
that followed.

We secured my unhappy friend, and carried him to his bed. It was
necessary to have men in attendance who could perform the duty of
watching him. The doctor sent for them, while I went downstairs
to make the best I could of the miserable news which it was
impossible entirely to conceal.

All that I could do to spare Miss Jillgall, I did. I was obliged
to acknowledge that there had been an outbreak of violence, and
that the portrait of the Minister's wife had been destroyed by
the Minister himself. Of Helena's revenge on me I said nothing.
It had led to consequences which even her merciless malice could
not have contemplated. There were no obstacles in the way of
keeping secret the attempt on my life. But I was compelled to own
that Mr. Gracedieu had taken a dislike to me, which rendered it
necessary that my visit should be brought to an end. I hastened
to add that I should go to the hotel, and should wait there until
the next day, in the hope of hearing better news.

Of the multitude of questions with which poor Miss Jillgall
overwhelmed me--of the wild words of sorrow and alarm that
escaped her--of the desperate manner in which she held by my arm,
and implored me not to go away, when I must see for myself that
"she was a person entirely destitute of presence of mind"--I
shall say nothing. The undeserved suffering that is inflicted on
innocent persons by the sins of others demands silent sympathy;
and, to that extent at least, I can say that I honestly felt for
my quaint and pleasant little friend.

In the evening the doctor called on me at the hotel. The medical
treatment of his patient had succeeded in calming the maddened
brain under the influence of sleep. If the night passed quietly,
better news might be hoped for in the morning.

On the next day I had arranged to drive to the farm, being
resolved not to disappoint Eunice. But I shrank from the prospect
of having to distress her as I had already distressed Miss
Jillgall. The only alternative left was to repeat the sad story
in writing, subject to the concealments which I had already
observed. This I did, and sent the letter by messenger,
overnight, so that Eunice might know when to expect me.

The medical report, in the morning, justified some hope. Mr.
Gracedieu had slept well, and there had been no reappearance of
insane violence on his waking. But the doctor's opinion was far
from encouraging when we spoke of the future. He did not
anticipate the cruel necessity of placing the Minister under
restraint--unless some new provocation led to a new outbreak. The
misfortune to be feared was imbecility.

I was just leaving the hotel to keep my appointment with Eunice,
when the waiter announced the arrival of a young lady who wished
to speak with me. Before I could ask if she had mentioned her
name, the young lady herself walked in--Helena Gracedieu.

She explained her object in calling on me, with the exasperating
composure which was peculiarly her own. No parallel to it occurs
to me in my official experience of shameless women.

"I don't wish to speak of what happened yesterday, so far as I
know anything about it," she began. "It is quite enough for me
that you have been obliged to leave the house and to take refuge
in this hotel. I have come to say a word about the future. Are
you honoring me with your attention?"

I signed to her to go on. If I had answered in words, I should
have told her to leave the room.

"At first," she resumed, "I thought of writing; but it occurred
to me that you might keep my letter, and show it to Philip, by
way of lowering me in his good opinion, as you have lowered me in
the good opinion of his father. My object in coming here is to
give you a word of warning. If you attempt to make mischief next
between Philip and myself, I shall hear of it--and you know what
to expect, when you have Me for an enemy. It is not worth while
to say any more. We understand each other, I hope?"

She was determined to have a reply--and she got it.

"Not quite yet," I said. "I have been hitherto, as becomes a
gentleman, always mindful of a woman's claims to forbearance. You
will do well not to tempt me into forgetting that _you_ are a
woman, by prolonging your visit. Now, Miss Helena Gracedieu, we
understand each other." She made me a low curtsey, and answered
in her finest tone of irony: "I only desire to wish you a
pleasant journey home."

I rang for the waiter. "Show this lady out," I said.

Even this failed to have the slightest effect on her. She
sauntered to the door, as perfectly at her ease as if the room
had been hers--not mine.

I had thought of driving to the farm. Shall I confess it? My
temper was so completely upset that active movement of some kind
offered the one means of relief in which I could find refuge. The
farm was not more than five miles distant, and I had been a good
walker all my life. After making the needful inquiries, I set
forth to visit Eunice on foot.

My way through the town led me past the, Minister's house. I had
left the door some fifty yards behin d me, when I saw two ladies
approaching. They were walking, in the friendliest manner, arm in
arm. As they came nearer, I discovered Miss Jillgall. Her
companion was the middle-aged lady who had declined to give her
name, when we met accidentally at Mr. Gracedieu's door.

Hysterically impulsive, Miss Jillgall seized both my hands, and
overwhelmed me with entreaties that I would go back with her to
the house. I listened rather absently. The middle-aged lady
happened to be nearer to me now than on either of the former
occasions on which I had seen her. There was something in the
expression of her eyes which seemed to be familiar to me. But the
effort of my memory was not helped by what I observed in the
other parts of her face. The iron-gray hair, the baggy lower
eyelids, the fat cheeks, the coarse complexion, and the double
chin, were features, and very disagreeable features, too, which I
had never seen at any former time.

"Do pray come back with us," Miss Jillgall pleaded. "We were just
talking of you. I and my friend--" There she stopped, evidently
on the point of blurting out the name which she had been
forbidden to utter in my hearing.

The lady smiled; her provokingly familiar eyes rested on me with
a humorous enjoyment of the scene.

"My dear," she said to Miss Jillgall, "caution ceases to be a
virtue when it ceases to be of any use. The Governor is beginning
to remember me, and the inevitable recognition--with _his_
quickness of perception--is likely to be a matter of minutes
now." She turned to me. "In more ways than one, sir, women are
hardly used by Nature. As they advance in years they lose more in
personal appearance than the men do. You are white-haired, and
(pray excuse me) you are too fat; and (allow me to take another
liberty) you stoop at the shoulders--but you have not entirely
lost your good looks. _I_ am no longer recognizable. Allow me to
prompt you, as they say on the stage. I am Mrs. Tenbruggen."

As a man of the world, I ought to have been capable of concealing
my astonishment and dismay. She struck me dumb.

Mrs. Tenbruggen in the town! The one woman whose appearance Mr.
Gracedieu had dreaded, and justly dreaded, stood before me--free,
as a friend of his kinswoman, to enter his house, at the very
time when he was a helpless man, guarded by watchers at his
bedside. My first clear idea was to get away from both the women,
and consider what was to be done next. I bowed--and begged to be
excused--and said I was in a hurry, all in a breath.

Hearing this, the best of genial old maids was unable to restrain
her curiosity. "Where are you going?" she asked.

Too confused to think of an excuse, I said I was going to the
farm.

"To see my dear Euneece?" Miss Jillgall burst out. "Oh, we will
go with you!" Mrs. Tenbruggen's politeness added immediately,
"With the greatest pleasure."


CHAPTER XLVII.

THE JOURNEY TO THE FARM.


MY first ungrateful impulse was to get rid of the two cumbersome
ladies who had offered to be my companions. It was needless to
call upon my invention for an excuse; the truth, as I gladly
perceived, would serve my purpose. I had only to tell them that I
had arranged to walk to the farm.

Lean, wiry, and impetuous, Miss Jillgall received my excuse with
the sincerest approval of it, as a new idea. "Nothing could be
more agreeable to me," she declared; "I have been a wonderful
walker all my life." She turned to her friend. "We will go with
him, my dear, won't we?"

Mrs. Tenbruggen's reception of this proposal inspired me with
hope; she asked how far it was to the farm. "Five miles!" she
repeated. "And five miles back again, unless the farmer lends us
a cart. My dear Selina, you might as well ask me to walk to the
North Pole. You have got rid of one of us, Mr. Governor," she
added, pleasantly; "and the other, if you only walk fast enough,
you will leave behind you on the road. If I believed in
luck--which I don't--I should call you a fortunate man."

But companionable Selina would not hear of a separation. She
asked, in her most irresistible manner, if I objected to driving
instead of walking. Her heart's dearest wish, she said, was to
make her bosom friend and myself better acquainted with each
other. To conclude, she reminded me that there was a cab-stand in
the next street.

Perhaps I might have been influenced by my distrust of Mrs.
Tenbruggen, or perhaps by my anxiety to protect Eunice. It struck
me that I might warn the defenseless girl to be on her guard with
Mrs. Tenbruggen to better purpose, if Eunice was in a position to
recognize her in any future emergency that might occur. To my
mind, this dangerous woman was doubly formidable--and for a good
reason; she was the bosom friend of that innocent and unwary
person, Miss Jillgall.

So I amiably consented to forego my walk, yielding to the
superior attraction of Mrs. Tenbruggen's company. On that day the
sunshine was tempered by a delightful breeze. If we had been in
the biggest and worst-governed city on the civilised earth, we
should have found no public vehicle, open to the air, which could
offer accommodation to three people. Being only in a country
town, we had a light four-wheeled chaise at our disposal, as a
matter of course.

No wise man expects to be mercifully treated, when he is shut
into a carriage with a mature single lady, inflamed by curiosity.
I was not unprepared for Miss Jillgall when she alluded, for the
second time, to the sad events which had happened in the house on
the previous day--and especially to the destruction by Mr.
Gracedieu of the portrait of his wife.

"Why didn't he destroy something else?" she pleaded, piteously.
"It is such a disappointment to Me. I never liked that picture
myself. Of course I ought to have admired the portrait of the
wife of my benefactor. But no--that disagreeable painted face was
too much for me. I should have felt inexpressibly relieved, if I
could have shown it to Elizabeth, and heard her say that she
agreed with me."

"Perhaps I saw it when I called on you," Mrs. Tenbruggen
suggested. "Where did the picture hang?"

"My dear! I received you in the dining-room, and the portrait
hung in Mr. Gracedieu's study."

What they said to each other next escaped my attention. Quite
unconsciously, Miss Jillgall had revealed to me a danger which
neither the Minister nor I had discovered, though it had
conspicuously threatened us both on the wall of the study. The
act of mad destruction which, if I had possessed the means of
safely interfering, I should certainly have endeavored to
prevent, now assumed a new and startling aspect. If Mrs.
Tenbruggen really had some motive of her own for endeavoring to
identify the adopted child, the preservation of the picture must
have led her straight to the end in view. The most casual
opportunity of comparing Helena with the portrait of Mrs.
Gracedieu would have revealed the likeness between mother and
daughter--and, that result attained, the identification of Eunice
with the infant whom the "Miss Chance" of those days had brought
to the prison must inevitably have followed. It was perhaps
natural that Mr. Gracedieu's infatuated devotion to the memory of
his wife should have blinded him to the betrayal of Helena's
parentage, which met his eyes every time he entered his study.
But that I should have been too stupid to discover what he had
failed to see, was a wound dealt to my self-esteem which I was
vain enough to feel acutely.

Mrs. Tenbruggen's voice, cheery and humorous, broke in on my
reflections, with an odd question:

"Mr. Governor, do you ever condescend to read novels?"

"It's not easy to say, Mrs. Tenbruggen, how grateful I am to the
writers of novels."

"Ah! I read novels, too. But I blush to confess--do I
blush?--that I never thought of feeling grateful till you
mentioned it. Selina and I don't complain of your preferring your
own reflections to our company. On the contrary, you have
reminded us agreeably of the heroes of fiction, when the author
describes them as being 'absorbed in thought.' For some minutes,
Mr. Governor, you have been a hero; absorbed, as I venture to
guess, in unpleasant remembrances of the time when I was a single
lady. You have not forg otten how badly I behaved, and what
shocking things I said, in those bygone days. Am I right?"

"You are entirely wrong."

It is possible that I may have spoken a little too sharply.
Anyway, faithful Selina interceded for her friend. "Oh, dear sir,
don't be hard on Elizabeth! She always means well." Mrs.
Tenbruggen, as facetious as ever, made a grateful return for a
small compliment. She chucked Miss Jillgall under the chin, with
the air of an amorous old gentleman expressing his approval of a
pretty servant-girl. It was impossible to look at the two, in
their relative situations, without laughing. But Mrs. Tenbruggen
failed to cheat me into altering my opinion of her. Innocent Miss
Jillgall clapped her ugly hands, and said: "Isn't she good
company?"

Mrs. Tenbruggen's social resources were not exhausted yet. She
suddenly shifted to the serious side of her character.

"Perhaps I have improved a little," she said, "as I have advanced
in years. The sorrows of an unhappy married life may have had a
purifying influence on my nature. My husband and I began badly.
Mr. Tenbruggen thought I had money; and I thought Mr. Tenbruggen
had money. He was taken in by me; and I was taken in by him. When
he repeated the words of the marriage service (most impressively
read by your friend the Chaplain): 'With all my worldly goods I
thee endow'--his eloquent voice suggested one of the largest
incomes in Europe. When I promised and vowed, in my turn, the
delightful prospect of squandering my rich husband's money made
quite a new woman of me. I declare solemnly, when I said I would
love, honor, and obey Mr. T., I looked as if I really meant it.
Wherever he is now, poor dear, he is cheating somebody. Such a
handsome, gentleman-like man, Selina! And, oh, Mr. Governor, such
a blackguard!"

Having described her husband in those terms, she got tired of the
subject. We were now favored with another view of this many-sided
woman. She appeared in her professional character.

"Ah, what a delicious breeze is blowing, out here in the
country!" she said. "Will you excuse me if I take off my gloves?
I want to air my hands." She held up her hands to the breeze;
firm, muscular, deadly white hands. "In my professional
occupation," she explained, "I am always rubbing, tickling,
squeezing, tapping, kneading, rolling, striking the muscles of
patients. Selina, do you know the movements of your own joints?
Flexion, extension, abduction, adduction, rotation,
circumduction, pronation, supination, and the lateral movements.
Be proud of those accomplishments, my dear, but beware of
attempting to become a Masseuse. There are drawbacks in that
vocation--and I am conscious of one of them at this moment." She
lifted her hands to her nose. "Pah! my hands smell of other
people's flesh. The delicious country air will blow it away--the
luxury of purification!" Her fingers twisted and quivered, and
got crooked at one moment and straight again at another, and
showed themselves in succession singly, and flew into each other
fiercely interlaced, and then spread out again like the sticks of
a fan, until it really made me giddy to look at them. As for Miss
Jillgall, she lifted her poor little sunken eyes rapturously to
the sky, as if she called the homiest sunlight to witness that
this was the most lovable woman on the face of the earth.

But elderly female fascination offers its allurements in vain to
the rough animal, man. Suspicion of Mrs. Tenbruggen's motives had
established itself firmly in my mind. Why had the Popular
Masseuse abandoned her brilliant career in London, and plunged
into the obscurity of a country town? An opportunity of clearing
up the doubt thus suggested seemed to have presented itself now.
"Is it indiscreet to ask," I said, "if you are here in your
professional capacity?"

Her cunning seized its advantage and put a sly question to me.
"Do you wish to be one of my patients yourself?"

"That is, unfortunately, impossible," I replied "I have arranged
to return to London."

"Immediately?"

"To-morrow at the latest."

Artful as she was, Mrs. Tenbruggen failed to conceal a momentary
expression of relief which betrayed itself, partly in her manner,
partly in her face. She had ascertained, to her own complete
satisfaction, that my speedy departure was an event which might
be relied on.

"But I have not yet answered you," she resumed. "To tell the
truth, I am eager to try my hands on you. Massage, as I practice
it, would lighten your weight, and restore your figure; I may
even say would lengthen your life. You will think of me, one of
these days, won't you? In the meanwhile--yes! I am here in my
professional capacity. Several interesting cases; and one very
remarkable person, brought to death's door by the doctors; a rich
man who is liberal in paying his fees. There is my quarrel with
London and Londoners. Some of their papers, medical newspapers,
of course, declare that my fees are exorbitant; and there is a
tendency among the patients--I mean the patients who are rolling
in riches--to follow the lead of the newspapers. I am no worm to
be trodden on, in that way. The London people shall wait for me,
until they miss me--and, when I do go back, they will find the
fees increased. _My_ fingers and thumbs, Mr. Governor, are not to
be insulted with impunity."

Miss Jillgall nodded her head at me. It was an eloquent nod.
"Admire my spirited friend," was the interpretation I put on it.

At the same time, my private sentiments suggested that Mrs.
Tenbruggen's reply was too perfectly satisfactory, viewed as an
explanation. My suspicions were by no means set at rest; and I
was resolved not to let the subject drop yet. "Speaking of Mr.
Gracedieu, and of the chances of his partial recovery," I said,
"do you think the Minister would benefit by Massage?"

"I haven't a doubt of it, if you can get rid of the doctor."

"You think he would be an obstacle in the way?"

"There are some medical men who are honorable exceptions to the
general rule; and he may be one of them," Mrs. Tenbruggen
admitted. "Don't be too hopeful. As a doctor, he belongs to the
most tyrannical trades-union in existence. May I make a personal
remark?"

"Certainly."

"I find something in your manner--pray don't suppose that I am
angry--which looks like distrust; I mean, distrust of Me."

Miss Jillgall's ever ready kindness interfered in my defense:
"Oh, no, Elizabeth! You are not often mistaken; but indeed you
are wrong now. Look at my distinguished friend. I remember my
copy book, when I was a small creature learning to write, in
England. There were first lines that we copied, in big letters,
and one of them said, 'Distrust Is Mean.' I know a young person,
whose name begins with H, who is one mass of meanness.
But"--excellent Selina paused, and pointed to me with a gesture
of triumph--"no meanness there!"

Mrs. Tenbruggen waited to hear what I had to say, scornfully
insensible to Miss Jillgall's well-meant interruption.

"You are not altogether mistaken," I told her. "I can't say that
my mind is in a state of distrust, but I own that you puzzle me."

"How, if you please?"

"May I presume that you remember the occasion when we met at Mr.
Gracedieu's house-door? You saw that I failed to recognize you,
and you refused to give your name when the servant asked for it.
A few days afterward, I heard you (quite accidentally) forbid
Miss Jillgall to mention your name in my hearing. I am at a loss
to understand it."

Before she could answer me, the chaise drew up at the gate of the
farmhouse. Mrs. Tenbruggen carefully promised to explain what had
puzzled me, at the first opportunity. "If it escapes my memory,"
she said, "pray remind me of it."

I determined to remind her of it. Whether I could depend on her
to tell me the truth, might be quite another thing.



CHAPTER XLVIII

THE DECISION OF EUNICE.


EUNICE ran out to meet us, and opened the gate. She was instantly
folded in Miss Jillgall's arms. On her release, she came to me,
eager for news of her father's health. When I had communicated
all that I thought it right to tell her of the doctor's last
report, she noticed Mrs. Tenbruggen. The  appearance of a stranger
seemed to embarrass h er. I left Miss Jillgall to introduce them
to each other.

"Darling Euneece, you remember Mrs. Tenbruggen's name, I am sure?
Elizabeth, this is my sweet girl; I mentioned her in my letters
to you."

"I hope she will be _my_ sweet girl, when we know each other a
little better. May I kiss you, dear? You have lovely eyes; but I
am sorry to see that they don't look like happy eyes. You want
Mamma Tenbruggen to cheer you. What a charming old house!"

She put her arm round Eunice's waist and led her to the house
door. Her enjoyment of the creepers that twined their way up the
pillars of the porch was simply perfection as a piece of acting.
When the farmer's wife presented herself, Mrs. Tenbruggen was so
irresistibly amiable, and took such flattering notice of the
children, that the harmless British matron actually blushed with
pleasure. "I'm sure, ma'am, you must have children of your own,"
she said. Mrs. Tenbruggen cast her eyes on the floor, and sighed
with pathetic resignation. A sweet little family, and all cruelly
swept away by death. If the performance meant anything, it did
most assuredly mean that.

"What wonderful self-possession!" somebody whispered in my ear.
The children in the room were healthy, well-behaved little
creatures--but the name of the innocent one among them was
Selina.

Before dinner we were shown over the farm.

The good woman of the house led the way, and Miss Jillgall and I
accompanied her. The children ran on in front of us. Still
keeping possession of Eunice, Mrs. Tenbruggen followed at some
distance behind. I looked back, after no very long interval, and
saw that a separation had taken place. Mrs. Tenbruggen passed me,
not looking so pleasantly as usual, joined the children, and
walked with two of them, hand in hand, a pattern of maternal
amiability. I dropped back a little, and gave Eunice an
opportunity of joining me; having purposely left her to form her
own opinion, without any adverse influence exercised on my part.

"Is that lady a friend of yours?" she asked. "No; only an
acquaintance. What do you think of her?"

"I thought I should like her at first; she was so kind, and
seemed to take such an interest in me. But she said such strange
things--asked if I was reckoned like my mother, and which of us
was the eldest, my sister or myself, and whether we were my
father's only two children, and if one of us was more his
favorite than the other. What I could tell her, I did tell. But
when I said I didn't know which of us was the oldest, she gave me
an impudent tap on the cheek, and said, 'I don't believe you,
child,' and left me. How can Selina be so fond of her? Don't
mention it to any one else; I hope I shall never see her again."

"I will keep your secret, Eunice; and you must keep mine. I
entirely agree with you."

"You agree with me in disliking her?"

"Heartily."

We could say no more at that time. Our friends in advance were
waiting for us. We joined them at once.

If I had felt any doubt of the purpose which had really induced
Mrs. Tenbruggen to leave London, all further uncertainty on my
part was at an end. She had some vile interest of her own to
serve by identifying Mr. Gracedieu's adopted child--but what the
nature of that interest might be, it was impossible to guess. The
future, when I thought of it now, filled me with dismay. A more
utterly helpless position than mine it was not easy to conceive.
To warn the Minister, in his present critical state of health,
was simply impossible. My relations with Helena forbade me even
to approach her. And, as for Selina, she was little less than a
mere tool in the hands of her well-beloved friend. What, in God's
name, was I to do?

At dinner-time we found the master of the house waiting to bid us
welcome.

Personally speaking, he presented a remarkable contrast to the
typical British farmer. He was neither big nor burly; he spoke
English as well as I did; and there was nothing in his dress
which would have made him a fit subject for a picture of rustic
life. When he spoke, he was able to talk on subjects unconnected
with agricultural pursuits; nor did I hear him grumble about the
weather and the crops. It was pleasant to see that his wife was
proud of him, and that he was, what all fathers ought to be, his
children's best and dearest friend. Why do I dwell on these
details, relating to a man whom I was not destined to see again?
Only because I had reason to feel grateful to him. When my
spirits were depressed by anxiety, he made my mind easy about
Eunice, as long as she remained in his house.

The social arrangements, when our meal was over, fell of
themselves into the right train.

Miss Jillgall went upstairs, with the mother and the children, to
see the nursery and the bedrooms. Mrs. Tenbruggen discovered a
bond of union between the farmer and herself; they were both
skilled players at backgammon, and they sat down to try
conclusions at their favorite game. Without any wearisome
necessity for excuses or stratagems, Eunice took my arm and led
me to the welcome retirement of her own sitting-room.

I could honestly congratulate her, when I heard that she was
established at the farm as a member of the family. While she was
governess to the children, she was safe from dangers that might
have threatened her, if she had been compelled by circumstances
to return to the Minister's house.

The entry in her Journal, which she was anxious that I should
read, was placed before me next.


I followed the poor child's account of the fearful night that she
had passed, with an interest that held me breathless to the end.
A terrible dream, which had impressed a sense of its reality on
the sleeper by reaching its climax in somnambulism--this was the
obvious explanation, no doubt; and a rational mind would not
hesitate to accept it. But a rational mind is not a universal
gift, even in a country which prides itself on the idol-worship
of Fact. Those good friends who are always better acquainted with
our faults, failings, and weaknesses than we can pretend to be
ourselves, had long since discovered that my nature was
superstitious, and my imagination likely to mislead me in the
presence of events which encouraged it. Well! I was weak enough
to recoil from the purely rational view of all that Eunice had
suffered, and heard, and seen, on the fateful night recorded in
her Journal. Good and Evil walk the ways of this unintelligible
world, on the same free conditions. If we cling, as many of us
do, to the comforting belief that departed spirits can minister
to earthly creatures for good--can be felt moving in us, in a
train of thought, and seen as visible manifestations, in a
dream--with what pretense of reason can we deny that the same
freedom of supernatural influence which is conceded to the
departed spirit, working for good, is also permitted to the
departed spirit, working for evil? If the grave cannot wholly
part mother and child, when the mother's life has been good, does
eternal annihilation separate them, when the mother's life has
been wicked? No! If the departed spirit can bring with it a
blessing, the departed spirit can bring with it a curse. I dared
not confess to Eunice that the influence of her murderess-mother
might, as I thought possible, have been supernaturally present
when she heard temptation whispering in her ear; but I dared not
deny it to myself. All that I could say to satisfy and sustain
her, I did say. And when I declared--with my whole heart
declared--that the noble passion which had elevated her whole
being, and had triumphed over the sorest trials that desertion
could inflict, would still triumph to the end, I saw hope, in
that brave and true heart, showing its bright promise for the
future in Eunice's eyes.

She closed and locked her Journal. By common consent we sought
the relief of changing the subject. Eunice asked me if it was
really necessary that I should return to London.

I shrank from telling her that I could be of no further use to
her father, while he regarded me with an enmity which I had not
deserved. But I saw no reason for concealing that it was my
purpose to see Philip Dunboyne.

"You told me  yesterday," I reminded her, "that I was to say you
had forgiven him. Do you still wish me to do that?"

"Indeed I do!"

"Have you thought of it seriously? Are you sure of not having
been hurried by a generous impulse into saying more than you
mean?"

"I have been thinking of it," she said, "through the wakeful
hours of last night--and many things are plain to me, which I was
not sure of in the time when I was so happy. He has caused me the
bitterest sorrow of my life, but he can't undo the good that I
owe to him. He has made a better girl of me, in the time when his
love was mine. I don't forget that. Miserably as it has ended, I
don't forget that."

Her voice trembled; the tears rose in her eyes. It was impossible
for me to conceal the distress that I felt. The noble creature
saw it. "No," she said faintly; "I am not going to cry. Don't
look so sorry for me." Her hand pressed my hand gently--_she_
pitied _me._ When I saw how she struggled to control herself, and
did control herself, I declare to God I could have gone down on
my knees before her.

She asked to be allowed to speak of Philip again, and for the
last time.

"When you meet with him in London, he may perhaps ask if you have
seen Eunice."

"My child! he is sure to ask."

"Break it to him gently--but don't let him deceive himself. In
this world, he must never hope to see me again."

I tried--very gently--to remonstrate. "At your age, and at his
age," I said, "surely there is hope?"

"There is no hope." She pressed her hand on her heart. "I know
it, I feel it, here."

"Oh, Eunice, it's hard for me to say that!"

"I will try to make it easier for you. Say that I have forgiven
him--and say no more."


CHAPTER XLIX.

THE GOVERNOR ON HIS GUARD.


AFTER leaving Eunice, my one desire was to be alone. I had much
to think of, and I wanted an opportunity of recovering myself. On
my way out of the house, in search of the first solitary place
that I could discover, I passed the room in which we had dined.
The door was ajar. Before I could get by it, Mrs. Tenbruggen
stepped out and stopped me.

"Will you come in here for a moment?" she said. "The farmer has
been called away, and I want to speak to you."

Very unwillingly--but how could I have refused without giving
offense?--I entered the room.

"When you noticed my keeping my name from you," Mrs. Tenbruggen
began, "while Selina was with us, you placed me in an awkward
position. Our little friend is an excellent creature, but her
tongue runs away with her sometimes; I am obliged to be careful
of taking her too readily into my confidence. For instance, I
have never told her what my name was before I married. Won't you
sit down?"

I had purposely remained standing as a hint to her not to prolong
the interview. The hint was thrown away; I took a chair.

"Selina's letters had informed me," she resumed, "that Mr.
Gracedieu was a nervous invalid. When I came to England, I had
hoped to try what Massage might do to relieve him. The cure of
their popular preacher might have advertised me through the whole
of the Congregational sect. It was essential to my success that I
should present myself as a stranger. I could trust time and
change, and my married name (certainly not known to Mr.
Gracedieu) to keep up my incognito. He would have refused to see
me if he had known that I was once Miss Chance."

I began to be interested.

Here was an opportunity, perhaps, of discovering what the
Minister had failed to remember when he had been speaking of this
woman, and when I had asked if he had ever offended her. I was
especially careful in making my inquiries.

"I remember how you spoke to Mr. Gracedieu," I said, "when you
and he met, long ago, in my rooms. But surely you don't think him
capable of vindictively remembering some thoughtless words, which
escaped you sixteen or seventeen years since?"

"I am not quite such a fool as that, Mr. Governor. What I was
thinking of was an unpleasant correspondence between the Minister
and myself. Before I was so unfortunate as to meet with Mr.
Tenbruggen, I obtained a chance of employment in a public
Institution, on condition that I included a clergyman among my
references. Knowing nobody else whom I could apply to, I rashly
wrote to Mr. Gracedieu, and received one of those cold and cruel
refusals which only the strictest religious principle can
produce. I was mortally offended at the time; and if your friend
the Minister had been within my reach--" She paused, and finished
the sentence by a significant gesture.

"Well," I said, "he is within your reach now."

"And out of his mind," she added. "Besides, one's sense of injury
doesn't last (except in novels and plays) through a series of
years. I don't pity him--and if an opportunity of shaking his
high position among his admiring congregation presented itself, I
daresay I might make a mischievous return for his letter to me.
In the meanwhile, we may drop the subject. I suppose you
understand, now, why I concealed my name from you, and why I kept
out of the house while you were in it."

It was plain enough, of course. If I had known her again, or had
heard her name, I might have told the Minister that Mrs.
Tenbruggen and Miss Chance were one and the same. And if I had
seen her and talked with her in the house, my memory might have
shown itself capable of improvement. Having politely presented
the expression of my thanks, I rose to go.

She stopped me at the door.

"One word more," she said, "while Selina is out of the way. I
need hardly tell you that I have not trusted her with the
Minister's secret. You and I are, as I take it, the only people
now living who know the truth about these two girls. And we keep
our advantage."

"What advantage?" I asked.

"Don't you know?"

"I don't indeed."

"No more do I. Female folly, and a slip of the tongue; I am old
and ugly, but I am still a woman. About Miss Eunice. Somebody has
told the pretty little fool never to trust strangers. You would
have been amused, if you had heard that sly young person
prevaricating with me. In one respect, her appearance strikes me.
She is not like either the wretch who was hanged, or the poor
victim who was murdered. Can she be the adopted child? Or is it
the other sister, whom I have not seen yet? Oh, come! come! Don't
try to look as if you didn't know. That is really too
ridiculous."

"You alluded just now," I answered, "to our 'advantage' in being
the only persons who know the truth about the two girls. Well,
Mrs. Tenbruggen, I keep _my_ advantage."

"In other words," she rejoined, "you leave me to make the
discovery myself. Well, my friend, I mean to do it!"

. . . . . . .

In the evening, my hotel offered to me the refuge of which I
stood in need. I could think, for the first time that day,
without interruption.

Being resolved to see Philip, I prepared myself for the interview
by consulting my extracts once more. The letter, in which Mrs.
Tenbruggen figures, inspired me with the hope of protection for
Mr. Gracedieu, attainable through no less a person than Helena
herself.

To begin with, she would certainly share Philip's aversion to the
Masseuse, and her dislike of Miss Jillgall would, just as
possibly, extend to Miss Jillgall's friend. The hostile feeling
thus set up might be trusted to keep watch on Mrs. Tenbruggen's
proceedings, with a vigilance not attainable by the coarser
observation of a man. In the event, of an improvement in the
Minister's health, I should hear of it both from the doctor and
from Miss Jillgall, and in that case I should instantly return to
my unhappy friend and put him on his guard.

I started for London by the early train in the morning.

My way home from the terminus took me past the hotel at which the
elder Mr. Dunboyne was staying. I called on him. He was reported
to be engaged; that is to say, immersed in his books. The address
on one of Philip's letters had informed me that he was staying at
another hotel. Pursuing my inquiries in this direction, I met
with a severe disappointment. Mr. Philip Dunboyne had left the
hotel that morning; for what destination neither the landlord nor
the waiter could tell me.

The next day's post brought with it the information which I had
failed to obtain. Miss Jillgall wrote, infor ming me in her
strongest language that Philip Dunboyne had returned to Helena.
Indignant Selina added: "Helena means to make him marry her; and
I promise you she shall fail, if I can stop it."

In taking leave of Eunice, I had given her my address; had warned
her to be careful, if she and Mrs. Tenbruggen happened to meet
again, and had begged her to write to me, or to come to me, if
anything happened to alarm her in my absence.

In two days more, I received a line from Eunice, written
evidently in the greatest agitation.

"Philip has discovered me. He has been here, and has insisted on
seeing me. I have refused. The good farmer has so kindly taken my
part. I can write no more."


CHAPTER L.

THE NEWS FROM THE FARM.


WHEN I next heard from Miss Jillgall, the introductory part of
her letter merely reminded me that Philip Dunboyne was
established in the town, and that Helena was in daily
communication with him. I shall do Selina no injustice if my
extract begins with her second page.

"You will sympathize, I am sure" (she writes), "with the
indignation which urged me to call on Philip, and tell him the
way to the farmhouse. Think of Helena being determined to marry
him, whether he wants to or not! I am afraid this is bad grammar.
But there are occasions when even a cultivated lady fails in her
grammar, and almost envies the men their privilege of swearing
when they are in a rage. My state of mind is truly indescribable.
Grief mingles with anger, when I tell you that my sweet Euneece
has disappointed me, for the first time since I had the happiness
of knowing and admiring her. What can have been the motive of her
refusal to receive her penitent lover? Is it pride? We are told
that Satan fell through pride. Euneece satanic? Impossible! I
feel inclined to go and ask her what has hardened her heart
against a poor young man who bitterly regrets his own folly. Do
you think it was bad advice from the farmer or his wife? In that
case, I shall exert my influence, and take her away. You would do
the same, wouldn't you?

"I am ashamed to mention the poor dear Minister in a postscript.
The truth is, I don't very well know what I am about. Mr.
Gracedieu is quiet, sleeps better than he did, eats with a keener
appetite, gives no trouble. But, alas, that glorious intellect is
in a state of eclipse! Do not suppose, because I write
figuratively, that I am not sorry for him. He understands
nothing; he remembers nothing; he has my prayers.

"You might come to us again, if you would only be so kind. It
would make no difference now; the poor man is so sadly altered. I
must add, most reluctantly, that the doctor recommends your
staying at home. Between ourselves, he is little better than a
coward. Fancy his saying; 'No; we must not run that risk yet.' I
am barely civil to him, and no more.

"In any other affair (excuse me for troubling you with a second
postscript), my sympathy with Euneece would have penetrated her
motives; I should have felt with her feelings. But I have never
been in love; no gentleman gave me the opportunity when I was
young. Now I am middle-aged, neglect has done its dreary work--my
heart is an extinct crater. Figurative again! I had better put my
pen away, and say farewell for the present."

Miss Jillgall may now give place to Eunice. The same day's post
brought me both letters.

I should be unworthy indeed of the trust which this affectionate
girl has placed in me, if I failed to receive her explanation of
her conduct toward Philip Dunboyne, as a sacred secret confided
to my fatherly regard. In those later portions of her letter,
which are not addressed to me confidentially, Eunice writes as
follows:


"I get news--and what heartbreaking news!--of my father, by
sending a messenger to Selina. It is more than ever impossible
that I can put myself in the way of seeing Helena again. She has
written to me about Philip, in a tone so shockingly insolent and
cruel, that I have destroyed her letter. Philip's visit to the
farm, discovered I don't know how, seems to have infuriated her.
She accuses me of doing all that she might herself have done in
my place, and threatens me--No! I am afraid of the wicked
whisperings of that second self of mine if I think of it. They
were near to tempting me when I read Helena's letter. But I
thought of what you said, after I had shown you my Journal; and
your words took my memory back to the days when I was happy with
Philip. The trial and the terror passed away.

"Consolation has come to me from the best of good women. Mrs.
Staveley writes as lovingly as my mother might have written, if
death had spared her. I have replied with all the gratitude that
I really feel, but without taking advantage of the services which
she offers. Mrs. Staveley has it in her mind, as you had it in
your mind, to bring Philip back to me. Does she forget, do you
forget, that Helena claims him? But you both mean kindly, and I
love you both for the interest that you feel in me.

"The farmer's wife--dear good soul!--hardly understands me so
well as her husband does. She confesses to pitying Philip. 'He is
so wretched,' she says. 'And, dear heart, how handsome, and what
nice, winning manners! I don't think I should have had your
courage, in your place. To tell the truth, I should have jumped
for joy when I saw him at the door; and I should have run down to
let him in--and perhaps been sorry for it afterward. If you
really wish to forget him, my dear, I will do all I can to help
you.'

"These are trifling things to mention, but I am afraid you may
think I am unhappy--and I want to prevent that.

"I have so much to be thankful for, and the children are so fond
of me. Whether I teach them as well as I might have done, if I
had been a more learned girl, may perhaps be doubtful. They do
more for their governess, I am afraid, than their governess does
for them. When they come into my room in the morning, and rouse
me with their kisses, the hour of waking, which used to be so
hard to endure after Philip left me, is now the happiest hour of
my day."


With that reassuring view of her life as a governess, the poor
child's letter comes to an end.


CHAPTER LI.

THE TRIUMPH OF MRS. TENBRUGGEN.


MISS JILLGALL appears again, after an interval, on the field of
my extracts. My pleasant friend deserves this time a serious
reception. She informs me that Mrs. Tenbruggen has begun the
inquiries which I have the best reason to dread--for I alone know
the end which they are designed to reach.

The arrival of this news affected me in two different ways.

It was discouraging to find that circumstances had not justified
my reliance on Helena's enmity as a counter-influence to Mrs.
Tenbruggen. On the other hand, it was a relief to be assured that
my return to London would serve, rather than compromise, the
interests which it was my chief anxiety to defend. I had foreseen
that Mrs. Tenbruggen would wait to set her enterprise on foot,
until I was out of her way; and I had calculated on my absence as
an event which would at least put an end to suspense by
encouraging her to begin.

The first sentences in Miss Jillgall's letter explain the nature
of her interest in the proceedings of her friend, and are, on
that account, worth reading.

"Things are sadly changed for the worse" (Selina writes); "but I
don't forget that Philip was once engaged to Euneece, and that
Mr. Gracedieu's extraordinary conduct toward him puzzled us all.
The mode of discovery which dear Elizabeth suggested by letter,
at that time, appears to be the mode which she is following now.
When I asked why, she said: 'Philip may return to Euneece; the
Minister may recover--and will be all the more likely to do so if
he tries Massage. In that case, he will probably repeat the
conduct which surprised you; and your natural curiosity will ask
me again to find out what it means. Am I your friend, Selina, or
am I not?' This was so delightfully kind, and so irresistibly
conclusive, that I kissed her in a transport of gratitude. With
what breathless interest I have watched her progress toward
penetrating the mystery of the girls' ages, it is quite needless
to tell  you."

. . . . . . .

Mrs. Tenbruggen's method o f keeping Miss Jillgall in ignorance
of what she was really about, and Miss Jillgall's admirable
confidence in the integrity of Mrs. Tenbruggen, being now set
forth on the best authority, an exact presentation of the state
of affairs will be completed if I add a word more, relating to
the positions actually occupied toward Mrs. Tenbruggen's
enterprise, by my correspondent and myself.

On her side, Miss Jillgall was entirely ignorant that one of the
two girls was not Mr. Gracedieu's daughter, but his adopted
child. On my side, I was entirely ignorant of Mrs. Tenbruggen's
purpose in endeavoring to identify the daughter of the murderess.
Speaking of myself, individually, let me add that I only waited
the event to protect the helpless ones--my poor demented friend,
and the orphan whom his mercy received into his heart and his
home.

Miss Jillgall goes on with her curious story, as follows:

. . . . . . .

"Always desirous of making myself useful, I thought I would give
my dear Elizabeth a hint which might save time and trouble. 'Why
not begin,' I suggested, 'by asking the Governor to help you?'
That wonderful woman never forgets anything. She had already
applied to you, without success.

"In my next attempt to be useful, I did violence to my most
cherished convictions, by presenting the wretch Helena to the
admirable Elizabeth. That the former would be cold as ice, in her
reception of any friend of mine, was nothing wonderful. Mrs.
Tenbruggen passed it over with the graceful composure of a woman
of the world. In the course of conversation with Helena, she
slipped in a question: 'Might I ask if you are older than your
sister?' The answer was, of course: 'I don't know.' And here, for
once, the most deceitful girl in existence spoke the truth.

"When we were alone again, Elizabeth made a remark: 'If personal
appearance could decide the question,' she said, 'the
disagreeable young woman is the oldest of the two. The next thing
to be done is to discover if looks are to be trusted in this
case.'

"My friend's lawyer received confidential instructions (not shown
to me, which seems rather hard) to trace the two Miss Gracedieus'
registers of birth. Elizabeth described this proceeding (not very
intelligibly to my mind) as a means of finding out which of the
girls could be identified by name as the elder of the two.

"The report arrived this morning. I was only informed that the
result, in one case, had entirely defeated the inquiries. In the
other case, Elizabeth had helped her agent by referring him to a
Birth, advertised in the customary columns of the _Times_
newspaper. Even here, there was a fatal obstacle. The name of the
place in which Mr. Gracedieu's daughter had been born was not
added, as usual.

"I still tried to be useful. Had my friend known the Minister's
wife? My friend had never even seen the Minister's wife. And, as
if by a fatality, her portrait was no longer in existence. I
could only mention that Helena was like her mother. But Elizabeth
seemed to attach very little importance to my evidence, if I may
call it by so grand a name. 'People have such strange ideas about
likenesses,' she said, 'and arrive at such contradictory
conclusions. One can only trust one's own eyes in a matter of
that kind.'

"My friend next asked me about our domestic establishment. We had
only a cook and a housemaid. If they were old servants who had
known the girls as children, they might be made of some use. Our
luck was as steadily against us as ever. They had both been
engaged when Mr. Gracedieu assumed his new pastoral duties, after
having resided with his wife at her native place.

"I asked Elizabeth what she proposed to do next.

"She deferred her answer, until I had first told her whether the
visit of the doctor might be expected on that day. I could reply
to this in the negative. Elizabeth, thereupon, made a startling
request; she begged me to introduce her to Mr. Gracedieu.

"I said: 'Surely, you have forgotten the sad state of his mind?'
No; she knew perfectly well that he was imbecile. 'I want to
try,' she explained, 'if I can rouse him for a few minutes.'

" 'By Massage?' I inquired.

"She burst out laughing. 'Massage, my dear, doesn't act in that
way. It is an elaborate process, pursued patiently for weeks
together. But my hands have more than one accomplishment at their
finger-ends. Oh, make your mind easy! I shall do no harm, if I do
no good. Take me. Selina, to the Minister.'

"We went to his room. Don't blame me for giving way; I am too
fond of Elizabeth to be able to disappoint her.

"It was a sad sight when we went in. He was quite happy, playing
like a child, at cup-and-ball. The attendant retired at my
request. I introduced Mrs. Tenbruggen. He smiled and shook hands
with her. He said: 'Are you a Christian or a Pagan? You are very
pretty. How many times can you catch the ball in the cup?' The
effort to talk to her ended there. He went on with his game, and
seemed to forget that there was anybody in the room. It made my
heart ache to remember what he was--and to see him now.

"Elizabeth whispered: 'Leave me alone with him.'

"I don't know why I did such a rude thing--I hesitated.

"Elizabeth asked me if I had no confidence in her. I was ashamed
of myself; I left them together.

"A long half-hour passed. Feeling a little uneasy, I went
upstairs again and looked into the room. He was leaning back in
his chair; his plaything was on the floor, and he was looking
vacantly at the light that came in through the window. I found
Mrs. Tenbruggen at the other end of the room, in the act of
ringing the bell. Nothing in the least out of the ordinary way
seemed to have happened. When the attendant had answered the
bell, we left the room together. Mr. Gracedieu took no notice of
us.

" 'Well,' I said, 'how has it ended?'

"Quite calmly my noble Elizabeth answered: 'In total failure.'

" 'What did you say to him after you sent me away?'

" 'I tried, in every possible way, to get him to tell me which of
his two daughters was the oldest.'

" 'Did he refuse to answer?'

" 'He was only too ready to answer. First, he said Helena was the
oldest--then he corrected himself, and declared that Eunice was
the oldest--then he said they were twins--then he went back to
Helena and Eunice. Now one was the oldest, and now the other. He
rang the changes on those two names, I can't tell you how often,
and seemed to think it a better game than cup-and-ball.'

" 'What is to be done?'

" 'Nothing is to be done, Selina.'

" 'What!' I cried, 'you give it up?'

"My heroic friend answered: 'I know when I am beaten, my dear--I
give it up.' She looked at her watch; it was time to operate on
the muscles of one of her patients. Away she went, on her
glorious mission of Massage, without a murmur of regret. What
strength of mind! But, oh, dear, what a disappointment for poor
little me! On one thing I am determined. If I find myself getting
puzzled or frightened, I shall instantly write to you."

With that expression of confidence in me, Selina's narrative came
to an end. I wish I could have believed, as she did, that the
object of her admiration had been telling her the truth.

A few days later, Mrs. Tenbruggen honored me with a visit at my
house in the neighborhood of London. Thanks to this circumstance,
I am able to add a postscript which will complete the revelations
in Miss Jillgall's letter.

The illustrious Masseuse, having much to conceal from her
faithful Selina, was well aware that she had only one thing to
keep hidden from me; namely, the advantage which she would have
gained if her inquiries had met with success.

"I thought I might have got at what I wanted," she told me, "by
mesmerizing our reverend friend. He is as weak as a woman; I
threw him into hysterics, and had to give it up, and quiet him,
or he would have alarmed the house. You look as if you don't
believe in mesmerism."

"My looks, Mrs. Tenbruggen, exactly express my opinion. Mesmerism
is a humbug!"

"You amusing old Tory! Shall I throw you into a state of trance?
No! I'll give you a shock of another kind--a shock of surprise. I
know as much as you do about Mr. Gracedieu's daughters. What do
you think of that?"

" I think I should like to hear you tell me, which is the adopted
child."

"Helena, to be sure!"

Her manner was defiant, her tone was positive; I doubted both.
Under the surface of her assumed confidence, I saw something
which told me that she was trying to read my thoughts in my face.
Many other women had tried to do that. They succeeded when I was
young. When I had reached the wrong side of fifty, my face had
learned discretion, and they failed.

"How did you arrive at your discovery?" I asked. "I know of
nobody who could have helped you."

"I helped myself, sir! I reasoned it out. A wonderful thing for a
woman to do, isn't it? I wonder whether you could follow the
process?"

My reply to this was made by a bow. I was sure of my command over
my face; but perfect control of the voice is a rare power. Here
and there, a great actor or a great criminal possesses it.

Mrs. Tenbruggen's vanity took me into her confidence. "In the
first place," she said, "Helena is plainly the wicked one of the
two. I was not prejudiced by what Selina had told me of her: I
saw it, and felt it, before I had been five minutes in her
company. If lying tongues ever provoke her as lying tongues
provoked her mother, she will follow her mother's example. Very
well. Now--in the second place--though it is very slight, there
is a certain something in her hair and her complexion which
reminds me of the murderess: there is no other resemblance, I
admit. In the third place, the girls' names point to the same
conclusion. Mr. Gracedieu is a Protestant and a Dissenter. Would
he call a child of his own by the name of a Roman Catholic saint?
No! he would prefer a name in the Bible; Eunice is _his_ child.
And Helena was once the baby whom I carried into the prison. Do
you deny that?"

"I don't deny it."

Only four words! But they were deceitfully spoken, and the
deceit--practiced in Eunice's interest, it is needless to
say--succeeded. Mrs. Tenbruggen's object in visiting me was
attained; I had confirmed her belief in the delusion that Helena
was the adopted child.

She got up to take her leave. I asked if she proposed remaining
in London. No; she was returning to her country patients that
night.

As I attended her to the house-door, she turned to me with her
mischievous smile. "I have taken some trouble in finding the clew
to the Minister's mystery," she said. "Don't you wonder why?"

"If I did wonder," I answered, "would you tell me why?"

She laughed at the bare idea of it. "Another lesson," she said,
"to assist a helpless man in studying the weaker sex. I have
already shown you that a woman can reason. Learn next that a
woman can keep a secret. Good-by. God bless you!"

Of the events which followed Mrs. Tenbruggen's visit it is not
possible for me, I am thankful to say, to speak from personal
experience. Ought I to conclude with an expression of repentance
for the act of deception to which I have already pleaded guilty?
I don't know. Yes! the force of circumstances does really compel
me to say it, and say it seriously--I declare, on my word of
honor, I don't know.


Third period: 1876.

_HELENA'S DIARY RESUMED._


CHAPTER LII.

HELENA'S DIARY RESUMED.



WHILE my father remains in his present helpless condition,
somebody must assume a position of command in this house. There
cannot be a moment's doubt that I am the person to do it.

In my agitated state of mind, sometimes doubtful of Philip,
sometimes hopeful of him, I find Mrs. Tenbruggen simply
unendurable. A female doctor is, under any circumstances, a
creature whom I detest. She is, at her very best, a bad imitation
of a man. The Medical Rubber is worse than this; she is a bad
imitation of a mountebank. Her grinning good-humor, adopted no
doubt to please the fools who are her patients, and her impudent
enjoyment of hearing herself talk, make me regret for the first
time in my life that I am a young lady. If I belonged to the
lowest order of the population, I might take the first stick I
could find, and enjoy the luxury of giving Mrs. Tenbruggen a good
beating.

She literally haunts the house, encouraged, of course, by her
wretched little dupe, Miss Jillgall. Only this morning, I tried
what a broad hint would do toward suggesting that her visits had
better come to an end.

"Really, Mrs. Tenbruggen," I said, "I must request Miss Jillgall
to moderate her selfish enjoyment of your company, for your own
sake. Your time is too valuable, in a professional sense, to be
wasted on an idle woman who has no sympathy with your patients,
waiting for relief perhaps, and waiting in vain.

She listened to this, all smiles and good-humor: "My dear, do you
know how I might answer you, if I was an ill-natured woman?"

"I have no curiosity to hear it, Mrs. Tenbruggen."

"I might ask you," she persisted, "to allow me to mind my own
business. But I am incapable of making an ungrateful return for
the interest which you take in my medical welfare. Let me venture
to ask if you understand the value of time."

"Are you going to say much more, Mrs. Tenbruggen?"

"I am going to make a sensible remark, my child. If you feel
tired, permit me--here is a chair. Father Time, dear Miss
Gracedieu, has always been a good friend of mine, because I know
how to make the best use of him. The author of the famous saying
_Tempus fugit_ (you understand Latin, of course) was, I take
leave to think, an idle man. The more I have to do, the readier
Time is to wait for me. Let me impress this on your mind by some
interesting examples. The greatest conqueror of the
century--Napoleon--had time enough for everything. The greatest
novelist of the century--Sir Walter Scott--had time enough for
everything. At my humble distance, I imitate those illustrious
men, and my patients never complain of me."

"Have you done?" I asked.

"Yes, dear--for the present."

"You are a clever woman, Mrs. Tenbruggen and you know it. You
have an eloquent tongue, and you know it. But you are something
else, which you don't seem to be aware of. You are a Bore."

She burst out laughing, with the air of a woman who thoroughly
enjoyed a good joke. I looked back when I left the room, and saw
the friend of Father Time in the easy chair opening our
newspaper.

This is a specimen of the customary encounter of our wits. I
place it on record in my Journal, to excuse myself _to_ myself.
When she left us at last, later in the day, I sent a letter after
her to the hotel. Not having kept a copy of it, let me present
the substance, like a sermon, under three heads: I begged to be
excused for speaking plainly; I declared that there was a total
want of sympathy between us, on my side; and I proposed that she
should deprive me of future opportunities of receiving her in
this house. The reply arrived immediately in these terms: "Your
letter received, dear girl. I am not in the least angry; partly
because I am very fond of you, partly because I know that you
will ask me to come back again. P. S--Philip sends his love."

This last piece of insolence was unquestionably a lie. Philip
detests her. They are both staying at the same hotel. But I
happen to know that he won't even look at her, if they meet by
accident on the stairs.

People who can enjoy the melancholy spectacle of human nature in
a state of degradation would be at a loss which exhibition to
prefer--an ugly old maid in a rage, or an ugly old maid in tears.
Miss Jillgall presented herself in both characters when she heard
what had happened. To my mind, Mrs. Tenbruggen's bosom-friend is
a creature not fit to be seen or heard when she loses her temper.
I only told her to leave the room. To my great amusement, she
shook her bony fist at me, and expressed a frantic wish: "Oh, if
I was rich enough to leave this wicked house!" I wonder whether
there is insanity (as well as poverty) in Miss Jillgall's family?


Last night my mind was in a harassed state. Philip was, as usual,
the cause of it.

Perhaps I acted indiscreetly when I insisted on his leaving
London, and returning to this place. But what else could I have
done? It was not merely my interest, it was an act of downright
necessity, to withdraw him from the influence of his hateful
father--whom I now regard as
 the one serious obstacle to my marriage. There is no prospect of
being rid of Mr. Dunboyne the elder by his returning to Ireland.
He is trying a new remedy for his crippled hand--electricity. I
wish it was lightning, to kill him! If I had given that wicked
old man the chance, I am firmly convinced he would not have let a
day pass without doing his best to depreciate me in his son's
estimation. Besides, there was the risk, if I had allowed Philip
to remain long away from me, of losing--no, while I keep my
beauty I cannot be in such danger as that--let me say, of
permitting time and absence to weaken my hold on him. However
sullen and silent he may be, when we meet--and I find him in that
condition far too often--I can, sooner or later, recall him to
his brighter self. My eyes preserve their charm, my talk can
still amuse him, and, better even than that, I feel the answering
thrill in him, which tells me how precious my kisses are--not too
lavishly bestowed! But the time when I am obliged to leave him to
himself is the time that I dread. How do I know that his thoughts
are not wandering away to Eunice? He denies it; he declares that
he only went to the farmhouse to express his regret for his own
thoughtless conduct, and to offer her the brotherly regard due to
the sister of his promised wife. Can I believe it? Oh, what would
I not give to be able to believe it! How can I feel sure that her
refusal to see him was not a cunning device to make him long for
another interview, and plan perhaps in private to go back and try
again. Marriage! Nothing will quiet these frightful doubts of
mine, nothing will reward me for all that I have suffered,
nothing will warm my heart with the delightful sense of triumph
over Eunice, but my marriage to Philip. And what does he say,
when I urge it on him?--yes, I have fallen as low as that, in the
despair which sometimes possesses me. He has his answer, always
the same, and always ready: "How are we to live? where is the
money?" The maddening part of it is that I cannot accuse him of
raising objections that don't exist. We are poorer than ever
here, since my father's illness--and Philip's allowance is barely
enough to suffice him as a single man. Oh, how I hate the rich!

It was useless to think of going to bed. How could I hope to
sleep, with my head throbbing, and my thoughts in this disturbed
state? I put on my comfortable dressing-gown, and sat down to try
what reading would do to quiet my mind.

I had borrowed the book from the Library, to which I have been a
subscriber in secret for some time past. It was an old volume,
full of what we should now call Gossip; relating strange
adventures, and scandalous incidents in family history which had
been concealed from public notice.

One of these last romances in real life caught a strong hold on
my interest.

It was a strange case of intended poisoning, which had never been
carried out. A young married lady of rank, whose name was
concealed under an initial letter, had suffered some unendurable
wrong (which was not mentioned) at the hands of her husband's
mother. The wife was described as a woman of strong passions, who
had determined on a terrible revenge by taking the life of her
mother-in-law. There were difficulties in the way of her
committing the crime without an accomplice to help her; and she
decided on taking her maid, an elderly woman, into her
confidence. The poison was secretly obtained by this person; and
the safest manner of administering it was under discussion
between the mistress and the maid, when the door of the room was
suddenly opened. The husband, accompanied by his brother, rushed
in, and charged his wife with plotting the murder of his mother.
The young lady (she was only twenty-three) must have been a
person of extraordinary courage and resolution. She saw at once
that her maid had betrayed her, and, with astonishing presence of
mind, she turned on the traitress, and said to her husband:
"There is the wretch who has been trying to persuade me to poison
your mother!" As it happened, the old lady's temper was violent
and overbearing; and the maid had complained of being ill-treated
by her, in the hearing of the other servants. The circumstances
made it impossible to decide which of the two was really the
guilty woman. The servant was sent away, and the husband and wife
separated soon afterward, under the excuse of incompatibility of
temper. Years passed; and the truth was only discovered by the
death-bed confession of the wife. A remarkable story, which has
made such an impression on me that I have written it in my
Journal. I am not rich enough to buy the book.


For the last two days, I have been confined to my room with a bad
feverish cold--caught, as I suppose, by sitting at an open window
reading my book till nearly three o'clock in the morning. I sent
a note to Philip, telling him of my illness. On the first day, he
called to inquire after me. On the second day, no visit, and no
letter. Here is the third day--and no news of him as yet. I am
better, but not fit to go out. Let me wait another hour, and, if
that exertion of patience meets with no reward, I shall send a
note to the hotel.

No news of Philip. I have sent to the hotel. The servant has just
returned, bringing me back my note. The waiter informed her that
Mr. Dunboyne had gone away to London by the morning train. No
apology or explanation left for me.

_Can_ he have deserted me? I am in such a frenzy of doubt and
rage that I can hardly write that horrible question. Is it
possible--oh, I feel it _is_ possible that he has gone away with
Eunice. Do I know where to find them? if I did know, what could I
do? I feel as if I could kill them both!

CHAPTER LIII.

HELENA'S DIARY RESUMED.


AFTER the heat of my anger had cooled, I made two discoveries.
One cost me a fee to a messenger, and the other exposed me to the
insolence of a servant. I pay willingly in my purse and my pride,
when the gain is peace of mind. Through my messenger I
ascertained that Eunice had never left the farm. Through my own
inquiries, answered by the waiter with an impudent grin, I heard
that Philip had left orders to have his room kept for him. What
misery our stupid housemaid might have spared me, if she had
thought of putting that question when I sent her to the hotel!

The rest of the day passed in vain speculations on Philip's
motive for this sudden departure. What poor weak creatures we
are! I persuaded myself to hope that anxiety for our marriage had
urged him to make an effort to touch the heart of his mean
father. Shall I see him to-morrow? And shall I have reason to be
fonder of him than ever?


We met again to-day as usual. He has behaved infamously.

When I asked what had been his object in going to London, I was
told that it was "a matter of business." He made that idiotic
excuse as coolly as if he really thought I should believe it. I
submitted in silence, rather than mar his return to me by the
disaster of a quarrel. But this was an unlucky day. A harder
trial of my self-control was still to come. Without the slightest
appearance of shame, Philip informed me that he was charged with
a message from Mrs. Tenbruggen! She wanted some Irish lace, and
would I be so good as to tell her which was the best shop at
which she could buy it?

Was he really in earnest? "You," I said, "who distrusted and
detested her--you are on friendly terms with that woman?"

He remonstrated with me. "My dear Helena, don't speak in that way
of Mrs. Tenbruggen. We have both been mistaken about her. That
good creature has forgiven the brutal manner in which I spoke to
her, when she was in attendance on my father. She was the first
to propose that we should shake hands and forget it. My darling,
don't let all the good feeling be on one side. You have no idea
how kindly she speaks of you, and how anxious she is to help us
to be married. Come! come! meet her half-way. Write down the name
of the shop on my card, and I will take it back to her."

Sheer amazement kept me silent: I let him go on. He was a mere
child in the hands of Mrs. Tenbruggen: she had only to determine
to make a fool of him, and she could do it.

But why did she
 do it? What advantage had she to gain by insinuating herself in
this way into his good opinion, evidently with the intention of
urging him to reconcile us to each other? How could we two poor
young people be of the smallest use to the fashionable Masseuse?

My silence began to irritate Philip. "I never knew before how
obstinate you could be," he said; "you seem to be doing your
best--I can't imagine why--to lower yourself in my estimation."

I held my tongue; I assumed my smile. It is all very well for men
to talk about the deceitfulness of women. What chance (I should
like to ask somebody who knows about it) do the men give us of
making our lives with them endurable, except by deceit! I gave
way, of course, and wrote down the address of the shop.

He was so pleased that he kissed me. Yes! the most fondly
affectionate kiss that he had given me, for weeks past, was my
reward for submitting to Mrs. Tenbruggen. She is old enough to be
his mother, and almost as ugly as Miss Jillgall--and she has made
her interests his interests already!


On the next day, I fully expected to receive a visit from Mrs.
Tenbruggen. She knew better than that. I only got a polite little
note, thanking me for the address, and adding an artless
concession: "I earn more money than I know what to do with; and I
adore Irish lace."

The next day came, and still she was careful not to show herself
too eager for a personal reconciliation. A splendid nosegay was
sent to me, with another little note: "A tribute, dear Helena,
offered by one of my grateful patients. Too beautiful a present
for an old woman like me. I agree with the poet: 'Sweets to the
sweet.' A charming thought of Shakespeare's, is it not? I should
like to verify the quotation. Would you mind leaving the volume
for me in the hall, if I call to-morrow?"

Well done, Mrs. Tenbruggen! She doesn't venture to intrude on
Miss Gracedieu in the drawing-room; she only wants to verify a
quotation in the hall. Oh, goddess of Humility (if there is such
a person), how becomingly you are dressed when your milliner is
an artful old woman!

While this reflection was passing through my mind, Miss Jillgall
came in--saw the nosegay on the table--and instantly pounced on
it. "Oh, for me! for me!" she cried. "I noticed it this morning
on Elizabeth's table. How very kind of her!" She plunged her
inquisitive nose into the poor flowers, and looked up
sentimentally at the ceiling. "The perfume of goodness," she
remarked, "mingled with the perfume of flowers!" "When you have
quite done with it," I said, "perhaps you will be so good as to
return my nosegay?" "_Your_ nosegay!" she exclaimed. "There is
Mrs. Tenbruggen's letter," I replied, "if you would like to look
at it." She did look at it. All the bile in her body flew up into
her eyes, and turned them green; she looked as if she longed to
scratch my face. I gave the flowers afterward to Maria; Miss
Jillgall's nose had completely spoiled them.


It would have been too ridiculous to have allowed Mrs. Tenbruggen
to consult Shakespeare in the hall. I had the honor of receiving
her in my own room. We accomplished a touching reconciliation,
and we quite forgot Shakespeare.

She troubles me; she does indeed trouble me.

Having set herself entirely right with Philip, she is determined
on performing the same miracle with me. Her reform of herself is
already complete. Her vulgar humor was kept under strict
restraint; she was quiet and well-bred, and readier to listen
than to talk. This change was not presented abruptly. She
contrived to express her friendly interests in Philip and in me
by hints dropped here and there, assisted in their effort by
answers on my part, into which I was tempted so skillfully that I
only discovered the snare set for me, on reflection. What is it,
I ask again, that she has in view in taking all this trouble?
Where is her motive for encouraging a love-affair, which Miss
Jillgall must have denounced to her as an abominable wrong
inflicted on Eunice? Money (even if there was a prospect of such
a thing, in our case) cannot be her object; it is quite true that
her success sets her above pecuniary anxiety. Spiteful feeling
against Eunice is out of the question. They have only met once;
and her opinion was expressed to me with evident sincerity: "Your
sister is a nice girl, but she is like other nice girls--she
doesn't interest me." There is Eunice's character, drawn from the
life in few words. In what an irritating position do I find
myself placed! Never before have I felt so interested in trying
to look into a person's secret mind; and never before have I been
so completely baffled.

I had written as far as this, and was on the point of closing my
Journal, when a third note arrived from Mrs. Tenbruggen.

She had been thinking about me at intervals (she wrote) all
through the rest of the day; and, kindly as I had received her,
she was conscious of being the object of doubts on my part which
her visit had failed to remove. Might she ask leave to call on
me, in the hope of improving her position in my estimation? An
appointment followed for the next day.

What can she have to say to me which she has not already said? Is
it anything about Philip, I wonder?


CHAPTER LIV.

HELENA'S DIARY RESUMED.


AT our interview of the next day, Mrs. Tenbruggen's capacity for
self-reform appeared under a new aspect. She dropped all
familiarity with me, and she stated the object of her visit
without a superfluous word of explanation or apology.

I thought this a remarkable effort for a woman; and I recognized
the merit of it by leaving the lion's share of the talk to my
visitor. In these terms she opened her business with me:

"Has Mr. Philip Dunboyne told you why he went to London?"

"He made a commonplace excuse," I answered. "Business, he said,
took him to London. I know no more."

"You have a fair prospect of happiness, Miss Helena, when you are
married--your future husband is evidently afraid of you. I am not
afraid of you; and I shall confide to your private ear something
which you have an interest in knowing. The business which took
young Mr. Dunboyne to London was to consult a competent person,
on a matter concerning himself. The competent person is the
sagacious (not to say sly) old gentleman--whom we used to call
the Governor. You know him, I believe?"

"Yes. But I am at a loss to imagine why Philip should have
consulted him."

"Have you ever heard or read, Miss Helena, of such a thing as 'an
old man's fancy'?"

"I think I have."

"Well, the Governor has taken an old man's fancy to your sister.
They appeared to understand each other perfectly when I was at
the farmhouse."

"Excuse me, Mrs. Tenbruggen, that is what I know already. Why did
Philip go to the Governor?"

She smiled. "If anybody is acquainted with the true state of your
sister's feelings, the Governor is the man. I sent Mr. Dunboyne
to consult him--and there is the reason for it."

This open avowal of her motives perplexed and offended me. After
declaring herself to be interested in my marriage-engagement had
she changed her mind, and resolved on favoring Philip's return to
Eunice? What right had he to consult anybody about the state of
that girl's feelings? _My_ feelings form the only subject of
inquiry that was properly open to him. I should have said
something which I might have afterward regretted, if Mrs.
Tenbruggen had allowed me the opportunity. Fortunately for both
of us, she went on with her narrative of her own proceedings.

"Philip Dunboyne is an excellent fellow," she continued; "I
really like him--but he has his faults. He sadly wants strength
of purpose; and, like weak men in general, he only knows his own
mind when a resolute friend takes him in hand and guides him. I
am his resolute friend. I saw him veering about between you and
Eunice; and I decided for his sake--may I say for your sake
also?--on putting an end to that mischievous state of indecision.
You have the claim on him; you are the right wife for him, and
the Governor was (as I thought likely from what I had myself
observed) the man to make him see it. I am not in anybody's
secrets; it was pure guesswork on my part, and it has succeeded.
Th ere is no more doubt now about Miss Eunice's sentiments. The
question is settled."

"In my favor?"

"Certainly in your favor--or I should not have said a word about
it."

"Was Philip's visit kindly received? Or did the old wretch laugh
at him?"

"My dear Miss Gracedieu, the old wretch is a man of the world,
and never makes mistakes of that sort. Before he could open his
lips, he had to satisfy himself that your lover deserved to be
taken into his confidence, on the delicate subject of Eunice's
sentiments. He arrived at a favorable conclusion. I can repeat
Philip's questions and the Governor's answers after putting the
young man through a stiff examination just as they passed: 'May I
inquire, sir, if she has spoken to you about me?' 'She has often
spoken about you.' 'Did she seem to be angry with me?' 'She is
too good and too sweet to be angry with you.' 'Do you think she
will forgive me?' 'She has forgiven you.' 'Did she say so
herself?' 'Yes, of her own free will.' 'Why did she refuse to see
me when I called at the farm?' 'She had her own reasons--good
reasons.' 'Has she regretted it since?' 'Certainly not.' 'Is it
likely that she would consent, if I proposed a reconciliation?'
'I put that question to her myself.' 'How did she take it, sir?'
'She declined to take it.' 'You mean that she declined a
reconciliation?' 'Yes.' 'Are you sure she was in earnest?' 'I am
positively sure.' That last answer seems, by young Dunboyne's own
confession, to have been enough, and more than enough for him. He
got up to go--and then an odd thing happened. After giving him
the most unfavorable answers, the Governor patted him paternally
on the shoulder, and encouraged him to hope. 'Before we say
good-by, Mr. Philip, one word more. If I was as young as you are,
I should not despair.' There is a sudden change of front! Who can
explain it?"

The Governor's mischievous resolution to reconcile Philip and
Eunice explained it, of course. With the best intentions
(perhaps) Mrs. Tenbruggen had helped that design by bringing the
two men together. "Go on," I said; "I am prepared to hear next
that Philip has paid another visit to my sister, and has been
received this time."

I must say this for Mrs. Tenbruggen: she kept her temper
perfectly.

"He has not been to the farm," she said, "but he has done
something nearly as foolish. He has written to your sister."

"And he has received a favorable reply, of course?"

She put her hand into the pocket of her dress.

"There is your sister's reply," she said.

Any persons who have had a crushing burden lifted, unexpectedly
and instantly, from off their minds, will know what I felt when I
read the reply. In the most positive language, Eunice refused to
correspond with Philip, or to speak with him. The concluding
words proved that she was in earnest. "You are engaged to Helena.
Consider me as a stranger until you are married. After that time
you will be my brother-in-law, and then I may pardon you for
writing to me."

Nobody who knows Eunice would have supposed that she possessed
those two valuable qualities--common-sense and proper pride. It
is pleasant to feel that I can now send cards to my sister, when
I am Mrs. Philip Dunboyne.

I returned the letter to Mrs. Tenbruggen, with the sincerest
expressions of regret for having doubted her. "I have been
unworthy of your generous interest in me," I said; "I am almost
ashamed to offer you my hand."

She took my hand, and gave it a good, heady shake.

"Are we friends?" she asked, in the simplest and prettiest
manner. "Then let us be easy and pleasant again," she went on.
"Will you call me Elizabeth; and shall I call you Helena? Very
well. Now I have got something else to say; another secret which
must be kept from Philip (I call _him_ by his name now, you see)
for a few days more. Your happiness, my dear, must not depend on
his miserly old father. He must have a little income of his own
to marry on. Among the hundreds of unfortunate wretches whom I
have relieved from torture of mind and body, there is a grateful
minority. Small! small! but there they are. I have influence
among powerful people; and I am trying to make Philip private
secretary to a member of Parliament. When I have succeeded, you
shall tell him the good news."

What a vile humor I must have been in, at the time, not to have
appreciated the delightful gayety of this good creature; I went
to the other extreme now, and behaved like a gushing young miss
fresh from school. I kissed her.

She burst out laughing. "What a sacrifice!" she cried. "A kiss
for me, which ought to have been kept for Philip! By-the-by, do
you know what I should do, Helena, in your place? I should take
our handsome young man away from that hotel!"

"I will do anything that you advise," I said.

"And you will do well, my child. In the first place, the hotel is
too expensive for Philip's small means. In the second place, two
of the chambermaids have audaciously presumed to be charming
girls; and the men, my dear--well! well! I will leave you to find
that out for yourself. In the third place, you want to have
Philip under your own wing; domestic familiarity will make him
fonder of you than ever. Keep him out of the sort of company that
he meets with in the billiard-room and the smoking-room. You have
got a spare bed here, I know, and your poor father is in no
condition to use his authority. Make Philip one of the family."

This last piece of advice staggered me. I mentioned the
Proprieties. Mrs. Tenbruggen laughed at the Proprieties.

"Make Selina of some use," she suggested. "While you have got
_her_ in the house, Propriety is rampant. Why condemn poor
helpless Philip to cheap lodgings? Time enough to cast him out to
the feather-bed and the fleas on the night before your marriage.
Besides, I shall be in and out constantly--for I mean to cure
your father. The tongue of scandal is silent in my awful
presence; an atmosphere of virtue surrounds Mamma Tenbruggen.
Think of it."


CHAPTER LV.

HELENA'S DIARY RESUMED.


I DID think of it. Philip came to us, and lived in our house.

Let me hasten to add that the protest of Propriety was duly
entered, on the day before my promised husband arrived. Standing
in the doorway--nothing would induce her to take a chair, or even
to enter the room--Miss Jillgall delivered her opinion on
Philip's approaching visit. Mrs. Tenbruggen reported it in her
pocket-book, as if she was representing a newspaper at a public
meeting. Here it is, copied from her notes:

"Miss Helena Gracedieu, my first impulse under the present
disgusting circumstances was to leave the house, and earn a bare
crust in the cheapest garret I could find in the town. But my
grateful heart remembers Mr. Gracedieu. My poor afflicted cousin
was good to me when I was helpless. I cannot forsake him when
_he_ is helpless. At whatever sacrifice of my own self-respect, I
remain under this roof, so dear to me for the Minister's sake. I
notice, miss, that you smile. I see my once dear Elizabeth, the
friend who has so bitterly disappointed me--" she stopped, and
put her handkerchief to her eyes, and went on again--"the friend
who has so bitterly disappointed me, taking satirical notes of
what I say. I am not ashamed of what I say. The virtue which will
not stretch a little, where the motive is good, is feeble virtue
indeed. I shall stay in the house, and witness horrors, and rise
superior to them. Good-morning, Miss Gracedieu. Good-morning,
Elizabeth." She performed a magnificent curtsey, and (as Mrs.
Tenbruggen's experience of the stage informed me) made a very
creditable exit.


A week has passed, and I have not opened my Diary.

My days have glided away in one delicious flow of happiness.
Philip has been delightfully devoted to me. His fervent
courtship, far exceeding any similar attentions which he may once
have paid to Eunice, has shown such variety and such
steadfastness of worship, that I despair of describing it. My
enjoyment of my new life is to be felt--not to be coldly
considered, and reduced to an imperfect statement in words.

For the first time I feel capable, if the circumstances
encouraged me, of acts of exalted virtue. For instance, I could
save my co untry if my country was worth it. I could die a martyr
to religion if I had a religion. In one word, I am exceedingly
well satisfied with myself. The little disappointments of life
pass over me harmless. I do not even regret the failure of good
Mrs. Tenbruggen's efforts to find an employment for Philip,
worthy of his abilities and accomplishments. The member of
Parliament to whom she had applied has chosen a secretary
possessed of political influence. That is the excuse put forward
in his letter to Mrs. Tenbruggen. Wretched corrupt creature! If
he was worth a thought I should pity him. He has lost Philip's
services.


Three days more have slipped by. The aspect of my heaven on earth
is beginning to alter.

Perhaps the author of that wonderful French novel, "L'Ame
Damne'e," is right when he tells us that human happiness is
misery in masquerade. It would be wrong to say that I am
miserable. But I may be on the way to it; I am anxious.

To-day, when he did not know that I was observing him, I
discovered a preoccupied look in Philip's eyes. He laughed when I
asked if anything had happened to vex him. Was it a natural
laugh? He put his arm round me and kissed me. Was it done
mechanically? I daresay I am out of humor myself. I think I had a
little headache. Morbid, probably. I won't think of it any more.


It has occurred to me this morning that he may dislike being left
by himself, while I am engaged in my household affairs. If this
is the case, intensely as I hate her, utterly as I loathe the
idea of putting her in command over my domestic dominions, I
shall ask Miss Jillgall to take my place as housekeeper.

I was away to-day in the kitchen regions rather longer than
usual. When I had done with my worries, Philip was not to be
found. Maria, looking out of one of the bedroom windows instead
of doing her work, had seen Mr. Dunboyne leave the house. It was
possible that he had charged Miss Jillgall with a message for me.
I asked if she was in her room. No; she, too, had gone out. It
was a fine day, and Philip had no doubt taken a stroll--but he
might have waited till I could join him. There were some orders
to be given to the butcher and the green-grocer. I, too, left the
house, hoping to get rid of some little discontent, caused by
thinking of what had happened. Returning by the way of High
Street--I declare I can hardly believe it even now--I did
positively see Miss Jillgall coming out of a pawnbroker's shop!

The direction in which she turned prevented her from seeing me.
She was quite unaware that I had discovered her; and I have said
nothing about it since. But I noticed something unusual in the
manner in which her watch-chain was hanging, and I asked her what
o'clock it was. She said, "You have got your own watch." I told
her my watch had stopped. "So has mine," she said. There is no
doubt about it now; she has pawned her watch. What for? She lives
here for nothing, and she has not had a new dress since I have
known her. Why does she want money?

Philip had not returned when I got home. Another mysterious
journey to London? No. After an absence of more than two hours,
he came back.

Naturally enough, I asked what he had been about. He had been
taking a long walk. For his health's sake? No: to think. To think
of what? Well, I might be surprised to hear it, but his idle life
was beginning to weigh on his spirits; he wanted employment. Had
he thought of an employment? Not yet. Which way had he walked?
Anyway: he had not noticed where he went. These replies were all
made in a tone that offended me. Besides, I observed there was no
dust on his boots (after a week of dry weather), and his walk of
two hours did not appear to have heated or tired him. I took an
opportunity of consulting Mrs. Tenbruggen.

She had anticipated that I should appeal to her opinion, as a
woman of the world.

I shall not set down in detail what she said. Some of it
humiliated me; and from some of it I recoiled. The expression of
her opinion came to this. In the absence of experience, a certain
fervor of temperament was essential to success in the art of
fascinating men. Either my temperament was deficient, or my
intellect overpowered it. It was natural that I should suppose
myself to be as susceptible to the tender passion as the most
excitable woman living. Delusion, my Helena, amiable delusion!
Had I ever observed or had any friend told me that my pretty
hands were cold hands? I had beautiful eyes, expressive of
vivacity, of intelligence, of every feminine charm, except the
one inviting charm that finds favor in the eyes of a man. She
then entered into particulars, which I don't deny showed a true
interest in helping me. I was ungrateful, sulky,
self-opinionated. Dating from that day's talk with Mrs.
Tenbruggen, my new friendship began to show signs of having
caught a chill.

But I did my best to follow her instructions--and failed.

It is perhaps true that my temperament is overpowered by my
intellect. Or it is possibly truer still that the fire in my
heart, when it warms to love, is a fire that burns low. My belief
is that I surprised Philip instead of charming him. He responded
to my advances, but I felt that it was not done in earnest, not
spontaneously. Had I any right to complain? Was I in earnest? Was
I spontaneous? We were making love to each other under false
pretenses. Oh, what a fool I was to ask for Mrs. Tenbruggen's
advice!

A humiliating doubt has come to me suddenly. Has his heart been
inclining to Eunice again? After such a letter as she has written
to him? Impossible!


Three events since yesterday, which I consider, trifling as they
may be, intimations of something wrong.

First, Miss Jillgall, who at one time was eager to take my place,
has refused to relieve me of my housekeeping duties. Secondly,
Philip has been absent again, on another long walk. Thirdly, when
Philip returned, depressed and sulky, I caught Miss Jillgall
looking at him with interest and pity visible in her skinny face.
What do these things mean?


I am beginning to doubt everybody. Not one of them, Philip
included, cares for me--but I can frighten them, at any rate.
Yesterday evening, I dropped on the floor as suddenly as if I had
been shot: a fit of some sort. The doctor honestly declared that
he was at a loss to account for it. He would have laid me under
an eternal obligation if he had failed to bring me back to life
again.

As it is, I am more clever than the doctor. What brought the fit
on is well known to me. Rage--furious, overpowering, deadly
rage--was the cause. I am now in the cold-blooded state, which
can look back at the event as composedly as if it had happened to
some other girl. Suppose that girl had let her sweetheart know
how she loved him as she had never let him know it before.
Suppose she opened the door again the instant after she had left
the room, eager, poor wretch, to say once more, for the fiftieth
time, "My angel, I love you!" Suppose she found her angel
standing with his back toward her, so that his face was reflected
in the glass. And suppose she discovered in that face, so smiling
and so sweet when his head had rested on her bosom only the
moment before, the most hideous expression of disgust that
features can betray. There could be no doubt of it; I had made my
poor offering of love to a man who secretly loathed me. I wonder
that I survived my sense of my own degradation. Well! I am alive;
and I know him in his true character at last. Am I a woman who
submits when an outrage is offered to her? What will happen next?
Who knows? I am in a fine humor. What I have just written has set
me laughing at myself. Helena Gracedieu has one merit at
least--she is a very amusing person.


I slept last night.

This morning, I am strong again, calm, wickedly capable of
deceiving Mr. Philip Dunboyne, as he has deceived me. He has not
the faintest suspicion that I have discovered him. I wish he had
courage enough to kill somebody. How I should enjoy hiring the
nearest window to the scaffold, and seeing him hanged!

Miss Jillgall is in better spirits than ever. She is going to
take a little holiday; and the cunning creature makes a mystery
of it. "Good-by, Miss Helen a. I am going to stay for a day or
two with a friend." What friend? Who cares?


Last night, I was wakeful. In the darkness a daring idea came to
me. To-day, I have carried out the idea. Something has followed
which is well worth entering in my Diary.

I left the room at the usual hour for attending to my domestic
affairs. The obstinate cook did me a service; she was insolent;
she wanted to have her own way. I gave her her own way. In less
than five minutes I was on the watch in the pantry, which has a
view of the house door. My hat and my parasol were waiting for me
on the table, in case of my going out, too.

In a few minutes more, I heard the door opened. Mr. Philip
Dunboyne stepped out. He was going to take another of his long
walks.

I followed him to the street in which the cabs stand. He hired
the first one on the rank, an open chaise; while I kept myself
hidden in a. shop door.

The moment he started on his drive, I hired a closed cab. "Double
your fare," I said to the driver, "whatever it may be, if you
follow that chaise cleverly, and do what I tell you."

He nodded and winked at me. A wicked-looking old fellow; just the
man I wanted.

We followed the chaise.



CHAPTER LVI.

HELENA'S DIARY RESUMED.


WHEN we had left the town behind us, the coachman began to drive
more slowly. In my ignorance, I asked what this change in the
pace meant. He pointed with his whip to the open road and to the
chaise in the distance.

"If we keep too near the gentleman, miss, he has only got to look
back, and he'll see we are following him. The safe thing to do is
to let the chaise get on a bit. We can't lose sight of it, out
here."

I had felt inclined to trust in the driver's experience, and he
had already justified my confidence in him. This encouraged me to
consult his opinion on a matter of some importance to my present
interests. I could see the necessity of avoiding discovery when
we had followed the chaise to its destination; but I was totally
at a loss to know how it could be done. My wily old man was ready
with his advice the moment I asked for it.

"Wherever the chaise stops, miss, we must drive past it as if we
were going somewhere else. I shall notice the place while we go
by; and you will please sit back in the corner of the cab so that
the gentleman can't see you."

"Well," I said, "and what next?"

"Next, miss, I shall pull up, wherever it may be, out of sight of
the driver of the chaise. He bears an excellent character, I
don't deny it; but I've known him for years--and we had better
not trust him. I shall tell you where the gentleman stopped; and
you will go back to the place (on foot, of course), and see for
yourself what's to be done, specially if there happens to be a
lady in the case. No offense, miss; it's in my experience that
there's generally a lady in the case. Anyhow, you can judge for
yourself, and you'll know where to find me waiting when you want
me again."

"Suppose something happens," I suggested, "that we don't expect?"

"I shan't lose my head, miss, whatever happens."

"All very well, coachman; but I have only your word for it." In
the irritable state of my mind, the man's confident way of
thinking annoyed me.

"Begging your pardon, my young lady, you've got (if I may say so)
what they call a guarantee. When I was a young man, I drove a cab
in London for ten years. Will that do?"

"I suppose you mean," I answered, "that you have learned deceit
in the wicked ways of the great city."

He took this as a compliment. "Thank you, miss. That's it
exactly."

After a long drive, or so it seemed to my impatience, we passed
the chaise drawn up at a lonely house, separated by a front
garden from the road. In two or three minutes more, we stopped
where the road took a turn, and descended to lower ground. The
farmhouse which we had left behind us was known to the driver. He
led the way to a gate at the side of the road, and opened it for
me.

"In your place, miss," he said slyly, "the private way back is
the way I should wish to take. Try it by the fields. Turn to the
right when you have passed the barn, and you'll find yourself at
the back of the house." He stopped, and looked at his big silver
watch. "Half-past twelve," he said, "the Chawbacons--I mean the
farmhouse servants, miss--will be at their dinner. All in your
favor, so far. If the dog happens to be loose, don't forget that
his name's Grinder; call him by his name, and pat him before he
has time enough to think, and he'll let you be. When you want me,
here you'll find me waiting for orders."

I looked back as I crossed the field. The driver was sitting on
the gate, smoking his pipe, and the horse was nibbling the grass
at the roadside. Two happy animals, without a burden on their
minds!

After passing the barn, I saw nothing of the dog. Far or near, no
living creature appeared; the servants must have been at dinner,
as the coachman had foreseen. Arriving at a wooden fence, I
opened a gate in it, and found myself on a bit of waste ground.
On my left, there was a large duck-pond. On my right, I saw the
fowl-house and the pigstyes. Before me was a high impenetrable
hedge; and at some distance behind it--an orchard or a garden, as
I supposed, filling the intermediate space--rose the back of the
house. I made for the shelter of the hedge, in the fear that some
one might approach a window and see me. Once sheltered from
observation, I might consider what I should do next. It was
impossible to doubt that this was the house in which Eunice was
living. Neither could I fail to conclude that Philip had tried to
persuade her to see him, on those former occasions when he told
me he had taken a long walk.

As I crouched behind the hedge, I heard voices approaching on the
other side of it. At last fortune had befriended me. The person
speaking at the moment was Miss Jillgall; and the person who
answered her was Philip.

"I am afraid, dear Mr. Philip, you don't quite understand my
sweet Euneece. Honorable, high minded, delicate in her feelings,
and, oh, so unselfish! I don't want to alarm you, but when she
hears you have been deceiving Helena--"

"Upon my word, Miss Jillgall, you are so provoking! I have not
been deceiving Helena. Haven't I told you what discouraging
answers I got, when I went to see the Governor? Haven't I shown
you Eunice's reply to my letter? You can't have forgotten it
already?"

"Oh, yes, I have. Why should I remember it? Don't I know poor
Euneece was in your mind, all the time?"

"You're wrong again! Eunice was not in my mind all the time. I
was hurt--I was offended by the cruel manner in which she had
treated me. And what was the consequence? So far was I from
deceiving Helena--she rose in my estimation by comparison with
her sister."

"Oh, come, come, Mr. Philip! that won't do. Helena rising in
anybody's estimation? Ha! ha! ha!"

"Laugh as much as you like, Miss Jillgall, you won't laugh away
the facts. Helena loved me; Helena was true to me. Don't be hard
on a poor fellow who is half distracted. What a man finds he can
do on one day, he finds he can't do on another. Try to understand
that a change does sometimes come over one's feelings."

"Bless my soul, Mr. Philip, that's just what I have been
understanding all the time! I know your mind as well as you know
it yourself. You can't forget my sweet Euneece."

"I tell you I tried to forget her! On my word of honor as a
gentleman, I tried to forget her, in justice to Helena. Is it my
fault that I failed? Eunice was in my mind, as you said just now.
Oh, my friend--for you are my friend, I am sure--persuade her to
see me, if it's only for a minute!"

(Was there ever a man's mind in such a state of confusion as
this! First, I rise in his precious estimation, and Eunice drops.
Then Eunice rises, and I drop. Idiot! Mischievous idiot! Even
Selina seemed to be disgusted with him, when she spoke next.)

"Mr. Philip, you are hard and unreasonable. I have tried to
persuade her, and I have made my darling cry. Nothing you can say
will induce me to distress her again. Go back, you very
undetermined man--go back to your Helena."

"Too late."

"Nonsense!"

"I say too late. If I could have married Helena when I first went
to
 stay in the house, I might have faced the sacrifice. As it is, I
can't endure her; and (I tell you this in confidence) she has
herself to thank for what has happened."

"Is that really true?"

"Quite true."

"Tell me what she did.

"Oh, don't talk of her! Persuade Eunice to see me. I shall come
back again, and again, and again till you bring her to me."

"Please don't talk nonsense. If she changes her mind, I will
bring her with pleasure. If she still shrinks from it, I regard
Euneece's feelings as sacred. Take my advice; don't press her.
Leave her time to think of you, and to pity you--and that true
heart may be yours again, if you are worthy of it."

"Worthy of it? What do you mean?"

"Are you quite sure, my young friend, that you won't go back to
Helena?"

"Go back to _her?_ I would cut my throat if I thought myself
capable of doing it!"

"How did she set you against her? Did the wretch quarrel with
you?"

"It might have been better for both of us if she had done that.
Oh, her fulsome endearments! What a contrast to the charming
modesty of Eunice! If I was rich, I would make it worth the while
of the first poor fellow I could find to rid me of Helena by
marrying her. I don't like saying such a thing of a woman, but if
you will have the truth--"

"Well, Mr. Philip--and what is the truth?"

"Helena disgusts me."


CHAPTER LVII.

HELENA'S DIARY RESUMED.


So it was all settled between them. Philip is to throw me away,
like one of his bad cigars, for this unanswerable reason: "Helena
disgusts me." And he is to persuade Eunice to take my place, and
be his wife. Yes! if I let him do it.

I heard no more of their talk. With that last, worst outrage
burning in my memory, I left the place.

On my way back to the carriage, the dog met me. Truly, a grand
creature. I called him by his name, and patted him. He licked my
hand. Something made me speak to him. I said: "If I was to tell
you to tear Mr. Philip Dunboyne to pieces, would you do it?" The
great good-natured brute held out his paw to shake hands. Well!
well! I was not an object of disgust to the dog.

But the coachman was startled, when he saw me again. He said
something, I did not know what it was; and he produced a
pocket-flask, containing some spirits, I suppose. Perhaps he
thought I was going to faint. He little knew me. I told him to
drive back to the place at which I had hired the cab, and earn
his money. He earned it.

On getting home, I found Mrs. Tenbruggen walking up and down the
dining-room, deep in thought. She was startled when we first
confronted each other. "You look dreadfully ill," she said.

I answered that I had been out for a little exercise, and had
over-fatigued myself; and then changed the subject. "Does my
father seem to improve under your treatment?" I asked.

"Very far from it, my dear. I promised that I would try what
Massage would do for him, and I find myself compelled to give it
up."

"Why?"

"It excites him dreadfully."

"In what way?"

"He has been talking wildly of events in his past life. His brain
is in some condition which is beyond my powers of investigation.
He pointed to a cabinet in his room, and said his past life was
locked up there. I asked if I should unlock it. He shook with
fear; he said I should let out the ghost of his dead
brother-in-law. Have you any idea of what he meant?"

The cabinet was full of old letters. I could tell her that--and
could tell her no more. I had never heard of his brother-in-law.
Another of his delusions, no doubt. "Did you ever hear him
speak," Mrs. Tenbruggen went on, "of a place called Low Lanes?"

She waited for my reply to this last inquiry with an appearance
of anxiety that surprised me. I had never heard him speak of Low
Lanes.

"Have you any particular interest in the place?" I asked.

"None whatever."

She went away to attend on a patient. I retired to my bedroom,
and opened my Diary. Again and again, I read that remarkable
story of the intended poisoning, and of the manner in which it
had ended. I sat thinking over this romance in real life till I
was interrupted by the announcement of dinner.

Mr. Philip Dunboyne had returned. In Miss Jillgall's absence we
were alone at the table. My appetite was gone. I made a pretense
of eating, and another pretense of being glad to see my devoted
lover. I talked to him in the prettiest manner. As a hypocrite,
he thoroughly matched me; he was gallant, he was amusing. If
baseness like ours had been punishable by the law, a prison was
the right place for both of us.

Mrs. Tenbruggen came in again after dinner, still not quite easy
about my health. "How flushed you are!" she said. "Let me feel
your pulse." I laughed, and left her with Mr. Philip Dunboyne.

Passing my father's door, I looked in, anxious to see if he was
in the excitable state which Mrs. Tenbruggen had described. Yes;
the effect which she had produced on him--how, she knows
best--had not passed away yet: he was still talking. The
attendant told me it had gone on for hours together. On my
approaching his chair, he called out: "Which are you? Eunice or
Helena?" When I had answered him, he beckoned me to come nearer.
"I am getting stronger every minute," he said. "We will go
traveling to-morrow, and see the place where you were born."

Where had I been born? He had never told me where. Had he
mentioned the place in Mrs. Tenbruggen's hearing? I asked the
attendant if he had been present while she was in the room. Yes;
he had remained at his post; he had also heard the allusion to
the place with the odd name. Had Mr. Gracedieu said anything more
about that place? Nothing more; the poor Minister's mind had
wandered off to other things. He was wandering now. Sometimes, he
was addressing his congregation; sometimes, he wondered what they
would give him for supper; sometimes, he talked of the flowers in
the garden. And then he looked at me, and frowned, and said I
prevented him from thinking.

I went back to my bedroom, and opened my Diary, and read the
story again.

Was the poison of which that resolute young wife proposed to make
use something that acted slowly, and told the doctors nothing if
they looked for it after death?

Would it be running too great a risk to show the story to the
doctor, and try to get a little valuable information in that way?
It would be useless. He would make some feeble joke; he would
say, girls and poisons are not fit company for each other.

But I might discover what I want to know in another way. I might
call on the doctor, after he has gone out on his afternoon round
of visits, and might tell the servant I would wait for his
master's return. Nobody would be in my way; I might get at the
medical literature in the consulting-room, and find the
information for myself.

A knock at my door interrupted me in the midst of my plans. Mrs.
Tenbruggen again!--still in a fidgety state of feeling on the
subject of my health. "Which is it?" she said. "Pain of body, my
dear, or pain of mind? I am anxious about you."

"My dear Elizabeth, your sympathy is thrown away on me. As I have
told you already, I am over-tired--nothing more."

She was relieved to hear that I had no mental troubles to
complain of. "Fatigue," she remarked, "sets itself right with
rest. Did you take a very long walk?"

"Yes."

"Beyond the limits of the town, of course? Philip has been taking
a walk in the country, too. He doesn't say that he met you."

These clever people sometimes overreach themselves. How she
suggested it to me, I cannot pretend to have discovered. But I
did certainly suspect that she had led Philip, while they were
together downstairs, into saying to her what he had already said
to Miss Jillgall. I was so angry that I tried to pump my
excellent friend, as she had been trying to pump me--a vulgar
expression, but vulgar writing is such a convenient way of
writing sometimes. My first attempt to entrap the Masseuse failed
completely. She coolly changed the subject.

"Have I interrupted you in writing?" she asked, pointing to my
Diary.

"No; I was idling over what I have written already--an
extraordinary story which I copied from a book."

"May I look at it?"

I pushed the open Diary across the table. If I was the ob ject of
any suspicions which she wanted to confirm, it would be curious
to see if the poisoning story helped her. "It's a piece of family
history," I said; "I think you will agree with me that it is
really interesting."

She began to read. As she went on, not all her power of
controlling herself could prevent her from turning pale. This
change of color (in such a woman) a little alarmed me. When a
girl is devoured by deadly hatred of a man, does the feeling show
itself to other persons in her face? I must practice before the
glass and train my face into a trustworthy state of discipline.

"Coarse melodrama!" Mrs. Tenbruggen declared. "Mere sensation. No
analysis of character. A made-up story!"

"Well made up, surely?" I answered.

"I don't agree with you." Her voice was not quite so steady as
usual. She asked suddenly if my clock was right--and declared
that she should be late for an appointment. On taking leave she
pressed my hand strongly--eyed me with distrustful attention and
said, very emphatically: "Take care of yourself, Helena; pray
take care of yourself."

I am afraid I did a very foolish thing when I showed her the
poisoning story. Has it helped the wily old creature to look into
my inmost thoughts?

Impossible!


To-day, Miss Jillgall returned, looking hideously healthy and
spitefully cheerful. Although she tried to conceal it, while I
was present, I could see that Philip had recovered his place in
her favor. After what he had said to her behind the hedge at the
farm, she would be relieved from all fear of my becoming his
wife, and would joyfully anticipate his marriage to Eunice. There
are thoughts in me which I don't set down in my book. I only say:
We shall see.

This afternoon, I decided on visiting the doctor. The servant was
quite sorry for me when he answered the door. His master had just
left the house for a round of visits. I said I would wait. The
servant was afraid I should find waiting very tedious. I reminded
him that I could go away if I found it tedious. At last, the
polite old man left me.

I went into the consulting-room, and read the backs of the
medical books ranged round the walls, and found a volume that
interested me. There was such curious information in it that I
amused myself by making extracts, using the first sheets of paper
that I could find. They had printed directions at the top, which
showed that the doctor was accustomed to write his prescriptions
on them. We had many, too many, of his prescriptions in our
house.

The servant's doubts of my patience proved to have been well
founded. I got tired of waiting, and went home before the doctor
returned.

From morning to night, nothing has been seen of Mrs. Tenbruggen
to-day. Nor has any apology for her neglect of us been received,
fond as she is of writing little notes. Has that story in my
Diary driven her away? Let me see what to-morrow may bring forth.


To-day has brought forth--nothing. Mrs. Tenbruggen still keeps
away from us. It looks as if my Diary had something to do with
the mystery of her absence.

I am not in good spirits to-day. My nerves--if I have such
things, which is more than I know by my own experience--have been
a little shaken by a horrid dream. The medical information, which
my thirst for knowledge absorbed in the doctor's consulting-room,
turned traitor--armed itself with the grotesque horrors of
nightmare--and so thoroughly frightened me that I was on the
point of being foolish enough to destroy my notes. I thought
better of it, and my notes are safe under lock and key.

Mr. Philip Dunboyne is trying to pave the way for his flight from
this house. He speaks of friends in London, whose interest will
help him to find the employment which is the object of his
ambition. "In a few days more," he said, "I shall ask for leave
of absence."

Instead of looking at me, his eyes wandered to the window; his
fingers played restlessly with his watch-chain while he spoke. I
thought I would give him a chance, a last chance, of making the
atonement that he owes to me. This shows shameful weakness, on my
part. Does my own resolution startle me? Or does the wretch
appeal--to what? To my pity? It cannot be my love; I am
positively sure that I hate him. Well, I am not the first girl
who had been an unanswerable riddle to herself.

"Is there any other motive for your departure?" I asked.

"What other motive can there be?" he replied. I put what I had to
say to him in plainer words still. "Tell me, Philip, are you
beginning to wish that you were a free man again?"

He still prevaricated. Was this because he is afraid of me, or
because he is not quite brute enough to insult me to my face? I
tried again for the third and last time. I almost put the words
into his mouth.

"I fancy you have been out of temper lately," I said. "You have
not been your own kinder and better self. Is this the right
interpretation of the change that I think I see in you?"

He answered: "I have not been very well lately."

"And that is all?"

"Yes--that is all."

There was no more to be said; I turned away to leave the room. He
followed me to the door. After a momentary hesitation, he made
the attempt to kiss me. I only looked at him--he drew back from
me in silence. I left the new Judas, standing alone, while the
shades of evening began to gather over the room.



Third Period _(continued)._

_EVENTS IN THE FAMILY, RELATED BY MISS JILLGALL._



CHAPTER LVIII.

DANGER.


"IF anything of importance happens, I trust to you to write an
account of it, and to send the writing to me. I will come to you
at once, if I see reason to believe that my presence is
required." Those lines, in your last kind reply to me, rouse my
courage, dear Mr. Governor, and sharpen the vigilance which has
always been one of the strong points in my character. Every
suspicious circumstance which occurs in this house will be (so to
speak) seized on by my pen, and will find itself (so to speak
again) placed on its trial, before your unerring judgment! Let
the wicked tremble! I mention no names.

Taking up my narrative where it came to an end when I last wrote,
I have to say a word first on the subject of my discoveries, in
regard to Philip's movements.

The advertisement of a private inquiry office, which I read in a
newspaper, put the thing into my head. I provided myself with
money to pay the expenses by--I blush while I write it--pawning
my watch. This humiliation of my poor self has been rewarded by
success. Skilled investigation has proved that our young man has
come to his senses again, exactly as I supposed. On each occasion
when he was suspiciously absent from the house, he has been
followed to the farm. I have been staying there myself for a day
or two, in the hope of persuading Eunice to relent. The hope has
not yet been realized. But Philip's devotion, assisted by my
influence, will yet prevail. Let me not despair.

Whether Helena knows positively that she has lost her wicked hold
on Philip I cannot say. It seems hardly possible that she could
have made the discovery just yet. The one thing of which I am
certain is, that she looks like a fiend.

Philip has wisely taken my advice, and employed pious fraud. He
will get away from the wretch, who has tempted him once and may
tempt him again, under pretense of using the interest of his
friends in London to find a place under Government. He has not
been very well for the last day or two, and the execution of our
project is in consequence delayed.

I have news of Mrs. Tenbruggen which will, I think, surprise you.

She has kept away from us in a most unaccountable manner. I
called on her at the hotel, and heard she was engaged with her
lawyer. On the next day, she suddenly returned to her old habits,
and paid the customary visit. I observed a similar alteration in
her state of feeling. She is now coldly civil to Helena; and she
asks after Eunice with a maternal interest touching to see--I
said to her: "Elizabeth, you appear to have changed your opinion
of the two girls, since I saw you." She answered, with a
delightful candor which reminded me of old times: "Completely!" I
said: "A woman of your intellectual caliber, dear, doesn't change
her mind without a
 good reason for it." Elizabeth cordially agreed with me. I
ventured to be a little more explicit: "You have no doubt made
some interesting discovery." Elizabeth agreed again; and I
ventured again: "I suppose I may not ask what the discovery is?"
"No, Selina, you may not ask."

This is curious; but it is nothing to what I have got to tell you
next. Just as I was longing to take her to my bosom again as my
friend and confidante, Elizabeth has disappeared. And, alas!
alas! there is a reason for it which no sympathetic person can
dispute.

I have just received some overwhelming news, in the form of a
neat parcel, addressed to myself.

There has been a scandal at the hotel. That monster in human
form, Elizabeth's husband, is aware of his wife's professional
fame, has heard of the large sums of money which she earns as the
greatest living professor of massage, has been long on the
lookout for her, and has discovered her at last. He has not only
forced his way into her sitting-room at the hotel; he insists on
her living with him again; her money being the attraction, it is
needless to say. If she refuses, he threatens her with the law,
the barbarous law, which, to use his own coarse expression, will
"restore his conjugal rights."

All this I gather from the narrative of my unhappy friend, which
forms one of the two inclosures in her parcel. She has already
made her escape. Ha! the man doesn't live who can circumvent
Elizabeth. The English Court of Law isn't built which can catch
her when she roams the free and glorious Continent.

The vastness of this amazing woman's mind is what I must pause to
admire. In the frightful catastrophe that has befallen her, she
can still think of Philip and Euneece. She is eager to hear of
their marriage, and renounces Helena with her whole heart. "I too
was deceived by that cunning young Woman," she writes. "Beware of
her, Selina. Unless I am much mistaken, she is going to end
badly. Take care of Philip, take care of Euneece. If you want
help, apply at once to my favorite hero in real life, The
Governor." I don't presume to correct Elizabeth's language. I
should have called you The idol of the Women.

The second inclosure contains, as I suppose, a wedding present.
It is carefully sealed--it feels no bigger than an ordinary
letter--and it contains an inscription which your
highly-cultivated intelligence may be able to explain. I copy it
as follows:

"To be inclosed in another envelope, addressed to Mr. Dunboyne
the elder, at Percy's Private Hotel, London, and delivered by a
trustworthy messenger, on the day when Mr. Philip Dunboyne is
married to Miss Eunice Gracedieu. Placed meanwhile under the care
of Miss Selina Jillgall."

Why is this mysterious letter to be sent to Philip's father? I
wonder whether that circumstance will puzzle you as it has
puzzled me.

I have kept my report back, so as to send you the last news
relating to Philip's state of health. To my great regret, his
illness seems to have made a serious advance since yesterday.
When I ask if he is in pain, he says: "It isn't exactly pain; I
feel as if I was sinking. Sometimes I am giddy; and sometimes I
find myself feeling thirsty and sick." I have no opportunity of
looking after him as I could wish; for Helena insists on nursing
him, assisted by the housemaid. Maria is a very good girl in her
way, but too stupid to be of much use. If he is not better
to-morrow, I shall insist on sending for the doctor.


He is no better; and he wishes to have medical help. Helena
doesn't seem to understand his illness. It was not until Philip
had insisted on seeing him that she consented to send for the
doctor.

You had some talk with this experienced physician when you were
here, and you know what a clever man he is. When I tell you that
he hesitates to say what is the matter with Philip, you will feel
as much alarmed as I do. I will wait to send this to the post
until I can write in a more definite way.


Two days more have passed. The doctor has put two very strange
questions to me.

He asked, first, if there was anybody staying with us besides the
regular members of the household. I said we had no visitor. He
wanted to know, next, if Mr. Philip Dunboyne had made any enemies
since he has been living in our town. I said none that I knew
of--and I took the liberty of asking what he meant. He answered
to this, that he has a few more inquiries to make, and that he
will tell me what he means to-morrow.


For God's sake come here as soon as you possibly can. The whole
burden is thrown on me--and I am quite unequal to it.

I received the doctor to-day in the drawing-room. To my
amazement, he begged leave to speak with me in the garden. When I
asked why, he answered: "I don't want to have a listener at the
door. Come out on the lawn, where we can be sure that we are
alone."

When we were in the garden, he noticed that I was trembling.

"Rouse your courage, Miss Jillgall," he said. "In the Minister's
helpless state there is nobody whom I can speak to but yourself."

I ventured to remind him that he might speak to Helena as well as
to myself.

He looked as black as thunder when I mentioned her name. All he
said was, "No!" But, oh, if you had heard his voice--and he so
gentle and sweet-tempered at other times--you would have felt, as
I did, that he had Helena in his mind!

"Now, listen to this," he went on. "Everything that my art can do
for Mr. Philip Dunboyne, while I am at his bedside, is undone
while I am away by some other person. He is worse to-day than I
have seen him yet."

"Oh, sir, do you think he will die?"

"He will certainly die unless the right means are taken to save
him, and taken at once. It is my duty not to flinch from telling
you the truth. I have made a discovery since yesterday which
satisfies me that I am right. Somebody is trying to poison Mr.
Dunboyne; and somebody will succeed unless he is removed from
this house."

I am a poor feeble creature. The doctor caught me, or I should
have dropped on the grass. It was not a fainting-fit. I only
shook and shivered so that I was too weak to stand up. Encouraged
by the doctor, I recovered sufficiently to be able to ask him
where Philip was to be taken to. He said: "To the hospital. No
poisoner can follow my patient there. Persuade him to let me take
him away, when I call again in an hour's time."

As soon as I could hold a pen, I sent a telegram to you. Pray,
pray come by the earliest train. I also telegraphed to old Mr.
Dunboyne, at the hotel in London.

It was impossible for me to face Helena; I own I was afraid. The
cook kindly went upstairs to see who was in Philip's room. It was
the housemaid's turn to look after him for a while. I went
instantly to his bedside.

There was no persuading him to allow himself to be taken to the
hospital. "I am dying," he said. "If you have any pity for me,
send for Euneece. Let me see her once more, let me hear her say
that she forgives me, before I die."

I hesitated. It was too terrible to think of Euneece in the same
house with her sister. Her life might be in danger! Philip gave
me a look, a dreadful ghastly look. "If you refuse," he said
wildly, "the grave won't hold me. I'll haunt you for the rest of
your life."

"She shall hear that you are ill," I answered--and ran out of the
room before he could speak again.

What I had promised to write, I did write. But, placed between
Euneece's danger and Philip's danger, my heart was all for
Euneece. Would Helena spare her, if she came to Philip's bedside?
In such terror as I never felt before in my life, I added a word
more, entreating her not to leave the farm. I promised to keep
her regularly informed on the subject of Philip's illness; and I
mentioned that I expected the Governor to return to us
immediately. "Do nothing," I wrote, "without his advice." My
letter having been completed, I sent the cook away with it, in a
chaise. She belonged to the neighborhood, and she knew the
farmhouse well.

Nearly two hours afterward, I heard the chaise stop at the door,
and ran out, impatient to hear how my sweet girl had received my
letter. God help us all! When I opened the door, the first person
whom I saw was Euneece herself.


CHA PTER LIX.

DEFENSE.

ONE surprise followed another, after I had encountered Euneece at
the door.

When my fondness had excused her for setting the well-meant
advice in my letter at defiance, I was conscious of expecting to
see her in tears; eager, distressingly eager, to hear what hope
there might be of Philip's recovery. I saw no tears, I heard no
inquiries. She was pale, and quiet, and silent. Not a word fell
from her when we met, not a word when she kissed me, not a word
when she led the way into the nearest room--the dining-room. It
was only when we were shut in together that she spoke.

"Which is Philip's room?" she asked.

Instead of wanting to know how he was, she desired to know where
he was! I pointed toward the back dining-room, which had been
made into a bedroom for Philip. He had chosen it himself, when he
first came to stay with us, because the window opened into the
garden. and he could slip out and smoke at any hour of the day or
night, when he pleased.

"Who is with him now?" was the next strange thing this
sadly-changed girl said to me.

"Maria is taking her turn," I answered; "she assists in nursing
Philip."

"Where is--?" Euneece got no further than that. Her breath
quickened, her color faded away. I had seen people look as she
was looking now, when they suffered under some sudden pain.
Before I could offer to help her, she rallied, and went on:
"Where," she began again, "is the other nurse?"

"You mean Helena?" I said.

"I mean the Poisoner."

When I remind you, dear Mr. Governor, that my letter had
carefully concealed from her the horrible discovery made by the
doctor, your imagination will picture my state of mind. She saw
that I was overpowered. Her sweet nature, so strangely frozen up
thus far, melted at last. "You don't know what I have heard," she
said, "you don't know what thoughts have been roused in me." She
left her chair, and sat on my knee with the familiarity of the
dear old times, and took the letter that I had written to her
from her pocket.

"Look at it yourself," she said, "and tell me if anybody could
read it, and not see that you were concealing something. My dear,
I have driven round by the doctor's house--I have seen him--I
have persuaded him, or perhaps I ought to say surprised him, into
telling me the truth. But the kind old man is obstinate. He
wouldn't believe me when I told him I was on my way here to save
Philip's life. He said: 'My child, you will only put your own
life in jeopardy. If I had not seen that danger, I should never
have told you of the dreadful state of things at home. Go back to
the good people at the farm, and leave the saving of Philip to
me.' "

"He was right, Euneece, entirely right."

"No, dear, he was wrong. I begged him to come here, and judge for
himself; and I ask you to do the same."

I was obstinate. "Go back!" I persisted. "Go back to the farm!"

"Can I see Philip?" she asked.

I have heard some insolent men say that women are like cats. If
they mean that we do, figuratively speaking, scratch at times, I
am afraid they are not altogether wrong. An irresistible impulse
made me say to poor Euneece: "This is a change indeed, since you
refused to receive Philip."

"Is there no change in the circumstances?" she asked sadly.
"Isn't he ill and in danger?"

I begged her to forgive me; I said I meant no harm.

"I gave him up to my sister," she continued, "when I believed
that his happiness depended, not on me, but on her. I take him
back to myself, when he is at the mercy of a demon who threatens
his life. Come, Selina, let us go to Philip."

She put her arm round me, and made me get up from my chair. I was
so easily persuaded by her, that the fear of what Helena's
jealousy and Helena's anger might do was scarcely present in my
thoughts. The door of communication was locked on the side of the
bedchamber. I went into the hall, to enter Philip's room by the
other door. She followed, waiting behind me. I heard what passed
between them when Maria went out to her.

"Where is Miss Gracedieu?"

"Resting upstairs, miss, in her room."

"Look at the clock, and tell me when you expect her to come down
here."

"I am to call her, miss, in ten minutes more."

"Wait in the dining-room, Maria, till I come back to you. "

She joined me. I held the door open for her to go into Philip's
room. It was not out of curiosity; the feeling that urged me was
sympathy, when I waited a moment to see their first meeting. She
bent over the poor, pallid, trembling, suffering man, and raised
him in her arms, and laid his head on her bosom. "My Philip!" She
murmured those words in a kiss. I closed the door, I had a good
cry; and, oh, how it comforted me!

There was only a minute to spare when she came out of the room.
Maria was waiting for her. Euneece said, as quietly as ever: "Go
and call Miss Gracedieu."

The girl looked at her, and saw--I don't know what. Maria became
alarmed. But she went up the stairs, and returned in haste to
tell us that her young mistress was coming down.

The faint rustling of Helena's dress as she left her room reached
us in the silence. I remained at the open door of the
dining-room, and Maria approached and stood near me. We were both
frightened. Euneece stepped forward, and stood on the mat at the
foot of the stairs, waiting. Her back was toward me; I could only
see that she was as still as a statue. The rustling of the dress
came nearer. Oh, heavens! what was going to happen? My teeth
chattered in my head; I held by Maria's shoulder. Drops of
perspiration showed themselves on the girl's forehead; she stared
in vacant terror at the slim little figure, posted firm and still
on the mat.

Helena turned the corner of the stairs, and waited a moment on
the last landing, and saw her sister.

"You here?" she said. "What do you want?"

There was no reply. Helena descended, until she reached the last
stair but one. There, she stopped. Her staring eyes grew large
and wild; her hand shook as she stretched it out, feeling for the
banister; she staggered as she caught at it, and held herself up.
The silence was still unbroken. Something in me, stronger than
myself, drew my steps along the hall nearer and nearer to the
stair, till I could see the face which had struck that murderous
wretch with terror.

I looked.

No! it was not my sweet girl; it was a horrid transformation of
her. I saw a fearful creature, with glittering eyes that
threatened some unimaginable vengeance. Her lips were drawn back;
they showed her clinched teeth. A burning red flush dyed her
face. The hair of her head rose, little by little, slowly. And,
most dreadful sight of all, she seemed, in the stillness of the
house, to be _listening to something._ If I could have moved, I
should have fled to the first place of refuge I could find. If I
could have raised my voice, I should have cried for help. I could
do neither the one nor the other. I could only look, look, look;
held by the horror of it with a hand of iron.

Helena must have roused her courage, and resisted her terror. I
heard her speak:

"Let me by!"

"No."

Slowly, steadily, in a whisper, Euneece made that reply.

Helena tried once more--still fighting against her own terror: I
knew it by the trembling of her voice.

"Let me by," she repeated; "I am on my way to Philip's room."

"You will never enter Philip's room again."

"Who will stop me?"

"I will."

She had spoken in the same steady whisper throughout--but now she
moved. I saw her set her foot on the first stair. I saw the
horrid glitter in her eyes flash close into Helena's face. I
heard her say:

"Poisoner, go back to your room."

Silent and shuddering, Helena shrank away from her--daunted by
her glittering eyes; mastered by her lifted hand pointing up the
stairs.

Helena slowly ascended till she reached the landing. She turned
and looked down; she tried to speak. The pointing hand struck her
dumb, and drove her up the next flight of stairs. She was lost to
view. Only the small rustling sound of the dress was to be heard,
growing fainter and fainter; then an interval of stillness; then
the noise of a door opened and closed again; then no sound
more--but a change to be seen: the transformed creature was cr
ouching on her knees, still and silent, her face covered by her
hands. I was afraid to approach her; I was afraid to speak to
her. After a time, she rose. Suddenly, swiftly, with her head
turned away from me, she opened the door of Philip's room--and
was gone.

I looked round. There was only Maria in the lonely hall. Shall I
try to tell you what my sensations were? It may sound strangely,
but it is true--I felt like a sleeper, who has half-awakened from
a dream.


CHAPTER LX.

DISCOVERY.


A LITTLE later, on that eventful day, when I was most in need of
all that your wisdom and kindness could do to guide me, came the
telegram which announced that you were helpless under an attack
of gout. As soon as I had in some degree got over my
disappointment, I remembered having told Euneece in my letter
that I expected her kind old friend to come to us. With the
telegram in my hand I knocked softly at Philip's door.

The voice that bade me come in was the gentle voice that I knew
so well. Philip was sleeping. There, by his bedside, with his
hand resting in her hand, was Euneece, so completely restored to
her own sweet self that I could hardly believe what I had seen,
not an hour since. She talked of you, when I showed her your
message, with affectionate interest and regret. Look back, my
admirable friend, at what I have written on the two or three
pages which precede this, and explain the astounding contrast if
you can.

I was left alone to watch by Philip, while Euneece went away to
see her father. Soon afterward, Maria took my place; I had been
sent for to the next room to receive the doctor.

He looked care-worn and grieved. I said I was afraid he had
brought bad news with him.

"The worst possible news," he answered. "A terrible exposure
threatens this family, and I am powerless to prevent it,"

He then asked me to remember the day when I had been surprised by
the singular questions which he had put to me, and when he had
engaged to explain himself after he had made some inquiries. Why,
and how, he had set those inquiries on foot was what he had now
to tell. I will repeat what he said, in his own words, as nearly
as I can remember them. While he was in attendance on Philip, he
had observed symptoms which made him suspect that Digitalis had
been given to the young man, in doses often repeated. Cases of
attempted poisoning by this medicine were so rare, that he felt
bound to put his suspicions to the test by going round among the
chemists's shops--excepting of course the shop at which his own
prescriptions were made up--and asking if they had lately
dispensed any preparation of Digitalis, ordered perhaps in a
larger quantity than usual. At the second shop he visited, the
chemist laughed. "Why, doctor," he said, "have you forgotten your
own prescription?" After this, the prescription was asked for,
and produced. It was on the paper used by the doctor--paper which
had his address printed at the top, and a notice added, telling
patients who came to consult him for the second time to bring
their prescriptions with them. Then, there followed in writing:
"Tincture of Digitalis, one ounce"--with his signature at the
end, not badly imitated, but a forgery nevertheless. The chemist
noticed the effect which this discovery had produced on the
doctor, and asked if that was his signature. He could hardly, as
an honest man, have asserted that a forgery was a signature of
his own writing. So he made the true reply, and asked who had
presented the prescription. The chemist called to his assistant
to come forward. "Did you tell me that you knew, by sight, the
young lady who brought this prescription?" The assistant admitted
it. "Did you tell me she was Miss Helena Gracedieu?" "I did."
"Are you sure of not having made any mistake?" "Quite sure." The
chemist then said: "I myself supplied the Tincture of Digitalis,
and the young lady paid for it, and took it away with her. You
have had all the information that I can give you, sir; and I may
now ask, if you can throw any light on the matter." Our good
friend thought of the poor Minister, so sorely afflicted, and of
the famous name so sincerely respected in the town and in the
country round, and said he could not undertake to give an
immediate answer. The chemist was excessively angry. "You know as
well as I do," he said, "that Digitalis, given in certain doses,
is a poison, and you cannot deny that I honestly believed myself
to be dispensing your prescription. While you are hesitating to
give me an answer, my character may suffer; I may be suspected
myself." He ended in declaring he should consult his lawyer. The
doctor went home, and questioned his servant. The man remembered
the day of Miss Helena's visit in the afternoon, and the
intention that she expressed of waiting for his master's return.
He had shown her into the parlor which opened into the
consulting-room. No other visitor was in the house at that time,
or had arrived during the rest of the day. The doctor's own
experience, when he got home, led him to conclude that Helena had
gone into the consulting-room. He had entered that room, for the
purpose of writing some prescriptions, and had found the leaves
of paper that he used diminished in number. After what he had
heard, and what he had discovered (to say nothing of what he
suspected), it occurred to him to look along the shelves of his
medical library. He found a volume (treating of Poisons) with a
slip of paper left between the leaves; the poison described at
the place so marked being Digitalis, and the paper used being one
of his own prescription-papers. "If, as I fear, a legal
investigation into Helena's conduct is a possible event," the
doctor concluded, "there is the evidence that I shall be obliged
to give, when I am called as a witness."

It is my belief that I could have felt no greater dismay, if the
long arm of the Law had laid its hold on me while he was
speaking. I asked what was to be done.

"If she leaves the house at once," the doctor replied, "she may
escape the infamy of being charged with an attempt at murder by
poison; and, in her absence, I can answer for Philip's life. I
don't urge you to warn her, because that might be a dangerous
thing to do. It is for you to decide, as a member of the family,
whether you will run the risk."

I tried to speak to him of Euneece, and to tell him what I had
already related to yourself. He was in no humor to listen to me.
"Keep it for a fitter time," he answered; "and think of what I
have just said to you." With that, he left me, on his way to
Philip's room.

Mental exertion was completely beyond me. Can you understand a
poor middle-aged spinster being frightened into doing a dangerous
thing? That may seem to be nonsense. But if you ask why I took a
morsel of paper, and wrote the warning which I was afraid to
communicate by word of mouth--why I went upstairs with my knees
knocking together, and opened the door of Helena's room just wide
enough to let my hand pass through--why I threw the paper in, and
banged the door to again, and ran downstairs as I have never run
since I was a little girl--I can only say, in the way of
explanation, what I have said already: I was frightened into
doing it.

What I have written, thus far, I shall send to you by to-night's
post.

The doctor came back to me, after he had seen Philip, and spoken
with Euneece. He was very angry; and, I must own, not without
reason. Philip had flatly refused to let himself be removed to
the hospital; and Euneece--"a mere girl"--had declared that she
would be answerable for consequences! The doctor warned me that
he meant to withdraw from the case, and to make his declaration
before the magistrates. At my entreaties he consented to return
in the evening, and to judge by results before taking the
terrible step that he had threatened.

While I remained at home on the watch, keeping the doors of both
rooms locked, Eunice went out to get Philip's medicine. She came
back, followed by a boy carrying a portable apparatus for
cooking. "All that Philip wants, and all that we want," she
explained, "we can provide for ourselves. Give me a morsel of
paper to write on."

Unhooking the little pencil attac hed to her watch-chain, she
paused and looked toward the door. "Somebody listening," she
whispered. "Let them listen." She wrote a list of necessaries, in
the way of things to eat and things to drink, and asked me to go
out and get them myself. "I don't doubt the servants," she said,
speaking distinctly enough to be heard outside; "but I am afraid
of what a Poisoner's cunning and a Poisoner's desperation may do,
in a kitchen which is open to her." I went away on my
errand--discovering no listener outside, I need hardly say. On my
return, I found the door of communication with Philip's room
closed, but no longer locked. "We can now attend on him in turn,"
she said, "without opening either of the doors which lead into
the hall. At night we can relieve each other, and each of us can
get sleep as we want it in the large armchair in the dining-room.
Philip must be safe under our charge, or the doctor will insist
on taking him to the hospital. When we want Maria's help, from
time to time, we can employ her under our own superintendence.
Have you anything else, Selina, to suggest?"

There was nothing left to suggest. Young and inexperienced as she
was, how (I asked) had she contrived to think of all this? She
answered, simply "I'm sure I don't know; my thoughts came to me
while I was looking at Philip."

Soon afterward I found an opportunity of inquiring if Helena had
left the house. She had just rung her bell; and Maria had found
her, quietly reading, in her room. Hours afterward, when I was on
the watch at night, I heard Philip's door softly tried from the
outside. Her dreadful purpose had not been given up, even yet.

The doctor came in the evening, as he had promised, and found an
improvement in Philip's health. I mentioned what precautions we
had taken, and that they had been devised by Euneece. "Are you
going to withdraw from the case?" I asked. "I am coming back to
the case," he answered, "to-morrow morning."

It had been a disappointment to me to receive no answer to the
telegram which I had sent to Mr. Dunboyne the elder. The next
day's post brought the explanation in a letter to Philip from his
father, directed to him at the hotel here. This showed that my
telegram, giving my address at this house, had not been received.
Mr. Dunboyne announced that he had returned to Ireland, finding
the air of London unendurable, after the sea-breezes at home. If
Philip had already married, his father would leave him to a life
of genteel poverty with Helena Gracedieu. If he had thought
better of it, his welcome was waiting for him.

Little did Mr. Dunboyne know what changes had taken place since
he and his son had last met, and what hope might yet present
itself of brighter days for poor Euneece! I thought of writing to
him. But how would that crabbed old man receive a confidential
letter from a lady who was a stranger?

My doubts were set at rest by Philip himself. He asked me to
write a few lines of reply to his father; declaring that his
marriage with Helena was broken off--that he had not given up all
hope of being permitted to offer the sincere expression of his
penitence to Euneece--and that he would gladly claim his welcome,
as soon as he was well enough to undertake the journey to
Ireland. When he had signed the letter, I was so pleased that I
made a smart remark. I said: "This is a treaty of peace between
father and son."

When the doctor arrived in the morning, and found the change for
the better in his patient confirmed, he did justice to us at
last. He spoke kindly, and even gratefully, to Euneece. No more
allusions to the hospital as a place of safety escaped him. He
asked me cautiously for news of Helena. I could only tell him
that she had gone out at her customary time, and had returned at
her customary time. He did not attempt to conceal that my reply
had made him uneasy.

"Are you still afraid that she may succeed in poisoning Philip?"
I asked.

"I am afraid of her cunning," he said. "If she is charged with
attempting to poison young Dunboyne, she has some system of
defense, you may rely on it, for which we are not prepared.
There, in my opinion, is the true reason for her extraordinary
insensibility to her own danger."

Two more days passed, and we were still safe under the protection
of lock and key.

On the evening of the second day (which was a Monday) Maria came
to me in great tribulation. On inquiring what was the matter, I
received a disquieting reply: "Miss Helena is tempting me. She is
so miserable at being prevented from seeing Mr. Philip, and
helping to nurse him, that it is quite distressing to see her. At
the same time, miss, it's hard on a poor servant. She asks me to
take the key secretly out of the door, and lend it to her at
night for a few minutes only. I'm really afraid I shall be led
into doing it, if she goes on persuading me much longer."

I commended Maria for feeling scruples which proved her to be the
best of good girls, and promised to relieve her from all fear of
future temptation. This was easily done. Euneece kept the key of
Philip's door in her pocket; and I kept the key of the
dining-room door in mine.


CHAPTER LXI.

ATROCITY.

ON the next day, a Tuesday in the week, an event took place which
Euneece and I viewed with distrust. Early in the afternoon, a
young man called with a note for Helena. It was to be given to
her immediately, and no answer was required.

Maria had just closed the house door, and was on her way upstairs
with the letter, when she was called back by another ring at the
bell. Our visitor was the doctor. He spoke to Maria in the hall:

"I think I see a note in your hand. Was it given to you by the
young man who has just left the house?"

"Yes, sir.

"If he's your sweetheart, my dear, I have nothing more to say."

"Good gracious, doctor, how you do talk! I never saw the young
man before in my life."

"In that case, Maria, I will ask you to let me look at the
address. Aha! Mischief!"

The moment I heard that I threw open the dining-room door.
Curiosity is not easily satisfied. When it hears, it wants to
see; when it sees, it wants to know. Every lady will agree with
me in this observation.

"Pray come in," I said.

"One minute, Miss Jillgall. My girl, when you give Miss Helena
that note, try to get a sly look at her when she opens it, and
come and tell me what you have seen." He joined me in the
dining-room, and closed the door. "The other day," he went on,
"when I told you what I had discovered in the chemist's shop, I
think I mentioned a young man who was called to speak to a
question of identity--an assistant who knew Miss Helena Gracedieu
by sight."

"Yes, yes!"

"That young man left the note which Maria has just taken
upstairs."

"Who wrote it, doctor, and what does it say?"

"Questions naturally asked, Miss Jillgall--and not easily
answered. Where is Eunice? Her quick wit might help us."

She had gone out to buy some fruit and flowers for Philip.

The doctor accepted his disappointment resignedly. "Let us try
what we can do without her," he said. "That young man's master
has been in consultation (you may remember why) with his lawyer,
and Helena may be threatened by an investigation before the
magistrates. If this wild guess of mine turns out to have hit the
mark, the poisoner upstairs has got a warning."

I asked if the chemist had written the note. Foolish enough of me
when I came to think of it. The chemist would scarcely act a
friendly part toward Helena, when she was answerable for the
awkward position in which he had placed himself. Perhaps the
young man who had left the warning was also the writer of the
warning. The doctor reminded me that he was all but a stranger to
Helena. "We are not usually interested," he remarked, "in a
person whom we only know by sight."

"Remember that he is a young man," I ventured to say. This was a
strong hint, but the doctor failed to see it. He had evidently
forgotten his own youth. I made another attempt.

"And vile as Helena is," I continued, "we cannot deny that this
disgrace to her sex is a handsome young lady."

He saw it at last. "Woman's wit!" he cried. "You have hit it,
Miss Jillgall. The young fool is smitten with her, and has given
 her a chance of making her escape."

"Do you think she will take the chance?"

"For all our sakes, I pray God she may! But I don't feel sure
about it."

"Why?"

"Recollect what you and Eunice have done. You have shown your
suspicion of her without an attempt to conceal it. If you had put
her in prison you could not have more completely defeated her
infernal design. Do you think she is a likely person to submit to
that, without an effort to be even with you?"

Just as he said those terrifying words, Maria came back to us. He
asked at once what had kept her so long upstairs.

The girl had evidently something to say, which had inflated her
(if I may use such an expression) with a sense of her own
importance.

"Please to let me tell it, sir," she answered, "in my own way.
Miss Helena turned as pale as ashes when she opened the letter,
and then she took a turn in the room, and then she looked at me
with a smile--well, miss, I can only say that I felt that smile
in the small of my back. I tried to get to the door. She stopped
me. She says: 'Where's Miss Eunice?' I says: 'Gone out.' She
says: 'Is there anybody in the drawing-room?' I says: 'No, miss.'
She says: 'Tell Miss Jillgall I want to speak to her, and say I
am waiting in the drawing-room.' It's every word of it true! And,
if a poor servant may give an opinion, I don't like the look of
it."

The doctor dismissed Maria. "Whatever it is," he said to me, "you
must go and hear it."

I am not a courageous woman; I expressed myself as being willing
to go to her, if the doctor went with me. He said that was
impossible; she would probably refuse to speak before any
witness; and certainly before him. But he promised to look after
Philip in my absence, and to wait below if it really so happened
that I wanted him. I need only ring the bell, and he would come
to me the moment he heard it. Such kindness as this roused my
courage, I suppose. At any rate, I went upstairs.

She was standing by the fire-place, with her elbow on the
chimney-piece, and her head, resting on her hand. I stopped just
inside the door, waiting to hear what she had to say. In this
position her side-face only was presented to me. It was a ghastly
face. The eye that I could see turned wickedly on me when I came
in--then turned away again. Otherwise, she never moved. I confess
I trembled, but I did my best to disguise it.

She broke out suddenly with what she had to say: "I won't allow
this state of things to go on any longer. My horror of an
exposure which will disgrace the family has kept me silent,
wrongly silent, so far. Philip's life is in danger. I am
forgetting my duty to my affianced husband, if I allow myself to
be kept away from him any longer. Open those locked doors, and
relieve me from the sight of you. Open the doors, I say, or you
will both of you--you the accomplice, she the wretch who directs
you--repent it to the end of your lives."

In my own mind, I asked myself if she had gone mad. But I only
answered: "I don't understand you."

She said again: "You are Eunice's accomplice."

"Accomplice in what?" I asked.

She turned her head slowly and faced me. I shrank from looking at
her.

"All the circumstances prove it," she went on. "I have supplanted
Eunice in Philip's affection. She was once engaged to marry him;
I am engaged to marry him now. She is resolved that he shall
never make me his wife. He will die if I delay any longer. He
will die if I don't crush her, like the reptile she is. She comes
here--and what does she do? Keeps him prisoner under her own
superintendence. Who gets his medicine? She gets it. Who cooks
his food? She cooks it. The doors are locked. I might be a
witness of what goes on; and I am kept out. The servants who
ought to wait on him are kept out. She can do what she likes with
his medicine; she can do what she likes with his food: she is
infuriated with him for deserting her, and promising to marry me.
Give him back to my care; or, dreadful as it is to denounce my
own sister, I shall claim protection from the magistrates."

I lost all fear of her: I stepped close up to the place at which
she was standing; I cried out: "Of what, in God's name, do you
accuse your sister?"

She answered: "I accuse her of poisoning Philip Dunboyne."

I ran out of the room; I rushed headlong down the stairs. The
doctor heard me, and came running into the hall. I caught hold of
him like a madwoman. "Euneece!" My breath was gone; I could only
say: "Euneece!"

He dragged me into the dining-room. There was wine on the
side-board, which he had ordered medically for Philip. He forced
me to drink some of it. It ran through me like fire; it helped me
to speak. "Now tell me," he said, "what has she done to Eunice?"

"She brings a horrible accusation against her," I answered.

"What is the accusation?" I told him.

He looked me through and through. "Take care!" he said. "No
hysterics, no exaggeration. You may lead to dreadful consequences
if you are not sure of yourself. If it's really true, say it
again." I said it again--quietly this time.

His face startled me; it was white with rage. He snatched his hat
off the hall table.

"What are you going to do?" I asked.

"My duty." He was out of the house before I could speak to him
again.



Third Period _(concluded)._

_TROUBLES AND TRIUMPHS OF THE FAMILY, RELATED BY THE GOVERNOR._


CHAPTER LXII.

THE SENTENCE PRONOUNCED.


MARTYRS to gout know, by sad experience, that they suffer under
one of the most capricious of maladies. An attack of this disease
will shift, in the most unaccountable manner, from one part of
the body to another; or, it will release the victim when there is
every reason to fear that it is about to strengthen its hold on
him; or, having shown the fairest promise of submitting to
medical treatment, it will cruelly lay the patient prostrate
again in a state of relapse. Adverse fortune, in my case,
subjected me to this last and worst trial of endurance. Two
months passed--months of pain aggravated by anxiety--before I was
able to help Eunice and Miss Jillgall personally with my sympathy
and advice.

During this interval, I heard regularly from the friendly and
faithful Selina.

Terror and suspense, courageously endured day after day, seem to
have broken down her resistance, poor soul, when Eunice's good
name and Eunice's tranquillity were threatened by the most
infamous of false accusations. From that time, Miss Jillgall's
method of expressing herself betrayed a gradual deterioration. I
shall avoid presenting at a disadvantage a correspondent who has
claims on my gratitude, if I give the substance only of what she
wrote--assisted by the newspaper which she sent to me, while the
legal proceedings were in progress.


Honest indignation does sometimes counsel us wisely. When the
doctor left Miss Jillgall, in anger and in haste, he had
determined on taking the course from which, as a humane man and a
faithful friend, he had hitherto recoiled. It was no time, now,
to shrink from the prospect of an exposure. The one hope of
successfully encountering the vindictive wickedness of Helena lay
in the resolution to be beforehand with her, in the appeal to the
magistrates with which she had threatened Eunice and Miss
Jillgall. The doctor's sworn information stated the whole
terrible case of the poisoning, ranging from his first suspicions
and their confirmation, to Helena's atrocious attempt to accuse
her innocent sister of her own guilt. So firmly were the
magistrates convinced of the serious nature of the case thus
stated, that they did not hesitate to issue their warrant. Among
the witnesses whose attendance was immediately secured, by the
legal adviser to whom the doctor applied, were the farmer and his
wife.

Helena was arrested while she was dressing to go out. Her
composure was not for a moment disturbed. "I was on my way," she
said coolly, "to make a statement before the justices. The sooner
they hear what I have to say the better."

The attempt of this shameless wretch to "turn the tables" on poor
Eunice--suggested, as I afterward discovered, by the record of
family history which she had quoted in her  journal--was defeated
with ease. The farmer and his wife prove d the date at which
Eunice had left her place of residence under their roof. The
doctor's evidence followed. He proved, by the production of his
professional diary, that the discovery of the attempt to poison
his patient had taken place before the day of Eunice's departure
from the farm, and that the first improvement in Mr. Philip
Dunboyne's state of health had shown itself after that young
lady's arrival to perform the duties of a nurse. To the wise
precautions which she had taken--perverted by Helena to the
purpose of a false accusation--the doctor attributed the
preservation of the young man's life.

Having produced the worst possible impression on the minds of the
magistrates, Helena was remanded. Her legal adviser had predicted
this result; but the vindictive obstinacy of his client had set
both experience and remonstrance at defiance.

At the renewed examination, the line of defense adopted by the
prisoner's lawyer proved to be--mistaken identity.

It was asserted that she had never entered the chemist's shop;
also, that the assistant had wrongly identified some other lady
as Miss Helena Gracedieu; also, that there was not an atom of
evidence to connect her with the stealing of the doctor's
prescription-paper and the forgery of his writing. Other
assertions to the same purpose followed, on which it is needless
to dwell.

The case for the prosecution was, happily, in competent hands.
With the exception of one witness, cross-examination afforded no
material help to the evidence for the defense.

The chemist swore positively to the personal appearance of
Helena, as being the personal appearance of the lady who had
presented the prescription. His assistant, pressed on the
question of identity, broke down under
cross-examination--purposely, as it was whispered, serving the
interests of the prisoner. But the victory, so far gained by the
defense, was successfully contested by the statement of the next
witness, a respectable tradesman in the town. He had seen the
newspaper report of the first examination, and had volunteered to
present himself as a witness. A member of Mr. Gracedieu's
congregation, his pew in the chapel was so situated as to give
him a view of the minister's daughters occupying their pew. He
had seen the prisoner on every Sunday, for years past; and he
swore that he was passing the door of the chemist's shop, at the
moment when she stepped out into the street, having a bottle
covered with the customary white paper in her hand. The doctor
and his servant were the next witnesses called. They were
severely cross-examined. Some of their statements--questioned
technically with success--received unexpected and powerful
support, due to the discovery and production of the prisoner's
diary. The entries, guardedly as some of them were written,
revealed her motive for attempting to poison Philip Dunboyne;
proved that she had purposely called on the doctor when she knew
that he would be out, that she had entered the consulting-room,
and examined the medical books, had found (to use her own written
words) "a volume that interested her," and had used the
prescription-papers for the purpose of making notes. The notes
themselves were not to be found; they had doubtless been
destroyed. Enough, and more than enough, remained to make the
case for the prosecution complete. The magistrates committed
Helena Gracedieu for trial at the next assizes.

I arrived in the town, as well as I can remember, about a week
after the trial had taken place.

Found guilty, the prisoner had been recommended to mercy by the
jury--partly in consideration of her youth; partly as an
expression of sympathy and respect for her unhappy father. The
judge (a father himself) passed a lenient sentence. She was
condemned to imprisonment for two years. The careful matron of
the jail had provided herself with a bottle of smelling-salts, in
the fear that there might be need for it when Helena heard her
sentence pronounced. Not the slightest sign of agitation appeared
in her face or her. manner. She lied to the last; asserting her
innocence in a firm voice, and returning from the dock to the
prison without requiring assistance from anybody.

Relating these particulars to me, in a state of ungovernable
excitement, good Miss Jillgall ended with a little confession of
her own, which operated as a relief to my overburdened mind after
what I had just heard.

"I wouldn't own it," she said, "to anybody but a dear friend. One
thing, in the dreadful disgrace that has fallen on us, I am quite
at a loss to account for. Think of Mr. Gracedieu's daughter being
one of those criminal creatures on whom it was once your terrible
duty to turn the key! Why didn't she commit suicide?"

"My dear lady, no thoroughly wicked creature ever yet committed
suicide. Self-destruction, when it is not an act of madness,
implies some acuteness of feeling--sensibility to remorse or to
shame, or perhaps a distorted idea of making atonement. There is
no such thing as remorse or shame, or hope of making atonement,
in Helena's nature."

"But when she comes out of prison, what will she do?"

"Don't alarm yourself, my good friend. She will do very well."

"Oh, hush! hush! Poetical justice, Mr. Governor!"

"Poetical fiddlesticks, Miss Jillgall."


CHAPTER LXIII.

THE OBSTACLE REMOVED.


WHEN the subject of the trial was happily dismissed, my first
inquiry related to Eunice. The reply was made with an ominous
accompaniment of sighs and sad looks. Eunice had gone back to her
duties as governess at the farm. Hearing this, I asked naturally
what had become of Philip.

Melancholy news, again, was the news that I now heard.

Mr. Dunboyne the elder had died suddenly, at his house in
Ireland, while Philip was on his way home. When the funeral
ceremony had come to an end, the will was read. It had been made
only a few days before the testator's death; and the clause which
left all his property to his son was preceded by expressions of
paternal affection, at a time when Philip was in sore need of
consolation. After alluding to a letter, received from his son,
the old man added: "I always loved him, without caring to confess
it; I detest scenes of sentiment, kissings, embracings, tears,
and that sort of thing. But Philip has yielded to my wishes, and
has broken off a marriage which would have made him, as well as
me, wretched for life. After this, I may speak my mind from my
grave, and may tell my boy that I loved him. If the wish is
likely to be of any use, I will add (on the chance)--God bless
him."

"Does Philip submit to separation from Eunice?" I asked. "Does he
stay in Ireland?"

"Not he, poor fellow! He will be here to-morrow or next day. When
I last wrote," Miss Jillgall continued, "I told him I hoped to
see you again soon. If you can't help us (I mean with Eunice)
that unlucky young man will do some desperate thing. He will join
those madmen at large who disturb poor savages in Africa, or go
nowhere to find nothing in the Arctic regions.

"Whatever I can do, Miss Jillgall, shall be gladly done. Is it
really possible that Eunice refuses to marry him, after having
saved his life?"

"A little patience, please, Mr. Governor; let Philip tell his own
story. If I try to do it, I shall only cry--and we have had tears
enough lately, in this house."

Further consultation being thus deferred, I went upstairs to the
Minister's room.

He was sitting by the window, in his favorite armchair, absorbed
in knitting! The person who attended on him, a good-natured,
patient fellow, had been a sailor in his younger days, and had
taught Mr. Gracedieu how to use the needles. "You see it amuses
him," the man said, kindly. "Don't notice his mistakes, he thinks
there isn't such another in the world for knitting as himself.
You can see, sir, how he sticks to it." He was so absorbed over
his employment that I had to speak to him twice, before I could
induce him to look at me. The utter ruin of his intellect did not
appear to have exercised any disastrous influence over his bodily
health. On the contrary, he had grown fatter since I had last
seen him; his complexion had lost the pallor that I
remembered--there was color in his cheeks.

"Don't yo u remember your old friend?" I said. He smiled, and
nodded, and repeated the words:

"Yes, yes, my old friend." It was only too plain that he had not
the least recollection of me. "His memory is gone," the man said.
"When he puts away his knitting, at night, I have to find it for
him in the morning. But, there! he's happy--enjoys his victuals,
likes sitting out in the garden and watching the birds. There's
been a deal of trouble in the family, sir; and it has all passed
over him like a wet sponge over a slate." The old sailor was
right. If that wreck of a man had been capable of feeling and
thinking, his daughter's disgrace would have broken his heart. In
a world of sin and sorrow, is peaceable imbecility always to be
pitied? I have known men who would have answered, without
hesitation: "It is to be envied." And where (some persons might
say) was the poor Minister's reward for the act of mercy which
had saved Eunice in her infancy? Where it ought to be! A man who
worthily performs a good action finds his reward in the action
itself.


At breakfast, on the next day, the talk touched on those passages
in Helena's diary, which had been produced in court as evidence
against her.

I expressed a wish to see what revelation of a depraved nature
the entries in the diary might present; and my curiosity was
gratified. At a fitter time, I may find an opportunity of
alluding to the impression produced on me by the diary. In the
meanwhile, the event of Philip's return claims notice in the
first place.

The poor fellow was so glad to see me that he shook hands as
heartily as if we had known each other from the time when he was
a boy.

"Do you remember how kindly you spoke to me when I called on you
in London?" he asked. "If I have repeated those words once--but
perhaps you don't remember them? You said: 'If I was as young as
you are, I should not despair.' Well! I have said that to myself
over and over again, for a hundred times at least. Eunice will
listen to you, sir, when she will listen to nobody else. This is
the first happy moment I have had for weeks past."

I suppose I must have looked glad to hear that. Anyway, Philip
shook hands with me again.

Miss Jillgall was present. The gentle-hearted old maid was so
touched by our meeting that she abandoned herself to the genial
impulse of the moment, and gave Philip a kiss. The outraged
claims of propriety instantly seized on her. She blushed as if
the long-lost days of her girlhood had been found again, and ran
out of the room.

"Now, Mr. Philip," I said, "I have been waiting, at Miss
Jillgall's suggestion, to get my information from you. There is
something wrong between Eunice and yourself. What is it? And who
is to blame?"

"Her vile sister is to blame," he answered. "That reptile was
determined to sting us. And she has done it!" he cried, starting
to his feet, and walking up and down the room, urged into action
by his own unendurable sense of wrong. "I say, she has done it,
after Eunice has saved me--done it, when Eunice was ready to be
my wife."

"How has she done it?"

Between grief and indignation his reply was involved in a
confusion of vehemently-spoken words, which I shall not attempt
to reproduce. Eunice had reminded him that her sister had been
publicly convicted of an infamous crime, and publicly punished
for it by imprisonment. "If I consent to marry you," she said, "I
stain you with my disgrace; that shall never be." With this
resolution, she had left him. "I have tried to convince her,"
Philip said, "that she will not be associated with her sister's
disgrace when she bears my name; I have promised to take her far
away from England, among people who have never even heard of her
sister. Miss Jillgall has used her influence to help me. All in
vain! There is no hope for us but in you. I am not thinking
selfishly only of myself. She tries to conceal it--but, oh, she
is broken-hearted! Ask the farmer's wife, if you don't believe
me. Judge for yourself, sir. Go--for God's sake, go to the farm."

I made him sit down and compose himself.

"You may depend on my going to the farm," I answered. "I shall
write to Eunice to-day, and follow my letter to-morrow." He tried
to thank me; but I would not allow it. "Before I consent to
accept the expression of your gratitude," I said, "I must know a
little more of you than I know now. This is only the second
occasion on which we have met. Let us look back a little, Mr.
Philip Dunboyne. You were Eunice's affianced husband; and you
broke faith with her. That was a rascally action. How do you
defend it?"

His head sank. "I am ashamed to defend it," he answered.

I pressed him without mercy. "You own yourself," I said, "that it
was a rascally action?"

"Use stronger language against me, even than that, sir--I deserve
it."

"In plain words," I went on, "you can find no excuse for your
conduct?"

"In the past time," he said, "I might have found excuses."

"But you can't find them now?"

"I must not even look for them now."

"Why not?"

"I owe it to Eunice to leave my conduct at its worst; with
nothing said--by me--to defend it."

"What has Eunice done to have such a claim on you as that?"

"Eunice has forgiven me."

It was gratefully and delicately said. Ought I to have allowed
this circumstance to weigh with me? I ask, in return, had _I_
never committed any faults? As a fellow-mortal and fellow-sinner,
had I any right to harden my heart against an expression of
penitence which I felt to be sincere in its motive?

But I was bound to think of Eunice. I did think of her, before I
ventured to accept the position--the critical position, as I
shall presently show--of Philip's friend.

After more than an hour of questions put without reserve, and of
answers given without prevarication, I had traveled over the
whole ground laid out by the narratives which appear in these
pages, and had arrived at my conclusion--so far as Philip
Dunboyne was concerned.

I found him to be a man with nothing absolutely wicked in
him--but with a nature so perilously weak, in many respects, that
it might drift into wickedness unless a stronger nature was at
hand to bold it back. Married to a wife without force of
character, the probabilities would point to him as likely to
yield to examples which might make him a bad husband. Married to
a wife with a will of her own, and with true love to sustain
her--a wife who would know when to take the command and how to
take the command--a wife who, finding him tempted to commit
actions unworthy of his better self, would be far-sighted enough
to perceive that her husband's sense of honor might sometimes
lose its balance, without being on that account hopelessly
depraved--then, and, in these cases only, the probabilities would
point to Philip as a man likely to be the better and the happier
for his situation, when the bonds of wedlock had got him.

But the serious question was not answered yet.

Could I feel justified in placing Eunice in the position toward
Philip which I have just endeavored to describe? I dared not
allow my mind to dwell on the generosity which had so nobly
pardoned him, or on the force of character which had bravely
endured the bitterest disappointment, the cruelest humiliation.
The one consideration which I was bound to face, was the sacred
consideration of her happiness in her life to come.

Leaving Philip, with a few words of sympathy which might help him
to bear his suspense, I went to my room to think.

The time passed--and I could arrive at no positive conclusion.
Either way--with or without Philip--the contemplation of Eunice's
future harassed me with doubt. Even if I had conquered my own
indecision, and had made up my mind to sanction the union of the
two young people, the difficulties that now beset me would not
have been dispersed. Knowing what I alone knew, I could certainly
remove Eunice's one objection to the marriage. In other words, I
had only to relate what had happened on the day when the Chaplain
brought the Minister to the prison, and the obstacle of their
union would be removed. But, without considering Philip, it was
simply out of the question to do this, in mercy to Eunice
herself. What was Helena's disgrace, compared with the infamy
which stained the name of the poor girl's mother! The other
alternative of telling her part of the truth only was before me,
if I could persuade myself to adopt it. I failed to persuade
myself; my morbid anxiety for her welfare made me hesitate again.
Human patience could endure no more. Rashness prevailed and
prudence yielded--I left my decision to be influenced by the
coming interview with Eunice.

The next day I drove to the farm. Philip's entreaties persuaded
me to let him be my companion, on one condition--that he waited
in the carriage while I went into the house.

I had carefully arranged my ideas, and had decided on proceeding
with the greatest caution, before I ventured on saying the
all-important words which, once spoken, were not to be recalled.
The worst of those anxieties, under which the delicate health of
Mr. Gracedieu had broken down, was my anxiety now. Could I
reconcile it to my conscience to permit a man, innocent of all
knowledge of the truth, to marry the daughter of a condemned
murderess, without honestly telling him what he was about to do?
Did I deserve to be pitied? did I deserve to be blamed?--my mind
was still undecided when I entered the house.

She ran to meet me as if she had been my daughter; she kissed me
as if she had been my daughter; she fondly looked up at me as if
she had been my daughter. At the sight of that sweet young face,
so sorrowful, and so patiently enduring sorrow, all my doubts and
hesitations, everything artificial about me with which I had
entered the room, vanished in an instant.

After she had thanked me for coming to see her, I saw her tremble
a little. The uppermost interest in her heart was forcing its way
outward to expression, try as she might to keep it back. "Have
you seen Philip?" she asked. The tone in which she put that
question decided me--I was resolved to let her marry him.
Impulse! Yes, impulse, asserting itself inexcusably in a man at
the end of his life. I ought to have known better than to have
given way. Very likely. But am I the only mortal who ought to
have known better--and did not?

When Eunice asked if I had seen Philip, I owned that he was
outside in the carriage. Before she could reproach me, I went on
with what I had to say: "My child, I know what a sacrifice you
have made; and I should honor your scruples, if you had any
reason for feeling them."

"Any reason for feeling them?" She turned pale as she repeated
the words.

An idea came to me. I rang for the servant, and sent her to the
carriage to tell Philip to come in. "My dear, I am not putting
you to any unfair trial," I assured her; "I am going to prove
that I love you as truly as if you were my own child."

When they were both present, I resolved that they should not
suffer a moment of needless suspense. Standing between them, I
took Eunice's hand, and laid my other hand on Philip's shoulder,
and spoke out plainly.

"I am here to make you both happy," I said. "I can remove the
only obstacle to your marriage, and I mean to do it. But I must
insist on one condition. Give me your promise, Philip, that you
will ask for no explanations, and that you will be satisfied with
the one true statement which is all that I can offer to you."

He gave me his promise, without an instant's hesitation.

"Philip grants what I ask," I said to Eunice. "Do you grant it,
too?"

Her hand turned cold in mine; but she spoke firmly when she said:
"Yes."

I gave her into Philip's care. It was his privilege to console
and support her. It was my duty to say the decisive words:

"Rouse your courage, dear Eunice; you are no more affected by
Helena's disgrace than I am. You are not her sister. Her father
is not your father; her mother was not your mother. I was
present, in the time of your infancy, when Mr. Gracedieu's
fatherly kindness received you as his adopted child. This, I
declare to you both, on my word of honor, is the truth."

How she bore it I am not able to say. My foolish old eyes were
filling with tears. I could just see plainly enough to find my
way to the door, and leave them together.

In my reckless state of mind, I never asked myself if Time would
be my accomplice, and keep the part of the secret which I had not
revealed--or be my enemy, and betray me. The chances, either way,
were perhaps equal. The deed was done.


CHAPTER LXIV.

THE TRUTH TRIUMPHANT.


THE marriage was deferred, at Eunice's request, as an expression
of respect to the memory of Philip's father.

When the time of delay had passed, it was arranged that the
wedding ceremony should be held--after due publication of
Banns--at the parish church of the London suburb in which my
house was situated. Miss Jillgall was bridesmaid, and I gave away
the bride. Before we set out for the church, Eunice asked leave
to speak with me for a moment in private.

"Don't think," she said, "that I am forgetting my promise to be
content with what you have told me about myself. I am not so
ungrateful as that. But I do want, before I consent to be
Philip's wife, to feel sure that I am not quite unworthy of him.
Is it because I am of mean birth that you told me I was Mr.
Gracedieu's adopted child--and told me no more?"

I could honestly satisfy her, so far. "Certainly not!" I said.

She put her arms round my neck. "Do you say that," she asked, "to
make my mind easy? or do you say it on your word of honor?"

"On my word of honor."

We arrived at the church. Let Miss Jillgall describe the
marriage, in her own inimitable way.

"No wedding breakfast, when you don't want to eat it. No wedding
speeches, when nobody wants to make them, and nobody wants to
hear them. And no false sentiment, shedding tears and reddening
noses, on the happiest day in the whole year. A model marriage! I
could desire nothing better, if I had any prospect of being a
bride myself."

They went away for their honeymoon to a quiet place by the
seaside, not very far from the town in which Eunice had passed
some of the happiest and the wretchedest days in her life. She
persisted in thinking it possible that Mr. Gracedieu might
recover the use of his faculties, at the last, and might wish to
see her on his death-bed. "His adopted daughter," she gently
reminded me, "is his only daughter now." The doctor shook his
head when I told him what Eunice had said to me--and, the sad
truth must be told, the doctor was right.

Miss Jillgall returned, on the wedding-day, to take care of the
good man who had befriended her in her hour of need.

Before the end of the week, I heard from her, and was
disagreeably reminded of an incident which we had both forgotten,
absorbed as we were in other and greater interests, at the time.

Mrs. Tenbruggen had again appeared on the scene! She had written
to Miss Jillgall, from Paris, to say that she had heard of old
Mr.. Dunboyne's death, and that she wished to have the letter
returned, which she had left for delivery to Philip's father on
the day when Philip and Eunice were married. I had my own
suspicions of what that letter might contain; and I regretted
that Miss Jillgall had sent it back without first waiting to
consult me. My misgivings, thus excited, were increased by more
news of no very welcome kind. Mrs. Tenbruggen had decided on
returning to her professional pursuits in England. Massage, now
the fashion everywhere, had put money into her pocket among the
foreigners; and her husband, finding that she persisted in
keeping out of his reach, had consented to a compromise. He was
ready to submit to a judicial separation; in consideration of a
little income which his wife had consented to settle on him,
under the advice of her lawyer.

Some days later, I received a delightful letter from Philip and
Eunice; reminding me that I had engaged to pay them a visit at
the seaside. My room was ready for me, and I was left to choose
my own day. I had just begun to write my reply, gladly accepting
the invitation, when an ominous circumstance occurred. My servant
announced "a lady"; and I found myself face to face with--Mrs.
Tenbruggen!

She was as cheerful as ever, and as eminently agreeable as ever.

"I have heard it all from Selina," she said. "Philip's marriage
to Eunice (I shall go and congratulate them, of course), and the
catastrophe (how dramatic!) of Helena Gracedieu. I warned. Selina
that Miss Helena would end badly. To tell the truth, she
frightened me. I don't deny that I am a mischievous woman when I
find myself affronted, quite capable of taking my revenge in my
own small spiteful way. But poison and murder--ah, the frightful
subject! let us drop it, and talk of something that doesn't make
my hair (it's really my own hair) stand on end. Has Selina told
you that I have got rid of my charming husband, on easy pecuniary
terms? Oh, you know that? Very well. I will tell you something
that you don't know. Mr. Governor, I have found you out."

"May I venture to ask how?"

"When I guessed which was which of those two girls," she
answered, "and guessed wrong, you deliberately encouraged the
mistake. Very clever, but you overdid it. From that moment,
though I kept it to myself, I began to fear I might be wrong. Do
you remember Low Lanes, my dear sir? A charming old church. I
have had another consultation with my lawyer. His questions led
me into mentioning how it happened that I heard of Low Lanes.
After looking again at his memorandum of the birth advertised in
the newspaper without naming the place--he proposed trying the
church register at Low Lanes. Need I tell you the result? I know,
as well as you do, that Philip has married the adopted child. He
has had a mother-in-law who was hanged, and, what is more, he has
the honor, through his late father, of being otherwise connected
with the murderess by marriage--as his aunt!"

Bewilderment and dismay deprived me of my presence of mind. "How
did you discover that?" I was foolish enough to ask.

"Do you remember when I brought the baby to the prison?" she
said. "The father--as I mentioned at the time--had been a dear
and valued friend of mine. No person could be better qualified to
tell me who had married his wife's sister. If that lady had been
living, I should never have been troubled with the charge of the
child. Any more questions?"

"Only one. Is Philip to hear of this?"

"Oh, for shame! I don't deny that Philip insulted me grossly, in
one way; and that Philip's late father insulted me grossly, in
another way. But Mamma Tenbruggen is a Christian. She returns
good for evil, and wouldn't for the world disturb the connubial
felicity of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Dunboyne."

The moment the woman was out of my house, I sent a telegram to
Philip to say that he might expect to see me that night. I caught
the last train in the evening; and I sat down to supper with
those two harmless young creatures, knowing I must prepare the
husband for what threatened them, and weakly deferring it, when I
found myself in their presence, until the next day. Eunice was,
in some degree, answerable for this hesitation on my part. No one
could look at her husband, and fail to see that he was a
supremely happy man. But I detected signs of care in the wife's
face.

Before breakfast the next morning I was out on the beach, trying
to decide how the inevitable disclosure might be made. Eunice
joined me. Now, when we were alone, I asked if she was really and
completely happy. Quietly and sadly she answered: "Not yet."

I hardly knew what to say. My face must have expressed
disappointment and surprise.

"I shall never be quite happy," she resumed, "till I know what it
is that you kept from me on that memorable day. I don't like
having a secret from my husband--though it is not _my_ secret."

"Remember your promise," I said

"I don't forget it," she answered. "I can only wish that my
promise would keep back the thoughts that come to me in spite of
myself."

"What thoughts?"

"There is something, as I fear, in the story of my parents which
you are afraid to confide to me. Why did Mr. Gracedieu allow me
to believe and leave everybody to believe, that I was his own
child?"

"My dear, I relieved your mind of those doubts on the morning of
your marriage."

"No. I was only thinking of myself at that time. My mother--the
doubt of _her_ is the doubt that torments me now."

"What do you mean?"

She put her arm in mine, and held by it with both hands.

"The mock-mother!" she whispered. "Do you remember that dreadful
Vision, that horrid whispering temptation in the dead of night?
_Was_ it a mock-mother? Oh, pity me! I don't know who my mother
was. One horrid thought about her is a burden on my mind. If she
was a good woman, you who love me would surely have made me happy
by speaking of her?"

Those words decided me at last. Could she suffer more than she
had suffered already, if I trusted her with the truth? I ran the
risk. There was a time of silence that filled me with terror. The
interval passed. She took my hand, and put it to her heart. "Does
it beat as if I was frightened?" she asked.


No! It was beating calmly.

"Does it relieve your anxiety?"

It told me that I had not surprised her. That unforgotten Vision
of the night had prepared her for the worst, after the time when
I had told her that she was an adopted child. "I know," I said,
"that those whispered temptations overpowered you again, when you
and Helena met on the stairs, and you forbade her to enter
Philip's room. And I know that love had conquered once more, when
you were next seen sitting by Philip's bedside. Tell me--have you
any misgivings now? Is there fear in your heart of the return of
that tempting spirit in you, in the time to come?"

"Not while Philip lives!"

There, where her love was--there her safety was. And she knew it!
She suddenly left me. I asked where she was going.

"To tell Philip," was the reply.

She was waiting for me at the door, when I followed her to the
house.

"Is it done?" I said.

"It is done," she answered.

"What did he say?"

"He said: 'My darling, if I could be fonder of you than ever, I
should be fonder of you now.' "

I have been blamed for being too ready to confide to Philip the
precious trust of Eunice's happiness. If that reply does not
justify me, where is justification to be found?

POSTSCRIPT.


LATER in the day, Mrs. Tenbruggen arrived to offer her
congratulations. She asked for a few minutes with Philip alone.
As a cat elaborates her preparations for killing a mouse, so the
human cat elaborated her preparations for killing Philip's
happiness, he remained uninjured by her teeth and her claws.
"Somebody," she said, "has told you of it already?" And Philip
answered: "Yes; my wife."

For some months longer, Mr. Gracedieu lingered. One morning, he
said to Eunice: "I want to teach you to knit. Sit by me, and see
me do it." His hands fell softly on his lap; his head sank little
by little on her shoulder. She could just hear him whisper: "How
pleasant it is to sleep!" Never was Death's dreadful work more
gently done

Our married pair live now on the paternal estate in Ireland; and
Miss Jillgall reigns queen of domestic affairs. I am still strong
enough to pass my autumn holidays in that pleasant house.

At times, my memory reverts to Helena Gracedieu, and to what I
discovered when I had seen her diary.

How little I knew of that terrible creature when I first met with
her, and fancied that she had inherited her mother's character!
It was weak indeed to compare the mean vices of Mrs. Gracedieu
with the diabolical depravity of her daughter. Here the doctrine
of hereditary transmission of moral qualities must own that it
has overlooked the fertility (for growth of good and for growth
of evil equally) which is inherent in human nature. There are
virtues that exalt us, and vices that degrade us, whose
mysterious origin is, not in our parents, but in ourselves. When
I think of Helena, I ask myself, where is the trace which reveals
that the first murder in the world was the product of inherited
crime?

The criminal left the prison, on the expiration of her sentence,
so secretly that it was impossible to trace her. Some months
later, Miss Jillgall received an illustrated newspaper published
in the United States. She showed me one of the portraits in it.

"Do you recognize the illustrious original?" she asked, with
indignant emphasis on the last two words. I recognized Helena.
"Now read her new title," Miss Jillgall continued.

I read: "The Reverend Miss Gracedieu."

The biographical notice followed. Here is an extract: "This
eminent lady, the victim of a shocking miscarriage of justice in
England, is now the distinguished leader of a new community in
the United States. We hail in her the great intellect which
asserts the superiority of woman over man. In the first French
Revolution, the attempt made by men to found a rational religion
met with only temporary success. It was reserved for the mightier
spirit of woman to lay the foundations more firmly, and to
dedicate one of the noblest edifices in this city to the Worship
of Pure Reason. Readers who wish for further information will do
well to provide themselves with the Reverend Miss Gracedieu's
Orations--the tenth edition of which is advertised in our
columns."

"I once asked you," Miss Jillgall reminded me, "what Helena would
do when she came out of prison, and you said she would do very
well. Oh, Mr. Governor, Solomon was nothing to You!"