For weeks Parry Glyddyr lay almost
at the point of death, and there were times when Sarah
Woodham shuddered and left the room, barring the door
against all comers, as the poor wretch raved in his
delirium about poison, and the dead coming back to
torture him and drag him down.
His ravings were so frightful that
at times the hard, stern woman was quite unnerved;
but she refused all assistance, and returned to her
post, keeping the young wife from being present at
all such scenes.
Asher had sternly refused to attend
him, after being present during one of Glyddyr’s
fits of raving. So the rival from the upper part
of the little Churchtown took his place, and after
a week’s attendance laid before Claude and her
friends the necessity for calling in further help.
The result was that the young wife
insisted upon the presence of an eminent medical man
from London, and was present afterwards when the great
magnate had been in consultation.
“It is most painful, madam,”
he said, “to have to speak out before you; but
since you insist ”
“Yes; I do insist,” said
Claude firmly. “Let us all know the truth.”
“The truth is this, madam,” he said; “Mr
Glyddyr ”
He paused, and looked round the drawing-room,
where Mary, Trevithick and Gellow were seated.
“ Mr Glyddyr, though
apparently naturally of a good constitution, has completely
shattered his health by terrible excesses in the use
of stimulants. Our friend here, my brother practitioner,
has done everything possible, and has accepted a few
suggestions of mine which I hope will have good results.”
“But you will save his life,
Doctor?” said Claude piteously.
“I hope yes, my dear madam.
I think I can say you may rely upon our friend here.
It will be a long and tedious recovery, no doubt,
and afterwards it will rest with you to save him from
the temptation of further indulgence. And
if he is not an idiot he will thank his stars for
his fate,” added the great Doctor himself.
“And I will try so hard, so
hard,” vowed Claude. “It was like
a judgment upon me. Yes, I will try to be his
good, true wife, and bring him back to a better life.”
Thus, on her knees that night, ere she lay down to
rest.
“Talks, does he, of murder,
eh?” said Gellow. “Yes, Mr Trevithick,
they do at times. Never had DT, I suppose?”
“No, sir; I never had.”
“Good job for you. I had
once, and that was enough for me. I didn’t
swear off, but I swore a little way on. I’ve
had ’em, sir. Snakes in your boots blue-devils,
things crawling all over you; it’s enough to
make you shiver to think of it.”
“I suppose so.”
“You won’t believe me, but I couldn’t
keep him away from the stuff.”
“Then he has been in the habit of drinking a
great deal?”
“Great deal isn’t half big enough, sir.”
“Then don’t you think
it would have been your duty to warn Miss Gartram
of the character of the man she was about to wed?”
“Split on my friend; get up
an action for slander; set the young lady against
me; and perhaps have poor old Glyddyr knock me on the
head. No, sir: I’m not that sort
of man. There, good evening. If you want
me, I shall be at the hotel. I seem to be the
poor chap’s only friend, and I can’t go
back to town till I see him safe.”
“I don’t like that man,”
said Trevithick. “He has some hold on Glyddyr,
I am sure.”
As the great doctor prophesied, it
was a long, slow recovery, and there were returns
of the delirium and horrible nights when Glyddyr appeared
to be haunted by one who was always reproaching him
for some deed, and Sarah Woodham would sit, looking
at him wildly, and with the past and her oath to her
dead husband slowly revolving in her mind.
Then the invalid began to mend, and
became constant in his demands for Claude.
“Where is she?” he would
ask with a quick, jealous eagerness if she were away
from his room for an hour; and on her return from one
of the walks necessary for her health, he would cross-examine
her, gazing at her searchingly, as to where she had
been and whom she had seen.
Claude had nothing to conceal, and
she answered him quietly and without resentment; but
she did not and she knew it allay
the pang of mad jealousy in her husband’s breast.
“It is a judgment on me,”
she used to say, “for I gave him cause.”
Time glided on, and Glyddyr began
to be about, at first in an invalid chair, and then
he was able to walk up and down a little on the terraces
of the Fort; and as the rough fishermen of the place
saw him, there was a quiet nudge passed on, as they
said that the new King of the Castle was not like
the old.
As he grew better, he looked a haggard,
sallow being, with wild, restless eyes, which appeared
to be always on the lookout for some anticipated danger
or trouble, and the sight of Chris Lisle passing in
the distance was sufficient at any time to make him
turn angrily upon his wife, and, clinging to her arm,
bid her help him in doors.
Claude never showed even that she
was hurt, but bore his taunts and peevish remarks
patiently, always with the same grave, calm pale face.
But in the solitude of her own room, or when clasped
in Mary’s arms, she sobbed wildly at times to
relieve her overladen breast.
Trevithick had his legal business
to transact at the Fort, but he never resented the
sneers and snarls of its owner, who was constantly
making allusions as to the probable length of his
bill.
“And I deserve it all, Mary,
dear,” Trevithick used to say. “I
could do it all by means of letters, except when I
wanted a signature witnessed; but of course I sha’n’t
charge.”
“But why do you come?”
asked Mary demurely; “I’m sure this place
is miserable enough. It’s a perfect purgatory.”
“For shame!” he said,
with a quiet, happy smile; “why, its a perfect
paradise, dear, and unless I’m very hard at work,
I’m wretched unless I’m here. Mary,
dear?”
“Yes.”
“When is it to be?”
“What?”
“Our wedding.”
“How can you ask me such a thing?
As if I could ever think of leaving poor Claude.
And besides, after such a lesson upon what matrimony
really is, I wonder that you should ever renew the
subject.”
“No, you don’t, dear,”
he said, gaining possession of the little white hand,
which pretended to escape, and then resigned itself
to its fate, while Trevithick’s countenance
told how truthful were his words.
“Tell me when it shall be,” he said in
a whisper.
“When I can see Claude happy. John,
couldn’t she have a divorce?”
“For what reason?”
“Because she does not love him;
and the way in which he treats her with his horrid
jealousy is maddening.”
“That’s no reason.”
“No reason? Why, I thought
people could be divorced if they could prove cruelty.”
“Yes legal cruelty. No, my
dear, jealousy and suspicion will not do.”
“Why did you come over to-day?”
“Business. I had to see
old Mrs Sarson at the cottage where Mr Lisle lodges.
She’s ill.”
“What for? You are not a doctor.”
“No,” he said, with a
chuckle, “but about her affairs. She thinks
it time to make a will and arrange about her savings.
Curious old body.”
“Why?”
“Troubled with poor Mr Gartram’s complaint.”
“What do you mean?”
“Distrust. She has all
her savings hoarded up, and next time I go she has
promised to place them in my hands for investment.”
“Don’t talk about that.
I hate the very name of money. I wish poor
Claude hadn’t a shilling, and we were both free
girls, able to do what we liked.”
Trevithick laughed.
“How can you be so cruel, sir?”
cried Mary. “Oh, John, dear, that man
is killing poor Claude. Seriously, can’t
you discover some way to separate them?”
Trevithick shook his head.
“Then Claude will separate herself.”
“I wish she could. But how?” said
Trevithick, with a sigh.
“By dying.”
“What?”
“Yes,” said Mary, with
the tears in her eyes. “I can see beneath
all that calm, patient way of hers. Her heart
is broken, John; and before six months are over she
will ”
Poor Mary could not finish, but sank
upon her knees at Trevithick’s feet, laid her
face in her hands, and sobbed as if her heart would
break.