There was a scene one day at the Fort
when, after finishing the business in connection with
a heavy sum which had been raised to pay over to Gellow,
the lawyer had taken upon himself to suggest that it
was not fair to his old client’s daughter that
such a heavy drain should be kept up on the fortune
she had brought him.
This was sufficient to send Glyddyr
into a fit of passion, with the result that Trevithick
was ordered to give up all charge of the estate for
the future, and hand his papers over to another solicitor,
who was named.
“Very good, Mr Glyddyr,”
said the lawyer quietly. “As far as you
have claims I will do so; but I must remind you that
I am your wife’s trustee, and even if she wished
to obey you, I cannot be ousted from that.”
Claude suffered bitterly for this
when the lawyer was gone, but she forbore to speak.
She felt that she was forced to give up the hints
and friendly counsel of one whom her father trusted,
and she trembled lest there should be a breach with
regard to Mary, and that she should lose her.
Sarah Woodham had been abused and insulted almost
beyond bearing a hundred times, and ordered to go,
but she always smiled sadly in Claude’s face
afterwards.
“Don’t you be afraid,
my dear,” she used to say. “Let him
say what he will, I’ll never leave you.”
One day Sarah Woodham entered the
room to find Mary in tears, but as they were hastily
dried, they were ignored.
“I beg pardon, miss; I thought Mr Trevithick
was here.”
“Why should you think that?”
“Because I saw him at the hotel half-an-hour
ago.”
“No; he has not been, and is
not likely to come after such treatment as he received
from Mr Glyddyr a fortnight ago.”
“Going out, miss?” said
Sarah, as she saw Mary beginning to dress hurriedly.
“Yes. Where is your master in
the garden?”
“No, miss. He has gone down to the quarry.”
“With your mistress?”
“No, Miss Mary. She is in the garden.”
Mary shuddered as she thought of the
future, and of Glyddyr’s recovery of his health.
“Are you cold, Miss Mary?” said Woodham
earnestly.
“Yes I mean no. That is nothing.
If Miss Claude ”
She stopped short.
“I mean, if your mistress calls
for me, say I have gone for a walk. No, no,
no,” she cried passionately. “I must
not go. If he knew that I had been out, it would
cause trouble.”
Sarah Woodham sighed. The words were incontrovertible.
Mary began to take off her things,
but changed her mind and put them on again.
“I will go. I must see
him,” she said. “You shall go with
me, Sarah. It would not look so then would
it?”
“I think, as Mr Trevithick cannot
come here now, you have a perfect right to go and
see him.”
“Mr Trevithick!” cried
Mary, with her face aflame; “why do you say
that? I did not speak of going to see Mr Trevithick.”
“No, Miss Mary no,
my dear; but do you think I did not know. And
I’m very, very glad.”
Mary was looking at her with flashing
eyes, but the flames were put out by her tears, and
she caught and pressed Sarah’s hand.
“You don’t seem like a
servant to us,” she whispered quickly.
“Come with me, please.”
Five minutes later they were on their
way down the slope to the beach, with Mary trembling
at what she thought was her daring behaviour; and as
she walked on everybody she passed seemed to know where
she was going, and to crown her confusion, just as
they were nearing Mrs Sarson’s, Chris Lisle
came out, nodded to her, changing colour a little,
and was about to pass her, but he stopped short.
It was the first time they had met for months.
“Will you shake hands, Mary?” he said,
raising his own hesitatingly.
“You know I will,” she
cried eagerly, as she placed hers in his, glad of
the relief from her thoughts.
“I am very, very glad to speak
to you again, dear,” he said, in a subdued way.
“You look so well, too, with that colour.
There, I will not keep you. Perhaps some day
we may meet again, and be able to have a friendly
chat. Good-bye!”
He walked hurriedly away, and the tears rose to her
eyes.
“Poor dear Chris!” she
said. “I always seemed to love him as if
he were my brother.”
“Who could help liking him, Miss Mary?”
“Sarah?”
“Yes, miss. You were speaking
aloud. Ah! poor lad, we don’t often see
him about now. Look, miss; Mr Trevithick.”
Mary had already seen the lawyer as
he stepped out of the hotel and came towards them
slowly, till he appeared to see them suddenly, when
he turned sharply upon his heel and went back to the
hotel.
Mary crimsoned with mortification,
and then felt as if she would sink beneath the weight
of her misery. Nearly a fortnight had passed,
and her lover had made no sign; and now, when they
were on the point of meeting, he had openly avoided
her.
Mary’s heart felt as if it sank
down into the darkness. There could be but one
interpretation, she said. He had repented of
the engagement, and his eyes had been opened to what
a poor, misshapen little thing she was.
“Sarah!” she whispered
hoarsely, “I cannot see where I am going; please
take me home quickly, so that I am not ”
“No, no, my dear, let’s
walk up here first and over the bridge into the glen.
You are too agitated to be seen. Try and be
firm, my dear try and be firm.”
Totally unnerved, the poor girl clung
to the sturdy woman by her side, and readily allowed
her to guide her right away up into the calm, silent
glen, where, making a sign, she let Sarah Woodham assist
her to one of the detached rocks, where she sat down
to let her tears of misery have full vent.
“And I was so happy,”
she moaned at last, as she looked up piteously in
Sarah Woodham’s face. “Is there real
happiness, Sarah, for poor creatures such as we?
Life appears to be all misery and care.”
It was only about the third walk that
Glyddyr had taken alone, and he left home reluctantly,
and with a shadow as it were following every step.
“I oughtn’t to have gone
and left her,” he muttered. “It’s
of no use trying to deceive myself; all that quiet,
calm way means something, and I’m sure they
meet I could swear it. She never dares
to look me straight in the face. I won’t
stay away long. I won’t stay here long
either. I see him; he’s always hanging
about trying to catch sight of her. Does he
think I’m blind? I know! I know!”
He walked on hurriedly toward the
quarry, but he had over-rated his strength, and grinding
his teeth with rage, he sat down and began to wipe
his wet brow.
“This cursed weakness,”
he groaned. “But I’m stronger and
better now. If I could have a drop of brandy
now and then not much I should
soon be all right.”
“Yes,” he said, after
a pause, during which he had been looking nervously
round, “I’ll go away and take her on the
Continent for our wedding trip. In another week
I shall be strong and well enough, and we’ll
go away, and Chris Lisle may grind his teeth, and say
the grapes are sour.
“I wonder whether they ever
have met while I was so ill and at my worst?
He knows the way. He was found in the grounds
that night. Would she dare?
“No, no,” he muttered,
after a long pause. “She wouldn’t
dare, but he might persuade her. Curse him!
Why does he stay in the place?
“There, there; this won’t
do. I’m getting hot and excited, and I
can’t bear it yet. I’ll go on now
and see what the scoundrels are doing with the stones.
I know they rob me because I’m ill and don’t
understand the trade; but I’ll startle some
of them.
“Now, then, I’m better
now. The old strength’s coming back, and No,”
he cried, with a whine of misery, “I can’t
go on. If I go there it will seem as if he’s
back and at my elbow always. It’s bad enough
at home. He seems to haunt the cursed place,
and I’m always fancying he’s there.
That doctor does me no good; no good. I want
strength, strength. There, I’ll go back.”
He was so weak that, short as the
distance was, he was well-nigh spent, and had to sit
down twice. But as he reached the end of the
hollow road, overshadowed by trees, and came out in
the open, where he could see the sea and feel the
cool breeze, he recovered himself.
“Yes, there she lies,”
he said, as he let his eyes rest upon his yacht.
“What a time since I have been aboard!
Yes, why not at once? We’ll go to-morrow
and sail across to France, and coast down to the Pyrénées.
Get away from here; curse the place. It will
be long before I come back.”
He panted a little as he turned up
the slope and passed through the gateway, to pause
on the terrace, and look once more upon the yacht,
as she lay about a quarter of a mile from where he
stood.
“I was a fool not to think of
it before. Get her right away; she daren’t
refuse. No, no; not so bad as that. She
wouldn’t have dared. And yet it would have
been so easy while I was lying by.”
He entered the hall with curious thoughts
buzzing through his brain.
“A miserable, puling, white-faced
thing! Where is she? I’ll tell her
to get ready. We will go to-morrow.”
He went into the drawing-room, but
Claude was not there, and in an instant suspicion
was master of his brain. Where was she?
He crossed the room and looked out
through the open window, but no Claude. Then,
hurrying to the dining-room, he saw that she was not
there.
As he came out, he caught sight of
a skirt just passing through a swing-door, and he
dashed after it.
It was one of the maids.
“Here,” he said, in a half-whisper.
“Your mistress upstairs?”
“No, sir. In the library, I think.
A gentleman came.”
“That’ll do,” he said sharply.
“No; stop. Where is Miss Mary?”
“Gone out, sir, with Mrs Woodham.”
He turned quickly and swung to the
door, with a look in his face that was diabolical.
“Gun pistol?”
he muttered. “No, no; not that not
murder. Better revenge. Lot of the money’s
mine. Free, free! Let him take her let
him curse him! I wish I was strong
once more.”
As if impelled by the wave of passion
that came over him, he walked quickly to the library
door, and as he reached it, he heard a peculiar clang,
as of the closing of the book-shelf doors which screened
the iron safe.
A peculiar look of rage and cunning
distorted his face; and, twisting the handle round,
he threw open the door and rushed in, as, with her
face wild from excitement, Claude turned towards him.
“Hah!” he cried, with
a look of fierce triumph, as he caught her by the
wrist, “I’ve come back.” And
he uttered a low laugh as he pointed to the great
safe.
Claude tried to speak, but no words
would come, and she clung to the hand which held her
to keep herself from falling.
“Didn’t expect me back, eh? Didn’t
expect me back?”
“Come away quick; come away!”
panted Claude, in a voice hardly above a whisper.
“Yes, of course,” he snarled,
as he held her at arm’s-length, nearly fainting
from terror and agony. “Come away, so as
not to disturb our dear Chris!”
Claude looked at him wildly.
“Parry Glyddyr!” she cried,
as a look of horror dilated her eyes, and she tried
to cling to him and push him towards the door, for
no further words words would come.
“Yes! Parry Glyddyr, your
lawful husband,” he yelled. “Found
out at last!”