THE TENTH NIGHT.
“It might be,” thought
Capel, as he dwelt upon the adventure of that night.
Katrine had descended to breakfast
the next morning, and he fancied she blushed slightly
as he pressed her hand; but she looked so frankly in
his face that he could not but think that she was ignorant
of what had taken place.
The days slipped by, and in company,
by a private understanding, Capel and the old lawyer
searched every article of furniture that could possibly
have been made the receptacle of the lost treasure.
“I’ll help you, of course,
my dear sir,” said the old man, “if you
wish it; but I really think we shall do no good.”
There had been several talks about
breaking up the party, but Capel, as host, had always
begged that his companions would stay, urging Mr Girtle
to back him up by proposing that there should be no
change until the whole of the business of the will
was completed so far as the others were concerned.
“I shall find my share at last,”
Capel said, laughingly.“And besides,
I have the house.”
One afternoon, when Artis had accompanied
the ladies for a drive, and the search was about to
be recommenced, Mr Girtle sat down by his little table
in the drawing-room and said:
“I have a little news for you, Mr Capel.”
“What, have you found the clue?”
“Not yet,” said the old man, quietly;
“but I have found an angel.”
“A what?”
“An angel.You did not know we had one
in this house.”
“Indeed, but I did,” cried Capel.
“Ah, yes,” said the old
man, looking at him thoughtfully; “but I’m
afraid we are not thinking of the same.”
“Indeed, but we are,”
said Capel, warmly.“No one who has seen
Miss D’Enghien ”
“Could hesitate to say that
she is a very handsome woman,” said the old
lawyer, “but I was referring to Miss Lawrence.”
“A lady for whom I entertain
the most profound esteem,” said Capel.
“Which will be strengthened,
sir, when I tell you that she came to me and made
a proposition that ”
The old lawyer’s communication
was checked by the announcement of a visitor for Mr
Capel, and the doctor, Mr Heston, was ushered in.
His visit was not productive of much,
for he had only to announce that he was more and more
sure in his own mind that he was right, the result
being that Capel asked him to wait before taking any
further steps, and Dr Heston went away rather dissatisfied
in his own mind.
“If he does not follow up my
proposals,” he said to himself, “I shall
begin to think that he has some reason of his own for
keeping the matter quiet.”
The ladies returned directly the doctor
had gone, and Artis, in pursuance of his instructions,
made himself so agreeable to Capel that he did not
leave him alone with the old lawyer, while at dinner
and during the evening no opportunity was likely to
occur for a private conversation.
“I’ll see you directly
after breakfast to-morrow morning, Mr Capel,”
the old man said.“I should prefer a quiet
business chat with you, for the matter is important.”
“I should like to have heard
it at once,” replied Capel, “but as you
will.”
Suspicion was very busy in the Dark
House in those days, for the butler had found that
for several nights past chamber candles had been burned
down in the sockets in one of the candlesticks, which
candlestick was left in the drawing-room, while a
tall candlestick was afterwards taken up to the bedroom.
Preenham wanted to know why Mr Capel,
“or the young master,” as he termed him,
should want to sit up so late, so he watched, and saw
that, night after night, he stayed down in the drawing-room
for hours.But he found out nothing, only that
the cold struck, even through the mat, from the stone
floor, and that he was chilly enough, when he went
to bed in his pantry, to require a liqueur of brandy
to keep off rheumatism and similar attacks.
For Capel had remained up after the
others had gone, night after night; blaming himself
for behaving in an unfair, unmanly spirit, but unable
to control the impulse which led him to long for such
another adventure as on that special night.
But after a long day, night watches
grow wearisome to the most ardent lovers, and when,
after nine nights spent in expectancy, there was no
result no soft, gliding step heard upon
stair or floor, both Capel and Preenham grew weary,
and retired to their couches like the rest.
It was on the tenth night that Capel,
instead of going to bed at once, sat musing over the
old lawyer’s words.
Then he began thinking of the doctor’s
visit, and at last, taking out his watch, he saw it
was close upon two.
The hour made him think of the night
when he had encountered Katrine just at that time,
and moved by some impulse, he knew not what, he went
to his door, softly opened it, and gazed out on to
the gloomy staircase, where all was silent as the
grave.
No!There was the faint creak
of a hinge that had been opened, and, with his heart
seeming to stand still, Capel stood in the darkness
listening, till, utterly wearied, he was about to close
his door, when, so softly that he could hardly distinguish
the sweep of the dress, something passed him, going
straight to the stairs, and then he could just hear
whoever it was descend.