TOWARD six o’clock the next
morning, the light pouring in on her face awoke Magdalen
in the bedroom in Rosemary Lane.
She started from her deep, dreamless
repose of the past night with that painful sense of
bewilderment, on first waking, which is familiar to
all sleepers in strange beds. “Norah!”
she called out mechanically, when she opened her eyes.
The next instant her mind roused itself, and her senses
told her the truth. She looked round the miserable
room with a loathing recognition of it. The sordid
contrast which the place presented to all that she
had been accustomed to see in her own bed-chamber the
practical abandonment, implied in its scanty furniture,
of those elegant purities of personal habit to which
she had been accustomed from her childhood shocked
that sense of bodily self-respect in Magdalen which
is a refined woman’s second nature. Contemptible
as the influence seemed, when compared with her situation
at that moment, the bare sight of the jug and basin
in a corner of the room decided her first resolution
when she woke. She determined, then and there,
to leave Rosemary Lane.
How was she to leave it? With
Captain Wragge, or without him?
She dressed herself, with a dainty
shrinking from everything in the room which her hands
or her clothes touched in the process, and then opened
the window. The autumn air felt keen and sweet;
and the little patch of sky that she could see was
warmly bright already with the new sunlight.
Distant voices of bargemen on the river, and the chirping
of birds among the weeds which topped the old city
wall, were the only sounds that broke the morning
silence. She sat down by the window; and searched
her mind for the thoughts which she had lost, when
weariness overcame her on the night before.
The first subject to which she returned
was the vagabond subject of Captain Wragge.
The “moral agriculturist”
had failed to remove her personal distrust of him,
cunningly as he had tried to plead against it by openly
confessing the impostures that he had practiced
on others. He had raised her opinion of his abilities;
he had amused her by his humor; he had astonished
her by his assurance; but he had left her original
conviction that he was a Rogue exactly where it was
when he first met with her. If the one design
then in her mind had been the design of going on the
stage, she would, at all hazards, have rejected the
more than doubtful assistance of Captain Wragge on
the spot.
But the perilous journey on which
she had now adventured herself had another end in
view an end, dark and distant an
end, with pitfalls hidden on the way to it, far other
than the shallow pitfalls on the way to the stage.
In the mysterious stillness of the morning, her mind
looked on to its second and its deeper design, and
the despicable figure of the swindler rose before
her in a new view.
She tried to shut him out to
feel above him and beyond him again, as she had felt
up to this time.
After a little trifling with her dress,
she took from her bosom the white silk bag which her
own hands had made on the farewell night at Combe-Raven.
It drew together at the mouth with delicate silken
strings. The first thing she took out, on opening
it, was a lock of Frank’s hair, tied with a
morsel of silver thread; the next was a sheet of paper
containing the extracts which she had copied from her
father’s will and her father’s letter;
the last was a closely-folded packet of bank-notes,
to the value of nearly two hundred pounds the
produce (as Miss Garth had rightly conjectured) of
the sale of her jewelry and her dresses, in which
the servant at the boarding-school had privately assisted
her. She put back the notes at once, without
a second glance at them, and then sat looking thoughtfully
at the lock of hair as it lay on her lap. “You
are better than nothing,” she said, speaking
to it with a girl’s fanciful tenderness.
“I can sit and look at you sometimes, till I
almost think I am looking at Frank. Oh, my darling!
my darling!” Her voice faltered softly, and
she put the lock of hair, with a languid gentleness,
to her lips. It fell from her fingers into her
bosom. A lovely tinge of color rose on her cheeks,
and spread downward to her neck, as if it followed
the falling hair. She closed her eyes, and let
her fair head droop softly. The world passed from
her; and, for one enchanted moment, Love opened the
gates of Paradise to the daughter of Eve.
The trivial noises in the neighboring
street, gathering in number as the morning advanced,
forced her back to the hard realities of the passing
time. She raised her head with a heavy sigh, and
opened her eyes once more on the mean and miserable
little room.
The extracts from the will and the
letter those last memorials of her father,
now so closely associated with the purpose which had
possession of her mind still lay before
her. The transient color faded from her face,
as she spread the little manuscript open on her lap.
The extracts from the will stood highest on the page;
they were limited to those few touching words in which
the dead father begged his children’s forgiveness
for the stain on their birth, and implored them to
remember the untiring love and care by which he had
striven to atone for it. The extract from the
letter to Mr. Pendril came next. She read the
last melancholy sentences aloud to herself: “For
God’s sake come on the day when you receive
this come and relieve me from the dreadful
thought that my two darling girls are at this moment
unprovided for. If anything happened to me, and
if my desire to do their mother justice ended (through
my miserable ignorance of the law) in leaving Norah
and Magdalen disinherited, I should not rest in my
grave!” Under these lines again, and close at
the bottom of the page, was written the terrible commentary
on that letter which had fallen from Mr. Pendril’s
lips: “Mr. Vanstone’s daughters are
Nobody’s Children, and the law leaves them helpless
at their uncle’s mercy.”
Helpless when those words were spoken helpless
still, after all that she had resolved, after all
that she had sacrificed. The assertion of her
natural rights and her sister’s, sanctioned by
the direct expression of her father’s last wishes;
the recall of Frank from China; the justification
of her desertion of Norah all hung on her
desperate purpose of recovering the lost inheritance,
at any risk, from the man who had beggared and insulted
his brother’s children. And that man was
still a shadow to her! So little did she know
of him that she was even ignorant at that moment of
his place of abode.
She rose and paced the room with the
noiseless, negligent grace of a wild creature of the
forest in its cage. “How can I reach him
in the dark?” she said to herself. “How
can I find out ?” She stopped suddenly.
Before the question had shaped itself to an end in
her thoughts, Captain Wragge was back in her mind
again.
A man well used to working in the
dark; a man with endless resources of audacity and
cunning; a man who would hesitate at no mean employment
that could be offered to him, if it was employment
that filled his pockets was this the instrument
for which, in its present need, her hand was waiting?
Two of the necessities to be met, before she could
take a single step in advance, were plainly present
to her the necessity of knowing more of
her father’s brother than she knew now; and
the necessity of throwing him off his guard by concealing
herself personally during the process of inquiry.
Resolutely self-dependent as she was, the inevitable
spy’s work at the outset must be work delegated
to another. In her position, was there any ready
human creature within reach but the vagabond downstairs?
Not one. She thought of it anxiously, she thought
of it long. Not one! There the choice was,
steadily confronting her: the choice of taking
the Rogue, or of turning her back on the Purpose.
She paused in the middle of the room.
“What can he do at his worst?” she said
to herself. “Cheat me. Well! if my
money governs him for me, what then? Let him
have my money!” She returned mechanically to
her place by the window. A moment more decided
her. A moment more, and she took the first fatal
step downward-she determined to face the risk, and
try Captain Wragge.
At nine o’clock the landlady
knocked at Magdalen’s door, and informed her
(with the captain’s kind compliments) that breakfast
was ready.
She found Mrs. Wragge alone, attired
in a voluminous brown holland wrapper, with a limp
cape and a trimming of dingy pink ribbon. The
ex-waitress at Darch’s Dining-rooms was absorbed
in the contemplation of a large dish, containing a
leathery-looking substance of a mottled yellow color,
profusely sprinkled with little black spots.
“There it is!” said Mrs.
Wragge. “Omelette with herbs. The landlady
helped me. And that’s what we’ve made
of it. Don’t you ask the captain for any
when he comes in don’t, there’s
a good soul. It isn’t nice. We had
some accidents with it. It’s been under
the grate. It’s been spilled on the stairs.
It’s scalded the landlady’s youngest boy he
went and sat on it. Bless you, it isn’t
half as nice as it looks! Don’t you ask
for any. Perhaps he won’t notice if you
say nothing about it. What do you think of my
wrapper? I should so like to have a white one.
Have you got a white one? How is it trimmed?
Do tell me!”
The formidable entrance of the captain
suspended the next question on her lips. Fortunately
for Mrs. Wragge, her husband was far too anxious for
the promised expression of Magdalen’s decision
to pay his customary attention to questions of cookery.
When breakfast was over, he dismissed Mrs. Wragge,
and merely referred to the omelette by telling her
that she had his full permission to “give it
to the dogs.”
“How does my little proposal
look by daylight?” he asked, placing chairs
for Magdalen and himself. “Which is it to
be: ’Captain Wragge, take charge of me?’
or, ‘Captain Wragge, good-morning?’”
“You shall hear directly,”
replied Magdalen. “I have something to say
first. I told you, last night, that I had another
object in view besides the object of earning my living
on the stage ”
“I beg your pardon,” interposed
Captain Wragge. “Did you say, earning your
living?”
“Certainly. Both my sister
and myself must depend on our own exertions to gain
our daily bread.”
“What!!!” cried the captain,
starting to his feet. “The daughters of
my wealthy and lamented relative by marriage reduced
to earn their own living? Impossible wildly,
extravagantly impossible!” He sat down again,
and looked at Magdalen as if she had inflicted a personal
injury on him.
“You are not acquainted with
the full extent of our misfortune,” she said,
quietly. “I will tell you what has happened
before I go any further.” She told him
at once, in the plainest terms she could find, and
with as few details as possible.
Captain Wragge’s profound bewilderment
left him conscious of but one distinct result produced
by the narrative on his own mind. The lawyer’s
offer of Fifty Pounds Reward for the missing young
lady ascended instantly to a place in his estimation
which it had never occupied until that moment.
“Do I understand,” he
inquired, “that you are entirely deprived of
present resources?”
“I have sold my jewelry and
my dresses,” said Magdalen, impatient of his
mean harping on the pecuniary string. “If
my want of experience keeps me back in a theater,
I can afford to wait till the stage can afford to
pay me.”
Captain Wragge mentally appraised
the rings, bracelets, and necklaces, the silks, satins,
and laces of the daughter of a gentleman of fortune,
at say, a third of their real value.
In a moment more, the Fifty Pounds Reward suddenly
sank again to the lowest depths in the deep estimation
of this judicious man.
“Just so,” he said, in
his most business-like manner. “There is
not the least fear, my dear girl, of your being kept
back in a theater, if you possess present resources,
and if you profit by my assistance.”
“I must accept more assistance
than you have already offered or none,”
said Magdalen. “I have more serious difficulties
before me than the difficulty of leaving York, and
the difficulty of finding my way to the stage.”
“You don’t say so!
I am all attention; pray explain yourself!”
She considered her next words carefully
before they passed her lips.
“There are certain inquiries,”
she said, “which I am interested in making.
If I undertook them myself, I should excite the suspicion
of the person inquired after, and should learn little
or nothing of what I wish to know. If the inquiries
could be made by a stranger, without my being seen
in the matter, a service would be rendered me of much
greater importance than the service you offered last
night.”
Captain Wragge’s vagabond face
became gravely and deeply attentive.
“May I ask,” he said,
“what the nature of the inquiries is likely to
be?”
Magdalen hesitated. She had necessarily
mentioned Michael Vanstone’s name in informing
the captain of the loss of her inheritance. She
must inevitably mention it to him again if she employed
his services. He would doubtless discover it
for himself, by a plain process of inference, before
she said many words more, frame them as carefully as
she might. Under these circumstances, was there
any intelligible reason for shrinking from direct
reference to Michael Vanstone? No intelligible
reason and yet she shrank.
“For instance,” pursued
Captain Wragge, “are they inquiries about a man
or a woman; inquiries about an enemy or a friend ?”
“An enemy,” she answered, quickly.
Her reply might still have kept the
captain in the dark but her eyes enlightened
him. “Michael Vanstone!” thought the
wary Wragge. “She looks dangerous; I’ll
feel my way a little further.”
“With regard, now, to the person
who is the object of these inquiries,” he resumed.
“Are you thoroughly clear in your own mind about
what you want to know?”
“Perfectly clear,” replied
Magdalen. “I want to know where he lives,
to begin with.”
“Yes. And after that?”
“I want to know about his habits;
about who the people are whom he associates with;
about what he does with his money ”
She considered a little. “And one thing
more,” she said; “I want to know whether
there is any woman about his house a relation,
or a housekeeper who has an influence over
him.”
“Harmless enough, so far,” said the captain.
“What next?”
“Nothing. The rest is my secret.”
The clouds on Captain Wragge’s
countenance began to clear away again. He reverted,
with his customary precision, to his customary choice
of alternatives. “These inquiries of hers,”
he thought, “mean one of two things Mischief,
or Money! If it’s Mischief, I’ll slip
through her fingers. If it’s Money, I’ll
make myself useful, with a view to the future.”
Magdalen’s vigilant eyes watched
the progress of his reflections suspiciously.
“Captain Wragge,” she said, “if you
want time to consider, say so plainly.”
“I don’t want a moment,”
replied the captain. “Place your departure
from York, your dramatic career, and your private
inquiries under my care. Here I am, unreservedly
at your disposal. Say the word do you
take me?”
Her heart beat fast; her lips turned
dry but she said the word.
“I do.”
There was a pause. Magdalen sat
silent, struggling with the vague dread of the future
which had been roused in her mind by her own reply.
Captain Wragge, on his side, was apparently absorbed
in the consideration of a new set of alternatives.
His hands descended into his empty pockets, and prophetically
tested their capacity as receptacles for gold and
silver. The brightness of the precious metals
was in his face, the smoothness of the precious metals
was in his voice, as he provided himself with a new
supply of words, and resumed the conversation.
“The next question,” he
said, “is the question of time. Do these
confidential investigations of ours require immediate
attention or can they wait?”
“For the present, they can wait,”
replied Magdalen. “I wish to secure my
freedom from all interference on the part of my friends
before the inquiries are made.”
“Very good. The first step
toward accomplishing that object is to beat our retreat excuse
a professional metaphor from a military man to
beat our retreat from York to-morrow. I see my
way plainly so far; but I am all abroad, as we used
to say in the militia, about my marching orders afterward.
The next direction we take ought to be chosen with
an eye to advancing your dramatic views. I am
all ready, when I know what your views are. How
came you to think of the theater at all? I see
the sacred fire burning in you; tell me, who lit it?”
Magdalen could only answer him in
one way. She could only look back at the days
that were gone forever, and tell him the story of her
first step toward the stage at Evergreen Lodge.
Captain Wragge listened with his usual politeness;
but he evidently derived no satisfactory impression
from what he heard. Audiences of friends were
audiences whom he privately declined to trust; and
the opinion of the stage-manager was the opinion of
a man who spoke with his fee in his pocket and his
eye on a future engagement.
“Interesting, deeply interesting,”
he said, when Magdalen had done. “But not
conclusive to a practical man. A specimen of your
abilities is necessary to enlighten me. I have
been on the stage myself; the comedy of the Rivals
is familiar to me from beginning to end. A sample
is all I want, if you have not forgotten the words a
sample of ‘Lucy,’ and a sample of ‘Julia.’”
“I have not forgotten the words,”
said Magdalen, sorrowfully; “and I have the
little books with me in which my dialogue was written
out. I have never parted with them; they remind
me of a time ” Her lip trembled,
and a pang of the heart-ache silenced her.
“Nervous,” remarked the
captain, indulgently. “Not at all a bad
sign. The greatest actresses on the stage are
nervous. Follow their example, and get over it.
Where are the parts? Oh, here they are! Very
nicely written, and remarkably clean. I’ll
give you the cues it will all be over (as
the dentists say) in no time. Take the back drawing-room
for the stage, and take me for the audience.
Tingle goes the bell; up runs the curtain; order in
the gallery, silence in the pit enter Lucy!”
She tried hard to control herself;
she forced back the sorrow the innocent,
natural, human sorrow for the absent and the dead pleading
hard with her for the tears that she refused.
Resolutely, with cold, clinched hands, she tried to
begin. As the first familiar words passed her
lips, Frank came back to her from the sea, and the
face of her dead father looked at her with the smile
of happy old times. The voices of her mother
and her sister talked gently in the fragrant country
stillness, and the garden-walks at Combe-Raven opened
once more on her view. With a faint, wailing
cry, she dropped into a chair; her head fell forward
on the table, and she burst passionately into tears.
Captain Wragge was on his feet in
a moment. She shuddered as he came near her,
and waved him back vehemently with her hand. “Leave
me!” she said; “leave me a minute by myself!”
The compliant Wragge retired to the front room; looked
out of the window; and whistled under his breath.
“The family spirit again!” he said.
“Complicated by hysterics.”
After waiting a minute or two he returned
to make inquiries.
“Is there anything I can offer
you?” he asked. “Cold water? burned
feathers? smelling salts? medical assistance?
Shall I summon Mrs. Wragge? Shall we put it off
till to-morrow?”
She started up, wild and flushed,
with a desperate s elf-command in her face, with an
angry resolution in her manner.
“No!” she said. “I
must harden myself and I will! Sit
down again and see me act.”
“Bravo!” cried the captain.
“Dash at it, my beauty and it’s
done!”
She dashed at it, with a mad defiance
of herself with a raised voice, and a glow
like fever in her cheeks. All the artless, girlish
charm of the performance in happier and better days
was gone. The native dramatic capacity that was
in her came, hard and bold, to the surface, stripped
of every softening allurement which had once adorned
it. She would have saddened and disappointed
a man with any delicacy of feeling. She absolutely
electrified Captain Wragge. He forgot his politeness,
he forgot his long words. The essential spirit
of the man’s whole vagabond life burst out of
him irresistibly in his first exclamation. “Who
the devil would have thought it? She can
act, after all!” The instant the words escaped
his lips he recovered himself, and glided off into
his ordinary colloquial channels. Magdalen stopped
him in the middle of his first compliment. “No,”
she said; “I have forced the truth out of you
for once. I want no more.”
“Pardon me,” replied the
incorrigible Wragge. “You want a little
instruction; and I am the man to give it you.”
With that answer, he placed a chair
for her, and proceeded to explain himself.
She sat down in silence. A sullen
indifference began to show itself in her manner; her
cheeks turned pale again; and her eyes looked wearily
vacant at the wall before her. Captain Wragge
noticed these signs of heart-sickness and discontent
with herself, after the effort she had made, and saw
the importance of rousing her by speaking, for once,
plainly and directly to the point. She had set
a new value on herself in his mercenary eyes.
She had suggested to him a speculation in her youth,
her beauty, and her marked ability for the stage, which
had never entered his mind until he saw her act.
The old militia-man was quick at his shifts.
He and his plans had both turned right about together
when Magdalen sat down to hear what he had to say.
“Mr. Huxtable’s opinion
is my opinion,” he began. “You are
a born actress. But you must be trained before
you can do anything on the stage. I am disengaged I
am competent I have trained others I
can train you. Don’t trust my word:
trust my eye to my own interests. I’ll
make it my interest to take pains with you, and to
be quick about it. You shall pay me for my instructions
from your profits on the stage. Half your salary
for the first year; a third of your salary for the
second year; and half the sum you clear by your first
benefit in a London theater. What do you say
to that? Have I made it my interest to push you,
or have I not?”
So far as appearances went, and so
far as the stage went, it was plain that he had linked
his interests and Magdalen’s together. She
briefly told him so, and waited to hear more.
“A month or six weeks’
study,” continued the captain, “will give
me a reasonable idea of what you can do best.
All ability runs in grooves; and your groove remains
to be found. We can’t find it here for
we can’t keep you a close prisoner for weeks
together in Rosemary Lane. A quiet country place,
secure from all interference and interruption, is the
place we want for a month certain. Trust my knowledge
of Yorkshire, and consider the place found. I
see no difficulties anywhere, except the difficulty
of beating our retreat to-morrow.”
“I thought your arrangements
were made last night?” said Magdalen.
“Quite right,” rejoined
the captain. “They were made last night;
and here they are. We can’t leave by railway,
because the lawyer’s clerk is sure to be on
the lookout for you at the York terminus. Very
good; we take to the road instead, and leave in our
own carriage. Where the deuce do we get it?
We get it from the landlady’s brother, who has
a horse and chaise which he lets out for hire.
That chaise comes to the end of Rosemary Lane at an
early hour to-morrow morning. I take my wife and
my niece out to show them the beauties of the neighborhood.
We have a picnic hamper with us, which marks our purpose
in the public eye. You disfigure yourself in
a shawl, bonnet, and veil of Mrs. Wragge’s; we
turn our backs on York; and away we drive on a pleasure
trip for the day you and I on the front
seat, Mrs. Wragge and the hamper behind. Good
again. Once on the highroad, what do we do?
Drive to the first station beyond York, northward,
southward, or eastward, as may be hereafter determined.
No lawyer’s clerk is waiting for you there.
You and Mrs. Wragge get out first opening
the hamper at a convenient opportunity. Instead
of containing chickens and Champagne, it contains
a carpet-bag, with the things you want for the night.
You take your tickets for a place previously determined
on, and I take the chaise back to York. Arrived
once more in this house, I collect the luggage left
behind, and send for the woman downstairs. ’Ladies
so charmed with such and such a place (wrong place
of course), that they have determined to stop there.
Pray accept the customary week’s rent, in place
of a week’s warning. Good day.’
Is the clerk looking for me at the York terminus?
Not he. I take my ticket under his very nose;
I follow you with the luggage along your line of railway and
where is the trace left of your departure? Nowhere.
The fairy has vanished; and the legal authorities
are left in the lurch.”
“Why do you talk of difficulties?”
asked Magdalen. “The difficulties seem
to be provided for.”
“All but ONE,” said Captain
Wragge, with an ominous emphasis on the last word.
“The Grand Difficulty of humanity from the cradle
to the grave Money.” He slowly
winked his green eye; sighed with deep feeling; and
buried his insolvent hands in his unproductive pockets.
“What is the money wanted for?” inquired
Magdalen.
“To pay my bills,” replied
the captain, with a touching simplicity. “Pray
understand! I never was and never shall
be personally desirous of paying a single
farthing to any human creature on the habitable globe.
I am speaking in your interest, not in mine.”
“My interest?”
“Certainly. You can’t
get safely away from York to-morrow without the chaise.
And I can’t get the chaise without money.
The landlady’s brother will lend it if he sees
his sister’s bill receipted, and if he gets his
day’s hire beforehand not otherwise.
Allow me to put the transaction in a business light.
We have agreed that I am to be remunerated for my
course of dramatic instruction out of your future earnings
on the stage. Very good. I merely draw on
my future prospects; and you, on whom those prospects
depend, are naturally my banker. For mere argument’s
sake, estimate my share in your first year’s
salary at the totally inadequate value of a hundred
pounds. Halve that sum; quarter that sum ”
“How much do you want?” said Magdalen,
impatiently.
Captain Wragge was sorely tempted
to take the Reward at the top of the handbills as
his basis of calculation. But he felt the vast
future importance of present moderation; and actually
wanting some twelve or thirteen pounds, he merely
doubled the amount, and said, “Five-and-twenty.”
Magdalen took the little bag from
her bosom, and gave him the money, with a contemptuous
wonder at the number of words which he had wasted on
her for the purpose of cheating on so small a scale.
In the old days at Combe-Raven, five-and-twenty pounds
flowed from a stroke of her father’s pen into
the hands of any one in the house who chose to ask
for it.
Captain Wragge’s eyes dwelt
on the little bag as the eyes of lovers dwell on their
mistresses. “Happy bag!” he murmured,
as she put it back in her bosom. He rose; dived
into a corner of the room; produced his neat dispatch-box;
and solemnly unlocked it on the table between Magdalen
and himself.
“The nature of the man, my dear
girl the nature of the man,” he said,
opening one of his plump little books bound in calf
and vellum. “A transaction has taken place
between us. I must have it down in black and
white.” He opened the book at a blank page,
and wrote at the top, in a fine mercantile hand:
"Miss Vanstone, the Younger: In account with
Horatio Wragge, late o f the Royal Militia. Dr. Cr.
Septh, 1846. Dr.: To estimated value
of H. Wragge’s interest in Miss V.’s first
year’s salary say 200 pounds.
Cr. By paid on account, 25 pounds." Having
completed the entry and having also shown,
by doubling his original estimate on the Debtor side,
that Magdalen’s easy compliance with his demand
on her had not been thrown away on him the
captain pressed his blotting-paper over the wet ink,
and put away the book with the air of a man who had
done a virtuous action, and who was above boasting
about it.
“Excuse me for leaving you abruptly,”
he said. “Time is of importance; I must
make sure of the chaise. If Mrs. Wragge comes
in, tell her nothing she is not sharp enough
to be trusted. If she presumes to ask questions,
extinguish her immediately. You have only to be
loud. Pray take my authority into your own hands,
and be as loud with Mrs. Wragge as I am!” He
snatched up his tall hat, bowed, smiled, and tripped
out of the room.
Sensible of little else but of the
relief of being alone; feeling no more distinct impression
than the vague sense of some serious change having
taken place in herself and her position, Magdalen let
the events of the morning come and go like shadows
on her mind, and waited wearily for what the day might
bring forth. After the lapse of some time, the
door opened softly. The giant figure of Mrs. Wragge
stalked into the room, and stopped opposite Magdalen
in solemn astonishment.
“Where are your Things?”
asked Mrs. Wragge, with a burst of incontrollable
anxiety. “I’ve been upstairs looking
in your drawers. Where are your night-gowns and
night-caps? and your petticoats and stockings? and
your hair-pins and bear’s grease, and all the
rest of it?”
“My luggage is left at the railway
station,” said Magdalen.
Mrs. Wragge’s moon-face brightened
dimly. The ineradicable female instinct of Curiosity
tried to sparkle in her faded blue eyes flickered
piteously and died out.
“How much luggage?” she
asked, confidentially. “The captain’s
gone out. Let’s go and get it!”
“Mrs. Wragge!” cried a terrible voice
at the door.
For the first time in Magdalen’s
experience, Mrs. Wragge was deaf to the customary
stimulant. She actually ventured on a feeble remonstrance
in the presence of her husband.
“Oh, do let her have her Things!”
pleaded Mrs. Wragge. “Oh, poor soul, do
let her have her Things!”
The captain’s inexorable forefinger
pointed to a corner of the room dropped
slowly as his wife retired before it and
suddenly stopped at the region of her shoes.
“Do I hear a clapping on the
floor!” exclaimed Captain Wragge, with an expression
of horror. “Yes; I do. Down at heel
again! The left shoe this time. Pull it
up, Mrs. Wragge! pull it up! The chaise
will be here to-morrow morning at nine o’clock,”
he continued, addressing Magdalen. “We
can’t possibly venture on claiming your box.
There is note-paper. Write down a list of the
necessaries you want. I will take it myself to
the shop, pay the bill for you, and bring back the
parcel. We must sacrifice the box we
must, indeed.”
While her husband was addressing Magdalen,
Mrs. Wragge had stolen out again from her corner,
and had ventured near enough to the captain to hear
the words “shop” and “parcel.”
She clapped her great hands together in ungovernable
excitement, and lost all control over herself immediately.
“Oh, if it’s shopping,
let me do it!” cried Mrs. Wragge. “She’s
going out to buy her Things! Oh, let me go with
her please let me go with her!”
“Sit down!” shouted the
captain. “Straight! more to the right more
still. Stop where you are!”
Mrs. Wragge crossed her helpless hands
on her lap, and melted meekly into tears.
“I do so like shopping,”
pleaded the poor creature; “and I get so little
of it now!”
Magdalen completed her list; and Captain
Wragge at once left the room with it. “Don’t
let my wife bore you,” he said, pleasantly, as
he went out. “Cut her short, poor soul cut
her short!”
“Don’t cry,” said
Magdalen, trying to comfort Mrs. Wragge by patting
her on the shoulder. “When the parcel comes
back you shall open it.”
“Thank you, my dear,”
said Mrs. Wragge, meekly, drying her eyes; “thank
you kindly. Don’t notice my handkerchief,
please. It’s such a very little one!
I had a nice lot of them once, with lace borders.
They’re all gone now. Never mind!
It will comfort me to unpack your Things. You’re
very good to me. I like you. I say you
won’t be angry, will you? Give us a kiss.”
Magdalen stooped over her with the
frank grace and gentleness of past days, and touched
her faded cheek. “Let me do something harmless!”
she thought, with a pang at her heart “oh
let me do something innocent and kind for the sake
of old times!”
She felt her eyes moistening, and silently turned
away.
That night no rest came to her.
That night the roused forces of Good and Evil fought
their terrible fight for her soul and left
the strife between them still in suspense when morning
came. As the clock of York Minster struck nine,
she followed Mrs. Wragge to the chaise, and took her
seat by the captain’s side. In a quarter
of an hour more York was in the distance, and the
highroad lay bright and open before them in the morning
sunlight.
THE END OF THE SECOND SCENE.