I stood before Shuttleworth angry and defiant.
I had crossed to Sylvia and had taken her soft hand.
“I really cannot see, sir, by
what right you interfere between us!” I cried,
looking at him narrowly. “You forbid!
What do I care why, pray, should you forbid
my actions?”
“I forbid,” repeated the
thin-faced clergyman, “because I have a right a
right which one day will be made quite plain to you.”
“Ah! Mr. Shuttleworth,”
gasped Sylvia, now pale as death, “what are
you saying?”
“The truth, my child. You
know too well that, for you, love and marriage are
forbidden,” he exclaimed, looking at her meaningly.
She sighed, and her tiny hand trembled
within my grasp. Her mouth trembled, and I saw
that tears were welling in her eyes.
“Ah! yes,” she cried hoarsely
a moment later. “I know, alas! that I am
not like other women. About me there have been
forged bonds of steel bonds which I can
never break.”
“Only by one means,” interrupted
Shuttleworth, terribly calm and composed.
“No, no!” she protested
quickly, covering her face with her hands as though
in shame. “Not that never that!
Do not let us speak of it!”
“Then you have no right to accept
this man’s love,” he said reproachfully,
“no right to allow him to approach nearer the
brink of the grave than he has done. You know
full well that, for him, your love must prove fatal!”
She hung her head as though not daring
to look again into my eyes. The strange clergyman’s
stern rebuke had utterly confused and confounded her.
Yet I knew she loved me dearly. That sweet, intense
love-look of hers an hour ago could never be feigned.
It spoke far more truly than mere words.
Perhaps she was annoyed that I had
told Shuttleworth the truth. Yes, I had acted
very foolishly. My tongue had loosened involuntarily.
My wild joy had led me into an injudicious confession one
that I had never dreamed would be fraught with sorrow.
“Mr. Shuttleworth,” I
said at last, “please do not distress yourself
on my account. I love Sylvia, and she has promised
to be mine. If disaster occurs, then I am fully
prepared to meet it. You seem in close touch
with this remarkable association of thieves and assassins,
or you would hardly be so readily aware of their evil
intentions.”
“Ah!” he responded, with
a slight sigh, “you are only speaking in ignorance.
If you were aware of the true facts, you would, on
the contrary, thank me for revealing the peril in
which love for this young lady will assuredly place
you.”
“But have I not already told
you that I am fearless? I am prepared to meet
this mysterious peril, whatever it is, for her sake!”
I protested.
A curious, cynical smile overspread
his grey, ascetic face.
“You speak without knowledge,
my dear sir,” he remarked. “Could
I but reveal the truth, you would quickly withdraw
that assertion. You would, indeed, flee from
this girl as you would from the plague!”
“Well,” I said, “your
words are at least very remarkable, sir. One
would really imagine Miss Pennington to be a hell-fiend from
your denunciation.”
“You mistake me. I make
no denunciation. On the other hand, I am trying
to impress upon you the utter futility of your love.”
“Why should you do that?
What is your motive?” I asked quickly, trying
to discern what could be at the back of this man’s
mind. How strange it was! Hitherto I had
rather liked the tall, quiet, kind-mannered country
rector. Yet he had suddenly set himself out in
open antagonism to my plans to my love!
“My motive,” he declared,
“is to protect the best interests of you both.
I have no ends to serve, save those of humanity, Mr.
Biddulph.”
“You urged Miss Pennington to
make confession to me. You implied that her avowal
of affection was false,” I said, with quick indignation.
“I asked her to confess to
tell you the truth, because I am unable so to do,”
was his slow reply. “Ah! Mr. Biddulph,”
he sighed, “if only the real facts could be
exposed to you if only you could be told
the ghastly, naked truth.”
“Why do you say all this, Mr.
Shuttleworth?” protested Sylvia in a low, pained
voice. “Why should Mr. Biddulph be mystified
further? If you are determined that I should
sacrifice myself well, I am ready.
You have been my friend yet now you seem
to have suddenly turned against me, and treat me as
an enemy.”
“Only as far as this unfortunate
affair is concerned, my child,” he said.
“Remember my position recall all the
past, and put to yourself the question whether I have
not a perfect right to forbid you to sacrifice the
life of a good, honest man like the one before you,”
he said, his clerical drawl becoming more accentuated
as he spoke.
“Rubbish, my dear sir,”
I laughed derisively. “Put aside all this
cant and hypocrisy. It ill becomes you.
Speak out, like a man of the world that you are.
What specific charge do you bring against this lady?
Come, tell me.”
“None,” he replied.
“Evil is done through her not by her.”
And she stood silent, unable to protest.
“But can’t you be more
explicit?” I cried, my anger rising. “If
you make charges, I demand that you shall substantiate
them. Recollect all that I have at stake in this
matter.”
“I know your life,”
he responded. “Well, I have already told
you what to expect.”
“Sylvia,” I said, turning
to the pale girl standing trembling at my side, “will
you not speak? Will you not tell me what all this
means? By what right does this man speak thus?
Has he any right?”
She was silent for a few moments.
Then slowly she nodded her head in an affirmative.
“What right has he to forbid
our affection?” I demanded. “I love
you, and I tell you that no man shall come between
us!”
“He alone has a right, Owen,”
she said, addressing me for the first time by my Christian
name.
“What right?”
But she would not answer. She
merely stood with head downcast, and said
“Ask him.”
This I did, but the thin-faced man
refused to reply. All he would say was
“I have forbidden this fatal
folly, Mr. Biddulph. Please do not let us discuss
it further.”
I confess I was both angry and bewildered.
The mystery was hourly increasing. Sylvia had
admitted that Shuttleworth had a right to interfere.
Yet I could not discern by what right a mere friend
could forbid a girl to entertain affection. I
felt that the ever-increasing problem was even stranger
and more remarkable than I had anticipated, and that
when I fathomed it, it would be found to be utterly
astounding!
Sylvia was unwavering in her attachment
to myself. Her antagonism towards Shuttleworth’s
pronouncement was keen and bitter, yet, with her woman’s
superior judgment, she affected carelessness.
“You asked this lady to confess,”
I said, addressing him. “Confess what?”
“The truth.”
Then I turned to my well-beloved and asked
“What is the truth? Do you love me?”
“Yes, Owen, I do,” was her frank and fervent
response.
“I did not mean that,”
said Shuttleworth hastily. “I meant the
truth concerning yourself.”
“Mr. Biddulph knows what I am.”
“But he does not know who you are.”
“Then you may tell him,”
was her hoarse reply. “Tell him!”
she cried wildly. “Tear from me all that
I hold sacred all that I hold most dear dash
me back into degradation and despair if
you will! I am in your hands.”
“Sylvia!” he said reproachfully.
“I am your friend and your father’s
friend. I am not your enemy. I regret if
you have ever thought I have lifted a finger against
you.”
“Are you not standing as a barrier
between myself and Mr. Biddulph?” she protested,
her eyes flashing.
“Because I see that only misfortune ah!
death can arise. You know full well
the promise I have made. You know, too, what has
been told me in confidence, because because
my profession happens to be what it is a
humble servant of God.”
“Yes,” she faltered, “I
know I know! Forgive me if I have spoken
harshly, Mr. Shuttleworth. I know you are my friend and
you are Owen’s. Only only it
seems very hard that you should thus put this ban
upon us you, who preach the gospel of truth
and love.”
Shuttleworth drew a deep breath.
His thin lips were pursed; his grey eyebrows contracted
slightly, and I saw in his countenance a distinctly
pained expression.
“I have spoken with all good
intention, Sylvia,” he said. “Your
love for Mr. Biddulph must only bring evil upon both
of you. Surely you realize that?”
“Sylvia has already realized
it,” I declared. “But we have resolved
to risk it.”
“The risk is, alas! too great,”
he declared. “Already you are a marked
man. Your only chance of escape is to take Sylvia’s
advice and to go into hiding. Go away into
the country and live in some quiet, remote
village under another name. It is your best mode
of evading disaster. To remain and become the
lover of Sylvia Pennington is, I tell you, the height
of folly it is suicide!”
“Let it be so,” I responded
in quiet defiance. “I will never forsake
the woman I love. Frankly, I suspect a hidden
motive in this suggestion of yours; therefore I refuse
to accept it.”
“Not to save your own life?”
“Not even to save my life. This is surely
my own affair.”
“And hers.”
“I shall protect Sylvia, never
fear. I am not afraid. Let our enemies betray
their presence by sign or word, and I will set myself
out to combat them. They have already those crimes
in Bayswater to account for. And they will take
a good deal of explaining away.”
“Then you really intend to reveal
the secret of that house in Porchester Terrace?”
he asked, not without some apprehension.
“My enemies, you say, intend
to plot and encompass my death. Good! Then
I shall take my own means of vindication. Naturally
I am a quiet, law-abiding man. But if any enemy
rises against me without cause, then I strike out
with a sledgehammer.”
“You are hopeless,” he declared.
“I am, where my love is concerned,”
I admitted. “Sylvia has promised to-day
that she will become my wife. The future is surely
our own affair, Mr. Shuttleworth not yours!”
“And if her father forbids?”
he asked quite quietly, his eyes fixed straight upon
my well-beloved.
“Let me meet him face to face,”
I said in defiance. “He will not interfere
after I have spoken,” I added, with confidence.
“I, perhaps, know more than you believe concerning
him.”
Sylvia started, staring at me, her
face blanched in an instant. The scene was tragic
and painful.
“What do you know?” she asked breathlessly.
“Nothing, dearest, which will
interfere with our love,” I reassured her.
“Your father’s affairs are not yours, and
for his doings you cannot be held responsible.”
She exchanged a quick glance with
Shuttleworth, I noticed.
Then it seemed as though a great weight
were lifted from her mind by my words, for, turning
to me, she smiled sweetly, saying
“Ah! how can I thank you sufficiently?
I am helpless and defenceless. If I only dared,
I could tell you a strange story for surely
mine is as strange as any ever printed in the pages
of fiction. But Mr. Shuttleworth will not permit
it.”
“You may speak if
you deem it wise,” exclaimed the rector in a
strangely altered voice. He seemed much annoyed
at my open defiance. “Mr. Biddulph may
as well, perhaps, know the truth at first as at last.”
“The truth!” I echoed.
“Yes, tell me the truth,” I begged her.
“No,” she cried wildly,
again covering her fair face with her hands.
“No forgive me. I can’t I
can’t!”
“No,” remarked Shuttleworth
in a strange, hard, reproachful tone, and with a cruel,
cynical smile upon his lips. “You cannot for
it is too hideous too disgraceful too
utterly scandalous! It is for that reason I forbid
you to love!”