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<h2> CHAPTER XXIII. The Tress of Hair. </h2>
<p>How to extricate himself from the dilemma in which he was placed, Lord
Roos scarcely knew. But he had a good deal of self-possession, and it did
not desert him on the present trying occasion. After such consideration as
circumstances permitted, he could discern only one chance of escape, and
though well-nigh hopeless, he resolved to adopt it. If consummate audacity
could carry him through—and it was required in the present emergency—he
had no lack of it.</p>
<p>Hitherto, not a word had passed between him and the intruders on his
privacy. Lady Lake seemed to enjoy his confusion too much to do anything
to relieve it, and his wife was obliged to regulate her movements by those
of her mother. Without breaking the silence, which by this time had become
painfully oppressive, he proceeded to deposit the still inanimate person
of the Countess of Exeter upon a couch, and, casting a handkerchief, as if
undesignedly, over her face, he marched quickly up to the spot where Diego
was standing, and said to him, in a deep, determined tone, but so low as
not to be overheard by the others:</p>
<p>"You have betrayed me, villain; and unless you obey me unhesitatingly, and
corroborate all my assertions, however startling they may appear, you
shall pay for your treachery with your life."</p>
<p>This done, he turned towards the two ladies, and with more calmness than
might have been expected, addressed himself to Lady Lake:</p>
<p>"You imagine you have made an important discovery, Madam," he said; "a
discovery which will place me and a noble lady, whose reputation you and
your daughter seek to injure, in great perplexity. And you conclude that,
being completely (as you fancy) in your power, I shall consent to any
terms you and Lady Roos may propose, rather than suffer you to go forth
from this chamber and reveal what you have seen in it. Is it not so,
Madam?"</p>
<p>"Ay, my lord," Lady Lake replied, bitterly. "You have stated the matter
correctly enough, except in one particular. We do not <i>imagine</i> we
have made a discovery; because we are quite sure of it. We do not <i>fancy</i>
you will agree to our terms; because we are certain you will only too
gladly screen yourself and the partner of your guilt from exposure and
disgrace, at any sacrifice. And allow me to observe, that the tone adopted
by your lordship is neither befitting the circumstances in which you are
placed, nor the presence in which you stand. Some sense of shame must at
least be left you—some show of respect (if nothing more) ought to be
observed towards your injured wife. Were I acting alone in this matter, I
would show you and my lady of Exeter no consideration whatever; but I
cannot resist the pleadings of my daughter; and for her sake—and <i>hers</i>
alone—I am content to suspend the blow, unless forced to strike; in
which case, nothing shall stay my hands."</p>
<p>"I thank your ladyship for your clemency," said Lord Roos, with mock
humility.</p>
<p>"O, my dear lord! do not for ever close the door between us!" cried Lady
Roos. "Return to me, and all shall be forgiven."</p>
<p>"Peace, Elizabeth!" exclaimed Lady Lake, impatiently. "Know you not, from
sad experience, that your husband is inaccessible to all gentle entreaty?
His heart is steeled to pity. Solicit not that which is your right, and
which must be conceded, whether he like or not. Let him bend the knee to
you. Let him promise amendment, and implore pardon, and it will then be
for you to consider whether you will extend forgiveness to him."</p>
<p>Lady Roos looked as if she would fain interrupt her mother, but she was
too much under her subjection to offer a remark.</p>
<p>"It is time to undeceive you, Madam," said Lord Roos, wholly unmoved by
what was said. "I am not in the strait you suppose; and have not the
slightest intention of soliciting Lady Roos's pardon, or making any
promise to her."</p>
<p>"O mother! you see that even <i>you</i> fail to move him," said Lady Roos,
tearfully. "What is to happen to me?"</p>
<p>"You will make me chide you, daughter, if you exhibit this weakness,"
cried Lady Lake, angrily. "Let me deal with him. In spite of your affected
confidence, my lord, you cannot be blind to the position in which you
stand. And though you yourself personally may be careless of the
consequences of a refusal of our demands, you cannot, I conceive, be
equally indifferent to the fate of the Countess of Exeter, which that
refusal will decide."</p>
<p>"I am so little indifferent to the safety of the Countess, Madam, that I
cannot sufficiently rejoice that she is out of the reach of your malice."</p>
<p>"How, my lord!" exclaimed Lady Lake, astounded at his assurance. "Out of
reach, when she is here! You cannot mean," she added, with an undefinable
expression of satisfaction, "that she is dead?"</p>
<p>"Dead!" ejaculated Lady Roos; "the Countess dead! I thought she was only
in a swoon."</p>
<p>"What riddle is it you would have us read, my lord?" demanded Lady Lake.</p>
<p>"No riddle whatever, Madam," replied Lord Roos. "I only mean to assert
that the person you behold upon that couch is not the Countess of Exeter."</p>
<p>"Not the Countess!" exclaimed Lady Roos. "Oh, if this were possible! But
no, no! I cannot be deceived."</p>
<p>"I now see the reason why her face has been covered with a 'kerchief,"
cried Lady Lake. "But it shall not save her from our scrutiny."</p>
<p>So saying, she advanced towards the couch, with the intention of removing
the covering, when Lord Roos barred her approach.</p>
<p>"Not a step nearer, Madam," he cried, in a peremptory tone. "I will not
allow you to gratify your curiosity further. You and Lady Roos may make
the most of what you have seen; and proclaim abroad any tale your
imaginations may devise forth. You will only render yourselves ridiculous,
and encounter derision in lieu of sympathy. No one will credit your
assertions, because I shall be able to prove that, at this moment, Lady
Exeter is in a different part of the palace."</p>
<p>"This bold falsehood will not serve your turn, my lord. Whoever she may
be, the person on that couch shall be seized, and we shall then ascertain
the truth."</p>
<p>And she would have moved towards the door, if Lord Roos had not caught
hold of her arm, while at the same time he drew his sword. Thinking from
his fierce looks and menacing gestures that her mother might be sacrificed
to his fury, Lady Roos fell on her knees before him, imploring pity; and
she continued in this supplicating posture till Lady Lake angrily bade her
rise.</p>
<p>"You have come here without my permission, Madam," Lord Roos cried
furiously to his mother-in-law, "and you shall not depart until I choose.
Secure the door, Diego, and bring me the key. It is well," he continued,
as the injunction was obeyed.</p>
<p>Lady Lake submitted without resistance to the constraint imposed upon her.
She could not well do otherwise; for though her screams would have brought
aid, it might have arrived too late. And, after all, she did not intend to
settle matters in this way. But she betrayed no symptoms of fear, and, as
we have stated, ordered her daughter to discontinue her supplications.</p>
<p>"And now, Madam," said Lord Roos, releasing Lady Lake, as he took the key
from Diego, "I will tell you who that person is," pointing to the couch.</p>
<p>"Add not to the number of falsehoods you have already told, my lord,"
rejoined Lady Lake, contemptuously. "I am perfectly aware who she is."</p>
<p>"But I would fain hear his explanation, mother," said Lady Roos.</p>
<p>"What explanation can be offered?" cried Lady Lake. "Do you doubt the
evidence of your senses?"</p>
<p>"I know not what I doubt, or what I believe," exclaimed Lady Roos
distractedly.</p>
<p>"Then believe what I tell you, Bess," said her husband. "This is the
countess's handmaiden, Gillian Greenford."</p>
<p>"An impudent lie!" cried Lady Lake.</p>
<p>"A truth, my lady," interposed Diego. "A truth to which I am ready to
swear."</p>
<p>"No doubt of it, thou false knave, and double traitor! thou art worthy of
thy lord. There is no lie, however absurd and improbable, which he can
invent, that thou wilt not support. Thou art ready now to perjure thyself
for him; but let him place little reliance on thee, for thou wilt do the
same thing for us to-morrow."</p>
<p>"I scarcely think it probable, my lady," Diego replied, bowing.</p>
<p>Lady Lake turned from him in supreme disgust.</p>
<p>"Admitting for a moment the possibility of your lordship's assertion being
correct," said Lady Roos, "how comes Gillian Greenford (for so methinks
you name her) in her mistress's attire?"</p>
<p>"'T is easily explained, chuck," Lord Roos rejoined. "Anxious, no doubt,
to set herself off to advantage, she hath made free with the countess's
wardrobe. Your own favourite attendant, Sarah Swarton, hath often arranged
herself in your finest fardingales, kirtlets, and busk-points, as Diego
will tell you. Is it not so, rascal?"</p>
<p>"'T is precisely as my lord hath stated, my lady," said the Spaniard to
Lady Roos. "When Sarah Swarton hath been so habited, I have more than once
mistaken her for your ladyship."</p>
<p>"Yet Sarah is very unlike me," said Lady Roos.</p>
<p>"That only shows how deceptive appearances are, chuck, and how little we
ought to trust to them," observed Lord Roos.</p>
<p>"How can you suffer yourself to be thus duped, Elizabeth?" said Lady Lake.</p>
<p>"Because her ladyship would rather believe me than you, Madam," rejoined
Lord Roos. "But she is <i>not</i> duped."</p>
<p>"Heaven forgive him!" exclaimed Diego, aside.</p>
<p>"And supposing it were Gillian, how would the case be mended, as far as
you are concerned, Elizabeth?" said Lady Lake. "Are you not as much
injured by one as by the other?"</p>
<p>"It may be," replied her daughter, "but I am jealous only of the Countess.
I would kneel to any other woman, and thank her, who would tear my husband
from her embraces!"</p>
<p>"Weak fool! I disown you," exclaimed Lady Lake, angrily.</p>
<p>"What a wife!" cried Diego, apart. "His lordship is quite unworthy of her.
Now I should appreciate such devotion."</p>
<p>At this juncture there was a slight movement on the part of Lady Exeter,
and something like a sigh escaped her.</p>
<p>"She revives!" whispered Lady Lake to her daughter. "We shall soon learn
the truth. I will find a means to make her speak. Well, my lord," she
added aloud, and speaking in a sarcastic tone, "if you will have it so, it
is idle to dispute it. But what will the Countess say, when she discovers
your infidelity?"</p>
<p>On this a brisker movement took place on the couch, and a hand was raised
as if to snatch away the 'kerchief.</p>
<p>"We have her," whispered Lady Lake triumphantly to her daughter. "Surely,"
she proceeded aloud, "the Countess will deeply resent the transfer of your
affections to her handmaiden."</p>
<p>Lord Roos saw the peril in which he stood. A moment more and Lady Lake had
gained her point, and the Countess betrayed herself.</p>
<p>"Lady Exeter will place little reliance on any representations you may
make, Madam," he said, giving particular significance to his words,
"except so far as they concern herself, and then she will take care to
refute them. As to the circumstance of Gillian Greenford visiting me,
fainting in my arms (from excess of timidity, poor girl!) and being
discovered by you and Lady Roos in that position, the Countess will laugh
at it when it comes to her knowledge—as why should she do otherwise?
But she will feel very differently when she finds that you and your
daughter insist that it was she herself, and not her handmaiden, whom you
beheld. Rely on it, Madam, Lady Exeter will contradict that assertion, and
disprove it."</p>
<p>"Let it be disproved now. Let the person on that couch disclose her
features, and we shall then see whether she be the Countess or Gillian."</p>
<p>"Ay, let her do that, my lord,—let her speak to us," urged Lady
Roos.</p>
<p>"Diablo! how is this request to be complied with, I marvel?" said Diego
apart.</p>
<p>But Lord Roos was too experienced a player to be defeated by this turn in
the game.</p>
<p>"Gillian has already been sufficiently annoyed," he cried; "and shall not
submit to this ordeal. Besides, she has relapsed into insensibility, as
you see."</p>
<p>"She does what your lordship wills her, it is clear," said Lady Lake,
contemptuously. "We know what construction to put upon your refusal."</p>
<p>"I care not what construction you put upon it," cried Lord Roos, losing
patience. "You and Lady Roos may think what you please, and act as you
please. Enough for me, you can prove nothing."</p>
<p>"Why, this is more like yourself, my lord," retorted Lady Lake,
derisively. "Having thrown aside the mask, you will be spared the
necessity of further subterfuge. The Countess, doubtless, will imitate
your example, lay aside her feigned insensibility, and defy us. She need
be under no apprehension; since she has your own warrant that we can prove
nothing."</p>
<p>"Your purpose, I perceive, is to irritate me, Madam," cried Lord Roos,
fiercely; "and so far you are likely to succeed, though you fail in all
else. I have no mask to throw off; but if you will have me declare myself
your enemy, I am ready to do so. Henceforth, let there be no terms kept
between us—let it be open warfare."</p>
<p>"Be it so, my lord. And you will soon find who will be worsted in the
struggle."</p>
<p>"Oh, do not proceed to these fearful extremities, dear mother, and dearest
husband!" cried Lady Roos, turning from one to the other imploringly.
"Cease these provocations, I pray of you. Be friends, and not enemies."</p>
<p>"As you please—peace or war; it is the same to me," said Lord Roos.
"Meantime, I am wearied of this scene, and must put an end to it. Diego!"
And beckoning his servant to him, he whispered some directions in his ear.</p>
<p>"My lord shall be obeyed," said Diego, as he received his commission.
"Gillian shall be conveyed with all care to her chamber."</p>
<p>"We must have some proof that she has been here," thought Lady Lake. But
how to obtain it? I have it. "Take these," she added in a whisper to her
daughter, and giving a pair of scissors; "and contrive, if possible, to
sever a lock of her hair before she be removed."</p>
<p>By a look Lady Roos promised compliance.</p>
<p>While this was passing, Diego had approached the couch; and fastening the
kerchief securely round the Countess's face, he raised her in his arms,
and moved towards the secret staircase, the tapestried covering of which
was held aside by Lord Roos to give him passage.</p>
<p>Rapidly as the Spaniard moved, he did not outstrip Lady Roos, whose design
being favoured by the escape from its confinement of one of the Countess's
long dark tresses, she had no difficulty of possessing, herself of it in
the manner prescribed by her mother. Lady Exeter was aware of the loss she
had sustained, and uttered a stifled cry; but this was attributed to the
fright natural to the occasion by Lord Roos, who had not noticed what had
taken place, and only caused him to hurry Diego's departure. But before
the latter had wholly disappeared with his burthen, the perfumed and
silken tress of hair was delivered to Lady Lake, who muttered triumphantly
as she received it—"This will convict her. She cannot escape us
now."</p>
<p>The prize was scarcely concealed when Lord Roos, sheathing the sword which
he had hitherto held drawn, advanced towards his mother-in-law.</p>
<p>"Now that the object of your disquietude is removed, Madam, it will not be
necessary to prolong this interview," he said.</p>
<p>"Have we then your lordship's permission to depart?" rejoined Lady Lake,
coldly. "We are not, I presume, to avail ourselves of the private means of
exit contrived for your amorous adventures, lest we should make other
discoveries."</p>
<p>"Your ladyship will leave by the way you entered," rejoined Lord Roos. "I
will attend you to the door—and unfasten it for you."</p>
<p>"Before we go, I would have a word with my husband—it may be my
last," said Lady Roos to her mother. "I pray you withdraw a little, that
we may be alone."</p>
<p>"Better not," rejoined Lady Lake. But unable to resist her daughter's
imploring looks, she added, "Well, as you will. But it is useless."</p>
<p>With this she proceeded to the little passage, and remained there.</p>
<p>As Lady Roos turned to her husband, she saw, from the stern and inflexible
look he had assumed, that any appeal made to him would be unavailing, and
she attempted none. A moment elapsed before she could utter a word, and
then it was only a murmur to heaven for guidance and support.</p>
<p>"What say you, Elizabeth?" demanded Lord Roos, thinking she had addressed
him.</p>
<p>"I asked for support from on High, William, and it has been accorded to
me," she replied in a low sweet voice. "I can now speak to you. It is not
to weary you with supplications or reproaches that I thus detain you. I
have something to impart to you, and I am sure you will eagerly listen to
it. Come nearer, that we may not be overheard."</p>
<p>Lord Roos, whose curiosity was aroused by her manner, obeyed her.</p>
<p>"I am all attention," he said.</p>
<p>"I feel I am in your way, William," she rejoined, in a deep whisper; "and
that you desire my death. Nay, interrupt me not; I am sure you desire it;
and I am equally sure that the desire will be gratified, and that you will
kill me."</p>
<p>"Kill you, Bess!" cried Lord Roos, startled. "How can you imagine aught so
frightful?"</p>
<p>"There is a power granted to those who love deeply as I do, of seeing into
the hearts of those they love, and reading their secrets. I have read
yours, William. Nay, be not alarmed. I have kept it to myself hitherto,
and will keep it to the end. You wish me dead, I say; and you shall have
your wish—but not in the way you propose. Having lost your love, I
am become indifferent to life—or, rather, life is grown intolerable
to me. But though death may be a release, it must not come from your
hand."</p>
<p>"You cannot mean to destroy yourself, Elizabeth?" cried Lord Roos,
appalled.</p>
<p>"I mean to trouble you no longer. I mean to make the last and greatest
sacrifice I can for you; and to save you from a crime—or, if you
must share the crime, at least to screen you from punishment. Look, here!"
she added, producing a small phial. "Bid me drink of this, and ere
to-morrow you are free, and I am at rest. Shall I do it?"</p>
<p>"No—no," rejoined Lord Roos, snatching the phial from her. "Live,
Bess, live!"</p>
<p>"Am I to live for you, William?" she cried, with inexpressible joy.</p>
<p>He made no answer, but averted his head.</p>
<p>"In mercy give me back the phial," she exclaimed, again plunged into the
depths of despair.</p>
<p>"I must refuse your request," he replied.</p>
<p>"Have you done, Elizabeth?" demanded Lady Lake, coming forth from the
passage.</p>
<p>"A moment more, mother," cried Lady Roos. "One word—one look!" she
added to her husband.</p>
<p>But he neither spoke to her, nor regarded her.</p>
<p>"I am ready to accompany you now, mother," said the poor lady faintly.</p>
<p>"Nerve yourself, weak-hearted girl," said Lady Lake, in a low tone.
"Revenge is ours."</p>
<p>"If I could only strike her without injuring him, I should not heed,"
thought Lady Roos. "But where he suffers, I must also suffer, and yet more
acutely."</p>
<p>And scarcely able to support herself, she followed her mother to the door
of the ante-chamber, which was unlocked, and thrown open for them by her
husband. He did not bid her farewell!</p>
<p>As Lady Lake passed forth, she paused for a moment, and said—</p>
<p>"To-morrow, my Lord, we will ascertain whether the tress of hair we have
obtained from the fair visitant to your chamber, matches with that of
Gillian Greenford or with the raven locks of the Countess of Exeter."</p>
<p>And satisfied with the effect produced by this menace, she departed with
her daughter, before Lord Roos could utter a reply.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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