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<h2> CHAPTER XIII. </h2>
<p>"THE fortune which Mr. Vanstone possessed when you knew him" (the lawyer
began) "was part, and part only, of the inheritance which fell to him on
his father's death. Mr. Vanstone the elder was a manufacturer in the North
of England. He married early in life; and the children of the marriage
were either six or seven in number—I am not certain which. First,
Michael, the eldest son, still living, and now an old man turned seventy.
Secondly, Selina, the eldest daughter, who married in after-life, and who
died ten or eleven years ago. After those two came other sons and
daughters, whose early deaths make it unnecessary to mention them
particularly. The last and by many years the youngest of the children was
Andrew, whom I first knew, as I told you, at the age of nineteen. My
father was then on the point of retiring from the active pursuit of his
profession; and in succeeding to his business, I also succeeded to his
connection with the Vanstones as the family solicitor.</p>
<p>"At that time, Andrew had just started in life by entering the army. After
little more than a year of home-service, he was ordered out with his
regiment to Canada. When he quitted England, he left his father and his
elder brother Michael seriously at variance. I need not detain you by
entering into the cause of the quarrel. I need only tell you that the
elder Mr. Vanstone, with many excellent qualities, was a man of fierce and
intractable temper. His eldest son had set him at defiance, under
circumstances which might have justly irritated a father of far milder
character; and he declared, in the most positive terms, that he would
never see Michael's face again. In defiance of my entreaties, and of the
entreaties of his wife, he tore up, in our presence, the will which
provided for Michael's share in the paternal inheritance. Such was the
family position, when the younger son left home for Canada.</p>
<p>"Some months after Andrew's arrival with his regiment at Quebec, he became
acquainted with a woman of great personal attractions, who came, or said
she came, from one of the Southern States of America. She obtained an
immediate influence over him; and she used it to the basest purpose. You
knew the easy, affectionate, trusting nature of the man in later life—you
can imagine how thoughtlessly he acted on the impulse of his youth. It is
useless to dwell on this lamentable part of the story. He was just
twenty-one: he was blindly devoted to a worthless woman; and she led him
on, with merciless cunning, till it was too late to draw back. In one
word, he committed the fatal error of his life: he married her.</p>
<p>"She had been wise enough in her own interests to dread the influence of
his brother-officers, and to persuade him, up to the period of the
marriage ceremony, to keep the proposed union between them a secret. She
could do this; but she could not provide against the results of accident.
Hardly three months had passed, when a chance disclosure exposed the life
she had led before her marriage. But one alternative was left to her
husband—the alternative of instantly separating from her.</p>
<p>"The effect of the discovery on the unhappy boy—for a boy in
disposition he still was—may be judged by the event which followed
the exposure. One of Andrew's superior officers—a certain Major
Kirke, if I remember right—found him in his quarters, writing to his
father a confession of the disgraceful truth, with a loaded pistol by his
side. That officer saved the lad's life from his own hand, and hushed up
the scandalous affair by a compromise. The marriage being a perfectly
legal one, and the wife's misconduct prior to the ceremony giving her
husband no claim to his release from her by divorce, it was only possible
to appeal to her sense of her own interests. A handsome annual allowance
was secured to her, on condition that she returned to the place from which
she had come; that she never appeared in England; and that she ceased to
use her husband's name. Other stipulations were added to these. She
accepted them all; and measures were privately taken to have her well
looked after in the place of her retreat. What life she led there, and
whether she performed all the conditions imposed on her, I cannot say. I
can only tell you that she never, to my knowledge, came to England; that
she never annoyed Mr. Vanstone; and that the annual allowance was paid
her, through a local agent in America, to the day of her death. All that
she wanted in marrying him was money; and money she got.</p>
<p>"In the meantime, Andrew had left the regiment. Nothing would induce him
to face his brother-officers after what had happened. He sold out and
returned to England. The first intelligence which reached him on his
return was the intelligence of his father's death. He came to my office in
London, before going home, and there learned from my lips how the family
quarrel had ended.</p>
<p>"The will which Mr. Vanstone the elder had destroyed in my presence had
not been, so far as I know, replaced by another. When I was sent for, in
the usual course, on his death, I fully expected that the law would be
left to make the customary division among his widow and his children. To
my surprise, a will appeared among his papers, correctly drawn and
executed, and dated about a week after the period when the first will had
been destroyed. He had maintained his vindictive purpose against his
eldest son, and had applied to a stranger for the professional assistance
which I honestly believe he was ashamed to ask for at my hands.</p>
<p>"It is needless to trouble you with the provisions of the will in detail.
There were the widow and three surviving children to be provided for. The
widow received a life-interest only in a portion of the testator's
property. The remaining portion was divided between Andrew and Selina—two-thirds
to the brother; one-third to the sister. On the mother's death, the money
from which her income had been derived was to go to Andrew and Selina, in
the same relative proportions as before—five thousand pounds having
been first deducted from the sum and paid to Michael, as the sole legacy
left by the implacable father to his eldest son.</p>
<p>"Speaking in round numbers, the division of property, as settled by the
will, stood thus. Before the mother's death, Andrew had seventy thousand
pounds; Selina had thirty-five thousand pounds; Michael—had nothing.
After the mother's death, Michael had five thousand pounds, to set against
Andrew's inheritance augmented to one hundred thousand, and Selina's
inheritance increased to fifty thousand.—Do not suppose that I am
dwelling unnecessarily on this part of the subject. Every word I now speak
bears on interests still in suspense, which vitally concern Mr. Vanstone's
daughters. As we get on from past to present, keep in mind the terrible
inequality of Michael's inheritance and Andrew's inheritance. The harm
done by that vindictive will is, I greatly fear, not over yet.</p>
<p>"Andrew's first impulse, when he heard the news which I had to tell him,
was worthy of the open, generous nature of the man. He at once proposed to
divide his inheritance with his elder brother. But there was one serious
obstacle in the way. A letter from Michael was waiting for him at my
office when he came there, and that letter charged him with being the
original cause of estrangement between his father and his elder brother.
The efforts which he had made—bluntly and incautiously, I own, but
with the purest and kindest intentions, as I know—to compose the
quarrel before leaving home, were perverted, by the vilest
misconstruction, to support an accusation of treachery and falsehood which
would have stung any man to the quick. Andrew felt, what I felt, that if
these imputations were not withdrawn before his generous intentions toward
his brother took effect, the mere fact of their execution would amount to
a practical acknowledgment of the justice of Michael's charge against him.
He wrote to his brother in the most forbearing terms. The answer received
was as offensive as words could make it. Michael had inherited his
father's temper, unredeemed by his father's better qualities: his second
letter reiterated the charges contained in the first, and declared that he
would only accept the offered division as an act of atonement and
restitution on Andrew's part. I next wrote to the mother to use her
influence. She was herself aggrieved at being left with nothing more than
a life interest in her husband's property; she sided resolutely with
Michael; and she stigmatized Andrew's proposal as an attempt to bribe her
eldest son into withdrawing a charge against his brother which that
brother knew to be true. After this last repulse, nothing more could be
done. Michael withdrew to the Continent; and his mother followed him
there. She lived long enough, and saved money enough out of her income, to
add considerably, at her death, to her elder son's five thousand pounds.
He had previously still further improved his pecuniary position by an
advantageous marriage; and he is now passing the close of his days either
in France or Switzerland—a widower, with one son. We shall return to
him shortly. In the meantime, I need only tell you that Andrew and Michael
never again met—never again communicated, even by writing. To all
intents and purposes they were dead to each other, from those early days
to the present time.</p>
<p>"You can now estimate what Andrew's position was when he left his
profession and returned to England. Possessed of a fortune, h e was alone
in the world; his future destroyed at the fair outset of life; his mother
and brother estranged from him; his sister lately married, with interests
and hopes in which he had no share. Men of firmer mental caliber might
have found refuge from such a situation as this in an absorbing
intellectual pursuit. He was not capable of the effort; all the strength
of his character lay in the affections he had wasted. His place in the
world was that quiet place at home, with wife and children to make his
life happy, which he had lost forever. To look back was more than he dare.
To look forward was more than he could. In sheer despair, he let his own
impetuous youth drive him on; and cast himself into the lowest
dissipations of a London life.</p>
<p>"A woman's falsehood had driven him to his ruin. A woman's love saved him
at the outset of his downward career. Let us not speak of her harshly—for
we laid her with him yesterday in the grave.</p>
<p>"You, who only knew Mrs. Vanstone in later life, when illness and sorrow
and secret care had altered and saddened her, can form no adequate idea of
her attractions of person and character when she was a girl of seventeen.
I was with Andrew when he first met her. I had tried to rescue him, for
one night at least, from degrading associates and degrading pleasures, by
persuading him to go with me to a ball given by one of the great City
Companies. There they met. She produced a strong impression on him the
moment he saw her. To me, as to him, she was a total stranger. An
introduction to her, obtained in the customary manner, informed him that
she was the daughter of one Mr. Blake. The rest he discovered from
herself. They were partners in the dance (unobserved in that crowded
ball-room) all through the evening.</p>
<p>"Circumstances were against her from the first. She was unhappy at home.
Her family and friends occupied no recognized station in life: they were
mean, underhand people, in every way unworthy of her. It was her first
ball—it was the first time she had ever met with a man who had the
breeding, the manners and the conversation of a gentleman. Are these
excuses for her, which I have no right to make? If we have any human
feeling for human weakness, surely not!</p>
<p>"The meeting of that night decided their future. When other meetings had
followed, when the confession of her love had escaped her, he took the one
course of all others (took it innocently and unconsciously), which was
most dangerous to them both. His frankness and his sense of honor forbade
him to deceive her: he opened his heart and told her the truth. She was a
generous, impulsive girl; she had no home ties strong enough to plead with
her; she was passionately fond of him—and he had made that appeal to
her pity which, to the eternal honor of women, is the hardest of all
appeals for them to resist. She saw, and saw truly, that she alone stood
between him and his ruin. The last chance of his rescue hung on her
decision. She decided; and saved him.</p>
<p>"Let me not be misunderstood; let me not be accused of trifling with the
serious social question on which my narrative forces me to touch. I will
defend her memory by no false reasoning—I will only speak the truth.
It is the truth that she snatched him from mad excesses which must have
ended in his early death. It is the truth that she restored him to that
happy home existence which you remember so tenderly—which <i>he</i>
remembered so gratefully that, on the day when he was free, he made her
his wife. Let strict morality claim its right, and condemn her early
fault. I have read my New Testament to little purpose, indeed, if
Christian mercy may not soften the hard sentence against her—if
Christian charity may not find a plea for her memory in the love and
fidelity, the suffering and the sacrifice, of her whole life.</p>
<p>"A few words more will bring us to a later time, and to events which have
happened within your own experience.</p>
<p>"I need not remind you that the position in which Mr. Vanstone was now
placed could lead in the end to but one result—to a disclosure, more
or less inevitable, of the truth. Attempts were made to keep the hopeless
misfortune of his life a secret from Miss Blake's family; and, as a matter
of course, those attempts failed before the relentless scrutiny of her
father and her friends. What might have happened if her relatives had been
what is termed 'respectable' I cannot pretend to say. As it was, they were
people who could (in the common phrase) be conveniently treated with. The
only survivor of the family at the present time is a scoundrel calling
himself Captain Wragge. When I tell you that he privately extorted the
price of his silence from Mrs. Vanstone to the last; and when I add that
his conduct presents no extraordinary exception to the conduct, in their
lifetime, of the other relatives—you will understand what sort of
people I had to deal with in my client's interests, and how their assumed
indignation was appeased.</p>
<p>"Having, in the first instance, left England for Ireland, Mr. Vanstone and
Miss Blake remained there afterward for some years. Girl as she was, she
faced her position and its necessities without flinching. Having once
resolved to sacrifice her life to the man she loved; having quieted her
conscience by persuading herself that his marriage was a legal mockery,
and that she was 'his wife in the sight of Heaven,' she set herself from
the first to accomplish the one foremost purpose of so living with him, in
the world's eye, as never to raise the suspicion that she was not his
lawful wife. The women are few, indeed, who cannot resolve firmly, scheme
patiently, and act promptly where the dearest interests of their lives are
concerned. Mrs. Vanstone—she has a right now, remember, to that name—Mrs.
Vanstone had more than the average share of a woman's tenacity and a
woman's tact; and she took all the needful precautions, in those early
days, which her husband's less ready capacity had not the art to devise—precautions
to which they were largely indebted for the preservation of their secret
in later times.</p>
<p>"Thanks to these safeguards, not a shadow of suspicion followed them when
they returned to England. They first settled in Devonshire, merely because
they were far removed there from that northern county in which Mr.
Vanstone's family and connections had been known. On the part of his
surviving relatives, they had no curious investigations to dread. He was
totally estranged from his mother and his elder brother. His married
sister had been forbidden by her husband (who was a clergyman) to hold any
communication with him, from the period when he had fallen into the
deplorable way of life which I have described as following his return from
Canada. Other relations he had none. When he and Miss Blake left
Devonshire, their next change of residence was to this house. Neither
courting nor avoiding notice; simply happy in themselves, in their
children, and in their quiet rural life; unsuspected by the few neighbors
who formed their modest circle of acquaintance to be other than what they
seemed—the truth in their case, as in the cases of many others,
remained undiscovered until accident forced it into the light of day.</p>
<p>"If, in your close intimacy with them, it seems strange that they should
never have betrayed themselves, let me ask you to consider the
circumstances and you will understand the apparent anomaly. Remember that
they had been living as husband and wife, to all intents and purposes
(except that the marriage-service had not been read over them), for
fifteen years before you came into the house; and bear in mind, at the
same time, that no event occurred to disturb Mr. Vanstone's happiness in
the present, to remind him of the past, or to warn him of the future,
until the announcement of his wife's death reached him, in that letter
from America which you saw placed in his hand. From that day forth—when
a past which <i>he</i> abhorred was forced back to his memory; when a
future which <i>she</i> had never dared to anticipate was placed within
her reach—you will soon perceive, if you have not perceived already,
that they both betrayed themselves, time after time; and that you r
innocence of all suspicion, and their children's innocence of all
suspicion, alone prevented you from discovering the truth.</p>
<p>"The sad story of the past is now as well known to you as to me. I have
had hard words to speak. God knows I have spoken them with true sympathy
for the living, with true tenderness for the memory of the dead."</p>
<p>He paused, turned his face a little away, and rested his head on his hand,
in the quiet, undemonstrative manner which was natural to him. Thus far,
Miss Garth had only interrupted his narrative by an occasional word or by
a mute token of her attention. She made no effort to conceal her tears;
they fell fast and silently over her wasted cheeks, as she looked up and
spoke to him. "I have done you some injury, sir, in my thoughts," she
said, with a noble simplicity. "I know you better now. Let me ask your
forgiveness; let me take your hand."</p>
<p>Those words, and the action which accompanied them, touched him deeply. He
took her hand in silence. She was the first to speak, the first to set the
example of self-control. It is one of the noble instincts of women that
nothing more powerfully rouses them to struggle with their own sorrow than
the sight of a man's distress. She quietly dried her tears; she quietly
drew her chair round the table, so as to sit nearer to him when she spoke
again.</p>
<p>"I have been sadly broken, Mr. Pendril, by what has happened in this
house," she said, "or I should have borne what you have told me better
than I have borne it to-day. Will you let me ask one question before you
go on? My heart aches for the children of my love—more than ever my
children now. Is there no hope for their future? Are they left with no
prospect but poverty before them?"</p>
<p>The lawyer hesitated before he answered the question.</p>
<p>"They are left dependent," he said, at last, "on the justice and the mercy
of a stranger."</p>
<p>"Through the misfortune of their birth?"</p>
<p>"Through the misfortunes which have followed the marriage of their
parents."</p>
<p>With that startling answer he rose, took up the will from the floor, and
restored it to its former position on the table between them.</p>
<p>"I can only place the truth before you," he resumed, "in one plain form of
words. The marriage has destroyed this will, and has left Mr. Vanstone's
daughters dependent on their uncle."</p>
<p>As he spoke, the breeze stirred again among the shrubs under the window.</p>
<p>"On their uncle?" repeated Miss Garth. She considered for a moment, and
laid her hand suddenly on Mr. Pendril's arm. "Not on Michael Vanstone!"</p>
<p>"Yes: on Michael Vanstone."</p>
<p>Miss Garth's hand still mechanically grasped the lawyer's arm. Her whole
mind was absorbed in the effort to realize the discovery which had now
burst on her.</p>
<p>"Dependent on Michael Vanstone!" she said to herself. "Dependent on their
father's bitterest enemy? How can it be?"</p>
<p>"Give me your attention for a few minutes more," said Mr. Pendril, "and
you shall hear. The sooner we can bring this painful interview to a close,
the sooner I can open communications with Mr. Michael Vanstone, and the
sooner you will know what he decides on doing for his brother's orphan
daughters. I repeat to you that they are absolutely dependent on him. You
will most readily understand how and why, if we take up the chain of
events where we last left it—at the period of Mr. and Mrs.
Vanstone's marriage."</p>
<p>"One moment, sir," said Miss Garth. "Were you in the secret of that
marriage at the time when it took place?"</p>
<p>"Unhappily, I was not. I was away from London—away from England at
the time. If Mr. Vanstone had been able to communicate with me when the
letter from America announced the death of his wife, the fortunes of his
daughters would not have been now at stake."</p>
<p>He paused, and, before proceeding further, looked once more at the letters
which he had consulted at an earlier period of the interview. He took one
letter from the rest, and put it on the table by his side.</p>
<p>"At the beginning of the present year," he resumed, "a very serious
business necessity, in connection with some West Indian property possessed
by an old client and friend of mine, required the presence either of
myself, or of one of my two partners, in Jamaica. One of the two could not
be spared; the other was not in health to undertake the voyage. There was
no choice left but for me to go. I wrote to Mr. Vanstone, telling him that
I should leave England at the end of February, and that the nature of the
business which took me away afforded little hope of my getting back from
the West Indies before June. My letter was not written with any special
motive. I merely thought it right—seeing that my partners were not
admitted to my knowledge of Mr. Vanstone's private affairs—to warn
him of my absence, as a measure of formal precaution which it was right to
take. At the end of February I left England, without having heard from
him. I was on the sea when the news of his wife's death reached him, on
the fourth of March: and I did not return until the middle of last June."</p>
<p>"You warned him of your departure," interposed Miss Garth. "Did you not
warn him of your return?"</p>
<p>"Not personally. My head-clerk sent him one of the circulars which were
dispatched from my office, in various directions, to announce my return.
It was the first substitute I thought of for the personal letter which the
pressure of innumerable occupations, all crowding on me together after my
long absence, did not allow me leisure to write. Barely a month later, the
first information of his marriage reached me in a letter from himself,
written on the day of the fatal accident. The circumstances which induced
him to write arose out of an event in which you must have taken some
interest—I mean the attachment between Mr. Clare's son and Mr.
Vanstone's youngest daughter."</p>
<p>"I cannot say that I was favorably disposed toward that attachment at the
time," replied Miss Garth. "I was ignorant then of the family secret: I
know better now."</p>
<p>"Exactly. The motive which you can now appreciate is the motive that leads
us to the point. The young lady herself (as I have heard from the elder
Mr. Clare, to whom I am indebted for my knowledge of the circumstances in
detail) confessed her attachment to her father, and innocently touched him
to the quick by a chance reference to his own early life. He had a long
conversation with Mrs. Vanstone, at which they both agreed that Mr. Clare
must be privately informed of the truth, before the attachment between the
two young people was allowed to proceed further. It was painful in the
last degree, both to husband and wife, to be reduced to this alternative.
But they were resolute, honorably resolute, in making the sacrifice of
their own feelings; and Mr. Vanstone betook himself on the spot to Mr.
Clare's cottage.—You no doubt observed a remarkable change in Mr.
Vanstone's manner on that day; and you can now account for it?"</p>
<p>Miss Garth bowed her head, and Mr. Pendril went on.</p>
<p>"You are sufficiently acquainted with Mr. Clare's contempt for all social
prejudices," he continued, "to anticipate his reception of the confession
which his neighbor addressed to him. Five minutes after the interview had
begun, the two old friends were as easy and unrestrained together as
usual. In the course of conversation, Mr. Vanstone mentioned the pecuniary
arrangement which he had made for the benefit of his daughter and of her
future husband—and, in doing so, he naturally referred to his will
here, on the table between us. Mr. Clare, remembering that his friend had
been married in the March of that year, at once asked when the will had
been executed: receiving the reply that it had been made five years since;
and, thereupon, astounded Mr. Vanstone by telling him bluntly that the
document was waste paper in the eye of the law. Up to that moment he, like
many other persons, had been absolutely ignorant that a man's marriage is,
legally as well as socially, considered to be the most important event in
his life; that it destroys the validity of any will which he may have made
as a single man; and that it renders absolutely necessary the entire
re-assertion of his testamentary intentions in the character of a husband.
The statement of this plain fact appeared to overwhelm Mr. Vanstone.
Declaring that his friend had laid him under an obligation which he should
remember to his dying day, he at once left the cottage, at once returned
home, and wrote me this letter."</p>
<p>He handed the letter open to Miss Garth. In tearless, speechless grief,
she read these words:</p>
<p>"MY DEAR PENDRIL—Since we last wrote to each other an extraordinary
change has taken place in my life. About a week after you went away, I
received news from America which told me that I was free. Need I say what
use I made of that freedom? Need I say that the mother of my children is
now my Wife?</p>
<p>"If you are surprised at not having heard from me the moment you got back,
attribute my silence, in great part—if not altogether—to my
own total ignorance of the legal necessity for making another will. Not
half an hour since, I was enlightened for the first time (under
circumstances which I will mention when me meet) by my old friend, Mr.
Clare. Family anxieties have had something to do with my silence as well.
My wife's confinement is close at hand; and, besides this serious anxiety,
my second daughter is just engaged to be married. Until I saw Mr. Clare
to-day, these matters so filled my mind that I never thought of writing to
you during the one short month which is all that has passed since I got
news of your return. Now I know that my will must be made again, I write
instantly. 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! Come at any cost, to yours ever,</p>
<p>"A. V."</p>
<p>"On the Saturday morning," Mr. Pendril resumed, "those lines reached me. I
instantly set aside all other business, and drove to the railway. At the
London terminus, I heard the first news of the Friday's accident; heard
it, with conflicting accounts of the numbers and names of the passengers
killed. At Bristol, they were better informed; and the dreadful truth
about Mr. Vanstone was confirmed. I had time to recover myself before I
reached your station here, and found Mr. Clare's son waiting for me. He
took me to his father's cottage; and there, without losing a moment, I
drew out Mrs. Vanstone's will. My object was to secure the only provision
for her daughters which it was now possible to make. Mr. Vanstone having
died intestate, a third of his fortune would go to his widow; and the rest
would be divided among his next of kin. As children born out of wedlock,
Mr. Vanstone's daughters, under the circumstances of their father's death,
had no more claim to a share in his property than the daughters of one of
his laborers in the village. The one chance left was that their mother
might sufficiently recover to leave her third share to them, by will, in
the event of her decease. Now you know why I wrote to you to ask for that
interview—why I waited day and night, in the hope of receiving a
summons to the house. I was sincerely sorry to send back such an answer to
your note of inquiry as I was compelled to write. But while there was a
chance of the preservation of Mrs. Vanstone's life, the secret of the
marriage was hers, not mine; and every consideration of delicacy forbade
me to disclose it."</p>
<p>"You did right, sir," said Miss Garth; "I understand your motives, and
respect them."</p>
<p>"My last attempt to provide for the daughters," continued Mr. Pendril,
"was, as you know, rendered unavailing by the dangerous nature of Mrs.
Vanstone's illness. Her death left the infant who survived her by a few
hours (the infant born, you will remember, in lawful wedlock) possessed,
in due legal course, of the whole of Mr. Vanstone's fortune. On the
child's death—if it had only outlived the mother by a few seconds,
instead of a few hours, the result would have been the same—the next
of kin to the legitimate offspring took the money; and that next of kin is
the infant's paternal uncle, Michael Vanstone. The whole fortune of eighty
thousand pounds has virtually passed into his possession already."</p>
<p>"Are there no other relations?" asked Miss Garth. "Is there no hope from
any one else?"</p>
<p>"There are no other relations with Michael Vanstone's claim," said the
lawyer. "There are no grandfathers or grandmothers of the dead child (on
the side of either of the parents) now alive. It was not likely there
should be, considering the ages of Mr. and Mrs. Vanstone when they died.
But it is a misfortune to be reasonably lamented that no other uncles or
aunts survive. There are cousins alive; a son and two daughters of that
elder sister of Mr. Vanstone's, who married Archdeacon Bartram, and who
died, as I told you, some years since. But their interest is superseded by
the interest of the nearer blood. No, Miss Garth, we must look facts as
they are resolutely in the face. Mr. Vanstone's daughters are Nobody's
Children; and the law leaves them helpless at their uncle's mercy."</p>
<p>"A cruel law, Mr. Pendril—a cruel law in a Christian country."</p>
<p>"Cruel as it is, Miss Garth, it stands excused by a shocking peculiarity
in this case. I am far from defending the law of England as it affects
illegitimate offspring. On the contrary, I think it a disgrace to the
nation. It visits the sins of the parents on the children; it encourages
vice by depriving fathers and mothers of the strongest of all motives for
making the atonement of marriage; and it claims to produce these two
abominable results in the names of morality and religion. But it has no
extraordinary oppression to answer for in the case of these unhappy girls.
The more merciful and Christian law of other countries, which allows the
marriage of the parents to make the children legitimate, has no mercy on
<i>these</i> children. The accident of their father having been married,
when he first met with their mother, has made them the outcasts of the
whole social community; it has placed them out of the pale of the Civil
Law of Europe. I tell you the hard truth—it is useless to disguise
it. There is no hope, if we look back at the past: there may be hope, if
we look on to the future. The best service which I can now render you is
to shorten the period of your suspense. In less than an hour I shall be on
my way back to London. Immediately on my arrival, I will ascertain the
speediest means of communicating with Mr. Michael Vanstone; and will let
you know the result. Sad as the position of the two sisters now is, we
must look at it on its best side; we must not lose hope."</p>
<p>"Hope?" repeated Miss Garth. "Hope from Michael Vanstone!"</p>
<p>"Yes; hope from the influence on him of time, if not from the influence of
mercy. As I have already told you, he is now an old man; he cannot, in the
course of nature, expect to live much longer. If he looks back to the
period when he and his brother were first at variance, he must look back
through thirty years. Surely, these are softening influences which must
affect any man? Surely, his own knowledge of the shocking circumstances
under which he has become possessed of this money will plead with him, if
nothing else does?"</p>
<p>"I will try to think as you do, Mr. Pendril—I will try to hope for
the best. Shall we be left long in suspense before the decision reaches
us?"</p>
<p>"I trust not. The only delay on my side will be caused by the necessity of
discovering the place of Michael Vanstone's residence on the Continent. I
think I have the means of meeting this difficulty successfully; and the
moment I reach London, those means shall be tried."</p>
<p>He took up his hat; and then returned to the table on which the father's
last letter, and the father's useless will, were lying side by side. After
a moment's consideration, he placed them both in Miss Garth's hands.</p>
<p>"It may help you in breaking the hard truth to the orphan sisters," he
said, in his quiet, self-repressed way, "if they can see how their father
refers to them in his will—if they ca n read his letter to me, the
last he ever wrote. Let these tokens tell them that the one idea of their
father's life was the idea of making atonement to his children. 'They may
think bitterly of their birth,' he said to me, at the time when I drew
this useless will; 'but they shall never think bitterly of me. I will
cross them in nothing: they shall never know a sorrow that I can spare
them, or a want which I will not satisfy.' He made me put those words in
his will, to plead for him when the truth which he had concealed from his
children in his lifetime was revealed to them after his death. No law can
deprive his daughters of the legacy of his repentance and his love. I
leave the will and the letter to help you: I give them both into your
care."</p>
<p>He saw how his parting kindness touched her and thoughtfully hastened the
farewell. She took his hand in both her own and murmured a few broken
words of gratitude. "Trust me to do my best," he said—and, turning
away with a merciful abruptness, left her. In the broad, cheerful sunshine
he had come in to reveal the fatal truth. In the broad, cheerful sunshine—that
truth disclosed—he went out.</p>
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