<p>THE END OF THE FIRST SCENE. <SPAN name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019"></SPAN></p>
<h2> BETWEEN THE SCENES. </h2>
<h3> PROGRESS OF THE STORY THROUGH THE POST. </h3>
<p>I.</p>
<p><i>From Norah Vanstone to Mr. Pendril.</i></p>
<p>"Westmoreland House, Kensington,</p>
<p>"August 14th, 1846.</p>
<p>"DEAR MR. PENDRIL—The date of this letter will show you that the
last of many hard partings is over. We have left Combe-Raven; we have said
farewell to home.</p>
<p>"I have been thinking seriously of what you said to me on Wednesday,
before you went back to town. I entirely agree with you that Miss Garth is
more shaken by all she has gone through for our sakes than she is herself
willing to admit; and that it is my duty, for the future, to spare her all
the anxiety that I can on the subject of my sister and myself. This is
very little to do for our dearest friend, for our second mother. Such as
it is, I will do it with all my heart.</p>
<p>"But, forgive me for saying that I am as far as ever from agreeing with
you about Magdalen. I am so sensible, in our helpless position, of the
importance of your assistance; so anxious to be worthy of the interest of
my father's trusted adviser and oldest friend, that I feel really and
truly disappointed with myself for differing with you—and yet I do
differ. Magdalen is very strange, very unaccountable, to those who don't
know her intimately. I can understand that she has innocently misled you;
and that she has presented herself, perhaps, under her least favorable
aspect. But that the clew to her language and her conduct on Wednesday
last is to be found in such a feeling toward the man who has ruined us, as
the feeling at which you hinted, is what I can not and will not believe of
my sister. If you knew, as I do, what a noble nature she has, you would
not be surprised at this obstinate resistance of mine to your opinion.
Will you try to alter it? I don't mind what Mr. Clare says; he believes in
nothing. But I attach a very serious importance to what <i>you</i> say;
and, kind as I know your motives to be, it distresses me to think you are
doing Magdalen an injustice.</p>
<p>"Having relieved my mind of this confession, I may now come to the proper
object of my letter. I promised, if you could not find leisure time to
visit us to-day, to write and tell you all that happened after you left
us. The day has passed without our seeing you. So I open my writing-case
and perform my promise.</p>
<p>"I am sorry to say that three of the women-servants—the house-maid,
the kitchen-maid, and even our own maid (to whom I am sure we have always
been kind)—took advantage of your having paid them their wages to
pack up and go as soon as your back was turned. They came to say good-by
with as much ceremony and as little feeling as if they were leaving the
house under ordinary circumstances. The cook, for all her violent temper,
behaved very differently: she sent up a message to say that she would stop
and help us to the last. And Thomas (who has never yet been in any other
place than ours) spoke so gratefully of my dear father's unvarying
kindness to him, and asked so anxiously to be allowed to go on serving us
while his little savings lasted, that Magdalen and I forgot all formal
considerations and both shook hands with him. The poor lad went out of the
room crying. I wish him well; I hope he will find a kind master and a good
place.</p>
<p>"The long, quiet, rainy evening out-of-doors—our last evening at
Combe-Raven—was a sad trial to us. I think winter-time would have
weighed less on our spirits; the drawn curtains and the bright lamps, and
the companionable fires would have helped us. We were only five in the
house altogether—after having once been so many! I can't tell you
how dreary the gray daylight looked, toward seven o'clock, in the lonely
rooms, and on the noiseless staircase. Surely, the prejudice in favor of
long summer evenings is the prejudice of happy people? We did our best. We
kept ourselves employed, and Miss Garth helped us. The prospect of
preparing for our departure, which had seemed so dreadful earlier in the
day, altered into the prospect of a refuge from ourselves as the evening
came on. We each tried at first to pack up in our own rooms—but the
loneliness was more than we could bear. We carried all our possessions
downstairs, and heaped them on the large dining-table, and so made our
preparations together in the same room. I am sure we have taken nothing
away which does not properly belong to us.</p>
<p>"Having already mentioned to you my own conviction that Magdalen was not
herself when you saw her on Wednesday, I feel tempted to stop here and
give you an instance in proof of what I say. The little circumstance
happened on Wednesday night, just before we went up to our rooms.</p>
<p>"After we had packed our dresses and our birthday presents, our books and
our music, we began to sort our letters, which had got confused from being
placed on the table together. Some of my letters were mixed with
Magdalen's, and some of hers with mine. Among these last I found a card,
which had been given to my sister early in the year by an actor who
managed an amateur theatrical performance in which she took a part. The
man had given her the card, containing his name and address, in the belief
that she would be invited to many more amusements of the same kind, and in
the hope that she would recommend him as a superintendent on future
occasions. I only relate these trifling particulars to show you how little
worth keeping such a card could be, in such circumstances as ours.
Naturally enough, I threw it away from me across the table, meaning to
throw it on the floor. It fell short, close to the place in which Magdalen
was sitting. She took it up, looked at it, and immediately declared that
she would not have had this perfectly worthless thing destroyed for the
world. She was almost angry with me for having thrown it away; almost
angry with Miss Garth for asking what she could possibly want with it!
Could there be any plainer proof than this that our misfortunes—falling
so much more heavily on her than on me—have quite unhinged her, and
worn her out? Surely her words and looks are not to be interpreted against
her, when she is not sufficiently mistress of herself to exert her natural
judgment—when she shows the unreasonable petulance of a child on a
question which is not of the slightest importance.</p>
<p>"A little after eleven we went upstairs to try if we could get some rest.</p>
<p>"I drew aside the curtain of my window and looked out. Oh, what a cruel
last night it was: no moon, no stars; such deep darkness that not one of
the dear familiar objects in the garden was visible when I looked for
them; such deep stillness that even my own movements about the room almost
frightened me! I tried to lie down and sleep, but the sense of loneliness
came again and quite overpowered me. You will say I am old enough, at
six-and-twenty, to have exerted more control over myself. I hardly know
how it happened, but I stole into Magdalen's room, just as I used to steal
into it years and years ago, when we were children. She was not in bed;
she was sitting with her writing materials before her, thinking. I said I
wanted to be with her the last night; and she kissed me, and told me to
lie down, and promised soon to follow me. My mind was a little quieted and
I fell asleep. It was daylight when I woke—and the first sight I saw
was Magdalen, still sitting in the chair, and still thinking. She had
never been to bed; she had not slept all through the night.</p>
<p>"'I shall sleep when we have left Combe-Raven,' she said. 'I shall be
better when it is all over, and I have bid Frank good-by.' She had in her
hand our father's will, and the letter he wrote to you; and when she had
done speaking, she gave them into my possession. I was the eldest (she
said), and those last precious relics ought to be in my keeping. I tried
to propose to her that we should divide them; but she shook her head. 'I
have copied for myself,' was her answer, 'all that he says of us in the
will, and all that he says in the letter.' She told me this, and took from
her bosom a tiny white silk bag, which she had made in the night, and in
which she had put the extracts, so as to keep them always about her. 'This
tells me in his own words what his last wishes were for both of us,' she
said; 'and this is all I want for the future.'</p>
<p>"These are trifles to dwell on; and I am almost surprised at myself for
not feeling ashamed to trouble you with them. But, since I have known what
your early connection was with my father and mother, I have learned to
think of you (and, I suppose, to write to you) as an old friend. And,
besides, I have it so much at heart to change your opinion of Magdalen,
that I can't help telling you the smallest things about her which may, in
my judgment, end in making you think of her as I do.</p>
<p>"When breakfast-time came (on Thursday morning), we were surprised to find
a strange letter on the table. Perhaps I ought to mention it to you, in
case of any future necessity for your interference. It was addressed to
Miss Garth, on paper with the deepest mourning-border round it; and the
writer was the same man who followed us on our way home from a walk one
day last spring—Captain Wragge. His object appears to be to assert
once more his audacious claim to a family connection with my poor mother,
under cover of a letter of condolence; which it is an insolence in such a
person to have written at all. He expresses as much sympathy—on his
discovery of our affliction in the newspaper—as if he had been
really intimate with us; and he begs to know, in a postscript (being
evidently in total ignorance of all that has really happened), whether it
is thought desirable that he should be present, among the other relatives,
at the reading of the will! The address he gives, at which letters will
reach him for the next fortnight, is, 'Post-office, Birmingham.' This is
all I have to tell you on the subject. Both the letter and the writer seem
to me to be equally unworthy of the slightest notice, on our part or on
yours.</p>
<p>"After breakfast Magdalen left us, and went by herself into the
morning-room. The weather being still showery, we had arranged that
Francis Clare should see her in that room, when he presented himself to
take his leave. I was upstairs when he came; and I remained upstairs for
more than half an hour afterward, sadly anxious, as you may well believe,
on Magdalen's account.</p>
<p>"At the end of the half-hour or more, I came downstairs. As I reached the
landing I suddenly heard her voice, raised entreatingly, and calling on
him by his name—then loud sobs—then a frightful laughing and
screaming, both together, that rang through the house. I instantly ran
into the room, and found Magdalen on the sofa in violent hysterics, and
Frank standing staring at her, with a lowering, angry face, biting his
nails.</p>
<p>"I felt so indignant—without knowing plainly why, for I was
ignorant, of course, of what had passed at the interview—that I took
Mr. Francis Clare by the shoulders and pushed him out of the room. I am
careful to tell you how I acted toward him, and what led to it; because I
understand that he is excessively offended with me, and that he is likely
to mention elsewhere what he calls my unladylike violence toward him. If
he should mention it to you, I am anxious to acknowledge, of my own
accord, that I forgot myself—not, I hope you will think, without
some provocation.</p>
<p>"I pushed him into the hall, leaving Magdalen, for the moment, to Miss
Garth's care. Instead of going away, he sat down sulkily on one of the
hall chairs. 'May I ask the reason of this extraordinary violence?' he
inquired, with an injured look. 'No,' I said. 'You will be good enough to
imagine the reason for yourself, and to leave us immediately, if you
please.' He sat doggedly in the chair, biting his nails and considering.
'What have I done to be treated in this unfeeling manner?' he asked, after
a while. 'I can enter into no discussion with you,' I answered; 'I can
only request you to leave us. If you persist in waiting to see my sister
again, I will go to the cottage myself and appeal to your father.' He got
up in a great hurry at those words. 'I have been infamously used in this
business,' he said. 'All the hardships and the sacrifices have fallen to
my share. I'm the only one among you who has any heart: all the rest are
as hard as stones—Magdalen included. In one breath she says she
loves me, and in another she tells me to go to China. What have I done to
be treated with this heartless inconsistency? I am consistent myself—I
only want to stop at home—and (what's the consequence?) you're all
against me!' In that manner he grumbled his way down the steps, and so I
saw the last of him. This was all that passed between us. If he gives you
any other account of it, what he says will be false. He made no attempt to
return. An hour afterward his father came alone to say good-by. He saw
Miss Garth and me, but not Magdalen; and he told us he would take the
necessary measures, with your assistance, for having his son properly
looked after in London, and seen safely on board the vessel when the time
came. It was a short visit, and a sad leave-taking. Even Mr. Clare was
sorry, though he tried hard to hide it.</p>
<p>"We had barely two hours, after Mr. Clare had left us, before it would be
time to go. I went back to Magdalen, and found her quieter and better,
though terribly pale and exhausted, and oppressed, as I fancied, by
thoughts which she could not prevail on herself to communicate. She would
tell me nothing then—she has told me nothing since—of what
passed between herself and Francis Clare. When I spoke of him angrily
(feeling as I did that he had distressed and tortured her, when she ought
to have had all the encouragement and comfort from him that man could
give), she refused to hear me: she made the kindest allowances and the
sweetest excuses for him, and laid all the blame of the dreadful state in
which I had found her entirely on herself. Was I wrong in telling you that
she had a noble nature? And won't you alter your opinion when you read
these lines?</p>
<p>"We had no friends to come and bid us good-by; and our few acquaintances
were too far from us—perhaps too indifferent about us—to call.
We employed the little leisure left in going over the house together for
the last time. We took leave of our old schoolroom, our bedrooms, the room
where our mother died, the little study where our father used to settle
his accounts and write his letters—feeling toward them, in our
forlorn condition, as other girls might have felt at parting with old
friends. From the house, in a gleam of fine weather, we went into the
garden, and gathered our last nosegay; with the purpose of drying the
flowers when they begin to wither, and keeping them in remembrance of the
happy days that are gone. When we had said good-by to the garden, there
was only half an hour left. We went together to the grave; we knelt down,
side by side, in silence, and kissed the sacred ground. I thought my heart
would have broken. August was the month of my mother's birthday; and, this
time last year, my father and Magdalen and I were all consulting in secret
what present we could make to surprise her with on the birthday morning.</p>
<p>"If you had seen how Magdalen suffered, you would never doubt her again. I
had to take her from the last resting-place of our father and mother
almost by force. Before we were out of the churchyard she broke from me
and ran back. She dropped on her knees at the grave; tore up from it
passionately a handful of grass; and said something to herself, at the
same moment, which, though I followed her instantly, I did not get near
enough to hear. She turned on me in such a frenzied manner, when I tried
to raise her from the ground—she looked at me with such a fearful
wildness in her eyes—that I felt absolutely terrified at the sight
of her. To my relief, the paroxysm left her as suddenly as it had come.
She thrust away the tuft of grass into the bosom of her dress, and took my
arm and hurried with me out of the churchyard. I asked her why she had
gone back—I asked what those words were which she had spoken at the
grave. 'A promise to our dead father,' she answered, with a momentary
return of the wild look and the frenzied manner which had startled me
already. I was afraid to agitate her by saying more; I left all other
questions to be asked at a fitter and a quieter time. You will understand
from this how terribly she suffers, how wildly and strangely she acts
under violent agitation; and you will not interpret against her what she
said or did when you saw her on Wednesday last.</p>
<p>"We only returned to the house in time to hasten away from it to the
train. Perhaps it was better for us so—better that we had only a
moment left to look back before the turn in the road hid the last of
Combe-Raven from our view. There was not a soul we knew at the station;
nobody to stare at us, nobody to wish us good-by. The rain came on again
as we took our seats in the train. What we felt at the sight of the
railway—what horrible remembrances it forced on our minds of the
calamity which has made us fatherless—I cannot, and dare not, tell
you. I have tried anxiously not to write this letter in a gloomy tone; not
to return all your kindness to us by distressing you with our grief.
Perhaps I have dwelt too long already on the little story of our parting
from home? I can only say, in excuse, that my heart is full of it; and
what is not in my heart my pen won't write.</p>
<p>"We have been so short a time in our new abode that I have nothing more to
tell you—except that Miss Garth's sister has received us with the
heartiest kindness. She considerately leaves us to ourselves, until we are
fitter than we are now to think of our future plans, and to arrange as we
best can for earning our own living. The house is so large, and the
position of our rooms has been so thoughtfully chosen, that I should
hardly know—except when I hear the laughing of the younger girls in
the garden—that we were living in a school.</p>
<p>"With kindest and best wishes from Miss Garth and my sister, believe me,
dear Mr. Pendril, gratefully yours,</p>
<p>"NORAH VANSTONE." II.</p>
<p><i>From Miss Garth to Mr. Pendril.</i></p>
<p>"Westmoreland House, Kensington,</p>
<p>"September 23d, 1846.</p>
<p>"MY DEAR SIR—I write these lines in such misery of mind as no words
can describe. Magdalen has deserted us. At an early hour this morning she
secretly left the house, and she has not been heard of since.</p>
<p>"I would come and speak to you personally; but I dare not leave Norah. I
must try to control myself; I must try to write.</p>
<p>"Nothing happened yesterday to prepare me or to prepare Norah for this
last—I had almost said, this worst—of all our afflictions. The
only alteration we either of us noticed in the unhappy girl was an
alteration for the better when we parted for the night. She kissed me,
which she has not done latterly; and she burst out crying when she
embraced her sister next. We had so little suspicion of the truth that we
thought these signs of renewed tenderness and affection a promise of
better things for the future.</p>
<p>"This morning, when her sister went into her room, it was empty, and a
note in her handwriting, addressed to Norah, was lying on the
dressing-table. I cannot prevail on Norah to part with the note; I can
only send you the inclosed copy of it. You will see that it affords no
clew to the direction she has taken.</p>
<p>"Knowing the value of time, in this dreadful emergency, I examined her
room, and (with my sister's help) questioned the servants immediately on
the news of her absence reaching me. Her wardrobe was empty; and all her
boxes but one, which she has evidently taken away with her, are empty,
too. We are of opinion that she has privately turned her dresses and
jewelry into money; that she had the one trunk she took with her removed
from the house yesterday; and that she left us this morning on foot. The
answers given by one of the servants are so unsatisfactory that we believe
the woman has been bribed to assist her; and has managed all those
arrangements for her flight which she could not have safely undertaken by
herself.</p>
<p>"Of the immediate object with which she has left us, I entertain no doubt.</p>
<p>"I have reasons (which I can tell you at a fitter time) for feeling
assured that she has gone away with the intention of trying her fortune on
the stage. She has in her possession the card of an actor by profession,
who superintended an amateur theatrical performance at Clifton, in which
she took part; and to him she has gone to help her. I saw the card at the
time, and I know the actor's name to be Huxtable. The address I cannot
call to mind quite so correctly; but I am almost sure it was at some
theatrical place in Bow Street, Covent Garden. Let me entreat you not to
lose a moment in sending to make the necessary inquiries; the first trace
of her will, I firmly believe, be found at that address.</p>
<p>"If we had nothing worse to dread than her attempting to go on the stage,
I should not feel the distress and dismay which now overpower me. Hundreds
of other girls have acted as recklessly as she has acted, and have not
ended ill after all. But my fears for Magdalen do not begin and end with
the risk she is running at present.</p>
<p>"There has been something weighing on her mind ever since we left
Combe-Raven—weighing far more heavily for the last six weeks than at
first. Until the period when Francis Clare left England, I am persuaded
she was secretly sustained by the hope that he would contrive to see her
again. From the day when she knew that the measures you had taken for
preventing this had succeeded; from the day when she was assured that the
ship had really taken him away, nothing has roused, nothing has interested
her. She has given herself up, more and more hopelessly, to her own
brooding thoughts; thoughts which I believe first entered her mind on the
day when the utter ruin of the prospects on which her marriage depended
was made known to her. She has formed some desperate project of contesting
the possession of her father's fortune with Michael Vanstone; and the
stage career which she has gone away to try is nothing more than a means
of freeing herself from all home dependence, and of enabling her to run
what mad risks she pleases, in perfect security from all home control.
What it costs me to write of her in these terms, I must leave you to
imagine. The time has gone by when any consideration of distress to my own
feelings can weigh with me. Whatever I can say which will open your eyes
to the real danger, and strengthen your conviction of the instant
necessity of averting it, I say in despite of myself, without hesitation
and without reserve.</p>
<p>"One word more, and I have done.</p>
<p>"The last time you were so good as to come to this house, do you remember
how Magdalen embarrassed and distressed us by questioning you about her
right to bear her father's name? Do you remember her persisting in her
inquiries, until she had forced you to acknowledge that, legally speaking,
she and her sister had No Name? I venture to remind you of this, because
you have the affairs of hundreds of clients to think of, and you might
well have forgotten the circumstance. Whatever natural reluctance she
might otherwise have had to deceiving us, and degrading herself, by the
use of an assumed name, that conversation with you is certain to have
removed. We must discover her by personal description—we can trace
her in no other way.</p>
<p>"I can think of nothing more to guide your decision in our deplorable
emergency. For God's sake, let no expense and no efforts be spared. My
letter ought to reach you by ten o'clock this morning, at the latest. Let
me have one line in answer, to say you will act instantly for the best. My
only hope of quieting Norah is to show her a word of encouragement from
your pen. Believe me, dear sir, yours sincerely and obliged,</p>
<p>"HARRIET GARTH." III.</p>
<p><i>From Magdalen to Norah (inclosed in the preceding Letter).</i></p>
<p>"MY DARLING—Try to forgive me. I have struggled against myself till
I am worn out in the effort. I am the wretchedest of living creatures. Our
quiet life here maddens me; I can bear it no longer; I must go. If you
knew what my thoughts are; if you knew how hard I have fought against
them, and how horribly they have gone on haunting me in the lonely quiet
of this house, you would pity and forgive me. Oh, my love, don't feel hurt
at my not opening my heart to you as I ought! I dare not open it. I dare
not show myself to you as I really am.</p>
<p>"Pray don't send and seek after me; I will write and relieve all your
anxieties. You know, Norah, we must get our living for ourselves; I have
only gone to get mine in the manner which is fittest for me. Whether I
succeed, or whether I fail, I can do myself no harm either way. I have no
position to lose, and no name to degrade. Don't doubt I love you—don't
let Miss Garth doubt my gratitude. I go away miserable at leaving you; but
I must go. If I had loved you less dearly, I might have had the courage to
say this in your presence—but how could I trust myself to resist
your persuasions, and to bear the sight of your distress? Farewell, my
darling! Take a thousand kisses from me, my own best, dearest love, till
we meet again.</p>
<p>"MAGDALEN." IV.</p>
<p><i>From Sergeant Bulmer (of the Detective Police) to Mr. Pendril.</i></p>
<p>"Scotland Yard, September 29th, 1846.</p>
<p>"SIR—Your clerk informs me that the parties interested in our
inquiry after the missing young lady are anxious for news of the same. I
went to your office to speak to you about the matter to-day. Not having
found you, and not being able to return and try again to-morrow, I write
these lines to save delay, and to tell you how we stand thus far.</p>
<p>"I am sorry to say, no advance has been made since my former report. The
trace of the young lady which we found nearly a week since, still remains
the last trace discovered of her. This case seems a mighty simple one
looked at from a distance. Looked at close, it alters very considerably
for the worse, and becomes, to speak the plain truth—a Poser.</p>
<p>"This is how we now stand:</p>
<p>"We have traced the young lady to the theatrical agent's in Bow Street. We
know that at an early hour on the morning of the twenty-third the agent
was called downstairs, while he was dressing, to speak to a young lady in
a cab at the door. We know that, on her production of Mr. Huxtable's card,
he wrote on it Mr. Huxtable's address in the country, and heard her order
the cabman to drive to the Great Northern terminus. We believe she left by
the nine o'clock train. We followed her by the twelve o'clock train. We
have ascertained that she called at half-past two at Mr. Huxtable's
lodgings; that she found he was away, and not expected back till eight in
the evening; that she left word she would call again at eight; and that
she never returned. Mr. Huxtable's statement is—he and the young
lady have never set eyes on each other. The first consideration which
follows, is this: Are we to believe Mr. Huxtable? I have carefully
inquired into his character; I know as much, or more, about him than he
knows about himself; and my opinion is, that we <i>are</i> to believe him.
To the best of my knowledge, he is a perfectly honest man.</p>
<p>"Here, then, is the hitch in the case. The young lady sets out with a
certain object before her. Instead of going on to the accomplishment of
that object, she stops short of it. Why has she stopped? and where? Those
are, unfortunately, just the questions which we can't answer yet.</p>
<p>"My own opinion of the matter is, briefly, as follows: I don't think she
has met with any serious accident. Serious accidents, in nine cases out of
ten, discover themselves. My own notion is, that she has fallen into the
hands of some person or persons interested in hiding her away, and sharp
enough to know how to set about it. Whether she is in their charge, with
or without her own consent, is more than I can undertake to say at
present. I don't wish to raise false hopes or false fears; I wish to stop
short at the opinion I have given already.</p>
<p>"In regard to the future, I may tell you that I have left one of my men in
daily communication with the authorities. I have also taken care to have
the handbills offering a reward for the discovery of her widely
circulated. Lastly, I have completed the necessary arrangements for seeing
the play-bills of all country theaters, and for having the dramatic
companies well looked after. Some years since, this would have cost a
serious expenditure of time and money. Luckily for our purpose, the
country theaters are in a bad way. Excepting the large cities, hardly one
of them is open, and we can keep our eye on them, with little expense and
less difficulty.</p>
<p>"These are the steps which I think it needful to take at present. If you
are of another opinion, you have only to give me your directions, and I
will carefully attend to the same. I don't by any means despair of our
finding the young lady and bringing her back to her friends safe and well.
Please to tell them so; and allow me to subscribe myself, yours
respectfully,</p>
<p>"ABRAHAM BULMER." V.</p>
<p><i>Anonymous Letter addressed to Mr. Pendril.</i></p>
<p>"SIR—A word to the wise. The friends of a certain young lady are
wasting time and money to no purpose. Your confidential clerk and your
detective policeman are looking for a needle in a bottle of hay. This is
the ninth of October, and they have not found her yet: they will as soon
find the Northwest Passage. Call your dogs off; and you may hear of the
young lady's safety under her own hand. The longer you look for her, the
longer she will remain, what she is now—lost."</p>
<p>[The preceding letter is thus indorsed, in Mr. Pendril's handwriting: "No
apparent means of tracing the inclosed to its source. Post-mark, 'Charing
Cross.' Stationer's stamp cut off the inside of the envelope. Handwriting,
probably a man's, in disguise. Writer, whoever he is, correctly informed.
No further trace of the younger Miss Vanstone discovered yet."]</p>
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