<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"></SPAN></p>
<h2> THE SECOND SCENE. </h2>
<h3> SKELDERGATE, YORK. </h3>
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<h2> CHAPTER I. </h2>
<p>IN that part of the city of York which is situated on the western bank of
the Ouse there is a narrow street, called Skeldergate, running nearly
north and south, parallel with the course of the river. The postern by
which Skeldergate was formerly approached no longer exists; and the few
old houses left in the street are disguised in melancholy modern costume
of whitewash and cement. Shops of the smaller and poorer order, intermixed
here and there with dingy warehouses and joyless private residences of red
brick, compose the present a spect of Skeldergate. On the river-side the
houses are separated at intervals by lanes running down to the water, and
disclosing lonely little plots of open ground, with the masts of
sailing-barges rising beyond. At its southward extremity the street ceases
on a sudden, and the broad flow of the Ouse, the trees, the meadows, the
public-walk on one bank and the towing-path on the other, open to view.</p>
<p>Here, where the street ends, and on the side of it furthest from the
river, a narrow little lane leads up to the paved footway surmounting the
ancient Walls of York. The one small row of buildings, which is all that
the lane possesses, is composed of cheap lodging-houses, with an opposite
view, at the distance of a few feet, of a portion of the massive city
wall. This place is called Rosemary Lane. Very little light enters it;
very few people live in it; the floating population of Skeldergate passes
it by; and visitors to the Walk on the Walls, who use it as the way up or
the way down, get out of the dreary little passage as fast as they can.</p>
<p>The door of one of the houses in this lost corner of York opened softly on
the evening of the twenty-third of September, eighteen hundred and
forty-six; and a solitary individual of the male sex sauntered into
Skeldergate from the seclusion of Rosemary Lane.</p>
<p>Turning northward, this person directed his steps toward the bridge over
the Ouse and the busy center of the city. He bore the external appearance
of respectable poverty; he carried a gingham umbrella, preserved in an
oilskin case; he picked his steps, with the neatest avoidance of all dirty
places on the pavement; and he surveyed the scene around him with eyes of
two different colors—a bilious brown eye on the lookout for
employment, and a bilious green eye in a similar predicament. In plainer
terms, the stranger from Rosemary Lane was no other than—Captain
Wragge.</p>
<p>Outwardly speaking, the captain had not altered for the better since the
memorable spring day when he had presented himself to Miss Garth at the
lodge-gate at Combe-Raven. The railway mania of that famous year had
attacked even the wary Wragge; had withdrawn him from his customary
pursuits; and had left him prostrate in the end, like many a better man.
He had lost his clerical appearance—he had faded with the autumn
leaves. His crape hat-band had put itself in brown mourning for its own
bereavement of black. His dingy white collar and cravat had died the death
of old linen, and had gone to their long home at the paper-maker's, to
live again one day in quires at a stationer's shop. A gray shooting-jacket
in the last stage of woolen atrophy replaced the black frockcoat of former
times, and, like a faithful servant, kept the dark secret of its master's
linen from the eyes of a prying world. From top to toe every square inch
of the captain's clothing was altered for the worse; but the man himself
remained unchanged—superior to all forms of moral mildew, impervious
to the action of social rust. He was as courteous, as persuasive, as
blandly dignified as ever. He carried his head as high without a
shirt-collar as ever he had carried it with one. The threadbare black
handkerchief round his neck was perfectly tied; his rotten old shoes were
neatly blacked; he might have compared chins, in the matter of smooth
shaving, with the highest church dignitary in York. Time, change, and
poverty had all attacked the captain together, and had all failed alike to
get him down on the ground. He paced the streets of York, a man superior
to clothes and circumstances—his vagabond varnish as bright on him
as ever.</p>
<p>Arrived at the bridge, Captain Wragge stopped and looked idly over the
parapet at the barges in the river. It was plainly evident that he had no
particular destination to reach and nothing whatever to do. While he was
still loitering, the clock of York Minster chimed the half-hour past five.
Cabs rattled by him over the bridge on their way to meet the train from
London, at twenty minutes to six. After a moment's hesitation, the captain
sauntered after the cabs. When it is one of a man's regular habits to live
upon his fellow-creatures, that man is always more or less fond of
haunting large railway stations. Captain Wragge gleaned the human field,
and on that unoccupied afternoon the York terminus was as likely a corner
to look about in as any other.</p>
<p>He reached the platform a few minutes after the train had arrived. That
entire incapability of devising administrative measures for the management
of large crowds, which is one of the characteristics of Englishmen in
authority, is nowhere more strikingly exemplified than at York. Three
different lines of railway assemble three passenger mobs, from morning to
night, under one roof; and leave them to raise a traveler's riot, with all
the assistance which the bewildered servants of the company can render to
increase the confusion. The customary disturbance was rising to its climax
as Captain Wragge approached the platform. Dozens of different people were
trying to attain dozens of different objects, in dozens of different
directions, all starting from the same common point and all equally
deprived of the means of information. A sudden parting of the crowd, near
the second-class carriages, attracted the captain's curiosity. He pushed
his way in; and found a decently-dressed man—assisted by a porter
and a policeman—attempting to pick up some printed bills scattered
from a paper parcel, which his frenzied fellow-passengers had knocked out
of his hand.</p>
<p>Offering his assistance in this emergency, with the polite alacrity which
marked his character, Captain Wragge observed the three startling words,
"Fifty Pounds Reward," printed in capital letters on the bills which he
assisted in recovering; and instantly secreted one of them, to be more
closely examined at the first convenient opportunity. As he crumpled up
the bill in the palm of his hand, his party-colored eyes fixed with hungry
interest on the proprietor of the unlucky parcel. When a man happens not
to be possessed of fifty pence in his own pocket, if his heart is in the
right place, it bounds; if his mouth is properly constituted, it waters,
at the sight of another man who carries about with him a printed offer of
fifty pounds sterling, addressed to his fellow-creatures.</p>
<p>The unfortunate traveler wrapped up his parcel as he best might, and made
his way off the platform, after addressing an inquiry to the first
official victim of the day's passenger-traffic, who was sufficiently in
possession of his senses to listen to it. Leaving the station for the
river-side, which was close at hand, the stranger entered the ferryboat at
the North Street Postern. The captain, who had carefully dogged his steps
thus far, entered the boat also; and employed the short interval of
transit to the opposite bank in a perusal of the handbill which he had
kept for his own private enlightenment. With his back carefully turned on
the traveler, Captain Wragge now possessed his mind of the following
lines:</p>
<p>"FIFTY POUNDS REWARD.</p>
<p>"Left her home, in London, early on the morning of September 23d, 1846, A
YOUNG LADY. Age—eighteen. Dress—deep mourning. Personal
appearance—hair of a very light brown; eyebrows and eyelashes
darker; eyes light gray; complexion strikingly pale; lower part of her
face large and full; tall upright figure; walks with remarkable grace and
ease; speaks with openness and resolution; has the manners and habits of a
refined, cultivated lady. Personal marks—two little moles, close
together, on the left side of the neck. Mark on the under-clothing—'Magdalen
Vanstone.' Is supposed to have joined, or attempted to join, under an
assumed name, a theatrical company now performing at York. Had, when she
left London, one black box, and no other luggage. Whoever will give such
information as will restore her to her friends shall receive the above
Reward. Apply at the office of Mr. Harkness, solicitor, Coney Street,
York. Or to Messrs. Wyatt, Pendril, and Gwilt, Serle Street, Lincoln's
Inn, London."</p>
<p>Accustomed as Captain Wragge was to keep the completest possession of
himself in all hum an emergencies, his own profound astonishment, when the
course of his reading brought him to the mark on the linen of the missing
young lady, betrayed him into an exclamation of surprise which even
startled the ferryman. The traveler was less observant; his whole
attention was fixed on the opposite bank of the river, and he left the
boat hastily the moment it touched the landing-place. Captain Wragge
recovered himself, pocketed the handbill, and followed his leader for the
second time.</p>
<p>The stranger directed his steps to the nearest street which ran down to
the river, compared a note in his pocketbook with the numbers of the
houses on the left-hand side, stopped at one of them, and rang the bell.
The captain went on to the next house; affected to ring the bell, in his
turn, and stood with his back to the traveler—in appearance, waiting
to be let in; in reality, listening with all his might for any scraps of
dialogue which might reach his ears on the opening of the door behind him.</p>
<p>The door was answered with all due alacrity, and a sufficiently
instructive interchange of question and answer on the threshold rewarded
the dexterity of Captain Wragge.</p>
<p>"Does Mr. Huxtable live here?" asked the traveler.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," was the answer, in a woman's voice.</p>
<p>"Is he at home?"</p>
<p>"Not at home now, sir; but he will be in again at eight to-night."</p>
<p>"I think a young lady called here early in the day, did she not?"</p>
<p>"Yes; a young lady came this afternoon."</p>
<p>"Exactly; I come on the same business. Did she see Mr. Huxtable?"</p>
<p>"No, sir; he has been away all day. The young lady told me she would come
back at eight o'clock."</p>
<p>"Just so. I will call and see Mr. Huxtable at the same time."</p>
<p>"Any name, sir?"</p>
<p>"No; say a gentleman called on theatrical business—that will be
enough. Wait one minute, if you please. I am a stranger in York; will you
kindly tell me which is the way to Coney Street?"</p>
<p>The woman gave the required information, the door closed, and the stranger
hastened away in the direction of Coney Street.</p>
<p>On this occasion Captain Wragge made no attempt to follow him. The
handbill revealed plainly enough that the man's next object was to
complete the necessary arrangements with the local solicitor on the
subject of the promised reward.</p>
<p>Having seen and heard enough for his immediate purpose, the captain
retraced his steps down the street, turned to the right, and entered on
the Esplanade, which, in that quarter of the city, borders the river-side
between the swimming-baths and Lendal Tower. "This is a family matter,"
said Captain Wragge to himself, persisting, from sheer force of habit, in
the old assertion of his relationship to Magdalen's mother; "I must
consider it in all its bearings." He tucked the umbrella under his arm,
crossed his hands behind him, and lowered himself gently into the abyss of
his own reflections. The order and propriety observable in the captain's
shabby garments accurately typified the order and propriety which
distinguished the operations of the captain's mind. It was his habit
always to see his way before him through a neat succession of alternatives—and
so he saw it now.</p>
<p>Three courses were open to him in connection with the remarkable discovery
which he had just made. The first course was to do nothing in the matter
at all. Inadmissible, on family grounds: equally inadmissible on pecuniary
grounds: rejected accordingly. The second course was to deserve the
gratitude of the young lady's friends, rated at fifty pounds. The third
course was, by a timely warning to deserve the gratitude of the young lady
herself, rated—at an unknown figure. Between these two last
alternatives the wary Wragge hesitated; not from doubt of Magdalen's
pecuniary resources—for he was totally ignorant of the circumstances
which had deprived the sisters of their inheritance—but from doubt
whether an obstacle in the shape of an undiscovered gentleman might not be
privately connected with her disappearance from home. After mature
reflection, he determined to pause, and be guided by circumstances. In the
meantime, the first consideration was to be beforehand with the messenger
from London, and to lay hands securely on the young lady herself.</p>
<p>"I feel for this misguided girl," mused the captain, solemnly strutting
backward and forward by the lonely river-side. "I always have looked upon
her—I always shall look upon her—in the light of a niece."</p>
<p>Where was the adopted relative at that moment? In other words, how was a
young lady in Magdalen's critical position likely to while away the hours
until Mr. Huxtable 's return? If there was an obstructive gentleman in the
background, it would be mere waste of time to pursue the question. But if
the inference which the handbill suggested was correct—if she was
really alone at that moment in the city of York—where was she likely
to be?</p>
<p>Not in the crowded thoroughfares, to begin with. Not viewing the objects
of interest in the Minster, for it was now past the hour at which the
cathedral could be seen. Was she in the waiting-room at the railway? She
would hardly run that risk. Was she in one of the hotels? Doubtful,
considering that she was entirely by herself. In a pastry-cook's shop? Far
more likely. Driving about in a cab? Possible, certainly; but no more.
Loitering away the time in some quiet locality, out-of-doors? Likely
enough, again, on that fine autumn evening. The captain paused, weighed
the relative claims on his attention of the quiet locality and the
pastry-cook's shop; and decided for the first of the two. There was time
enough to find her at the pastry-cook's, to inquire after her at the
principal hotels, or, finally, to intercept her in Mr. Huxtable's
immediate neighborhood from seven to eight. While the light lasted, the
wise course was to use it in looking for her out-of-doors. Where? The
Esplanade was a quiet locality; but she was not there—not on the
lonely road beyond, which ran back by the Abbey Wall. Where next? The
captain stopped, looked across the river, brightened under the influence
of a new idea, and suddenly hastened back to the ferry.</p>
<p>"The Walk on the Walls," thought this judicious man, with a twinkle of his
party-colored eyes. "The quietest place in York; and the place that every
stranger goes to see."</p>
<p>In ten minutes more Captain Wragge was exploring the new field of search.
He mounted to the walls (which inclose the whole western portion of the
city) by the North Street Postern, from which the walk winds round until
it ends again at its southernly extremity in the narrow passage of
Rosemary Lane. It was then twenty minutes to seven. The sun had set more
than half an hour since; the red light lay broad and low in the cloudless
western heaven; all visible objects were softening in the tender twilight,
but were not darkening yet. The first few lamps lit in the street below
looked like faint little specks of yellow light, as the captain started on
his walk through one of the most striking scenes which England can show.</p>
<p>On his right hand, as he set forth, stretched the open country beyond the
walls—the rich green meadows, the boundary-trees dividing them, the
broad windings of the river in the distance, the scattered buildings
nearer to view; all wrapped in the evening stillness, all made beautiful
by the evening peace. On his left hand, the majestic west front of York
Minster soared over the city and caught the last brightest light of heaven
on the summits of its lofty towers. Had this noble prospect tempted the
lost girl to linger and look at it? No; thus far, not a sign of her. The
captain looked round him attentively, and walked on.</p>
<p>He reached the spot where the iron course of the railroad strikes its way
through arches in the old wall. He paused at this place—where the
central activity of a great railway enterprise beats, with all the pulses
of its loud-clanging life, side by side with the dead majesty of the past,
deep under the old historic stones which tell of fortified York and the
sieges of two centuries since—he stood on this spot, and searched
for her again, and searched in vain. Others were looking idly down at the
desolate activity on the wilderness of the iron rails; but she was not
among them. The captain glanced doubtfully at the darkening sky, and
walked on.</p>
<p>He stopped again where the postern of Micklegate still stands, and still
strengthens the city wall as of old. Here the paved walk descends a few
steps, passes through the dark stone guardroom of the ancient gate,
ascends again, and continues its course southward until the walls reach
the river once more. He paused, and peered anxiously into the dim inner
corners of the old guard-room. Was she waiting there for the darkness to
come, and hide her from prying eyes? No: a solitary workman loitered
through the stone chamber; but no other living creature stirred in the
place. The captain mounted the steps which led out from the postern and
walked on.</p>
<p>He advanced some fifty or sixty yards along the paved footway; the
outlying suburbs of York on one side of him, a rope-walk and some patches
of kitchen garden occupying a vacant strip of ground on the other. He
advanced with eager eyes and quickened step; for he saw before him the
lonely figure of a woman, standing by the parapet of the wall, with her
face set toward the westward view. He approached cautiously, to make sure
of her before she turned and observed him. There was no mistaking that
tall, dark figure, as it rested against the parapet with a listless grace.
There she stood, in her long black cloak and gown, the last dim light of
evening falling tenderly on her pale, resolute young face. There she stood—not
three months since the spoiled darling of her parents; the priceless
treasure of the household, never left unprotected, never trusted alone—there
she stood in the lovely dawn of her womanhood, a castaway in a strange
city, wrecked on the world!</p>
<p>Vagabond as he was, the first sight of her staggered even the dauntless
assurance of Captain Wragge. As she slowly turned her face and looked at
him, he raised his hat, with the nearest approach to respect which a long
life of unblushing audacity had left him capable of making.</p>
<p>"I think I have the honor of addressing the younger Miss Vanstone?" he
began. "Deeply gratified, I am sure—for more reasons than one."</p>
<p>She looked at him with a cold surprise. No recollection of the day when he
had followed her sister and herself on their way home with Miss Garth rose
in her memory, while he now confronted her, with his altered manner and
his altered dress.</p>
<p>"You are mistaken," she said, quietly. "You are a perfect stranger to me."</p>
<p>"Pardon me," replied the captain; "I am a species of relation. I had the
pleasure of seeing you in the spring of the present year. I presented
myself on that memorable occasion to an honored preceptress in your late
father's family. Permit me, under equally agreeable circumstances, to
present myself to <i>you</i>. My name is Wragge."</p>
<p>By this time he had recovered complete possession of his own impudence;
his party-colored eyes twinkled cheerfully, and he accompanied his modest
announcement of himself with a dancing-master's bow.</p>
<p>Magdalen frowned, and drew back a step. The captain was not a man to be
daunted by a cold reception. He tucked his umbrella under his arm and
jocosely spelled his name for her further enlightenment. "W, R, A, double
G, E—Wragge," said the captain, ticking off the letters persuasively
on his fingers.</p>
<p>"I remember your name," said Magdalen. "Excuse me for leaving you
abruptly. I have an engagement."</p>
<p>She tried to pass him and walk on northward toward the railway. He
instantly met the attempt by raising both hands, and displaying a pair of
darned black gloves outspread in polite protest.</p>
<p>"Not that way," he said; "not that way, Miss Vanstone, I beg and entreat!"</p>
<p>"Why not?" she asked haughtily.</p>
<p>"Because," answered the captain, "that is the way which leads to Mr.
Huxtable's."</p>
<p>In the ungovernable astonishment of hearing his reply she suddenly bent
forward, and for the first time looked him close in the face. He sustained
her suspicious scrutiny with every appearance of feeling highly gratified
by it. "H, U, X—Hux," said the captain, playfully turning to the old
joke: "T, A—ta, Huxta; B, L, E—ble; Huxtable."</p>
<p>"What do you know about Mr. Huxtable?" she asked. "What do you mean by
mentioning him to me?"</p>
<p>The captain's curly lip took a new twist upward. He immediately replied,
to the best practical purpose, by producing the handbill from his pocket.</p>
<p>"There is just light enough left," he said, "for young (and lovely) eyes
to read by. Before I enter upon the personal statement which your
flattering inquiry claims from me, pray bestow a moment's attention on
this Document."</p>
<p>She took the handbill from him. By the last gleam of twilight she read the
lines which set a price on her recovery—which published the
description of her in pitiless print, like the description of a strayed
dog. No tender consideration had prepared her for the shock, no kind word
softened it to her when it came. The vagabond, whose cunning eyes watched
her eagerly while she read, knew no more that the handbill which he had
stolen had only been prepared in anticipation of the worst, and was only
to be publicly used in the event of all more considerate means of tracing
her being tried in vain—than she knew it. The bill dropped from her
hand; her face flushed deeply. She turned away from Captain Wragge, as if
all idea of his existence had passed out of her mind.</p>
<p>"Oh, Norah, Norah!" she said to herself, sorrowfully. "After the letter I
wrote you—after the hard struggle I had to go away! Oh, Norah,
Norah!"</p>
<p>"How is Norah?" inquired the captain, with the utmost politeness.</p>
<p>She turned upon him with an angry brightness in her large gray eyes. "Is
this thing shown publicly?" she asked, stamping her foot on it. "Is the
mark on my neck described all over York?"</p>
<p>"Pray compose yourself," pleaded the persuasive Wragge. "At present I have
every reason to believe that you have just perused the only copy in
circulation. Allow me to pick it up."</p>
<p>Before he could touch the bill she snatched it from the pavement, tore it
into fragments, and threw them over the wall.</p>
<p>"Bravo!" cried the captain. "You remind me of your poor dear mother. The
family spirit, Miss Vanstone. We all inherit our hot blood from my
maternal grandfather."</p>
<p>"How did you come by it?" she asked, suddenly.</p>
<p>"My dear creature, I have just told you," remonstrated the captain. "We
all come by it from my maternal grandfather."</p>
<p>"How did you come by that handbill?" she repeated, passionately.</p>
<p>"I beg ten thousand pardons! My head was running on the family spirit.—How
did I come by it? Briefly thus." Here Captain Wragge entered on his
personal statement; taking his customary vocal exercise through the
longest words of the English language, with the highest elocutionary
relish. Having, on this rare occasion, nothing to gain by concealment, he
departed from his ordinary habits, and, with the utmost amazement at the
novelty of his own situation, permitted himself to tell the unmitigated
truth.</p>
<p>The effect of the narrative on Magdalen by no means fulfilled Captain
Wragge's anticipations in relating it. She was not startled; she was not
irritated; she showed no disposition to cast herself on his mercy, and to
seek his advice. She looked him steadily in the face; and all she said,
when he had neatly rounded his last sentence, was—"Go on."</p>
<p>"Go on?" repeated the captain. "Shocked to disappoint you, I am sure; but
the fact is, I have done."</p>
<p>"No, you have not," she rejoined; "you have left out the end of your
story. The end of it is, you came here to look for me; and you mean to
earn the fifty pounds reward."</p>
<p>Those plain words so completely staggered Captain Wragge that for the
moment he stood speechless. But he had faced awkward truths of all sorts
far too often to be permanently disconcerted by them. Before Magdalen
could pursue her advantage, the vagabond had recovered his balance: Wragge
was himself again.</p>
<p>"Smart," said the captain, laughing indulgently, and drumming with his
umbrella on the pavement. "Some men might take it seriously. I'm not
easily offended. Try again."</p>
<p>Magdalen looked at him through the gathering darkness in mute perplexity.
All her little experience of society had been experience among people who
possessed a common sense of honor, and a common responsibility of social
position. She had hitherto seen nothing but the successful human product
from the great manufactory of Civilization. Here was one of the failures,
and, with all her quickness, she was puzzled how to deal with it.</p>
<p>"Pardon me for returning to the subject," pursued the captain. "It has
just occurred to my mind that you might actually have spoken in earnest.
My poor child! how can I earn the fifty pounds before the reward is
offered to me? Those handbills may not be publicly posted for a week to
come. Precious as you are to all your relatives (myself included), take my
word for it, the lawyers who are managing this case will not pay fifty
pounds for you if they can possibly help it. Are you still persuaded that
my needy pockets are gaping for the money? Very good. Button them up in
spite of me with your own fair fingers. There is a train to London at nine
forty-five to-night. Submit yourself to your friend's wishes and go back
by it."</p>
<p>"Never!" said Magdalen, firing at the bare suggestion, exactly as the
captain had intended she should. "If my mind had not been made up before,
that vile handbill would have decided me. I forgive Norah," she added,
turning away and speaking to herself, "but not Mr. Pendril, and not Miss
Garth."</p>
<p>"Quite right!" said Captain Wragge. "The family spirit. I should have done
the same myself at your age. It runs in the blood. Hark! there goes the
clock again—half-past seven. Miss Vanstone, pardon this seasonable
abruptness! If you are to carry out your resolution—if you are to be
your own mistress much longer, you must take a course of some kind before
eight o'clock. You are young, you are inexperienced, you are in imminent
danger. Here is a position of emergency on one side—and here am I,
on the other, with an uncle's interest in you, full of advice. Tap me."</p>
<p>"Suppose I choose to depend on nobody, and to act for myself?" said
Magdalen. "What then?"</p>
<p>"Then," replied the captain, "you will walk straight into one of the four
traps which are set to catch you in the ancient and interesting city of
York. Trap the first, at Mr. Huxtable's house; trap the second, at all the
hotels; trap the third, at the railway station; trap the fourth, at the
theater. That man with the handbills has had an hour at his disposal. If
he has not set those four traps (with the assistance of the local
solicitor) by this time, he is not the competent lawyer's clerk I take him
for. Come, come, my dear girl! if there is somebody else in the
background, whose advice you prefer to mine—"</p>
<p>"You see that I am alone," she interposed, proudly. "If you knew me
better, you would know that I depend on nobody but myself."</p>
<p>Those words decided the only doubt which now remained in the captain's
mind—the doubt whether the course was clear before him. The motive
of her flight from home was evidently what the handbills assumed it to be—a
reckless fancy for going on the stage. "One of two things," thought Wragge
to himself, in his logical way. "She's worth more than fifty pounds to me
in her present situation, or she isn't. If she is, her friends may whistle
for her. If she isn't, I have only to keep her till the bills are posted."
Fortified by this simple plan of action, the captain returned to the
charge, and politely placed Magdalen between the two inevitable
alternatives of trusting herself to him, on the one hand, or of returning
to her friends, on the other.</p>
<p>"I respect independence of character wherever I find it," he said, with an
air of virtuous severity. "In a young and lovely relative, I more than
respect—I admire it. But (excuse the bold assertion), to walk on a
way of your own, you must first have a way to walk on. Under existing
circumstances, where is <i>your</i> way? Mr. Huxtable is out of the
question, to begin with."</p>
<p>"Out of the question for to-night," said Magdalen; "but what hinders me
from writing to Mr. Huxtable, and making my own private arrangements with
him for to-morrow?"</p>
<p>"Granted with all my heart—a hit, a palpable hit. Now for my turn.
To get to to-morrow (excuse the bold assertion, once more), you must first
pass through to-night. Where are you to sleep?"</p>
<p>"Are there no hotels in York?"</p>
<p>"Excellent hotels for large families; excellent hotels for single
gentlemen. The very worst hotels in the world for handsome young ladies
who present themselves alone at the door without male escort, without a
maid in attendance, and without a single article of luggage. Dark as it
is, I think I could see a lady's box, if there was anything of the sort in
our immediate neighborhood."</p>
<p>"My box is at the cloak-room. What is to prevent my sending the ticket for
it?"</p>
<p>"Nothing—if you want to communicate your address by means of your
box—nothing whatever. Think; pray think! Do you really suppose that
the people who are looking for you are such fools as not to have an eye on
the cloakroom? Do you think they are such fools—when they find you
don't come to Mr. Huxtable's at eight to-night—as not to inquire at
all the hotels? Do you think a young lady of your striking appearance
(even if they consented to receive you) could take up her abode at an inn
without becoming the subject of universal curiosity and remark? Here is
night coming on as fast as it can. Don't let me bore you; only let me ask
once more—Where are you to sleep?"</p>
<p>There was no answer to that question: in Magdalen's position, there was
literally no answer to it on her side. She was silent.</p>
<p>"Where are you to sleep?" repeated the captain. "The reply is obvious—under
my roof. Mrs. Wragge will be charmed to see you. Look upon her as your
aunt; pray look upon her as your aunt. The landlady is a widow, the house
is close by, there are no other lodgers, and there is a bedroom to let.
Can anything be more satisfactory, under all the circumstances? Pray
observe, I say nothing about to-morrow—I leave to-morrow to you, and
confine myself exclusively to the night. I may, or may not, command
theatrical facilities, which I am in a position to offer you. Sympathy and
admiration may, or may not, be strong within me, when I contemplate the
dash and independence of your character. Hosts of examples of bright stars
of the British drama, who have begun their apprenticeship to the stage as
you are beginning yours, may, or may not, crowd on my memory. These are
topics for the future. For the present, I confine myself within my strict
range of duty. We are within five minutes' walk of my present address.
Allow me to offer you my arm. No? You hesitate? You distrust me? Good
heavens! is it possible you can have heard anything to my disadvantage?"</p>
<p>"Quite possible," said Magdalen, without a moment's flinching from the
answer.</p>
<p>"May I inquire the particulars?" asked the captain, with the politest
composure. "Don't spare my feelings; oblige me by speaking out. In the
plainest terms, now, what have you heard?"</p>
<p>She answered him with a woman's desperate disregard of consequences when
she is driven to bay—she answered him instantly,</p>
<p>"I have heard you are a Rogue."</p>
<p>"Have you, indeed?" said the impenetrable Wragge. "A Rogue? Well, I waive
my privilege of setting you right on that point for a fitter time. For the
sake of argument, let us say I am a Rogue. What is Mr. Huxtable?"</p>
<p>"A respectable man, or I should not have seen him in the house where we
first met."</p>
<p>"Very good. Now observe! You talked of writing to Mr. Huxtable a minute
ago. What do you think a respectable man is likely to do with a young lady
who openly acknowledges that she has run away from her home and her
friends to go on the stage? My dear girl, on your own showing, it's not a
respectable man you want in your present predicament. It's a Rogue—like
me."</p>
<p>Magdalen laughed, bitterly.</p>
<p>"There is some truth in that," she said. "Thank you for recalling me to
myself and my circumstances. I have my end to gain—and who am I, to
pick and choose the way of getting to it? It is my turn to beg pardon now.
I have been talking as if I was a young lady of family and position.
Absurd! We know better than that, don't we, Captain Wragge? You are quite
right. Nobody's child must sleep under Somebody's roof—and why not
yours?"</p>
<p>"This way," said the captain, dexterously profiting by the sudden change
in her humor, and cunningly refraining from exasperating it by saying more
himself. "This way."</p>
<p>She followed him a few steps, and suddenly stopped.</p>
<p>"Suppose I <i>am</i> discovered?" she broke out, abruptly. "Who has any
authority over me? Who can take me back, if I don't choose to go? If they
all find me to-morrow, what then? Can't I say No to Mr. Pendril? Can't I
trust my own courage with Miss Garth?"</p>
<p>"Can you trust your courage with your sister?" whispered the captain, who
had not forgotten the references to Norah which had twice escaped her
already.</p>
<p>Her head drooped. She shivered as if the cold night air had struck her,
and leaned back wearily against the parapet of the wall.</p>
<p>"Not with Norah," she said, sadly. "I could trust myself with the others.
Not with Norah."</p>
<p>"This way," repeated Captain Wragge. She roused herself; looked up at the
darkening heaven, looked round at the darkening view. "What must be,
must," she said, and followed him.</p>
<p>The Minster clock struck the quarter to eight as they left the Walk on the
Wall and descended the steps into Rosemary Lane. Almost at the same moment
the lawyer's clerk from London gave the last instructions to his
subordinates, and took up his own position, on the opposite side of the
river, within easy view of Mr. Huxtable's door.</p>
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