<p>VIII.</p><p><i>Chronicle for April and May.</i></p>
<p>We have visited seven more large towns, and are now at Birmingham.
Consulting my books, I find that Miss Vanstone has realized by the
Entertainment, up to this time, the enormous sum of nearly four hundred
pounds. It is quite possible that my own profits may reach one or two
miserable hundred more. But I was the architect of her fortunes—the
publisher, so to speak, of her book—and, if anything, I am
underpaid.</p>
<p>I made the above discovery on the twenty-ninth of the month—anniversary
of the Restoration of my royal predecessor in the field of human
sympathies, Charles the Second. I had barely finished locking up my
dispatch-box, when the ungrateful girl, whose reputation I have made, came
into the room and told me in so many words that the business connection
between us was for the present at an end.</p>
<p>I attempt no description of my own sensations: I merely record facts. She
informed me, with an appearance of perfect composure, that she needed
rest, and that she had "new objects in view." She might possibly want me
to assist those objects; and she might possibly return to the
Entertainment. In either case it would be enough if we exchanged
addresses, at which we could write to each other in case of need. Having
no desire to leave me too abruptly, she would remain the next day (which
was Sunday); and would take her departure on Monday morning. Such was her
explanation, in so many words.</p>
<p>Remonstrance, as I knew by experience, would be thrown away. Authority I
had none to exert. My one sensible course to take in this emergency was to
find out which way my own interests pointed, and to go that way without a
moment's unnecessary hesitation.</p>
<p>A very little reflection has since convinced me that she has a deep-laid
scheme against Michael Vanstone in view. She is young, handsome, clever,
and unscrupulous; she has made money to live on, and has time at her
disposal to find out the weak side of an old man; and she is going to
attack Mr. Michael Vanstone unawares with the legitimate weapons of her
sex. Is she likely to want me for such a purpose as this? Doubtful. Is she
merely anxious to get rid of me on easy terms? Probable. Am I the sort of
man to be treated in this way by my own pupil? Decidedly not: I am the man
to see my way through a neat succession of alternatives; and here they
are:</p>
<p>First alternative: To announce my compliance with her proposal; to
exchange addresses with her; and then to keep my eye privately on all her
future movements. Second alternative: to express fond anxiety in a
paternal capacity; and to threaten giving the alarm to her sister and the
lawyer, if she persists in her design. Third alternative: to turn the
information I already possess to the best account, by making it a
marketable commodity between Mr. Michael Vanstone and myself. At present I
incline toward the last of these three courses. But my decision is far too
important to be hurried. To-day is only the twenty-ninth. I will suspend
my Chronicle of Events until Monday.</p>
<p><i>May 31st</i>.—My alternatives and her plans are both overthrown
together.</p>
<p>The newspaper came in, as usual, after breakfast. I looked it over, and
discovered this memorable entry among the obituary announcements of the
day:</p>
<p>"On the 29th inst., at Brighton, Michael Vanstone, Esq., formerly of
Zurich, aged 77."</p>
<p>Miss Vanstone was present in the room when I read those two startling
lines. Her bonnet was on; her boxes were packed; she was waiting
impatiently until it was time to go to the train. I handed the paper to
her, without a word on my side. Without a word on hers, she looked where I
pointed, and read the news of Michael Vanstone's death.</p>
<p>The paper dropped out of her hand, and she suddenly pulled down her veil.
I caught one glance at her face before she hid it from me. The effect on
my mind was startling in the extreme. To put it with my customary dash of
humor—her face informed me that the most sensible action which
Michael Vanstone, Esq., formerly of Zurich, had ever achieved in his life
was the action he performed at Brighton on the 29th instant.</p>
<p>Finding the dead silence in the room singularly unpleasant under existing
circumstances, I thought I would make a remark. My regard for my own
interests supplied me with a subject. I mentioned the Entertainment.</p>
<p>"After what has happened," I said, "I presume we go on with our
performances as usual?"</p>
<p>"No," she answered, behind the veil. "We go on with my inquiries."</p>
<p>"Inquiries after a dead man?"</p>
<p>"Inquiries after the dead man's son."</p>
<p>"Mr. Noel Vanstone?"</p>
<p>"Yes; Mr. Noel Vanstone."</p>
<p>Not having a veil to put down over my own face, I stooped and picked up
the newspaper. Her devilish determination quite upset me for the moment. I
actually had to steady myself before I could speak to her again.</p>
<p>"Are the new inquiries as harmless as the old ones?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Quite as harmless."</p>
<p>"What am I expected to find out?"</p>
<p>"I wish to know whether Mr. Noel Vanstone remains at Brighton after the
funeral."</p>
<p>"And if not?"</p>
<p>"If not, I shall want to know his new address wherever it may be."</p>
<p>"Yes. And what next?"</p>
<p>"I wish you to find out next if all the father's money goes to the son."</p>
<p>I began to see her drift. The word money relieved me; I felt quite on my
own ground again.</p>
<p>"Anything more?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Only one thing more," she answered. "Make sure, if you please, whether
Mrs. Lecount, the housekeeper, remains or not in Mr. Noel Vanstone's
service."</p>
<p>Her voice altered a little as she mentioned Mrs. Lecount's name; she is
evidently sharp enough to distrust the housekeeper already.</p>
<p>"My expenses are to be paid as usual?" I said.</p>
<p>"As usual."</p>
<p>"When am I expected to leave for Brighton?"</p>
<p>"As soon as you can."</p>
<p>She rose, and left the room. After a momentary doubt, I decided on
executing the new commission. The more private inquiries I conduct for my
fair relative the harder she will find it to get rid of hers truly,
Horatio Wragge.</p>
<p>There is nothing to prevent my starting for Brighton to-morrow. So
to-morrow I go. If Mr. Noel Vanstone succeeds to his father's property, he
is the only human being possessed of pecuniary blessings who fails to
inspire me with a feeling of unmitigated envy.</p>
<p>IX.</p>
<p><i>Chronicle for June</i>.</p>
<p><i>9th</i>.—I returned yesterday with my information. Here it is,
privately noted down for convenience of future reference:</p>
<p>Mr. Noel Vanstone has left Brighton, and has removed, for the purpose of
transacting business in London, to one of his late father's empty houses
in Vauxhall Walk, Lambeth. This singularly mean selection of a place of
residence on the part of a gentleman of fortune looks as if Mr. N. V. and
his money were not easily parted.</p>
<p>Mr. Noel Vanstone has stepped into his father's shoes under the following
circumstances: Mr. Michael Vanstone appears to have died, curiously
enough, as Mr. Andrew Vanstone died—intestate. With this difference,
however, in the two cases, that the younger brother left an informal will,
and the elder brother left no will at all. The hardest men have their
weaknesses; and Mr. Michael Vanstone's weakness seems to have been an
insurmountable horror of contemplating the event of his own death. His
son, his housekeeper, and his lawyer, had all three tried over and over
again to get him to make a will; and had never shaken his obstinate
resolution to put off performing the only business duty he was ever known
to neglect. Two doctors attended him in his last illness; warned him that
he was too old a man to hope to get over it; and warned him in vain. He
announced his own positive determination not to die. His last words in
this world (as I succeeded in discovering from the nurse who assisted Mrs.
Lecount) were: "I'm getting better every minute; send for the fly directly
and take me out for a drive." The same night Death proved to be the more
obstinate of the two; and left his son (and only child) to take the
property in due course of law. Nobody doubts that the result would have
been the same if a will had been made. The father and son had every
confidence in each other, and were known to have always lived together on
the most friendly terms.</p>
<p>Mrs. Lecount remains with Mr. Noel Vanstone, in the same housekeeping
capacity which she filled with his father, and has accompanied him to the
new residence in Vauxhall Walk. She is acknowledged on all hands to have
been a sufferer by the turn events have taken. If Mr. Michael Vanstone had
made his will, there is no doubt she would have received a handsome
legacy. She is now left dependent on Mr. Noel Vanstone's sense of
gratitude; and she is not at all likely, I should imagine, to let that
sense fall asleep for want of a little timely jogging. Whether my fair
relative's future intentions in this quarter point toward Mischief or
Money, is more than I can yet say. In either case, I venture to predict
that she will find an awkward obstacle in Mrs. Lecount.</p>
<p>So much for my information to the present date. The manner in which it was
received by Miss Vanstone showed the most ungrateful distrust of me. She
confided nothing to my private ear but the expression of her best thanks.
A sharp girl—a devilish sharp girl. But there is such a thing as
bowling a man out once too often; especially when the name of that man
happens to be Wragge.</p>
<p>Not a word more about the Entertainment; not a word more about moving from
our present quarters. Very good. My right hand lays my left hand a wager.
Ten to one, on her opening communications with the son as she opened them
with the father. Ten to one, on her writing to Noel Vanstone before the
month is out.</p>
<p><i>21st</i>.—She has written by to-day's post. A long letter,
apparently—for she put two stamps on the envelope. (Private
memorandum, addressed to myself. Wait for the answer.)</p>
<p><i>22d, 23d, 24th.</i>—(Private memorandum continued. Wait for the
answer.)</p>
<p><i>25th.</i>—The answer has come. As an ex-military man, I have
naturally employed stratagem to get at it. The success which rewards all
genuine perseverance has rewarded me—and I have got at it
accordingly.</p>
<p>The letter is written, not by Mr. Noel Vanstone, but by Mrs. Lecount. She
takes the highest moral ground, in a tone of spiteful politeness. Mr. Noel
Vanstone's delicate health and recent bereavement prevent him from writing
himself. Any more letters from Miss Vanstone will be returned unopened.
Any personal application will produce an immediate appeal to the
protection of the law. Mr. Noel Vanstone, having been expressly cautioned
against Miss Magdalen Vanstone by his late lamented father, has not yet
forgotten his father's advice. Considers it a reflection cast on the
memory of the best of men, to suppose that his course of action toward the
Misses Vanstone can be other than the course of action which his father
pursued. This is what he has himself instructed Mrs. Lecount to say. She
has endeavored to express herself in the most conciliatory language she
could select; she had tried to avoid giving unnecessary pain, by
addressing Miss Vanstone (as a matter of courtesy) by the family name; and
she trusts these concessions, which speak for themselves, will not be
thrown away.—Such is the substance of the letter, and so it ends.</p>
<p>I draw two conclusions from this little document. First—that it will
lead to serious results. Secondly—that Mrs. Lecount, with all her
politeness, is a dangerous woman to deal with. I wish I saw my way safe
before me. I don't see it yet.</p>
<p><i>29th.</i>—Miss Vanstone has abandoned my protection; and the
whole lucrative future of the dramatic entertainment has abandoned me with
her. I am swindled—I, the last man under heaven who could possibly
have expected to write in those disgraceful terms of myself—I AM
SWINDLED!</p>
<p>Let me chronicle the events. They exhibit me, for the time being, in a
sadly helpless point of view. But the nature of the man prevails: I must
have the events down in black and white.</p>
<p>The announcement of her approaching departure was intimated to me
yesterday. After another civil speech about the information I had procured
at Brighton, she hinted that there was a necessity for pushing our
inquiries a little further. I immediately offered to undertake them, as
before. "No," she said; "they are not in your way this time. They are
inquiries relating to a woman; and I mean to make them myself!" Feeling
privately convinced that this new resolution pointed straight at Mrs.
Lecount, I tried a few innocent questions on the subject. She quietly
declined to answer them. I asked next when she proposed to leave. She
would leave on the twenty-eighth. For what destination? London. For long?
Probably not. By herself? No. With me? No. With whom then? With Mrs.
Wragge, if I had no objection. Good heavens! for what possible purpose?
For the purpose of getting a respectable lodging, which she could hardly
expect to accomplish unless she was accompanied by an elderly female
friend. And was I, in the capacity of elderly male friend, to be left out
of the business altogether? Impossible to say at present. Was I not even
to forward any letters which might come for her at our present address?
No: she would make the arrangement herself at the post-office; and she
would ask me, at the same time, for an address, at which I could receive a
letter from her, in case of necessity for future communication. Further
inquiries, after this last answer, could lead to nothing but waste of
time. I saved time by putting no more questions.</p>
<p>It was clear to me that our present position toward each other was what
our position had been previously to the event of Michael Vanstone's death.
I returned, as before, to my choice of alternatives. Which way did my
private interests point? Toward trusting the chance of her wanting me
again? Toward threatening her with the interference of her relatives and
friends? Or toward making the information which I possessed a marketable
commodity between the wealthy branch of the family and myself? The last of
the three was the alternative I had chosen in the case of the father. I
chose it once more in the case of the son.</p>
<p>The train started for London nearly four hours since, and took her away in
it, accompanied by Mrs. Wragge.</p>
<p>My wife is too great a fool, poor soul, to be actively valuable in the
present emergency; but she will be passively useful in keeping up Miss
Vanstone's connection with me—and, in consideration of that
circumstance, I consent to brush my own trousers, shave my own chin, and
submit to the other inconveniences of waiting on myself for a limited
period. Any faint glimmerings of sense which Mrs. Wragge may have formerly
possessed appear to have now finally taken their leave of her. On
receiving permission to go to London, she favored us immediately with two
inquiries. Might she do some shopping? and might she leave the
cookery-book behind her? Miss Vanstone said Yes to one question, and I
said Yes to the other—and from that moment, Mrs. Wragge has existed
in a state of perpetual laughter. I am still hoarse with vainly repeated
applications of vocal stimulant; and I left her in the railway carriage,
to my inexpressible disgust, with <i>both</i> shoes down at heel.</p>
<p>Under ordinary circumstances these absurd particulars would not have dwelt
on my memory. But, as matters actually stand, my unfortunate wife's
imbecility may, in her present position, lead to consequences which we
none of us foresee. She is nothing more or less than a grown-up child; and
I can plainly detect that Miss Vanstone trusts her, as she would not have
trusted a sharper woman, on that very account. I know children, little and
big, rather better than my fair relative does; and I say—beware of
all forms of human innocence, when it happens to be your interest to keep
a secret to yourself.</p>
<p>Let me return to business. Here I am, at two o'clock on a fine summer's
afternoon, left entirely alone, to consider the safest means of
approaching Mr. Noel Vanstone on my own account. My private suspicions of
his miserly character produce no discouraging effect on me. I have
extracted cheering pecuniary results in my time from people quite as fond
of their money as he can be. The real difficulty to contend with is the
obstacle of Mrs. Lecount. If I am not mistaken, this lady merits a little
serious consideration on my part. I will close my chronicle for to-day,
and give Mrs. Lecount her due.</p>
<p><i>Three o'clock.</i>—I open these pages again to record a discovery
which has taken me entirely by surprise.</p>
<p>After completing the last entry, a circumstance revived in my memory which
I had noticed on escorting the ladies this morning to the railway. I then
remarked that Miss Vanstone had only taken one of her three boxes with her—and
it now occurred to me that a private investigation of the luggage she had
left behind might possibly be attended with beneficial results. Having, at
certain periods of my life been in the habit of cultivating friendly terms
with strange locks, I found no difficulty in establishing myself on a
familiar footing with Miss Vanstone's boxes. One of the two presented
nothing to interest me. The other—devoted to the preservation of the
costumes, articles of toilet, and other properties used in the dramatic
Entertainment—proved to be better worth examining: for it led me
straight to the discovery of one of its owner's secrets.</p>
<p>I found all the dresses in the box complete—with one remarkable
exception. That exception was the dress of the old north-country lady; the
character which I have already mentioned as the best of all my pupil's
disguises, and as modeled in voice and manner on her old governess, Miss
Garth. The wig; the eyebrows; the bonnet and veil; the cloak, padded
inside to disfigure her back and shoulders; the paints and cosmetics used
to age her face and alter her complexion—were all gone. Nothing but
the gown remained; a gaudily-flowered silk, useful enough for dramatic
purposes, but too extravagant in color and pattern to bear inspection by
daylight. The other parts of the dress are sufficiently quiet to pass
muster; the bonnet and veil are only old-fashioned, and the cloak is of a
sober gray color. But one plain inference can be drawn from such a
discovery as this. As certainly as I sit here, she is going to open the
campaign against Noel Vanstone and Mrs. Lecount in a character which
neither of those two persons can have any possible reason for suspecting
at the outset—the character of Miss Garth.</p>
<p>What course am I to take under these circumstances? Having got her secret,
what am I to do with it? These are awkward considerations; I am rather
puzzled how to deal with them.</p>
<p>It is something more than the mere fact of her choosing to disguise
herself to forward her own private ends that causes my present perplexity.
Hundreds of girls take fancies for disguising themselves; and hundreds of
instances of it are related year after year in the public journals. But my
ex-pupil is not to be confounded for one moment with the average
adventuress of the newspapers. She is capable of going a long way beyond
the limit of dressing herself like a man, and imitating a man's voice and
manner. She has a natural gift for assuming characters which I have never
seen equaled by a woman; and she has performed in public until she has
felt her own power, and trained her talent for disguising herself to the
highest pitch. A girl who takes the sharpest people unawares by using such
a capacity as this to help her own objects in private life, and who
sharpens that capacity by a determination to fight her way to her own
purpose, which has beaten down everything before it, up to this time—is
a girl who tries an experiment in deception, new enough and dangerous
enough to lead, one way or the other, to very serious results. This is my
conviction, founded on a large experience in the art of imposing on my
fellow-creatures. I say of my fair relative's enterprise what I never said
or thought of it till I introduced myself to the inside of her box. The
chances for and against her winning the fight for her lost fortune are now
so evenly balanced that I cannot for the life of me see on which side the
scale inclines. All I can discern is, that it will, to a dead certainty,
turn one way or the other on the day when she passes Noel Vanstone's doors
in disguise.</p>
<p>Which way do my interests point now? Upon my honor, I don't know.</p>
<p><i>Five o'clock.</i>—I have effected a masterly compromise; I have
decided on turning myself into a Jack-o n-both-sides.</p>
<p>By to-day's post I have dispatched to London an anonymous letter for M r.
Noel Vanstone. It will be forwarded to its destination by the same means
which I successfully adopted to mystify Mr. Pendril; and it will reach
Vauxhall Walk, Lambeth, by the afternoon of to-morrow at the latest.</p>
<p>The letter is short, and to the purpose. It warns Mr. Noel Vanstone, in
the most alarming language, that he is destined to become the victim of a
conspiracy; and that the prime mover of it is a young lady who has already
held written communication with his father and himself. It offers him the
information necessary to secure his own safety, on condition that he makes
it worth the writer's while to run the serious personal risk which such a
disclosure will entail on him. And it ends by stipulating that the answer
shall be advertised in the <i>Times</i>; shall be addressed to "An Unknown
Friend"; and shall state plainly what remuneration Mr. Noel Vanstone
offers for the priceless service which it is proposed to render him.</p>
<p>Unless some unexpected complication occurs, this letter places me exactly
in the position which it is my present interest to occupy. If the
advertisement appears, and if the remuneration offered is large enough to
justify me in going over to the camp of the enemy, over I go. If no
advertisement appears, or if Mr. Noel Vanstone rates my invaluable
assistance at too low a figure, here I remain, biding my time till my fair
relative wants me, or till I make her want me, which comes to the same
thing. If the anonymous letter falls by any accident into her hands, she
will find disparaging allusions in it to myself, purposely introduced to
suggest that the writer must be one of the persons whom I addressed while
conducting her inquiries. If Mrs. Lecount takes the business in hand and
lays a trap for me—I decline her tempting invitation by becoming
totally ignorant of the whole affair the instant any second person appears
in it. Let the end come as it may, here I am ready to profit by it: here I
am, facing both ways, with perfect ease and security—a moral
agriculturist, with his eye on two crops at once, and his swindler's
sickle ready for any emergency.</p>
<p>For the next week to come, the newspaper will be more interesting to me
than ever. I wonder which side I shall eventually belong to?</p>
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