<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0039" id="link2HCH0039"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER III. </h2>
<p>THERE was a pause of a few minutes while Mrs. Lecount opened the second of
the two papers which lay before her on the table, and refreshed her memory
by looking it rapidly through. This done, she once more addressed herself
to Noel Vanstone, carefully lowering her voice, so as to render it
inaudible to any one who might be listening in the passage outside.</p>
<p>"I must beg your permission, sir," she began, "to return to the subject of
your wife. I do so most unwillingly; and I promise you that what I have
now to say about her shall be said, for your sake and for mine, in the
fewest words. What do we know of this woman, Mr. Noel—judging her by
her own confession when she came to us in the character of Miss Garth, and
by her own acts afterward at Aldborough? We know that, if death had not
snatched your father out of her reach, she was ready with her plot to rob
him of the Combe-Raven money. We know that, when you inherited the money
in your turn, she was ready with her plot to rob <i>you</i>. We know how
she carried that plot through to the end; and we know that nothing but
your death is wanted, at this moment, to crown her rapacity and her
deception with success. We are sure of these things. We are sure that she
is young, bold, and clever—that she has neither doubts, scruples,
nor pity—and that she possesses the personal qualities which men in
general (quite incomprehensibly to <i>me!</i>) are weak enough to admire.
These are not fancies, Mr. Noel, but facts; you know them as well as I
do."</p>
<p>He made a sign in the affirmative, and Mrs. Lecount went on:</p>
<p>"Keep in your mind what I have said of the past, sir, and now look with me
to the future. I hope and trust you have a long life still before you; but
let us, for the moment only, suppose the case of your death—your
death leaving this will behind you, which gives your fortune to your
cousin George. I am told there is an office in London in which copies of
all wills must be kept. Any curious stranger who chooses to pay a shilling
for the privilege may enter that office, and may read any will in the
place at his or her discretion. Do you see what I am coming to, Mr. Noel?
Your disinherited widow pays her shilling, and reads your will. Your
disinherited widow sees that the Combe-Raven money, which has gone from
your father to you, goes next from you to Mr. George Bartram. What is the
certain end of that discovery? The end is, that you leave to your cousin
and your friend the legacy of this woman's vengeance and this woman's
deceit-vengeance made more resolute, deceit made more devilish than ever,
by her exasperation at her own failure. What is your cousin George? He is
a generous, unsuspicious man; incapable of deceit himself, and fearing no
deception in others. Leave him at the mercy of your wife's unscrupulous
fascinations and your wife's unfathomable deceit, and I see the end as
certainly as I see you sitting there! She will blind his eyes, as she
blinded yours; and, in spite of <i>you</i>, in spite of <i>me</i>, she
will have the money!"</p>
<p>She stopped, and left her last words time to gain their hold on his mind.
The circumstances had been stated so clearly, the conclusion from them had
been so plainly drawn, that he seized her meaning without an effort, and
seized it at once.</p>
<p>"I see!" he said, vindictively clinching his hands. "I understand,
Lecount! She shan't have a farthing. What shall I do? Shall I leave the
money to the admiral?" He paused, and considered a little. "No," he
resumed; "there's the same danger in leaving it to the admiral that there
is in leaving it to George."</p>
<p>"There is no danger, Mr. Noel, if you take my advice."</p>
<p>"What is your advice?"</p>
<p>"Follow your own idea, sir. Take the pen in hand again, and leave the
money to Admiral Bartram."</p>
<p>He mechanically dipped the pen in the ink, and then hesitated.</p>
<p>"You shall know where I am leading you, sir," said Mrs. Lecount, "before
you sign your will. In the meantime, let us gain every inch of ground we
can, as we go on. I want the will to be all written out before we advance
a single step beyond it. Begin your third paragraph, Mr. Noel, under the
lines which leave me my legacy of five thousand pounds."</p>
<p>She dictated the last momentous sentence of the will (from the rough draft
in her own possession) in these words:</p>
<p>"The whole residue of my estate, after payment of my burial expenses and
my lawful debts, I give and bequeath to Rear-Admiral Arthur Everard
Bartram, my Executor aforesaid; to be by him applied to such uses as he
may think fit.</p>
<p>"Signed, sealed, and delivered, this third day of November, eighteen
hundred and forty-seven, by Noel Vanstone, the within-named testator, as
and for his last Will and Testament, in the presence of us—"</p>
<p>"Is that all?" asked Noel Vanstone, in astonishment.</p>
<p>"That is enough, sir, to bequeath your fortune to the admiral; and
therefore that is all. Now let us go back to the case which we have
supposed already. Your widow pays her shilling, and sees this will. There
is the Combe-Raven money left to Admiral Bartram, with a declaration in
plain words that it is his, to use as he likes. When she sees this, what
does she do? She sets her trap for the admiral. He is a bachelor, and he
is an old man. Who is to protect him against the arts of this desperate
woman? Protect him yourself, sir, with a few more strokes of that pen
which has done such wonders already. You have left him this legacy in your
will—which your wife sees. Take the legacy away again, in a letter—which
is a dead secret between the admiral and you. Put the will and the letter
under one cover, and place them in the admiral's possession, with your
written directions to him to break the seal on the day of your death. Let
the will say what it says now; and let the letter (which is your secret
and his) tell him the truth. Say that, in leaving him your fortune, you
leave it with the request that he will take his legacy with one hand from
you, and give it with the other to his nephew George. Tell him that your
trust in this matter rests solely on your confidence in his honor, and on
your belief in his affectionate remembrance of your father and yourself.
You have known the admiral since you were a boy. He has his little whims
and oddities; but he is a gentleman from the crown of his head to the sole
of his foot; and he is utterly incapable of proving false to a trust in
his honor, reposed by his dead friend. Meet the difficulty boldly, by such
a stratagem as this; and you save these two helpless men from your wife's
snare, one by means of the other. Here, on one side, is your will, which
gives the fortune to the admiral, and sets her plotting accordingly. And
there, on the other side, is your letter, which privately puts the money
into the nephew's hands!"</p>
<p>The malicious dexterity of this combination was exactly the dexterity
which Noel Vanstone was most fit to appreciate. He tried to express his
approval and admiration in words. Mrs. Lecount held up her hand warningly
and closed his lips.</p>
<p>"Wait, sir, before you express your opinion," she went on. "Half the
difficulty is all that we have conquered yet. Let us say, the admiral has
made the use of your legacy which you have privately requested him to make
of it. Sooner or later, however well the secret may be kept, your wife
will discover the truth. What follows that discovery! She lays siege to
Mr. George. All you have done is to leave him the money by a roundabout
way. There he is, after an interval of time, as much at her mercy as if
you had openly mentioned him in your will. What is the remedy for this?
The remedy is to mislead her, if we can, for the second time—to set
up an obstacle between her and the money, for the protection of your
cousin George. Can you guess for yourself, Mr. Noel, what is the most
promising obstacle we can put in her way?"</p>
<p>He shook his head. Mrs. Lecount smiled, and startled him into close
attention by laying her hand on his arm.</p>
<p>"Put a Woman in her way, sir!" she whispered in her wiliest tones. "<i>We</i>
don't believe in that fascinating beauty of hers—whatever <i>you</i>
may do. <i>Our</i> lips don't burn to kiss those smooth cheeks. <i>Our</i>
arms don't long to be round that supple waist. <i>We</i> see through her
smiles and her graces, and her stays and her padding—she can't
fascinate <i>us!</i> Put a woman in her way, Mr. Noel! Not a woman in my
helpless situation, who is only a servant, but a woman with the authority
and the jealousy of a Wife. Make it a condition, in your letter to the
admiral, that if Mr. George is a bachelor at the time of your death, he
shall marry within a certain time afterward, or he shall not have the
legacy. Suppose he remains single in spite of your condition, who is to
have the money then? Put a woman in your wife's way, sir, once more—and
leave the fortune, in that case, to the married sister of your cousin
George."</p>
<p>She paused. Noel Vanstone again attempted to express his opinion, and
again Mrs. Lecount's hand extinguished him in silence.</p>
<p>"If you approve, Mr. Noel," she said, "I will take your approval for
granted. If you object, I will meet your objection before it is out of
your mouth. You may say: Suppose this condition is sufficient to answer
the purpose, why hide it in a private letter to the admiral? Why not
openly write it down, with my cousin's name, in the will? Only for one
reason, sir. Only because the secret way is the sure way, with such a
woman as your wife. The more secret you can keep your intentions, the more
time you force her to waste in finding them out for herself. That time
which she loses is time gained from her treachery by the admiral—time
gained by Mr. George (if he is still a bachelor) for his undisturbed
choice of a lady—time gained, for her own security, by the object of
his choice, who might otherwise be the first object of your wife's
suspicion and your wife's hostility. Remember the bottle we have
discovered upstairs; and keep this desperate woman ignorant, and therefore
harmless, as long as you can. There is my advice, Mr. Noel, in the fewest
and plainest words. What do you say, sir? Am I almost as clever in my way
as your friend Mr. Bygrave? Can I, too, conspire a little, when the object
of my conspiracy is to assist your wishes and to protect your friends?"</p>
<p>Permitted the use of his tongue at last, Noel Vanstone's admiration of
Mrs. Lecount expressed itself in terms precisely similar to those which he
had used on a former occasion, in paying his compliments to Captain
Wragge. "What a head you have got!" were the grateful words which he had
once spoken to Mrs. Lecount's bitterest enemy. "What a head you have got!"
were the grateful words which he now spoke again to Mrs. Lecount herself.
So do extremes meet; and such is sometimes the all-embracing capacity of
the approval of a fool!</p>
<p>"Allow my head, sir, to deserve the compliment which you have paid to it,"
said Mrs. Lecount. "The letter to the admiral is not written yet. Your
will there is a body without a soul—an Adam without an Eve—until
the letter is completed and laid by its side. A little more dictation on
my part, a little more writing on yours, and our work is done. Pardon me.
The letter will be longer than the will; we must have larger paper than
the note-paper this time."</p>
<p>The writing-case was searched, and some letter paper was found in it of
the size required. Mrs. Lecount resumed her dictation; and Noel Vanstone
resumed his pen.</p>
<p>"Baliol Cottage, Dumfries,</p>
<p>"November 3d, 1847.</p>
<p>"Private.</p>
<p>"DEAR ADMIRAL BARTRAM—When you open my Will (in which you are named
my sole executor), you will find that I have bequeathed the whole residue
of my estate—after payment of one legacy of five thousand pounds—to
yourself. It is the purpose of my letter to tell you privately what the
object is for which I have left you the fortune which is now placed in
your hands.</p>
<p>"I beg you to consider this large legacy as intended, under certain
conditions, to be given by you to your nephew George. If your nephew is
married at the time of my death, and if his wife is living, I request you
to put him at once in possession of your legacy; accompanying it by the
expression of my desire (which I am sure he will consider a sacred and
binding obligation on him) that he will settle the money on his wife—and
on his children, if he has any. If, on the other hand, he is unmarried at
the time of my death, or if he is a widower—in either of those
cases, I make it a condition of his receiving the legacy, that he shall be
married within the period of—"</p>
<p>Mrs. Lecount laid down the Draft letter from which she had been dictating
thus far, and informed Noel Vanstone by a sign that his pen might rest.</p>
<p>"We have come to the question of time, sir," she observed. "How long will
you give your cousin to marry, if he is single, or a widower, at the time
of your death?"</p>
<p>"Shall I give him a year?" inquired Noel Vanstone.</p>
<p>"If we had nothing to consider but the interests of Propriety," said Mrs.
Lecount, "I should say a year too, sir—especially if Mr. George
should happen to be a widower. But we have your wife to consider, as well
as the interests of Propriety. A year of delay, between your death and
your cousin's marriage, is a dangerously long time to leave the disposal
of your fortune in suspense. Give a determined woman a year to plot and
contrive in, and there is no saying what she may not do."</p>
<p>"Six months?" suggested Noel Vanstone.</p>
<p>"Six months, sir," rejoined Mrs. Lecount, "is the preferable time of the
two. A six months' interval from the day of your death is enough for Mr.
George. You look discomposed, sir; what is the matter?"</p>
<p>"I wish you wouldn't talk so much about my death," he broke out,
petulantly. "I don't like it! I hate the very sound of the word!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Lecount smiled resignedly, and referred to her Draft.</p>
<p>"I see the word 'decease' written here," she remarked. "Perhaps, Mr. Noel,
you would prefer it?"</p>
<p>"Yes," he said; "I prefer 'Decease.' It doesn't sound so dreadful as
'Death.'"</p>
<p>"Let us go on with the letter, sir."</p>
<p>She resumed her dictation, as follows:</p>
<p>"...in either of those cases, I make it a condition of his receiving the
legacy that he shall be married within the period of Six calendar months
from the day of my decease; that the woman he marries shall not be a
widow; and that his marriage shall be a marriage by Banns, publicly
celebrated in the parish church of Ossory—where he has been known
from his childhood, and where the family and circumstances of his future
wife are likely to be the subject of public interest and inquiry."</p>
<p>"This," said Mrs. Lecount, quietly looking up from the Draft, "is to
protect Mr. George, sir, in case the same trap is set for him which was
successfully set for you. She will not find her false character and her
false name fit quite so easily next time—no, not even with Mr.
Bygrave to help her! Another dip of ink, Mr. Noel; let us write the next
paragraph. Are you ready?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>Mrs. Lecount went on.</p>
<p>"If your nephew fails to comply with these conditions—that is to
say, if being either a bachelor or a widower at the time of my decease, he
fails to marry in all respects as I have here instructed him to marry,
within Six calendar months from that time—it is my desire that he
shall not receive the legacy, or any part of it. I request you, in the
case here supposed, to pass him over altogether; and to give the fortune
left you in my will to his married sister, Mrs. Girdlestone.</p>
<p>"Having now put you in possession of my motives and intentions, I come to
the next question which it is necessary to consider. If, when you open
this letter, your nephew is an unmarried man, it is clearly indispensable
that he should know of the conditions here imposed on him, as soon, if
possible, as you know of them yourself. Are you, under these
circumstances, freely to communicate to him what I have here written to
you? Or are you to leave him under the impression that no such private
expression of my wishes as this is in existence; and are you to state all
the conditions relating to his marriage, as if they emanated entirely from
yourself?</p>
<p>"If you will adopt this latter alternative, you will add one more to the
many obligations under which your friendship has placed me.</p>
<p>"I have serious reason to believe that the possession of my money, and the
discovery of any peculiar arrangements relating to the disposal of it,
will be objects (after my decease) of the fraud and conspiracy of an
unscrupulous person. I am therefore anxious—for your sake, in the
first place—that no suspicion of the existence of this letter should
be conveyed to the mind of the person to whom I allude. And I am equally
desirous—for Mrs. Girdlestone's sake, in the second place—that
this same person should be entirely ignorant that the legacy will pass
into Mrs. Girdlestone's possession, if your nephew is not married in the
given time. I know George's easy, pliable disposition; I dread the
attempts that will be made to practice on it; and I feel sure that the
prudent course will be, to abstain from trusting him with secrets, the
rash revelation of which might be followed by serious, and even dangerous
results.</p>
<p>"State the conditions, therefore, to your nephew, as if they were your
own. Let him think they have been suggested to your mind by the new
responsibilities imposed on you as a man of property, by your position in
my will, and by your consequent anxiety to provide for the perpetuation of
the family name. If these reasons are not sufficient to satisfy him, there
can be no objection to your referring him, for any further explanations
which he may desire, to his wedding-day.</p>
<p>"I have done. My last wishes are now confided to you, in implicit reliance
on your honor, and on your tender regard for the memory of your friend. Of
the miserable circumstances which compel me to write as I have written
here, I say nothing. You will hear of them, if my life is spared, from my
own lips—for you will be the first friend whom I shall consult in my
difficulty and distress. Keep this letter strictly secret, and strictly in
your own possession, until my requests are complied with. Let no human
being but yourself know where it is, on any pretense whatever.</p>
<p>"Believe me, dear Admiral Bartram, affectionately yours,</p>
<p>"NOEL VANSTONE."</p>
<p>"Have you signed, sir?" asked Mrs. Lecount. "Let me look the letter over,
if you please, before we seal it up."</p>
<p>She read the letter carefully. In Noel Vanstone's close, cramped
handwriting, it filled two pages of letter-paper, and ended at the top of
the third page. Instead of using an envelope, Mrs. Lecount folded it,
neatly and securely, in the old-fashioned way. She lit the taper in the
ink-stand, and returned the letter to the writer.</p>
<p>"Seal it, Mr. Noel," she said, "with your own hand, and your own seal."
She extinguished the taper, and handed him the pen again. "Address the
letter, sir," she proceeded, "to <i>Admiral Bartram, St.
Crux-in-the-Marsh, Essex.</i> Now, add these words, and sign them, above
the address: <i>To be kept in your own possession, and to be opened by
yourself only, on the day of my death</i>—or 'Decease,' if you
prefer it—<i>Noel Vanstone.</i> Have you done? Let me look at it
again. Quite right in every particular. Accept my congratulations, sir. If
your wife has not plotted her last plot for the Combe-Raven money, it is
not your fault, Mr. Noel—and not mine!"</p>
<p>Finding his attention released by the completion of the letter, Noel
Vanstone reverted at once to purely personal considerations. "There is my
packing-up to be thought of now," he said. "I can't go away without my
warm things."</p>
<p>"Excuse me, sir," rejoined Mrs. Lecount, "there is the Will to be signed
first; and there must be two persons found to witness your signature." She
looked out of the front window, and saw the carriage waiting at the door.
"The coachman will do for one of the witnesses," she said. "He is in
respectable service at Dumfries, and he can be found if he happens to be
wanted. We must have one of your own servants, I suppose, for the other
witness. They are all de testable women; but the cook is the least
ill-looking of the three. Send for the cook, sir; while I go out and call
the coachman. When we have got our witnesses here, you have only to speak
to them in these words: 'I have a document here to sign, and I wish you to
write your names on it, as witnesses of my signature.' Nothing more, Mr.
Noel! Say those few words in your usual manner—and, when the signing
is over, I will see myself to your packing-up, and your warm things."</p>
<p>She went to the front door, and summoned the coachman to the parlor. On
her return, she found the cook already in the room. The cook looked
mysteriously offended, and stared without intermission at Mrs. Lecount. In
a minute more the coachman—an elderly man—came in. He was
preceded by a relishing odor of whisky; but his head was Scotch; and
nothing but his odor betrayed him.</p>
<p>"I have a document here to sign," said Noel Vanstone, repeating his
lesson; "and I wish you to write your names on it, as witnesses of my
signature."</p>
<p>The coachman looked at the will. The cook never removed her eyes from Mrs.
Lecount.</p>
<p>"Ye'll no object, sir," said the coachman, with the national caution
showing itself in every wrinkle on his face—"ye'll no object, sir,
to tell me, first, what the Doecument may be?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Lecount interposed before Noel Vanstone's indignation could express
itself in words.</p>
<p>"You must tell the man, sir, that this is your Will," she said. "When he
witnesses your signature, he can see as much for himself if he looks at
the top of the page."</p>
<p>"Ay, ay," said the coachman, looking at the top of the page immediately.
"His last Will and Testament. Hech, sirs! there's a sair confronting of
Death in a Doecument like yon! A' flesh is grass," continued the coachman,
exhaling an additional puff of whisky, and looking up devoutly at the
ceiling. "Tak' those words in connection with that other Screepture: Many
are ca'ad, but few are chosen. Tak' that again, in connection with
Rev'lations, Chapter the First, verses One to Fefteen. Lay the whole to
heart; and what's your Walth, then? Dross, sirs! And your body?
(Screepture again.) Clay for the potter! And your life? (Screepture once
more.) The Breeth o' your Nostrils!"</p>
<p>The cook listened as if the cook was at church: but she never removed her
eyes from Mrs. Lecount.</p>
<p>"You had better sign, sir. This is apparently some custom prevalent in
Dumfries during the transaction of business," said Mrs. Lecount,
resignedly. "The man means well, I dare say."</p>
<p>She added those last words in a soothing tone, for she saw that Noel
Vanstone's indignation was fast merging into alarm. The coachman's
outburst of exhortation seemed to have inspired him with fear, as well as
disgust.</p>
<p>He dipped the pen in the ink, and signed the Will without uttering a word.
The coachman (descending instantly from Theology to Business) watched the
signature with the most scrupulous attention; and signed his own name as
witness, with an implied commentary on the proceeding, in the form of
another puff of whisky, exhaled through the medium of a heavy sigh. The
cook looked away from Mrs. Lecount with an effort—signed her name in
a violent hurry—and looked back again with a start, as if she
expected to see a loaded pistol (produced in the interval) in the
housekeeper's hands. "Thank you," said Mrs. Lecount, in her friendliest
manner. The cook shut up her lips aggressively and looked at her master.
"You may go!" said her master. The cook coughed contemptuously, and went.</p>
<p>"We shan't keep you long," said Mrs. Lecount, dismissing the coachman. "In
half an hour, or less, we shall be ready for the journey back."</p>
<p>The coachman's austere countenance relaxed for the first time. He smiled
mysteriously, and approached Mrs. Lecount on tiptoe.</p>
<p>"Ye'll no forget one thing, my leddy," he said, with the most ingratiating
politeness. "Ye'll no forget the witnessing as weel as the driving, when
ye pay me for my day's wark!" He laughed with guttural gravity; and,
leaving his atmosphere behind him, stalked out of the room.</p>
<p>"Lecount," said Noel Vanstone, as soon as the coachman closed the door,
"did I hear you tell that man we should be ready in half an hour?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>"Are you blind?"</p>
<p>He asked the question with an angry stamp of his foot. Mrs. Lecount looked
at him in astonishment.</p>
<p>"Can't you see the brute is drunk?" he went on, more and more irritably.
"Is my life nothing? Am I to be left at the mercy of a drunken coachman? I
won't trust that man to drive me, for any consideration under heaven! I'm
surprised you could think of it, Lecount."</p>
<p>"The man has been drinking, sir," said Mrs. Lecount. "It is easy to see
and to smell that. But he is evidently used to drinking. If he is sober
enough to walk quite straight—which he certainly does—and to
sign his name in an excellent handwriting—which you may see for
yourself on the Will—I venture to think he is sober enough to drive
us to Dumfries."</p>
<p>"Nothing of the sort! You're a foreigner, Lecount; you don't understand
these people. They drink whisky from morning to night. Whisky is the
strongest spirit that's made; whisky is notorious for its effect on the
brain. I tell you, I won't run the risk. I never was driven, and I never
will be driven, by anybody but a sober man."</p>
<p>"Must I go back to Dumfries by myself, sir?"</p>
<p>"And leave me here? Leave me alone in this house after what has happened?
How do I know my wife may not come back to-night? How do I know her
journey is not a blind to mislead me? Have you no feeling, Lecount? Can
you leave me in my miserable situation—?" He sank into a chair and
burst out crying over his own idea, before he had completed the expression
of it in words. "Too bad!" he said, with his handkerchief over his face—"too
bad!"</p>
<p>It was impossible not to pity him. If ever mortal was pitiable, he was the
man. He had broken down at last, under the conflict of violent emotions
which had been roused in him since the morning. The effort to follow Mrs.
Lecount along the mazes of intricate combination through which she had
steadily led the way, had upheld him while that effort lasted: the moment
it was at an end, he dropped. The coachman had hastened a result—of
which the coachman was far from being the cause.</p>
<p>"You surprise me—you distress me, sir," said Mrs. Lecount. "I
entreat you to compose yourself. I will stay here, if you wish it, with
pleasure—I will stay here to-night, for your sake. You want rest and
quiet after this dreadful day. The coachman shall be instantly sent away,
Mr. Noel. I will give him a note to the landlord of the hotel, and the
carriage shall come back for us to-morrow morning, with another man to
drive it."</p>
<p>The prospect which those words presented cheered him. He wiped his eyes,
and kissed Mrs. Lecount's hand. "Yes!" he said, faintly; "send the
coachman away—and you stop here. You good creature! You excellent
Lecount! Send the drunken brute away, and come back directly. We will be
comfortable by the fire, Lecount—and have a nice little dinner—and
try to make it like old times." His weak voice faltered; he returned to
the fire side, and melted into tears again under the pathetic influence of
his own idea.</p>
<p>Mrs. Lecount left him for a minute to dismiss the coachman. When she
returned to the parlor she found him with his hand on the bell.</p>
<p>"What do you want, sir?" she asked.</p>
<p>"I want to tell the servants to get your room ready," he answered. "I wish
to show you every attention, Lecount."</p>
<p>"You are all kindness, Mr. Noel; but wait one moment. It may be well to
have these papers put out of the way before the servant comes in again. If
you will place the Will and the Sealed Letter together in one envelope—and
if you will direct it to the admiral—I will take care that the
inclosure so addressed is safely placed in his own hands. Will you come to
the table, Mr. Noel, only for one minute more?"</p>
<p>No! He was obstinate; he refused to move from the fire; he was sick and
tired of writing: he wished he had never been born, and he loathed the
sight of pen and ink. All Mrs. Lecount's patience and all Mrs. Lecount's
persuasion were required to induce him to write t he admiral's address for
the second time. She only succeeded by bringing the blank envelope to him
upon the paper-case, and putting it coaxingly on his lap. He grumbled, he
even swore, but he directed the envelope at last, in these terms: "To
Admiral Bartram, St. Crux-in-the-Marsh. Favored by Mrs. Lecount." With
that final act of compliance his docility came to an end. He refused, in
the fiercest terms, to seal the envelope. There was no need to press this
proceeding on him. His seal lay ready on the table, and it mattered
nothing whether he used it, or whether a person in his confidence used it
for him. Mrs. Lecount sealed the envelope, with its two important
inclosures placed safely inside.</p>
<p>She opened her traveling-bag for the last time, and pausing for a moment
before she put the sealed packet away, looked at it with a triumph too
deep for words. She smiled as she dropped it into the bag. Not the shadow
of a suspicion that the Will might contain superfluous phrases and
expressions which no practical lawyer would have used; not the vestige of
a doubt whether the Letter was quite as complete a document as a practical
lawyer might have made it, troubled her mind. In blind reliance—born
of her hatred for Magdalen and her hunger for revenge—in blind
reliance on her own abilities and on her friend's law, she trusted the
future implicitly to the promise of the morning's work.</p>
<p>As she locked her traveling-bag Noel Vanstone rang the bell. On this
occasion, the summons was answered by Louisa.</p>
<p>"Get the spare room ready," said her master; "this lady will sleep here
to-night. And air my warm things; this lady and I are going away to-morrow
morning."</p>
<p>The civil and submissive Louisa received her orders in sullen silence—darted
an angry look at her master's impenetrable guest—and left the room.
The servants were evidently all attached to their mistress's interests,
and were all of one opinion on the subject of Mrs. Lecount.</p>
<p>"That's done!" said Noel Vanstone, with a sigh of infinite relief. "Come
and sit down, Lecount. Let's be comfortable—let's gossip over the
fire."</p>
<p>Mrs. Lecount accepted the invitation and drew an easy-chair to his side.
He took her hand with a confidential tenderness, and held it in his while
the talk went on. A stranger, looking in through the window, would have
taken them for mother and son, and would have thought to himself: "What a
happy home!"</p>
<p>The gossip, led by Noel Vanstone, consisted as usual of an endless string
of questions, and was devoted entirely to the subject of himself and his
future prospects. Where would Lecount take him to when they went away the
next morning? Why to London? Why should he be left in London, while
Lecount went on to St. Crux to give the admiral the Letter and the Will?
Because his wife might follow him, if he went to the admiral's? Well,
there was something in that. And because he ought to be safely concealed
from her, in some comfortable lodging, near Mr. Loscombe? Why near Mr.
Loscombe? Ah, yes, to be sure—to know what the law would do to help
him. Would the law set him free from the Wretch who had deceived him? How
tiresome of Lecount not to know! Would the law say he had gone and married
himself a second time, because he had been living with the Wretch, like
husband and wife, in Scotland? Anything that publicly assumed to be a
marriage was a marriage (he had heard) in Scotland. How excessively
tiresome of Lecount to sit there and say she knew nothing about it! Was he
to stay long in London by himself, with nobody but Mr. Loscombe to speak
to? Would Lecount come back to him as soon as she had put those important
papers in the admiral's own hands? Would Lecount consider herself still in
his service? The good Lecount! the excellent Lecount! And after all the
law-business was over—what then? Why not leave this horrid England
and go abroad again? Why not go to France, to some cheap place near Paris?
Say Versailles? say St. Germain? In a nice little French house—cheap?
With a nice French <i>bonne</i> to cook—who wouldn't waste his
substance in the grease-pot? With a nice little garden—where he
could work himself, and get health, and save the expense of keeping a
gardener? It wasn't a bad idea. And it seemed to promise well for the
future—didn't it, Lecount?</p>
<p>So he ran on—the poor weak creature! the abject, miserable little
man!</p>
<p>As the darkness gathered at the close of the short November day he began
to grow drowsy—his ceaseless questions came to an end at last—he
fell asleep. The wind outside sang its mournful winter-song; the tramp of
passing footsteps, the roll of passing wheels on the road ceased in dreary
silence. He slept on quietly. The firelight rose and fell on his wizen
little face and his nervous, drooping hands. Mrs. Lecount had not pitied
him yet. She began to pity him now. Her point was gained; her interest in
his will was secured; he had put his future life, of his own accord, under
her fostering care—the fire was comfortable; the circumstances were
favorable to the growth of Christian feeling. "Poor wretch!" said Mrs.
Lecount, looking at him with a grave compassion—"poor wretch!"</p>
<p>The dinner-hour roused him. He was cheerful at dinner; he reverted to the
idea of the cheap little house in France; he smirked and simpered; and
talked French to Mrs. Lecount, while the house-maid and Louisa waited,
turn and turn about, under protest. When dinner was over, he returned to
his comfortable chair before the fire, and Mrs. Lecount followed him. He
resumed the conversation—which meant, in his case, repeating his
questions. But he was not so quick and ready with them as he had been
earlier in the day. They began to flag—they continued, at longer and
longer intervals—they ceased altogether. Toward nine o'clock he fell
asleep again.</p>
<p>It was not a quiet sleep this time. He muttered, and ground his teeth, and
rolled his head from side to side of the chair. Mrs. Lecount purposely
made noise enough to rouse him. He woke, with a vacant eye and a flushed
cheek. He walked about the room restlessly, with a new idea in his mind—the
idea of writing a terrible letter; a letter of eternal farewell to his
wife. How was it to be written? In what language should he express his
feelings? The powers of Shakespeare himself would be unequal to the
emergency! He had been the victim of an outrage entirely without parallel.
A wretch had crept into his bosom! A viper had hidden herself at his
fireside! Where could words be found to brand her with the infamy she
deserved? He stopped, with a suffocating sense in him of his own impotent
rage—he stopped, and shook his fist tremulously in the empty air.</p>
<p>Mrs. Lecount interfered with an energy and a resolution inspired by
serious alarm. After the heavy strain that had been laid on his weakness
already, such an outbreak of passionate agitation as was now bursting from
him might be the destruction of his rest that night and of his strength to
travel the next day. With infinite difficulty, with endless promises to
return to the subject, and to advise him about it in the morning, she
prevailed on him, at last, to go upstairs and compose himself for the
night. She gave him her arm to assist him. On the way upstairs his
attention, to her great relief, became suddenly absorbed by a new fancy.
He remembered a certain warm and comfortable mixture of wine, eggs, sugar,
and spices, which she had often been accustomed to make for him in former
times, and which he thought he should relish exceedingly before he went to
bed. Mrs. Lecount helped him on with his dressing-gown—then went
down-stairs again to make his warm drink for him at the parlor fire.</p>
<p>She rang the bell and ordered the necessary ingredients for the mixture,
in Noel Vanstone's name. The servants, with the small ingenious malice of
their race, brought up the materials one by one, and kept her waiting for
each of them as long as possible. She had got the saucepan, and the spoon,
and the tumbler, and the nutmeg-grater, and the wine—but not the
egg, the sugar, or the spices—when she heard him above, walking
backward and forward noisily in his room; exciting hi mself on the old
subject again, beyond all doubt.</p>
<p>She went upstairs once more; but he was too quick for her—he heard
her outside the door; and when she opened it, she found him in his chair,
with his back cunningly turned toward her. Knowing him too well to attempt
any remonstrance, she merely announced the speedy arrival of the warm
drink and turned to leave the room. On her way out, she noticed a table in
a corner, with an inkstand and a paper-case on it, and tried, without
attracting his attention, to take the writing materials away. He was too
quick for her again. He asked, angrily, if she doubted his promise. She
put the writing materials back on the table, for fear of offending him,
and left the room.</p>
<p>In half an hour more the mixture was ready. She carried it up to him,
foaming and fragrant, in a large tumbler. "He will sleep after this," she
thought to herself, as she opened the door; "I have made it stronger than
usual on purpose."</p>
<p>He had changed his place. He was sitting at the table in the corner—still
with his back to her, writing. This time his quick ears had not served
him; this time she caught him in the fact.</p>
<p>"Oh, Mr. Noel! Mr. Noel!" she said, reproachfully, "what is your promise
worth?"</p>
<p>He made no answer. He was sitting with his left elbow on the table, and
with his head resting on his left hand. His right hand lay back on the
paper, with the pen lying loose in it. "Your drink, Mr. Noel," she said,
in a kinder tone, feeling unwilling to offend him. He took no notice of
her. She went to the table to rouse him. Was he deep in thought?</p>
<p>He was dead!</p>
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