<p>THE END OF THE FIFTH SCENE. <SPAN name="link2H_4_0051" id="link2H_4_0051"></SPAN></p>
<h2> BETWEEN THE SCENES. </h2>
<h3> PROGRESS OF THE STORY THROUGH THE POST. </h3>
<p>I.</p>
<p><i>From Mrs. Noel Vanstone to Mr. Loscombe.</i></p>
<p>"Park Terrace, St. John's Wood, November 5th.</p>
<p>"DEAR SIR—I came to London yesterday for the purpose of seeing a
relative, leaving Mr. Vanstone at Baliol Cottage, and proposing to return
to him in the course of the week. I reached London late last night, and
drove to these lodgings, having written to secure accommodation
beforehand.</p>
<p>"This morning's post has brought me a letter from my own maid, whom I left
at Baliol Cottage, with instructions to write to me if anything
extraordinary took place in my absence. You will find the girl's letter
inclosed in this. I have had some experience of her; and I believe she is
to be strictly depended on to tell the truth.</p>
<p>"I purposely abstain from troubling you by any useless allusions to
myself. When you have read my maid's letter, you will understand the shock
which the news contained in it has caused me. I can only repeat that I
place implicit belief in her statement. I am firmly persuaded that my
husband's former housekeeper has found him out, has practiced on his
weakness in my absence, and has prevailed on him to make another Will.
From what I know of this woman, I feel no doubt that she has used her
influence over Mr. Vanstone to deprive me, if possible, of all future
interests in my husband's fortune.</p>
<p>"Under such circumstances as these, it is in the last degree important—for
more reasons than I need mention here—that I should see Mr.
Vanstone, and come to an explanation with him, at the earliest possible
opportunity. You will find that my maid thoughtfully kept her letter open
until the last moment before post-time—without, however, having any
later news to give me than that Mrs. Lecount was to sleep at the cottage
last night and that she and Mr. Vanstone were to leave together this
morning. But for that last piece of intelligence, I should have been on my
way back to Scotland before now. As it is, I cannot decide for myself what
I ought to do next. My going back to Dumfries, after Mr. Vanstone has left
it, seems like taking a journey for nothing —and my staying in
London appears to be almost equally useless.</p>
<p>"Will you kindly advise me in this difficulty? I will come to you at
Lincoln's Inn at any time this afternoon or to-morrow which you may
appoint. My next few hours are engaged. As soon as this letter is
dispatched, I am going to Kensington, with the object of ascertaining
whether certain doubts I feel about the means by which Mrs. Lecount may
have accomplished her discovery are well founded or not. If you will let
me have your answer by return of post, I will not fail to get back to St.
John's Wood in time to receive it. Believe me, dear sir, yours sincerely,</p>
<p>"MAGDALEN VANSTONE." II.</p>
<p><i>From Mr. Loscombe to Mrs. Noel Vanstone.</i></p>
<p>"Lincoln's Inn, November 5th.</p>
<p>"DEAR MADAM—Your letter and its inclosure have caused me great
concern and surprise. Pressure of business allows me no hope of being able
to see you either to-day or to-morrow morning. But if three o'clock
to-morrow afternoon will suit you, at that hour you will find me at your
service.</p>
<p>"I cannot pretend to offer a positive opinion until I know more of the
particulars connected with this extraordinary business than I find
communicated either in your letter or in your maid's. But with this
reserve, I venture to suggest that your remaining in London until
to-morrow may possibly lead to other results besides your consultation at
my chambers. There is at least a chance that you or I may hear something
further in this strange matter by the morning's post. I remain, dear
madam, faithfully yours,</p>
<p>"JOHN LOSCOMBE." III.</p>
<p><i>From Mrs. Noel Vanstone to Miss Garth.</i></p>
<p>"November 5th, Two o'Clock.</p>
<p>"I have just returned from Westmoreland House—after purposely
leaving it in secret, and purposely avoiding you under your own roof. You
shall know why I came, and why I went away. It is due to my remembrance of
old times not to treat you like a stranger, although I can never again
treat you like a friend.</p>
<p>"I set forth on the third from the North to London. My only object in
taking this long journey was to see Norah. I had been suffering for many
weary weeks past such remorse as only miserable women like me can feel.
Perhaps the suffering weakened me; perhaps it roused some old forgotten
tenderness—God knows!—I can't explain it; I can only tell you
that I began to think of Norah by day, and to dream of Norah by night,
till I was almost heartbroken. I have no better reason than this to give
for running all the risks which I ran, and coming to London to see her. I
don't wish to claim more for myself than I deserve; I don't wish to tell
you I was the reformed and repenting creature whom <i>you</i> might have
approved. I had only one feeling in me that I know of. I wanted to put my
arms round Norah's neck, and cry my heart out on Norah's bosom. Childish
enough, I dare say. Something might have come of it; nothing might have
come of it—who knows?</p>
<p>"I had no means of finding Norah without your assistance. However you
might disapprove of what I had done, I thought you would not refuse to
help me to find my sister. When I lay down last night in my strange bed, I
said to myself, 'I will ask Miss Garth, for my father's sake and my
mother's sake, to tell me.' You don't know what a comfort I felt in that
thought. How should you? What do good women like you know of miserable
sinners like me? All you know is that you pray for us at church.</p>
<p>"Well, I fell asleep happily that night—for the first time since my
marriage. When the morning came, I paid the penalty of daring to be happy
only for one night. When the morning came, a letter came with it, which
told me that my bitterest enemy on earth (you have meddled sufficiently
with my affairs to know what enemy I mean) had revenged herself on me in
my absence. In following the impulse which led me to my sister, I had gone
to my ruin.</p>
<p>"The mischief was beyond all present remedy, when I received the news of
it. Whatever had happened, whatever might happen, I made up my mind to
persist in my resolution of seeing Norah before I did anything else. I
suspected <i>you</i> of being concerned in the disaster which had
overtaken me—because I felt positively certain at Aldborough that
you and Mrs. Lecount had written to each other. But I never suspected
Norah. If I lay on my death-bed at this moment I could say with a safe
conscience I never suspected Norah.</p>
<p>"So I went this morning to Westmor eland House to ask you for my sister's
address, and to acknowledge plainly that I suspected you of being again in
correspondence with Mrs. Lecount.</p>
<p>"When I inquired for you at the door, they told me you had gone out, but
that you were expected back before long. They asked me if I would see your
sister, who was then in the school-room. I desired that your sister should
on no account be disturbed: my business was not with her, but with you. I
begged to be allowed to wait in a room by myself until you returned.</p>
<p>"They showed me into the double room on the ground-floor, divided by
curtains—as it was when I last remember it. There was a fire in the
outer division of the room, but none in the inner; and for that reason, I
suppose, the curtains were drawn. The servant was very civil and attentive
to me. I have learned to be thankful for civility and attention, and I
spoke to her as cheerfully as I could. I said to her, 'I shall see Miss
Garth here, as she comes up to the door, and I can beckon her in through
the long window.' The servant said I could do so, if you came that way,
but that you let yourself in sometimes with your own key by the
back-garden gate; and if you did this, she would take care to let you know
of my visit. I mention these trifles, to show you that there was no
pre-meditated deceit in my mind when I came to the house.</p>
<p>"I waited a weary time, and you never came: I don't know whether my
impatience made me think so, or whether the large fire burning made the
room really as hot as I felt it to be—I only know that, after a
while, I passed through the curtains into the inner room, to try the
cooler atmosphere.</p>
<p>"I walked to the long window which leads into the back garden, to look
out, and almost at the same time I heard the door opened—the door of
the room I had just left, and your voice and the voice of some other
woman, a stranger to me, talking. The stranger was one of the
parlor-boarders, I dare say. I gathered from the first words you exchanged
together, that you had met in the passage—she on her way downstairs,
and you on your way in from the back garden. Her next question and your
next answer informed me that this person was a friend of my sister's, who
felt a strong interest in her, and who knew that you had just returned
from a visit to Norah. So far, I only hesitated to show myself, because I
shrank, in my painful situation, from facing a stranger. But when I heard
my own name immediately afterward on your lips and on hers, then I
purposely came nearer to the curtain between us, and purposely listened.</p>
<p>"A mean action, you will say? Call it mean, if you like. What better can
you expect from such a woman as I am?</p>
<p>"You were always famous for your memory. There is no necessity for my
repeating the words you spoke to your friend, and the words your friend
spoke to you, hardly an hour since. When you read these lines, you will
know, as well as I know, what those words told me. I ask for no
particulars; I will take all your reasons and all your excuses for
granted. It is enough for me to know that you and Mr. Pendril have been
searching for me again, and that Norah is in the conspiracy this time, to
reclaim me in spite of myself. It is enough for me to know that my letter
to my sister has been turned into a trap to catch me, and that Mrs.
Lecount's revenge has accomplished its object by means of information
received from Norah's lips.</p>
<p>"Shall I tell you what I suffered when I heard these things? No; it would
only be a waste of time to tell you. Whatever I suffer, I deserve it—don't
I?</p>
<p>"I waited in that inner room—knowing my own violent temper, and not
trusting myself to see you, after what I had heard—I waited in that
inner room, trembling lest the servant should tell you of my visit before
I could find an opportunity of leaving the house. No such misfortune
happened. The servant, no doubt, heard the voices upstairs, and supposed
that we had met each other in the passage. I don't know how long or how
short a time it was before you left the room to go and take off your
bonnet—you went, and your friend went with you. I raised the long
window softly, and stepped into the back garden. The way by which you
returned to the house was the way by which I left it. No blame attaches to
the servant. As usual, where I am concerned, nobody is to blame but me.</p>
<p>"Time enough has passed now to quiet my mind a little. You know how strong
I am? You remember how I used to fight against all my illnesses when I was
a child? Now I am a woman, I fight against my miseries in the same way.
Don't pity me, Miss Garth! Don't pity me!</p>
<p>"I have no harsh feeling against Norah. The hope I had of seeing her is a
hope taken from me; the consolation I had in writing to her is a
consolation denied me for the future. I am cut to the heart; but I have no
angry feeling toward my sister. She means well, poor soul—I dare say
she means well. It would distress her, if she knew what has happened.
Don't tell her. Conceal my visit, and burn my letter.</p>
<p>"A last word to yourself and I have done:</p>
<p>"If I rightly understand my present situation, your spies are still
searching for me to just as little purpose as they searched at York.
Dismiss them—you are wasting your money to no purpose. If you
discovered me to-morrow, what could you do? My position has altered. I am
no longer the poor outcast girl, the vagabond public performer, whom you
once hunted after. I have done what I told you I would do—I have
made the general sense of propriety my accomplice this time. Do you know
who I am? I am a respectable married woman, accountable for my actions to
nobody under heaven but my husband. I have got a place in the world, and a
name in the world, at last. Even the law, which is the friend of all you
respectable people, has recognized my existence, and has become <i>my</i>
friend too! The Archbishop of Canterbury gave me his license to be
married, and the vicar of Aldborough performed the service. If I found
your spies following me in the street, and if I chose to claim protection
from them, the law would acknowledge my claim. You forget what wonders my
wickedness has done for me. It has made Nobody's Child Somebody's Wife.</p>
<p>"If you will give these considerations their due weight; if you will exert
your excellent common sense, I have no fear of being obliged to appeal to
my newly-found friend and protector—the law. You will feel, by this
time, that you have meddled with me at last to some purpose. I am
estranged from Norah—I am discovered by my husband—I am
defeated by Mrs. Lecount. You have driven me to the last extremity; you
have strengthened me to fight the battle of my life with the resolution
which only a lost and friendless woman can feel. Badly as your schemes
have prospered, they have not proved totally useless after all!</p>
<p>"I have no more to say. If you ever speak about me to Norah, tell her that
a day may come when she will see me again—the day when we two
sisters have recovered our natural rights; the day when I put Norah's
fortune into Norah's hand.</p>
<p>"Those are my last words. Remember them the next time you feel tempted to
meddle with me again.</p>
<p>"MAGDALEN VANSTONE." IV.</p>
<p><i>From Mr. Loscombe to Mrs. Noel Vanstone.</i></p>
<p>"Lincoln's Inn, November 6th.</p>
<p>"DEAR MADAM—This morning's post has doubtless brought you the same
shocking news which it has brought to me. You must know by this time that
a terrible affliction has befallen you—the affliction of your
husband's sudden death.</p>
<p>"I am on the point of starting for the North, to make all needful
inquiries, and to perform whatever duties I may with propriety undertake,
as solicitor to the deceased gentleman. Let me earnestly recommend you not
to follow me to Baliol Cottage, until I have had time to write to you
first, and to give you such advice as I cannot, through ignorance of all
the circumstances, pretend to offer now. You may rely on my writing, after
my arrival in Scot-land, by the first post. I remain, dear madam,
faithfully yours,</p>
<p>"JOHN LOSCOMBE." V.</p>
<p><i>From Mr. Pendril to Miss Garth.</i></p>
<p>"Serle Street, November 6th.</p>
<p>"DEAR MISS GARTH—I return you Mrs. Noel Vanstone's letter. I can
understand your mortification at the tone in which it is written, and your
distress at the manner in which this unhappy woman has interpreted the
conversation that she overheard at your house. I cannot honestly add that
I lament what has happened. My opinion has never altered since the
Combe-Raven time. I believe Mrs. Noel Vanstone to be one of the most
reckless, desperate, and perverted women living; and any circumstances
that estrange her from her sister are circumstances which I welcome, for
her sister's sake.</p>
<p>"There cannot be a moment's doubt on the course you ought to follow in
this matter. Even Mrs. Noel Vanstone herself acknowledges the propriety of
sparing her sister additional and unnecessary distress. By all means, keep
Miss Vanstone in ignorance of the visit to Kensington, and of the letter
which has followed it. It would be not only unwise, but absolutely cruel,
to enlighten her. If we had any remedy to apply, or even any hope to
offer, we might feel some hesitation in keeping our secret. But there is
no remedy, and no hope. Mrs. Noel Vanstone is perfectly justified in the
view she takes of her own position. Neither you nor I can assert the
smallest right to control her.</p>
<p>"I have already taken the necessary measures for putting an end to our
useless inquiries. In a few days I will write to Miss Vanstone, and will
do my best to tranquilize her mind on the subject of her sister. If I can
find no sufficient excuse to satisfy her, it will be better she should
think we have discovered nothing than that she should know the truth.
Believe me most truly yours,</p>
<p>"WILLIAM PENDRIL." VI.</p>
<p><i>From Mr. Loscombe to Mrs. Noel Vanstone.</i></p>
<p>"Lincoln's Inn, November 15th.</p>
<p>"DEAR MADAM—In compliance with your request, I now proceed to
communicate to you in writing what (but for the calamity which has so
recently befallen you) I should have preferred communicating by word of
mouth. Be pleased to consider this letter as strictly confidential between
yourself and me.</p>
<p>"I inclose, as you desire, a copy of the Will executed by your late
husband on the third of this month. There can be no question of the
genuineness of the original document. I protested, as a matter of form,
against Admiral Bartram's solicitor assuming a position of authority at
Baliol Cottage. But he took the position, nevertheless; acting as legal
representative of the sole Executor under the second Will. I am bound to
say I should have done the same myself in his place.</p>
<p>"The serious question follows, What can we do for the best in your
interests? The Will executed under my professional superintendence, on the
thirtieth of September last, is at present superseded and revoked by the
second and later Will, executed on the third of November. Can we dispute
this document?</p>
<p>"I doubt the possibility of disputing the new Will on the face of it. It
is no doubt irregularly expressed; but it is dated, signed, and witnessed
as the law directs; and the perfectly simple and straightforward
provisions that it contains are in no respect, that I can see, technically
open to attack.</p>
<p>"This being the case, can we dispute the Will on the ground that it has
been executed when the Testator was not in a fit state to dispose of his
own property? or when the Testator was subjected to undue and improper
influence?</p>
<p>"In the first of these cases, the medical evidence would put an obstacle
in our way. We cannot assert that previous illness had weakened the
Testator's mind. It is clear that he died suddenly, as the doctors had all
along declared he would die, of disease of the heart. He was out walking
in his garden, as usual, on the day of his death; he ate a hearty dinner;
none of the persons in his service noticed any change in him; he was a
little more irritable with them than usual, but that was all. It is
impossible to attack the state of his faculties: there is no case to go
into court with, so far.</p>
<p>"Can we declare that he acted under undue influence; or, in plainer terms,
under the influence of Mrs. Lecount?</p>
<p>"There are serious difficulties, again, in the way of taking this course.
We cannot assert, for example, that Mrs. Lecount has assumed a place in
the will which she has no fair claim to occupy. She has cunningly limited
her own legacy, not only to what is fairly due her, but to what the late
Mr. Michael Vanstone himself had the intention of leaving her. If I were
examined on the subject, I should be compelled to acknowledge that I had
heard him express this intention myself. It is only the truth to say that
I have heard him express it more than once. There is no point of attack in
Mrs. Lecount's legacy, and there is no point of attack in your late
husband's choice of an executor. He has made the wise choice, and the
natural choice, of the oldest and trustiest friend he had in the world.</p>
<p>"One more consideration remains—the most important which I have yet
approached, and therefore the consideration which I have reserved to the
last. On the thirtieth of September, the Testator executes a will, leaving
his widow sole executrix, with a legacy of eighty thousand pounds. On the
third of November following, he expressly revokes this will, and leaves
another in its stead, in which his widow is never once mentioned, and in
which the whole residue of his estate, after payment of one comparatively
trifling legacy, is left to a friend.</p>
<p>"It rests entirely with you to say whether any valid reason can or can not
be produced to explain such an extraordinary proceeding as this. If no
reason can be assigned—and I know of none myself—I think we
have a point here which deserves our careful consideration; for it may be
a point which is open to attack. Pray understand that I am now appealing
to you solely as a lawyer, who is obliged to look all possible
eventualities in the face. I have no wish to intrude on your private
affairs; I have no wish to write a word which could be construed into any
indirect reflection on yourself.</p>
<p>"If you tell me that, so far as you know, your husband capriciously struck
you out of his will, without assignable reason or motive for doing so, and
without other obvious explanation of his conduct than that he acted in
this matter entirely under the influence of Mrs. Lecount, I will
immediately take Counsel's opinion touching the propriety of disputing the
will on this ground. If, on the other hand, you tell me that there are
reasons (known to yourself, though unknown to me) for not taking the
course I propose, I will accept that intimation without troubling you,
unless you wish it, to explain yourself further. In this latter event, I
will write to you again; for I shall then have something more to say,
which may greatly surprise you, on the subject of the Will.</p>
<p>"Faithfully yours,</p>
<p>"JOHN LOSCOMBE." VII.</p>
<p><i>From Mrs. Noel Vanstone to Mr. Loscombe.</i></p>
<p>"November 16th.</p>
<p>"DEAR SIR—Accept my best thanks for the kindness and consideration
with which you have treated me; and let the anxieties under which I am now
suffering plead my excuse, if I reply to your letter without ceremony, in
the fewest possible words.</p>
<p>"I have my own reasons for not hesitating to answer your question in the
negative. It is impossible for us to go to law, as you propose, on the
subject of the Will.</p>
<p>"Believe me, dear sir, yours gratefully,</p>
<p>"MAGDALEN VANSTONE." VIII.</p>
<p><i>From Mr. Loscombe to Mrs. Noel Vanstone.</i></p>
<p>"Lincoln's Inn. November 17th.</p>
<p>"DEAR MADAM—I beg to acknowledge the receipt of your letter,
answering my proposal in the negative, for reasons of your own. Under
these circumstances—on which I offer no comment—I beg to
perform my promise of again communicating with you on the subject of your
late husband's Will.</p>
<p>"Be so kind as to look at your copy of the document. You will find that
the clause which devises the whole residue of your husband's estate to
Admiral Bartram ends in these terms: <i>to be by him applied to such uses
as he may think fit.</i></p>
<p>"Simple as they may seem to you, these are very remarkable words. In the
first place, no practical lawyer would have used them in drawing your
husband's will. In the second place, they are utterly useless to serve any
plain straightforward purpose. The legacy is left unconditionally to the
admiral; and in the same breath he is told that he may do what he likes
with it! The phrase points clearly to one of two conclusions. It has
either dropped from the writer's pen in pure ignorance, or it has been
carefully set where it appears to serve the purpose of a snare. I am
firmly persuaded that the latter explanation is the right one. The words
are expressly intended to mislead some person—yourself in all
probability—and the cunning which has put them to that use is a
cunning which (as constantly happens when uninstructed persons meddle with
law) has overreached itself. My thirty years' experience reads those words
in a sense exactly opposite to the sense which they are intended to
convey. I say that Admiral Bartram is <i>not</i> free to apply his legacy
to such purposes as he may think fit; I believe he is privately controlled
by a supplementary document in the shape of a Secret Trust.</p>
<p>"I can easily explain to you what I mean by a Secret Trust. It is usually
contained in the form of a letter from a Testator to his Executors,
privately informing them of testamentary intentions on his part which he
has not thought proper openly to acknowledge in his will. I leave you a
hundred pounds; and I write a private letter enjoining you, on taking the
legacy, not to devote it to your own purposes, but to give it to some
third person, whose name I have my own reasons for not mentioning in my
will. That is a Secret Trust.</p>
<p>"If I am right in my own persuasion that such a document as I here
describe is at this moment in Admiral Bartram's possession—a
persuasion based, in the first instance, on the extraordinary words that I
have quoted to you; and, in the second instance, on purely legal
considerations with which it is needless to incumber my letter—if I
am right in this opinion, the discovery of the Secret Trust would be, in
all probability, a most important discovery to your interests. I will not
trouble you with technical reasons, or with references to my experience in
these matters, which only a professional man could understand. I will
merely say that I don't give up your cause as utterly lost, until the
conviction now impressed on my own mind is proved to be wrong.</p>
<p>"I can add no more, while this important question still remains involved
in doubt; neither can I suggest any means of solving that doubt. If the
existence of the Trust was proved, and if the nature of the stipulations
contained in it was made known to me, I could then say positively what the
legal chances were of your being able to set up a Case on the strength of
it: and I could also tell you whether I should or should not feel
justified in personally undertaking that Case under a private arrangement
with yourself.</p>
<p>"As things are, I can make no arrangement, and offer no advice. I can only
put you confidentially in possession of my private opinion, leaving you
entirely free to draw your own inferences from it, and regretting that I
cannot write more confidently and more definitely than I have written
here. All that I could conscientiously say on this very difficult and
delicate subject, I have said.</p>
<p>"Believe me, dear madam, faithfully yours,</p>
<p>"JOHN LOSCOMBE.</p>
<p>"P.S.—I omitted one consideration in my last letter, which I may
mention here, in order to show you that no point in connection with the
case has escaped me. If it had been possible to show that Mr. Vanstone was
<i>domiciled</i> in Scotland at the time of his death, we might have
asserted your interests by means of the Scotch law, which does not allow a
husband the power of absolutely disinheriting his wife. But it is
impossible to assert that Mr. Vanstone was legally domiciled in Scotland.
He came there as a visitor only; he occupied a furnished house for the
season; and he never expressed, either by word or deed, the slightest
intention of settling permanently in the North."</p>
<p>IX.</p>
<p><i>From Mrs. Noel Vanstone to Mr. Loscombe.</i></p>
<p>"DEAR SIR—I have read your letter more than once, with the deepest
interest and attention; and the oftener I read it, the more firmly I
believe that there is really such a Letter as you mention in Admiral
Bartram's hands.</p>
<p>"It is my interest that the discovery should be made, and I at once
acknowledge to you that I am determined to find the means of secretly and
certainly making it. My resolution rests on other motives than the motives
which you might naturally suppose would influence me. I only tell you
this, in case you feel inclined to remonstrate. There is good reason for
what I say, when I assure you that remonstrance will be useless.</p>
<p>"I ask for no assistance in this matter; I will trouble nobody for advice.
You shall not be involved in any rash proceedings on my part. Whatever
danger there may be, I will risk it. Whatever delays may happen, I will
bear them patiently. I am lonely and friendless, and surely troubled in
mind, but I am strong enough to win my way through worse trials than
these. My spirits will rise again, and my time will come. If that Secret
Trust is in Admiral Bartram's possession—when you next see me, you
shall see me with it in my own hands. Yours gratefully,</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />