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<h2> CHAPTER IX. THE ADVERTISEMENT. </h2>
<p>I WAITED in silence for the disclosure that was now to come. Naomi began
by asking me a question.</p>
<p>"You remember when we went to see Ambrose in the prison?" she said.</p>
<p>"Perfectly."</p>
<p>"Ambrose told us of something which his villain of a brother said of John
Jago and me. Do you remember what it was?"</p>
<p>I remembered perfectly. Silas had said, "John Jago is too sweet on Naomi
not to come back."</p>
<p>"That's so," Naomi remarked when I had repeated the words. "I couldn't
help starting when I heard what Silas had said; and I thought you noticed
me."</p>
<p>"I did notice you."</p>
<p>"Did you wonder what it meant?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"I'll tell you. It meant this: What Silas Meadowcroft said to his brother
of John Jago was what I myself was thinking of John Jago at that very
moment. It startled me to find my own thought in a man's mind spoken for
me by a man. I am the person, sir, who has driven John Jago away from
Morwick Farm; and I am the person who can and will bring him back again."</p>
<p>There was something in her manner, more than in her words, which let the
light in suddenly on my mind.</p>
<p>"You have told me the secret," I said. "John Jago is in love with you."</p>
<p>"Mad about me!" she rejoined, dropping her voice to a whisper. "Stark,
staring mad!—that's the only word for him. After we had taken a few
turns on the gravel-walk, he suddenly broke out like a man beside himself.
He fell down on his knees; he kissed my gown, he kissed my feet; he sobbed
and cried for love of me. I'm not badly off for courage, sir, considering
I'm a woman. No man, that I can call to mind, ever really scared me
before. But I own John Jago frightened me; oh my! he did frighten me! My
heart was in my mouth, and my knees shook under me. I begged and prayed of
him to get up and go away. No; there he knelt, and held by the skirt of my
gown. The words poured out from him like—well, like nothing I can
think of but water from a pump. His happiness and his life, and his hopes
in earth and heaven, and Lord only knows what besides, all depended, he
said, on a word from me. I plucked up spirit enough at that to remind him
that I was promised to Ambrose. 'I think you ought to be ashamed of
yourself,' I said, 'to own that you're wicked enough to love me when you
know I am promised to another man!' When I spoke to him he took a new
turn; he began abusing Ambrose. <i>That</i> straightened me up. I snatched
my gown out of his hand, and I gave him my whole mind. 'I hate you!' I
said. 'Even if I wasn't promised to Ambrose, I wouldn't marry you—no!
not if there wasn't another man left in the world to ask me. I hate you,
Mr. Jago! I hate you!' He saw I was in earnest at last. He got up from my
feet, and he settled down quiet again, all on a sudden. 'You have said
enough' (that was how he answered me). 'You have broken my life. I have no
hopes and no prospects now. I had a pride in the farm, miss, and a pride
in my work; I bore with your brutish cousins' hatred of me; I was faithful
to Mr. Meadowcroft's interests; all for your sake, Naomi Colebrook—all
for your sake! I have done with it now; I have done with my life at the
farm. You will never be troubled with me again. I am going away, as the
dumb creatures go when they are sick, to hide myself in a corner, and die.
Do me one last favor. Don't make me the laughing-stock of the whole
neighborhood. I can't bear that; it maddens me only to think of it. Give
me your promise never to tell any living soul what I have said to you
to-night—your sacred promise to the man whose life you have broken!'
I did as he bade me; I gave him my sacred promise with the tears in my
eyes. Yes, that is so. After telling him I hated him (and I did hate him),
I cried over his misery; I did! Mercy, what fools women are! What is the
horrid perversity, sir, which makes us always ready to pity the men? He
held out his hand to me; and he said, 'Good-by forever!' and I pitied him.
I said, 'I'll shake hands with you if you will give me your promise in
exchange for mine. I beg of you not to leave the farm. What will my uncle
do if you go away? Stay here, and be friends with me, and forget and
forgive, Mr. John.' He gave me his promise (he can refuse me nothing); and
he gave it again when I saw him again the next morning. Yes. I'll do him
justice, though I do hate him! I believe he honestly meant to keep his
word as long as my eye was on him. It was only when he was left to himself
that the Devil tempted him to break his promise and leave the farm. I was
brought up to believe in the Devil, Mr. Lefrank; and I find it explains
many things. It explains John Jago. Only let me find out where he has
gone, and I'll engage he shall come back and clear Ambrose of the
suspicion which his vile brother has cast on him. Here is the pen all
ready for you. Advertise for him, friend Lefrank; and do it right away,
for my sake!"</p>
<p>I let her run on, without attempting to dispute her conclusions, until she
could say no more. When she put the pen into my hand, I began the
composition of the advertisement as obediently as if I, too, believed that
John Jago was a living man.</p>
<p>In the case of any one else, I should have openly acknowledged that my own
convictions remained unshaken. If no quarrel had taken place at the
lime-kiln, I should have been quite ready, as I viewed the case, to
believe that John Jago's disappearance was referable to the terrible
disappointment which Naomi had inflicted on him. The same morbid dread of
ridicule which had led him to assert that he cared nothing for Naomi, when
he and Silas had quarreled under my bedroom window, might also have
impelled him to withdraw himself secretly and suddenly from the scene of
his discomfiture. But to ask me to believe, after what had happened at the
lime-kiln, that he was still living, was to ask me to take Ambrose
Meadowcroft's statement for granted as a true statement of facts.</p>
<p>I had refused to do this from the first; and I still persisted in taking
that course. If I had been called upon to decide the balance of
probability between the narrative related by Ambrose in his defense and
the narrative related by Silas in his confession, I must have owned, no
matter how unwillingly, that the confession was, to my mind, the least
incredible story of the two.</p>
<p>Could I say this to Naomi? I would have written fifty advertisements
inquiring for John Jago rather than say it; and you would have done the
same, if you had been as fond of her as I was. I drew out the
advertisement, for insertion in the Morwick <i>Mercury</i>, in these
terms:</p>
<p>MURDER.—Printers of newspapers throughout the United States are
desired to publish that Ambrose Meadowcroft and Silas Meadowcroft, of
Morwick Farm, Morwick County, are committed for trial on the charge of
murdering John Jago, now missing from the farm and from the neighborhood.
Any person who can give information of the existence of said Jago may save
the lives of two wrongly-accused men by making immediate communication.
Jago is about five feet four inches high. He is spare and wiry; his
complexion is extremely pale, his eyes are dark, and very bright and
restless. The lower part of his face is concealed by a thick black beard
and mustache. The whole appearance of the man is wild and flighty.</p>
<p>I added the date and the address. That evening a servant was sent on
horseback to Narrabee to procure the insertion of the advertisement in the
next issue of the newspaper.</p>
<p>When we parted that night, Naomi looked almost like her brighter and
happier self. Now that the advertisement was on its way to the
printing-office, she was more than sanguine: she was certain of the
result.</p>
<p>"You don't know how you have comforted me," she said, in her frank,
warm-hearted way, when we parted for the night. "All the newspapers will
copy it, and we shall hear of John Jago before the week is out." She
turned to go, and came back again to me. "I will never forgive Silas for
writing that confession!" she whispered in my ear. "If he ever lives under
the same roof with Ambrose again, I—well, I believe I wouldn't marry
Ambrose if he did! There!"</p>
<p>She left me. Through the wakeful hours of the night my mind dwelt on her
last words. That she should contemplate, under any circumstances, even the
bare possibility of not marrying Ambrose, was, I am ashamed to say, a
direct encouragement to certain hopes which I had already begun to form in
secret. The next day's mail brought me a letter on business. My clerk
wrote to inquire if there was any chance of my returning to England in
time to appear in court at the opening of next law term. I answered,
without hesitation, "It is still impossible for me to fix the date of my
return." Naomi was in the room while I was writing. How would she have
answered, I wonder, if I had told her the truth, and said, "You are
responsible for this letter?"</p>
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