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<h2> CHAPTER XIX. SIR JERVIS REDWOOD. </h2>
<p>In the meantime, Emily, left by herself, had her own correspondence to
occupy her attention. Besides the letter from Cecilia (directed to the
care of Sir Jervis Redwood), she had received some lines addressed to her
by Sir Jervis himself. The two inclosures had been secured in a sealed
envelope, directed to the cottage.</p>
<p>If Alban Morris had been indeed the person trusted as messenger by Sir
Jervis, the conclusion that followed filled Emily with overpowering
emotions of curiosity and surprise.</p>
<p>Having no longer the motive of serving and protecting her, Alban must,
nevertheless, have taken the journey to Northumberland. He must have
gained Sir Jervis Redwood's favor and confidence—and he might even
have been a guest at the baronet's country seat—when Cecilia's
letter arrived. What did it mean?</p>
<p>Emily looked back at her experience of her last day at school, and
recalled her consultation with Alban on the subject of Mrs. Rook. Was he
still bent on clearing up his suspicions of Sir Jervis's housekeeper? And,
with that end in view, had he followed the woman, on her return to her
master's place of abode?</p>
<p>Suddenly, almost irritably, Emily snatched up Sir Jervis's letter. Before
the doctor had come in, she had glanced at it, and had thrown it aside in
her impatience to read what Cecilia had written. In her present altered
frame of mind, she was inclined to think that Sir Jervis might be the more
interesting correspondent of the two.</p>
<p>On returning to his letter, she was disappointed at the outset.</p>
<p>In the first place, his handwriting was so abominably bad that she was
obliged to guess at his meaning. In the second place, he never hinted at
the circumstances under which Cecilia's letter had been confided to the
gentleman who had left it at her door.</p>
<p>She would once more have treated the baronet's communication with contempt—but
for the discovery that it contained an offer of employment in London,
addressed to herself.</p>
<p>Sir Jervis had necessarily been obliged to engage another secretary in
Emily's absence. But he was still in want of a person to serve his
literary interests in London. He had reason to believe that discoveries
made by modern travelers in Central America had been reported from time to
time by the English press; and he wished copies to be taken of any notices
of this sort which might be found, on referring to the files of newspapers
kept in the reading-room of the British Museum. If Emily considered
herself capable of contributing in this way to the completeness of his
great work on "the ruined cities," she had only to apply to his bookseller
in London, who would pay her the customary remuneration and give her every
assistance of which she might stand in need. The bookseller's name and
address followed (with nothing legible but the two words "Bond Street"),
and there was an end of Sir Jervis's proposal.</p>
<p>Emily laid it aside, deferring her answer until she had read Cecilia's
letter.</p>
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