<p>"I'll tell you," he said, "when we get on shore." <SPAN name="link_4_0003" id="link_4_0003"></SPAN></p>
<div style="height: 4em;">
<br/> <br/> <br/> <br/></div>
<h2> SECOND SCENE.—VANGE ABBEY.—THE FOREWARNINGS </h2>
<h3> VI. </h3>
<p>As we approached the harbor at Folkestone, Romayne's agitation appeared to
subside. His head drooped; his eyes half closed—he looked like a
weary man quietly falling asleep.</p>
<p>On leaving the steamboat, I ventured to ask our charming fellow-passenger
if I could be of any service in reserving places in the London train for
her mother and herself. She thanked me, and said they were going to visit
some friends at Folkestone. In making this reply, she looked at Romayne.
"I am afraid he is very ill," she said, in gently lowered tones. Before I
could answer, her mother turned to her with an expression of surprise, and
directed her attention to the friends whom she had mentioned, waiting to
greet her. Her last look, as they took her away, rested tenderly and
sorrowfully on Romayne. He never returned it—he was not even aware
of it. As I led him to the train he leaned more and more heavily on my
arm. Seated in the carriage, he sank at once into profound sleep.</p>
<p>We drove to the hotel at which my friend was accustomed to reside when he
was in London. His long sleep on the journey seemed, in some degree, to
have relieved him. We dined together in his private room. When the
servants had withdrawn, I found that the unhappy result of the duel was
still preying on his mind.</p>
<p>"The horror of having killed that man," he said, "is more than I can bear
alone. For God's sake, don't leave me!"</p>
<p>I had received letters at Boulogne, which informed me that my wife and
family had accepted an invitation to stay with some friends at the
sea-side. Under these circumstances I was entirely at his service. Having
quieted his anxiety on this point, I reminded him of what had passed
between us on board the steamboat. He tried to change the subject. My
curiosity was too strongly aroused to permit this; I persisted in helping
his memory.</p>
<p>"We were looking into the engine-room," I said; "and you asked me what I
heard there. You promised to tell me what <i>you</i> heard, as soon as we
got on shore—"</p>
<p>He stopped me, before I could say more.</p>
<p>"I begin to think it was a delusion," he answered. "You ought not to
interpret too literally what a person in my dreadful situation may say.
The stain of another man's blood is on me—"</p>
<p>I interrupted him in my turn. "I refuse to hear you speak of yourself in
that way," I said. "You are no more responsible for the Frenchman's death
than if you had been driving, and had accidentally run over him in the
street. I am not the right companion for a man who talks as you do. The
proper person to be with you is a doctor." I really felt irritated with
him—and I saw no reason for concealing it.</p>
<p>Another man, in his place, might have been offended with me. There was a
native sweetness in Romayne's disposition, which asserted itself even in
his worst moments of nervous irritability. He took my hand.</p>
<p>"Don't be hard on me," he pleaded. "I will try to think of it as you do.
Make some little concession on your side. I want to see how I get through
the night. We will return to what I said to you on board the steamboat
to-morrow morning. Is it agreed?"</p>
<p>It was agreed, of course. There was a door of communication between our
bedrooms. At his suggestion it was left open. "If I find I can't sleep,"
he explained, "I want to feel assured that you can hear me if I call to
you."</p>
<p>Three times in the night I woke, and, seeing the light burning in his
room, looked in at him. He always carried some of his books with him when
he traveled. On each occasion when I entered the room, he was reading
quietly. "I suppose I forestalled my night's sleep on the railway," he
said. "It doesn't matter; I am content. Something that I was afraid of has
not happened. I am used to wakeful nights. Go back to bed, and don't be
uneasy about me."</p>
<p>The next morning the deferred explanation was put off again.</p>
<p>"Do you mind waiting a little longer?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Not if you particularly wish it."</p>
<p>"Will you do me another favor? You know that I don't like London. The
noise in the streets is distracting. Besides, I may tell you I have a sort
of distrust of noise, since—" He stopped, with an appearance of
confusion.</p>
<p>"Since I found you looking into the engine-room?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Yes. I don't feel inclined to trust the chances of another night in
London. I want to try the effect of perfect quiet. Do you mind going back
with me to Vange? Dull as the place is, you can amuse yourself. There is
good shooting, as you know."</p>
<p>In an hour more we had left London.</p>
<p class="center">
VII.</p>
<p>VANGE ABBEY is, I suppose, the most solitary country house in England. If
Romayne wanted quiet, it was exactly the place for him.</p>
<p>On the rising ground of one of the wildest moors in the North Riding of
Yorkshire, the ruins of the old monastery are visible from all points of
the compass. There are traditions of thriving villages clustering about
the Abbey, in the days of the monks, and of hostleries devoted to the
reception of pilgrims from every part of the Christian world. Not a
vestige of these buildings is left. They were deserted by the pious
inhabitants, it is said, at the time when Henry the Eighth suppressed the
monasteries, and gave the Abbey and the broad lands of Vange to his
faithful friend and courtier, Sir Miles Romayne. In the next generation,
the son and heir of Sir Miles built the dwelling-house, helping himself
liberally from the solid stone walls of the monastery. With some
unimportant alterations and repairs, the house stands, defying time and
weather, to the present day.</p>
<p>At the last station on the railway the horses were waiting for us. It was
a lovely moonlight night, and we shortened the distance considerably by
taking the bridle path over the moor. Between nine and ten o'clock we
reached the Abbey.</p>
<p>Years had passed since I had last been Romayne's guest. Nothing, out of
the house or in the house, seemed to have undergone any change in the
interval. Neither the good North-country butler, nor his buxom Scotch
wife, skilled in cookery, looked any older: they received me as if I had
left them a day or two since, and had come back again to live in
Yorkshire. My well-remembered bedroom was waiting for me; and the
matchless old Madeira welcomed us when my host and I met in the
inner-hall, which was the ordinary dining-room of the Abbey.</p>
<p>As we faced each other at the well-spread table, I began to hope that the
familiar influences of his country home were beginning already to breathe
their blessed quiet over the disturbed mind of Romayne. In the presence of
his faithful old servants, he seemed to be capable of controlling the
morbid remorse that oppressed him. He spoke to them composedly and kindly;
he was affectionately glad to see his old friend once more in the old
house.</p>
<p>When we were near the end of our meal, something happened that startled
me. I had just handed the wine to Romayne, and he had filled his glass—when
he suddenly turned pale, and lifted his head like a man whose attention is
unexpectedly roused. No person but ourselves was in the room; I was not
speaking to him at the time. He looked round suspiciously at the door
behind him, leading into the library, and rang the old-fashioned handbell
which stood by him on the table. The servant was directed to close the
door.</p>
<p>"Are you cold?" I asked.</p>
<p>"No." He reconsidered that brief answer, and contradicted himself. "Yes—the
library fire has burned low, I suppose."</p>
<p>In my position at the table, I had seen the fire: the grate was heaped
with blazing coals and wood. I said nothing. The pale change in his face,
and his contradictory reply, roused doubts in me which I had hoped never
to feel again.</p>
<p>He pushed away his glass of wine, and still kept his eyes fixed on the
closed door. His attitude and expression were plainly suggestive of the
act of listening. Listening to what?</p>
<p>After an interval, he abruptly addressed me. "Do you call it a quiet
night?" he said.</p>
<p>"As quiet as quiet can be," I replied. "The wind has dropped—and
even the fire doesn't crackle. Perfect stillness indoors and out."</p>
<p>"Out?" he repeated. For a moment he looked at me intently, as if I had
started some new idea in his mind. I asked as lightly as I could if I had
said anything to surprise him. Instead of answering me, he sprang to his
feet with a cry of terror, and left the room.</p>
<p>I hardly knew what to do. It was impossible, unless he returned
immediately to let this extraordinary proceeding pass without notice.
After waiting for a few minutes I rang the bell.</p>
<p>The old butler came in. He looked in blank amazement at the empty chair.
"Where's the master?" he asked.</p>
<p>I could only answer that he had left the table suddenly, without a word of
explanation. "He may perhaps be ill," I added. "As his old servant, you
can do no harm if you go and look for him. Say that I am waiting here, if
he wants me."</p>
<p>The minutes passed slowly and more slowly. I was left alone for so long a
time that I began to feel seriously uneasy. My hand was on the bell again,
when there was a knock at the door. I had expected to see the butler. It
was the groom who entered the room.</p>
<p>"Garthwaite can't come down to you, sir," said the man. "He asks, if you
will please go up to the master on the Belvidere."</p>
<p>The house—extending round three sides of a square—was only two
stories high. The flat roof, accessible through a species of hatchway, and
still surrounded by its sturdy stone parapet, was called "The Belvidere,"
in reference as usual to the fine view which it commanded. Fearing I knew
not what, I mounted the ladder which led to the roof. Romayne received me
with a harsh outburst of laughter—that saddest false laughter which
is true trouble in disguise.</p>
<p>"Here's something to amuse you!" he cried. "I believe old Garthwaite
thinks I am drunk—he won't leave me up here by myself."</p>
<p>Letting this strange assertion remain unanswered, the butler withdrew. As
he passed me on his way to the ladder, he whispered: "Be careful of the
master! I tell you, sir, he has a bee in his bonnet this night."</p>
<p>Although not of the north country myself, I knew the meaning of the
phrase. Garthwaite suspected that the master was nothing less than mad!</p>
<p>Romayne took my arm when we were alone—we walked slowly from end to
end of the Belvidere. The moon was, by this time, low in the heavens; but
her mild mysterious light still streamed over the roof of the house and
the high heathy ground round it. I looked attentively at Romayne. He was
deadly pale; his hand shook as it rested on my arm—and that was all.
Neither in look nor manner did he betray the faintest sign of mental
derangement. He had perhaps needlessly alarmed the faithful old servant by
something that he had said or done. I determined to clear up that doubt
immediately.</p>
<p>"You left the table very suddenly," I said. "Did you feel ill?"</p>
<p>"Not ill," he replied. "I was frightened. Look at me—I'm frightened
still."</p>
<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
<p>Instead of answering, he repeated the strange question which he had put to
me downstairs.</p>
<p>"Do you call it a quiet night?"</p>
<p>Considering the time of year, and the exposed situation of the house, the
night was almost preternaturally quiet. Throughout the vast open country
all round us, not even a breath of air could be heard. The night-birds
were away, or were silent at the time. But one sound was audible, when we
stood still and listened—the cool quiet bubble of a little stream,
lost to view in the valley-ground to the south.</p>
<p>"I have told you already," I said. "So still a night I never remember on
this Yorkshire moor."</p>
<p>He laid one hand heavily on my shoulder. "What did the poor boy say of me,
whose brother I killed?" he asked. "What words did we hear through the
dripping darkness of the mist?"</p>
<p>"I won't encourage you to think of them. I refuse to repeat the words."</p>
<p>He pointed over the northward parapet.</p>
<p>"It doesn't matter whether you accept or refuse," he said, "I hear the boy
at this moment—there!"</p>
<p>He repeated the horrid words—marking the pauses in the utterance of
them with his finger, as if they were sounds that he heard:</p>
<p>"Assassin! Assassin! where are you?"</p>
<p>"Good God!" I cried. "You don't mean that you really <i>hear</i> the
voice?"</p>
<p>"Do you hear what I say? I hear the boy as plainly as you hear me. The
voice screams at me through the clear moonlight, as it screamed at me
through the sea-fog. Again and again. It's all round the house. <i>That</i>
way now, where the light just touches on the tops of the heather. Tell the
servants to have the horses ready the first thing in the morning. We leave
Vange Abbey to-morrow."</p>
<p>These were wild words. If he had spoken them wildly, I might have shared
the butler's conclusion that his mind was deranged. There was no undue
vehemence in his voice or his manner. He spoke with a melancholy
resignation—he seemed like a prisoner submitting to a sentence that
he had deserved. Remembering the cases of men suffering from nervous
disease who had been haunted by apparitions, I asked if he saw any
imaginary figure under the form of a boy.</p>
<p>"I see nothing," he said; "I only hear. Look yourself. It is in the last
degree improbable—but let us make sure that nobody has followed me
from Boulogne, and is playing me a trick."</p>
<p>We made the circuit of the Belvidere. On its eastward side the house wall
was built against one of the towers of the old Abbey. On the westward
side, the ground sloped steeply down to a deep pool or tarn. Northward and
southward, there was nothing to be seen but the open moor. Look where I
might, with the moonlight to make the view plain to me, the solitude was
as void of any living creature as if we had been surrounded by the awful
dead world of the moon.</p>
<p>"Was it the boy's voice that you heard on the voyage across the Channel?"
I asked.</p>
<p>"Yes, I heard it for the first time—down in the engine-room; rising
and falling, rising and falling, like the sound of the engines
themselves."</p>
<p>"And when did you hear it again?"</p>
<p>"I feared to hear it in London. It left me, I should have told you, when
we stepped ashore out of the steamboat. I was afraid that the noise of the
traffic in the streets might bring it back to me. As you know, I passed a
quiet night. I had the hope that my imagination had deceived me—that
I was the victim of a delusion, as people say. It is no delusion. In the
perfect tranquillity of this place the voice has come back to me. While we
were at table I heard it again—behind me, in the library. I heard it
still, when the door was shut. I ran up here to try if it would follow me
into the open air. It <i>has</i> followed me. We may as well go down again
into the hall. I know now that there is no escaping from it. My dear old
home has become horrible to me. Do you mind returning to London tomorrow?"</p>
<p>What I felt and feared in this miserable state of things matters little.
The one chance I could see for Romayne was to obtain the best medical
advice. I sincerely encouraged his idea of going back to London the next
day.</p>
<p>We had sat together by the hall fire for about ten minutes, when he took
out his handkerchief, and wiped away the perspiration from his forehead,
drawing a deep breath of relief. "It has gone!" he said faintly.</p>
<p>"When you hear the boy's voice," I asked, "do you hear it continuously?"</p>
<p>"No, at intervals; sometimes longer, sometimes shorter."</p>
<p>"And thus far, it comes to you suddenly, and leaves you suddenly?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Do my questions annoy you?"</p>
<p>"I make no complaint," he said sadly. "You can see for yourself—I
patiently suffer the punishment that I have deserved."</p>
<p>I contradicted him at once. "It is nothing of the sort! It's a nervous
malady, which medical science can control and cure. Wait till we get to
London."</p>
<p>This expression of opinion produced no effect on him.</p>
<p>"I have taken the life of a fellow-creature," he said. "I have closed the
career of a young man who, but for me, might have lived long and happily
and honorably. Say what you may, I am of the race of Cain. <i>He</i> had
the mark set on his brow. I have <i>my</i> ordeal. Delude yourself, if you
like, with false hopes. I can endure—and hope for nothing.
Good-night."</p>
<p class="center">
VIII.</p>
<p>EARLY the next morning, the good old butler came to me, in great
perturbation, for a word of advice.</p>
<p>"Do come, sir, and look at the master! I can't find it in my heart to wake
him."</p>
<p>It was time to wake him, if we were to go to London that day. I went into
the bedroom. Although I was no doctor, the restorative importance of that
profound and quiet sleep impressed itself on me so strongly, that I took
the responsibility of leaving him undisturbed. The event proved that I had
acted wisely. He slept until noon. There was no return of "the torment of
the voice"—as he called it, poor fellow. We passed a quiet day,
excepting one little interruption, which I am warned not to pass over
without a word of record in this narrative.</p>
<p>We had returned from a ride. Romayne had gone into the library to read;
and I was just leaving the stables, after a look at some recent
improvements, when a pony-chaise with a gentleman in it drove up to the
door. He asked politely if he might be allowed to see the house. There
were some fine pictures at Vange, as well as many interesting relics of
antiquity; and the rooms were shown, in Romayne's absence, to the very few
travelers who were adventurous enough to cross the heathy desert that
surrounded the Abbey. On this occasion, the stranger was informed that Mr.
Romayne was at home. He at once apologized—with an appearance of
disappointment, however, which induced me to step forward and speak to
him.</p>
<p>"Mr. Romayne is not very well," I said; "and I cannot venture to ask you
into the house. But you will be welcome, I am sure, to walk round the
grounds, and to look at the ruins of the Abbey."</p>
<p>He thanked me, and accepted the invitation. I find no great difficulty in
describing him, generally. He was elderly, fat and cheerful; buttoned up
in a long black frockcoat, and presenting that closely shaven face and
that inveterate expression of watchful humility about the eyes, which we
all associate with the reverend personality of a priest.</p>
<p>To my surprise, he seemed, in some degree at least, to know his way about
the place. He made straight for the dreary little lake which I have
already mentioned, and stood looking at it with an interest which was so
incomprehensible to me, that I own I watched him.</p>
<p>He ascended the slope of the moorland, and entered the gate which led to
the grounds. All that the gardeners had done to make the place attractive
failed to claim his attention. He walked past lawns, shrubs, and
flower-beds, and only stopped at an old stone fountain, which tradition
declared to have been one of the ornaments of the garden in the time of
the monks. Having carefully examined this relic of antiquity, he took a
sheet of paper from his pocket, and consulted it attentively. It might
have been a plan of the house and grounds, or it might not—I can
only report that he took the path which led him, by the shortest way, to
the ruined Abbey church.</p>
<p>As he entered the roofless inclosure, he reverently removed his hat. It
was impossible for me to follow him any further, without exposing myself
to the risk of discovery. I sat down on one of the fallen stones, waiting
to see him again. It must have been at least half an hour before he
appeared. He thanked me for my kindness, as composedly as if he had quite
expected to find me in the place that I occupied.</p>
<p>"I have been deeply interested in all that I have seen," he said. "May I
venture to ask, what is perhaps an indiscreet question on the part of a
stranger?"</p>
<p>I ventured, on my side, to inquire what the question might be.</p>
<p>"Mr. Romayne is indeed fortunate," he resumed, "in the possession of this
beautiful place. He is a young man, I think?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Is he married?"</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"Excuse my curiosity. The owner of Vange Abbey is an interesting person to
all good antiquaries like myself. Many thanks again. Good-day."</p>
<p>His pony-chaise took him away. His last look rested—not on me—but
on the old Abbey.</p>
<p class="center">
IX.</p>
<p>MY record of events approaches its conclusion.</p>
<p>On the next day we returned to the hotel in London. At Romayne's
suggestion, I sent the same evening to my own house for any letters which
might be waiting for me. His mind still dwelt on the duel; he was morbidly
eager to know if any communication had been received from the French
surgeon.</p>
<p>When the messenger returned with my letters, the Boulogne postmark was on
one of the envelopes. At Romayne's entreaty, this was the letter that I
opened first. The surgeon's signature was at the end.</p>
<p>One motive for anxiety—on my part—was set at rest in the first
lines. After an official inquiry into the circumstances, the French
authorities had decided that it was not expedient to put the survivor of
the duelists on his trial before a court of law. No jury, hearing the
evidence, would find him guilty of the only charge that could be formally
brought against him—the charge of "homicide by premeditation."
Homicide by misadventure, occurring in a duel, was not a punishable
offense by the French law. My correspondent cited many cases in proof of
it, strengthened by the publicly-expressed opinion of the illustrious
Berryer himself. In a word, we had nothing to fear.</p>
<p>The next page of the letter informed us that the police had surprised the
card playing community with whom we had spent the evening at Boulogne, and
that the much-bejeweled old landlady had been sent to prison for the
offense of keeping a gambling-house. It was suspected in the town that the
General was more or less directly connected with certain disreputable
circumstances discovered by the authorities. In any case, he had retired
from active service.</p>
<p>He and his wife and family had left Boulogne, and had gone away in debt.
No investigation had thus far succeeded in discovering the place of their
retreat.</p>
<p>Reading this letter aloud to Romayne, I was interrupted by him at the last
sentence.</p>
<p>"The inquiries must have been carelessly made," he said. "I will see to it
myself."</p>
<p>"What interest can you have in the inquiries?" I exclaimed.</p>
<p>"The strongest possible interest," he answered. "It has been my one hope
to make some little atonement to the poor people whom I have so cruelly
wronged. If the wife and children are in distressed circumstances (which
seems to be only too likely) I may place them beyond the reach of anxiety—anonymously,
of course. Give me the surgeon's address. I shall write instructions for
tracing them at my expense—merely announcing that an Unknown Friend
desires to be of service to the General's family."</p>
<p>This appeared to me to be a most imprudent thing to do. I said so plainly—and
quite in vain. With his customary impetuosity, he wrote the letter at
once, and sent it to the post that night.</p>
<p class="center">
X.</p>
<p>ON the question of submitting himself to medical advice (which I now
earnestly pressed upon him), Romayne was disposed to be equally
unreasonable. But in this case, events declared themselves in my favor.</p>
<p>Lady Berrick's last reserves of strength had given way. She had been
brought to London in a dying state while we were at Vange Abbey. Romayne
was summoned to his aunt's bedside on the third day of our residence at
the hotel, and was present at her death. The impression produced on his
mind roused the better part of his nature. He was more distrustful of
himself, more accessible to persuasion than usual. In this gentler frame
of mind he received a welcome visit from an old friend, to whom he was
sincerely attached. The visit—of no great importance in itself—led,
as I have since been informed, to very serious events in Romayne's later
life. For this reason, I briefly relate what took place within my own
healing.</p>
<p>Lord Loring—well known in society as the head of an old English
Catholic family, and the possessor of a magnificent gallery of pictures—was
distressed by the change for the worse which he perceived in Romayne when
he called at the hotel. I was present when they met, and rose to leave the
room, feeling that the two friends might perhaps be embarrassed by the
presence of a third person. Romayne called me back. "Lord Loring ought to
know what has happened to me," he said. "I have no heart to speak of it
myself. Tell him everything, and if he agrees with you, I will submit to
see the doctors." With those words he left us together.</p>
<p>It is almost needless to say that Lord Loring did agree with me. He was
himself disposed to think that the moral remedy, in Romayne's case, might
prove to be the best remedy.</p>
<p>"With submission to what the doctors may decide," his lordship said, "the
right thing to do, in my opinion, is to divert our friend's mind from
himself. I see a plain necessity for making a complete change in the
solitary life that he has been leading for years past. Why shouldn't he
marry? A woman's influence, by merely giving a new turn to his thoughts,
might charm away that horrible voice which haunts him. Perhaps you think
this a merely sentimental view of the case? Look at it practically, if you
like, and you come to the same conclusion. With that fine estate—and
with the fortune which he has now inherited from his aunt—it is his
duty to marry. Don't you agree with me?"</p>
<p>"I agree most cordially. But I see serious difficulties in your lordship's
way. Romayne dislikes society; and, as to marrying, his coldness toward
women seems (so far as I can judge) to be one of the incurable defects of
his character."</p>
<p>Lord Loring smiled. "My dear sir, nothing of that sort is incurable, if we
can only find the right woman."</p>
<p>The tone in which he spoke suggested to me that he had got "the right
woman"—and I took the liberty of saying so. He at once acknowledged
that I had guessed right.</p>
<p>"Romayne is, as you say, a difficult subject to deal with," he resumed.
"If I commit the slightest imprudence, I shall excite his suspicion—and
there will be an end of my hope of being of service to him. I shall
proceed carefully, I can tell you. Luckily, poor dear fellow, he is fond
of pictures! It's quite natural that I should ask him to see some recent
additions to my gallery—isn't it? There is the trap that I set! I
have a sweet girl to tempt him, staying at my house, who is a little out
of health and spirits herself. At the right moment, I shall send word
upstairs. She may well happen to look in at the gallery (by the merest
accident) just at the time when Romayne is looking at my new pictures. The
rest depends, of course, on, the effect she produces. If you knew her, I
believe you would agree with me that the experiment is worth trying."</p>
<p>Not knowing the lady, I had little faith in the success of the experiment.
No one, however, could doubt Lord Loring's admirable devotion to his
friend—and with that I was fain to be content.</p>
<p>When Romayne returned to us, it was decided to submit his case to a
consultation of physicians at the earliest possible moment. When Lord
Loring took his departure, I accompanied him to the door of the hotel,
perceiving that he wished to say a word more to me in private. He had, it
seemed, decided on waiting for the result of the medical consultation
before he tried the effect of the young lady's attractions; and he wished
to caution me against speaking prematurely of visiting the picture gallery
to our friend.</p>
<p>Not feeling particularly interested in these details of the worthy
nobleman's little plot, I looked at his carriage, and privately admired
the two splendid horses that drew it. The footman opened the door for his
master, and I became aware, for the first time, that a gentleman had
accompanied Lord Loring to the hotel, and had waited for him in the
carriage. The gentleman bent forward, and looked up from a book that he
was reading. To my astonishment, I recognized the elderly, fat and
cheerful priest who had shown such a knowledge of localities, and such an
extraordinary interest in Vange Abbey!</p>
<p>It struck me as an odd coincidence that I should see the man again in
London, so soon after I had met with him in Yorkshire. This was all I
thought about it, at the time. If I had known then, what I know now, I
might have dreamed, let us say, of throwing that priest into the lake at
Vange, and might have reckoned the circumstance among the wisely-improved
opportunities of my life.</p>
<p>To return to the serious interests of the present narrative, I may now
announce that my evidence as an eye-witness of events has come to an end.
The day after Lord Loring's visit, domestic troubles separated me, to my
most sincere regret, from Romayne. I have only to add, that the foregoing
narrative of personal experience has been written with a due sense of
responsibility, and that it may be depended on throughout as an exact
statement of the truth.</p>
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