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"Then I came last night, and he was here again. So I went away once more, and to-night I came earlier, and he wasn't here, but just as I was going to ring the bell, and say that I had no home, and that my eyes were growing worse, something seemed to say they would ask if I had a father, and why I had left him; and then I couldn't ring--and then I thought if only I could die--yes, if only I could die and forget, and never wake up again in the morning--"
"Hush, Mercy. You shall go back home to your father."
"No, no, no!"
"Yes; and I shall go with you."
There was silence. The bleared eyes looked stealthily up into his face.
A light smile played there.
"Ah!"
A bright vision came to her of a fair day when, hand in hand with him she loved, she should return to her forsaken home in the mountains, and hold up her head, and wipe away her father's tears. She was in the dark street of the city, then; she and her home were very far apart.
He laughed inwardly at a different vision. In a grim spirit of humor he saw all his unquenchable pa.s.sion conquered, and he saw himself the plain, homely, respectable husband of this simple wife.
"Was Paul alone when you saw him?" said Hugh.
"Yes. And would you tell them all?"
The girl's sidelong glance was far away.
"Mercy, I want you to do something for me."
"Yes, yes."
Again the sidelong glance.
Hugh lifted the girl's head with his hand to recall her wandering thoughts.
"Paul will come again to-night. I want you to wait for him and speak to him."
"Yes, yes; but won't he ask me questions?"
"What if he does? Answer them all. Only don't say that I have told you to speak to him. Tell him--will you remember it?--are you listening?--look me in the face, little woman."
"Yes, yes."
"Tell him that Mr. Christian--Parson Christian, you know--has come to London and wishes to see him at once. Say he has looked for him at the hotel in Regent Street and not found him there, and is now at the inn in Hendon. Will you remember?"
"Yes."
"Where were you going, Mercy--back to your poor friends?"
"No. But will he be sure to come to-night?"
"No doubt. At what time was he here last night?"
"Ten o'clock."
"It is now hard on nine. Tell him to go to Hendon at once, and when he goes, you go with him. Do you understand?"
"Yes."
"Don't forget--to-night; to-morrow night will not do. If he does not come, you must follow me to Hendon and tell me so. I shall be there.
Don't tell him that--do you hear?"
The girl gave a meek a.s.sent.
"And now good-bye for an hour or two, little one."
He turned away, and she was left alone before the dark convent. But, she was not all alone. A new-born dream was with her, and her soul was radiant with light.
CHAPTER XIV.
Hugh Ritson walked rapidly through Dean's Yard in the direction of the sanctuary. As he turned into Parliament Street the half moon rose above the roof of Westminster Hall. But the night was still dark.
He pa.s.sed through Trafalgar Square and into the Haymarket. The streets were thronged. Crowds on crowds went languidly by. Dim ghosts of men and women, most of them, who loitered at this hour in these streets. Old men, with the souls long years dead within them, and the corruption reeking up with every breath to poison every word, or lurking like charnel lights in the eyes to blink contagion in every glance. Young girls hopping like birds beside them, the spectres of roses in their cheeks, but the real thorns at their hearts. There had been no way for them but this--this and one other way: either to drift into the Thames and be swallowed up in the waters of death, or to be carried along for a brief minute on the froth of the waves of life.
Laughing because they might not weep; laughing because their souls were dead; laughing in their conscious travesty of the tragedy of pleasure--they tripped and lounged and sauntered along. And the lamps shone round them, and above them was the glimmering moon.
As Hugh Ritson went up the steep Haymarket, his infirmity became more marked, and he walked with a sliding gait. Seeing this, a woman who stood there halted and limped a few paces by his side, and pretending not to see him, shouted with a mocking laugh, "What is it--a man or a bat?"
How the wild, mad heart of the night leaped up!
A man pa.s.sed through the throng with eyes that seemed to see nothing of its frantic frenzy and joyless joy--a stalwart man, who strode along like a giant among midgets, his vacant eyes fixed before him, his strong white face expressionless. Hugh Ritson saw him. They pa.s.sed within two paces, but without recognition. The one was wandering aimlessly in his blind misery toward the Convent of St. Margaret, the other was making for the old inn at Hendon.
An hour later Hugh Ritson was standing in the bar of the Hawk and Heron.
His mind was made up; his resolve was fixed; his plan was complete.
"Anybody with him?" he said to the landlady, motioning toward the stairs.
"Not as I knows on, sir, but he do seem that restless and off his wittals, and I don't know as I quite understands why--"
Hugh Ritson stopped her garrulous tongue. "I have found the girl. She will come back to you to-night, Mrs. Drayton. If she brings with her the gentleman who left these boxes in your care, take him to your son's bedroom and tell him the person he wishes to see has arrived, and will be with him directly."
With this he went up the stairs. Then, calling down, he added: "The moment he is in the room come up and tell me."
A minute later he called again: "Where's the key to this door? Let me have it."
The landlady hobbled up with the key to Drayton's bedroom; the room was empty and the door stood open. Hugh Ritson tried the key in the lock and saw that the wards moved freely. "That will do," he said, in a satisfied tone.