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He paused to clear his voice, which sounded very husky. Then continuing:
"For your sake--for the sake of your innocent child, I promise that on the part of Mr Dixon and myself there shall be no harsh treatment, no persecution. Your husband shall have justice."
"That is all I ask," cried Millicent, starting forward. "Justice, only justice; for he is innocent."
"My poor girl!" said Sir Gordon warmly; "there," he cried, with a pitying smile, "you see I speak to you as if the past six or seven years had not glided away."
"Yes, yes," she said, clinging to his hand, "forget them, and speak as my dear old friend."
"I will," he said firmly. "And believe me, Millicent, if it were a question merely of the money--my money that I have lost--I would forgive your husband."
"Forgive--"
"I would ignore his defalcation for your sake; but I am not a free agent in a case like this. You do not understand."
"No, no," she said piteously, "everything is contained in one thought to me. They have taken my poor husband and treated him as if a thief."
"Listen, my child," continued Sir Gordon, "I found that the valuable doc.u.ments of scores of the customers of an old bank had been taken away.
They were in your husband's charge."
"Yes, but he says it can all be explained."
Sir Gordon paused, tightening his lips, and a few indignant words trembled on the balance, but he spared the suffering woman's bleeding heart, and continued gravely:
"I was bound in honour to consult with my partner at once, and the result you know."
"Yes; he was arrested. You, you, Sir Gordon, gave the order."
"Yes," he said gravely; "had I not, he would have been beaten and trampled to death by the maddened crowd. Millicent Hallam, be just in your anger. I saved his life."
"Better death than dishonour," she cried pa.s.sionately.
"Amen!" he responded; and in imagination he saw before him the convict's cell, and went on picturing a horror from which he turned shuddering away.
"Come," he said, "be sure of justice, my child. And now what can I do to help you? Money you must want."
"No," she said drearily.
"Well; means to procure good counsel for your husband's defence."
"He said that you must have procured the counsel he already has."
"I? No, my child; no, I did not even think of such a thing. How could I?"
"Who then has paid fees to this man who has been to my husband?"
"I do not know. I cannot say."
Millicent rose heavily, her eyes wandering, her face deadly white.
"I can do no more here," she said, wringing her hands and pa.s.sing one over the other in a weak, helpless way; and as Sir Gordon watched her, he saw a faint smile come over her pinched features. She was gazing down at her wedding ring, which seemed during the past few weeks to have begun to hang loosely on her finger. She raised it reverently to her lips, and kissed it in a rapt, absent way, gazing round at last as if wondering why she was there.
"Justice! You have promised justice," she cried suddenly, with a mental light irradiating her face. "I know I may trust you."
"You may," he said reverently, for this woman's love seemed to inspire him with awe.
"And you will forgive me--all I have said?" she whispered.
"Forgive you?" he said, taking her hand and speaking gravely.
"Millicent Hallam has no truer servant and friend than Gordon Bourne."
"No truer servant and friend than Gordon Bourne," he repeated, as he returned to his room, after seeing the suffering wife to the door. "Ah!
how Heaven's gifts are cast away here and there! What would my life have been if blessed by the love of this man's wife?"
VOLUME TWO, CHAPTER NINETEEN.
THE VERDICT.
"How is she now, dear Mrs Luttrell--how is she now?" Miss Heathery looked up from out of the handkerchief in which her face was being constantly buried, and it would have been hard to say which was the redder, eyes or nose.
Poor Mrs Luttrell, who had come trembling down from the bed-room, caught at her friend's arm, and seemed to stay herself by it, as she said piteously:
"I can't bear it, my dear; I can't bear it. I was obliged to come down for a few minutes."
"My poor dear," whispered little Miss Heathery, who, excluded from the bed-room, pa.s.sed her time in hot water that she shed, and that she used to make the universal panacea for woe--a cup of tea--one she administered to all in turn.
"You seem so overcome, you poor dear," she whispered; and, helping Mrs Luttrell to the couch, she poured out a cup of tea for her with kindliest intent, but the trembling mother waved it aside.
"She begged me so, my dear, I was obliged to come out of the room. The doctor says it would be madness; and it is all Thisbe and he can do to keep her lying down. What am I to say to you for giving you all this trouble?"
The tears were running fast down Miss Heathery's yellow cheeks, as she took Mrs Luttrell's grey head to her bony breast.
"Don't! don't! don't!" she sobbed. "What have I ever done that you should only think me a fine-weather friend? If I could only tell you how glad I am to be able to help dear Millicent, but I can't."
"Heaven bless you!" whispered Mrs Luttrell, clinging to her--glad to cling to some one in her distress; "you have been a good friend indeed!"
Just then the stairs creaked slightly, and Thisbe, looking very hard and grim, came into the room.
"How is she, Thisbe?" cried Miss Heathery in a quick whisper.
Thisbe shook her head.
"Seems to be dozing a little now, miss; but she keeps asking for the news."
"Poor dear! poor dear!" sobbed Miss Heathery, with more tears running slowly down her face, to such an extent that if there had been any one to notice, he or she would have wondered where they all came from, and have then set it down to the tea.
"Sit down, Thisbe," sighed Mrs Luttrell, "you must be worn out."
"Poor soul! yes," said Miss Heathery, and pouring out a fresh cup, she took it to where Thisbe--who had not been to bed for a week, watching, as she had been, by Millicent's couch--was sitting on the edge of a chair.