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Looking at her: but I could detect no emotion on her face; no drooping of the eye; no rise or fall of colour, such as one guilty would have been likely to display. She appeared to take my question literally, and to see nothing beyond it.
"I cannot tell anything about it, Mr. Strange. Had my dress been covered with parchments, I was in too much terror to notice them. Your clerks would be more able to answer you than I, for they had to a.s.sist me down to my carriage. But how should a parchment become attached to a lady's dress?" she added, shaking out the folds of her ample skirts.
"The c.r.a.pe is quite soft, you perceive. Touch it."
"Quite so," I a.s.sented, advancing for a half-moment the extreme tip of my forefinger.
"You will take a gla.s.s of wine? Now don't say no. Why can't you be sociable?"
"Not any wine, thank you," I answered with a laugh. "We lawyers have to keep our heads clear, Lady Clavering: we should not do that if we took wine in the daytime."
"Sit still, pray. You have scarcely been here five minutes. I want to speak to you, too, upon a matter of business."
So I resumed my seat, and waited. She was looking at me very earnestly.
"It is about those missing letters of mine. Have you searched for them, Mr. Strange?"
"Partially. I do not think we hold any. There are none amongst the Clavering papers."
"Why do you say 'partially'?" she questioned.
"I have not had time to search amongst the packets of letters in Mr.
Brightman's cupboards and places. But I think if there were any of your letters in our possession they would have been with the Clavering papers."
Her gaze again sought mine for a moment, and then faded to vacancy.
"I wonder if he burnt them," she dreamily uttered.
"Who? Mr. Brightman?"
"No; my husband. You must look _everywhere_, Mr. Strange. If those letters are in existence, I must have them. You will look?"
"Certainly I will."
"I shall remain in town until I hear from you. You _will_ go, then!"
"One more question ere I do go, Lady Clavering. Have you positively no recollection of seeing this lost parchment?"
She looked surprised at my pertinacity. "If I had, I should say so. I do not think I saw anything of the sort. But if I had seen it, the subsequent fright would have taken it clean out of my memory."
So I wished her good-morning and departed. "It is not Lady Clavering,"
I exclaimed to Lennard, when I reached home.
"Are you sure of that, Mr. Strange?"
"I think so. I judge by her manner: it is only consistent with perfect innocence. In truth, Lennard, I begin to see that I was foolish to have doubted her at all, the circ.u.mstances surrounding it are so intensely improbable."
And yet, even while I spoke, something of the suspicion crept into my mind again. So p.r.o.ne to inconsistency is the human heart.
CHAPTER VII.
ANNABEL.
Most men have their romance in life sooner or later. Mine had come in due course, and she who made it for me was Annabel Brightman.
After my first meeting with her, when she was a child of fourteen, and I not much more than a lad of twenty, I had continued to see her from time to time, for Mr. Brightman's first invitation to me was only the prelude to others. I watched her grow up into a good, unaffected woman, lovable and charming as she was when a child. Childhood had pa.s.sed away now, and thought and gentleness had taken its place; and to my eyes and my heart no other girl in the world could compare with Annabel Brightman.
Her father suspected it. Had he lived only a little longer, he would have learned it beyond doubt, for I should have spoken out more fully upon the matter.
A little less than a year before his death--it was on a Good Friday--I was spending the day at his house, and was in the garden with Annabel.
She had taken my arm, and we were pacing the broad walk to the left of the lawn, thinking only of ourselves, when, raising my eyes, I saw Mr.
Brightman looking attentively at us from one of the French windows. He beckoned to me, and I went in.
"Charles," said he, when I had stepped inside, "no _nonsense_. You and Annabel are too young for anything of that sort."
I felt that his eyes were full upon me as I stood before him, and my face flushed to the roots of my hair. But I took courage to ask a question.
"Sir, every year pa.s.sing over our heads will lessen that objection.
Would there be any other?"
"Be quiet, Charles. Time enough to talk of these things when the years shall have pa.s.sed. You are too young for them, I say."
"I am twenty-five, sir; and Miss Brightman----"
"Twenty-five?" he interrupted. "I was past forty when I thought of marriage. You must not turn Annabel's head with visions of what the years may bring forth, for if you do I will not have you here. Leave that to the future."
But there was sufficient in Mr. Brightman's manner to prove that he had not been blind to the attachment springing up between us, and undoubtedly regarded me as the possible future husband of his daughter. At any rate he continued to invite me to his house. During the past year Annabel had been a great deal at Hastings with Miss Brightman; I wondered that her father and mother would spare her so much.
But Annabel knew nothing of that conversation, and I had never yet spoken of love to her. And now Mr. Brightman, who would, or at least might, have sanctioned it, was gone; and Mrs. Brightman, who would certainly, as I believed, oppose it, remained.
In the days immediately following Mr. Brightman's death, I was literally overwhelmed with business. Apart from the additional work that naturally fell upon me--his share as well as mine--no end of clients came pouring in; and for no earthly purpose, that I could see, excepting curiosity. Besides this, there was the frightful search for Sir Ralph Clavering's will, and the anxiety its loss entailed on me.
On the Wednesday afternoon, just as I had got rid of two clients, Lennard came up with the news that someone else was there. I was then in the front room, seated at Mr. Brightman's desk. Too impatient to hear Lennard out, I told him I could see no one; could not, and would not.
"It is Miss Annabel Brightman," rejoined Lennard quietly.
"Miss Annabel Brightman? Oh, that's very different; I will see her."
Annabel came in, throwing back her c.r.a.pe veil. She had driven up alone in the carriage to bring me a message from her mother. Mrs. Brightman had made an appointment with me for that evening at her house; she had now sent to tell me not to keep it, as she was not well enough to attend to business.
"Mamma wishes you to come to-morrow instead of to-day; early in the afternoon," added Annabel.
That would be impossible, and I said so; my engagements would not at present permit me to give up an afternoon.
"Perhaps to-morrow evening will do," I suggested. "In fact it must do, Annabel. I don't know when I shall have leisure to come down to you in the daytime."
"I dare say it will do," a.s.sented Annabel. "At any rate, you can come to us. If mamma is not able to enter into business matters, another time can be appointed."