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"Is your mamma so very ill?"
"Sometimes I think so--but she fluctuates," replied Annabel. "She is extremely weak, and her spirits are depressed. She will pa.s.s whole hours shut up in her room in solitude. When I ask to go in, Hatch brings out a message that mamma is not able to see even me."
"Her illness must be on the nerves."
"I suppose so. Yesterday she came down and walked with me in the garden in the suns.h.i.+ne. She seemed pretty well then, but not strong.
In the evening she shut herself up again."
"I wish you would sit down, Annabel," I said, offering her a chair for the third time.
"I would if I could stay. Mamma charged me to go straight back after leaving the message with you. Are you well?" she continued with hesitation. "You look hara.s.sed."
"I am well, Annabel. But you have used the right word--I am hara.s.sed; terribly so."
"Poor papa!" she sighed. "It has brought a world of work and care upon you, as well as of grief to us."
"I should not mind work. But--we have had another loss, Annabel. A loss as mysterious as that of the gold; and far more important."
"What is it?" she asked. "More money?"
"No; I wish it were. A will, deposited in the safe there, has disappeared. I cannot even guess at the consequences; ruin probably to me and to one of our best clients. Not only that. If things are to vanish so unaccountably from our strongholds, we must have an enemy at work, and it is impossible to foresee where it may end."
"How very strange! What was the will like? I mean, what did it look like? I have a reason for asking you."
"It was a folded parchment. You saw your father's will, Annabel: it looked very much like that. Why do you ask?"
"Because I remember papa's bringing home a parchment exactly like the one you describe. It was an evening or two before he died: the evening before I and mamma went to Hastings. We left on Sat.u.r.day, so it must have been Friday. Do you think it could be the missing will?"
"Oh no. I have known Mr. Brightman--though very rarely--take home deeds which required studying; but he was not likely to take home Sir Ralph Clavering's will. He made it himself, and knew every word it contained. Annabel, I did not intend to let out the name, but it will be safe with you."
"Perfectly so; as safe as with yourself. I will not repeat it, even to mamma."
"And what I shall do I cannot tell," I concluded, as I attended her down to the carriage. "I would give every s.h.i.+lling I possess to find it."
More work, and then the afternoon came to an end, my dinner came up, and I was at liberty to enjoy a little rest. I had taken to the front room as my sitting-room, and should speedily remove the desk and iron safe into the other, making that exclusively a business-room, and seeing clients in it. After dinner, the fire clear, my reading-lamp lighted, I took up the newspaper. But for habits of order and self-denying rules, I should never have attained to the position I enjoyed. One of those rules was, never to read the _Times_ or any work of relaxation until my work was over for the day. I could then enjoy my paper and my cigar, and feel that I had earned both.
I took up the _Times_, and almost the very first paragraph my eye fell upon was the following:
"We hear that the convict s.h.i.+p _Vengeance_, after encountering stormy weather and contrary winds on her pa.s.sage out, has been wrecked upon an uninhabited island. It is said that some of the convicts have escaped."
I started up almost as if I had been shot. Tom Heriot had gone out in the _Vengeance_: was he one of those who had escaped? If so, where was he? and what would be his ultimate fate?
The s.h.i.+p had sailed from our sh.o.r.es in August; this was February: therefore the reader may think that the news had been long enough in reaching England. But it must be remembered that sailing-vessels were at the mercy of the winds and waves, and in those days telegrams and cablegrams had not been invented.
Throwing my cigar into the fire and the newspaper on the table, I fell into an unpleasant reverie. My lucky star did not seem in the ascendant just now. Mr. Brightman's unhappy death; this fresh uncertainty about Tom Heriot; the certain loss of the gold, and the disappearance of the will----
A ring at the visitors' bell aroused me. I listened, as Leah opened the door, curious to know who could be coming after office hours, unless it was Sir Edmund Clavering. Lake was in the country.
"Is Mr. Strange in, Leah?" And the sound of the sweet voice set my heart beating.
"Yes, Miss Brightman. Please go up."
A light foot on the stairs, and Annabel entered, holding up a parchment with its endors.e.m.e.nt towards me. "Will of Sir Ralph Clavering."
"Oh, Annabel! you are my guardian angel!"
I seized the deed and her hands together. She smiled, and drew away the latter.
"I still thought the parchment I spoke of might be the missing one,"
she explained, "and when I got home I looked in papa's secretaire.
There it was."
"And you have come back to bring it to me!"
"Of course I have. It would have been cruel to let you pa.s.s another night of suspense. I came as soon as I had dined."
"Who is with you?"
"No one; I came in by the omnibus. In two omnibuses really, for the first one only brought me as far as Charing Cross."
"You came in by omnibus! And alone?"
"Why not? Who was to know me, or what could harm me? I kept my veil down. I would not order the carriage out again. It might have disturbed mamma, and she is in bed with one of her worst headaches.
And now, Charles, I must hasten back again."
"Wait one moment, Annabel, whilst I lock up this doubly-precious will."
"Why? You are not going to trouble yourself to accompany me, when you are so busy? It is not in the least necessary. I shall return home just as safely as I came here."
"You silly child! That you have come here at night and alone, I cannot help; but what would Mrs. Brightman say to me if I suffered you to go back in the same manner?"
"I suppose it was not quite right," she returned laughingly; "but I only thought of the pleasure of restoring the will."
I locked it up in the safe, and went downstairs with her. Why Mr.
Brightman should have taken the will home puzzled me considerably; but the relief to my mind was inexpressible, and I felt quite a gush of remorse towards Lady Clavering for having unjustly suspected her.
The prosy old omnibus, as it sped on its way to Clapham, was to me as an Elysian chariot. And we had it to ourselves the whole way, but never a word pa.s.sed between us that might not have been spoken before a committee of dowagers. In fact, we talked chiefly of Miss Brightman.
I began it by asking how she was.
"Aunt Lucy is very delicate indeed," replied Annabel. "Papa's death has tried her greatly: and anything that tries her at once affects her chest. She says she shall not be able to risk another winter in England, even at Hastings."
"Where would she go?"
"To Madeira. At least, she thinks so now. In a letter mamma received from her yesterday, Aunt Lucy said she should go there in the autumn."
"She will find it very dull and lonely--all by herself."
"Yes," sighed Annabel. "Mamma said she should send me with her. But of course I could not go--and leave mamma. I wish I had a sister! One of us might then accompany Aunt Lucy, and the other remain at home. What do you think that stupid Hatch said?" cried Annabel, running on. "We were talking about it at lunch, and Hatch was in the room. 'It's just the best thing you can do, Miss Annabel, to go with your aunt,' she declared, following up mamma's remark."