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Mr. Chattaway growled something about the day not having been particularly fine.
"Did you buy the stock you thought of buying?" asked Miss Diana.
"I bought some," he said, rather sulkily. "Prices ran high to-day."
"You are home late," she resumed.
"I came round by Blackstone."
It was evident by his tone and manner that he was in one of his least genial humours. Both ladies knew from experience that the wisest plan at those times was to leave him to himself, and they resumed their own converse. Mr. Chattaway stood with his back to them, his hands in his pockets, his eyes peering into the dark night. Not in reality looking at anything, or attempting to look; he was far too deeply engaged with his thoughts to attend to outward things.
He was beginning very slightly to repent of the horsewhipping, to doubt whether it might not have been more prudent had he abstained from inflicting it. As many more of us do, when we awake to reflection after some act committed in anger. If Rupert _was_ to be dreaded; if he, in connection with others, was hatching treason, this outrage would only make him a more bitter enemy. Better, perhaps, not to have gone to the extremity.
But it was done; it could not be undone; and to regret it were worse than useless. Mr. Chattaway began thinking of the point which had led to it--the refusal of Rupert to say who had admitted him. This at least Mr.
Chattaway determined to ascertain.
"Did either of you let in Rupert last night?" he suddenly inquired, looking round.
"No, we did not," promptly replied Miss Diana, answering for Mrs.
Chattaway as well as for herself, which she believed she was perfectly safe in doing. "He was not in until eleven, I hear; we went up to bed long before that."
"Then who did let him in?" exclaimed Mr. Chattaway.
"One of the servants, of course," rejoined Miss Diana.
"But they say they did not," he answered.
"Have you asked them all?"
No. Mr. Chattaway remembered that he had not asked them all, and he came to the conclusion that one of them must have been the culprit. He turned to the window again, standing sulkily as before, and vowing in his own mind that the offender, whether man or woman, should be summarily turned out of the Hold.
"If you have been to Blackstone, you have heard that the inquest is over, James," observed Mrs. Chattaway, anxious to turn the conversation from the subject of last night. "Did you hear the verdict?"
"I heard it," he growled.
"It is not an agreeable verdict," remarked Miss Diana. "Better you had made these improvements in the mine--as I urged upon you long ago--than wait to be forced to do them."
"I am not forced yet," retorted Chattaway. "They must----Halloa! What's that?"
His sudden exclamation called them both to the window. A bright light, a blaze, was shooting up into the sky. At the same moment a shrill scream of terror--the scream from Bridget--arose with it.
"The rick-yard!" exclaimed Miss Diana. "It is on fire!"
Mr. Chattaway stood for an instant as one paralysed. The next he was leaping down the stairs, something like a yell bursting from him.
CHAPTER x.x.xVI
THE FIRE
There is a terror which shakes man's equanimity to its foundation--and that terror fell upon Trevlyn Hold. At the evening hour its inmates were sitting in idleness; the servants gossiping quietly in the kitchen, the girls lingering over the fire in the drawing-room; when those terrible sounds disturbed them. With a simultaneous movement, all flew to the hall, only to see Mr. Chattaway leaping down the stairs, followed by his wife and Miss Diana Trevlyn.
"What is it? What is the matter?"
"The rick-yard is on fire!"
None knew who answered. It was not Mr. Chattaway's voice; it was not their mother's; it did not sound like Miss Diana's. A startled pause, and they ran out to the rick-yard, a terrified group. Little Edith Chattaway, a most excitable girl, fell into hysterics, and added to the confusion of the scene.
The blaze was shooting upwards, and men were coming from the out-buildings, giving vent to their dismay in various exclamations. One voice was heard distinctly above all the rest--that of Miss Diana Trevlyn.
"Who has done this? It must have been purposely set on fire."
She turned sharply on the group of servants as she spoke, as if suspecting one of them. The blaze fell on their alarmed faces, and they visibly recoiled; not from any consciousness of guilt, but from the general sense of fear which lay upon all. One of the grooms spoke impulsively.
"I heard voices not a minute ago in the rick-yard," he cried. "I was going across the top there to fetch a bucket of water from the pump, and heard 'em talking. One was a woman's. I saw a light, too."
The women-servants were grouped together, staring helplessly at the blaze. Miss Diana directed her attention particularly to them: she possessed a ready perception, and detected such unmistakable signs of terror in the face of one of them, that she drew a rapid conclusion. It was not the expression of general alarm, seen on the countenance of the rest; but a lively, conscious terror. The girl endeavoured to draw behind, out of sight of Miss Diana.
Miss Diana laid her hand upon her. It was Bridget, the kitchenmaid. "You know something of this!"
Bridget burst into tears. A more complete picture of helpless fear than she presented at that moment could not well be drawn. In her ap.r.o.n was something hidden.
"What have you got there?" sharply continued Miss Diana, whose thoughts may have flown to incendiary adjuncts.
Bridget, unable to speak, turned down the ap.r.o.n and disclosed a little black puppy, which began to whine. There was nothing very guilty about that.
"Were you in the rick-yard?" questioned Miss Diana; "was it your voice Sam heard?" And Bridget was too frightened to deny it.
"Then, what were you doing? What brought you in the rick-yard at all?"
Mrs. Chattaway, timid Mrs. Chattaway, trembling almost as much as Bridget, but who had compa.s.sion for every one in distress, came to the rescue. "Don't, Diana," she said. "I am sure Bridget is too honest a girl to have taken part in anything so dreadful as this. The rick may have got heated and taken fire spontaneously."
"No, Madam, I'd die before I'd do such a thing," sobbed Bridget, responding to the kindness. "If I was in the rick-yard, I wasn't doing no harm--and I'm sure I'd rather have went a hundred miles the other way if I'd thought what was going to happen. I turned sick with fright when I saw the flame burst out."
"Was it you who screamed?" inquired Miss Diana.
"I did scream, ma'am. I couldn't help it."
"Diana," whispered Mrs. Chattaway, "you may see she's innocent."
"Yes, most likely; but there's something behind for all that," replied Miss Diana, decisively. "Bridget, I mean to come to the bottom of this business, and the sooner you explain it, the less trouble you'll get into. I ask what took you to the rick-yard?"
"It wasn't no harm, ma'am, as Madam says," sobbed Bridget, evidently very unwilling to enter on the explanation. "I never did no harm in going there, nor thought none."
"Then it is the more easily told," responded Miss Diana. "Do you hear me? What business took you to the rick-yard, and who were you talking to?"