 CHAPTER VII The church clocks at West Linn struck eight one lovely morning in July, and then the bells chimed out, giving token that it was Sunday. West Linn had changed owners, and now it was the property of Mr. Carlyle. He had bought it as it stood, furniture and all, but the transfer had been conducted with secrecy, and was suspected by none save those engaged in the negotiations. Whether Lord Mount Severn thought it might prevent any one getting on the scent, or whether he wished to take farewell of a place he had formerly been fond of, certain it is that he craved a week or two's visit to it. Mr. Carlyle most readily and graciously acquiesced, and the Earl, his daughter, and Retinue had arrived the previous day. West Linn was an ecstasy. It called itself an aristocratic place, and it indulged hopes that the Earl might be intending to confer permanently the light of his presence by taking up his residence again at East Linn. The toilettes prepared to meet his admiring eyes were prodigious, and pretty Barbara Hare was not the only young lady who had thereby to encounter the paternal storm. Miss Carlyle was ready for church at the usual time, plainly, but well-dressed. As she and Archibald were leaving their house, they saw something looming up the street, flashing and gleaming in the sun. A pink parasol came first, a pink bonnet and feather came behind it, a gray brocaded dress and white gloves. The vain little idiot ejaculated Miss Carlyle, but Barbara smiled up the street toward them, unconscious of the apostrophe. Well done, Barbara, was the salutation of Miss Carlyle. The justice might well call out. You are finer than a sunbeam. Not half so fine as many another in the church will be to-day, responded Barbara, as she lifted her shy, blue eyes and blushing face to answer the greetings of Mr. Carlyle. West Linn seems bent on outdressing the Lady Isabel. You should have been at the milliners yesterday morning, Miss Carlyle. Is all the finery coming out to-day? gravely inquired Mr. Carlyle, as Barbara turned with them toward the church, and he walked by her side in his sisters, for he had an objection almost invincible as a Frenchman's, to give his arm to two ladies. Of course, replied Barbara, first impression is everything, you know, and the Earl and his daughter will be coming to church. Suppose she should not be in peacock's plumes, cried Miss Carlyle with an imperturbable face. Oh! but she is sure to be, if you mean richly dressed, cried Barbara hastily. Or suppose they should not come to church, laughed Mr. Carlyle. What a disappointment to the bonnets and feathers! After all, Barbara, what are they to us, or we to them? resumed Miss Carlyle. We may never meet. We in significant West Linn gentry shall not intrude ourselves into East Linn. It would scarcely be fitting, or be deemed so by the Earl and Lady Isabel. That's just how Papa went on, grumbled Barbara. He caught sight of this bonnet yesterday, and when by way of excuse I said I had it to call on them, he asked whether I thought the obscure West Linn families would venture to thrust their calls on Lord Mount Severn, as though they were of the country aristocracy. It was the feather that put him out. It is a very long one, remarked Miss Carlyle, grimly surveying it. Barbara was to sit in the Carlyle pew that day, for she thought the farther she was from the justice the better. There was no knowing, but he might take a sly, revengeful cut at the feather in the middle of service, and so dock its beauty. Scarcely were they seated when some strangers came quietly up the aisle, a gentleman who limped as he walked, with a furrowed brow and gray hair, and a young lady. Barbara looked round with eagerness, but looked away again. They could not be the expected strangers. The young lady's dress was too plain, a clear-looking Muslim dress for a hot summer's day. But the old beetle in his many-caped coat was walking before them sideways with his marshaling baton, and he marshaled them into the East Linn pew, unoccupied for so many years. Who in the world can they be? whispered Barbara to Miss Carlyle. That old stupid is always making a mistake in putting people into the wrong places. The Earl and Lady Isabel. The colour flushed into Barbara's face, and she stared at Miss Corny. Why, she has no silks, and no feathers, and no anything, cried Barbara. She's plainer than anybody in the church. Plainer than any of the fine ones, than you, for instance. The Earl is much altered, but I should have known them both anywhere. I should have known her from the likeness to her poor mother, just the same eyes and sweet expression. I, those brown eyes, so full of sweetness and melancholy, you who had once seen them could mistake or forget them, and Barbara Hare, forgetting where she was, looked at them much that day. She is very lovely, thought Barbara, and her dress is certainly that of a lady. I wish I had not this streaming pink feather, what fine jackdaws she must deem us all. The Earl's carriage, an open barouche, was waiting at the gate, at the conclusion of the service. He handed his daughter in, and was putting his gouty foot upon the step to follow her when he observed Mr. Carlyle. The Earl turned and held out his hand. A man who could purchase East Linn was worthy of being received as an equal, though he was but a country lawyer. Mr. Carlyle shook hands with the Earl, approached the carriage and raised his hat to Lady Isabel. She bent forward with her pleasant smile and put her hand into his. I have many things to say to you, said the Earl. I wish you would go home with us. If you have nothing better to do, be East Linn's guest for the remainder of the day. He smiled peculiarly as he spoke, and Mr. Carlyle echoed it. East Linn's guest! That is what the Earl was at present. Mr. Carlyle turned aside to tell his sister. Cornelia, I shall not be home to dinner. I am going with Lord Mount Severn. Good day, Barbara! Mr. Carlyle stepped into the carriage, was followed by the Earl, and it drove away. The sun shone still, but the day's brightness had gone out for Barbara Hare. How does he know the Earl so well? How does he know Lady Isabel? she reiterated in her astonishment. Archibald knows something of most people, replied Miss Cornie. He saw the Earl frequently when he was in town in the spring, and Lady Isabel once or twice. What a lovely face hers is! Barbara made no reply. She returned home with Miss Carlyle, but her manner was as absent as her heart, and that had run away to East Linn. Chapter 8 Mr. Cain's Concert Before Lord Mount Severn had completed the fortnight of his proposed stay, the gut came on seriously. It was impossible for him to move away from East Linn. Mr. Carlyle assured him he was only too pleased that he should remain as long as might be convenient, and the Earl expressed his acknowledgments. He hoped soon to be re-established on his legs. But he was not. The gut came, and the gut went, not positively laying him up in bed, but rendering him unable to leave his rooms, and this continued until October when he grew much better. The county families had been neighbourly, calling on the invalid Earl, and occasionally carrying off Lady Isabel, but his chief and constant visitor had been Mr. Carlyle. The Earl had grown to like him in no common degree, and was disappointed if Mr. Carlyle spent an evening away from him, so that he became, as it were, quite domesticated with the Earl and Isabel. I am not quite equal to general society, he observed to his daughter, and it is considerate and kind of Carlyle to come here and cheer my loneliness. Extremely kind, said Isabel. I like him very much, Papa. I don't know anybody that I like half as well, was the rejoinder of the Earl. Mr. Carlyle went up as usual the same evening, and in the course of it the Earl asked Isabel to sing. I will if you wish, Papa, was the reply, but the piano is so much out of tune that it is not pleasant to sing to it. Is there anyone in West Lynn who could come here and tune my piano, Mr. Carlyle? she added, turning to him. Certainly there is. Cain would do it. Shall I send him to-morrow? I should be glad if it would not be giving you too much trouble. Not that tuning would benefit it greatly, old thing that it is. Were we to be much at East Lynn, I should get Papa to exchange it for a good one. Little thought, Lady Isabel, that that very piano was Mr. Carlyle's and not hers, the Earl coughed and exchanged a smile and a glance with his gust. Mr. Cain was the organist of St Jude's Church, a man of embarrassment and sorrow, who had long had a sore fight with the world. When he arrived at East Lynn the following day, dispatched by Mr. Carlyle, Lady Isabel happened to be playing, and she stood by and watched him begin his work. She was courteous and affable. She was so to everyone, and the poor musicmaster took courage to speak of his own affairs, and did proffer a humble request, that she and Lord Mount Seven would patronise and personally attend a concert he was about to give the following week. A scarlet blush came into his thin cheeks as he confessed that he was very poor, could scarcely live, and he was getting up this concert in his desperate need. If it succeeded well, he could then go on again. If not, he should be turned out of his home, and his furniture sold for the two years ran to Yode, and he had seven children. Isabel, all her sympathies awakened, sought the Earl. Oh, Papa, I have to ask you the greatest favour. Will you grant it? Aye, child, you don't ask them often. What is it? I want you to take me to a concert at West Lynn. The Earl fell back in surprise and stared at Isabel. A concert at West Lynn, he laughed, to hear the rustic scraping the fiddle. My dear Isabel! She poured out what she had just heard with her own comments and additions. Seven children, Papa, and if the concert does not succeed, he must give up his home and turn out into the streets with them. It is, you see, almost a matter of life or death with him. He is very poor. I am poor myself, said the Earl. I was so sorry for him when he was speaking. He kept turning red and white, and catching up his breath in agitation. It was painful to him to tell of his embarrassments. I am sure he is a gentleman. Well, you may take a pound's worth of ticket, Isabel, and give him to the upper servants. A village concert. Oh, Papa, it is not. Can't you see it is not? If we, you and I, will promise to be present, all the families round West Lynn will attend, and he will have the room full. They will go, because we do, he said so. Make a sacrifice for once, dearest Papa, and go, if it be only for an hour. I shall enjoy it, if there's nothing but a fiddle and a tambourine. You gypsy, you are as bad as a professional beggar. There, go and tell the fellow we will look in for half an hour. She flew back to Mr. Cain, her eyes dancing. She spoke quietly as she always did, but her own satisfaction gladdened her voice. I am happy to tell you that Papa has consented. He will take four tickets, and we will attend the concert. The tears rushed into Mr. Cain's eyes. Isabel was not sure, but they were in her own. He was a tall, thin, delicate-looking man, with long white fingers and a long neck. He faltered forth his thanks with an inquiry whether he might be allowed to state openly that they would be present. Tell everybody, said she, eagerly. Everybody you come across, if as you think, it will be the means of inducing people to attend. I shall tell all friends he call upon me and ask them to go. When Mr. Carlyle came up in the evening, the earl was temporarily absent from the room. Isabel began to speak of the concert. It is a hazardous venture for Mr. Cain, observed Mr. Carlyle. I fear he will only lose money and add to his embarrassments. Why do you fear that? she asked. Because, Lady Isabel, nothing gets patronized at West Lynn, nothing native, and people have heard so long of poor Cain's necessities that they think little of them. Is he so very poor? Very. He is starved half his time. Starved, repeated Isabel, an expression of perplexity arising to her face as she looked at Mr. Carlyle, for she scarcely understood him. Do you mean that he does not have enough to eat? Of bread, he may, but not much better nourishment. His salary is organist, is thirty pounds, and he gets a little stray teaching. But he has his wife and children to keep, and no doubt serves them before himself. I dare say he scarcely knows what it is to taste meat. The words brought a bitter pang to Lady Isabel. Not enough to eat! Never to taste meat! And she and her carelessness, her ignorance, her indifference, she scarcely knew what term to give it. Had not thought to order him a meal in their house of plenty. He had walked from West Lynn, occupied himself an hour with her piano, and set off to walk back again, battling with his hunger. A word from her, and a repasse had been set before him out of their superfluities such as he never sat down to, and that word she had not spoken. You were looking grave, Lady Isabel. I am taking contrition to myself. Never mind, it cannot now be helped, but it will always be a dark spot on my memory. What is it? She lifted her repentant face to his, and smiled. Never mind, I say, Mr. Collier, what is past cannot be recalled. He looks like a gentleman. Who? Cain? A gentleman bred. His father was a clergyman. Cain's ruin was his love of music. It prevented his settling to any better paid profession. His early marriage also was a drawback and kept him down. He is young still. Mr. Collier, I would not be one of your West Lynn people for the world. Here is a young gentleman struggling with adversity, and you won't put out your hand to help him. He smiled at her warmth. Some of us will take tickets, I for one, but I don't know about attending the concert. I fear few would do that. Because that's just the thing that would serve him, if one went another would. Well, I shall try and show West Lynn that I don't take a lesson from their book. I shall be there before it begins, and never come out till the last song's over. I am not too grand to go if West Lynn is. You surely do not think of going? I surely do think of it, and Papar goes with me. I persuaded him, and I have given Mr. Cain the promise. Mr. Collier paused. I am glad to hear it. It will be a perfect boon to Cain. If it once gets abroad that Lord Mount Seven and Lady Isabel intend to honour the concert, there won't be standing room. She danced round with a little gleeful step. What high and mighty personages Lord Mount Seven and Lady Isabel seem to be! If you had any goodness of heart, Mr. Collier, you would enlist yourself in the cause also. I think I will, he smiled. Papar says you hold sway at West Lynn. If you proclaim that you mean to go, you will induce others. I will proclaim that you do, he answered. That will be all sufficient. But, Lady Isabel, you must not expect much gratification from the performance. A tambourine will be quite enough for me, I told Papar so. I shall not think of music. I shall think of poor Mr. Cain. Mr. Collier, I know you can be kind, if you like. I know you would rather be kind than otherwise. It is to be read in your face. Try and do what you can for him. Yes, I will, he warmly answered. Mr. Collier sold no end of tickets the following day, or rather caused them to be sold. He praised up the concert far and wide, and proclaimed that Lord Mount Seven and his daughter would not think of missing it. Mr. Cain's house was besieged for tickets, faster than he could write his signature in their corner, and when Mr. Collier went home to luncheon at midday, which he did not often do, he laid down two at Miss Cornie's elbow. What's this? Concert tickets? Archibald, you have never gone and bought these. What would she have said had she known that the two were not the extent of his investment? Ten shillings to throw away upon two poultry bits of cardboard, chafed Miss Collier. You always wear a noodle in money matters, Archibald, and always will be. I wish I had the keeping of your purse. What I have given will not hurt me, Cornelia, and Cain is badly off. Think of his troop of children. Oh, dear, said Miss Cornie. I imagine he should think of them. I suppose it was his own fault they came. That's always it. Poor folks get a heap of children about them and then ask for pity. I should say it would be more just if they asked for blame. Well, there the tickets are, bought and paid for, so they may as well be used. You will go with me, Cornelia. And stick ourselves there upon empty benches, like two geese, and sit staring and counting the candles. A pleasant evening. You need not fear empty benches. The Mount Sevens are going, and West Lynn is in a fever, racing after tickets. I suppose you have got a cap, looking at the nondescript article decorating his sister's head, that will be suitable to go in, Cornelia. If not, you had better order one. This suggestion put up Miss Collierle. Hadn't you better have your hair curled, and your coat tails lined with white satin, and a gold opera glass, and a cocked hat, retorted she, my greatest me, a fine new cap to go to their mess of a concert in after paying ten shillings for the tickets, the world's coming to something. Mr. Collierle left her and her grumbling to return to the office. Lord Mount Seven's carriage was passing at the moment, and Isabel Vane was within it. She caused it to stop when she saw Mr. Collierle, and he advanced to her. I have been to Mr. Cain's myself for the tickets, said she, with a beaming look. I came into West Lynn on purpose. I told the coachman to find out where he lived, and he did. I thought, if the people saw me and the carriage there, they would guess what I wanted. I do hope he will have a full concert. I am sure he will, replied Mr. Collierle, as he released her hand. And Lady Isabel signed to the carriage to drive on. As Mr. Collierle turned away, he met Ottway Bethel, a nephew of Colonel Bethel's, who was tolerated in the Colonel's house because he had no other home, and appeared incapable of making himself one. Some persons persisted in calling him a gentleman, as he was by birth. Others, and more veils-sougers. The two were united sometimes. He was dressed in a velveteen suit, and had a gun in his hand. Indeed, he was rarely seen without a gun, being inordinately fond of sport. But if all tales whispered were true, he supplied himself with game in other ways than by shooting, which had the credit of going up to London dealers. For the last six months, or nearer upon it, he had been away from West Linn. Why, where have you been hiding yourself? exclaimed Mr. Collierle. The Colonel has been inconsolable. Calm, no, Gemin, Collierle. I have been on the tramp through France and Germany. Man likes a change sometimes. As to the revered Colonel, he would not be inconsolable if he saw me nailed up in a six-foot box, and carried out feet foremost. Bethel, I have a question to ask you, continued Mr. Collierle, dropping his light-menner and his voice together. Take your thoughts back to the night of Hallijohn's murder. I wish you may get it, cried Mr. Bethel. The reminiscence is not attractive. You'll do it, quietly said Mr. Collierle. It has been told me, though it did not appear at the inquest, that Richard Hare held a conversation with you in the wood a few minutes after the deed was done. Now, who told you that? interrupted Bethel. That is not the question. My authority is indisputable. It is true that he did. I said nothing about it, for I did not want to make the case worse against Dick Hare than it already was. He certainly did accost me, like a man flurried out of his life. Asking if you had seen a certain lover of Afie's fly from the cottage. One thorn. That was the purport. Thorn. Thorn. I think Thorn was the name he mentioned. My opinion was that Dick was either wild or acting apart. Now, Bethel, I want you to answer me truly. The question cannot affect you, either way, but I must know whether you did see this Thorn leave the cottage. Bethel shook his head. I know nothing whatever about any Thorn, and I saw nobody but Dick Hare. Not but what a dozen Thorns might have run from the cottage without my seeing them. You heard the shot fired? Yes, but I never gave a thought to mischief. I knew Loxley was in the wood, and suppose it came from him. I ran across the path, bearing towards the cottage, and struck into the wood on the other side. By and by, Dick Hare pitched upon me like one startled out of his seven senses, and asked if I had seen Thorn leave the cottage. Thorn. That was the name. And you had not? I had seen nobody but Dick accepting Loxley. My impression was that nobody else was about. I think so still. But Richard— Now, look you here, Carlyle. I won't do Dick Hare an injury, even by a single word, if I can help it, and it is of no use setting me on to it. I should be the last to set you on to injure any one, especially Richard Hare, rejoined Mr. Carlyle, and my motive is to do Richard Hare good, not harm. I hold a suspicion, no matter whence gathered, that it was not Richard Hare who committed the murder, but another. Can you throw any light upon the subject? No, I can't. I have always thought poor wavering Dick was nobody's enemy but his own, but as to throwing any light on that night's work, I can't do it. Cords should not have dragged me to the inquest to give evidence against Dick, and for that reason I was glad Loxley never let out that I was on the spot. How the deuce it got about afterwards that I was, I can't tell, but that was no matter—my evidence did not help on the verdict. And talking of that, Carlyle, how has it come to your knowledge that Richard Hare accosted me? I have not opened my lips upon it to mortal man. It is of no consequence now, repeated Mr. Carlyle. I do know it, and that is sufficient. I was in hopes you had really seen this man's thorn leave the cottage. Otway Bethel shook his head. I should not lay too much stress upon any thorns having been there, where are you, Carlyle? Dick Hare was as one crazy that night, and might see shapes and forms where there were none. Chapter 9 The Song and the Dirge The concert was to take place on Thursday, and on the following Saturday, Lord Mount Seven intended finally to quit each dlin. The necessary preparations for departure were in progress, but when Thursday morning dawned, it appeared a question whether they would not once more be rendered nuggetry. Their house was roused by times, and Mr. Rainwright, the surgeon from West Linn, summoned to the old's bedside. He had experienced another and a violent attack. The peer was exceedingly annoyed and vexed, and very irritable. I may be kept here a week, a month, a fortnight, a month longer now," he uttered fretfully to Isabel. I am very sorry, Papa. I dare say you do find East Linn dull. Dull? That's not it. I have other reasons for wishing East Linn to be quit of us, and now you can't go to the concert. Isabel's face flushed. Not go, Papa. Why, who is to take you? I can't get out of bed. Oh, Papa, I must be there. Otherwise it would look almost as though as though we had announced what we did not mean to perform. You know it was arranged that we should join the juices. The courage can still take me to the concert room, and I can go in with them. Just as you please, I thought you would have jumped at any plea for staying away. Not at all, laughed Isabel. I should like West Linn to see that I don't despise Mr. Cain in his concert. Later in the day the ogre alarmingly worse, his paroxysms of pain were awful. Isabel, who was kept from the room, knew nothing of the danger, and the owl's groans did not penetrate to her ears. She dressed herself in a gleeful mode full of laughing wilfulness. Marvel her mage, superintending in stiff displeasure, for the attire chosen did not meet her approbation. When ready she went into the owl's room. Shall I do, papa? Lord Mount Seven raised his swollen eyelids and drew the clothes from his flushed face. A shining vision was standing before him, a beautyous queen, a gleaming fairy. He hardly knew what she looked like. She had put on a white lace hat and her diamonds, the dress was rich, and the jewels gleamed from her delicate arms, and her cheeks were flushed and her curls were flowing. The owl stared at her in amazement. How could you dress yourself off like that for a concert? You were out of your senses, Isabel. Marvel thinks so, too, was the gay answer. She has had a cross-face since I told her what to put on. But I did it on purpose, papa. I thought I would show those Westland people that I think the poor man's moment worth going to and worth dressing for. You will have the whole room gaping at you. I don't mind. I'll bring you word all about it. Let them gape. You vain child! You have so dressed yourself to please your vanity. But, Isabel, you—oooh! Isabel started as she stood. The earl's groan of pain was dreadful. An awful twinge, child. There, go along. Talking makes me worse. Papa, shall I stay at home with you? she gravely asked. Every consideration should give way to illness. If you would like me to remain, or if I can do any good, pray, let me. Quite the contrary. I had rather you were away. You can do no earthly good, for I could not have you in the room. Goodbye, darling. If you see Carlisle, tell him I shall hope to see him tomorrow. The room was partly full when Mrs. Ducey, her two daughters, and Lady Isabel, entered, and were conducted to seats by Mr. Cain, seats he had reserved for them at the upper end, near the orchestra. The same dazzling vision which had burst in the sight of Lord Mount Seven fell on that of the audience, in Isabel with her rich white dress, her glittering diamonds, her flowing curls, and her wondrous beauty. The Mrs. Ducey, plain girls in brown silks, turned up their noses worse than nature had done it for them, and Mrs. Ducey heaved an audible sigh. The poor, motherless girl is to be pitied, my dears, she whispered. She has nobody to point out to her suitable attire. This ridiculous decking must have been Marvel's doings. But she looked like a lily among poppies and sunflowers, whether the decking out was ridiculous or not. Was Lord Mount Seven right when he accused her of dressing so in self-gratification? Very likely, for has not the great preacher said that childhood and youth are vanity. Miss Carlisle, the Justice and Barbara, also had seats near the orchestra, for Miss Carlisle in West Lynn was a person to be considered, and not hidden behind others. Mr. Carlisle, however, preferred to join the gentlemen who congregated and stood round about the door, inside and out. There was scarcely standing-room in the place. Mr. Cain had, as was anticipated, got a bumper, and the poor man could have worshipped Lady Isabel, for he knew he owed it to her. It was very long, country concerts generally are, and was about three parts over when a powdered head, larger than any cauliflower ever grown, was discerned ascending the stairs behind the group of gentlemen, which head, when it brought its body in full view, was discovered to belong to one of the footmen of Lord Mount Seven. The carves alone, cased in their silk stockings, were a sight to be seen, and these carves betook themselves inside the concert-room with a deprecatory bow for permission to the gentleman they had to steer through, and there they came to a standstill, the cauliflower extending forward, and turning itself about from right to left. Well, I'll be jiffled, cried an astonished old fox-hunter who had been elbowed by the footmen, the cheek these fellows have. The fellow in question did not appear, however, to be enjoying any great amount of cheek just at that moment, for he looked perplexed, humble, and uneasy. Suddenly his eye fell upon Mr. Carlisle, and it lighted up. Beg pardon, sir, could you happen to inform me whereabouts my young lady is sitting? At the other end of the room, near the orchestra. I'm sure I don't know however I am to get to her, then, replied the man, more in self soliloquy than to Mr. Carlisle. The room is chock-full, and I don't like crushing fire. My lord is taking alarmingly worse, sir, he explained, in an awe-stricken tone. It is feared he is dying. Mr. Carlisle was painfully startled. His screams of pain were awful, sir. Mr. Rainwright and another doctor from West Leonard with him, and an express has gone to Lionborough for physicians. Mrs. Mason said we were to fetch my young lady right home, and not lose a moment, and we brought the carriage, sir, wells galloping his horses all the way. I will bring Lady Isabel, said Mr. Carlisle. I am sure, sir, I should be under everlasting obligations, if you would, returned the man. He worked his way through the concert-room. He was tall and slender, many looking daggers at him, for a pathetic song was just then being given by a London lady. He disregarded all, and stood before Isabel. I thought you were not coming to speak to me to-night. Is it not a famous room? I am so pleased. More than famous, Lady Isabel, choosing his words that they may not alarm her. Lord Mount Severn does not find himself so well, and he has sent the carriage for you. Papa not so well, she quickly exclaimed. Not quite, at any rate, he wishes you to go home. Will you allow me to pilot you through the room? Oh, my dear, considerate papa, she laughed. He fears I shall be weary, and would emancipate me before the time. Thank you, Mr. Carlisle, but I will wait till the conclusion. No, no, Lady Isabel, it is not that. Lord Mount Severn is indeed worse. Her countenance changed to seriousness, but she was not alarmed. Very well, when the song is over, not to disturb the room. I think he had better lose no time, he urged. Never mind the song and the room. She rose instantly, and put her arm within Mr. Carlisle's. A hasty word of explanation to Mrs. Juicy, and he led her away, the room in its surprise, making for them what space it might. Many an eye followed them, but none more curiously and eagerly than Barbara hers. Where is she going to take her to, involuntarily, uttered Barbara? How should I know, returned Miss Quarney? Barbara, you have done nothing but fidget all the night. What's the matter with you? Folks come to a concert to listen, not to talk, and fidget. Isabel's mantel was procured from the anti-room where it had been left, and she descended the stairs of Mr. Carlisle. The carriage was drawn up close to the entrance, and the coachman had his reins gathered, ready to start. The footman, not the one who had gone upstairs, threw up in the carriage door as he saw her. He was new in the service, a simple country native just engaged. She withdrew her arm from Mr. Carlisle's and stood a moment before stepping in, looking at the man. Is papa much worse? Oh, yes, my lady, he was screaming, shocking, but they think he'll live till morning. With a sharp cry she seized the arm of Mr. Carlisle, seized it for support in her shock of agony. Mr. Carlisle rudely thrust the man away, he would willingly have flung him at full length on the pavement. Oh, Mr. Carlisle, why did you not tell me? she shivered. My dear lady Isabel, I am grieved that you are told now, but take comfort, you know how ill he frequently is, and this may be but an ordinary attack. Step in, I trust we shall find it nothing more. Are you going home with me? Certainly, I shall not leave you to go alone. She moved to the other side of the chariot, making room for him. Thank you, I will sit outside. But the night is cold. Oh, no! he closed the door and took his seat by the coachman. The footman got up behind, and the carriage sped away. Isabel gathered herself into her corner, and moaned aloud in her suspense and helplessness. The coachman drove rapidly, and soon whipped his horses through the lodge gates. The housekeeper, Mrs. Mason, waited at the hall door to receive Lady Isabel. Mr. Carlisle helped her out of the carriage, and gave her his arm up the steps. She scarcely dared to inquire. Is he better? May I go to his room? she panted. Yes, the old was better. Better insofar that he was quiet and senseless. She moved hastily towards his chamber. Mr. Carlisle, do the housekeeper aside. Is there any hope? Not the slightest, sir. He is dying. The old knew no one. Pain was gone for the present, and he lay on his bed, calm. But his face, which had death in it all too plainly, startled Isabel. She did not scream or cry. She was perfectly quiet, save that she had a fit of shivering. Will he soon be better? she whispered to Mr. Wainwright, who stood there. The surgeon coughed. Well, he—he—we must hope it, my lady. But why does his face look like that? It is pale. Gray! I never saw anybody else look so. He has been in great pain, my lady, and pain leaves its traces on the countenance. Mr. Carlisle, who had come and was standing by the surgeon, touched his arm to draw him from the room. He noticed the look on the old's face and did not like it. He wished to question the surgeon. Lady Isabel saw that Mr. Carlisle was about to quit the room and beckon to him. Do not leave the house, Mr. Carlisle, when he wakes up it may cheer him to see you here. He liked you very much. I will not leave it, Lady Isabel. I did not think of doing so. In time, it seemed an age, the medical men arrived from Lindborough, three of them. The groom had thought he could not summon too many. It was a strange scene they entered upon. The ghastly peer, growing restless again now, battling with his departing spirit, and the gala robes, the sparkling gems adorning the young girl watching at his side. They comprehended the case without difficulty, that she had been suddenly called from some scene of gaiety. They stooped to look at the earl and felt his pulse and touched his heart, and exchanged a few murmured words of Mr. Wainwright. Isabel had stood back to give them place, but her exercise followed their every movement. They did not seem to notice her, and she stepped forward. Can you do anything for him? Will he recover? They all turned at the address and looked at her. One spoke. It was an evasive answer. Tell me the truth, she implored, with feverish impatience. He must not trifle with me. Do you not know me? I am his only child, and I am here alone. The first thing was to get her away from the room, for the great change was approaching, and departing struggle between the body and the spirit might be one of warfare, no sight for her. But in answer to their suggestion that she should go, she only leaned her head upon the pillow by her father and moaned in despair. She must have got out of the room, cried one of the physicians almost angrily. Ma'am, turning suddenly upon Mrs. Mason, are there no reserves in the house? No one who can exert influence over the young lady? She has scarcely any relatives in the world, replied the housekeeper. No near ones, and we happen to be, just now, quite alone. But Mr. Carlile, seeing the urgency of the case, for the earl with every minute, grew more excited, approached and whispered her, You are as anxious as we can be for your father's recovery? As anxious, she uttered reproachfully, You know what I would imply. Of course, our anxiety can be nothing to yours. As nothing, as nothing, I think my heart will break. Then forgive me, you should not oppose the wishes of his medical attendants. They wish to be alone with him, and time is being lost. She rose up, she placed her hands on her brows, and to collect the sense of the words, and then she addressed the doctors. Is it really necessary that I should leave the room necessary for him? It is necessary, my lady, absolutely essential. She broke into a passion of tears and sorbs, as Mr. Carlile led her to another apartment. He is my dear father! I have but him in the wide world! she exclaimed. I know, I know, I feel for you all that you are feeling. Twenty times this night I have wished, forgive me the thought, that you are my sister, so that I might express my sympathy more freely and comfort you. Tell me the truth, then, why I am kept away. If you can show me sufficient cause, I will be reasonable and obey, but do not say again I should be disturbing him, for it is not true. He is too ill for you to see him. His symptoms are too painful. In fact, it would not be proper, and were you to go in, in defiance of advice, you would regret it all your afterlife. Is he dying? Mr. Carlile hesitated. Or he to disassemble with her as the doctors had done? A strong feeling was upon him that he ought not. I trust to you not to deceive me, she simply said. I fear he is. I believe he is. She rose up, she grasped his arm in the sudden fear that flashed over her. You are deceiving me, and he is dead. I am not deceiving you, Lady Isabel. He is not dead, but it may be very near. She laid her face down upon the soft pillow. Going forever from me, going forever. Oh, Mr. Carlile, let me see him for a minute, just one farewell. Will you not try for me? He knew how hopeless it was, but he turned to leave the room. I will go and see, but you will remain here quietly, you will not come. She bowed her head in acquiescence, and he closed the door. Had she indeed been his sister, he would probably have turned the key upon her. He entered the old's chamber, but not many seconds did he remain in it. It is over, he whispered to Mrs. Mason whom he met in the corridor, and Mr. Wainwright is asking for you. You are soon back, quite Isabel, lifting her head. May I go? He sat down and took her hand, shrinking from his task. I wish I could comfort you, he exclaimed, in a tone of deep emotion. Her face turned of a ghastly whiteness, as white as another's not far away. Tell me the worst, she breathed. I have nothing to tell you but the worst. May God support you, dear Lady Isabel. She turned to hide her face and its misery away from him, and a low wail of anguish broke from her, telling its own tale of despair. The grey dawn of mourning was breaking over the world, advent of another bustling day in life's history. But the spirit of William Vane, Earl of Mount Severn, had soared away from it forever. 10. The Keepers of the Dead Events between the death of Lord Mount Severn and his internment occurred quickly, and to one of them the reader may feel inclined to demur, as believing that it could have no foundation, in fact, in the actions of real life. But must be a wild creation of the author's brain. He would be wrong. The author is no more fond of wild creations than the reader. The circumstance did take place. The Earl died on Friday morning at daylight. The news spread rapidly. It generally does on the death of a peer, if he has been of note, whether good or bad, in the world, and was known in London before the day was over. The consequence of which was, that by Saturday morning, early, a shawl of what the late peer would have called harpiers had arrived to surround East Lynn. There were creditors of all sorts, for small sums and for great, for five or ten pounds, up to five or ten thousand. Some were civil, some impatient, some loud and rough and angry, some came to put in executions on the effects, and some to arrest the body. This last act was accomplished cleverly. Two men, each with a remarkably hooked nose, stole away from the hubbub of the clemeris, and, peering cunningly about, made their way to the side or tradesman's entrance. A kitchen maid answered their gentle appeal at the bell. Is the coffin come yet? said they. Coffin? No, was the girl's reply. The shell ain't here yet. Mr. Jones didn't promise that till nine o'clock, and it haven't gone eight. It won't be long, quothay, it's on its road. We'll go up to his lordship's room, please, and be getting ready for it. The girl called the butler. Two men from Jones's, the undertaker, sir, announced she. The shell's coming on, and they want to go up and make ready for it. The butler marshaled them upstairs himself, and introduced them to the room. That will do, said they, as he was about to enter with them. We won't trouble you to wait. Enclosing the door upon the unsuspicious butler, they took up their station on either side of the dead, like a couple of ill omen'd mutes. They had placed an arrest upon the corpse. It was theirs until their claim was satisfied, and they sat down to thus watch and secure it. Pleasant occupation. It may have been an hour later that Lady Isabel, leaving her own chamber, opened noiselessly that of the dead. She had been in it several times during the previous day, at first with the housekeeper, afterward when the nameless dread was somewhat effaced, alone. But she felt nervous again this morning, and had gained the bed before she ventured to lift her eyes from the carpet and encounter the sight. Then she started, for there sat two strange-looking men, and not attractive men, either. It darted through her mind that they must be people from the neighborhood come to gratify an idle and unpardonable curiosity. Her first impulse was to summon the butler, her second, to speak to them herself. Do you want anything here? she quietly said. Much obliged for the inquiry, Miss. We are all right. The words and tones struck her as being singular in the extreme, and they kept their seats, too, as they had a right to be there. Why are you here? she repeated. What are you doing? Well, Miss, I don't mind telling you, for I suppose you are his daughter, avoiding his left arm over his shoulder at the late pier. And we here have got no other relative and are him. We have been obliged, Miss, to perform an unpleasant duty and secure him. The words were like Greek to her, and the men saw that they were. He, unfortunately, owed a slight amount of money, Miss, as you perhaps be aware on, and our employers is in deep. So, as soon as they heard what had happened, they set us down to arrest the dead corpse, and we have done it. Amazement, horror, fear, struggled together in the shocked mind of Lady Isabel. Arrest the dead. She had never heard of a like calamity, nor could she have believed in such. Arrest it for what purpose? what to do? to disfigure it? to sell it? With a panting heart and ashy lips she turned from the room. Miss's Mason happened to be passing near the stairs, and Isabel flew to her, laying hold of her with both hands in her terror, as she burst into a fit of nervous tears. Those men in there, she gasped. What men, my lady, returned Miss's Mason surprised. I don't know, I don't know. I think they're going to stop there. They say they have taken Papal. After her paws of bewildered astonishment, the housekeeper left her standing where she was, and went to the Earl's chamber to see if she could fathom the mystery of the words. Isabel leaned against the balustrades, partly for support, partly that she seemed afraid to stir from them, and the ominous disturbances downstairs reached her ears. Strangers, interlopers, appeared to be in the hall, talking vehemently, and complaining in bitter tones. More and more terrified she held her breath to listen. Where's the good of your seeing the young lady? cried the butler in a tone of remonstrance. She knows nothing about the Earl's affairs. She is in grief enough just now without any other worry. I will see her, returned a dogged voice. If she is too start-up and mighty to come down and answer a question or two, why, I'll find my way on to her. Here we are, a shameful crowd of us, swindled out of our own, told there's nobody we can speak to, nobody here but the young lady, and she must not be troubled. She didn't find it trouble to help to spend our money. She has got no honour and feelings of a lady if she don't come and speak to us. There! Repressing her rebellious emotions, Lady Isabel glided partly down the staircase, and softly called to the butler. What is all this? she asked. I must know. Oh, my lady, don't go amongst those rough men. You can't do any good. Pray go back before they see you. I have sent for Mr. Carlisle and expect him here momentarily. Did Papa owe them all money? she said, shivering. I'm afraid he did, my lady. She went swiftly on, and passing through the few stragglers in the hall, entered the dining room where the chief mass had congregated and the hubbub was loudest. All anger, at least external anger, was hushed at her sight. She looked so young, so innocent, so childlike in her pretty morning dress of peach-coloured muslin, her fair face shaded by its fallen curls, so little fit to combat with or understand their business, that instead of pouring forth complaints, they hushed them into silence. I heard someone calling out that I ought to see you. She began, her agitation causing the words to come forth in a jerking manner. What did you want with me? Then they poured forth their complaints, but not angrily, and she listened till she greased sick. There were many informantable claims, promissory notes in IOUs, overdue bills and underdue bills, heavy outstanding debts of all sorts, and trifles comparatively speaking, for housekeeping, servants' liveries, outdoor servants' wages, bread, and meat. What was Isabel Vane to answer? What excuse to offer? What hope or promise to give? She stood in bewilderment, unable to speak, turning from one to the other her sweet eyes full of pity and contrition. The fact is, young lady, spoke up one who bore the exterior of a gentleman. We should not have come down troubling you, at least, I can answer for myself, but his lordship's men of business, Warburton and Ware, to whom many of us hastened last evening, told us there would not be a shilling for anybody unless it could be got from furniture. When it comes to that, it is first come, first served, and I got down by morning light, and leave it in execution. Which was leave it before you came, put in a man who might be brother to the two upstairs to judge by his nose. But what such furniture is this to our claims, if you come to combine them? No more than a bucket of water is to the Thames. What can I do, shivered lady Isabel? What is it you wish me to do? I have no money to give you, I— No, miss, broken a quiet, pale man. If report tells me you are worse wrong than we are, for you won't have a roof to put your head under or a guinea to call your own. He has been a scoundrel to everybody, interrupted an intemperate voice. He has ruined thousands. The speech was hissed down, even they were not men gratuitously to insult a delicate young lady. Perhaps you would just answer us a question, miss, persisted the voice in spite of the hisses. Is there any ready money that can— But another person had entered the room, Mr. Carlyle. He caught sight of the white face and trembling hands of Isabel, and interrupted the last speaker with scant ceremony. What is the meaning of this? he demanded in a tone of authority. What do you want? If you are a friend of the late peers, you ought to know what we want, was the response. We want our debts paid. But this is not the place to come to, returned Mr. Carlyle. You are coming here, flocking in this extraordinary manner, will do no good. You must go to Warburton and wear. We have been to them and received their answer, a cool assurance that there will be nothing for anybody. At any rate you will get nothing here, observed Mr. Carlyle to the assembly collectively. Allow me to request that you leave the house at once. It was little likely that they would for him, and they said it. Then I warn you of the consequences of a refusal, quietly said Mr. Carlyle. You are trespassing upon a stranger's property. This house is not Lord Mount Sevens. He sold it some time back. They knew better. Some laughed and said these tricks were stale. Listen, gentlemen, we joined Mr. Carlyle in the plain straightforward manner that carried its own truth. To make an assertion that could be disproved when the old affairs come to be investigated would be simply foolish. I'll give you my word of honour as a gentleman, nay, as a fellow man, that this estate with their house and all it contains passed months ago from the hands of Lord Mount Seven, and, during his recent sojourn here, he was a visitor in it. Go and ask his men of business. Who purchased it was the inquiry. Mr. Carlyle of West Lynn, some of you may possibly know him by reputation. Some of them did. A cute young lawyer, observed a voice as his father was before him. I am he, proceeded Mr. Carlyle, and, being a cute lawyer, as you do me the honour to decide, you cannot suppose I should risk my money upon any sale not perfectly safe and legal. I was not an agent in the affair. I employed agents, for it was my own money that I invested, and East Lynn is mine. Is the purchase money paid over? inquired more than one. It was paid over at the time, last June. What did Lord Mount Seven do with the money? I do not know, replied Mr. Carlyle. I am not cognizant of Lord Mount Seven's private affairs. Significant members arose. Strange that the Earl should stop two or three months at a place that wasn't his. It may appear so to you, but allow me to explain, returned Mr. Carlyle. The Earl expressed a wish to pay East Lynn a few days visit by way of farewell, and I acceded. Before the few days were over he was taken ill, and remained from that time too ill to quitted. This very day, this day, gentlemen, as we stand here, was at length fixed for his departure. And you tell us you bought the furniture? Everything as it stands. You need not doubt my word, for the proofs will be forthcoming. East Lynn was in the market for sale. I heard of it, and became the purchaser, just as I might have bought an estate from any of you. And now, as this is my house, and you have no claim upon me, I shall be obliged to you to withdraw. Perhaps you'll claim the horses and carriages next, sir, cried the man with a hawk's nose. Mr. Carlyle raised his head haughtily. What is mine is mine, legally purchased and paid for, a fair just price. The carriages and horses I have nothing to do with. Lord Mount Seven brought them down with him. And I have got a safe watcher over them in the art premises, to see as they don't run away, nor a demand complacently. And if I don't mistake, there's a safe watcher over something else upstairs. What a cursed scoundrel Mount Seven was! Whatever he may have been it does not give you the right to outrage the feelings of his daughter, warmly interrupted Mr. Carlyle. And I should have thought that men calling themselves Englishmen would have disdained the shame. Allow me, Lady Isabel, he added, imperatively taking her hand to lead her from the room. I will remain and deal with this business. But she hesitated and stopped. The injury her father had done these men was telling painfully on her sense of right, and she essayed to speak a word of apology, of sorrow. She thought she ought to do so. She did not like them to deem her quite heartless. But it was a painful task, and the colour went and came in her pale face, and her breath was laboured with the excess of her tribulation. I am very sorry, she stemmed, and with the effort of speaking, emotion quite got the better of her, and she burst into tears. I did not know anything of all this. My father's affairs were not spoken of before me. I believe I have not anything, if I had, I would divide it amongst you as equally as I could. But should the means ever be in my power, should money ever be mine, and I will thankfully pay all your claims? All your claims! Lady Isabel little thought what that all would comprise. However, such promises made at such a moment felt heedlessly upon the ear. Scarcely one present, but felt sympathy and sorrow for her, and Mr. Carlile drew her from the room. He closed the door upon the noisy crew, and then sorbs came forth hysterically. I am so grieved, Lady Isabel. Had I foreseen this annoyance, you should have been spared it. Can you go upstairs alone, or shall I call Mrs. Mason? Oh yes, I can go alone. I am not ill, only frightened and sick. This is not the worst, she shivered. There are two men, up, up with papa. Up with papa, Mr. Carlile was puzzled. He saw that she was shaking from head to foot as she stood before him. I cannot understand it, and it terrifies me, she continued, attempting an explanation. They are sitting in the room, close to him. They have taken him, they say. A blank, thunderstruck pause. Mr. Carlile looked at her. He did not speak, and then he turned and looked at the butler who was standing near. But the man only responded by giving his head a half-shake, and Mr. Carlile saw that it was an ominous one. I will clear the house of these, he said to Lady Isabel, pointing back to the dining room, and then join you upstairs. Too ruffian, sir, and they have got possession of the body, whispered the butler in Mr. Carlile's ear as Lady Isabel departed. They obtained entrance to the chamber by a slide deceitful trick, saying that they were the undertaker's men, and that he can't be buried unless their claims are paid if it's for a month to come. It has upset all our stomachs, sir. Mrs. Mason, while telling me, for she was the first one to know it, was as sick as she could be. At present Mr. Carlile returned to the dining room and bore the brunt of the anger of those savages, and it may be said ill-used men. Not that it was vented upon him, quite the contrary, but on the memory of the unhappy peer who lay overhead. A few had taken the precaution to ensure the ear's life, and they were the best off. They left the house after a short space of time, for Mr. Carlile's statement was indisputable, and they knew the law better than to remain, trespassers on his property. But the custodians of the dead could not be caught rid of. Mr. Carlile proceeded to the death-chamber, and examined their authority. A similar case had never occurred under his own observation, though it had under his father's, and Mr. Carlile remembered hearing of it. The body of a church dignitary, who had died deeply in debt, was arrested as it was being carried through the coasters to its grave in the cathedral. These men, sitting over Lord Mount Severn, enforced heavy claims, and there they must sit until the arrival of Mr. Vane from Castle Marling, now the Earl of Mount Severn. On the following morning, Sunday, Mr. Carlile proceeded again to East Lynn, and found to his surprise that there was no arrival. Isabel sat in the breakfast-room alone, the meal on the table untouched, and she, shivering, as it seemed, on a low Ottoman before the fire. She looked so ill that Mr. Carlile could not forbear remarking upon it. I have not slept, and I am very cold, she answered. I did not close my eyes all night. I was so terrified. Terrified at what, he asked? At those men, she whispered. It is strange that Mr. Vane has not come. Is the post in? I don't know, she apathetically replied. I have received nothing. She had scarcely spoke when the butler entered with his salve full of letters, most of them bearing condolence with Lady Isabel. She singled one out, and hastened to open it, for it bore the Castle Marling postmark. It is Mr. Vane's handwriting, she remarked to Mr. Carlile. Castle Marling Saturday My dear Isabel, I am dreadfully grieved and shocked at the news conveyed in Mr. Carlile's letter to my husband, for he has gone cruising in his yacht, and I opened it. Goodness knows where he may be, round the coast somewhere, but he said it should be home for Sunday, and as he is pretty punctual in keeping his word I expect him. Be assured he will not lose a moment in hastening to East Lynn. I cannot express what I feel to you, and am too bullied, I say, to write more. Try and keep up your spirits, and believe me, dear Isabel, with sincere sympathy and regret, faithfully yours. Emma Mount Severn The colour came into Isabel's pale cheek when she read the signature. She thought, had she been the writer, she should in that first early letter have still signed herself Emma Vane. Isabel handed the note to Mr. Carlile. It is very unfortunate, she sighed. Mr. Carlile glanced over it as quickly as Mrs. Vane's eligible writing allowed him, and drew in his lips in a peculiar manner when he came to the signature. Perhaps at the same thought which had struck Isabel. Had Mrs. Vane been worth a rush, she would have come herself, knowing your lonely situation, he uttered impulsively. Isabel leaned her head upon her hand. All the difficulties and embarrassments of her position came crowding on her mind. No orders had been given in preparation for the funeral, and she felt that she had no right to give any. The owls of Mount Severn were buried at Mount Severn, but to take her father's cither would involve great expense. Would the present earl sanction that? Since the previous morning she seemed to have grown old in the world's experience. Her ideas were changed. The bent of her thoughts had been violently turned from its course. Instead of being a young lady of high position, of wealth and rank, she appeared to herself more in the light of an unfortunate pauper and interloper in the house she was inhabiting. It has been the custom in romance to present young ladies, especially if they be handsome and interesting, as being entirely oblivious of matter of fat cares and necessities, supremely indifferent to future prospects of poverty, poverty that brings hunger and thirst and cold and nakedness. But be assured, this apathy never existed in real life. Isabel Vane's grief for her father, whom, whatever may have been the aspect he wore for others, she had deeply loved in reverence, was sharply poignant, but in the midst of that grief and of the singular troubles his death had brought forth she could not shut her eyes to her own future. Its blank uncertainty, its shattered forth embarrassments, did obtrude themselves in the words of that plain-speaking creditor kept ringing in her ears. You won't have a roof to put your head under, or a guinea to call your own. Where was she to go, with whom to live? She was in Mr. Kallal's house now, and how was she to pay the servants? Money was owing to them all. Mr. Kallal, how long has this house been yours? she asked, breaking the silence. It was in June that the purchase was completed. Did Lord Mount Severn never tell you he had sold it to me? No, never. All these things are yours, glancing round the room. The furniture was sold with the house. Not these sorts of things, he added, his eye falling on the silver on the breakfast table. Not the plate and linen. Not the plate and linen. Then those poor men who were here yesterday have a right to them, she quickly cried. I scarcely know. I believe the plate goes with the entail, and the jewels go also. The linen cannot be of consequence either way. Are my clothes my own? He smiled as he looked at her, smiled to her simplicity, and assured her that there were nobodies else. I did not know, she sighed. I did not understand. So many strange things have happened in the last day or two. Did I seem to understand nothing? Indeed, she could not understand. She had no definite ideas on the subject of this transfer of East Linn to Mr. Kallal. Plenty of indefinite ones, and they were haunting her. Fears of debt to him, and of the house and its contents being handed over to him in liquidation, perhaps only partial, were working in her brain. Does my father owe you any money? she breathed in a timid tone. Not any, he replied. Lord Mount Seven was never indebted to me in his life. Yet he purchased East Linn. As any one else might have done, he answered, discerning the drift of her thoughts. I was in search of an eligible estate to invest money in, and East Linn suited me. I feel my position, Mr. Kallal, she resumed, the rebellious fears forcing themselves to her eyes, dust to be intruding upon you for a shelter, and I cannot help myself. You can help grieving me, he gently answered, which you do much when you talk of obligation. The obligation is on my side, Lady Isabel, and when I express a hope that you will continue at East Linn while it can be of service, however prolonged that period may be, I assure you I say it in all sincerity. He were very kind, she vaulted, and for a few days, until I can think, until—oh, Mr. Kallal, a papa's affairs really so bad as they said yesterday? She broke off, her perplexities recurring to her with the human force. Is there nothing left? Now Mr. Kallal might have given the evasive assurance that there would be plenty left just to tranquilize her, but to have used deceit with her would have pricked against every feeling of his nature, and he saw how implicitly she relied upon his truth. A few things are not very bright, he answered, that is, so far as we can see at present. But there may have been some settlement effected for you that you do not know of. Warburton and where? No, she interrupted. I never heard of a settlement, and I am sure there is none. I see the worst plainly. I have no home. No home and no money. This house is yours. The townhouse and Mount Severn go to Mr. Vane, and I have nothing. But surely Mr. Vane will be delighted to welcome you to your old home. The house has passed to him. It almost seems as though you had the greater right in them than he or Mrs. Vane. My home with them, she retorted, as if the words had stung her. What are you saying, Mr. Kallal? I beg your pardon, Lady Isabel. I should not have presumed to touch upon these points myself, but— nay, I think I ought to beg yours, she interrupted more calmly. I am only grateful for the interest you take in them, the kindness you have shown, but I could not make my home with Mrs. Vane. Mr. Kallal rose. He could do no good by remaining, and did not think it well to intrude longer. He suggested that it might be more pleasant if Isabel had a friend with her. Mrs. Juicy would no doubt be willing to come, and she was a kind, motherly woman. Isabel shook her head with a pass and shot her. Have strangers here with—all—that—in Papa's chamber, she uttered. Mrs. Juicy drove over yesterday, perhaps to remain—I don't know, but I was afraid of questions, and would not see her. When I think of—that—I feel thankful that I am alone. The housekeeper stopped Mr. Kallal as he was going out. —Sir, what is the news from Castle Marling? Pound said there was a letter. Is Mr. Vane coming? He was out yachting. Mrs. Vane expected him home yesterday, so it is three hopes he will be here today. —Whatever will be done if he does not come? she breathed. The leadened coffiner to be soldered down for, you know, air, the state he was in when he died. It can be soldered down without Mr. Vane? Of course, without Mr. Vane. It's not bad, sir. Will those men allow it to be done? The undertakers were here this morning at daybreak, and those men intimated that they were not going to lose sight of the dead. The words sounded significant to us, but we asked them no questions. Have they a right to prevent it, sir? Upon my word, I cannot tell, replied Mr. Kallal. The proceeding is so rarer one, that I know little what right of law they have or have not. Do not mention this to Lady Isabel. And remistivate, when Lord Mount Severn arrives, send down to apprise me of it. CHAPTER X A post-shade was discerned thundering up the avenue that Sunday afternoon. It contained the new pier, Lord Mount Severn. The more direct line of rail from Castle Miling brought him only two within five miles of West Slinn, and thence he had travelled in a hired chaise. Mr. Kallal soon joined him, and almost at the same time Mr. Warburton arrived from London. Absence from town at the period of the Earl's death had prevented Mr. Warburton's earlier attendance. Business was entered upon, immediately. The present Earl knew that his predecessor had been an embarrassed man, but he had no conception of the extent of the evil. There had not been intimate, and rarely came into contact. As the various items of news were now detailed to him, the wasteful expedentia, the disastrous ruin, the total absence of provision for Isabel, he stood petrified in a ghast. He was a tall, stout man of three and forty years, his nature honourable, his manner cold, and his countenance severe. It is the most iniquitous piece of business I ever heard of, he exclaimed to the two lawyers. Of all the reckless fools, Mount Seven must have been the worst. Unpardonably improvident as regards his daughter, was the ascending remark. Improvident! It must have been rank madness, retorted the Earl. No man in his senses could leave a child to the mercy of the world as he has left her. She has not a shilling, literally, not a shilling in her possession. I put the question to her what money there was in the house when the Earl died. Twenty or twenty-five pounds, she answered, which she had given to Mason, who required it for housekeeping purposes. If a girl wants a yard of ribbon for herself, she has not the pence to pay for it. Can you realise such a case to the mind? continued the excited peer. I will stake my veracity that such a one never occurred yet. No money for her own personal wants, exclaimed Mr. Carlyle. Not a half penny in the world, and there are no funds, and will be none, that I can see for her to draw upon. Quite correct, my lord, noted Mr. Warburton. The entailed estates go to you, and what trifling matter of personal property may be left the creditors will take care of. I understand East Lynn is yours, cried the Earl, turning sharply upon Mr. Carlyle. Isabel has just said so. It is, was the reply. It became mine last June. I believe his lordship kept the fact a close secret. He was obliged to keep it a secret, interposed Mr. Warburton, addressing Lord Mount Seven, for not a stiver of the purchased money could hear a finger had it got wind. Except ourselves and Mr. Carlyle's agents, the fact was made known to none. It is strange, sir, that you could not urge the claims of his child upon the Earl, rejoined the new peer to Mr. Warburton, his tone one of harsh reproof. You were in his confidence, you knew the state of his affairs. It was in your line of duty to do it. Knowing the state of affairs, my lord, we knew how useless the urging it would be, returned Mr. Warburton. Your lordship has but a faint idea of the burden's Lord Mount Seven had upon him. The interest to learn upon his deaths was frightful, and it due to his own work it was to get it. Not to speak of the kites he let loose. He would fly them and nothing could stop him, and they had to be provided for. Oh, why no, replied the Earl with a gesture of contempt. Drawing one bill to cover another, that was his system. Draw, echoed Mr. Warburton. He would have drawn a bill on Algate Pump. It was a downright mania with him. Urged to it by his necessities, I concluded, put in Mr. Carlyle. He had no business to have such necessities, sir, cried the Earl rothfully. But let us proceed to business. What money is there lying at his bankers, Mr. Warburton? Do you know? None, was the blink of reply. We overdue the account ourselves a fortnight ago to meet one of his pressing liabilities. We hold a little, and had he lived a week or two longer, the autumn rents would have been paid in, though they must have been as quickly paid out again. I'm glad there's something. What is the amount? My Lord! answered Mr. Warburton, shaking his head in a self-condoling manner. I am sorry to tell you that what we hold will not half satisfy our own claim. Money actually paid out of our pockets. Then where on earth is the money to come from, sir? For the funeral, for the servant's wages, for everything, in fact. There is none to come from anywhere, was the reply of Mr. Warburton. Lord Mount Sevens drove the carpet more fiercely. Wicked in providence, shameful profligacy, callous-hearted men, to live a rogue and dire beggar, leaving his daughter to the charity of strangers. Her case presents the worst feature of the whole, remarked Mr. Colile. What will she do for a home? She must, of course, find it with me, replied his Lordship, and, I should hope, a better one than this. With all these debts and dands at his elbow, Mount Sevens' house could not have been a bower of roses. A fancy she knew nothing of the state of affairs, had seen little, if anything, of the embarrassments, returned Mr. Colile. Nonsense! said the peer. Mr. Colile is right, my Lord, observed Mr. Warburton looking over his spectacles. Lady Isabel was in safety at Mount Seven till the spring, and the purchase-money from East Lynn, what the ill could touch of it, was a stop-gap for many things, and made matters easy for the moment. However, his imprudences are at an end now. No, they are not at an end, returned Lord Mount Seven. They leave their effects behind them. I hear there was a fine scene yesterday morning. Some of the unfortunate wretches he has taken in made their appearance here all the way from town. Oh, they are Jews, half of them, slidingly spoke Mr. Warburton. If they do lose a little, it would be an agreeable novelty to them. Jews have as much right to their own as we have, Mr. Warburton, was the peer's angry reprimand, and if they were Turks and infidels, it would not excuse Mount Sevens' practices. Isabel says it was you, Mr. Colile, who can try to get rid of them. By convincing them that East Lynn and its furniture belong to me. But there are those two men upstairs in possession of—of him. I could not get rid of them. The old looked at him. I do not understand you. Did you not know that they have seized the corpse? asked Mr. Colile, dropping his voice. Two men have been posted over it, like sentinels, since yesterday morning. And there's a third in the house are here, who relieves each other by turn that they may go down the hall and take their meals. The earl had halted in his walk and drew near to Mr. Colile, his mouth open, his face and marvel of consternation. By George was all Mr. Warburton uttered and snatched off his glasses. Mr. Colile, do I understand you are right, that the body of the late earl has been seized for a debt, demanded the peer solemnly. Sees a dead body. Am I awake or dreaming? It is what they have done. They got into the room by stratagem. Is it possible that transactions so infamous are permitted by our law? ejaculated the earl. Arrest a dead man! I never heard of such a thing. I am shocked beyond expression. Isabelle said something about two men, I remember, but she was so full of grief and agitation altogether, that I about half comprehended what she did say upon the subject. Why, what will be done? Can't we bury him? I fancy not. The housekeeper told me this morning, she feared they would not even suffer the coffin to be closed down, and that ought to be done with all convenient speed. It is perfectly horrible uttered the earl. Who has done it? Do you know? inquired Mr. Warburton. Somebody of the name of Anstey, replied Mr. Colile. In the absence of any member of the family, I took upon myself to pay the Chamber a visit and examine into the men's authority. The claim is about three thousand pounds. If it's Anstey who has done it, it is a personal debt of the earls, really owing every pound of it, observed Mr. Warburton. A sharp man, though, that Anstey, to hit upon such a scheme. And a shameless and a scandalous man, added Lord Mount Seven. Well, this is a pretty thing. What's to be done? While they consult, let us look for a moment at Lady Isabelle. She sat alone in great perplexity, indulging the deepest grief. Lord Mount Seven had intimated to her, kindly and affectionately, that henceforth she must find her home with him and his wife. Isabelle returned to faint, thank you. And as soon as he left her, burst in a paroxysm of rebellious tears. Have her home with Mrs. Vane, she uttered to her own heart. No, never. Rather would she die. Rather would she eat a crust and drink water. And so on and so on. Young demazelles are somewhat prone to indulge in these flights of fancy. But they are in most cases impracticable and foolish, exceedingly so in that of Lady Isabelle Vane. Work for their living? It may appear very feasible in theory, but theory and practice are as opposite as light and dark. The plain fact was that Isabelle had no alternative, whatever, saved out of accepting her home with Lady Mount Seven. And the conviction that it must be so, stole over her spirit even while her hasty lips were protesting that she would not. Two mourners only attended the funeral—the Earl and Mr. Carlyle. The latter was no relative of the deceased, and but a very recent friend. But the Earl had invited him, probably not liking the parading, Solus, his trappings of woe. Some of the county aristocracy were poor-bearers and many private carriages followed. All was bustle in the following morning. The Earl was to depart, and Isabelle was to depart, but not together. In the course of the day the domestics would disperse. The Earl was speeding to London, and the shades to convey him to the railway station at West Lynn was already at the door when Mr. Carlyle arrived. I was getting fidgety, fearing you would not be here, for I have barely five minutes to spare, observed the Earl, as he shook hands. You are sure you fully understood about the tombstone? Perfectly, replied Mr. Carlyle. How is Lady Isabelle? Very darn hearted I fear, poor child, for she did not breakfast with me, replied the Earl. Mason privately told me that she was in a convulsion of grief. A bad man—a bad man—was Mount Seven, he emphatically added, as he rose and rang the Bell. Let Lady Isabelle be informed that I am ready to depart and that I wait to see her, he said to the servant who answered it. And while she is coming, Mr. Carlyle, he added, allow me to express my obligations to you. How I should have got along in this worrying business without you, I cannot divine. You have promised mine to pay me a visit, and I shall expect it speedily. Promise conditionally, did I find myself in your neighbourhood? smiled Mr. Carlyle, should— Isabelle entered, dressed also and ready, for she was to depart immediately after the Earl. Her crepe veil was over her face, but she threw it back. My time is up, Isabelle, and I must go. Is there anything you wish to say to me? She opened her lips to speak, but glanced at Mr. Carlyle and hesitated. He was standing at the window, his back towards them. I suppose not, said the Earl, answering himself, for he was in a fever of hurry to be off, like many others are, when starting on a journey. You will have no trouble whatever, my dear, only mind you get some refreshments in the middle of the day, for you won't be at Castle Marling before dinnertime. Tell Mrs. Va—Tell Lady Mount Seven that I had no time to write, but will do so from town. But Isabelle stood before him in an attitude of uncertainty, of expectancy it may be said, her colour varying. What is it, you wish to say something? She certainly did wish to say something, but she did not know how. It was a moment of embarrassment to her, intensely painful, and the presence of Mr. Carlyle did not tend to lessen it. The latter had no idea his absence was wished for. Bless me, Isabelle, I declare I forgot all about it, cried the Earl, in a tone of vexation. Not being accustomed to this aspect of affairs is so new, he broke off his disjointed sentences, unbuttoned his coat, due out his purse, and paused over its contents. Isabelle, I have run myself very short, and have but little beyond what will take me to town. You must make three pounds, do for now, my dear. Once at Castle Marling, pound has the funds for the journey. Lady Mount Seven will supply you, but you must tell her, or she will not know. He shot some gold out of his purse as he spoke, and left two sovereigns and two half-sovereigns on the table. Farewell, my dear, make yourself happy at Castle Marling, I shall be home soon. Passing from the room with Mr. Carlyle, he stood talking with that gentleman a minute, his foot on the step of the shears, and the next was being whisked away. Mr. Carlyle returned to the breakfast-room, where Isabelle and Ashy Whiteness having replaced the crimson on her cheeks was picking up the gold. Will you do me a favour, Mr. Carlyle? I will do anything I can for you. She pushed a sovereign and a half toward him. It is for Mr. Cain. I told Marvell to send in and pay him, but it seems she forgot it, or put it off, and he is not paid. The tickets were a sovereign. The rest is for tuning the piano. Will you kindly give it him? If I trust one of the servants it may be forgotten again in the hurry of their departure. Cain's charge for tuning a piano is five shillings, remarked Mr. Carlyle. But he was a long time occupied with it, and did something with the leathers. It is not too much. Besides, I never ordered him anything to eat. He wants money even worse than I do, she added, with a poor attempt at a smile. But for thinking of him I should not have mustered the courage to beg of Lord Mount Seven, as you have just heard me do. In that case, do you know what I should have done? What should you have done? he smiled. I should have asked you to pay him for me, and I would have repaid you as soon as I had any money. I had a great mind to ask you, do you know? It would have been less painful than being obliged to beg of Lord Mount Seven. I hope it would, he answered, in a low earnest tone. What else can I do for you? She was about to answer nothing that he had done enough, but at that moment their attention was attracted by a bustle outside, and they moved to the window. It was the courage coming round for Lady Isabel, the late Earl's chariot, which was to convey her to the railway station six or seven miles off. It had four post-horses to it, the number having been designated by Lord Mount Seven, who appeared to wish Isabel to leave the neighbourhood in as much state as she had entered it. The courage was packed, and marvel was perched outside. All is ready, she said, and the time has come for me to go. Mr. Carlisle, I am going to leave you a legacy—those pretty gold and silver fish that I bought a few weeks back. But why do you not take them? Take them to Lady Mount Seven? No, I'd rather leave them with you. Throw a few crumbs into the globe now and then. Her face was wet with tears, and he knew that she was talking hurriedly to cover her emotion. Sit down a few minutes, he said. No, no, I had better go at once. He took her hand to conduct her to the carriage. The servants were gathered in the hall, waiting for her. Some had grown grey in her father's service. She put out her hand, she strove to say a word of thanks and a farewell, and she thought she would choke at the effort of keeping down the sobs. At length it was over. A kind look around, a yearning wave of the hand, and she passed on with Mr. Carlisle. Pound had ascended to his place by a marvel, and the post-boys were awaiting the signal to start. But Mr. Carlisle had the carriage door open again, and was bending in, holding her hand. I have not said a word of thanks to you for all your kindness, Mr. Carlisle, she cried, her breath very laboured. I am sure you have seen that I could not. I wish I could have done more. I wish I could have shielded you from the annoyance that you have been obliged to endure, he answered. Should we never meet again? Oh, but we shall meet again, she interrupted. You promised, Lord Mount Seven. True, we may so meet casually, once in a way, but our ordinary paths in life lie far and wide apart. God for ever bless you, dear Lady Isabel. The post-boys touched their horses, and the carriage sped on. She drew down the blinds, and leaned back in an agony of tears. Tears for the house she was leaving, for the father she had lost. Her last thoughts had been of gratitude to Mr. Carlisle, but she had more cause to be grateful to him than she yet knew of. Emotion soon spanned itself, and as her eyes cleared, she saw a bit of crumpled paper lying on her lap, which appeared to have fallen from her hand. Mechanically she took it up and opened it. It was a banknote for one hundred pounds. Ah, reader, you will say that this is a romance of fiction, and a far-fetched one, but it is verily and indeed true. Mr. Carlisle had taken it with him to East Lynn that morning, with its destined purpose. Lady Isabel strained her eyes and gazed at the note, gazed and gazed again. Where could it have come from? What had brought it there? Suddenly the undoubted truth flashed upon her. Mr. Carlisle had left it in her hand. Her cheeks burned, her fingers trembled, her angry spirit rose up in arms. In that first moment of discovery she was ready to resent it as an insult. But when she came to remember the sober facts of the last few days, her anger subsided into admiration of his wondrous kindness. Did he not know that she was without a home to call her own, without money, absolutely without money, save what would be given her in charity? When Lord Mount Severn reached London, in the hotel which the veins were in the habit of using, the first object his eyes lighted on was his own wife, whom he had believed to be safe at Castle Marling. He inquired the cause. Lady Mount Severn gave herself little trouble to explain. She had been up a day or two, could order her morning so much better in person, and William did not seem well, so she brought him up for a change. I am sorry you came to town, Emma, remarked the Earl after listening. Isabelle is gone to-day to Castle Marling. Lady Mount Severn quickly lifted her head. What's she gone there for? It is the most disgraceful piece of business altogether, we turn the Earl without replying to the immediate question. Mount Severn has died worse than a beggar, and there's not a shilling for Isabelle. It was never expected there would be much. But there's nothing, not a penny, nothing for her own personal expenses. I gave her a pound or two to-day, for she was completely destitute. The Countess opened her eyes. Where will she live? What will become of her? She must live with us, she— with us! interrupted Lady Mount Severn, her voice almost reaching a scream, that she never shall. She must, Emma, there is nowhere else for her to live. I have been obliged to decide it so, and she is gone, as I tell you, to Castle Marling today. Lady Mount Severn grew pale with anger. She rose from her seat and confronted her husband, the table-beam between them. Listen, Raymond, I will not have Isabelle Vane under my roof! I hate her! How could you be cajoled into sanctioning such a thing? I was not cajoled, and by sanction was not asked, he mildly replied. I proposed it. Where else is she to be? I don't care where, was the obstinate retort, never with us. She is at Castle Marling now, gone to it as her home, regime the ill, and even you, when you return, will scarcely venture to turn her out again into the road or to the work-house. She will not trouble you long. Carelessly continued the ill. One so lovely as Isabelle will be sure to marry early, and she appears as gentle and sweet-tempered a girl as I ever saw. So whence can arise your dislike to her, I don't pretend to guess. Many a man will be ready to forget her want of fortune for the sake of her face. She shall marry the first who asks her, snapped the angry lady. I'll take care of that. CHAPTER XII. LIFE AT Castle Marling Isabelle had been in her new home about ten days when Lord and Lady Mount Seven arrived at Castle Marling, which was not a castle, you may as well be told, but only the name of a town, nearly contiguous to which was their residence a smaller state. Lord Mount Seven welcomed Isabelle, Lady Mount Seven also after a fashion, but her manner was so repellent, so insolently patronising, that it brought the indignant crimson to the cheeks of Lady Isabelle. And if this was the case at the first meeting, what do you suppose it must have been as time went on? Gauling, slights, petty vexations, chilling annoyances were put upon her, trying her powers of endurance to the very length of their tether. She would wring her hands when alone and passionately wished that she could find another refuge. The Earl and Countess had two children, both boys, and in February the younger one, always a delicate child, died. This somewhat altered their plans. Instead of proceeding to London after Easter, as had been decided upon, they would not go till May. The Earl had passed part of the winter at Mount Seven, looking after the repairs and renovations that were being made there. In March he went to Paris, full of grief for the loss of his boy, far greater grief than was experienced by Lady Mount Seven. April approached, and with it Easter. To the unconcealed dismay of Lady Mount Seven, her grandmother, Mrs. Leverson, wrote her word that she required change, and should pass Easter with her at Castle Marling. Lady Mount Seven would have given her diamonds to have got out of it, but there was no escape. Diamonds that were once Isabelle's, at least, that Isabelle had worn. On the Monday and Passion Week the old lady arrived, and with her, Frances Leverson. They had no other guests. Things went on pretty smoothly till Good Friday. On Good Friday afternoon, Isabelle strolled out with little William Vane, and they never came in till a nearly dinner time when the three entered together. Lady Mount Seven doing penance all the time and nursing her rage against Isabelle, for Mrs. Leverson kept her indoors. There was barely time to dress for dinner, and Isabelle went straight to her room. Her dress was off, her dressing going on. Marvel was busy with her hair, and William chattering at her knee when the door was flung open, and my lady entered. Where have you been? demanded she, shaking with passion. Isabelle knew the signs. Strolling about in the shrubberies and grounds, answered Isabelle. How dare you so disgrace yourself! I do not understand you, said Isabelle, her heart beginning to beat unpleasantly. Marvel, you are pulling my hair. When women liable to intemperate fits of passion give the reins to them, they neither know nor care what they say. Lady Mount Seven broke into a torrent of reproach and abuses, most degrading and unjustifiable. Is it not sufficient that you are allowed an asylum in my house, but you must also disgrace it? Three hours have you been hiding yourself with Frances Leverson. You have done nothing but flirt with him from the moment he came. You did nothing else at Christmas. The attack was longer and broader, but that was the substance of it, and Isabelle was goaded to resistance, to anger little less great than that of the Countess. This, and before her attendant, she and Earl's daughter so much better born than Emma Mount Seven to be thus insultingly accused in the other's mad jealousy. Isabelle tossed her hair from the hands of Marvel, rose up and confronted the Countess, constraining her voice to calmness. I do not flirt, she said. I have never flirted. I leave that, and she could not wholly suppress in tone the scorn she felt. To married women, though it seems to me that it is a fault less venial in them than in single ones. There is but one inmate of this house to flirt so far as I have seen since I have lived in it. Is it you or I, Lady Mount Seven? The home truth told on her ladyship. She turned white with rage, forgot her manners, and raising her white hands struck Isabelle a stinging blow upon the left cheek. Confused and terrified, Isabelle stood in pain, and before she could speak or act my ladys left hand was raised to the other cheek, and a blow left on that. Lady Isabelle shivered as with a sudden chill, and cried out, a sharp, quick cry. Covered her outraged face and sank down upon the dressing-chair. Marvel threw up her hands in dismay, and William Vane could not have burst into a louder roar had he been beaten himself. The boy, who was of a sensitive nature, was frightened. My good reader, are you one of the inexperienced ones who borrow notions of fashionable life from the novels got in a library, taking their high-flown contents for gospel and religiously believing that lords and ladys live upon stilts, speak, eat, move, breathe, by the rules of good breeding only? Are you under the delusion, too many are, that the days of dukes and duchesses are spent discussing pictures, tastes, Shakespeare, and the musical glasses, that they are strung and polite wires of silver and can't get off the hinges, never giving vent to angry tempers to words unorthodox as commonplace mortals do? That will come to pass when the great creator shall see fit to send men into the world free from baneful tempers, evil passions, from their sins bequeathed from the fall of Adam. Lady Mount Seven finished up the scene by boxing William for his noise, jerked him out of the room, and told him he was a monkey. Isabelle Vane lived through the live-long night, weeping tears of anguish and indignation. She would not remain at Castle Mylan, who would after so great an outrage? Yet where was she to go? Fifty times in the course of the night did she wish that she was laid beside her father, for her feelings obtained the mastery of her reason. In her calm moments she would have shrunk from the idea of death as the young and healthy must do. She rose on the Saturday morning weak and languid, the effects of the night of grief, and Marvel brought her breakfast up. William Vane stole into her room afterward. He was attached to her in a remarkable degree. Mama's going out, he exclaimed in the course of the morning. Look, Isabelle! Isabelle went to the window. Lady Mount Seven was in the pony carriage, Frances Levison, driving. We can go down now, Isabelle. Nobody will be there. She ascended and went down with William, but scarcely were they in the drawing-room when a servant entered with a card on a salvo. A gentleman, my lady, wishes to see you. To see me return, Isabelle, in surprise. Or Lady Mount Seven? He asked for you, my lady. She took up the card. Mr. Carlisle. Oh! she answered in a tone of joyful surprise. Show him in! It is curious, nay appalling, to trace the thread in a human life, how the most trivial occurrences lead to the great events of existence, bringing forth happiness or misery, will or woe. A client of Mr. Carlisle's, travelling from one part of England to the other, was arrested by illness at Castle Marling—grave illness, it appeared to be—inducing fears of death. He had not, as the phrase goes, settled his affairs, and Mr. Carlisle was telegraphed for in haste to make his will, and for other private matters. A very simple occurrence, it appeared to Mr. Carlisle this journey, and yet it was destined to lead to events that would end only with his own life. Mr. Carlisle entered, unaffected and gently as ever, with his noble form, his attractive face, and his duping eyelids. She advanced to meet him, holding out her hand, her countenance betraying her pleasure. This is indeed unexpected, she exclaimed, how very pleased I am to see you. Business brought me yesterday to Castle Marling. I could not leave it again without calling on you. I hear that Lord Mount Seven is absent. Here's in France, she rejoined. I said we should be sure to meet again. Do you remember Mr. Carlisle? You— Isabelle suddenly stopped, for with the word remember, she also remembered something—the hundred-pound note—and what she was saying faltered on her tongue. Confused indeed, grew she, for alas, she had changed and partly spent it. How was it possible to ask Lady Mount Seven for money? And the ear was nearly always away. Mr. Carlisle saw her embarrassment, though he may not have detected its cause. What a fine boy, exclaimed he, looking at the child. It is Lord Vane, said Isabelle. A truthful earnest spire, I am sure, he continued gazing at his open countenance. How old are you, my little man? I am six, sir, and my brother was four. Isabelle bent over the child, an excuse to cover her perplexity. You do not know this gentleman, William. It is Mr. Carlisle, and he has been very kind to me. The little Lord had turned his thoughtful eyes on Mr. Carlisle, apparently studying his countenance. I shall like you, sir, if you are kind to Isabelle. Are you kind to her? Very, very kind, murmured Lady Isabelle, leaving William and turning to Mr. Carlisle, but not looking at him. I do not know what to say. I ought to thank you. I did not intend to use the—to use it, but I—I— Hush! he interrupted, laughing at her confusion. I do not know what you were talking of. I have a great misfortune to break to you, Lady Isabelle. She lifted her eyes on her glowing cheeks, somewhat aroused from her own thoughts. Two of your fish are dead, the gold ones. Are they? I believe it was the frost killed them. I do not know what else it could have been. You may remember those bitter days we had in January. They died down. You are very good to take care of them all this while. How is East Lynn looking? Dear East Lynn, is it occupied? Not yet. I have spent some money upon it, and it repays the outlay. The excitement of his arrival had worn off, and she was looking herself again, pale and sad. He could not help observing that she was changed. I cannot expect to look so well at Castle Marling, as I did at East Lynn, she answered. I trusted is a happy home to you, said Mr. Carlisle, speaking upon impulse. She glanced up at him, a look that he would never forget, it certainly told of despair. No, she said, shaking her head. It is a miserable home, and I cannot remain in it. I have been awake all night, thinking where I can go, but I cannot tell. I have not a friend in the wide world. Never let people talk secrets before children, for be assured that they comprehend a vast deal more than is expedient. The saying that little pictures have great ears is wonderfully true. Lord Vane held up his hand to Mr. Carlisle. Isabel told me this morning that she should go away from us. Shall I tell you why? Mama beat her yesterday when she was angry. Be quiet, William, interrupted Lady Isabel, her face in a flame. Two great slaps upon her cheeks continued the young boy-count, and Isabel cried so, and I screamed, and then Mama hit me. But boys are made to be hit, Nurse says so. Marvel came into the nursery when we were at tea and told Nurse about it. She says, Isabel's too good-looking, and that's why Mama— Isabel stopped the child's tongue, wring a peel on the bell, and marched him to the door, dispatching him to the nursery by the servant who answered it. Mr. Carlisle's eyes were full of indignant sympathy. Can this be true? he asked in a low tone when she returned to him. You do indeed want a friend. I must bear my lot, she replied, obeying the impulse which prompted her to confide in Mr. Carlisle, at least till Lord Mount Severn returns. And then? I really do not know, she said, the rebellious tears rising faster than she could choke them down. He has no other home to offer me, but with Lady Mount Severn I cannot and will not remain. She would break my heart, as she has already well now broken my spirit. I have not deserved it of her, Mr. Carlisle. No, I am sure you have not, he warmly answered. I wish I could help you. What can I do? You can do nothing, she said. What can anyone do? I wish—oh, wish—I could help you, he repeated. East Lynn was not taken for all in all a pleasant home to you, but it seems you changed for the worse when you left. Not a pleasant home, she echoed, its reminiscences appearing delightful in that moment, for it must be remembered that all things are estimated by comparison. Indeed, it was. I may never have so pleasant a one again. Mr. Carlisle, do not disparage East Lynn to me. Would I could awake and find the last few months but a hideous dream, that I could find my dear father alive again, that we were still living peacefully at East Lynn? It would be very Eden to me now. What was Mr. Carlisle about to say? What emotion was it that agitated his countenance, impeded his breath, and died his face, blood red? His better genius was surely not watching over him, or those words had never been spoken. There is but one way, he began, taking her hand and nervously playing with it, probably unconscious that he did so. Only one way in which he could return to East Lynn, and that way, I may not presume perhaps to point it out. She looked at him and waited for an explanation. If my words offend you, Lady Isabel, check them as their presumption deserves, and pardon me. May I, dare I, offer you to return to East Lynn as its mistress? She did not comprehend him in the slightest degree, the drift of his meaning never dawned upon her. Return to East Lynn as its mistress, she repeated in bewilderment. And as my wife. No possibility of misunderstanding him now, and the shock and surprise were great. She had stood there by Mr. Carlisle's side, conversing confidentially with him, esteeming him greatly, feeling as if he were her truest friend on earth, clinging to him in her heart as to a powerful haven of refuge, loving him almost as she would a brother, suffering her hand to remain in his. But to be his wife, the idea had never presented itself to her in any shape until this moment, and her mind's first emotion was one of entire opposition, her first movement to express it, as she essayed to withdraw herself and her hand away from him. But not so. Mr. Carlisle did not suffer it. He not only retained that hand, but took the other also, and spoke, now the ice was broken, eloquent words of love, not unmeaning phrases of rhapsody about hearts and darts and dying for her, such as somebody else might have given utterance to, but earnest hearted words of deep tenderness, calculated to win upon the mind's good sense, as well as upon the ear and heart, and it may be that had her imagination not been filled up with that somebody else, she would have said yes there and then. They were suddenly interrupted. Lady Mount Severn entered, and took in the scene at a glance, Mr. Carlisle's bent attitude of devotion, his imprisonment of the hands, and Isabel's perplexed and blushing countenance. She threw up her head, and her little inquisitive nose, and stopped short in the carpet, her freezing looks demanded an explanation as plainly as looks can do it. Mr. Carlisle turned to her, and by way of sparing Isabel, proceeded to introduce himself. Isabel had just presence of mind left to name her, Lady Mount Severn. I am sorry that Lord Mount Severn should be absent, to whom I have the honour of being known, he said. I am Mr. Carlisle. I have heard of you," replied her ladyship, scanning his good looks and feeling cross that his homage should be given where she saw it was given. But I had not heard that you and Lady Isabel Vane were on the extraordinary terms of intimacy that—that— Madam, he interrupted, as he handed a chair to her ladyship and took another himself. We have never yet been on terms of extraordinary intimacy. I was begging the Lady Isabel to grant that we may be. I was asking her to become my wife. The avowal was a shower of incense to the countess, and her ill-humour melted into sunshine. It was a solution to her great difficulty, a loophole by which she might get rid of her better noir, the hated Isabel. A flash of gratification lighted her face, and she became full of graciousness to Mr. Carlisle. How very grateful Isabel must feel to you, quoth she. I speak openly, Mr. Carlisle, because I know that you were cognizant of the unprotected state in which she was left by the ills and providence, putting marriage for her at any rate a higher marriage, nearly out of the question. Eastland is a beautiful place, I have heard. For its size, it is not large, replied Mr. Carlisle as he rose, for Isabel had also risen, and was coming forward. And pray, what is Lady Isabel's answer, quickly asked the countess, turning to her. Not to her did Isabel condescend to give an answer, but she approached Mr. Carlisle and spoke in a low tone. Will you give me a few hours for consideration? I am only too happy that you should accord it consideration, for it speaks to me of hope, was his reply, as he opened the door for her to pass out. I will be here again this afternoon. It was a perplexing debate that Lady Isabel held with herself in the solitude of her chamber, whilst Mr. Carlisle touched upon ways and means to Lady Mount Severn. Isabel was little more than a child, and as a child she reasoned, looking neither far nor deep, the shallow, palpable aspect of her fair as alone, presenting itself to her view. That Mr. Carlisle was not of rank equal to her own, she scarcely remembered. East Lynn seemed a very fair settlement in life, and in point of size, beauty, and importance, it was far superior to the house she was now in. She forgot that her position in East Lynn as Mr. Carlisle's wife would not be what it had been as Lord Mount Severn's daughter. She forgot that she would be tied to a quiet house, shut out from the great world, the pumps and venities to which she was born. She liked Mr. Carlisle much. She experienced pleasure in conversing with him. She liked to be with him. In short, but for that other ill-oamened fancy which had crept over her, there would have been danger of her falling in love with Mr. Carlisle. And all, to be removed forever from the bitter dependence on Lady Mount Severn, East Lynn would in truth after that see what she had called it, Eden. So far it looks favourable, mentally exclaimed poor Isabel, but there is the other side of the question. It is not only that I do not love Mr. Carlisle, but I fear I do love, or very nearly love, Francis Leverson. I wish he would ask me to be his wife, or that I had never seen him. Isabel Soliloquy was interrupted by the entrance of Mrs. Leverson in the Countess. What the latter had said to the old lady to win her to the cause was best known to herself, but she was eloquent in it. They both used every possible argument to induce her to accept Mr. Carlisle. The old lady declaring that she had never been introduced to anyone she was so much taken with, and Mrs. Leverson was incapable of asserting what was not true, that he was worth a dozen empty-headed men of the great world. Isabel listened, now swayed one way, now the other, and when afternoon came her head was aching with perplexity. The stumbling block that she could not get over was Francis Leverson. She saw Mr. Carlisle approach from her window and went down to the drawing-room, not in the least knowing what her answer was to be, a shadowy idea was presenting itself that she would ask him for a longer time and write her answer. In the drawing-room was Francis Leverson, and her heart beat wildly, which said beating might have convinced her that she ought not to marry another. Where have you been hiding yourself, quote he? Did you hear of our mishap with the pony-courage? No, was her answer. I was driving Emma into town. The pony took fright, kicked, plunged, and went down upon his knees. She took fright in turn, got out, and walked back, so I gave the brutes and chastisements and a race, and brought him to the stables, getting home in time to be introduced to Mr. Carlisle. He seems an out-and-out good fellow, Isabel, and I congratulate you. What? she uttered? Don't start. We are all in the family, and my lady told. I went betrayed abroad. She says East Lynn is a place to be coveted. I wish you happiness, Isabel. Thank you, she returned, in a sarcastic tone, that her throat beat and her lips quivered. You are premature in your congratulations, Captain Leveson. Emma, keep my good wishes then till the right man comes. I am beyond the pale myself, and dare not think of entering the happy state, he added, in a pointed tone. I have indulged dreams of it like others, but I cannot afford to indulge them seriously. A poor man with uncertain prospects can only play the butterfly, perhaps to his life's end. He quitted the room as he spoke. It was impossible for Isabel to misunderstand him, but a feeling shot across her mind for the first time, that he was false and heartless. One of the servants appeared, showing him Mr. Carlisle. Nothing false or heartless about him. He closed the door and approached her, but she did not speak, and her lips were white and trembling. Mr. Carlisle waited. Well, he said at length in a gentle tone. Have you decided to grant my prayer? Yes, but she could not go on. What with one agitation and another, she had difficulty in conquering her emotion. But I was going to tell you. Presently he whispered, leaving her to her sofa. We can both afford to wait now. Oh, Isabel, you have made me very happy. I ought to tell you, I must tell you, she began again in the midst of hysterical tears. Though I have said yes to your proposal, I do not—yet— It has come upon me by surprise, she stemmed. I like you very much. I esteem and respect you, but I do not love you. I should wonder if you did, but really let me earn your love, Isabel. Oh, yes, she honestly answered. I hope so. He drew her closer to him, bent his face, and took from her lips his first kiss. Isabel was passive. She supposed he had gained the right to do so. My dearest, it is all I ask. CHAPTER XIII. OF EAST LYNN. This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. A MOONLIGHT WALK. The sensations of Mr. Carlyle, when he returned to West LYNN, were much like those of an eaten boy, who knows he has been in mischief and dreads detection. Always open, as to his own affairs, for he had nothing to conceal, he yet deemed it expedient to dissemble now. He felt that his sister would be bitter at the prospect of his marrying. Instinct had taught him that, years past, and he believed that, of all women, the most objectionable to her would be Lady Isabel, for Miss Carlyle looked to the useful and had neither sympathy nor admiration for the beautiful. He was not sure, but she might be capable of endeavouring to frustrate the marriage, should news of it reach her ears, and her indomitable will had caused many strange things in her life. Therefore, you will not blame Mr. Carlyle for observing entire reticence as to his future plans. A family of the name of Caru had been about taking East LYNN. They wished to rent it, furnished, for three years. Upon some of the minor arrangements they and Mr. Carlyle were opposed, but the latter declined to give way. During his absence at Castle Marling, news had arrived from them. They had acceded to all his terms, and would enter upon East LYNN as soon as it was convenient. Miss Carlyle was full of congratulations. It was off their hands, she said, but the first letter Mr. Carlyle wrote was, to decline them. He did not tell this to Miss Carlyle. The final touches to the house were given, preparatory to the reception of its inhabitants, and three maids and two men's servants hired and sent there, upon board wages, until the family should arrive. One evening, three weeks subsequent to Mr. Carlyle's visit to Castle Marling, Barbara Hare called at Miss Carlyle's and found them going to tea much earlier than usual. We dined earlier, said Miss Corny, and I ordered tea as soon as the dinner went away. Otherwise Archibald would have taken none. I am as well without tea, and I have a massive business to get through yet. You are not as well without it, cried Miss Corny, and I don't choose you should go without it. Take off your bonnet, Barbara. He does things like nobody else. He is off to Castle Marling to-morrow, and never could open his lips till just now that he was going. Is that infallid, Brewster, or whatever his name is, laid up at Castle Marling still, exclaimed Barbara. He is still there, said Mr. Carlyle. Barbara sprang up the moment tea was over. Dill is waiting for me in the office, and I have some hours work before me. However, I suppose you won't care to put up with Peter's attendance, so make haste with your bonnet, Barbara. She took his arm, and they walked on. Mr. Carlyle striking the hedge in the grass with her parasol. Another minute, and the handle was in too. I thought you would do it, said Barbara, while he was regarding the parasol with Ludacristus May. Never mind, it is an old one. I will bring you another to replace it. What is the colour? Brown. I won't forget. Hold the relics a minute, Barbara. He put the pieces in her hand, and taking out a note case made a note in pencil. What's that for? She inquired. He held it close to her eyes that she might discern what he had written. Brown parasol. B.H. A reminder for me, Barbara, in case I forget. Barbara's eyes detected another item or two already entered in the note case. Piano. Plate. I jot down the things as they occurred to me that I must get in London, he explained, otherwise I should forget half. In London? I thought you were going in an opposite direction, to Castle Marling. It was a slip of the tongue, but Mr. Carlyle repaired it. I may probably have to visit London as well as Castle Marling. How bright the moon looks rising there, Barbara. So bright, that or the sky, that I saw your secret. Answered she. Piano. Plate. What can you want with either, Archibald? There for East Glen, he quietly replied. Oh, for the carous, and Barbara's interest in the item was gone. They turned into the road just below the grove and reached it. Mr. Carlyle held the gate open for Barbara. You will come in and say good night to Mamma. She was saying to-day what a stranger you have made of yourself lately. I have been busy, and I really have not the time to-night. You must remember me to her instead. And cordially shaking her by the hand he closed the gate. It was two or three mornings after the departure of Mr. Carlyle that Mr. Dill appeared before Miss Carlyle bearing a letter. She was busy regarding the effect of some new Muslim curtains just put up, and did not pay attention to him. Will you please take out the letter, Miss Carlyle? The postman left it in the office with hours. It is from Mr. Archibald. Why, what has he got to write to me about? retorted Miss Carlyle. Does he say when he is coming home? You had better see, Miss Carlyle. Mind is not. Castle Marling, May 1st. My dear Carlyle, I was married this morning to Lady Isabel Vane, and hastened briefly to acquaint you with the fact. I will write you more fully to-morrow or the next day and explain all things. Your ever-affectionate brother, Archibald Carlyle. It is a hoax, was the first guttural sound that escaped from Miss Carlyle's throat when speech came to her. Mr. Dill only stood like a stone image. It is a hoax, I say, raved Miss Carlyle. What are you standing there for, like a gander on one leg? She reiterated, venting her anger upon the unoffending man. Is it a hoax or not? I am overdone with amazement, Miss Corney. It is not a hoax. I have had a letter too. It can't be true, can't be true. He had no more thought of being married when he left here three days ago than I have. How can we tell that, Miss Corney? How are we to know he did not go to be married? I fancy he did. Go to be married, shrieked Miss Corney in a passion, he would not be such a fool, and to that fine lady child. No, no. He has sent this to be put in the county journals, said Mr. Dill, holding forth a scrap of paper. They are married safe enough. Miss Carlyle took it and held it before her. Her hand was cold as ice, and shook as if with palsy. Married, on the first instance at Carl Marling by the chaplain to the Earl of Mount Severn, Archibald Carlyle, Esquire of East Lynn, to the Lady Isabelle Mary Vane, only child of William, late Earl of Mount Severn. Miss Carlyle tore the paper to Adams and scattered it. Mr. Dill afterward made copies from memory and sent them to the journal offices, but let that pass. I will never forgive him, she deliberately uttered, and I will never forgive or tolerate her.