 CHAPTER XXI I laid myself on the bed and wrapped my limbs in the folds of the carpet. My thoughts were restless and perturbed. I was once more busy in reflecting on the conduct which I ought to pursue with regard to the bank-bills. I weighed with scrupulous attention every circumstance that might influence my decision. I could not conceive any more beneficial application of this property than to the service of the indigent at this season of multiplied distress. But I considered that if my death were unknown the house would not be opened or examined till the pestilence had ceased, and the benefits of this application would thus be partly or wholly precluded. This season of disease, however, would give place to a season of scarcity. The number and wants of the poor during the ensuing winter would be deplorably aggravated. What multitudes might be rescued from famine and nakedness by the judicious application of this sum? But how should I secure this application? To enclose the bills in a letter directed to some eminent citizen or public officer was the obvious proceeding. Most of these conditions were fulfilled in the person of the present Chief Magistrate. To him, therefore, the packet was to be sent. Paper and the implements of writing were necessary for this end. Would they be found, I asked, in the upper room? If that apartment, like the rest which I had seen and its furniture had remained untouched, my task would be practicable. But if the means of writing were not to be immediately procured, my purpose, momentous and dear as it was, must be relinquished. The truth in this respect was easily and ought immediately to be ascertained. I rose from the bed which I had lately taken and proceeded to the study. The entries and staircases were illuminated by a pretty strong twilight. The rooms, in consequence of every ray being excluded by the closed shutters, were nearly as dark as if it had been midnight. The rooms into which I had already passed were locked, but its key was in each lock. I flattered myself that the entrance into the study would be found in the same condition. The door was shut, but no key was to be seen. My hopes were considerably damped by this appearance, but I conceived it still to be possible to enter, since, by chance or by design, the door might be unlocked. My fingers touched the lock when a sound was heard as if a bolt, appending to the door on the inside, had been drawn. I was startled by this incident. It betokened that the room was already occupied by some other who desired to exclude a visitor. The unbarred shutter below was remembered and associated itself with this circumstance, that this house should be entered by the same avenue at the same time and this room should be sought by two persons was a mysterious concurrence. I began to question whether I had heard distinctly. Numberless inexplicable noises are apt to assail the ear in an empty dwelling. The very echoes of our steps are unwanted and new. This perhaps was some such sound. Resuming courage I once more applied to the lock. The door, in spite of my repeated efforts, would not open. My design was too momentous to be readily relinquished. My curiosity and my fears likewise were awakened. The marks of violence which I had seen on the closets and cabinets below seemed to indicate the presence of plunderers. Here was one who labored for seclusion and concealment. The pillage was not made upon my property. My weakness would disable me from encountering or mastering a man of violence. To solicit admission into this room would be useless. To attempt to force my way would be absurd. These reflections prompted me to withdraw from the door, but the uncertainty of the conclusions I had drawn and the importance of gaining access to this apartment combined to check my steps. Perplexed as to the means I should employ, I once more tried the lock. The attempt was fruitless as the former. So hopeless of any information to be gained by that means I put my eye to the keyhole. I discovered a light different from what was usually met with at this hour. It was not the twilight which the sun imperfectly excluded produces, but gleams as from a lamp, yet its gleams were fainter and obscureer than a lamp generally in parts. Was this a confirmation of my first conjecture? The plight at Noonday, in a mansion thus deserted, and in a room which had been the scene of memorable and disastrous events, was ominous. Hitherto no direct proof had been given of the presence of a human being. How to ascertain his presence, or whether it were eligible by any means to ascertain it, were points on which I had not deliberated. I had no power to deliberate. My curiosity impelled me to call. Is there any one within? Speak! These words were scarcely uttered when someone exclaimed in a voice vehement but half smothered, good God! A deep pause succeeded. I waited for an answer for somewhat to which this emphatic invocation might be a prelude. After the tones were expressive of surprise, or pain, or grief, was for a moment dubious. Perhaps the motives which led me to this house suggested the suspicion which presently succeeded to my doubts, that the person within was disabled by sickness. The circumstances of my own condition took away the improbability from this belief. Why might not another be induced, like me, to hide himself in this desolate retreat? Might not a servant left to take care of the house, a measure usually adopted by the opulent at this time, be seized by the reigning malady? Incapacitated for exertion, or fearing to be dragged to the hospital, he has shut himself in this apartment. The robber, it may be, who came to pillage, was overtaken and detained by disease. In either case, detection or intrusion would be hateful, and would be assiduously eluded. These thoughts had no tendency to weaken or divert my efforts to obtain access to this room. The person was a brother in calamity, who it was my duty to succour and cherish to the utmost of my power. That's more, I spoke. Who is within? I beseech you to answer me. Whatever you be, I desire to do you good and not injury. Open the door and let me know your condition. I will try to be of use to you. I was answered by a deep groan and by a sob counteracted and devoured, as it were, by a mighty effort. This token of distress thrilled to my heart. My terrors wholly disappeared and gave place to unlimited compassion. I again entreated to be admitted, promising all the succour or consolation which my situation allowed me to afford. Answers were made in tones of anger and impatience blended with those of grief. I want no succour. Vex me not with your entreaties and offers. Lie from this spot. Linger not a moment lest you participate my destiny and rush upon your death. These I considered merely as the effusions of delirium or the dictates of despair. The style and articulation denoted the speaker to be superior to the class of servants. Hence my anxiety to see and to aid him was increased. My remonstrances were sternly and pertinaciously repelled. For a time incoherent and impassioned exclamations flowed from him. At length I was only permitted to hear strong aspirations and sobs, more eloquent and more indicative of grief than any language. The deportment filled me with no less wonder than commiseration. By what views this person was led hither, by what motives induced to deny himself to my entreaties, was wholly incomprehensible. Though hopeless of success, I repeated my request to be admitted. My perseverance seemed now to have exhausted all his patience, and he exclaimed in a voice of thunder, Arthur Mervin, be gone! Linger but a moment, and my rage, tiger-like, will rush upon you and rend you limb from limb. This address petrified me. The voice that uttered this sanguinary menace was strange to my ears. It suggested no suspicion of ever having heard it before. Yet my accents had betrayed me to him. He was familiar with my name. Notwithstanding the improbability of my entrance into this dwelling, I was clearly recognized and unhesitatingly named. My curiosity and compassion were in no wise diminished, but I found myself compelled to give up my purpose. I withdrew reluctantly from the door and once more threw myself upon my bed. Nothing was more necessary in the present condition of my frame than sleep, and sleep had perhaps been possible if the scene around me had been less pregnant with causes of wonder and panic. Once more I tasked my memory in order to discover, in the persons with whom I had hitherto conversed, some resemblance in voice or tones to him whom I had just heard. This process was effectual. Gradually my imagination called up an image which, now that it was clearly seen, I was astonished had not instantly occurred. Three years ago a man by name Colville came on foot with a knapsack on his back into the district where my father resided. He had learning and genius and readily obtained the station for which only he deemed himself qualified, that of a schoolmaster. His demeanor was gentle and modest, his habits as to sleep, food and exercise, abstemious and regular. Meditation in the forest or reading in his closet seemed to constitute together with attention to his scholars his soul amusement and employment. He estranged himself from company not because society afforded no pleasure, but because studious seclusion afforded him chief satisfaction. No one was more idolized by his unsuspecting neighbors. His scholars revered him as a father and made under his tuition a remarkable proficiency. His character seemed open to boundless inspection and his conduct was pronounced by all to be faultless. At the end of a year the scene was changed. A daughter of one of his patrons, young, artless and beautiful, appeared to have fallen a prey to the arts of some detestable seducer. The betrayer was gradually detected and successive discoveries showed that the same artifices had been practiced with the same success upon many others. Colville was the arch-villain. He retired from the storm of vengeance that was gathering over him and had not been heard of since that period. I saw him rarely and for a short time, and I was a mere boy. Hence the failure to recollect his voice and to perceive that the voice of him, emured in the room above, was the same with that of Colville. Though I had slight reasons for recognizing his features or accents, I had abundant cause to think of him with detestation and pursue him with implacable revenge. For the victim of his acts, she whose ruin was first detected, was my sister. This unhappy girl escaped from the upbradings of her parents, from the contumlies of the world, from the godlings of remorse, and the anguish flowing from the perfidy and desertion of Colville in a voluntary death. She was innocent and lovely. Previous to this evil, my soul was linked with hers by a thousand resemblances and sympathies, as well as by perpetual intercourse from infancy and by the fraternal relation. She was my sister, my preceptress, and friend, but she died. Her end was violent, untimely, and criminal. I cannot think of her without heart-bursting grief, of her destroyer without a ranker which I know to be wrong, but which I cannot subdue. When the image of Colville rushed upon this occasion on my thought, I almost started on my feet. To meet him, after so long a separation here and in these circumstances, was so unlooked for and abrupt an event, and revived a tribe of such hateful impulses and agonizing recollections that a total revolution seemed to have been affected in my frame. His recognition of my person, his aversion to be seen, his ejaculation of terror and surprise on first hearing my voice, all contributed to strengthen my belief. How was I to act? My feeble frame could but ill second my vengeful purposes, but vengeance, though it sometimes occupied my thoughts, was hindered by my reason from leading me in any instance to outrage or even to upgrading. All my wishes with regard to this man were limited to expeling his image from my memory and to shunning a meeting with him. That he had not opened the door at my bidding was now a topic of joy. To look upon some bottomless pit into which I was about to be cast headlong and alive was less to be aboard than to look upon the face of Colville. Had I known that he had taken refuge in this house, no power should have compelled me to enter it. To be immersed in the infection of the hospital and to be hurried yet breathing and observant to my grave was a more supportable fate. I dwell with self-condemnation and shame upon this part of my story. To feel extraordinary indignation at vice merely because we have partaken in an extraordinary degree of its mischiefs is unjustifiable. To regard the wicked with no emotion but pity, to be active in reclaiming them in controlling their malevolence and preventing or repairing the ills which they produce is the only province of duty. This lesson, as well as a thousand others, I have yet to learn, but I despair of living long enough for that or any beneficial purpose. My emotions with regard to Colville were erroneous but omnipotent. I started from my bed and prepared to rush into the street. I was careless of the lot that should befall me since no fate could be worse than that of abiding under the same roof with a wretch spotted with so many crimes. I had not set my feet upon the floor before my precipitation was checked by a sound from above. The door of the study was cautiously and slowly opened. This incident admitted only of one construction supposing all obstructions removed. Colville was creeping from his hiding-place and would probably fly with speed from the house. My belief of his sickness was now confuted, and illicit design was congenial with his character and congruous with those appearances already observed. I had no power or wish to obstruct his flight. I thought of it with transport and once more threw myself upon the bed and wrapped my averted face in the carpet. He would probably pass this door, unobservant of me, and my muffled face would save me from the agonies connected with the side of him. The footsteps above were distinguishable, though it was manifest that they moved with lightsomeness and circumspection. They reached the stair and descended. The room in which I lay was, like the rest, obscured by the closed shutters. This obscurity now gave way to a light resembling that glimmering and pale reflection which I had noticed in the study. My eyes, though averted from the door, were disengaged from the folds which covered the rest of my head and observed these tokens of Colville's approach flitting on the wall. My feverish perturbations increased as he drew nearer. He reached the door and stopped. The light rested for a moment. Presently he entered the apartment. My emotions suddenly rose to a height that would not be controlled. I imagined that he approached the bed and was gazing upon me. At the same moment by an involuntary impulse I threw off my covering and, turning my face, fixed my eyes upon my visitant. It was as I suspected. The figure lifting in his right hand a candle and gazing at the bed with lineaments and attitude bespeaking fearful expectation and tormenting doubts was now beheld. One glance communicated to my senses all the parts of this terrific vision, a sinking at my heart as if it had been penetrated by a dagger, seized me. This was not enough. I uttered a shriek too rueful and loud not to have startled the attention of the passengers, if any had at the moment been passing the street. Heaven seemed to have decreed that this period should be filled with trials of my equanimity and fortitude. The test of my courage was once more employed to cover me with humiliation and remorse. This second time my fancy conjured up a spectre and I shuttered as if the grave were forsaken and the unquiet dead haunted my pillow. The visage and the shape had indeed preternatural attitudes, but they belonged not to Colville, but to Wellbeck. CHAPTER XXI He whom I had accompanied to the midst of the river, whom I had imagined that I saw sink to rise no more, was now before me. Though incapable of precluding the groundless belief of preternatural visitations, I was able to banish the phantom almost at the same instant at which it appeared. Wellbeck had escaped from the stream alive or had, by some inconceivable means, been restored to life. The first was the most plausible conclusion. It instantly engendered a suspicion that his plunging into the water was an artifice intended to establish a belief of his death. His own tale had shown him to be versed in frauds and flexible to evil. But was he not associated with Colville? And what but a compact ininiquity could bind together such men? While thus musing, Wellbeck's countenance and gesture displayed emotions too vehement for speech. The glances that he fixed upon me were unsteadfast and wild. He walked along the floor, stopping at each moment and darting looks of eagerness upon me. A conflict of passions kept him mute. At length advancing to the bed, on the side of which I was now sitting, he addressed me. What is this? Are you here? In defiance of pestilence, are you actuated by some demon to haunt me, like the ghost of my offenses, and cover me with shame? What have I to do with that dauntless yet guiltless front? With that foolishly confiding and obsequious yet erect and unconquerable spirit? Is there no means of evading your pursuit? First I dip my hands a second time in blood and dig for you aggrave by the side of Watson. These words were listened to with calmness. I suspected and pitied the man, but I did not fear him. His words and his looks were indicative less of cruelty than madness. I looked at him with an air compassionate and wistful. I spoke with mildness and composure. After Wellbeck, you are unfortunate and criminal. Would to God I could restore you to happiness and virtue, but though my desire be strong, I have no power to change your habits or rescue you from misery. I believed you to be dead. I rejoiced to find myself mistaken. While you live there is room to hope that your errors will be cured and the turmoil and inquietudes that if hitherto beset your guilty progress will vanish by you reverting into better paths. From me you have nothing to fear. If your welfare will be promoted by my silence on the subject of your history, my silence shall be inviolate. I deem not lightly of my promises. They are given and shall not be recalled. This meeting was casual. Since I believed you to be dead it could not be otherwise. You err if you suspect that any injury will accrue to you from my life, but you need not discard that error. Since my death is coming I am not averse to your adopting the belief that the event is fortunate to you. Death is the inevitable and universal lot. When or how it comes is of little moment. To stand when so many thousands are falling around me is not to be expected. I have acted a humble and obscure part in the world, and my career has been short, but I murmur not at the decree that makes it so. The pestilence is now upon me. The chances of recovery are too slender to deserve my confidence. I came hither to die unmolested and at peace. All I ask of you is to consult your own safety by immediate flight and not to disappoint my hopes of concealment by disclosing my condition to the agents of the hospital. Wellbeck listened with the deepest attention. The wildness of his air disappeared and gave place to perplexity and apprehension. You are sick, said he in a tremulous tone in which terror was mingled with affection. You know this and expect not to recover. No mother nor sister nor friend will be near to administer food or medicine or comfort, yet you can talk calmly, can be thus considerate of others. Of me, whose guilt has been so deep and who has merited so little at your hands. Wretched coward! As miserable as I am and expect to be, I cling to life. To comply with your heroic counsel and to fly. To leave you thus desolate and helpless is the strongest impulse. Fane I would resist it, but cannot. To desert you would be flogitious and dastardly beyond all former acts. Yet to stay with you is to contract the disease and to perish after you. Life, burdened as it is with guilt and ignominy, is still dear. Yet you exhort me to go. You dispense with my assistance. Indeed I could be of no use. I should injure myself and profit you nothing. I cannot go into the city and procure a physician or attendant. I must never more appear in the streets of this city. I must leave you, then. He hurried to the door. Many hesitated. I renewed my entreaties that he would leave me and encouraged his belief that his presence might endanger himself without conferring the slightest benefit upon me. Wither should I fly. The wide world contains no asylum for me. I live but on one condition. I came hither to find what would save me from ruin, from death. I find it not. It has vanished. Some audacious and fortunate hand has snatched it from its place and now my ruin is complete. My last hope is extinct. Yes, Mervyn, I will stay with you. I will hold your head. I will put water to your lips. I will watch night and day by your side. When you die I will carry you by night to the neighboring field, will bury you and water your grave with those tears that are due to your incomparable worth and untimely destiny. Then I will lay myself in your bed and wait for the same oblivion. Wellbeck seemed now no longer to be fluctuating between opposite purposes. His tempestuous features subsided into calm. He put the candle still lighted on the table and paced the floor with less disorder than at his first entrance. His resolution was seen to be the dictate of despair. I hoped that it would not prove invincible to my remonstrances. I was conscious that his attendance might preclude in some degree my own exertions and alleviate the pangs of death, but these consolations might be purchased too dear. To receive them at the hazard of his life would be to make them odious. But if he should remain, what conduct would his companion pursue? Why did he continue in the study when Wellbeck had departed? By what motives were those men led hither? I addressed myself to Wellbeck. Your resolution to remain is hasty and rash. By persisting in it you will add to the miseries of my condition. You will take away the only hope that I cherished. But however you may act, Colville or I must be banished from this roof. What is the leak between you? Break it, I conjure you, before his frauds have involved you in inextricable destruction. Wellbeck looked at me with some expression of doubt. I mean, continued I, the man whose voice I heard above. He is a villain and betrayer. I have manifold proofs of his guilt. Why does he linger behind you? However you may decide, it is fitting that he should vanish. Alas! said Wellbeck, I have no companion, none to partake with me in good or evil. I came hither alone. How! exclaimed I! Whom did I hear in the room above? Someone answered my interrogations and entreaties whom I too certainly recognized. Why does he remain? You heard no one but myself. The design that brought me hither was to be accomplished without a witness. I desired to escape detection and repelled your solicitations for admission in a counterfeited voice. That voice belonged to one from whom I had lately parted. What his merits or demerits are, I know not. He found me wandering in the forests of New Jersey. He took me to his home. When seized by a lingering malady, he nursed me with fidelity and tenderness. When somewhat recovered, I speeded hither, but our ignorance of each other's character and views was mutual and profound. I deemed it useful to assume a voice different from my own. This was the last which I had heard, and this arbitrary and casual circumstance decided my choice. This imitation was too perfect and had influenced my fears too strongly to be easily credited. I suspected Wellbeck of some new artifice to baffle my conclusions and mislead my judgment. This suspicion, however, yielded to his earnest and repeated declarations. If Colville were not here, where had he made his abode? How came friendship and intercourse between Wellbeck and him? By what miracle escaped the former from the river into which I had imagined him forever sunk? I will answer you, said he with candor. You know already too much for me to have any interest in concealing any part of my life. You have discovered my existence and the causes that rescued me from destruction may be told without detriment to my person or fame. When I leaped into the river I intended to perish. I harbored no previous doubts of my ability to execute my fatal purpose. In this respect I was deceived. Suffocation would not come at my bidding. My muscles and limbs rebelled against my will. There was a mechanical repugnance to the loss of life which I could not vanquish. My struggles might thrust me below the surface, but my lips were spontaneously shut and excluded the torrent from my lungs. When my breath was exhausted, the efforts that kept me at the bottom were involuntarily remitted and I rose to the surface. I cursed my own pusillanimity. Thrice I plunged to the bottom and as often rose again. My aversion to life swiftly diminished, and at length I consented to make use of my skill in swimming which has seldom been exceeded to prolong my existence. I landed in a few minutes on the Jersey shore. This scheme being frustrated I sunk into dreariness and inactivity. I felt as if no dependence could be placed upon my courage, as if any effort I should make for self-destruction would be fruitless, yet existence was as void as ever of enjoyment and embellishment. My means of living were annihilated. I saw no path before me. To shun the presence of mankind was my sovereign wish. Since I could not die by my own hands I must be content to crawl upon the surface till a superior fate should permit me to perish. I wandered into the center of a wood. I stretched myself on the mossy verge of a brook and gazed at the stars till they disappeared. The next day was spent with little variation. The cravings of hunger were felt, and the sensation was a joyous one since it afforded me the practicable means of death. To refrain from food was easy, since some efforts would be needful to procure it, and these efforts should not be made. This was the sweet oblivion for which I so earnestly panted, placed within my reach. Three days of abstinence and reverie and solitude succeeded. On the evening of the fourth I was seated on a rock with my face buried in my hands. Someone laid his hand upon my shoulder. I started and looked up. I beheld a face beaming with compassion and bidnignity. He endeavored to extort from me the cause of my solitude and sorrow. I disregarded his entreaties and was obstinately silent. Finding me invincible in this respect he invited me to his cottage, which was hard by. I repelled him at first with impatience and anger, but he was not to be discouraged or intimidated. To allude his persuasions I was obliged to comply. My strength was gone, and the vital fabric was crumbling into pieces. A fever raged in my veins, and I was consoled by reflecting that my life was at once assailed by famine and disease. Meanwhile, my gloomy meditations experienced no respite. I incessantly ruminated on the events of my past life. The long series of my crimes arose daily and afresh to my imagination. The image of Lodie was recalled, his expiring looks and the directions which were mutually given respecting his sisters and his property. As I perpetually revolved these incidents, they assumed new forms and were linked with new associations. The volume written by his father and transferred to me by tokens which were now remembered to be more emphatic than the nature of the composition seemed to justify, was likewise remembered. It came attended by recollections respecting a volume which I filled, when a youth, with extracts from the Roman and Greek poets. Besides this literary purpose, I likewise used to preserve in it the bank bills with the keeping or carriage of which I chanced to be entrusted. This image led me back to the leather case containing Lodie's property, which was put into my hands at the time with the volume. These images now gave birth to a third conception which darted on my benighted understanding like an electrical flash. Was it not possible that part of Lodie's property might be enclosed within the leaves of this volume? Enhastily turning it over, I recollected to have noticed leaves whose edges by accident or design adhered to each other. Lodie, in speaking of the sale of his father's West India property, mentioned that the sum obtained for it was forty thousand dollars. Half only of this sum had been discovered by me. How had the remainder been appropriated? Only this volume contained it. The influence of this thought was like the infusion of a new soul into my frame. From torpid and desperate, from inflexible aversion to medicine and food, I was changed in a moment into vivacity and hope, into ravenous avidity for whatever could contribute to my restoration to health. I was not without pungent regrets and racking fears, that this volume would be ravished away by creditors or plunderers was possible. Every hour might be that which decided my fate. The first impulse was to seek my dwelling and search for this precious deposit. Meanwhile, my perturbations and impatience only exasperated my disease. While chained to my bed, the rumor of pestilence was spread abroad. This event, however, generally calamitous, was propitious to me and was hailed with satisfaction. It multiplied the chances that my house and its furniture would be unmolested. My friend was assiduous and indefatigable in his kindness. My deportment, before and subsequent to the revival of my hopes, was incomprehensible and argued nothing less than insanity. My thoughts were carefully concealed from him and all that he witnessed was contradictory and unintelligible. At length my strength was sufficiently restored. I resisted all my protector's importunities to postpone my departure till the perfect confirmation of my health. I designed to enter the city at midnight that prying eyes might be eluded to bear with me a candle and the means of lighting it to explore my way to my ancient study and to ascertain my future claim to existence and felicity. I crossed the river this morning. My impatience would not suffer me to wait till evening. Considering the desolation of the city I thought I might venture to approach thus near without hazard of detection. The house at all its avenues was closed. I stole into the backcourt. A window-shutter proved to be unfastened. I entered and discovered closets and cabinets unfastened and emptied of all their contents. At this spectacle my heart sunk. My books, doubtless, had shared the common destiny. My blood throbbed with painful vehemence as I approached the study and opened the door. My hopes that languished for a moment were revived by the sight of my shelves furnished as formerly. I had lighted my candle below for I desired not to awaken observation and suspicion by unclosing the windows. My eye eagerly sought the spot where I remembered to have left the volume. Its place was empty. The object of all my hopes had eluded my grasp and disappeared forever. To paint my confusion, to repeat my execrations on the infatuation which had rendered during so long a time that it was in my possession this treasure useless to me and my curses of the fatal interference which had snatched away the prize would be only aggravations of my disappointment and my sorrow. You found me in this state and know what followed. CHAPTER XXII. This narrative threw new light on the character of Welbeck. If accident had given him possession of this treasure it was easy to predict on what schemes of luxury and selfishness it would have been expended. The same dependence on the world's erroneous estimation, the same devotion to imposture and thoughtlessness of futurity would have constituted the picture of his future life as had distinguished the past. This money was another's. To retain it for his own use was criminal. Of this crime he appeared to be as insensible as ever. His own gratification was the supreme law of his actions. To be subjected to the necessity of honest labor was the heaviest of all evils and one from which he was willing to escape by the commission of suicide. The volume which he sought was mine. It was my duty to restore it to the rightful owner or, if the legal claimant could not be found, to employ it in the promotion of virtue and happiness. To give it to Welbeck was to consecrate it to the purpose of selfishness and misery. My right legally considered was as valid as his. But if I intended not to resign it to him, was it proper to disclose the truth and explain by whom the volume was perloined from the shelf? The first impulse was to hide this truth, but my understanding had been taught by recent occurrences, to question the justice and deny the usefulness of secrecy in any case. My principles were true. My motives were pure. Why should I scruple to avow my principles and vindicate my actions? Welbeck had ceased to be dreaded or revered. That all which was once created by his superiority of age, refinement of manners and dignity of garb had vanished. I was a boy in years, an indigent and uneducated rustic, but I was able to discern the illusions of power and riches, and abjured every claim to esteem that was not founded on integrity. There was no tribunal before which I should falter in asserting the truth, and no species of martyrdom which I would not cheerfully embrace in its cause. After some pause I said, Can't you conjecture in what way this volume has disappeared? No, he answered, with a sigh. Why, of all his volumes, this only should have vanished was an inexplicable enigma. Perhaps, said I, it is less important to know how it was removed than by whom it is now possessed. Unquestionably, and yet, unless that knowledge enables me to regain the possession, it will be useless. Useless than it will be, for the present possessor will never return it to you. Indeed, replied he, in a tone of dejection, your conjecture is most probable. Such a prize is of too much value to be given up. What I have said flows not from conjecture, but from knowledge. I know that it will never be restored to you. At these words Wellbeck looked at me with anxiety and doubt. You know that it will not. Have you any knowledge of the book? Can you tell me what has become of it? Yes, after our separation on the river I returned to this house. I found this volume and secured it. You rightly suspected its contents. The money was there. Wellbeck started as if he had trodden on a mine of gold. His first emotion was rapturous, but was immediately chastened by some degree of doubt. What has become of it? Have you got it? Is it entire? Have you it with you? It is unimpaired. I have got it, and shall hold it as a sacred trust for the rightful proprietor. The tone with which this declaration was accompanied shook the newborn confidence of Wellbeck. The rightful proprietor? True, but I am he. To me only it belongs, and to me you are doubtless willing to restore it. Mr. Wellbeck, it is not my desire to give you perplexity or anguish to sport with your passions. On the supposition of your death I deemed it no infraction of justice to take this manuscript. Accident unfolded its contents. I could not hesitate to choose my path. The natural and legal successor of Vincentio Lodi is his sister. To her, therefore, this property belongs, and to her only will I give it. Prisumptuous boy, and this is your sage decision. I tell you that I am the owner, and to me you shall render it. Who is this girl, childish and ignorant, unable to consult or act for herself on the most trivial occasion? Am I not, by the appointment of her dying brother, her protector and guardian? Her age produces a legal incapacity of property. Do you imagine that so obvious and expedient as that of procuring my legal appointment as her guardian was overlooked by me? If it were neglected, still my title to provide her subsistence and enjoyment is unquestionable. Did I not rescue her from poverty and prostitution and infamy? Have I not supplied all her wants with incessant solicitude? Whatever her condition required has been pleniously supplied. The dwelling and its furniture was hers, as far as a rigid jurisprudence would permit. To prescribe her expenses and govern her family was the province of her guardian. You have heard the tale of my anguish and despair. Whence did they flow but from the frustration of schemes projected for her benefit as they were executed with her money and by means which the authority of her guardian fully justified? Why have I encountered this contagious atmosphere and explored my way like a thief to this recess, but with a view to rescue her from poverty and restore her to her own? Your scruples are ridiculous and criminal. I treat them with less severity because your youth is raw and your conceptions crude. But if after this proof of the justice of my claim you hesitate to restore the money, I shall treat you as a robber who has plundered my cabinet and refused to refund his spoil. These reasonings were powerful and new. I was acquainted with the rites of guardianship. Wellbeck had, in some respects, acted as the friend of this lady. To vest himself with this office was the conduct which her youth and helplessness prescribed to her friend. His title to this money, as her guardian, could not be denied. But how was this statement compatible with former representations? No mention had then been made of guardianship. By thus acting he would have thwarted all his schemes for winning the esteem of mankind and fostering the belief which the world entertained of his opulence and independence. I was thrown by these thoughts into considerable perplexity. If his statement were true, his claim to this money was established. But I questioned its truth. To intimate my doubts of his veracity would be to provoke abhorrence and outrage. His last insinuation was peculiarly momentous. Suppose him the fraudulent possessor of this money. Shall I be justified in taking it away by violence under pretense of restoring it to the genuine proprietor, who for ought I know may be dead, or with whom at least I may never procure a meeting? But will not my behavior on this occasion be deemed illicit? I entered Wilbeck's habitation at midnight, proceeded to his closet, possessed myself of portable property, and retired unobserved. Is not guilt imputable to an action like this? Wilbeck waited with impatience for a conclusion to my pause. My perplexity and indecision did not abate, and my silence continued. At length he repeated his demands with new vehemence. I was compelled to answer. I told him in a few words that his reasonings had not convinced me of the equity of his claim, and that my determination was unaltered. He had not expected this inflexibility from one in my situation. The folly of opposition, when my feebleness and loneliness were contrasted with his activity and resources, appeared to him monstrous and glaring. But his contempt was converted into rage and fear when he reflected that this folly might finally defeat his hopes. He had probably determined to obtain the money, let the purchase cost what it would, but was willing to exhaust Pacific expedience before he should resort to force. He might likewise question whether the money was within his reach. I had told him that I had it, but whether it was now about me was somewhat dubious, yet, though he used no direct inquiries, he chose to proceed on the supposition of its being at hand. His angry tones were now changed into those of remonstrance and persuasion. Your present behavior, Mervyn, does not justify the expectation I had formed of you. You have been guilty of a base theft. To this you have added the deeper crime of ingratitude, but your infatuation and folly are, at least, as glaring as your guilt. Do you think I can credit your assertions that you keep this money for another when I recollect that six weeks have passed since you carried it off? Why have you not sought the owner and restored it to her? If your intentions had been honest, would you have suffered so long a time to elapse without doing this? It is plain that you designed to keep it for your own use. But whether this were your purpose or not, you have no longer power to restore it or retain it. You say that you came hither to die. If so, what is to be the fate of the money? In your present situation you cannot gain access to the lady. Some other must inherit this wealth. Next to Senora Lodi whose right can be put in competition with mine? But if you will not give it to me on my own account, let it be given in trust for her. Let me be the bearer of it to her own hands. I have already shown you that my claim to it as her guardian is legal and incontrovertible, but this claim I waive. I will merely be the executor of your will. I will bind myself to comply with your directions by any oath, however solemn and tremendous which you shall prescribe. As long as my own heart acquitted me, these imputations of dishonesty affected me but little. They excited no anger because they originated in ignorance and were rendered plausible to Welbeck by such facts as were known to him. It was needless to confute the charge by elaborate and circumstantial details. It was true that my recovery was, in the highest degree, improbable, and that my death would put an end to my power over this money, but had I not determined to secure its useful application in case of my death? This project was obstructed by the presence of Welbeck, but I hoped that his love of life would induce him to fly. He might rest this volume from me by violence, or he might wait till my death should give him peaceable possession. But these, though probable events, were not certain and would by no means justify the voluntary surrender. His strength, if employed for this end, could not be resisted, but then it would be a sacrifice, not a choice but necessity. These were easily given, but were surely not to be confided in. Welbeck's own tale, in which it could not be imagined that he had aggravated his defects, attested the frailty of his virtue. To put into his hands a sum like this, an expectation of his delivering it to another, when my death would cover the transaction with impenetrable secrecy, would be, indeed, a proof of that infatuation which he thought proper to impute to me. These thoughts influenced my resolution. But they were resolved in silence. To state them verbally was useless. They would not justify my conduct in his eyes. They would only exasperate dispute and impel him to those acts of violence which I was desirous of preventing. The sooner this controversy should end, and I, in any measure, be freed from the obstruction of his company the better. Mr. Welbeck, said I, my regard to your safety compels me to wish that this interview should terminate. At a different time I should not be unwilling to discuss this matter. Now it will be fruitless. My conscience points out to me too clearly the path I should pursue for me to mistake it. As long as I have power over this money I shall keep it for the use of the unfortunate lady whom I have seen in this house. I shall exert myself to find her, but, if that be impossible, I shall appropriate it in a way in which you shall have no participation. I will not repeat the contest that succeeded between my forbearance and his passions. I listened to the dictates of his rage and his avarice in silence. Astonishment at my inflexibility was blended with his anger. By turns he commented on the guilt and on the folly of my resolutions. Sometimes his emotions would mount into fury and he would approach me in a menacing attitude and lift his hand as if he would exterminate me at a blow. My languid eyes, my cheeks glowing and my temples throbbing with fever and my total passiveness, attracted his attention and arrested his stroke. Compassion would take the place of rage and the belief be revived that remonstrances and arguments would answer his purpose. CHAPTER XXIII This scene lasted, I know not, how long. Insensibly the passions and reasonings of Wellbeck assumed a new form. A grief mingled with perplexity overspread his countenance. He ceased to contend or to speak. His regards were withdrawn from me, on whom they had hitherto been fixed, and, wandering or vacant, testified a conflict of mind terrible beyond any that my young imagination had ever conceived. For a time he appeared to be unconscious of my presence. He moved to and fro with unequal steps and with gesticulations that possessed a horrible but indistinct significance. Occasionally he struggled for breath and his efforts were directed to remove some choking impediment. No test of my fortitude had hitherto occurred equal to that which it was now subjected. The suspicion which this deportment suggested was vague and formless. The tempest which I witnessed was the prelude of horror. These were throws which would terminate in the birth of some gigantic and sanguinary purpose. Did he meditate to offer a bloody sacrifice? Was his own death or was mine to attest the magnitude of his despair or the impetuosity of his vengeance? He had consented to live, but on one condition, that of regaining possession of this money. Should I be justified in driving him by my obstinate refusal to this fatal consummation of his crimes? Yet my fear of this catastrophe was groundless. Hitherto he had argued and persuaded, but this method was pursued because it was more eligible than the employment of force or than procrastination. No, these were tokens that pointed to me. Some unknown instigation was at work within him to tear away his remnant of humanity and fit him for the office of my murderer. I knew not how the accumulation of guilt could contribute to his gratification or security. His actions had been partially exhibited and vaguely seen. What extenuations or omissions had vitiated his former or recent narrative, how far his actual performances were congenial with the deed which was now to be perpetrated, I knew not. These thoughts lent new rapidity to my blood. I raised my head from the pillow and watched the deportment of this man with deeper attention. The paroxysm which controlled him at length in some degree subsided. He muttered, yes, it must come. My last humiliation must cover me. My last confession must be made. To die and leave behind me this train of enormous perils must not be. Oh, Clemenza, oh, Mervyn, ye have not merited that I should leave you a legacy of persecution and death. Your safety must be purchased at what price my malignant destiny will set upon it. The cord of the executioner, the note of everlasting infamy, is better than to leave you beset by the consequences of my guilt. It must not be. Saying this, Welbeck cast fearful glances at the windows and door. He examined every avenue and listened. Thrice he repeated this scrutiny. Having, as it seemed, ascertained that no one lurked within audience, he approached the bed. He put his mouth close to my face. He attempted to speak, but once more examined the apartment with suspicious glances. He drew closer and at length in a tone scarcely articulate and suffocated with emotion he spoke, excellent but fatally obstinate youth, know at least the cause of my importunity, know at least the depth of my infatuation and the enormity of my guilt. The bills, surrender them to me and save yourself from persecution and disgrace. Save the woman who you wish to benefit from the blackest imputations, from hazard to her life and her fame, from languishing in dungeons, from expiring on the gallows. The bills, oh, save me from the bitterness of death. Let the evils to which my miserable life has given birth terminate here and in myself. Surrender them to me, for here he stopped. His utterance was choked by terror. Rapid glances were again darted at the windows and doors. The silence was uninterrupted except by far-off sounds produced by some moving carriage. Once more he summoned resolution and spoke. Surrender them to me, for they are forged. Formerly I told you that a scheme of forgery had been conceived. Shame would not suffer me to add that my scheme was carried into execution. The bills were fashioned, but my fears contended against my necessities and forbade me to attempt to exchange them. The interview with Lodi saved me from the dangerous experiment. I enclosed them in that volume as the means of future opulence to be used when all other and less hazardous resources should fail. In the agonies of my remorse at the death of Watson they were forgotten. They afterwards recurred to recollection. My wishes pointed to the grave, but the stroke that should deliver me from life was suspended only till I could hasten hither, get possession of these papers and destroy them. When I thought upon the chances that should give them an owner, bring them into circulation, load the innocent with suspicion and lead them to trial and perhaps to death my sensations were fraught with agony. Earnestly as I panted for death it was necessarily deferred till I had gained possession of and destroyed these papers. What now remains? You have found them. Happily they have not been used. Give them, therefore, to me that I may crush at once the brood of mischiefs which they could not but generate. This disclosure was strange. It was accompanied with every token of sincerity. How had I tottered on the brink of destruction? If I had made use of this money in what a labyrinth of misery might I not have been involved? My innocence could never have been proved. An alliance with Welbett could not have failed to be inferred. My career would have found an ignominious close, or if my punishment had been transmuted into slavery and toil, would the testimony of my conscience have supported me? I shuttered at the view of those disasters from which I was rescued by the miraculous chance which led me to this house. Welbett's request was salutary to me and honourable to himself. I could not hesitate a moment in compliance. The notes were enclosed in paper and deposited in a fold of my clothes. I put my hand upon them. My motion and attention were arrested at the instant by a noise which arose in the street. Footsteps were heard upon the pavement before the door and voices as if busy in discourse. This incident was adapted to infuse the deepest alarm into myself and my companion. The motives of our trepidation were indeed different and were infinitely more powerful in my case than in his. It portended to me nothing less than the loss of my asylum and condemnation to a hospital. Welbett hurried to the door to listen to the conversation below. This interval was pregnant with thought. That impulse which led my reflections from Welbett to my own state passed away in a moment and suffered me to meditate anew upon the terms of that confession which had just been made. Horror at the fate which this interview had enabled me to shun was uppermost in my conceptions. I was eager to surrender these fatal bills. I held them for that purpose in my hand and was impatient for Welbett's return. He continued at the door, stooping with his face averted and eagerly attentive to the conversation in the street. All the circumstances of my present situation tended to arrest the progress of thought and chain my contemplations to one image, but even now there was room for foresight and deliberation. Welbett intended to destroy these bills. Perhaps he had not been sincere, or if his purpose had been honestly disclosed, this purpose might change when the bills were in his possession. His poverty and sanguinness of temper might prompt him to use them. That this conduct was evil and would only multiply his miseries could not be questioned. Why should I subject his frailty to this temptation? The destruction of these bills was the loudest and injunction of my duty was demanded by every sanction which bound me to promote the welfare of mankind. The means of destruction was easy. A lighted candle stood on a table at the distance of a few yards. Why should I hesitate a moment to annihilate so powerful a cause of error and guilt? A passing instant was sufficient. A momentary lingering might change the circumstances that surrounded me and frustrate my project. My langurs were suspended by the urgencies of this occasion. I started from my bed and glided to the table. Seizing the notes with my right hand I held them in the flame of the candle and then threw them blazing on the floor. The sudden illumination was perceived by Welbett. The cause of it appeared to suggest itself as soon. He turned and marking the paper where it lay leaped to the spot and extinguished the fire with his foot. His interposition was too late. Only enough of them remained to inform him of the nature of the sacrifice. Welbett now stood with limbs trembling, features aghast and eyes glaring upon me. For a time he was without speech. The storm was gathering in silence and at length burst upon me. In a tone menacing and loud he exclaimed, Wretch, what have you done? I have done justly. These notes were false. You desired to destroy them that they might not betray the innocent. I applauded your purpose and have saved you from the danger of temptation by destroying them myself. Maniac, miscreant, to be fooled by so gross an artifice. The notes were genuine. The tale of their forgery was false and meant only to arrest them from you. Execrable and perverse idiot, your deed has sealed my perdition. It has sealed your own. You shall pay with it with your blood. I will slay you by inches. I will stretch you as you have stretched me on the rack. During this speech all was frenzy and storm in the countenance and features of Welbett. Nothing less could be expected that the scene would terminate in some bloody catastrophe. I bitterly regretted the facility with which I had been deceived and the precipitation of my sacrifice. The act, however lamentable, could not be revoked. What remained but to encounter or endure its consequences with unshrinking firmness. The contest was too unequal. It is possible that the frenzy which actuated Welbett might have speedily subsided. It is more likely that his passions would have been satiated with nothing but my death. This event was precluded by loud knocks at the street door and calls by someone on the pavement without of, Who is within? Is anyone within? These noises gave a new direction to Welbett's thoughts. They're coming, said he. They will treat you as a sick man and a thief. I cannot desire you to suffer a worse evil than they will inflict. I leave you to your fate. So saying he rushed out of the room. Though confounded and stunned by this rapid succession of events, I was yet able to pursue measures for eluding these detested visitants. At first I extinguished the light, and then, observing that the parley in the street continued and grew louder, I sawed an asylum in the remotest corner of the house. In my former abode here I noticed that a trap-door opened in the ceiling of the third story to which you were conducted by a movable stair or ladder. I considered that this, probably, was an opening to a narrow and darksome nook formed by the angle of the roof. By ascending, drawing after me the ladder, and closing the door, I should escape the most vigilant search. And feebled as I was by my disease, my resolution rendered me strenuous. I gained the uppermost room, and, mounting the ladder, found myself at a sufficient distance from suspicion. The stair was hastily drawn up and the door closed. In a few minutes, however, my new retreat proved to be worse than any for which it was possible to change it. The air was musty, stagnant, and scorchingly hot. My breathing became difficult, and I saw that to remain here ten minutes would unavoidably produce suffocation. My terror of intruders had rendered me blind to the consequences of emuring myself in this cheerless recess. It was incumbent on me to extricate myself as speedily as possible. I attempted to lift the door. My first effort was successless. Every inspiration was quicker and more difficult than the former. As my terror so my strength and my exertions increased, finally my trembling hand lighted on the nail that was imperfectly driven into the wood, and which, by affording me a firmer hold, enabled me at length to raise it and to inhale the air from beneath. Relieved from my new peril by this situation, I bent an attentive ear through the opening, with a view to ascertain if the house had been entered, or if the outer door was still beset, but could hear nothing. Hence I was authorized to conclude that the people had departed and that I might resume my former station without hazard. Before I descended, however, I cast a curious eye over this recess. It was large enough to accommodate a human being. The means by which it was entered were easily concealed. Though narrow and low, it was long, and were it possible to contrive some inlet for air, one studious of concealment might rely on its protection with unbounded confidence. My scrutiny was imperfect by reason of the faint light which found its way through the opening, yet it was sufficient to set me a float on a sea of new wonders and subject my fortitude to a new test. Here Mervyn paused in his narrative. A minute passed in silence and seeming in decision. His perplexities gradually disappeared, and he continued. I have promised to relate the momentous incidents of my life, and as nothing would be more to test than my equivocation and mystery. Perhaps, however, I shall now incur some imputation of that kind. I would willingly escape the accusation, but confess that I am hopeless of escaping it. I might indeed have precluded your guesses and surmises by omitting to relate what befell me from the time of my leaving my chamber till I regained it. I might deceive you by asserting that nothing remarkable occurred, but this would be false, and every sacrifice is trivial which is made upon the altar of sincerity. Besides, the time may come when no inconvenience will arise from my newt descriptions of the objects which I now saw, and of the reasonings and inferences which they suggested to my understanding. At present it appears to be my duty to pass them over in silence, but it would be needless to conceal from you that the interval, though short, and the scrutiny, though hasty, furnished matter which my curiosity devoured with unspeakable eagerness and from which consequences may hereafter flow, deciding on my peace and my life. Nothing however occurred which could detain me long in this spot. I once more sought the lower story and threw myself on the bed which I had left. My mind was thronged with the images flowing from my late adventure. My fever had gradually increased, and my thoughts were deformed by inaccuracy and confusion. My heart did not sink when I reverted to my own condition. That I should quickly be disabled from moving was readily perceived. The foresight of my destiny was steadfast and clear. To linger for days in this comfortless solitude, to ask in vain, not for powerful restoratives or alleviating cordials, but for water to moisten my burning lips and abate the torments of thirst, ultimately to expire in torpor or frenzy, was the fate to which I looked forward, yet I was not terrified. I seemed to be sustained by a preternatural energy. I felt as if the opportunity of combating such evils was an enviable privilege and though none would witness my victorious magnanimity, yet to be conscious that praise was my due was all that my ambition required. These sentiments were doubtless tokens of delirium, the excruciating agonies which now seized upon my head and the cord which seemed to be drawn across my breast and which, as my fancy imagined, was tightened by some forcible hand with a view to strangle me, were incompatible with sober and coherent views. First was the evil which chiefly oppressed me. The means of relief was pointed out by nature and habit. I rose and determined to replenish my picture at the well. It was easier, however, to descend than to return. My limbs refused to bear me and I sat down upon the lower step of the staircase. Several hours had elapsed since my entrance into this dwelling, and it was now night. My imagination now suggested a new expedient. Medlicote was a generous and fearless spirit. To put myself under his protection, if I could walk as far as his lodgings, was the wisest proceeding which I could adopt. From this design, my incapacity to walk thus far and the consequences of being discovered in the street had hitherto deterred me. These impediments were now, in the confusion of my understanding, overlooked or despised, and I forthwith set out on this hopeless expedition. The doors communicating with the court and through the court with the street were fastened by inside bolts. These were easily withdrawn, and I issued forth with alacrity and confidence. My perturbed senses and the darkness hindered me from discerning the right way. I was conscious of this difficulty, but was not disheartened. I proceeded, as I have since discovered, in a direction different from the true, but hesitated not till my powers were exhausted and I sunk upon the ground. I closed my eyes and dismissed all fear and all foresight of futurity. In this situation I remained some hours, and should probably have expired on this spot had not I attracted your notice and been provided under this roof with all that medical skill that the tenderest humanity could suggest. In consequence of your care I have been restored to life and to health. Your conduct was not influenced by the prospect of pecuniary recompense, of service, or of gratitude. It is only in one way that I am able to heighten the gratification which must flow from reflection on your conduct by showing that the being whose life you have prolonged, though uneducated, ignorant, and poor, is not profligate and worthless, and will not dedicate that life which your bounty has given to mischievous or contemptible purposes. CHAPTER XXIV Here ended the narrative of Mervin. Surely its incidents were of no common kind. During this season of pestilence my opportunities of observation had been numerous and I had not suffered them to pass unimproved. The occurrences which fell within my own experience bore a general resemblance to those which had just been related, but they did not hinder the latter from striking on my mind with all the force of novelty. They served no end but as vouchers for the truth of the tale. Surely the youth had displayed inimitable and heroic qualities. His courage was the growth of benevolence and reason and not the child of insensibility in the nursling of habit. He had been qualified for the encounter of gigantic dangers by no laborious education. He stepped forth upon the stage, unfurnished by anticipation or experience, with the means of security against fraud, and yet by the aid of pure intentions had frustrated the wiles of an accomplished and veteran deceiver. I blessed the chance which placed the youth under my protection. When I reflected on that tissue of nice contingencies which led him to my door and enabled me to save from death a being of such rare endowments my heart overflowed with joy, not unmingled with regrets and trepidation. How many have been cut off by this disease in their career of virtue and their blossom time of genius? How many deeds of heroism and self-devotion are ravished from existence and consigned to hopeless oblivion? I had saved the life of this youth. This was not the limit of my duty or my power. Could I not render that life profitable to himself and to mankind? The gains of my profession were slender, but these gains were sufficient for his maintenance as well as my own. By residing with me, partaking my instructions and reading my books, he would in a few years be fitted for the practice of physics, a science whose truths are so conducive to the welfare of mankind and which comprehends the whole system of nature could not but gratify a mind so beneficent and strenuous as his. This scheme occurred to me as soon as the conclusion of his tale allowed me to think. I did not immediately mention it since the approbation of my wife, whose concurrence, however, I entertained no doubt, was previously to be obtained. Dismissing it for the present from my thoughts I reverted to the incidents of his tale. The lady whom Welbeck had betrayed and deserted was not unknown to me. I was but too well acquainted with her fate. If she had been single in calamity her tale would have been listened to with insupportable sympathy, but the frequency of the spectacle of distress seems to lessen the compassion with which it is reviewed. Now that those scenes are only remembered, my anguish is greater than when they were witnessed. Then every new day was only a repetition of the disasters of the foregoing. My sensibility, if not extinguished, was blunted, and I gazed upon the complicated ills of poverty and sickness with the degree of unconcern on which I should once have reflected with astonishment. The fate of Clemenza Lodi was not, perhaps, more signal than many which have occurred. It threw detestable light upon the character of Welbeck and showed him to be more inhuman than the tale of Mervin had evinced him to be. That man, indeed, was hitherto imperfectly seen. The time had not come which should fully unfold the enormity of his transgressions and the complexity of his frauds. There lived in a remote quarter of the city a woman, by name Villars, who passed for the widow of an English officer. Her manners and mode of living were specious. She had three daughters, well trained in the school of fashion, and elegant in person, manners, and dress. They had lately arrived from Europe and, for a time, received from their neighbors that respect to which their education and fortune appeared to lay claim. The fallacy of their pretensions slowly appeared. It began to be suspected that their subsistence was derived not from pension or patrimony, but from the wages of pollution. Their habitation was clandestinely frequented by men who were unfaithful to their secret. One of these was allied to me by ties which authorized me in watching his steps and detecting his errors with a view to his reformation. From him I obtained a knowledge of the genuine character of these women. A man like Welbeck, who was the slave of depraved appetites, could not fail of quickly being satiated with innocence and beauty. Some accident introduced him to the knowledge of this family, and the youngest daughter found him a proper subject on which to exercise her artifices. It was to the frequent demands made upon his purse by this woman that part of the embarrassments in which Mervin found himself involved are to be ascribed. To this circumstance must likewise be imputed his anxiety to transfer to some other the possession of the unhappy stranger. Why he concealed from Mervin his connection with Lucy Villars may be easily imagined. His silence with regard to Clemenza's asylum will not create surprise when it was told that she was placed with Mrs. Villars. On what conditions she was received under this roof cannot be so readily conjectured. It is obvious, however, to suppose that advantage was to be taken of her ignorance and weakness, and that they hoped in time to make her an associate in their profligate schemes. The appearance of pestilence, meanwhile, threw them into panic, and they hastened to remove from danger. Mrs. Villars appears to have been a woman of no ordinary views. She stooped to the vilest means of amassing money, but this money was employed to secure to herself and her daughters the benefits of independence. She purchased the house which she occupied in the city, and a mansion in the environs, well built and splendidly furnished. To the latter she and her family, of which the Italian girl was now a member, retired at the close of July. I have mentioned that the source of my intelligence was a kinsman who had been drawn from the paths of sobriety and rectitude by the impetuosity of youthful passions. He had power to confess and deplore, but none to repair his errors. One of these women held him by a spell which he struggled in vain to dissolve, and by which, in spite of resolutions and remorses, he was drawn to her feet and made to sacrifice to her pleasure his reputation and his fortune. My house was his customary abode during those intervals in which he was persuaded to pursue his profession. One time before the infection began its progress he had disappeared. No tidings were received of him till a messenger arrived in treating my assistance. I was conducted to the house of Mrs. Villers in which I found no one but my kinsman. Here it seems he had emurred himself from my inquiries and, on being seized by the reigning malady, had been deserted by the family who, where they departed, informed me by a messenger of his condition. Despondency combined with his disease to destroy him. Before he died he informed me fully of the character of his betrayers. The late arrival name and personal condition of Clemenza Lodi were related. Wellbeck was not named, but was described in terms which, combined with the narrative of Mervin, enabled me to recognize the paramour of Lucy Villers in the man whose crimes had been the principle theme of our discourse. Mervin's curiosity was greatly roused when I intimated my acquaintance with the fate of Clemenza. In answer to his eager interrogations I related what I knew. The tale plunged him into reverie. Recovering at length from his thoughtfulness he spoke. Her condition is perilous. The poverty of Wellbeck will drive him far from her abode. Her profligate protectors will entice her or abandon her to ruin. Cannot she be saved? I know not, answered I, by what means. The means are obvious. Let her remove to some other dwelling. Let her be apprised of the vices of those who surround her. Let her be entreated to fly. The will need only be inspired, the danger need only be shown, and she is safe, for she will remove beyond its reach. Thou art an adventurous youth. Who wilt thou find to undertake the office? Who will be persuaded to enter the house of a stranger, seek without an introduction the presence of this girl, tell her that the house she inhabits is a house of prostitution, prevail on her to believe the tale, and persuade her to accompany him? Who will open his house to the fugitive? Whom will you convince that her illicit intercourse with Wellbeck, of which the approbrious tokens cannot be concealed, has not fitted her for the company of prostitutes, and made her unworthy of protection? Who will adopt into their family a stranger whose conduct has incurred infamy, and whose present associates have, no doubt, made her worthy of the curse? True, these are difficulties which I did not foresee. Will she then perish? Shall not something be done to rescue her from infamy and guilt? It is neither in your power nor in mine to do anything. The lateness of the hour put an end to our conversation and summoned us to repose. I seized the first opportunity of imparting to my wife the scheme which had occurred relative to our guest, with which, as I expected, she readily concurred. In the morning I mentioned it to Mervyn. I dwelt upon the benefits that adhered to the medical profession, the power which it confers of lightening the distresses of our neighbours, the dignity which popular opinion annexes to it, the avenue which it opens to the acquisition of competence, the freedom from servile cares which attends it, and the means of intellectual gratification which it supplies us. As I spoke, his eyes sparkled with joy. Yes, said he with vehemence, I willingly embrace your offer. I accept this benefit because I know that if my pride should refuse it I should prove myself less worthy than you think, and give you pain instead of that pleasure which I am bound to confer. I would enter on the duties and studies of my new profession immediately, but somewhat is due to Mr. Hadwin and his daughters. I cannot vanquish my inquiitudes respecting them, but by returning to Malverton and ascertaining their state with my own eyes. You know in what circumstances I parted with Wallace and Mr. Hadwin. I am not sure that either of them ever reached home, or that they did not carry the infection along with them. I now find myself sufficiently strong to perform the journey, and purposed to have acquainted you at this interview with my intentions. An hour's delay is superfluous, and I hope you will consent to my setting out immediately. Real exercise and air for a week or fortnight will greatly contribute to my health. No objection could be made to this scheme. His narrative had excited no common affection in our bosoms for the Hadwins. His visit could not only inform us of their true state, but would dispel that anxiety which they could not but entertain respecting our guest. It was a topic of some surprise that neither Wallace nor Hadwin had returned to the city with a view to obtain some tidings of their friend. It was more easy to suppose them to have been detained by some misfortune than by insensibility or indolence. In a few minutes Mervyn bait us adieu and set out upon his journey, promising to acquaint us with the state of affairs as soon as possible after his arrival. We parted from him with reluctance and found no consolation but in the prospect of his speedy return. In his absence conversation naturally turned upon those topics which were suggested by the narrative and deportment of this youth. Different conclusions were formed by his two auditors. They had both contracted a deep interest in his welfare and an ardent curiosity as to those particulars which his unfinished story had left in obscurity. The true character and actual condition of Wellbeck were themes of much speculation. Whether he were dead or alive, near or distant from his ancient abode was a point on which neither Mervyn nor any of those with whom I had means of intercourse afforded any information. Whether he had shared the common fate and had been carried by the collectors of the dead from the highway or the hovel to the pits opened alike for the rich and the poor, the known and the unknown, whether he had escaped to a foreign shore or were destined to reappear upon this stage were questions involved in uncertainty. The disappearance of Watsonwood at a different time have excited much inquiry and suspicion, but as this had taken place on the eve of the epidemic his kindred and friends would acquiesce without scruple in the belief that he had been involved in the general calamity and was to be numbered among the earliest victims. Because of his profession usually resided in the street where the infection began and where its ravages had been most destructive and this circumstance would corroborate the conclusion of his friends. I did not perceive any immediate advantage to flow from imparting the knowledge I had lately gained to others. Shortly after Mervyn's departure to Malverton I was visited by Wortley. And from my guest I told him that, having recovered his health, he had left my house. He repeated his invectives against the villainy of Wellbeck, his suspicions of Mervyn and his wishes for another interview with the youth. Why had I suffered him to depart and wither had he gone? He has gone for a short time into the country. I expect him to return in less than a week when you will meet with him here as often as you please, for I expect him to take up his abode in this house. Such astonishment and disapprobation were expressed by my friend. I hinted that the lad had made disclosures to me which justified my confidence in his integrity. These proofs of his honesty were not of a nature to be indiscriminately unfolded. Mervyn had authorized me to communicate so much of his story to Wortley as would serve to vindicate him from the charge of being Wellbeck's co-partner and fraud. But this end would only be counteracted by an imperfect tale, and the full recital, though it might exculpate Mervyn, might produce inconveniences by which this advantage would be outweighed. Wortley, as might be naturally expected, was by no means satisfied with this statement. He suspected that Mervyn was a wily imposter, that he had been trained in the arts of fraud under an accomplished teacher, that the tale which he had told to me was a tissue of ingenious and plausible lies, that the mere assertions, however plausible and solemn of one like him, whose conduct had incurred such strong suspicions, were unworthy of the least credit. It cannot be denied, continued my friend, that he lived with Wellbeck at the time of his elopement, that they disappeared together, that they entered a boat at Pine Street Wharf at midnight, that this boat was discovered by the owner in the possession of a Fisher Minute Red Bank, who affirmed that he had found it stranded near his door, the day succeeding that on which they disappeared. All of this I can supply you with incontestable proof. If after this proof you can give credit to his story, I shall think you made a very perverse and credulous materials. The proof you mentioned, said I, will only enhance his credibility. All the facts which you have stated have been admitted by him. They constitute an essential portion of his narrative. What then is the inference? Are these not evidences of a compact between them? Has he not acknowledged this compact in confessing that he knew Wellbeck was my debtor, that he was apprised of his flight, but that what matchless effrontery he had promised secrecy and would by no means betray him? You say he means to return, but of that I doubt. You will never see his face more. He is too wise to thrust himself again into the noose, but I do not utterly despair of lighting upon Wellbeck. Old Thetford, Jameson and I, have sworn to hunt him through the world. I have strong hopes that he has not strayed far. Some intelligence has been lately received, which has enabled us to place our hounds upon his scent. He may double and skulk, but if he does not fall into our toils at last he will have the agility and cunning as well as the malignity of devils. The vengeful disposition thus betrayed by Wortley was not without excuse. The vigor of his days had been spent in acquiring a slender capital. His diligence and honesty had succeeded, and he had lately thought his situation such as to justify marriage with an excellent woman, to whom he had for years been betrothed, but from whom his poverty had hitherto compelled him to live separate. Scarcely had this alliance taken place, and the full career of nuptial enjoyments begun, when his ill fate exposed him to the frauds of Wellbeck, and brought him in one evil hour to the brink of insolvency. Jameson and Thetford, however, were rich, and I had not till now been informed that they had reasons for pursuing Wellbeck with peculiar animosity. The latter was the uncle of him whose fate had been related by Mervin, and was one of those who employed money, not as the medium of traffic, but as in itself a commodity. He had neither wines nor cloths to transmute into silver. He thought it a tedious process to exchange today one hundred dollars for a cask or bail, and to-morrow exchange the bail or cask for one hundred and ten dollars. It was better to give the hundred for a piece of paper which carried forthwith to the money changers he could procure a hundred twenty-three and three-fourths. In short, this man's coffers were supplied by the despair of honest men and the stratagem of rogues. I did not immediately suspect how this man's prudence and indefatigable attention to his own interest should allow him to become the dupe of Wellbeck. What, said I, is Thetford's claim upon Wellbeck? It is a claim, he replied, that if it ever be made good will doom Wellbeck to imprisonment and wholesome labour for life. How surely it is nothing more than debt! Have you not heard? But that is no wonder. Happily you are a stranger to mercantile anxieties and revolutions. Your fortune does not rest on a basis which an untoward blast may sweep away, or four strokes of a pen may demolish. That hoary dealer in suspicions was persuaded to put his hand to three notes for eight hundred dollars each. The eight was then dexterously prolonged to eighteen, and they were duly deposited in time and place, and the next day Wellbeck was credited for fifty-three hundred and seventy-three, which an hour after were told out to his messenger. Hard to say whether the old man's grief, shame, or rage be uppermost. He disdains all comfort but revenge, and that he will procure at any price. Jameson, who deals in the same stuff with Thetford, was outwitted in the same manner to the same amount and on the same day. This Wellbeck must have powers above the common rate of mortals. Grown gray and studying the follies and the stratagems of men, these veterans were overreached. No one pities them. For well if his artifices had been limited to such, and he had spared the honest and the poor, it is for his injuries to men who have earned their scanty subsistence without forfeiting their property that I hate him, and I shall exult to see him suffer all the rigors of the law. Here Wortley's engagements compelled him to take his leave.