“Have you the least idea or suspicion who these people may be?” asked he.
“None; but Mr. Dacre, who knows Mr. de Beaumirail, suspects, notwithstanding the ostentation of hatred assumed by these people, that he may really be implicated in the conspiracy — you men understand one another better than I can — but I don’t very clearly see how that is possible.”
“Nor I, either. I have been making inquiries about De Beaumirail, and I believe he is very ill indeed. I don’t say, from all I hear, that he would have very many scruples about taking a part in a disreputable enterprize, although I don’t quite know that he might not; but he is very ill. Gryston told me yesterday that he should not be surprised if he were dead, and buried, in a month.”
“Well, well, well, what of that?” said the young lady, impatiently.
“Not much; only this, that being so, I don’t see how, in any imaginable way, he could be of the slightest use to these conspirators, as you will give them that lofty title; a parcel of cowardly blackguards, London thieves, and swindlers, I suppose — the first letter written in the character of an Aristides, and the last in the language of an assassin.”
“That is not a reassuring view of the matter, Charlie; but something, you know, must be done.”
“In any way you please to employ me, you have only to command me,” said he.
“Thanks, Charlie; I know that,” said she, gravely.
“Well, what shall I do? Shall I go to the police office?” he asked.
“No, pray; that would be a very public step,” she said.
“We must take care to secure your house against the impertinences of these people, and I think the best way would be simply to tell the police; and I’ll do that, if you’ll allow me.”
“Well, no; I say I should not like yet, at least. But do you know Miniver’s Hotel?”
“Oh, yes; everyone knows that. Do you wish me to go there?”
Yes; you’ll go there, and see Mr. Dacre.”
“But I haven’t the pleasure of Mr. Dacre’s acquaintance,” he said, a little dryly, as if he did not desire it; “and I don’t believe he’s in a bit more danger than I am; and — you’ll think me a great brute; but it is as well to be frank — I really don’t very much care. I don’t think I ever saw a fellow in whom I felt less interest.”
“Well, you will, I am sure, for my — — “ and she paused.
“For your sake! Oh, that’s a different thing! for your sake, of course;” he laughed oddly. “You fancy an unseen circle of assassins round him, and I’m to break it for the purpose of warning him of his danger, and so diverting their fire upon me. But what of my unworthy life or person? For your sake, Challys — of course, I should go with pleasure.”
“But I didn’t say for my sake — you know I didn’t,” said she.
“You were going to say it, and you know you were,” said he. “Come, Challys, you used to love truth, and I wont believe, till you tell me so yourself, that change of place will ever change frank Challys Gray.”
“I did not say it, Charlie,” she answered; “but it is true I was on the point of saying it; and now I do say it — for my sake you will go there and see him, for he must be communicated with; and as he undertook the search after those people, for my sake, I do ask you, for my sake, to relieve my mind, by apprising him of that which, right or wrong, I cannot help believing may be a real danger.”
“Yes, Challys, that form of invocation is, for me, irresistible. I will go; although I could hardly have imposed a more disagreeable duty — not, of course, that I bear him any ill-will, for I don’t even know him, but that he is evidently such a — what can I say without giving offence? I was going to say such a prig, but I wont; but he is just the kind of conceited fellow who would meet one with those airs which I confess I can’t endure.”
“You mistake him very much, I assure you; when you know him a little you will like him extremely,” said Miss Laura Challys Gray, with that grave and gentle reserve, which, in jealous minds, excites suspicion.
“Well, what am I to tell him?”
“Tell him all I have related to you, that is, all that has happened since you and he were here to tea, the evening before last; he knows everything up to that.”
“Does he? Oh!”
“Yes. I’ll tell you some other time how that came about.” She blushed. “You need not smile — there is nothing whatever to smile at.”
“Nor to blush at?” said he.
“Nor to blush at,” she repeated, with a flash from her fine eyes— “neither to smile nor to blush at. It may strike you as very ridiculous, to me it is a serious anxiety.”
“Now, now, Challys, you must not quarrel with me so soon again.”
“Quarrel? No. You’ll understand it all perfectly, some day — that is, when there are five minutes to tell it in, but now there ain’t. Just tell him you come from me — tell him everything — learn all you can, and return here — Charlie, you are a very a kind fellow,” and she gave him her hand.
So away went Charles Mannering upon his mission.
CHAPTER XXVII.
HE RETURNS.
I DON’T care to analyze the feelings with which he undertook this service for handsome Mr. Dacre. If they were of an unfriendly kind, he was not fool enough to allow his churlish feelings to show themselves in his demeanour. With his usual frank bearing and cheery tones he inquired for Mr. Dacre at Miniver’s Hotel.
The hall-porter told him that he had orders to receive letters addressed to Mr. Alfred Dacre, if that was the name, but he did not know whether the gentleman was staying in the house. If he was, it must have been since this morning; and, on inquiry, it turned out that no gentleman of that name was at Miniver’s.
“Does he call for his letters, himself?”
“No one has called yet, sir.”
“Was it he himself who ordered his letters to be taken in here?”
The hall-porter here inquired of the waiter.
“No, sir, a gentleman known in the house ordered it.”
Into the coffee-room went Charles, and wrote this note —
“Miniver’s Hotel.
“MY DEAR MR. DACRE,
“Our friends at Guildford House requested me this morning to call, and, if possible, see you, in order to mention some circumstances which I find it impossible to detail in a note; but if you will be good enough to send me a line, to my rooms, at the Temple, No — , —— court, naming any hour this afternoon, after three, I shall be happy to meet you at Miniver’s.
“&c. &c.”
With the hall-porter he left his letter.
“Have you any idea where Mr. Dacre is at present staying in London?”
“No, sir.”
Well, he had honestly done his best, and could return to Laura Gray with a clear conscience. He would have a talk with her, and after luncheon return to town and see whether a note had arrived for him at his chambers, and if this failed, there was nothing for him to reproach himself with — nothing that Miss Gray could censure.
When he reached Guildford House, and walked up under the shadow of the elm boughs, Laura Gray was not among her flowerbeds, nor in the library window — her yesterday’s looking out from that window had not been lucky. But, from the drawingroom window, she was already looking out for him. On its pane he heard a tapping, as he approached; on looking up he saw her raising the sash.
He smiled and nodded, but she looked very grave, and beckoning him to quicken his pace, she leaned over the window-stone, and asked— “Any news?”
“No, nothing at present; but, by-and-bye, I shall hear.”
“Nothing bad?”
“Nothing; nothing whatever. I’ll run up and tell you everything — which, in fact, is just nothing.”
As he traversed the hall and mounted the stairs his heart was sore and angry.
“She did not even say, thank you, and she has known me from the time she was beginning to walk and talk, and her head is full of that d —— d fello
w, just because he is a little handsome — though, hang me, if I can see it. How capricious and cruel and worthless they are!”
“Well, here I am,” he said, cheerfully, as he entered the drawingroom, “about as wise as I went away,” and with this preface he told her what had passed. “And now I have told my pointless story. Suppose we come out, the day is so delightful, among your flowers, and sit in that rustic seat there under the shade, and I promise to answer all your questions, if you still have any to put?”
“Come, then; I’ll show you how I get; on at my gardening, and you shall admire the flowers; and shall I make a confession? I have grown such a fool, I have been shut up here all day; I have been afraid almost to look out of the window to-day, lest I should see one of those horrible gipsies. I am quite sure that girl brought the letter that came yesterday, and slipt it into Mersey’s pocket while she was pretending to tell her fortune, and then she said things that showed a knowledge of what those wicked people intended. I sometimes feel as if she was a witch, and sometimes as if she was a cheat; and I really am so nervous and ridiculous that you would pity me. But, under your protection, I think I may venture.”
So, without waiting to get her hat, down she ran, and led the way to the steps, and together they descended to the shorn grass, and the brilliant flowers.
With a childish eagerness and volatility she talked over the perfections of her flowers, her plans and operations, and, for a time, her whole soul was wrapped up in these themes.
“I’m a good listener, Laura, don’t you allow?”
“Yes, very good.”
“A man, as a rule, I think, is a better listener than a woman,” said he.
“Does not that depend on the subject a good deal?” said she.
“Well, I grant you, the fashions, the scandals — — “
“Don’t be impertinent.”
“I believe I was very near being impertinent, for I was thinking of speaking the truth.”
“Now, come, do be civil; it is a charming day, and here are we among the flowers, and I disposed to be perfectly polite, and what on earth happiness can there be in simply spoiling a tolerable half-hour by wanton incivility, I can’t understand.”
“But it is not wanton incivility — it has a purpose — I’m coming to my point.”
“0h! Then it is in cold blood?”
“Quite — and very harmless, as you’ll see. I have observed, that on a tolerably interesting subject a man will listen a great deal better than a woman, as a rule; but when a woman listens to such yarns, it is because, though the talk can’t interest her, the talker does.”
“Well, I’m interested by the talk at present; pray go on.”
“I’m quite sure it is not by the talker,” he said with a laugh, which didn’t quite conceal his pique; “but I was going to say, the other night, when I drank tea here, when that interesting young gentleman, Mr. Dacre, whose hands are expected here this evening, made up, I believe, in parcels, was entertaining you near the drawingroom window, although I could swear there was not a word of sense in all he said — I never saw a human being so engrossed by language as Miss Challys Gray was by his.”
“Oh, really! It is so good of you, I’m sure, to interest yourself in these things; but, somehow, I can’t feel at all obliged, as I suppose I ought, and if you fancy that I’m going to account to you for everything I say or do, you’ll find yourself very much mistaken.” She had blushed brilliantly and was vexed. “And if you wish that we should continue friends, you’ll not repeat the attempt,” Miss Challys continued, spiritedly.
“I do wish that we should continue friends, Challys — real friends, and that can only be on a footing of perfect frankness. You resent my assuming the airs of an adviser — I don’t dream of taking that character upon myself, except as you invite, or at least, permit it; but you are very young, and Mrs. Wardell is, in some respects, as easily duped as a child, and cannot, therefore, be relied upon to warn you of the kind of danger to which an heiress, so young and charming as you, is exposed, when left so much to herself.”
“You seem to fancy me a fool — you always talk in that tone,” complained Laura.
“If I ever talk in that tone, it is when I am vexed, and I myself foolish. It is because I honestly think you so clever, that I think it is a pity you should not be reminded of those facts and omissions, on which you are so capable of forming a sound judgment. Now, I only ask, and that
“Do you understand the signs of those clouds? I wonder what kind of weather we are going to have.”
“Not, weatherwise, Challys — no,” he answered, with a sigh, and a smile, and a little shake of the head, as they walked towards the steps; “not weatherwise — in any way.”
VOLUME II.
CHAPTER I.
A KNOCKING AT THE DOOR.
WHEN Charles Mannering reached his rooms at the Temple, it was nearly three o’clock. In his letter-box was a note in that pretty, but not unmanly hand which Miss Laura Gray had seen and admired also. “A. D.” in the corner of the envelope indicated the writer, who said –
“DEAR MR MANNERING, — Thank you so much, for your note, which has just reached me. I am at this moment so engaged — I fancy upon the subject of your message — that it is out of my power to name an hour for a meeting. Sometime to-day, however, I certainly shall call at your rooms, in the Temple, on the chance of finding you there.
Believe me, yours very truly,
“ALFRED DACRE.”
“If he thinks I’m going to wait here all day for him, he flatters himself,” said Charles, throwing the note on the table. “That sort of fellow gets so spoiled by women — they are such fools — that they think they may do as they please with us.”
And he laughed scornfully, and took his hat and umbrella and walked down the stairs again, and went off to his club.
It was all done in a spirit of defiance to this admirable Mr. Dacre, who assumed that Charles Mannering would wait for him, and was to learn that he was to wait on Charles Mannering.
He did not go again to his rooms till eight o’clock, although, if the truth were confessed, he was a little curious, and would have liked very well to hear what Dacre had to say, if only he could have managed to snub him a little at the same time.
Up the silent stairs, and into his lonely room, by his latchkey, went he. The papers he expected were on his table, some letters also, but no note in the hand with which he was now acquainted, with “A. D.” in the corner of the envelope.
So he had called, and tried to get in, and was, no doubt, surprised to discover that Charles Mannering had taken such a liberty as to go out, without having made provision for his reception.
Charles smiled faintly with a grim satisfaction as he pictured to himself the incredulous mortification of this conceited young gentleman, when he found himself obliged to turn about on the lobby, and go downstairs as he came up.
So he sat down in his easy-chair, with his candles, and not till an hour later was startled from the study of his papers, in which he was now deep, by a knocking at his door.
On opening it he saw, standing in the moonlight admitted by the lobby window, a gentleman in a loose coat and a felt hat, whom he had no difficulty in recognising as Mr. Dacre.
Oh, Mr. Mannering!” he said, raising his hat, and his handsome features smiling in the moonlight, looked as if they were fashioned of ivory.
“Pray come in. I hope you did not call while I was out? I should have waited here, but business compelled me to go out for a time,” said Charles Mannering, surprised into politeness and I fear a momentary disregard of truth.
“Thank you. No, I did not call — in fact I could not — until now. So fortunate to have met you.”
As he now stood, in the light of the room, face to face, Charles Mannering confessed to himself, with a twinge of chagrin, what a very handsome fellow Dacre unquestionably was.
“You were so good as to say you would give me some information when we met,” said Dacre afte
r they had talked a little. “The subject of course is — — “
“The anonymous correspondence with which Miss Gray has been so shamefully annoyed. It’s a mere burlesque, but it is not less an annoyance.” And he went on to recount all that Miss Gray had related, and particularly the threat of sending her Mr. Dacre’s hand, at which Charles laughed heartily, and the handsome Mr. Dacre laughed also, but not so comfortably, looking at his slender hand and wrist, which he moved under his eye, as if measuring in his mind whereabouts the line of amputation would be traced.
“Very laughable, but very curious; I’ll tell you how just now,” said he. “But I hope, so much Miss Gray does not mind it.”
“The whole thing worries and frightens her. I don’t think she believes all that; but she is nervous and uncomfortable.”
“It can’t be otherwise,” said Dacre; “and I’m afraid she suffers even more than she need.”
“I’m thinking of applying to the police about it,” said Charles Mannering.
Dacre shrugged —
“I can’t help it if you do; but the whole thing falls through-mind, I tell you that, and I know more about it than I did yesterday. It would be the greatest pity in life to let those miscreants off.”
“You seem to think rather seriously of it,” said Charles.
“I have reason,” said Dacre, with a faint smile. “You are advising Miss Gray in this miserable business?” he asked gently but suddenly.
“I can hardly say advising, because it seems to me that for the present she has made up her mind to do nothing. I undertook her little message to you, in Lord Ardenbroke’s absence — as a friend of yours he would have naturally undertaken it.”
Complete Works of Sheridan Le Fanu (Illustrated) Page 452