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by Ellen Wood


  Lord Level was not insensible to reason. He remained silent for a time, the angry expression gradually leaving his face. Mr. Ravensworth spoke:

  “I hope this injury to your lordship will not prove a grave one.”

  “It is a trifle,” was the answer; “nothing but a trifle. It is my knee that keeps me prostrate here more than anything else; and I have intermittent fever with it.”

  “Can I be of service to you? If so, command me.”

  “Much obliged. No, I do not want anyone to be of service to me, if you allude to this stabbing business. Some drunken fellow got in, and — —”

  “The servants say the doors were all left fastened, and were so found.”

  “The servants say so to conceal their carelessness,” cried Lord Level, as a contortion of pain crossed his face. “This knee gives me twinges at times like a red-hot iron.”

  “If anyone had broken in, especially any — —”

  “Mr. Ravensworth,” imperatively interrupted Lord Level, “it is my pleasure that this affair should not be investigated. I say that some man got in — a poacher, probably, who must have been the worse for drink — and he attacked me, not knowing what he was doing. To have a commotion made over it would only excite me in my present feverish condition. Therefore I shall put up with the injury, and shall be well all the sooner for doing so. You will be so obliging,” he added, some sarcasm in his tone, “as to do the same.”

  But now, Mr. Ravensworth did not show himself wise in that moment. He urged, in all good faith, a different course upon his lordship. The presumption angered and excited Lord Level. In no time, as it seemed, and without sufficient cause, the fever returned and mounted to the brain. His face grew crimson, his eye wild; his voice rose almost to a scream, and he flung his uninjured arm about the bed. Mr. Ravensworth, in self-reproach for what he had done, looked for the bell and rang it.

  “Drewitt, are the doors fastened?” raved his lordship in delirium, as the steward hastened in. “Do you hear me, Drewitt? Have you looked to the doors? You must have left one of them open! Where are the keys? The keys, I say, Drewitt! — What brings that man here?”

  “You had better go down, sir, out of his sight,” whispered the steward, for it was at Mr. Ravensworth the invalid was excitedly pointing. “I knew what it would be if he began talking. And he was so much better!”

  “His lordship excites himself for nothing,” was the deprecating answer.

  “Why, of course,” said Mr. Drewitt. “It is the nature of fever-patients to do so.”

  Mrs. Edwards came in with appliances to cool the heated head, and Mr. Ravensworth returned to the sitting-room below. Blanche was not there. Close upon that, Dr. Macferraty called. After he had been with his patient and dressed the wounds, he came bustling into the sitting-room. This loud young man had a nose that turned straight up, giving an impudent look to the face, and wide-open, round green eyes. But no doubt he had his good points, and was a skilful surgeon.

  “You are a friend of the family, I hear, sir,” he began. “I hope you intend to order an investigation into this extraordinary affair?”

  “I have no authority for doing so. And Lord Level does not wish it done.”

  “A fig for Lord Level! He does not know what he’s saying,” cried Dr. Macferraty. “There never was so monstrous a thing heard of as that a nobleman should be stabbed in his own bed and the assassin be let off scot-free! We need not look far for the culprit!”

  The last words, significantly spoken, jarred on Mr. Ravensworth’s ears. “Have you a suspicion?” he asked.

  “I can put two and two together, sir, and find they make four. The windows were fast; the doors were fast; there was no noise, no disturbance, no robbery: well, then, what deduction have we to fall back upon but that the villain, he or she, is an inmate of the house?”

  Mr. Ravensworth’s pulses beat a shade more quickly. “Do you suspect one of the servants?”

  “Yes, I do.”

  “But the servants are faithful and respectable. They are not suspected indoors, I assure you.”

  “Perhaps not; they are out-of-doors, though. The whole neighbourhood is in commotion over it; and how Drewitt and the old lady can let these two London servants be at large is the talk of the place.”

  “Oh, it is the London servants you suspect, then, or one of them?”

  “Look here,” said Dr. Macferraty, dropping his voice and bending forward in his chair till his face almost touched Mr. Ravensworth’s: “that the deed was done by an inmate of the house is certain. No one got in, or could have got in; it is nonsense to suggest it. The inmates consist of Lady Level and the servants only. If you take it from the servants, you must lay it upon her.”

  No answer.

  “Well,” went on the doctor, “it is impossible to suspect her. A delicate, refined girl, as she is, could not do so evil a thing. So we must needs look to the servants. Deborah would not do it; the stout old cook could not. She was in bed ill, besides, and slept through all the noise and confusion. The two other servants, Sanders and Timms, are strangers.”

  “I feel sure they no more did it than I,” impulsively spoke Mr. Ravensworth.

  “Then you would fall back upon Lady Level?”

  “No. No,” flashed Mr. Ravensworth. “The bare suggestion of the idea is an insult to her.”

  Dr. Macferraty drew himself back in his chair. “There’s a mystery in the affair, look at it which way you will, sir,” he cried raspingly. “My lord says he did not recognise the assassin; but, if he did not, why should he forbid investigation? Put it as you do, that the two servants are innocent — why, then, I fairly own I am puzzled. Another thing puzzles me: the knife was found in Lady Level’s chamber, yet she protests that she slept through it all — was only awakened by his lordship calling to her when it was over.”

  “It may have been flung in.”

  “No; it was carried in; for blood had dripped from it all along the floor.”

  “Has the weapon been recognised?”

  “Not that I am aware of. No one owns to knowing it. Anyway, it is an affair that ought to be, and that must be, inquired into officially,” concluded the doctor from the corridor, as he said good-night and went bustling out.

  Mr. Ravensworth, standing at the sitting-room door, saw him meet the steward, who must have overheard the words, and now advanced with cautious steps. Touching Mr. Ravensworth’s arm, he drew him within the shadow cast by a remote corner.

  “Sir,” he whispered, “my lady told Mrs. Edwards that you were a firm friend of hers; a sure friend?”

  “I trust I am, Mr. Drewitt.”

  “Then let it drop, sir; it is no common robber who has done this. Let it drop, for her sake and my lord’s.”

  Mr. Ravensworth felt painfully perplexed. Those few words, spoken by the faithful old steward, were more fraught with suspicion against Lady Level than anything he had yet heard.

  Returning to the sitting-room, pacing it to and fro in his perplexity for he knew not how long, he was looking at his watch to ascertain the time, when Lady Level came in. She had been in Lord Level’s sitting-room upstairs, she said, the one opposite his bed-chamber. He was somewhat calmer now. Mr. Ravensworth thought that he must now be going.

  “I have been of no assistance to you, Lady Level; I do not see that I can be of any,” he observed. “But should anything arise in which you think I can help you, send for me.”

  “What do you expect to arise?” she hastily inquired.

  “Nay, I expect nothing.”

  “Did Lord — —” Lady Level suddenly stopped and turned her head. Just within the room stood two policemen. She rose with a startled movement, and shrank close to Mr. Ravensworth, crying out, as for protection. “Arnold! Arnold!”

  “Do not agitate yourself,” he whispered. “What is it that you want?” he demanded, moving towards the men.

  “We have come about this attack on Lord Level, sir,” replied one of them.

  “Who sen
t for you?”

  “Don’t know anything about that, sir. Our superior ordered us here, and is coming on himself. We must examine the fastenings of this window, sir, by the lady’s leave.”

  They passed up the room, and Lady Level left it, followed by Mr. Ravensworth. Outside stood Deborah, aghast.

  “They have been in the kitchen this ten minutes, my lady,” she whispered, “asking questions of us all — Mr. Sanders and Mrs. Timms and me and cook, all separate. And now they are going round the house to search it, and see to the fastenings.”

  The men came out again and moved away, Deborah following slowly in their wake: she appeared to regard them with somewhat of the curiosity we give to a wild animal: but Mr. Ravensworth recalled her. Lady Level entered the room again and sat down by the fire. Mr. Ravensworth again observed that he must be going: he had barely time to walk to the station and catch the train.

  “Arnold, if you go, and leave me with these men in the house, I will never forgive it!” she passionately uttered.

  He looked at her in surprise. “I thought you wished for the presence of the police. You said you should regard them as a protection.”

  “Did you send for them?” she breathlessly exclaimed.

  “Certainly not.”

  She sank into a reverie — a deep, unpleasant reverie that compressed her lips and contracted her brow. Suddenly she lifted her head.

  “He is my husband, after all, Arnold.”

  “To be sure he is.”

  “And therefore — and therefore — there had better be no investigation.”

  “Why?” asked Mr. Ravensworth, scarcely above his breath.

  “Because he does not wish it,” she answered, bending her face downwards. “He forbade me to call in aid, or to suffer it to be called in; and, as I say, he is my husband. Will you stop those men in their search? will you send them away?”

  “I do not think I have power to do so.”

  “You can forbid them in Lord Level’s name. I give you full authority: as he would do, were he capable of acting. Arnold, I will have them out of the house. I will.”

  “What is it that you fear from them?”

  “I fear — I cannot tell you what I fear. They might question me.”

  “And if they did? — you can only repeat to them what you told me.”

  “No, it must not be,” she shivered. “I — I — dare not let it be.”

  Mr. Ravensworth paused. “Blanche,” he said, in low tones, “have you told me all?”

  “Perhaps not,” she slowly answered.

  “‘Perhaps!’”

  “There!” she exclaimed, springing up in wild excitement. “I hear those men upstairs, and you stand here idly talking! Order them away in Lord Level’s name.”

  Desperately perplexed, Mr. Ravensworth flew to the stairs. The steward, pale and agitated, met him half-way up. “It must not be looked into by the police,” he whispered. “Sir, it must not. Will you speak to them? you may have more weight with them than I. Say you are a friend of my lord’s. I strongly suspect this is the work of that meddling Macferraty.”

  Arnold Ravensworth moved forward as one in a dream, an under-current of thought asking what all this mystery meant. The steward followed. They found the men in one of the first rooms: not engaged in the examination of its fastenings or its closets (and the whole house abounded in closets and cupboards), but with their heads together, talking in whispers.

  In answer to Mr. Ravensworth’s peremptory demand, made in Lord Level’s name, that the search should cease and the house be freed of their presence, they civilly replied that they must not leave, but would willingly retire to the kitchen and there await their superior officer, who was on his road to the house: and they went down accordingly. Mr. Ravensworth returned to the sitting-room to acquaint Lady Level with the fact, but found she had disappeared. In a moment she came in, scared, her hands lifted in dismay, her breath coming in gasps.

  “Give me air!” she cried, rushing to the window and motioning to have it opened. “I shall faint; I shall die.”

  “What ever is the matter?” questioned Mr. Ravensworth, as he succeeded in undoing the bolt of the window, and throwing up its middle compartment. At that moment a loud ring came to the outer gate. It increased her terror, and she broke into a flood of tears.

  “My dear young lady, let me be your friend,” he said in his grave concern. “Tell me the whole truth. I know you have not done so yet. Let it be what it will, I promise to — if possible — shield you from harm.”

  “Those men are saying in the kitchen that it was I who attacked Lord Level; I overheard them,” she shuddered, the words coming from her brokenly in her agitation.

  “Make a friend of me; you shall never have a truer,” he continued, for really he knew not what else to urge, and he could not work in the dark. “Tell me all from beginning to end.”

  But she only shivered in silence.

  “Blanche! — did — you — do — it?”

  “No,” she answered, with a low burst of heartrending sobs. “But I saw it done.”

  VOLUME II.

  CHAPTER I.

  SUSPICION.

  The church-clock of that small country place, Upper Marshdale, was chiming half-past nine on a dark night, as the local inspector turned out of the police-station and made his way with a fleet step across a piece of waste land and some solitary fields beyond it. His name was Poole, and he was hastening to Marshdale House, as Lord Level’s place was called. A mysterious occurrence had taken place there the night before: Lord Level, previously an invalid, had been stabbed in his bed.

  The officer rang a loud peal at the outer gate, and a policeman, who had been already sent on, came from the house to answer the summons. He waited when they were both within the gate, knowing that he should be questioned. His superior walked half-way up the avenue, and placed his back against a tree.

  “What have you learnt, Jekyl? Any clue to the assassin?”

  The policeman dropped his voice to a whisper, as though afraid the very trees might hear. “Speak up,” sharply interrupted the inspector. “The air carries no tales.”

  “The case seems as clear, sir, as any we ever came across; a clear case against Lady Level.”

  It takes a great deal to astonish a police inspector, but this announcement certainly astonished Mr. Inspector Poole. “Against Lady Level?” he repeated.

  “She’s the guilty one, sir, I fear. But who’d think it, to see her? Only about twenty or so, and with beauty enough to knock you over, and blue eyes that look you down in their pride. She’s dressed out like those high-born ladies do dress, in light silk that glistens as she walks, her neck and arms uncovered. There’s a gentleman with her now, some friend of the family, and he won’t let us go on with our investigation. He came and stopped it, and said we were acting against Lord Level’s wishes.”

  “But why do you suspect Lady Level?” inquired the inspector.

  “Listen, sir. It appears certain that no one got in; the doors and windows were left safe, and were found so; hadn’t been disturbed at all; there has been no robbery, or anything of that sort, and no suspicion attaches to any of the servants so far as I see. Then there are the facts themselves. The servants were aroused in the middle of the night by Lord Level’s bell ringing violently, and my lady screaming. When they got to his room, there he lay, fainted dead off, stabbed in two places, and she pretty near fainting too, and dropped down in a chair in her silk dressing-gown — —”

  “I am acquainted with the facts so far, Jekyl.”

  “Well, sir. Not a sign or symptom was there of anybody else being about, or of anybody’s having been about. Her ladyship’s version is, that she was woke up by Lord Level calling to her, and she found him stabbed and bleeding. That is all she will confess to.”

  “And he?”

  “He says nothing, I hear, except that he will not have the police called in. He did not even want to have a doctor. But his lordship is off his head with
fever, and may not know what he is saying.”

  “How does Lady Level account for the knife being found in her room?”

  “There it is,” cried the man. “Whenever these people, let them be high or low, do an evil deed, they are certain to commit some act of folly which allows suspicion to creep in. They over-do it, or they under-do it. If anyone else had done it and carried the weapon to her ladyship’s room, she must have seen who it was, and would surely have denounced him. And why did she put it there of all places? There’s a fatality on them, I say, sir, and they can’t escape it.”

  “But her motive for attacking him?”

  “They were on bad terms, it seems. The servants heard them quarrelling violently earlier in the evening.”

  “Did the servants tell you this, to confirm their suspicions against her?”

  “They don’t suspect her, sir,” replied Jekyl. “I and Cliff have drawn our own deductions by what they have said, and by personal observation.”

  The inspector mused. He was a kindly-disposed man, possessed his share of common sense, and did not feel so sure about the matter as his subordinate. “It appears scarcely credible that a young woman like Lady Level, hardly six months married, should attempt her husband’s life, Jekyl. Where are these servants?”

  “In the kitchen, sir. This way. There’s no establishment to speak of. When my lord was detained here through damage to his knee, my lady followed him down — against his will, it’s whispered — and brought only her maid and a man-servant.”

  “I think you have been listening to a good deal of gossip,” remarked Inspector Poole, as he moved on to the house.

  Meanwhile Lady Level, in deep agitation, stood at the window which she had had thrown up for air, while she made the confession to Mr. Ravensworth that she had been a witness to the attack on her husband. This she had denied before; and it might never have been wrung from her, but that she overheard the two policemen, already in the house, whispering their suspicions against her.

 

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