» »»»» > THE RED LETTER SERIES jk tffiBfe: 1 M BY t&mS HUGH CO Y , Mm i ift mm U” •V‘. v < ti - - •••■'< r- \&wm No. 36. i?->S *> 111111 25 c. October 13, 1894. Issued Daily. Annual Subscription. $75.00 Entered at New^York Post Office as second-class matter. International 38ook Company t 1 ¥ m ■ ■ DARK DAYS BT HUGH COjNTW^Y, AUTHOR OP ‘"CALLED BACK.” NEW YORK INTERNATIONAL BOOK COMPANTt 'n 3IO-318 SIXTH AVENUE DARK DAYS. CHAPTER L ▲ PKAYEB AND A YOW. W HEN this story of my life, or of such portions of my life as present any out-of-tlie-common features, is read, it will be found that I have committed errors of judgment — that I have sinned not only socially, but also against the law of the land. In excuse I can plead but two things — the strength of love ; the weakness of human nature. If these carry no weight with you, throw the book aside. You are too good for me ; I am too human for you. We cannot be friends. Read no further. I need say nothing about my childhood ; nothing about my boyhood. Let me hurry on to early manhood ; to that time when the wonderful dreams of youth begin to leave one; when the impulse which can drive sober rea- son aside must be, indeed, a strong one ; when one has learned to count the cost of every rash step ; when the transient and fitful flames of the boy have settled down to a steady, glowing fire which will bum until only ashes are left j when the strength, the nerve, the in tel- 4 DARK DATS. lect, is or should he at its height; when, in short, one's years number thirty. Yet what was I then? A soured, morose, disappointed man; without ambition, without care for the morrow; without a goal or object in life. Breathing, eating, drinking, as by instinct. Rising in the morning, and wishing the day were over ; lying down at night, and caring little whether the listless eyes I closed might open again or not. And why ? All ! to know why you must sit with me as I sit lonely over my glowing lire one winter night. You must read my thoughts ; the pictures of my past must rise before you as they rise before me. My sorrow, my hate, my love must be yours. You must, indeed, be my very self. You may begin this retrospect with triumph. You may go back to the day whenf after having passed my examination with high honors, I, Basil North, was duly entitled to write M.D. after my name, and to set to work to win fame and fortune by doing my best toward re- lieving the sufferings of my fellow-creatures. You may say as I said then, as I say now, “ A noble career ; a life full of interest and usefulness.” You may see me full of hope and courage, and ready for any amount of hard work ; settling down in a large provincial town, resolved to beat out a practice for my- self. You may see how, after the usual initiatory strug- gles, my footing gradually grew firmer ; how my name became familiar; how, at last, I seemed to be in a fair way of winning success. You may see how for a while a dream brightened my life; liow that dream faded, and left gloom in its placu You may see the woman I loved. DARK DAYS. 5 No, I am wrong. Her you cannot see. Only I my- self can see Philippa as I saw her then- — as I see her now. Heavens! how fair she was! How glorious her rich dark beauty! How different from the pink- white and yellow dolls whom I have seen exalted as the types of perfection! Warm Southern blood ran through her veins and tinged her clear brown cheek with color. Her mother was an Englishwoman; but it was Spain that gave her daughter that exquisite grace, those wondrous dark eyes and long curled lashes, that mass of soft black hair, that passionate impulsive nature, and, perhaps, that queen-like carriage and dignity. The English mother may have given the girl many good gifts, but her beauty came from the father, whom she had never known ; the Andalusian, who died while she was but a child in arms. Yet, in spite of her foreign grace, Philippa was Eng- lish. Her Spanish origin was to her but a tradition. Her foot had never touched her father’s native land. Its language was strange to her. She was born in Eng- land, and her father, the nature of whose occupation I have not been able to ascertain, seems to have spent most of his time in this country. When did I learn to love her? Ask me rather, When did we first meet? Even then, as my eyes fell upon the girl, I knew, as by revelation, that for me life and her love meant one and the same thing. Till that moment there was no woman in the world the sight of whom would have quickened my pulse by a beat. I had read and ' heard of such love as this. I had laughed at it. There seemed no room for such an engrossing passion in my busy life. Yet all at once I loved as man has never loved before ; and as I sit to-night and gaze into the fire I tell myself that the objectless life I am leading is the 6 DARK DAYS. only one possible for the man who loved but failed to win Philippa. Our first meeting was brought about in a most prosaic way. Her mother, who suffered from a chronic disease, consulted me professionally. My visits, at first those of a doctor, soon became those of a friend, and I was free to woo the girl to the best of my ability. Philippa and her mother lived in a small house on the outskirts of the town. They were not rich people, but had enough to keep the pinch of poverty from their lives. The mother was a sweet, quiet, lady-like woman, who bore her sufferings with resignation. Her health was, indeed, wretched. The only thing which seemed likely to benefit her was continual change of air and scene. After attending her for about six months, I was in con- science bound to indorse the opinion of her former medi- cal advisers, and tell her it would be well for her to try another change. My heart was heavy as I gave this advice. H* adopted, it meant that Philippa and I must part. But why, during those six months, had I not, passion- ately in love as I was, won the girl’s heart ? Why did she not leave me as my affianced bride ? Why did I let her leave me at all? The answer is short. She loved me not. Hot that she had ever told me so in words. I had never asked her in words for her love. But she must have known — she must have known ! When I was with her, every look, every action of mine must have told her the truth. Women are not fools or blind. A man who, loving as I did, can conceal the true state of his feelings must be more than mortal. I had not spoken; I dared not speak. Better uneer* DARK DATS. 7 tainty with hope, than certainty with despair. The day on which Philippa refnsed my love would be as the day of death to me. Besides, what had I to offer her ? Although succeed- ing fairly well for a beginner, at present I could only ask the woman I made my wife to share comparative poverty. And Philippa! Ah! I would have wrapped Philippa in luxury ! All that wealth could buy ought to be hers. Had yon seen her in the glory of her fresh young beauty, you would have smiled at the presump- tion of the man who could expect such a being to become the wife of a hard-working and as yet ill-paid doctor. You would have felt that she should have had the world at her feet. . Had I thought that she loved me, I might perhaps have dared to hope she would even then have been happy as my wife. But she did not love me. Moreover, she was ambitions. . . , She knew— small blame to her— how beautiful she was. Do I wrong her when I say that in those days she looked for the gifts of rank and riches from the man who loved her? She knew that she was a queen among women, and expected a queen’s dues. (Sweetest, are my words cruel 1 They are the crudest I have spoken, or shall speak, against you. Forgive them !) We were friends— great friends. Such friendship is love’s bane. It buoys false hopes ; it lulls to security ; it leads astray; it is a stafiE which breaks suddenly, and wounds the hand which leans upon it. So little it seems to need to make friendship grow into love; and yet how seldom that little is added ! The love which begins with hate or dislike is often luckier than that which begin* with friendship. Lovers cannot be friends. ° DARK DATS. Philippa and her mother left my neighborhood, then went to London for a while. I heard from them occa- sionally, and once or twice, when in town, called upon them. Time went by. I worked hard at my profession the while, striving, by sheer toil, to drive away the dream from my life. Alas ! I strove in vain. To love Philippa was to love her forever ! One morning a letter came from her. I tore it open. The news it contained was grievous. Her mother had died suddenly. Philippa was alone in the world. So far as I knew, she had not a relation left ; and I believed, perhaps hoped, that, save myself, she had no friend. . I ^eeded no time for consideration. That afternoon I was in London. If I could not comfort her in her great sorrow, I could at least sympathize with her, could un- dertake the management of the many business details which are attendant upon a death. Poor Philippa! She was glad to see me. Through her tears she flashed me a look of gratitude. I did all I could for her, and stayed in town until the funeral was over. Then I was obliged to think of going home. What was to become of the girl ? Kith or kin she had none, nor did she mention the name of any friend who would be willing to receive her. As I suspected, she was absolutely alone in the world. As soon as my back was turned she would have no one on whom she" could count for sympathy or help. It must have been her utter loneliness which urged me, in spite of my better judgment, in spite of the grief which still oppressed her, to throw myself at her feet and declare the desire of my heart. My words I cannot recall, but I think — I know I pleaded eloquently. Such passion as mine gives power and intensity to the most DARK DAYS. 9 nnpractised speaker. Yet long before my appeal was ended I knew that I pleaded in vain. Her eyes, ber manner, told me she loved me not. Then, remembering her present helpless condition, I checked myself. I begged her to forget the words I had spoken ; not to answer them now; to let me say them again in some months 5 time. Let me still be her friend, and render her such service as I could. She shook her head ; she held out her hand. The first action meant the refusal of my love ; the second, the ac- ceptance of my friendship. I schooled myself to calm- ness, and we discussed her plans for the future. She was lodging in a house in a quiet, respectable street near Kegent’s Park. She expressed her intention of staying on here for a while. « But alone l” I exclaimed. “ Why not ? What have I to fear ? Still, I am open to reason, if you can suggest another plan.” I could suggest no other. Philippa was past twenty- one and would at once succeed to whatever money had been her mother’s. This was enough to live upon. She had no friends, and must live somewhere. Why should she not stay on at her present lodgings ? Nevertheless, I trembled as I thought of this beautiful girl all alone in London. Why could she not love me ? Why could she not be my wife ? It needed all my self-restraint to keep me from breaking afresh into passionate appeals. As she would not give me the right to dispose of her future, I could no nothing more. I bade her a sad fare- well, then went back to my home to conquer my un- happy love, or to suffer from its fresh inroads. Conquer it! Such love as mine is never conquered. It is a man’s life. Philippa was never absent from my 10 BARK BAYS. thoughts. Let my frame of mind be gay or grave, Philippa was always present. Now and then she w^rote to me, but her letters told me little as to her mode of life; they were short friendly epistles, and gave me little hope. Yet I was not quite hopeless. I felt that I had been too hasty in asking her for her love so soon after her mother’s death. Let her recover from the shock, then I will try again. Three months was the time which in my own mind I resolved should elapse before I again ap- proached her with words of love. Three months ! How wearily they dragged themselves away ! Toward the end of my self-imposed term of probation I fancied that a brighter, gayer tone manifested itself in Philippa’s letters. Fool that I was ! I augured well from this. Telling myself that such love as mine must win in the end, I went to London, and once more saw Philippa*- She received me kindly. Although her garb was still that of deep mourning, never, I thought, had she looked more beautiful. Not long after our first greeting did I wait before I began to plead again. She stopped me at the outset. “Hush,” she said; “I have forgotten your former words ; let us still be friends.” “ Never 1” I cried passionately. “ Philippa, answer me once for all, tell me you can love me !” She looked at me compassionately. “ How can I best answer you?” she said, musingly. “The sharpest remedy is perhaps the kindest. Basil, will you under- stand me when I say it is too late ?” “ Too late ! What can you mean ? Has another — ” The words died on my lips as Philippa, drawing a DARK DATS. 11 ring from the fourth finger of her left hand, showed me that it concealed a plain gold circlet. Her eyes met mine imploringly. « I should have told you before,” she said softly, and bending her proud head; “kit there were reasons — even now I am pledged to tell no one. Basil, I only show you this, because I know you will take no other answer.” I rose without a word. The room seemed whirling around me. The only thing which was clear to my sight was that cursed gold band on the fair white hand * that symbol of possession by another ! In that moment hope and all the sweetness of life seemed swept away from me. Something in my face must have told her how her news affected me. She came to me and laid her hand upon my arm. I trembled like a leaf beneath her touch. She looked beseechingly into my face. “Oh, not like that!” she cried. “Basil,. I am not worth it. I should not have made you happy. You will forget— you will find another. If I have wronged or misled you, say you forgive me. Let me hear you, my true friend, wish me happiness.” I strove to force my dry lips to frame some conven- tional phrase. In vain ! words would not come. I sank into a chair and covered my face with my hands. The door opened suddenly, and a man entered. He may have been about forty years of age. He was tall and remarkably handsome. He was dressed with scru- pulous care ; but there was something written on his face which told me it was not the face of a good man. As I rose from my chair he glanced from me to Philippa with an air of suspicious inquiry. “Doctor North, an old friend of my mother’s and 12 DAKK DAT*S. mine,” she said with composure. “Mr. Farmer,” she added ; and a rosy blush crept round her neck as she indicated the new-comer by the name which I felt sure was now also her own. I bowed mechanically. I made a few disjointed remarks about the weather and kindred topics; then I shook hands with Philippa and left the house, the most miserable man in England. Philippa married, and married secretly ! How could her pride have stooped to a clandestine union ? What manner of man was he who had won her ? Heavens l lie must be hard to please if he cared not to show his conquest to the light of day. Cur ! sneak ! coward f villain ! Stay ; he may have his own reasons for con- cealment — reasons known to Philippa and approved of by her. Not a word against her. She is still my queen ; the one woman in the world to me. What she has done is right ! I passed a sleepless night. In the morning I wrote to Philippa. I wished her all happiness — I could command my pen, if not my tongue. I said no word about the secrecy of the wedding, or the evils so often consequent to such concealment. But, with a foreboding of evil to come, I begged her to remember that we were friends ; that, although I could see her no more, whenever she wanted a friend’s aid, a word would bring me to her side. I used no word of blame. I risked no expression of love or regret. No thought of my grief should jar upon the happiness which she doubtless expected to find. Farewell the one dream of my life! Farewell Philippa ! Such a passion as mine may, in these matter-of-fact, iMiromantic days ; seem an anachronism. No matter, dark days. 13 whether to sympathy or ridicule, I am but laying bar® my true thoughts and feelings. I would not return to my horpe at once. I shrank from going back to my lonely hearth and beginning to eat my heart out. I had made arrangements to stay m town for some days; so I stayed, trying by a course of what is termed gayety to drive remembrance away. Futile effort ! How many have tried the same reputed remedy without success ! Four days after my interview with Philippa, I was walking with a friend who knew every one in town. As we passed the door of one of the most exclusive of the clubs, I saw, standing on the steps talking to other men, the man whom I knew was Philippa’s husband. His face was turned from me, so I was able to direct my friend’s attention to him. “Who is that man?” I asked. “ That man with the gardenia in his coat is Sir Mer- vyn Ferrand.” “Who is he? What is he? What kind of a man is he?” “A baronet. Not very rich. Just about the usual kind of man you see on those steps. Very popular with the ladies, they tell me.” “ Is lie married ?” “ Heaven knows ! I don’t. I never heard of a Lady Ferrand, although there must be several who are morally entitled to use the designation.” And this was her husband— Philippa’s husband ! I elinched my teeth. Why had he married under a fals«? name? Or if she knew that name by which she inti' id need him to me was false, why was it assumed? Why had the marriage been clandestine? Not only Sir 14 DARK DATS, Mervyn Ferrand, bnt the noblest in the land should be proud of winning Philippa! The more I thought of the matter, the more wretched I grew. The dread that she had been in some way deceived almost drove me mad. The thought of my proud, beautiful queen some day finding herself humbled to the dust by a scoundrel’s deceit was anguish. What could I do ? My first impulse was to demand an explanation, then and there, from Sir Mervyn Ferrand. Yet I had no right or authority so to do. What was I to Philippa save an unsuccessful suitor? Moreover, I felt that she had revealed her secret to me in confidence. If there were good reasons for the concealment, I might do her irretrievable harm by letting this man know that I was aware of his true position in society. No, I could not call him to account. But I must do something, or in time to come my grief may be rendered doubly deep by self-reproach. The next day I called upon Philippa. She would at least tell me if the name under which the man married her was the true or the false one. Alas ! I found she had left her home the day before — left it to return no more ! The landlady had no idea whither she was gone, but believed it was her intention to leave England. After this I threw prudence to the winds. With some trouble I found Sir Mervyn Ferrand’s town address. The next day I called on him. He also, I was informed, had just left England. His destination was also unknown. I turned away moodily. All chance of doing good was at an end. Let the marriage be true or false, Philippa had departed, accompanied by the man who, for purposes of his own, passed under the name of Far- mer, but who was really Sir Mervyn Ferrand. DABS DAYS. 15 I went back to my home, and amid the wreck of my life’s happiness* murmured a prayer and registered an oath. I prayed that honor and happiness might be the lot of her I loved; I swore that were she wronged I would with my own hand take vengeance on the m^n who wronged her. For myself I prayed nothing— not even forgetfulness, I loved Philippa : I had lost her forever ! The past, the present, the fuuv* were all summed up in these words 1 16 DABK DAYS. CHAPTER n. A villain’s blow. T HEY tell me there are natures stern enough to he able to crush love out of their lives. Ah! not sugIi love as mine ! Time, they say, can heal every wound. Not such a wound as mine! My whole existence under- went a change when Philippa showed me the wedding- ring on her finger. No wonder it did. Hope was eliminated from it. From that moment I was a changed man. Life was no longer worth living. The spur of ambi- tion was blunted ; the desire for fame gone ; the interest which I had hitherto felt in my profession vanished. All the spring, the elasticity, seemed taken out of my being. For months and months I did my work in a perfunctory manner. It gave me no satisfaction that my practice grew larger. I worked, but I cared nothing for my work. Success gave me no pleasure. An increase to the number of my patients was positively unwelcome to me. So long as I made money enough to supply my daily needs, what did it matter ? Of what use was wealth to me ? It could not buy me the one thing for which I craved. Of what use was life? No wonder that such friends as I had once possessed all but forsook me. My mood at that time was none of the sweetest. I wanted no friends. I was alone in the world; I should be always alone. DARK DAYS. 17 So things went on for more than a year. I grew worse instead of better. My gloom deepened ; my. cynicism grew more confirmed ; my life became more and more aimless. These are not lovers’ rhapsodies. I would spare you them if I could ; but it is necessary that you should know the exact state of my mind in order to understand my subsequent conduct. Even now it seems to me that I am writing this description with my heart’s blood. Not a word came from Philippa. I made no inquiries about her, took no steps to trace her. I dared not. Not for one moment did I forget her, and through all those weary months tried tOr think of her as happy and to be envied ; yet, in spite of myself, I shuddered as I pictured her lot as it might really be. But all the while I knew that the day would come when I should learn whether I was to be thankful that my prayer had been answered, or to be prepared to keep my vow. In my misanthropical state of mind I heard without the slightest feeling of joy or elation that a distant rela- tive of mine, a man from whom I expected nothing, had died and left me the bulk of his large property. I cared nothing for this unexpected wealth, except for the fact that it enabled me to free myself from a round of toil in which by now I took not the slightest interest. Had it but come two or three years before! Alas ! all things in this life come too late. Now that I was no longer forced to mingle with men in order to gain the means of living, I absolutely shunned my kind. The wish of myCyouth, to travel in far coun- tries, no longer existed with me. I disposed of my practice — or rather I simply handed it over to the first DARK DATS. 18 DARK DATS. 7 comer. I left the town of my adoption, and bonght a small house — it was little more than a cottage — some five miles away from the tiny town of Roding. Here I was utterly unknown, and could live exactly as I chose ; and for months it was my choice to live almost like a hermit. My needs were ministered to by a man who had been for some years in my employment. He was a handy, faithful fellow ; honest as the day, stolid as the Sphinx ; and, for some reason or other, so much attached to me that he was willing to perform on my behalf the duties of housekeeping which are usually relegated to female servants. Looking back upon that time of seclusion, as a medical man, I wonder what would eventually have been my fate if events had not occurred which once more forced me into the world of men ? I firmly believe that brooding in solitude over my grief would at last have affected my brain ; that sooner or later I must have developed symptoms of melancholia. Professionally speaking, the probabilities are I should have committed suicide. Even in the depth of my degradation I must have known the dangers of the path which I was treading; for, after having passed six dreary months in my lonely cottage, I was trying to brace myself to seek a change of scene. I shrank from leaving my quiet abode; but every day formed afresh the resolve to do so. Yet the days, each the same as its forerunner, went by, and I was still there. I had books, of course. I read for days together; then I would throw the volumes aside, and, with a bitter smile, ask myself to what end was I directing my studies. The accumulation of knowledge? Tush! I would give all the learning I had acquired, all that a lifetime of research could acquire, to hold Philippa DARK DATS. 19 for one brief moment to my heart, and hear her say she loved me! If in the whirl of men, in the midst of hard work, I found it impossible to conquer my hopeless pas- sion, how could I expect to do so living as I at present lived ? There! my egotistical descriptions are almost over. Now you know why I said that you must sit by the fire and think with me; must enter, as it were, into my inner self before you can understand my mental state. Whether you sympathize with me or not depends entirely on your own organization. If you are so con- structed that the love of one woman, and one only, can pervade your very being, fill your every thought, direct your every action, make life to you a blessing or a curse jf love comes to you in this guise, you will be able to understand me. That night, when I first presented myself to you, my wounds seemed less likely than ever to heal ; forgetful- ness seemed farther and farther away. Somehow, as my thoughts took the well-worn road to the past, every event seemed recent as yesterday, every scene vivid as if I had just left it. Hour after hour I sat gazing at the glowing embers, but seeing only Philippa’s beloved face. How had life fared with her? Where was she at this mo- ment? The resolve to quit my seclusion was made anew by me. I would go into the world and find her — not for any selfish motive. I would learn from her own lips that she was happy. If unhappy, she should have from me such comfort as the love of a true friend can give. Yes, I would leave this wretched life to-morrow. -My cheek flushed as I contrasted what I was with what I ought to be. No man has a right to ruin his life or hide his talents for the sake of a woman. 20 DARK DAYS. I bad another inducement which urged me to make a change in my mode of life. I am ashamed that I have not spoken of it. That morning I had received a letter from my mother. I had not seen her for six years. Just as I entered man’s estate she married for the second time. My stepfather was an American, and with many tears my mother left me for her new home. Some months ago her husband died. I should have gone to her, but she forbade me. She had no children by her second hus- band; and now that his affairs were practically wound up she proposed returning to England. Her letter told me that she would be in London in three days’ time, and suggested that I should meet her there. Although of late years we had drifted apart, she was dear, very dear to me. I hated the thought of her seeing me, her only child, reduced to such a wreck of my former self; yet for her sake I again renewed my resolve of leaving my seclusion. Yet I knew that to-morrow I should forswear myself, and sink back into my apathy and aimless existence. Ah! I knew not what events were to crowd into the morrow. But now back to the night. It was mid-winter, and bitterly cold out of doors. My lamp was not yet lighted ; the glow of my fire alone broke the darkness of the room. I had not even drawn the curtains or shut the shutters. At times I liked to look out an(l see the stars. They shone so peacefully, so calmly, so coldly; they seemed so unlike the world, with its strife and fierce passions and disappointments. I rose languidly from my chair and walked to the window, to see what sort of a night it was. As I ap„ proaclied the casement I could see that the skies had DARK DAY8. 21 darkened ; moreover, 1 noticed that feathery flakes of snow were accumulating in the corner of each pane. I went close to the window and peered out into the night. Standing within a yard of me, gazing into my dimly- lit room — her face stern and pale as death, her dark eyes now riveted on my own — - was a woman j and that woman was Philippa, my love ! For several seconds I stood spellbound, gazing at her. That I saw more than a phantom of my imagination did not at once enter into my head. In dreams I had seen the one I loved again and again, but this was the first time my waking thoughts had conjured up such a vision. Vision, "dream, reality ! I trembled as I looked ; for the form was that of Philippa in dire distress. It was seeing the hood which covered her head grow whiter and whiter with the fast-falling snow which aroused me to my senses, and made every fibre thrill with the thought that Philippa, in flesh and blood, stood before me. With a low cry of rapture I tore asunder the fastening of the French casement, threw the sashes apart, and without a word my love passed from the cold, bleak night into my room. She was wrapped from head to foot in a rich, dark fur-trimmed cloak. As she swept by me I felt she was damp with partially-thawed snow. I closed the window; then with a throbbing heart turned to greet my visitor. She stood in the centre of the' room. Her mantle had fallen to the ground, and, through the dusk I could see her white face, hands, and neck. I took her hands in mine ; they were as cold as icicles. “ Philippa ! Philippa! why are you here?” I whis- pered. “Welcome, thrice welcome, whether you bring me joy or sorrow.” 22 DARK DATS. A trembling ran through her. She said nothing, but her cold hands clasped mine closer. I led her to the fire, which I stirred until it blazed brightly. She kneeled before it and stretched out her hands for warmth. How pale she looked ; how unlike the Philippa of old 1 But to my eyes how lovely ! As I looked down at the fair woman kneeling at my feet, with her proud head bent as in shame, I knew intuitively that I should be called upon to keep my oath ; and knowing this, I re-registered it in all its entirety. At last she raised her face to mine. In her eyes was a sombre fire, which until now I had never seen there. “Philippa! Philippa!” I cried again. “ Fetch a light,” she whispered. “ Let me see a friend’s face once more — if you are still my friend.” “Your friend, your true friend forever,” I said, as I hastened to obey her. As I placed the lamp on the table Philippa rose from her knees. I could now see that she was in deep mourn- ing. Was the thought that flashed through me, that it might be that she was a widow, one of joy or sorrow? I hope — I try to believe it was the latter. • We stood for some moments in silence. My agitation, my rapture at seeing her once more seemed to have de- prived me of speech. I could do little more than to gaze at her and tell myself that I was not dreaming; that Philippa was really here ; that it was her voice that I had heard, her hands I clasped. Philippa it was, but not the Philippa of old ! The rich, warm, glowing beauty seemed toned down. Her face had lost its exquisite color. Moreover, it was the face of one who has suffered — one who is suffering. To me it looked as if illness had refined it, as it some- DARK DAYS. 23 times will refine a face. Yet, if slie had been ill, her illness could not have been of long duration. Her figure was as superb, her arms as finely rounded, as ever. She stood firm and erect. Yet I trembled as I gazed at that pale proud face and those dark solemn eyes. I dared not for the while ask her why she sought me. She was the first to break silence. “ You are changed, Basil,” she said. “Time changes every one,” I answered, forcing a smile. « "Will yon believe me,” she continued, “ when I say that the memory of your face as I saw it last has haunted even my most joyful moments? Ah me! Basil, had I been true to myself I think I might have learned to love you.” She spoke regretfully, and as one who has finished with life and its lo ve. My heart beat rapidly ; yet I knew her words wero not spoken ill order to hear me tell her that X loved her passionately as ever. a I have heard of you once or twice,” she said softly. « You are rich now, they tell me, but unhappy.” “X loved you and lost you,” I answered. “ How could I be happy?” And men can love like this slie said sadly. Ail men are not alike, then ?” “Enough of me,” I said. “Tell me of yourself. Tell me how I can aid you. Your husband She drew a sharp, (puck breath. The color rushed back to her cheek. Her eyes glittered strangely. Neverthe- less, she spoke calmly and distinctly. “ Husband ! I have none,” she said. “ Xs he dead ?” “No” — she spoke with surprising bitterness — “No ; I 24 DARK DATS. should rather say I never was a wife. Tell me, Basil,” she continued fiercely, “ did you ever hate a man?” “Yes,” I answered emphatically and truly. Hate a man ! From the moment I saw the wretch with whom Philippa fled I hated him. Now that my worst suspicions were true, what were my feelings ? I felt that my lips compressed themselves. I knew that when I spoke my voice was as stern and bitter as Philippa’s. “Sit down,” I said, “and tell me all. Tell me how you knew I was here — where yo* have come from.” Let me but learn whence she came, and I felt sure the knowledge would enable me to lay my hand on the man I wanted. Ah ! life now held something worth living for ! “ I have been here some months,” said Philippa. “ Here ! In this neighborhood ?” “ Yes. 1 have seen you several times. I have been living at a house about three miles away. I felt happier in knowing that in case of need I had one friend near me.” I pressed her hands. “ Go on,” I said hoarsely. “ He sent me here. He had grown weary of me. I was about to have a child. I was in his way — a trouble to him.” Her scornful accent as she spoke was indescribable. “Philippa! Philippa!” I groaned, “had you sunk so low as to do his bidding ?” She laid her hand on my arm. “More,” she said. “ Listen ! Before we parted he struck me. Struck— me ! He cursed me and struck me ! Basil, did you ever hate a man ?” I threw out my arms. My heart was full of rage an 38 DA UK DAYS. cute my other task. Why does she not come ? Time, precious time, is slipping by ! In the hope of meeting her, I walked for some distance up the road. “Why does she delay ?” I groaned. Even now I should be on my way to Boding, or I may miss my prey. Heavens ! can it be that she is waiting to see this man once more i Never ! never ! Perish the thought ! But, all the same, every fibre in my body quivered at the bare supposition of such a thing. I could bear the suspense no longer. For the hun- dredth time I glanced at my watch. It wanted but ten minutes to seven o’clock, and at that hour I had resolved to start from Mrs. Wilson’s, on my way to Boding. Yet now I dared not leave my own house. Any moment might bring Philippa. What would she think if I were not there to receive and welcome her. Five more precious moments gone ! I stamped in my rage. After all, I can only do one half of my task ; the sweet, but not the stern half. Shall I, indeed, do either? The train must now be close to Boding. In an hour everything may be lost. The man will see her before she leaves the house. He will persuade her. She will listen to his words ; for did he not once love her ? He must have loved her ! After all, he broke the laws for the sake of possessing her, and — cursed thought! — she loved him then ; and she is but a woman ! So I tortured myself until my state of mind grew un- bearable. At all hazard, I must prevent Ferrand from meeting Philippa. Oh, why had she not come as she promised? Oould it be she was detained against her will ? In spite of her uninterested manner, I distrusted the woman I had seen last night. It is now past seven o’clock, Philippa’s house, from which I had reckoned DARK DATS. 39 my time, was nearly three miles away. I must give up my scheme of vengeance. I must go in search of Phi- lippa. If I do not meet her I must call at Mrs. Wilson’s, find out what detains her, and if needful bear her away by force. By this time my steps had brought me back to my own house. I called William, and told him I was go- ing to walk up the road and meet my expected guest, If°by any chance I should miss her, he was to welcome her on my behalf, and tell her the reason for my absence. “Best take a lantern, sir,” said William; “moon’ll soon be hidden, and them roads is precious rough.” . “ I can’t be bothered with that great horn affair,” I said, rather testily. “ Take the little one — the bull’s-eye — that’s better than nothing,” said William. To humor him I put it into my pocket. I ran at the top of my speed to the house at which I had last night left Philippa. It took me nearly half an hour getting there. I rang the bell impetuously. The door was opened by a maid-servant. I inquired for Mrs. Farmer, knowing that Philippa had passed under this name to all except her hostess. To my surprise I was told that she had left the house, on foot and alone, some little while ago. The maid believed she was not going to return, as her luggage had that morning been sent for. The first effect of this intelligence was to cause me to blame my haste. I must have missed her; no doubt passed her on the road. No ; such a thing was impossi- ble. The way was a narrow one. The moon still gave some light. If I had met Philippa, I must have seen her. She must have seen me, and would then have stopped me. She could not have gone the way I came. 40 DARK DAYS. But where was she ? In what direction was I to seek her ? Argue the matter as I would — loth as I was to al- low myself to be convinced, I was bound to decide that she must have taken the path to Boding. There was no other. She had gone, even as I was going, to meet Fer- rand. She may have started intending to come to me ; but at the last moment a desire to see the man once more t— I fondly hoped for the purpose of heaping reproaches on his head— had mastered her. Yes, whatever her ob- ject might be, she had gone to meet him. And my heart sank as conviction was carried to it by the remembrance that coupled with her refusal to permit me to fetch her was an assertion that she had something to do before she came to me. That, as I now read it, could be but one thing — to meet this man ! Never again, if I can help it, shall liis voice strike on her ear! Never again shall their eyes meet! Never again shall the touch of even his finger contaminate her ! Let me follow, and stand between her and the scoundrel. If they meet he will wound her to the heart. Her pride will rise ; she will threaten. Then the coward will try another line. lie will plead for mercy ; he will swear he still loves her ; he will bait his hook with promises. She will listen ; hesitate ; perhaps yield, and find herself once more deceived. Then she will be lost to me for- ever. Now she is, in my eyes, pure as when first we met. Let me haste on, overtake, pass her; meet her betrayer, and, if needful, strike him to the ground. As I turned from the house I became aware that a great and sudden change had come over the night. It seemed to me that, even in the few minutes which I had spent in considering what to do, the heavy clouds had banked and massed together. It was all but pitch-dark j DARK DATS. 41 so dark that I paused, and drawing from my pocket the lantern with which William’s foresight had provided me, managed after several trials to light it. Then, impatient at the delay, I sped up the road. I was now almost facing the wind. All at once, sharp and quick, I felt the blinding snow on my face. The wind moaned through the leafless branches on either side of the road. The snow-flakes whirled madly here and there. Even in my excitement I was able to realize the fact that never before had I seen in England so fierce a snow-storm, or one which came on so suddenly. And, like myself, Philippa was abroad, and exposed to its full fury. Heavens! she might lose her way, and wander about all night. This fear quickened my steps. I forced my way on through the mad storm. For the time all thought of Sir Mervyn Ferrand and vengeance left my heart. All I now wanted was to find Philippa ; to lead her home, and see her safe beneath my roof. “ Surely,” I said, as I bat- tled along, “ she cannot have gone much farther.” I kept a sharp lookout — if, indeed, it can be called a lookout; for the whirling snow made everything, save what was within a few feet of me, invisible. I strained my ears to catch the faintest cry or other sound. I went on, flashing my lantern first on one and then on the other side of the road. My dread was that Philippa, utterly unable to fight against the white tempest, might be crouching under one of the banks, and if so I might pass without seeing her or even attracting her attention. My doing so on such a night as this might mean her death. Oli, why had she not come as promised ? Why had she gone to meet the man who had so foully wronged her? After what had happened, she could not, dared 42 DARK DAYS. not love liim. And for a dreary comfort T recalled the litter bitterness of her accent last night when she turned to me and said, “ Basil, did you ever hate a man 2” No, she could not love him 1 These thoughts brought my craving for vengeance back to my mind. Where was Ferrand ? By all my cal- culations, taking into account the time wasted at starting, I should by now have met him. Perhaps he had not come, after all. Perhaps the look of the weather had frightened him, and he had decided to stay at Roding for the night. I raged at the thought \ If only I knew that Philippa was safely housed, nothing, in my present frame of mind, would have suited me better than to have met him on this lonely road, in the midst of this wild storm. If Philippa were only safe ! Still no sign of her. I began to waver in my mind. What if my first supposition, that I had passed her on the road, was correct ? She might be now at my cottage, wondering what had become of me. Should I go farther or turn back? But what would be my feelings if I did the latter, and found when I arrived home that she had not made her appearance ? I halted, irresolute, in the centre of the road. Instinc- tively I beat my hands together to promote circulation. I had left my home hurriedly, and had made no provi- sion for the undergoing of such an ordeal as this terrible, unprecedented snow-storm inflicted. In spite of the speed at which I had travelled, my hands and feet were growing numbed, my face smarted with the cold. Heaven help me to decide aright, whether to go on or turn back ! The decision was not left to me. Suddenly, close at hand, I heard a wild peal, a scream of laughter which DARK DATS. 43 made my blood run cold. Swift from tlie whirling, toss- i„ay drifting snow emerged a tall gray figure It swept past me like tlie wind ; but as it passed me I knew that 1U y quest was ended-tliat Philippa was found ! ^ "She vanished in a second, before the terror which rooted me to the spot had passed away. Then I turned and, fast as I could ran, followed her, crying as I went, “Philippa! Philippa!” ...... T I soon overtook her ; but so dark was the night that 1 was almost touching her before I saw her shadowy, ghost- like form. I threw my arms round her and held her. She struggled violently in my grasp. « Philippa, dearest ! it is I, Basil,” I said, bending close to her ear. T , . , The sound of my voice seemed to calm her, or 1 siiou a rather say she ceased to struggle. “ Thank Heaven, I have found you !” I said. “ Let ns get back as soon as possible.” “Back! No! Go on, go on l” she exclaimed. On, on, on, up the road yet awhile — on through the storm, through the snow— on till you see what I have left behind me ! On till you see the wages of sin— the wages of sin ! Her words came like bullets from a mitrailleuse. Through the night I could see her face gleaming whiter than the 6iiow on her hood. I could see her great, fixed, dark eyes full of nameless horror. “Dearest, be calm,” I said, and strove to take her hands in mine. As I tried to gain possession of her right hand some- thing fell from it, and, although the road was now coated with 3 snow, a metallic sound rang out as it touched the ground. Mechanically I stooped and picked up the fallen object. 44 DARK DAYS. As I did so Philippa with a wild cry wrested herself from the one hand whose numbed grasp still sought to retain her, and with a frenzied reiteration of the words, “ The wages of sin 1” fled from me, and was lost in the night. Even as I rushed in pursuit I shuddered as the sense of feeling told me what thing it was I had picked up from the snowy ground. It was a small pistol ! Cold as the touch of the metal must have been, it seemed to . burn me like a coal of fire. Impulsively, thoughtlessly, as I ran I hurled the weapon from me,, far, far away. Why should it have been in Philippa’s hand this night? I ran madly on, but not for long. My foot caught in a stone, and I fell, half stunned and quite breathless, to the ground. It was some minutes before I recovered myself sufficiently to once more stand erect. Philippa must have obtained a start which, coupled with her frenzied speed, almost precluded the possibility of my overtaking her. Moreover, a strange, uncontrollable impulse swayed me. The touch of that deadly weapon still burned my hand. Philippa’s words still rang in my ears. “ On, on, on, up the road yet awhile !” she had cried. What did she mean ? What had been done to-night ? I must retrace my steps. I must see ! I must know ! Philippa is flying through the cold, dark, deadly night ; but her frame is but the frame of a woman. She must soon grow exhausted, perhaps sink senseless on the road. [Nevertheless, the dreadful fears which are growing in my mind must be set at rest ; then I can resume the pur- suit. At all cost I must know what has happened 1 Once more I turned and faced the storm. Heavens ! anything might happen on such a higlit as this 1 I went DABK DATS. 40 on and on, flashing my lantern as I went on the centre and each side of the road. I went some distance past that spot where I judged that Philippa had swept by me. Then suddenly, with a cry of horror, I stopped short. At my very feet, in the middle of the highway, illumined by the disk of light cast by my lantern, lay a whitened mass, and as my eye fell upon it I knew only too well the meaning of Philippa’s wild exclamation, “The wages of sin l The wages of sin l” bark bays. 46 CHAPTER IV. AT ALL COST, SLEEP ! T)EAD! Before I kneeled beside lnm, and, after nn, buttomng bis coat, laid my hand on his breast, I knew the man was dead. Before I turned the lantern on his white face T knew who the man was. Sir Mer- vjn Ferrand had paid for his sin with his life 1 It needed little professional skill to determine the cause of bis death. A bullet fired, it seemed to me, at close quarters had passed absolutely through the heart. He must have fallen without a moan. Killed, I knew by the hand of the woman he had wronged. ’ A sneering smile yet lingered on his set features. I could even imagine the words which had accompanied it w len swift and sudden, without one moment’s grace for repentance or confession, death had been meted out to 11m. . At one moment he stood erect and full of life mocking, it may be, her who had trusted him and had’ been betrayed ; at the next, before the sentence he was speaking was completed, he lay lifeless at her feet, with the snow-flakes beginning to form his winding-sheet! Oh, it was vengeance ! swift, deadly vengeance ! But why, oil, why had she wreaked it? Philippa, my peer, i i, Ll 1P ? a, a mUrderess ! 01 b it was too fearful, too horrible ! I must be dreaming. All my own thoughts ef tevenge left me. It was for the time pity, sheer pity. DARK DATS. 4? I felt for tlie man, cut to and picture I knew ho was ahve I coul loo* I°‘ » > kiU 40 minute when « ^ no aching Deahi Sir Men Tjn Ferrand dead, and slain by Philippa ■ Ti. i a Tint- he true ! It should not be true . x et “ d as gave a ToVm-y of anguish as I hurled from me the pistol she had let fall J weapon which had done the dreadful deed. _ Killed by Philippa! Not in a sudden _ burst of un- controllable passion, but with deliberate She must have gone armed to meet him. She must imve shot him through ^ she had ^01 U my poor turned and fled from the spot m a frenzy. Oli, yi r mS P tawnde 1 : ed by my anguish, I rom from my knees and stood for a while hes.de the corps , It was m that moment I learned how much I iea y woman who had done this thing. Over all my gnc an horror this love rose paramount. At all cost I mustsavo her- save her from tho hands of justice; save her f.om £. — r louVht° me 1 yesterday with the tale of her wrong how she had wildly fled from me, a few minutes ago, mad blindly into tho night; as I thought of the injuries < , liad suffered, and which had led her to shed this man s blood ; as I contrasted her in her present position with 48 DARK DATS. •* ^hat she was when first I knew her and loved her, the pit j began to fade from my heart; my thoughts toward the lifeless form at my feet grew stern and sombre, and/ I found myself beginning, by the old code of an eye ioi an eye to justify, although I regretted, Philippa’s fearful act. Pi glit or wrong, she was the woman I loved ; and 1 swore I would save her from the consequences of her crime, even-heaven help mo I— if the accusation, when made, must fall upon , my shoulders. . T et it 1 Was not the beginning of any scheme to evade justice which induced me to raise the dead body and bear it to the side of the road, where I placed it under the low bank on which the hedge grew. It was the rever- ence which one pays to death made me do this. I could not leave the poor wretch lying in the very middle of the highway, for the first passer-by to stumble against. To-morrow he would, of course, be found. To-morrow the hue and cry would be out! To-morrow Philippa, my nlippa, would — Oil, heavens! never, never So I laid what was left of Sir Morvyn Ferrand rever- en dally oy the side of the lonely road. I even tried to close his glassy eyes, and I covered his face with liis own handkerchief. Then with heart holding fear and anguish enough for a lifetime, I turned and went in search of the poor unhappy girl. Where should I seek her ? Who knew what her re- morse may have urged her to do ? Who knew whither her horror may have driven her ? It needs but to find ii ippa lifeless on the road to complete the heaviest tale °. f , ^bicli can be exacted from one man in one short night ! I clenched my teeth and rushed on. I had the road all to myself. No one was abroad in 40 DARK DATS. 8nch weather. Indeed, few persons were seen at night in any weather in this lonely part of the country. I made straight for my own house. The dismal thought came to me, that unless Philippa kept to the road she was lost to me forever. If she strayed to the right or to the left, how on such a night could I possibly find her? My one hope was, that she would go straight to my cottage ; so thither I made the best of my way. If she had not arrived, I must get what assistance I could, and seek for her in the fields to the right and left of the road. It was a dreary comfort to .remember that all the ponds and spaces of water were frozen six inches thick ! I hesitated a moment when I reached her late resi- dence. Should I inquire if she had returned thither ? No; when morning revealed the ghastly event of the night, my having done so would awake suspicion. Let me first go home. Home at last ! In a moment I shall know the worst. I opened the slide of my lantern, which was still alight, and threw the rays on the path which led to my door. My heart gave a great bound of thankfulness. There on the snow, not yet obliterated by more recent flakes, were the prints of a small foot. Philippa, as I prayed but scarcely dared to hope she might, had come straight to my house. _ i i My man opened the door for ?ne. It was well I had seen those footprints, as. my knowledge of Philippa’s arrival enabled me to assume a natural air. “ My sister has come ?” I asked. “ Yes, sir ; about a quarter of an hour ago.” « We missed each other on the road. What a night 1” I said, throwing off my snow-covered coat. (i Where is she now ?” I asked. 60 DAKK DATS. “In the sitting-room, sir.” The*, lowering his voice, William added, “She seemed just about in a tantrum when she found you weren’t at home. I expect we shall find her a hard lady to please.” William, in spite of his stolidit} 7 , occasionally ventured upon some liberty when addressing me. Ilis words greatly surprised * me. I forced mysel/ to make some laughing rejoinder; then I turned the handle of the door and entered the room in which Philippa had taken refuge. Oh, how my heart throbbed ! What would she say to me ? What could I, fresh from that dreadful scene, say to her? Would she excuse or palliate, would she simply confess or boldly justify her crime? Would she plead her wrongs in extenuation ? Would she assert that in a moment of ungovernable rage she had done the deed ? No matter what she said ; she was still Philippa, and even at the cost of my own life and honor I would save her. Yet as I advanced into the room a shudder ran through me. Fresh to my mind came the remembrance of that white face, that still form, lying as I had left it, w T ith the pure white snow falling thickly around it. Philippa was sitting in front of the fire. Her hat was removed; her dark hair dishevelled and gleaming wet with the snow which had melted in it. She must have heard me enter and close the door, but she took no notice. As I approached her she turned her shoulder upon me in a pettish way, and as one who by the action means to signify displeasure. I came to her side and stood over her, waiting for her to look up and speak first. She must speak first ! What can I say, after all that has hap- pened to-night ? DARK DAYS. 51 But she kept a stony silence— kept her eyes still turned from mine. At last I called her by her name, and bend- i pc? down, looked into her face. Its expression was one of sullen anger, and, moreover, anger which seemed to deepen as she heard my voice. She made a kind of contemptuous gesture, as if waving me aside. “ Philippa,” I said, as sternly as I could, “ speak to me!” # I laid my hand upon her arm. She shook it off fiercely, and then started to her feet. u You ask me to speak to you,” she said ; ‘‘you* who have treated me like this ! Oh, it is shameful ! shame- ful ! shameful ! I come through storm and snow— come to you, who were to welcome me as a brother! Wheie are you ? Away, your wretched servant tells me. Why are you away ? I trusted you ! Oh, you are a pretty brother ! If you had cared for me or respected me, you would have been here to greet me. No! you are all in a league — all in a league to ruin me] Now I am here, what will you do? Poison me, of course ! kill me, and make away with me, even as that other doctor killed and made away with my poor child ! He did ! I say lie did ! I saw him do it ! * A child of shame,’ he said 5 so he killed it ! All, all, all,— even you— you, whom I trusted — leagued against me !” She was trembling with excitement. Her words ran one into the other. It was as much as I could do to fol- low them ; yet the above is but a brief condensation of what she said. With unchecked volubility she continued to heap reproaches and accusations, many of which were of the most extravagant and frivolous nature, on my head. At last she was silent, and reseated herself in her 62 DARK DAYS. former attitude; and the sullen, discontented, ill-used look again settled on her face. And yet, although I, who loved her above all the world, was the object of her fierce reproaches, no words I had as yet listened to came more sweetly to my ear than these. A great joy swept,' through me ; a tide of relief bore me to comparative happiness. Whatever dreadful deed the poor girl had that night accomplished, she was morally innocent. Philippa was not accounta- ble for her action? ! As a doctor, I read the truth at once. The rapid flow ’ of words, the changing moods, the vehement excitement, the sullen air, the groundless suspicions — one and all car- ried conviction, and told me what was wrong. Mrs. Wilson’s words of yesterday, which warned me that Phi- lippa’s health should be inquired into, added absolute cer- tainty. My professional brethren who may happen to read this will understand me when I say that, although it is long since I have practised as a doctor, I am sorely tempted, as I reach this stage of my story, to give in detail the particulars which induced me to arrive at such a belief. dSTo physician, no surgeon, lives who does not feel it his duty as well as his pleasure to give an accurate account of any out-of-the-common case which has come under his notice. But I am not writing these pages for the bene- fit of science ; and having no wish to make my tale as- sume the authority of a hospital report, shall restrain my- self, and on technical points be as brief as possible. In short, then, Philippa had fallen a victim to that mania which not uncommonly shows itself after the birth of a child — that dread, mysterious disease which may, at the moment when everything seems going well, DARK DAYS. 53 him fl of iov into a house of mourning ; a disease the source of which I have no hesitation in not yet teen properly traced and investigated So for a» I know, there is no monograph on the subject, or cer tainlv there was none at that time. ,. Stffl, it is admitted by all the authorities that this spe- cies of insanity is not unfrequently produced by a severe mental shock, especially when that shock is ^compamed by an overwhelming sense of shame. Statistics show us that unmarried women who are mothers, and feel the degradation of such a position acutely, are peculmrly ha- ble to be attacked by the mysterious malady. Esqmrol was, I believe, the first to notice this fact, and the cor- rectness of his view has subsequently been confirmed by ^uchbeSg the case, it is small wonder that Philippa, waking yesterday morning to receive the intelligence that her marriage with Sir Mervyn Ferrand had been a farce should have been thrown into a state extremely susceptible to the attack of the disease Her careless ex- posure of herself to the wintry air, when last mght s sought me and claimed my aid, most probably hastened the°attack of the foe. Mrs. Wilson had noticed he strange manner. I myself have remarked upon her rapid changes from calmness to excitability. It was clear to me that even when she visited me last mg the mischief had begun to develop itself. I blamed my blindness bitterly. I ought to have seen what was wrong. Considering her agitated state, I ought to have been warned, and have taken precautions ; but I had attributed those fitful changes, the meaning of which was now on y too plain to me, to the natural agitation experienced by a passionate yet pure-minded woman, who found herself 54 DARK DAYS. betrayed and brought to shame. Oh, had I but guessed ] the real cause, or rather the way in which her grief had affected her, all the dark work of that night might have been left undone ! Although in many ways it added to the difficulties and dangers which surrounded us, the discovery of the truth was an unspeakable relief to me. No right-minded man could now call the poor girl guilty of crime. The man’s blood was indeed on her hands ; yet she had shed it, not knowing what she did. Her frenzy must then have been at its height. The idea of his coming that night must in some way have occurred to her. The desire to see him must have driven her to go and meet him. Her wrongs * — perhaps the dread she now felt of him may have in- duced her to arm herself ; perhaps she carried the weapon for self-protection. Any way, she was mad when she started ; she was mad when she drew the trigger ; .she was mad when she broke from my grasp ; she was mad now as she sat by my fire, eying me with morose, sus- picious glances. She was mad — and innocent! Her manner toward me troubled me but little. It is a well-known peculiarity of the disease that the patient turns with hatred from those who were the nearest and dearest to her. Fits of sullen, stubborn silence, alternat- ing with fierce outbursts of vituperation, are the most common characteristics of the mania. Hideous, startling as it is to see the change wrought in the sufferer, the malady is by no means of such an alarming nature as it seems. In fact the majority of cases are treated with perfect success. But all this is professional talk. Again I say that the discovery of Philippa’s state of mind was an immense re- lief to me. My conscience was cleared of a weight which DARK DAYS. 55 was pressing upon it. I felt braced up to use every . effort, and thoroughly justified in following whatever course I thought best. Moreover, a new relationship was now established between Philippa and myself. For a while every feeling save one must be banished. W e were now doctor and patient. After much persuasion, I induced her to let me fee her pulse. As'I expected, I found it up nearly to 120. This did not alarm me much, as in the course of my practice I had seen several of these cases. The prelimi- nary treatment was simple as A B C ; at all cost sleep must be obtained. Fortunately, I had a well-stocked medicine-chest. In a few minutes I had prepared the strongest dose of opium which I dared to administer. In such a case as the present I knew that no driblets would avail ; so I measured out no less than sixty drops of laudanum. Sleep the girl must have. That poor seething, boiling brain must by artificial means be forced to rest for hours. After that rest I should be able to say what chance there was of saving life and reason. __ But preparing a dose of medicine, and making a pa- tient like this take it, are two different things. I tried every art, everv persuasion. I implored and comman e . I threatened ‘ and insisted. Philippa was obdurate. Poor soul! she knew I meant to poison her. On my part, I knew that unless she swallowed that narcotic to- ni*lit, her case was all but hopeless. I rested for a while ; then I sent for lukewarm water. After some resistance she suffered me to bathe her thro - bin* temples. The refreshing coolness which followed theoperation was so grateful to her that she let me repea 66 DARK DAYS. the action again and again. A softer and more contented look settled on her beautiful face. I seized the moment. Once more I pressed the potion upon her. This time successfully. My heart trembled with joy as I saw her swallow the drug. Now she might be saved ! I still continued the comforting laving of her temples, and waited until the drug took its due effect. By and by that moment came. The large dark eyes closed, the weary head sank heavily on my shoulder, and I knew that Philippa had entered upon a term of merciful obliv- ion. I waited until her sleep was sound as the sleep of death; then I summoned my man. I had already told him that my sister was very ill. Between us we bore her to her room and laid her on the bed. I loosened her dress, cut the wet boots from her cold feet ; did all I could to promote warmth and such comfort as was possi- ble under the circumstances. Then I left her, sleeping that heavy sleep which I prayed might last unbroken for hours, and hours, and hours. dakk pays* m CHAPTER V. A WHITE TOMB. F ROM the moment when the true state of Philippa 9 mind flashed upon me, to the moment when I left her sleeping that heavy sleep,- 1 had little time to tlnnk of anything else than the best means of saving her liie, and, if possible, her reason. True, throughout the whole of my operations to effect this end, a dim sort of horror pervaded me— a recollection of the ghastly object which lay on the roadside, some three miles from us; but it was not until I turned from my patient’s door that the terrible situation in which she was placed presented itselt to me in all its dread entirety. Half broken-hearted, I threw myself wearily into my chair, and covered my face with my hands. , , , m What was to be done? What was to be done? 10- morrow morning the body would be found. I felt cer- tain that when inquiry was made suspicion would at once point toward Philippa. Mrs. Wilson knew of her start- ing from home in the evening, alone and on foot, bhe knew, moreover, that Sir Mervyn Ferrand was her hus- band ; that he had ill-used her. She would most certainly know to whom Philippa had fled. It did not follow that because I was ignorant as to who were my neighbors they knew nothing about me. At any rate, William, my man, would know the truth. So far as I could see, to-morrow ' DARK DATS. 68 or, by the latest, the next day Philippa would he arrested for the crime. Most probably, I should also be included in the arrest. For that I seemed to care nothing ; except that it might hinder me from helping my poor girl. Any hope of removing Philippa — there, put it in plain words — any hope of flight, for days, even weeks, was vain. Let everything go as well as can be in such cases, the girl must be kept in seclusion and quiet for at least a fortnight or three weeks. I groaned as I thought of what would happen if Philippa was arrested and car- ried before the magistrates, accused of the awful crime. From that moment until the day of her death she would be insane. Yet, what help was there for it? The moment the deed is known — the moment Mrs. Wilson learns that Sir Mervyn Ferrand has been found shot through the heart, she will let it be known that Lady Ferrand is at hand ; and Lady Ferrand, who has been passing under the name of Mrs. Farmer, will be sought and found. And then — and then ? Even if she did not die at once— even if she recovered — oh, the shame of the trial! No jury could or 'would convict her : but for Philippa, my queen, to stand in the dock, to plead for her life ; to know that, whether con. victed or acquitted, the deed was done by her ; to know that all England is talking of her wrongs and her ven- geance — horrible! horrible! It shall never be. Rather will I give her a draught of opium heavy enough to close her eyes forever. There will be plenty more of the drug left for me 5 Fool that I was! Why did I do things by halves? Why, for her sake, did I not hide the d#ad man where cone would .find him ? Why did I not rifle his pockets, BARK DAYS. G& so that suspicion should have pointed to a vulgar mur- derer; some one who had killed him for mere plunder? Why did I not, at least, destroy any letters or papers which were about him ? Identification might then have been rendered difficult, and perhaps been delayed for weeks. In that time I might have saved her. Why do I not do this now? I started to my feet ; then sank back into my chair. No; not even for Philip- • pa’s sake could I go again to that spot. If I did so, I should return as mad as she is now. Not being able to bring myself to adopt the gruesome alternative, I could do nothing save wait events — noth- ing, at least, to avert the consequences of her delirious act. But for her something must be done. IIow could she, in her frenzied state, be left here — her only companions two men ? Nurses must be at once procured. I sum- moned William, and told him he must go to London by the first train in the morning. William would have received my instructions to go to the Antipodes with imperturbability. He merely ex- pressed a doubt as to whether any one would be able to get to London to-morrow on account of the snow. I walked to the window and looked out. The night was still one mad whirl of snow-flakes. The window-panes were half covered by such as managed to find a resting-place there. As I watched what I could see of the wild white dance, I found myself thinking that r,. by now that dead man on tlie road must be covered an inch — must have lost shape and outline. I shivered as I turned away. “ They are sure to keep the line to town open ” I said. iL If you can get to Roding, you can get to London.” 60 DAUK BAYS. “Oh, I can get to Roding right enough !” said William. Then I told him what he was to do. He was to take a letter to one of the Nursing Institutions, and bring back two nurses with him. No matter what the weather was when they reached Roding, they were to come to my house at once, even if they had to hire twenty horses to drag them there. lie was also to get me a few drugs which I might want. William said no more. He nodded, to show that he understood me ; and I knew that if it were possible to do my bidding it would be done. Of his own accord he then brought me food. I ate, for I knew that I should want all my strength to support the anxieties of the next day or two. I stayed up the whole night. Oh, that awful night f shall I ever forget it? The solitude — the raging snow- storm outside — the poor creature to whose side I crept noislessly every half an hour. She lay there with a face like marble, calm and beautiful. The long, dark lashes swept her pale cheek. The only movement was the regular rise and fall of the bosom. Oh, happy oblivion ! Oh, dreaded wakening! As I looked at her, in spite of the love I bore her, I believe that, had I thought such a prayer would be answered, I should for her sake have prayed that those lashes might never again be lifted. Morning at last broke on my dreary vigil. Philippa still slept. I returned to the sitting-room and drew back tire curtains fi%m the window. Yes: it was moraine* — • • 7 © sncli a morning as leaden, wintry skies can give. It was still snowing as heavily a%, if not more heavily than, it had snowed last night. For twelve hours the flakes had fallen without iutermissiou. DARK DATS. 61 There was little wind now ; it had dropped, I knew, about an hour ago. The world, so far as I could see, was clad in white : but the snow lay unevenly. The wind had blown it into drifts. On my garden path its depth might be counted by inches ; against my garden wall by feet. William now made his appearance. He prepared some breakfast for himself, and then, having done justice to it, started for Boding. It occurred to me that he might be the first to find the object which lay on the roadside. Except that so doing might delay him and cause him to miss his train, this mattered little. I was now calmly awaiting the inevitable. Borne one must make the dis- covery. However, as I wanted the nurses, I said to him : “Bemember this is life and death. Nothing must stop you.” He touched his hat in a reassuring manner, and tramped off through the snow. I returned to my patient’s bedside and sat watching her, and waiting for her to awake. She had now slept for nearly eleven hours, and I knew that return to life might take place at any moment. I longed for, and yet I dreaded, her awakening. When the effects of the opiate were gone, how should I find her ? Alas ! I knew that the chances were a thousand to one that her brain would still be full of strange delusions ; that she would turn from me, as she turned last night, with loathing and anger. But my greatest fear was that she would, upon coming to herself, or rather to her poor insane self, be conscious of the act she had accomplished. It was the fear of this which made me wish that the opium would hold her in its drowsy grasp for hours longer. This wish was granted. Hour after hour I sat by her 62 DARK DAYS. motionless form. Now and again I glanced from the beautiful, senseless face, and looking out of the window saw the snow still falling. Would my messenger ever be able to reach town ; if lie did so, would he be able to return? I was bound to have a woman’s aid. The presence of the roughest daughter of the plough would be welcome to me when Philippa awoke. And it was now time she did so. Although I felt her pulse almost every other minute, and could find no reason for alarm, I am bound to say that her long sleep, protracted far beyond any I had in my experience seen produced by the exhibition of nar- cotics, rendered me very uneasy. I shall, I am sure, scarcely be credited when I say that Philippa’s uncon- sciousness lasted for sixteen hours — from half-past nine at night to half-past one on the following afternoon. I began then to think the duration abnormal, and deter- mined to take some steps toward arousing her. But I was spared the responsibility. She stirred on the couch. lief head turned languidly on the pillow. Her dark eyes opened, closed, and opened again. She looked at me in a dazed manner, not at first seeming to know me, or to understand why I was near her, or where she was. A prey to the wildest anxiety, I leaned over her, and waited until she spoke. Little by little her bewilderment seemed to leave her. Iler eyes rested with curious inquiry upon mine. “ Basil,” she said, faintly, but in a tone of surprise, “ you here ! Where am I ?” “ Under my roof — your brother’s roof,” I said. “Ah ! I remember,” she said, with a deep sigh. Then rhe closed her eyes, and once more seemed to sleep. What did she remember ? It seemed to me too great DARK DATS. 63 a mercy to expect that those hours of oblivion had effected a cure, but my hope was that she did not remem- ber what had happened when she met Sir Mervyn Fer- rand on the road. I was almost trembling with excite- ment. I was longing to really know in what state her mind was. Besides, I thought she had slept as long as was good for her. I took her hands and called her by name. P Once more she opened her eyes. They expressed no fear of me, no dislike to me. They conveyed no re- proach. They were calm, sad, weary, but gave no evi- dence of any mental disorder. “ Have I been ill long, Basil ?” she asked. “Not very long. You are going to get better soon. “I came to your house, did I not ?” “ Yes ; and here I mean to keep you. Do you feel weak?” , “Yery weak. Basil, I have dreamed such horrible things.” “You have been feverish and delirious. People like that always fancy strange things.” She was indeed as weak as a child ; but for the time, at least, she was perfectly sane. I could have cried for joy as I heard her faint but collected words. . I ventured to hope that I had before me one of those very rare eases ^-such as I had seen described, but had not as yet met With — where the patient awakes from the long, artifi- cially produced sleep perfectly free from all maniacal symptoms. If this were so with Philippa, if the return of reason were to be permanent, I knew that a few weeks’ careful nursing and judicious treatment might quite restore her to health. Even as this comforting thought came to me, I remembered the peril in which 64 DARK DAYS. she stood. To-morrow — ay, even to-day — the thing which I dreaded might happen, and sweep away all the good the narcotic had done her. She was now fully awake, and perfectly quiet. I gave her some refreshment; then seeing she was lying in peaceful silence, I thought it better to leave her. As I quitted her room I drew down the blind, fearing that the ! whirling snow might bring recollections which it was my one wish to keep from invading her mind. The long dreary day wore away. The light faded, and another night began. Philippa still lay calm, silent, and almost apathetic. I did nothing to rouse her. I went to her side as seldom as possible. I feared that her seeing me might recall the events of the last night, and that recollections so awakened might destroy all the good which I felt sure had been accomplished by the long hours of oblivion and quiet. Could I have deputed the task to another, I would not have even shown myself to my patient. Most anxiously, as evening came, I awaited the appearance of my faithful William and the nurses. Would they be able to reach us in such weather? It was still snowing fiercely. For more than twenty-four Fours the mad white revel had continued without inter- mission. Indeed, that storm which burst upon the world as I turned from Philippa’s house on the preceding night is now historical ; it was the beginning of the heaviest and the longest fall which the record of fifty years can show. For two nights and a day the snow came down in what may almost be called drifting masses. During that dismal day I saw from the window the heaps against the wall grow deeper and deeper, and even in my pre- occupied state of mind found myself marvelling at the sustained fury of the storm. DAKK DAYS. 65 At eleven o’clock at niglit I sadly gave up all hope of the much-needed assistance arriving. After all, it seemed that William had found it impossible to fight against the weather; so I made my preparations for another night of solitary watchfulness. I was all but worn out with fatigue ; yet I dared not sleep. If the mania returned, what might happen, were I not at hand to restrain Philippa’s actions ? My hope that the madnest had really left my patient, not, if she were properly treated, to return, was a growing one, but not yet strong enough to allow me to leave her for any length of time. My delight then may be imagined when, looking for the hundredth time up the road, I saw close at hand two flashing lights, and knew that William, the faithful, had done my bidding. In a few minutes two respectable women from one of the best of the London Nursing In. stitutions were within my walls. The train had, of course, been late, very late. At one or two places on the line it had almost given up the bat- tle, and settled down quietly until dug out ; but steam and iron had conquered, and at last it did get to Koding. There William, knowing my dire necessity, offered such a magnificent bribe that he soon found an enterprising carriage proprietor who was willing to make the attempt to force two horses and a carriage over the six miles of road between Koding and my house. The attempt was successful, although the rate of progression was slow ; and William triumphantly ushered his charges into my presence. After giving them time for rest and refreshment, I explained the nature of the case, set out the treatment I wished to be adopted, and then led them to Philippa. I left the poor girl in their charge for the night, then 63 DARK DATS. went to take the sleep of which I stood so much in need. But before going to bed I saw 'William. I dreaded to hear him say what gruesome sight he had seen that morning ; yet I was bound to learn if the deed had yet been made public. “ Did you manage to get to Boding all right this morning ?” I asked with assumed carelessness. “ I managed all right, sir,” said William, cheerfully. “ Snow deep on the road ?” “Not so deep as I fancied ’t would be. All drifted and blown up to one side, like. I never seen such a thing. Drift must have been feet deep this morning. What must it be now, I wonder ? Something like the arctic regions, I should think, sir !” For the first time for hours and hours, a ray of hope flashed across me. William had walked that lonely road this morning, and noticed nothing except the drifted snow ! I remembered how I had placed the dead man in the little hollow at the bottom of the bank. Could it be that the kindly, merciful snow, which I have already described as beginning to form in a winding-sheet, had hidden and buried him? That a pure white, shapeless heap, which told no tales, concealed for a while the dark deed from the world? Oh that Philippa were well enough to leave this place to-morrow ! We might fly and leave no trace behind us. She might never know what she had done in her madness. The fearful secret would be mine alone. A burden it would be, but one which I might easily find strength enough to bear. Bear it ! I could bear it, and be happy ; for something told me that, could I but save her from the peril which men- aced her, Philippa and I would part no more in this Dark days. 67 world until death, the only conqueror of such love as mine, swept us asunder. Once more I looked out into the night. Still the snow-flakes whirled down. Oh, brave, kind snow ! Fall, fall, fall ! Pile the masses on the dead wretch. Hide him deep in your bosom. Fall for weeks, for months, forever 1 Save my love and me l 68 DARK DAYS. CHAPTER VI. THE SECRET KEPT. I T is needless to say tliat when I awoke the next morn- ing my first thought was of Philippa: but my first action was to go to my window and look at the skies. My heart sank within me as I saw that the snow had ceased falling, and the wintry sun was shining. I threw up the sash ; the cold air cut me like a knife. I gathered up a handful of snow from the window-sill. It crumbled in my fingers like tooth-powder. I guessed at once that a hard black frost had succeeded the snow. I ran downstairs and glanced at ray thermometer outside my sitting-room window. It registered twelve degrees of frost. My spirits rose; 1 felt that Philippa would be saved. The wind was due east : so long as it stayed there the frost would last, and that white tomb on the roadside hide the secret of the dreadful night. I found, moreover, that Philippa’s condition was all that could, under the circumstances, be hoped for. Since she had awakened from that long sleep into winch the opiate had plunged her, there had been no recurrence of the delusions; no symptoms which gave me any alarm. She was, of course, weak in body, but quite quiet and collected. She spoke but little, and the few words which she did speak had ho bearing on forbidden or disturbing subjects. DARK DATS. 69 Day after day went by, and still the brave black frost held the world in its iron grip, and kept the secret of the night. Morning after morning I woke to find the wind still blowing from the east, the skies clear and showing every evidence of a long spell of hard weather. A pre- sentiment that we should be saved was now firmly established in my mind. The heavens themselves seemed to be shielding us and working for us. I have not given the year in which these things oc- curred ; but many who can remember that mighty fall of snow, and the time which the frost kept it on the earth, will be able to fix the date. Since that year there has been no weather like it. Day by day Philippa grew better and stronger. I spare you, as I promised to, all description which is not absolutely necessary of my treatment of my patient, and all technical summary of the case ; but before many days had gone by I knew that, as I hoped, I had to deal with one of those rare instances in which the balance of the mind is restored by forced sleep, and the complete restoration of health is but a matter of time and care. As soon as it became a certainty that all danger to life or reason was at an end, I began to consider what course to adopt. The moment she was well enough to risk the journey, or even, if a thaw set in, before then, Philippa must fly from the scene of the tragedy in which she had played so terrible, yet morally irresponsi- ble, a part. We must put lands and seas between our- selves and the fatal spot. But how to persuade her that sucli flight was absolutely necessary? Brother and sister as we now termed ourselves, would she ever consent to accompany me abroad ? Had I the right to put the woman I loved in such an equivocal position ? 70 DARK DATS. ]No! a thousand times no! And yet I knew there was no safety for her in England; and with whom could | she leave England save with me? I dared not urge upon her my true reason for flight. It was my greatest hope that the events of that night had left her mind when the madness left her, never to be recalled. And now time was pressing; ten days had passed by. The glorious frost still kept our counsel, but it could not last forever. The time must come when the white heaps of snow would melt and vanish away, and then Sir Mervyn Ferrand’s cold dead face would appear, and tell the tale of his death to the first passer-by. I had scarcely quitted the house since that night. Yet one day a kind of morbid fascination had led me to | walk along the road toward Roding, and to halt at what 1 judged to be the spot where I laid the dead man by the side of the road. I fancied I could single out the very drift under which that awful thing lay, and a dreary temptation to probe the white heap with my stick and make sure assailed me. I resisted it, and turned away from the spot. There was a certain amount of traffic on the road. By now the snow had been beaten down by cart-wheels , and people’s feet, so that it was quite possible to walk from one place to another. As 1 reached the house fiom which Philippa fled to seek refuge with me, I encoun- tered Mrs. Wilson. I was going to pass without any sign of recognition, but she stopped me. “ X thought you were going to take your sister away ? ’ she said. t “ Lady Ferrand was unfortunately taken very ill when she left you. She is now hardly well enough to be re- moved.” i : DA UK DATS. 71 « Has she heard from Sir Mervyn ?” asked Mrs. Wil- son, abruptly. “ Hot to my knowledge,” I replied. “It is strange. You. know, I suppose, that he was expected at my. house that night? « Certainly I do. It was for that reason my sister left you J? Mrs. Wilson looked at me thoughtfully. “ She will not meet him again ?” “ Never,” I said, thinking as I spoke that my words bore a meaning only known to myself. “ Hoes she hate him?” she asked, suddenly. “ She has been cruelly wronged,” I said, evasively. She laid her hand on my arm. “Listen,” she said. « If I thought she hated him, I would see her before she leaves, and tell her something. _ If I thought he hated her, I would tell him. I will wait and see. She turned away and walked on, leaving me to make the best of her enigmatical words. She was evidently a strange woman, %nd I felt more sure than ever was in some way mixed up with Sir Mervyn Ferrand’s early life. I had a great mind to follow her and demand an explanation, but caution told me that the less I said to her the better. It was from this woman’s knowledge of .the relationship between Philippa and the dead man that, when the secret of the night was laid bare, the greatest danger must arise. After walking a few paces, Mrs. Wilson turned and came back to me. “ Give me an address,” she said ; I may want to write to you.” I hesitated ; then I told hor that any letters sent to my bankers in London would reach me sooner or later. It 72 DARK DAtS. was too soon to excite suspicion by concealment of one’s movements. It was after I had gazed at that white tomb by the roadside that my impatience to remove Philippa grew fiercer and fiercer. Moreover, I had at last made up my mind what to do with my precious charge. As soon as she was well enough to bear the journey, I resolved to take her to London, and place her in the hands of one of the truest, noblest, tenderest women in the world, my mother. She was in London, waiting for me to join her. I had written, telling her that the serious illness of a friend prevented me from leaving my home for some days. Now I resolved to go to her and tell her alLPhilippa’s sad tale — all save the one dark chapter of which she her- self, I hoped, knew nothing. I would take her to my mother. I would tell my mother how I loved her ; I would appeal to her love for me, and ask her to take my poor stricken girl to her heart, even as she would take a daughter ; and I dared to hope that, if only for my sake, my prayer would be granted. Philippa was by now thoroughly convalescent. As I lay down my pen for a moment and think of that time, with its fears and troubles, it is a marvel to me that I could have dared to wait so long before moving her from the neighborhood. I can only attribute my lingering to the sense of fatality that all would go right, or to the professional instinct which forbade me urging a patient to do anything which might retard recovery ; but the time had at last come. Save for her quiet and subdued manner, my love was almost her old self again. Her words and manner to me Were tender, affectionate, and sisterly. I need hardly say DARK DAYS. 73 that during that time no word crossed my lips which I would have recalled. Love, if not the thought of it, I had laid aside until happier days dawned ; for— I say it advisedly, and at risk of censure— Philippa was to me pure and innocent as on the day when first we met. If her hands were stained with the blood of Sir Mervyn Ferrand, she knew it not. Her wrongs had goaded her to madness, and her madness was responsible for the act, not she herself. The man’s name never crossed her lips. For all she spoke of him he might never have existed, or, at the most, been but a part of a forgotten dream. As soon as she was well enough to rise from her bed, and I could for hours enjoy her society, we talked of many things ; but never of Sir Mervyn Ferrand and the immediate past. But, nevertheless, there were times when her look distressed me. Now and again I found her gazing at me with anxious, troubled eyes, as if trying to read some- thing which I was hiding from her. Once she asked me how she came to my house that night. “Out of the whirling, snow,” I said as lightly as I could. “You came in a high state of fever and deli- rium.” “ Where had I been ? What had I been doing?” “ You came straight from Mrs. Wilson’s, I suppose. I know no more.” Then she sighed and turned her head away; but I soon found her troubled dark eyes again fixed on my own. I could do nothing but meet their gaze bravely, and pray that my poor love might never, never be able to fill those hours which were at present a blank to her. At last, exactly a fortnight from the fatal day, we left 74 DARK DATS. my liome. I was now what is legally termed an acces- sory after the act, and was making every effort to save the poor girl from justice. In order to avert suspicion, I decided it was better not to shut up my house ; so I left the faithful William to take care of it, and await my in- structions. At present it was advisable that any inquirers should learn that I had gone to London with my sister, and that the time of our return was uncertain. By and by, if all went well, I could get rid of my cottage in an ordinary way. I, for one, should never wish to visit tin place again. Philippa acquiesced in all my arrangements. She was quite willing to accompany me to town. She trusted me tth childish simplicity. “But, Basil, afterward— what afterward ?” she asked. Even in the midst of the menacing peril it was all I could do to refrain from kneeling at her feet and telling her that my love would solve the question of the future. “ I have a surprise for you in London,” I said, as cnv^i- fully as I could. “ Trust yourself to me ; you will not regret it.” She took my hand. “ Whom else have I to trust ?” she said simply. “ Basil, you have been very good to me. I have made your life miserable; it is too late to atone; but I shall never forget these days.” - Her eyes were full of tears. I kissed her hand rever- ently, and told her that when I saw the old smile back upon her lips, all I had done would be a thousand times repaid ; but as I spoke I trembled at the thought of what might be in store for both of ns. We drove to Boding, and were perforce obliged to take the road which passed by Mrs. Wilson’s house. T bilippa half rose from her seat, and seemed to be on the DARK DAYS. 75 point of asking me some question; but slie changed her mind, and relapsed into silence. I felt a horrible dread lest the roadside objects and landmarks should awaken recollection, and my heart beat violently as we neared the white heap by the hedge, that heap which I believed held our secret. I felt that I grew deadly pale. I was foiced to turn my head away and loot out of the opposite win- dow. My state of mind was not made easier by knowing that Philippa was gazing at me with that troubled loo in her eyes. Altogether I felt that the strain was becom- ing too much for me, and I began to wonder if my life would ever again know a happy or secure moment. After a long silence Philippa spoke. ‘ Tell me, Basil, have you heard from that man? I shook my head. « Where is he % He was coming that night. Hid lie come r . “I suppose not. "Why do you ask . “ Basil, a kind of horrible dream haunts me. There was something I dreamed Of that fearful night, something I dream of now. Tell me what it was.” The perspiration rose to my brow. “Dearest, I san, “no wonder you dream. You are well now, but that nio-ht you were quite out of your senses. Your fancies are but the remains of that delirium. Tlunk no more of that wretch ; he is probably living in Pans, after the manner of his kind. Think only that life is going to be calm and happy.” Anything to keep the knowledge of her fatal act from her ! I forced myself to talk in a light, cheerful manner. I jested at the appearance of the few muffled-up country people whom we passed on the road. I pointed out the beauty of the trees ou the wayside, each branch of which 76 DARK DAYS. bore foliage of glistening snow. I did all I could to turn her thoughts into other channels — to drive that strange questioning look from her eyes. Right glad I felt when we were at last in the train, and the first stage of our flight an accomplished fact. Upon reaching London, I drove straight to the hotel at which my mother was staying. It was one of those high-priced respectable private hotels in Jermyn Street. I engaged rooms for my sister and myself. I sent Philippa to her room to rest, and then went to find my mother. In another minute I was in her arms, and ere half an hour was over I had told her Philippa’s story, and my love for the woman on whose behalf I besought her protection. Yes, I had done right to trust to her. I knew her noble nature ; her utter freedom from the petty tram- mels of society. I knew the love she bore her son. Let me here thank her once more for what she did for me that day. She heard all my outpourings in silence. I told her all, save two things — the name of the man who had wronged my love, and the fate which had overtaken him. I told her, as I have told you, how I had loved — how I loved Philippa ; how I now dared to hope that in time to come my love would be rewarded. I prayed her to take my poor girl to her heart, and by treating her as a daughter restore, if it were possible, her self-re- spect. My mother heard me. Her sweet face grew a shade paler. Her lips quivered, and the tears stood in her eyes. I knew all that was passing through her mind. I knew how proud she was of me, and what great things she had DABK DAYS. 77 hoped 1 should do in the world. She was a woman, and, woman-like, had counted upon her son’s bettering lnm- self by marriage ; but, in spite of all this, I knew I was right in counting upbn her aid. Once again, my sweet mother, 1 thank you. She rose. “Let me see the woman you love. VVlieie is she ? I will go to her. “ She is here, in this house. Ah, mother, I knew you would do this for me.” ,, , She kissed my forehead. “Bring her to me, she SElld. » * « I went out, and sent word to Philippa that I wanted her. She soon came to me. She had removed the stains of travel, and, although pale, looked the perfection o graceful beauty. I led her to my mother’s room She stopped short as she saw it was tenanted by a lady. A quick blush crossed her cheek. “Philippa, dearest,” I said, “this is my mother., 1 have told her all, and she is waiting to welcome you Still she stood motionless, save that her head bent down and her bosom heaved. My mother came to her side, and, placing her kind arms round her, whispered some words which I neither heard nor tried to hear. Philippa broke into a storm of sobs, and for some mo- ments wept on my mother’s shoulder. Then she raised her head and looked at me, and my heart leaped at the expression in her tearful eyes. “ Basil, iny brother, you are too good to me ! she ejacu- kt Mv mother led her to the sofa, and, with her arms still round her, .sat down by her side. I left them, knowing that my love had now the truest, noblest heart to sob 78 DARK DATS. agairist; the quickest, most sympathetic ear to listen to the tale of her wrongs ; and the softest, kindest voice to soothe and console her. Ah! how happy I should have felt, could that one night’s dark work have been undone — could that white tomb forever hold its ghastly secret I DAKK days. 79 CHAPTER Til. the melting of the SNOW. „ e 1ir flight toward safety accom- HHE first stage of our mg rev iew the L pUshed, I sat down to o m yself. nation, and »o take suck counsel “ * „f the in- : t"nT 1- beet to guard against or arn aside the peril. Mrs. Wilson. Undoubtedly the ch ef person to neat . ™ M !he alone knew that the man intend to ^ hat night. She alone ™ e ' v “ The ve , T night of d ration and I felt ais death would be fa J man was identified Mrs. rare that as soon as tli guest’s sudden de- Wilson could not fail to assoc^ , be terrible event. parture and . Sl ^eveLd what she knew or suspected, The moment she rev ^ and pursuit suspicion must poi 1 1 J J ’ J sick , a s, think how I tlTJ^ ~ no' loop-hole by whioh to eseap* from this danger. troubled hut little. Upon About secondary t b ^ belieVe that my stolid calm ■ reconsideration, right conclur -sraliam would for a moment jump at the ng 80 DARK DATS. sion. If he were led to sn&pect either of us, it would be me, not Philippa ; and I well knew that he was so much attached to me that, although he felt certain I had done the deed, he would feel equally certain that I had good and proper reasons for doing it, and no word to my det- riment would pass his reticent lips. No, there was little to fear from William. v I had blamed myself deeply for the impulse which had urged me to hurl the fatal weapon away. Why did I not keep it and bury it fathoms deep ? If that pistol were found, it would possibly furnish a clew which might be followed up, and undo everything. My only hope was that I had thrown it to some spot where it might lie for years undiscovered, until all association between it and the murder had disappeared. To . sum up briefly, I was bound to decide that the damning circumstantial evidence which could be fur- nished by Mrs. Wilson drove me back to my original idea. There was no chance of my poor Philippa’s re- maining unaccused or unsuspected of the deed she had unwittingly done; so her only hope of safety— indeed, considering all, I may also say my only hope of safety was rapid flight. . We must gain some land in which we could dwell without fear of being arrested. What land was there ? Many a one. The date of my story is before 1873, when nearly all the extradition treaties were made. At that time such treaties existed with only two foreign countries, France and the United States ; so that our choice of a resting-place was not so limited as those who are flying from the clutches of the law find it to-day. However, in order to make certain, I paid a visit to a legal friend of mine, and, by quoting a supposititious case. DARK DAYS. 81 ! managed to acquire a good deal of information respecting the dealings of one nation with another, so far as fugi- tives were concerned. I found that although, with the two exceptions above | named, there was no settled international law on the sub- ject, there was a kind of unwritten substitute, which was known by the name of the Comity of Nations. Under this code of courtesy, a notorious criminal, who had sought refuge in the arms of another country, was not uncommonly, although there was no law under which he could be arrested, given up to his pursuers, by being simply driven across the frontier of the country in which he had hoped to find security. However, I gathered that this so-called comity was scarcely expected to be exercised by the most friendly state, unless the fugitive had fled almost red-handed, and so placed his guilt beyond doubt. No one exactly knew how far this obliging expulsion might be counted upon. It was generally supposed to j be decided by the amount of influence or persuasion which one government exercised on the other. This information rather upset my preconceived ideas as to the ease with which safety might be obtained ; but reflection told me I had little to fear. The case against Philippa could be nothing more than one of suspicion. No one, not even I myself, had seen the deed done. A warrant would, no doubt, be issued for her arrest ; but if our flight precluded its execution, I did not believe that any government would put itself out of the way to aid the English law. There was no one, save myself, who could positively swear that Sir Mervyn Ferrand had been killed by Philippa. I learned that Spain was then, even as it is now, the land safest against English law. Perhaps the reason is that 82 DARK DATS. tlie grave, yet at times hot-blooded, Spaniard reckons human life at a lower value than more northerly nations. Anyway, it was to Spain that I turned my eyes ; Spain that I resolved to reach without an hour’s unenforced delay. The very next day I broached the subject of foreign travel to my mother. Although so short a time had passed since they first met, I was overjoyed to see the . ; terms upon which she and Philippa stood. The girl | seemed to cling to her as to a natural protector — seemed | ready to install her in the place of the mother she had' lost. After all, the love of her own sex is indispensable v to a woman’s happiness. It did my heart good to see the two together. Philippa talked to my mother as she had never yet talked to me ; and I knew that when the day came upon which I should ask for the only reward I wanted, my mother’s kindness to the forsaken and : shame- stricken girl would be an advocate that pleaded strongly in favor of my suit. But could it ever be ? Could we know happiness in the face of that dark night’s work ? Ah me ! my heart sank as I thought that any day might bring the crushing blow. Let there be no delay. Let me not blame myself hereafter for any negligence or false security. Let us away from the peril. Mother,” I said, “ will you come abroad with Phi- lippa and me?” “ Abroad, Basil ! I have only just come home.” “ Ho matter ; come with us at once. Let us go to some place where there is warmth and bright sunshine. Let us go to Spain.” “ Spain ! why Spain ? Besides, surely Philippa is not fit for a long journey !” DARK DATS. 83 « Jt will do her good. Her recollections of this eoun- I try are but sad ones.” « Well, in a week or two I will see about it.” “ Ho, at once. Let us start to-morrow or the next day. Mother, I ask it as a favor.” « Give me some good reason, Basil, and I will do as p you wish.” “ Look at me, and you will see the reason. Cannot you see that X am ill, w orn out, nerv ous 2 I must have a change, and at once.” She gazed at me with solicitude. “ Yes, I know you are not well ; but why Spain 2” (l A. whim — a sick man’s fancy. Perhaps because it is Philippa’s father’s country put it into my head. Mother, tell me, how do you like her 2” u She is the woman you love ; she is very beautiful ; she has been cruelly treated; she is blameless; to say more after so short an acquaintance would be exaggera- tion.” « You will come to Spain with me — with her 2” She kissed me and gave in to my whim. Then I * ' ' • sought Philippa. « yjy mother is going to take us abroad,” I said with a smile, which was forced, as all my smiles now were. “ She will see to everything for you.” « She is kind — she is sweet,” said Philippa, clasping her hands. “Basil, I am beginning to worship your mother. But why are we going abroad 2” “ To get away from sad thoughts, for one thing ; for another, because I feel ill.” She gave me a quick look of apprehension which brought the flush to my cheek. “ Oh, let us go at once ! she cried. “ Let us leave this land of ice and I will nurse 84 DAKK DATS. you and make you well. Where are we going ? When are we going*” “ To Spain — to-morrow or the next day.” She looked at me with the troubled gaze which I had so often noticed. “ Basil,” she said, “you are doing this for my sake.” “ And my own, I fear.” “ I threw away your love — I spoiled your life. I came to you a shamed woman. You saved me ! You did not scorn me. You brought me to your mother’s arms. Basil, may Grod requite you : I never can.” She burst into tears, and left the room hastily. It was well I settled the matter of the foreign journey then. That afternoon the wind changed and a thaw set i n — a thaw that slowly but surely drew away the thick white veil which covered the whole of England. That night I had little sleep. I could do nothing but lie awake and picture that white tomb slowly melting away, until the white face beneath peered out of it and made the dread secret known to all. Who would be the first to discover it? Doubtless some country man or woman passing that way in the gray of the morning. I drew pictures of the discoverer’s horror — the shriek of terror he or she would give. I scarcely dared to close my eyes ; for I knew that if I dreamed, my dreams would take me to stand over the snowdrift, and force me to watch it melting away ! It seemed to me that until Phi- lippa was out of the range of pursuit I should not sleep again. Faster and faster, now it had once begun, the thaw went on. Warm wind, heavy rain the next day, helped it. That tremendous fall of snow had, indeed, been the DARK DAYS. 85 last effort of the winter. I dreaded what I might see in the morning’s papers. , For it was the third day from that on which I spoke about going abroad ; yet we were still in London. When it really came to making preparations for the projected trip there were a thousand and one things to be done. There was the needful passport to be obtained; my mother had many purchases to make for both Philippa and herself. She was now fully contented with the pros- pect of a long sojourn on the continent ; but she liked travelling in comfort, and objected very much to being hurried. So it was that, in spite of the pressing need for immediate flight, we were still in London. The dangerous delay made me nervous, excitable, and ill-tempered. This state of mind was not without bene- fit to our cause, as my manner as well as my looks fully convinced my mother that my own health was the sole object of the journey. So, like a good creature, she set to work in thorough earnest to get everything ready for our departure. n To-morrow morning we were to start. I prayed Heaven that it might not be too late ; that the next twenty-four hours might pass without what I dreaded taking place. For I knew that by now that ghastly object on the road- side must be lying with the light of day on its pale face ! With an effort I opened the morning’s paper, and ran hastily up and down the columns. Wliat cared I for politics, foreign news, or money-market intelligence. Here was the one paragraph which riveted all m y tion. The white tomb had given up its secret ! Head . To me those words were written in letters of fire ! “Horrible Discovert near Rodino.— The melting of the snow has brought to light what to all appearances 86 DARK DAYS. is a fearful crime. Yesterday afternoon a laborer walk* ing on the highway discovered the body of a gentleman lying by the roadside. His death had been caused by a pistol-shot. It is supposed that it must have occurred on the night of the great snow-storm, and that the body has lain ever since under the snow, which had drifted to the depth of some feet. The facts that death must liavs been instantaneous, and that no weapon can be found near the spot, do away with the theory of suicide. Let- ters and papers found upon the corpse tend to show it to be that of Sir Mervyn Ferrand, Bart. The unfortunate gentleman’s friends have been communicated with, and the inquest will be opened to-morrow.” For some minutes I sat like one stunned. Inevitable as it was that the discovery should be made, the shock seemed scarcely lightened by the foreknowledge ; the danger seemed no less terrible. Oh, that we had started yesterday — were even to start to-day! What might not happen before to-morrow morning! My first impulse was to go to my mother and beg her to hasten our depar- ture ; but reflection showed me how unwise this course would be. I should alarm her — alarm Philippa ! I could give no reason. My one longing was to keep the news from my poor love. Let her read that paragraph, and who could answer for the consequences ? Looking as a medical man at her case, I knew that there was some- thing about that night which troubled her ; some dream, or semblance of dream, to which, fortunately, she could as yet give no coherence. Let her learn that Sir Mervyn Ferrand had ever since that night been lying dead where she met him, the fearful truth must come to her. No! not a word to excite her suspicion. My task was a two- fold one. I had to save her not only from what I sup DARK DAYS. 87 pose I must call justice, but also from lierself. It seemed to me that the latter was the hardest part of my work ; but I would do it— I swore I would do it. I would keep watch and ward, to see that nothing reached her— that she heard nothing which could awaken memories of those mercifully absent hours. _ . I tore the paper to pieces and burned it. I think ot all my dark days that one was the one I would be least willing to pass again. I trembled at every footstep on the stairs. Any man who paused for a moment outside our windows sent a cold chill over me. And in the midst of my misery I had to wear a cheerful face, and talk to Philippa and my mother about the pleasures of our projected journey ! Ah ! if we only reached the end of it in safety, the pleasure would not be altogether imaginary. . xl Once again I say, if you cannot feel with me, throw my tale aside. Heaven knows it is a sombre one ! I was breaking the law ; concealing what the law calls a crime ; doing all I could to save the criminal. But the criminal was Philippa, and I loved her ! I myself would have stood face to face with Sir Marvyn Ferrand, and have freely given my own life if I could have assured his dying like the dog he was. Why then should I blame Philippa, who had done in her temporary madness what I would have done in cold blood? Yet why trouble to extenuate? I loved her ! Those words sum up every- thing. . . The morning dawned. No fatal messenger had ar- rived. I glanced hastily at the papers, which, however, contained no more information about _ the tragedy. Shortly after ten o’clock we started to drive to Charing Cross. The rattle of wheels over thc stones seemed to 88 DARK DATS. send fresh life through mj veins. We were off on the road to safety. We started in plenty of time, as I wished to call at my bankers’ on the way. It was my intention to take with me a large sum in gold. Notes of any kind could be traced, but the bright sovereigns would tell no tale. 1 changed my check, and while doing so asked if there were any letters for me. Several persons addressed let- ters to me at my bankers’. The spruce cashier sent to in- quire, and, with my bag of gold, passed under the brass- wire railing a letter with a woman’s handwriting on the envelope. I thrust it into my pocket, to read at my leisure. We travelled by the tidal train for Paris, via Folke- stone and Boulogne. It was not the pleasantest weather in the world for a journey ; but I wrapped my charges up warmly, and did all I could to mitigate the hardships of the voyage, undertaken ostensibly for the sake of my health. My mother, who was by now an experienced and seasoned traveller, settled herself down to the jour- ney, although she little guessed how short the rest I meant to give her until we reached our destination. She laughingly protested against the cruelty of dragging an old woman like herself away from England just as she had returned to it ; but there was that in her voice and manner which told me she would fcr my sake make a far greater sacrifice of comfort than this. I thought that Philippa’s spirits, like mine, rose as we left London behind us. She smiled at my sallies and feeble attempts at making merry, which, now that we were fairly on our road to safety, were not quite so forced as they had been during the last few days. She listened with interest to the pictures I drew — imaginary DARK DATS. 89 ones, of course— of the beauties of the south; and I was glad* to believe that the thought of visiting what might almost be called her native land was beginning to awaken her interest. Only let me be able to show her that life .could still promise a pleasant future, and the moody memories of the past months might be banished forever. I am sure that no one who could have seen us that morning would have dreamed that out of that party of three, consisting of a comfortable, pleasant-looking Eng- lish matron, a strangely beautiful girl, and myself, two were flying from the hands of justice. Our appearance was certainly such as to disarm all suspicion. “But where are we going?” asked my mother. “I object to go wandering about without knowing where our pilgrimage is to end.” “We are going to Paris first, then to Spain to wher- ever we can find the warmth and sunshine which is necessary to my existence. If we can’t find them in Spain, we will cross over to Africa, and, if needful, go down to the Equator.” “ Then you young people will have to go alone. I draw the line of my good-nature at Europe. I glanced at Philippa. Her long curved lashes hid her eyes ; but a tell-tale blush was on her cheek. I knew that the day was not so very distant when she would answer my appeal as I wished. I knew that, could I but sweep away the record .of that one night, all might yet be well with her. Oh, that she may never recall what I aione know ! As we were nearing Folkestone I remembered the letter which had been given me at the bank. I drew it from my breast, intending to read it ; but the sight of ths* Bod in g post-mark on the outside made me change 90 DAKK DAYS. iny intention. I remembered Mrs. Wilson’s half promise to send me some communication. I longed and yet I dreaded to break the seal. I felt it would be better for me to read that letter alone. Whatever might be the tenor of its contents, I was sure it had some bearing on Philippa’s relations with Sir Mervyn Ferrand. We were soon on board the steamer and under weigh. Although the Arctic rigors of the last three weeks had departed, the air on the sea was too keen to make the channel passage an enjoyable one. I persuaded my mother and Philippa to take refuge in the saloon; and then I found a quiet spot where I was able to read my letter without fear of interruption, or of betraying myself by the emotion its contents might cause. It was well I did so, for the first words blanched my cheek. The letter began abruptly, so : “I know or guess all. I know why Sir Mervyn Fer- rand did not reach my house that night. I know the reason for her strange excited state. I know why she left my home before you came to seek her. I know how he met with the death he deserved. “ Ah ! she is braver than I am. She has done what years ago I swore I would do; and yet I had not the courage. I was base enough to forego revenge for the sake of the beggarly maintenance he offered me — for the sake, perhaps, of my children. I sank low enough to be- come his tool — to do as he bade me, even to taking under my roof the woman who thought herself his wife. Yes, she has been braver than I. But her wrongs were greater than mine ; for I had but myself to blame for being in such a degraded position that he could throw me aside like an old glove. He never married me. “ Fear nothing for your sister, if she be your sister. DARK DAYS. 91 Tell lier my lips are sealed to the death ; and for the sake of her brave act tell her this: « Si r Mervyn Ferrand’s first wife died on the ISth of June, 186- — , three jnonths before the day on which he married your sister. She died at Liverpool, at No. 5 Silver Street. She was buried in the cemetery, under the name of Lncy Ferrand. She has friends alive ; it will be easy to prove that she was the woman whom he married. Her maiden name was King. He hated her. They parted. He gave her a sum of money on condition that she never called herself his wife. He lost sight of her. I never did. For years I hoped she would die, and that he would marry me. She died too late for the hope to be realized. I told him of her death ; but I changed the date. I would not tell him where she died. Part of his object in coming to Boding that night was, to endeavor to wring the information from me. He would never have had it. No other woman should have been his wife so long as I could stop it. “ Now that he is dead, you can tell your brave sister that she may ; if she likes, take the name, title, and what wealth she can claim. Fear nothing from, me ; I will bt silent as death.” 92 DAKK DATS. CHAPTER VIII FLIGHT. READ the woman’s letter aorain and a^ain — read it c o with feelings in wliicli joy and disgust were strangely mingled; but the former was the predominant sensation. In the first place, if Mrs. Wilson kept her promise of secrecy, it seemed to me that all danger of suspicion fall- ing upon Philippa was removed. There would be no one else to make known the fact, that upon the night of Sir Mervyn’s death a wronged, distracted woman left her home — a woman whose life’s happiness had been clouded by the villain’s treacherous act — a woman of strong passions, who in her temporary delirium might easily be turned to take such vengeance for which I, at least, Held her quite unaccountable. If I could but feel sure of the silence of the one person whom I dreaded, we might even return to London, and fear nothing. 'I wavered. After all there is something contemptible in flight. Should I trust to Mrs. Wilson’s promise, and return with my com- panions by the next boat from Boulogne? Ho, a thousand times no ! Philippa’s welfare is far too precious to me to be trusted in the hands of one excitable Woman — a woman, moreover, who has wrongs of her own calling for vengeance. To-morrow her mind may change, rod instead of furthering our safety, she may be urging Vi~ ohe pursuit. Let me trust no one save myself. }***;?#■ DARK DAYS. 93 For my love’s sake, I was overjoyed to hear that, sup- posing the woman’s statement and date were correct, Philippa was the dead mail’s lawful wife. Not that this fact for one moment palliated the guilt of his intention, or lessened the contempt and hatred I bore toward him ; not that it changed in my eyes by one iota my love A position. Married or unmarried, to me she was all that a woman could be. Though a blackguard’s craft had wrought what would be her shame in the eyes of the world, though her hands were unconsciously red with a man’s blood, to me she was pure as a vestal, innocent as a child. Tet for her sake the new T s gladdened me. I knew that if ever the time should come when I could place proofs in her hands that she was a wife — that she could, if she chose, bear her worthless husband’s name, and face the world without fear of scorn, the restoration of her self- respect would bring with it a joy which only a woman can rightly comprehend. And Philippa, with all her pride and passion, was a true woman, full of the softness and delicate dread of shame which characterizes the best of her sex. Yet when should I be able to tell her? Whenever I did so I must also reveal the fact of her husband’s being $ lead, and my doing k) must bring the whole story of his death to her knowledge. I trembled as I thought what this might mean. Surely its dramatic surroundings must suggest something to her mind — must bring back the night and its horrors ; must, in fact, tell her what she had done in her madness ! Rather than risk this, I must let her continue to bear the cruel weight of what she thought her shame. My aim must be to make her believe that Sir Mervyn Ferrand is still alive, and troubling nothing 94 DARK DAYS. as to what has become of the woman whom he once falsely swore to love and cherish until death, I cursed the wretch’s memory as I thought of him. The sending of Philippa to live under the charge of one i>f his own discarded mistresses was but another proof of llie man’s revolting cynicism. Mrs. Wilson’s acceptance of the charge showed me to what a level a woman could sink. It told me, moreover, that in spite of her letter she was not to be trusted. A woman who could lend herself to her former lover’s purposes in such a way as this must have parted with every atom of pride. It seemed to me that the woman and the man were well j matched in baseness. Still her letter lifted a load from my mind. I felt that for a while there could be no pursuit ; yet I resolved to risk nothing, but hurry on with all possible speed, j Only when we crossed the frontier of Spain should I sleep in peace. All researches, with a view to obtaining evidence of the first Lady Ferrand’s death, I postponed indefinitely. Some day, if all went well, I would return to England and procure the documents necessary to prove the valid- ity of Philippa’s marriage. There was no pressing ^ hurry. As to any money which should be hers, never ! with ray consent should she touch a penny which had be- longed to the dead man. . Protracted as my meditations seem on paper, they were in reality much longer ; indeed, they were not at an end when the boat steamed in Boulogne harbor. I went in search of my companions, who, I was glad to find, had - borne the voyage well. We were soon in the train, and, without any event occurring worth recording, at eight o’clock stood on the Gare du Nord, Paris. DARK DATS. 95 We drove through the brightly lit streets to the Hotel du Louvre. The stains of travel washed away, my mother gave a sigh of satisfaction as she seated herself at the dinner-table. Like a sensible woman, she was no despiser of the good things of this life. There were other late diners in the great coffee-room, and many a head was turned to look at the beautiful girl who sat on my right hand ; for every day which brought her new health and strength, brought also to my love an instalment of her former rich beauty. In a very short time she would be to all appearances the Philippa of old. “How long shall we stay in Paris, Basil?” asked my mother. “It is now half-past nine; our train starts at 8.45 in the morning. Calculate the time.” “ Oh, nonsense ! It is years since I have been in Paris. I want to look at the shops. So does Philippa, I am sure.” “My dear mother, the man, much more the woman, who lingers in Paris is lost. If you are going elsewhere, the only way is to go straight through, or else you get no further. I have proved this, and mean to run no risk.” “ But remember we are only weak womep. This poor child is far from strong.” She smiled at Philippa, whose eyes thanked her for the affectionate appellation. “Don’t be merciless, Basil,” she continued; “give us at least one day.” “Not one. I am just going to look after a courier, so that you may travel in all possible comfort.” My mother seemed almost annoyed, and again said X was merciless. liV^hat would she have said had she known 06 DARK DAYS. that, unless I had received that letter, instead of going te our present comfortable quarters, we should have driven to the Orleans Railway, and taken the first train to the south? How little she knew — how little, I trusted, Phi- lippa knew — from what we were flying! I felt I must give my mother some reason for my haste ; so, before going in quest of my courier, I took her aside. “ It is not well for Philippa to stay in Paris,” I said. “ Some one whom she ought not to meet was here a short time ago.” I blamed myself for the deception ; but what could I do? Alas! it seemed to me that my life, which once was fearlessly open to the inspection of all, was now full of little else save deceptions. Should I ever again be my true self? My mother raised no further objection. I found a courier — a bearded gentleman of commanding presence, who spoke every European language with impartial im- perfection. I gave him instructions to see to everything the next morning ; to collect our luggage, save the small quantity we carried with us, and to register it through to Burgos. I had no particular reason for choosing Burgos, but it seemed a convenient place at which to take our . first thorough rest. The next day’s journey was a dull, dreary, wearisome affair. My companions had not shaken off the fatigue of the previous day, and now that I felt Philippa’s safety was, comparatively speaking, assured, a reaction set in with me. No wonder ! I shudder now as I think of the strain to which both body and mind had been subjected during the last fortnight. I was moody and listless. The air was full of fog and mist. The so-called express DAiJK DATS. $7 train ponnded along after the well-known style of French railways. Orleans, Blois, Tours, Poictiers, Angoul&me, Contras, and other stations passed me as one in a dream. The dull day crept on until dark evening was upon us, and we were all thoroughly glad when our day’s journey ended at Bordeaux. _ My mother, who was rather great at guide-books, had beguiled part of the journey by a Murray, which some- Jiow made its appearance from her travelling-bag. As she knew we were to sleep at Bordeaux she had been laying down the law as to what we were to look at. "We were to see the curious high wooden fifteenth-eentury houses of the old town ; the cathedral, with its fine tow- s' ers 5 the very old churches of St. Croix and St, Seurin, and* a variety of other interesting objects. It needed all I the assurance I possessed, all the Invalid’s querulousness | and insistance I could assume, to induce her to consent : to resume our journey the first thing in the morning. Even Philippa pleaded for delay, and gave me to under- stand that she thought I was using my mother unfairly. But I was firm. If I could I would have hurried on by the midnight train. Anyway, now that we were within a few hours’ journey of the frontier and of safety, I would leave no more than I could help to chance. So, in the early morning, I got my party together and before it was light led them to the train. I believe that by now my mother looked upon me as rather out of my senses. She frankly owned she could not see the neces* - sity for making such a toil out of what might be a pleasure. She little knew that nothing could have made that journey a pleasure to me; that even finding Philip- pa’s eyes now and again fixed on my face with what X almost dared to think was tender interest — that even tha 98 DARK DATS. blush which crossed her cheek when I caught thc»« glances— was not sufficient to reward me for my anxiety. A slow, a painfully slow train. Innumerable stoppages.' A country- which under the circumstances would have given me no interest even if we had been in summer in- stead of winter j and then, after nearly five hours’ slow travelling, Bayonne at last. Bayonne, with its strong fortifications. Bayonne, with the welcome Pyrenees towering above it. In less than two hours we should be in Spain. A curious dread seized me — a presentiment so strong that ever since then I have lost faith in presentiments. Something seemed to tell me that all my efforts had been in vain ; that at the frontier there would be certain ; intelligence received which would lead to our arrest ; that Philippa, with one foot, as it were, in the land of refuge, 1 would fie seized and carried back to face the horrors and I the shame of a trial for murder. It was, as events showed, an absurd fancy, and only the increasing tension of my nerves can account for the hold it gained upon me. I grew so pale, trembled so in every limb, that my companions were thoroughly alarmed. We had brandy with us, which was duly administered to me. After awhile I recovered, and although the fear was still with me, sat with the stoicism of an Indian at the stake, await- ing what might happen at the frontier. I had done all I could. If, at the last moment, disaster overtook us, I had at least striven by every means within my power to avert it. We have passed Biarritz, the merry bright watering- place. We have passed Hendaye, the French frontier station. We leave the towering Pyrenees on our left. We are at Irun, where all baggage must be jealously DARK DATS. 93 scrutinized. We are in Spain ! Nobod y lias troubled us, No suspicious-looking stranger lias watched ns. The stoppage has been long, for the custom-house officers are annoyingly particular in the discharge of their duty; but our noble-looking courier has saved us all personal trouble. He has done us yeoman’s service. At last we are in another train, a train which runs on a line of an- other gauge. The very time of day has changed. W e have lost or gained — I forget which — some twenty min- utes. We now count by Madrid time. We are fairly on Spanish ground, and I have saved my love. Saved her from others — now to save her from herself. Never, never shall she know the secret of that dark night. We will speed away to the south— to the sun ; the color ; the brightness ; the flowers. All shall be forgotten. The dark remembrance shall be swept from my mind. I will call it a dream. I will win Philippa’s love — the love that I dare to believe is already almost mine. We will live forever in bright, sunny, glowing lands. Who cares for dull, dark, dismal England ? Have we not youth, wealth, and oh, blessed word! love? Before my love and me lie years and years of sweetness and joy. Shake off black gloom and be merry, Basil North. You have conquered fate ! We have passed St. Sebastiam The sluggish train is wearily winding up the valley of the Urumea. We are / in wild and glorious scenery. The railway is carried at a great elevation, from which we get now and again peeps of far-away valleys. Yes, I could now find time to ad- mire the wonderful scenery which lasted until we passed Miranda. My mood changed with the country. I laughed ; I jested. Each of the many stations at which we stopped DARK PATS. 100 furnished materials for my new-born meriment. 1 laughed at the solemn-looking Spanish railway officials, and drew pictures of the doleful fate of imaginary nobly- born hidalgos whom poverty forced to descend to such employment. I grumbled not at the slowness of the train, although an ordinary traveller might well, when on a Spanish line, sigh for the comparatively lightning speed of the much-maligned French trains. Time was nothing tome now. Was there not a lifetime stretching before me— and Philippa? My gayety was contagions.. .My mother laughed until the tears came, and Philippa smiled as I had not 6een her smile since we picked up under such sad circumstances that long-dropped thread of friendship. Those who have travelled in Spain will scarcely credit me when X say we had the compartment to ourselves. We were troubled by no cloaked Spaniard who, as is the wont of his kind, insisted upon smoking like a furnace and keeping both windows shut. Our noble courier had been given his instructions. His arguments were venal, and had I troubled about money I should have found them costly. But they carried the point, and no one in- truded on our privacy. The hours went by. My mother slept, or pretended to sleep. I seated myself near Philippa, and whispered words of thinly-veiled love. She answered them not I expected no answer — but her eyes were downcast and her cheek was blushing. She sighed. A sad smile played around her sweet mouth ; a smile that spoke of a ^ world of regret. That sigh, that smile, told me that she understood me, but told me also that, ah ! it could never be. The past never forgives ! But all the same she let her hand rest in mine ; and although, considering what DARK DATS. 101 had happened, X scarcely dare to say so, for once, for many, many months, I was all but happy. Forme that journey ended only too soon. At nig t we reached Burgos, the capital of the old Castilian king- dom, and I laid my head on my pillow and enjoyed sleep ' such as I had not known since the night before that one, when Philippa, with the snow-flakes falling around her, stood outside the window of my cottage and gave me something to live for— something to hope for I 102 DARK DAYS. CHAPTER IX. SAFE — AND L O Y ED. *T^TOW that we are safe in Spain, now that Philippa’s -UN arrest is a matter of impossibility, and her expulsion from a country so lax in its observance of international obligations highly improbable, when her guilt can at the utmost be only suspected, if indeed suspicion ever points to her, I may pass rapidly over the events of the next two months; the more so as my record of them would differ very little from the description of an ordinary tour in Spain. To me, after the feverish anxiety, the horri- ble dread as to what any hour might bring forth, which had characterized our flight from England, it seemed something very much like bathos my dropping at once into the position of the every-day tourist taking a couple of ladies on a round of travel ; but for the time I was outwardly neither more nor less. From Burgos we went to Yalladolid; from Yalladolid to Madrid — Madrid, the high-perched city, with its arid, uninteresting surroundings and abominable climate. Not long did we linger here. Bad and trying as the English winter may be, the cold of Madrid is a poor exchange for it. I had almost thrown aside the assumed character of an invalid ; but I felt it would be the height of incon- sistency, after forcing my companions to accompany me in the search of warmth, to make any stay in the Spanish capital. Right glad I was to leave it, and turn my face DARK DATS. 103 southward. Philippa was by now in apparently good health, both bodily and mental ; but while at Madrid I trembled for her, as I should tremble for any one I loved who made that city a resting-place— a city swept from end to end by crafty, treacherous, icy winds blowing straight from the Guadarrama mountains; insidious blasts in which lurk the seeds of consumption and death. So at our leisure we went southward, halting at such places and seeing such sights as we thought lit ; lingeiing here and there just so long as it suited ns ; travelling by easy stages, and in such comfort as we could command. At Malaga we spent weeks, revelling in the balmy, delicious air; at Granada we were days and days before we could tear ourselves from the interesting, absorbing glories of the departed Moor. "We were in a new world a world which I had always longed to see. At last — it was just at the end of April, when the land was full of roses, when vegetation was breaking into that rich luxuriance unknown in the northern lands — we turned our steps to the city which I had in my own mind fixed upon as the end of our wanderings, the half Spanish, half Moorish, but wholly beautiful city of Seville ; bril- liant, romantic Seville, with its flower-bedecked houses, its groves of orange and olive trees, its luxuriant gardens, its crooked narrow streets, its Moorish walls, its num- erous towers, all of which sink into insignificance under the shadow of the lofty Giralda. All I wanted seemed to be here. Here was everything for the sake of seeking which I bad professed to leave foggy England sun, warmth, color, brightness. Here I thought, if in any place in the world, will the one I love forget what she knows of the cruel past. Here, it may be, our new life shall begin. 104 DARK DATS. Glorious, wonderful Seville ! The magic charm of the place fell on my companions as it fell upon me, as indeed it falls upon all who visit it. By common consent we arranged to stay our course for an indefinite time. Perhaps by now we all thought that we had endured enough of hotel life, and wanted some place which might bear the name of home ; so, although such things are not very easy to find, I hired a furnished house. Such a house ! From the narrow street — the need of shade makes narrow streets indispensable to Seville — pass through a light open-work iron gate into a spacious white marble- lined courtyard, or, as the Spaniards call it, patio / a courtyard open to the sky, save for the gayly-colored awning which is sometimes spread over it ; a space fra- grant to the four corners with the perfume of orange and other sweet-smelling blossoms, bright with glowing ole- anders, and musical wfith the murmur of fountains. Around the walls statues, some of the fair works of ar p, paintings and mirrors. Every sitting-room in the house opening on to this cool central fairyland — a fairyland which, for many months of the year, is almost the only part of the house used in their waking hours by the Sevillanos. Add to this a garden, not large but exquisite, full of the rarest and choicest blooms, and if vou are not hopelessly bigoted, and enamored of English fogs, you must long for such a home in courtly, beautiful Seville! With such surroundings — almost those of a Sybarite — who caii blame me for being lulled into security, if not forgetfulness, and for telling myself that my troubles were nearly at an end ? Who can wonder at the castles I built as hour after hour I lounged in the patio, with its fragrant, soothing atmosphere* and gazed at Philippa’s DA UK DAYS. 105 beautiful face, and now and again meeting her dark eyes, and sometimes surprising in those thoughtful depths a look which thrilled my heart — a look which I told my- self was one of love ? True, that often and often in my sleep I saw the white, dead face, with the snow-heap forming over it. True, that often and .often Philippa’s wild cry, “The wages of sin — on, on, on !” rang through my dreams, and I awoke trembling in every limb ; but in the day-time, in the midst of the sweet shaded repose, I could almost banish every memory, every thought which strove to lead me back to grief and horror. The days, each one sweeter than its forerunner, passed by. Each day was passed with Philippa. We wandered for hours through the marvellous gardens of the Alcazar ; we drove under the shading trees of Las Delicias ; we made excursions to Italica and other places, which the guide- book tells you every visitor to Seville should see ; but I think we found in the ordinary sights, which were at our veVy door, as much pleasure as in any of the stock shows. We loved to watch the people. We delighted in the picturesque, ragged-looking, black-eyed Andalusian boy- rascals who played and romped at every street-corner. We noted the exquisitely graceful figures of the Sevil- lanas ; I, moreover, noted that the most graceful of these figures could not be compared to Philippa’s own. We strolled up the awning-roofed Calle de las Sierpes, and laughed at the curious windowless little shops. Every- thing was so strange, so bright, so teeming with old- world tradition, so full of intense interest, that no won- der I could for the time send painful memories to the background. And Philippa? Although there were times when her 106 DAKK DATS. face grew sad with sad remembrances; although at times her eyes sought mine with that troubled, inquiring look ; although I trembled as to what might be the question icli I seemed to see her lips about to form ; I did not, could not believe she was entirely unhappy. The smile —a quiet, thoughtful one, yet a smile— was oftener seen on her face. It came now of its own accord. More and more certain I grew that, if nothing recalled the past, or I should say, if nothing filled the blank, so mercifully left, of that one night, the hour was not far distant when my love would call herself happy. Oh, to keep that fatal knowledge from her forever ! Such was my life. So, in calm, peace, all but happi- ness, the days passed by, until the hour came when for the third time I dared to tell Philippa that I loved her to tell her so with the certainty of hearing her re-echo my words. Yes, certainty. Had I not for many days seen her eyes grow brighter, the grave, thoughtful look leave her face, her whole manner change when I drew near? Such signs as these told me that the crowning moment of my life was at hand. Here for one moment I pause. I scorn to excuse my- self for wishing to marry a woman who had been, or supposed herself to have been, the innocent victim of a scoundrelly man of the world. I have nothing in com- mon with those who think such an excuse is needed. Mrs. Wilson’s statement that the marriage was valid might be true or false. It gave me the impression that it was true, and I believed that Philippa could lay claim to bear the man’s accursed name. But whether she was Lady Ferrand, or a trusting woman betrayed, for my own sake I cared little. She was Philippa! As to my intention of marrying, my one wish to DARK DAYS. 107 marry, a woman wlio, in her temporary and fully-ac- counted -for delirium, had killed the man who so cruelly wronged her, I have but this to say. My tale, although t give it to the world, is not written for the purpose of fiction. It is the story of myself — a story which seemed *.o me worth telling — of a man who loved one woman passionately, blindly, and without consideration. Such was my great love for Philippa that I feel no shame in telling the truth, and saying that had I seen her, in full possession of her senses, level that pistol and shoot her betrayer through his black heart, I should have held that only justice had been done. I should have regretted the act, but, nevertheless, I would have pleaded for her love as fervently and reverently as I now was about to plead for it. Once more I say, if you condemn me, throw the book aside. Philippa, with her eyes half closed, was, as was usual at that hour, sitting in the patio. In her hand she held a sprig of orange blossom, and ever and anon inhaled its I delicious perfume ; an action, by the bye, scarcely needful, as the whole air was redolent of the fragrance thrown from the great tree in the centre of the marble space. She was, or fancied she was, alone, as some little time before I had left the court to obtain a fresh supply of cigarettes ; and my mother, who could never quite adapt herself to the semi-open-air life, was taking a siesta in the drawing-room. As I saw Philippa in all her glowing beauty, tlxe white marble against which she leaned mak- ing as it were a suitable foil to the warm color of her cheek — the long, curved, black, downcast lashes — the bosom rising and falling gently — like an inspiration the thought came to me that in a minute my fate would be 108 DAEK DATS. decided. Heavens ! how conld I have waited so long to hear the words which I knew she wonld say ? I crept noiselessly to her side. I passed my arm rtund her waist and drew her to me. I whispered words » i passionate love in her ear — words, the confidence ol wi.ich startled me ; but then this time I knew that my love of years was to be rewarded. She did not shrink away ; she did not struggle to free herself, but she trembled like a leaf in my embrace. She sighed deeply, even hopelessly, and I saw the tears welling in her dark eyes. Closer and firmer I held her, and kissed her cheek again and again. Had that mo- ment been my last I should have said I had not lived in vain. “ Philippa,” I whispered, “ my queen, my love, tell me you love me at last.” She was silent. The tears broke from her eyes and ran down her cheeks. I kissed the signs of sorrow away. “ Dearest,” I said, “ it is answer enough that you suffer these kisses, but I have waited so long — been so unhappy ; look at me and satisfy me ; let me hear you say, ‘ I love you ! ’ ” She turned her tearful eyes to mine, but not for long. She cast her looks upon the ground and was still silent. Yet she lay unresisting in my arms. That, after all, was the true answer. But I must have it from her lips. “ Tell me, dearest — tell me once,” I prayed. Her lips quivered ; her bosom rose and fell. The blush , spread from her cheek and stole down her white neck. “ Yes,” she murmured, “now that it is too late, I love you.” DARK DATS. 109 I laughed a wild laugh. I clasped Philippa to my “Too late!” I cried. “We may have fifty years of happiness.” T . “ It is too late,” she answered. “ For your sake 1 nave told you that I love you, Basil. My love, I will kiss you once — then loose me, and let us say farewell.” “ When death closes the eyes of one of us we will say farewell— not until then,” I said, as my lips met hers in a long and rapturous kiss. Then with a sigh she gently but firmly freed herself from my arms. She rose, we stood on the marble floor, face to face, gazing in each other’s eyes. « Basil,” she said softly, “ all this must be forgotten. Say farewell ; to-morrow we must part.” “ Dearest, our lives henceforth are one.” « It cannot be. Spare me, Basil ! You have been kind to me. It cannot be.” “Why? Tell me why.” “Why! need you ask? You bear an honored and respected name ; and I, you know what I am a shamed woman.” „ “ A wronged woman, it may be, not a shamed one. “ Ah ! Basil, in this world, when a woman is concerned, wronged and shamed mean the same thing. You have been as a brother to me. I came to yon in my trouble ; you saved my life — my reason. Be kinder still, and spare me the pain of paining you.” By look, by word, by gesture, she seemed to beseech me. Oh, how I longed to tell her that I firmly believed she was the dead man’s wife! I had much difficulty uv checking the words which were forming on my lips. But I dared not speak. Telling her that the marriage was a 110 DAKK DAYS. valid one meant that I must tell her of her husbaW^ death, and, it might be, how he died. “ Philippa/ 5 I said, “ the whole happiness of my life, my every desire, is centred upon making you my wife. Think, dearest, how when I had no right to demand this gift my life was made desolate ; think what it will be when I know you love me and yet refuse to be mine ! Have I been true to you, Philippa ?” “ Heaven knows you have.” a Then why, now that you love me, refuse me my re- ward r “Oh, spare me 1— I cannot, I will not give it. Basil, dear Basil, why with your talents should you marry the cast-off — -mistress — of SirMervyn Ferrand ? Why should you blush to show your wife to the world F “ Blush ! The world ! What is my world save you ? You are all to me, sweetest. You love me — what more do I want? Before this time next week w r e will be married.” “Never, never! I will not wrong the man I love. Basil, farewell forever !” She clasped her hands and fled wildly across the court. I caught her at the door, which she had reached and half opened. “Promise me one thing,” I said ; “promise you will wait here until my return, t shall not be five minutes. It is not much to ask, Philippa.” I hilippa bent her head as m assent. I passed through the door, and in a few minutes returned to the patio, ac- companied by my mother, who glanced from Philippa to me in a 'surprised way. Wliat is the matter ?” she asked, with her cheerful smile. “Have you two young people been quarrel- ling?” DARK DATS. Ill Philippa made no answer. She stood with her Ungers interlaced ; her eyes cast on the ground. “ Mother,” I said, “I have to-day asked Philippa to be mv wife. I have told her that all my happiness depends upon her consent to this. I have loved her for years; and at last she loves me. Yes, she loves me. My mother gave a little cry of pleasure, and stepped forward. I checked her. . , K t> * “ X l 0 ve her, and she loves me,” I continued. h>u she refuses to marry me. And why? Because she fears to bring shame on an honorable name. You mow her story ; you are my mother. You, of all people m the world, should be the most jealous as to the honor of my name. Yon should know whom you would elioose for my wife. Tell her — ” . , , I said no more. My mother advanced with out- stretched arms, and in a moment my poor girl was weeping in her embrace, while words winch I could not hear, but whose purport I could well guess, were being whispered to her. I had iudeed been right m trusting to my mother’s noble nature. “ Leave us for a little while, Basil,” she said, as Phi- lippa still sobbed upon her shoulder. “ Come back in a quarter of an hour’s time. I turned away, went past the screen which is some- times put up to insure privacy, out of the iron gate, into I the narrow street. I watched the lounging, digmfieo- looking men and the dark-eyed women who went by , 1 looked at the merry urchins at play ; and after what seemed an interminable quarter of an hour, returned to learn how my gentle counsel had succeeded with my My mother and Philippa were sitting with tlieir arms 112 DARK DAYS. around each other. Philippa, as I entered the raised her eyes ta mine with a look of shy happiness. My mother rose and took the girl by the hand. “ Basil,’ 5 she said, “ I have at last been able to persuade her that yon and I, at least, rise above the conventionali- ties of what is called the world. I have told her that, knowing all I know, I see nothing to prevent her from being your wife. I have told her that simply for her own sweet sake I would rather see you marry her than any woman in the world. And, Basil, I fancy I have made her believe me.” With her soft eyes full of maternal love, my mother kissed me and left the court. I opened my arms to close them round the fairest woman in the world; and all the earth seemed bright and glorious to me. My great love had conquered ! And yet, even in that moment of bliss, my thoughts involuntarily flew away to a snow-heaped road in Eng- land — to a white drift, under which for days and days a ghastly object had once been lying. A dream ! a dream! It must have been a fearful dream. Forget it, Basil North, and be happy in the happiness you have at last won ! DARK DATS. CHAPTER X, THE SWORD PALLS NCE conquered— once convinced that the obstacles which her solicitude for my welfare raised against my wish were not insuperable — Philippa offered no further resistance ; while as for me, every day that might be counted before I called her my wife seemed a day spoiled, if not entirely wasted. 'With my mother’s argu- ments to back my own fervent persuasion, I had no difficulty in winning Philippa’s consent to our marriage taking place as soon as the needful formalities could be complied with. And yet, although the day was fixed it was at my instance changed, and the ceremony post- poned for a while. My reason for deferring my crowning happiness was this. Knowing all that I knew, the question arose, under what name was Philippa to be married? Under her own maiden name ; under the false name which for some time Sir Mervyn Ferrand, for reasons best known to himself, had 'made her assume ; 'or under that name which, supposing Mrs. Wilson had spoken the truth, she was legally entitled to bear? So anxious, so resolved was I that there should be no shadow of doubt as to the validity of her second and happier marriage, that after due consideration I determined to sacrifice my own in- clinations, and postpone our wedding long enough to 114 DARK DAYS. give me time to pay a flying visit to England, where could do my best to obtain such evidence as would show that Philippa was the dead man’s widow. I made the excuse that I found many matters of busi- ness connected with my property must be attended to be- fore I could be married. I travelled to England — to Liver- pool — as fast as I could. I stayed there for a week, and during that time made full researches into the life and death of a woman who, as Mrs. Wilson said, had died on a certain date, and been buried under the name of Lucy Ferrand. The information I acquired as to her antecedents is of no consequence to my story. Whatever her faults may have been, her history was a sad one; indeed it seemed to me that the history of any woman who had been cursed by Sir Mervyn Ferrand’s love was a sad one. However, the result of my investigations was, in short, this : Ferrand had married the woman many years ago. They had parted by mutual consent. With his cynical carelessness, he had troubled no more about her; and, stranger still, she had not troubled him. She died on the date given by my informant. The question of identity could be easily settled ; so that if ever Philippa chose to claim the rights appertaining to Sir Mervyn Ferrand’s widow, she would have no difficulty in making that claim good. But I trusted that years might pass before she learned that the man was dead. I made my presence in England known to no one ; in fact, I felt that in returning to my native country I ran a certain amount of risk. For all I knew to the con- trary, there might be a warrant out against me. If sus- picion as to the author of that night’s work had in any way been directed to Philippa, I, the partner of her DARK DATS. 115 flight, could not hope to escape free. However, I com- forted myself by thinking that if danger menaced us I should have heard something about it, as after our first hurried start I liad made no attempt to conceal our whereabouts. It would have been useless. My mother had friends in England, with whom she exchanged letters. I had an agent and lawyers, with whom, if only for financial reasons, I was bound to correspond. I had been obliged to write to my stolid William, and instruct him to get rid of the cottage as best he could, and to look out for a fresh place for himself. But all the same I did not care to let it be known that I was now in England. While engaged upon raking up evidence on Philippa’s behalf, I did not neglect to make such inquiries as I could respecting the event which had happened that night near Boding. 1 found that, so far as the general public knew, the crime was still veiled in mystery. No one had been arrested ; no one had been accused ; no reason for the deed had been discovered, and as yet sus- picion pointed to no one. Indeed, in spite of the hun- dred pounds reward offered by Government, it seemed that Sir Mervvn Fer rand’s murder was relegated to swell the list of undiscovered crimes. By this I knew that Mrs. Wilson had kept her promise of silence ; and. now that months had gone by, now that public attention had been turned from the thrilling affair, now that Philippa seemed as far or farther than ever from giving any token which suggested the awakening of recollection of what her wrong, her frenzy, had prompted her hand to do unknowingly, I dared to hope that any chance which remained of a revelation of the truth was reduced to a minimum. These results of my investigations and inquiries gave me immense relief, and my heart was all 116 BARK BAYS. bat gay as, armed with the proofs of the first Lady Ferrand’s death, I hurried back to Seville, Philippa, and the happiness which I vowed should be mine. We were married. Philippa and I were married I Married ; and a few months ago I sat lonely, miserable, and heart-broken, deeming that the one I loved was lost to me forever ! What matters the things which have filled those months, and made them the most painful of my life? To-day we are man and wife, joined together till death us do part ! I said no word as to the result of my inquiries in Liv- erpool. I had no difficulty in persuading Philippa, who in some things was as simple and trusting as a child, that it was necessary, or at least advisable, she should be mar- ried under the name which her first certificate of marri- age affected to bestow upon her. She signed her name for the last, it may, for aught I know, have also been the first time, as Philippa Ferrand ; and I noticed that she shuddered as she formed the letters. Although my bride was by birth half a Spaniard, and Although I had by now in many ways conformed to the Spanish mode of life, we were still English enough to look upon going away somewhere for a honeymoon as in- dispensable. It would be but a short trip ; and as my mother in our absence would be left at Seville alone, or with servants only, we did not care to go very far away. It so happened that, although so close to Cadiz, we had not yet paid that town a visit, and thought the present a capital opportunity for so doing. To Cadiz we went, and stayed several days at the Hotel de Paris. We liked the white-walled town, rising and shining above the dark-blue sea, like, as I have somewhere seen it described, a white pearl in a crown of sapphires; DARK DATS. 117 or, as the Gadi&nos call it, tazita de plata, a. silver cup. We liked the rows of tall terrace-topped houses. e 1 e the movement and bustle on the quays and in the port We liked the walks on the broad granite ramparts, and the lovely views of the busy bay and country beyond it , but all the same we agreed that Cadiz bore no com pan- son to our beautiful Seville, and the sooner we returned to that gay city the better. Now that I had gained my desire, was I happy ? After all that had passed, could I have been happy during those early days of our wedded life? As I look back upon them, I sit and muse, trying in vain to answer the ques- tion to ray own satisfaction. Plulippa loved me s 1 was my wife ; come good, come evil, she was mine for- ever. In so much I was happy, thrice happy. Coul have lived but for the present, my bliss would have known no alloy. , . - , But there was the past ! I could not altogether forget the path which had led to such happiness as now was mine. I could be thankful that I alone knew all the hor- rors and dangers with which that path was studdc . alone knew the secret of that one night. Although I could keep it forever, would it be always a seci e Yes, and there was the future. Behind the happiness which was mine at present lurked a dread as to what the future had in store for me-for us. It was a dread which day by day grew stronger. The greater my lappine , the more dreadful the thought of its being wrecked The feeling that my house of joy was built vl P oll s ^ d was always obtruding on my most blissful hours, and not, I knew, without good reasons. Philippa’s very avoidance of speaking of her p lent some justification to my gloomy forebodings. No 113 DARK DATS. once did Sir Mervyn Ferrand’s name pass between my wife and me. Not once did slie ask me for any further particulars concerning the events of that night upon which, in the height of her short-lived mania, she reached my cottage. True that upon becoming my wife, and be- ginning a new and happier stage of life, it might be but natural for her to wish to consign to oblivion the wrong, the shame, the suffering wrought by a villain’s craft ; yet I was so mixed up in the catastrophe that silence on the subject seemed strange. Her reticence alarmed me. I fancied it must be caused by some vague uneasiness con- nected with that night — some doubt which she dared not seek to set at rest. It is, 1 know, not unusual for women, after their recovery from that mysterious disease which had for awhile driven my poor girl distraught, to be able to recall and accurately describe the delusions which had afflicted them during those wandering hours. I myself had in one or two cases noticed this peculiarity, and the authorities which I had studied during Philippa’s illness mention it as an indisputable fact. My great dread was that at some moment, perhaps when our happiness Was as perfect as it could be, some simple chance, some allu- sion to certain events, even the bare mention of a name, might supply the missing link, and the fearful truth would be revealed to my wife. Our return journey to Seville was made by water. Although the Gfnadalquiver is not a very interesting river, we thought travelling by steamer would be a pleas- ant change from the journeys in the hot, stuffy, slow trains, full from end to end with the odor of garlic and tobacco ; so early one morning we left Cadis, and were soon steaming up the sluggish, dull, turbid river, with the great flat stretches of swampy land on either hutid. DARK DAYS. 119 There were not many passengers on board the steamer. The boat itself was a wretched affair, and before an hour was over we wished we had chosen the train as a mode of transit. Mile after mile of the level deserted land through which the river flows passed by, and presented no objects of interest greater than herds of cattle or flights of aquatic birds. Save that Philippa was by my side, it was the dullest journey I ever made. Of course there were English tourists on boaid; no spot is complete without them. Two of them, young men, and apparently gentlemen, had seated themselves near us; and after the usual admiring glances at my beautiful Philippa, commenced a desultory talk with each other. From the unrestrained way in which they spoke, and from the strength of some of their unfavorable com- ments on the scenery, or lack of scenery, it was clear that they took us for natives, before whom they could speak without being understood. Philippa, of course, looked a thorough Spaniard, and my own face had become so tanned by the sun that I might have been of any nation- ality. The young fellows chatted on, quite oblivious to the fact that two of their neighbors understood every word they spoke. For some time I listened with great amuse- ment; then the lulling motiou of the steamer, the slug- gish muddy flow of the stream, the monotonous banks past which we stole, exercised a soporific effect upon me, and I began to doze and dream. Through my dreams X heard a name, a hated name, spoken clearly and distinctly. I started and opened my eyes. Philippa’s head was stretched forward as if she 120 DARK DAYS. was intent upon catching some expected words spoken bj another. “ Sir Mervyn Ferrand,” I heard one of our fellow- voyagers repeat. “Yes, I remember him; tall, good- looking man. Where is lie now ? He was a bad lot.” “ Surely you read or heard about it ?” said his com. panion in a tone of surprise. I touched my wife’s arm. “ Come away, Philippa,” I said. She made a motion of dissent. Again I urged her. She shook her head pettishly. u Ah! I forgot where you have been for months,” said the second tourist, laughing ; “ out of the pale of civilization and newspapers. Well, Ferrand was mur- dered — shot dead !” Philippa, dearest, come, I implore you,” I whispered. It was too late! The look on her face told me that nothing would now move her — nothing! She would hear the dreadful truth, told perhaps with distorted details. I groaned inwardly. The moment I had so long dreaded had come. If I dragged her away by force -if I interrupted the speakers — what good could it do? She had heard enough. She would force me to tell her the rest. I could only pray that she would not in any way associate herself with the man’s death. “ Murdered! Poor fellow! Who murdered him?” I heai’d the first speaker say. “Ho one knows. lie was shot dead on a couutry roadside, just as that fearful snow-storm of last winter began. It seems almost incredible, but the snow drifted ovei him, and until it melted the crime was not discov- ered. In the interval the murderer had, of course, got clean away.” DARK DATS. 121 ■ “Poor devil! T never beard any good of him; but what an end !” I was not looking at the speakers. I was noting every change in my wife’s face. I saw the color fly from her cheek. I saw her lips and throat working convulsively, as though she was trying to articulate. I saw her dark brows contract as in anguish. I knew that she was clasping her hands together, as was her way when agi- tated. Suddenly she turned her eyes to mine, and in her eyes was a look of horror which told me that the very worst had come to pass — that the dread which had haunted me was realized ! Then with a low moan she sank, white and senseless, on my shoulder. Though in a whirl of despair, I believe that I assumed a kind of mechanical calm. I seem to remember that the two English tourists offered their assistance ; that, as we bore Philippa to an extemporized couch in the shadiest and coolest place we could find, I smiled, and attributed my wife’s fainting-fit to the heat of the sun, the smell of engines, or something of that kind. Little did those young men guesss what their chance words had wrought. Little could they think that in speaking of Sir Mervyn Eerrand’s death they had, perhaps, wrecked the happiness of two lives. My heart was full of grief and fear, but I believe I bore myself bravely. In spite of such restoratives as we could administer, Philippa’s swoon lasted for a considerable time. I troubled little about that fact. Indeed, to me it seemed well that syncope should have supervened, and, for a time, banished the dreadful memories which had so sud- denly invaded her brain. Could such a thing have been possible, I would almost have wished that her insensibil- ity would continue until wc reached Seville. But it was 128 t>AKK DAYS. not to be so. By and by she sighed deeply, and her eye opened. Consciousness and all its dreaded sequence w hers once more. I spoke to her, but she made no reply. She tnrne her eyes from mine ; she shunned my gaze ; she even seemed to shrink from the toucn of my hand. During the remainder of that dreary journey not one word passed her lips. She lay with her face turned to the side of the vessel, heedless of curious glances from fellow-passengers, heedless of my whispered words of love ; heedless of all save her own thoughts — thoughts which led her, I trembled to picture whither. ‘ Through all those long sultry hours while the ^wretched steamboat ploughed its way up the broad muddy stream I sat beside her, trying to find some way out of our sorrow. Alas ! every road was stopped by the impassable obstacle of Philippa’s knowledge of what she had done. For she knew it, I was certain. That look in her eyes had told me so much. The duration of her insanity had been so short that I could gather no comfort from the fact that by some merciful arrangement maniacs who recover their erring senses are troubled little by the deeds they have done in their moments of madness. I felt that in my wife’s case my only hope was to endeavor by argument to bring her to my own way of thinking; that is, to con- sider herself unaccountable by any law, human or divine, for her actions at the time. But I doubted if her sensi- tive, impulsive nature could ever be induced to take this view of her act. I doubted, had she not been the woman I loved with a passionate love, if I could have quite ab- solved her from the crime, with the remembrance of her Words, “ Basil, did you ever hate a man ?” still with me. Yet, strange anomaly, I would, in fair fight of course^ DARK DAYS. 123 have shot that man through the heart and have gloried in the deed. But then Philippa was a woman, and had she not been the woman I loved I might have shrunk from the one who, even in her madness, was urged to take such fearful vengeance. I smiled bitterly as I thought how a chance breath of wind had tumbled my house of cards to the ground. I smiled almost triumphantly as I told myself that, come what might — misery — shame — death — I had won and held for a week the one desire of my life. Nothing could deprive me of that memory. Home at last ! Still silent, or answering my questions by monosyllables, Philippa was brought by me to our once happy home in Seville. My mother, with arch smiles of welcome on her comely face, was at the gate of the patio ready to receive us. As she saw her a kind of shiver ran through my poor love’s frame. She let my mother embrace and caress her without, any display of reciprocal affection. “Philippa is ill,” I said, in explanation. “I will take her to her room.” " I led her to the apartment which my mother had in our absence fitted up for us. It was gay and beautiful with flowers, and there were many other careful little evidences of the hearty welcome which was waiting us. Philippa noticed nothing. I closed the door and turned toward my wife. She looked at me with those wondrous dark eyes, which seemed to search my very soul. “Basil,” she said, in a low, solemn voice, “ tell me — tell me the truth. What had I done that night V ’ 134 DARK DATS. CHAPTER XL I SPECIAL PLEADING. I T was over ! She knew ! The hope which may have buoyed my spirits, that Philippa’s agitation at learning of Sir Mervyn Ferrand’s death was hut due to the fact that once she loved the man entirely vanished. I could 6ee no loophole of escape, no possibility of persuading her that she was fancying horrors which had never taken place. Moreover, although I would have given my life to have saved her from the knowledge of this thing, I could not meet the eyes of her I loved, and lie to her. I did indeed, if but for the sake of gaining time, at- tempt to stammer out some evasive answer; but she interrupted me before I had spoken five words. “ Why do I ask?” she echoed. “I knew it all — all — all ! In dreams it has come to me — the whitened road . — the dull dead face — the whirling snow ! In dreams I have stood over him, and said to myself, ‘ He is dead ! ’ But, Basil, my love, my husband, I thought it was but a dream. I drove it away. I said, ‘ It must be a dream, j I hated him, and so I dreamed that I killed him.’ Basil, dearest Basil, tell me, if you can, that I dreamed it!” Her voice sank into accents of piteous entreaty. She looked at me yearningly. “ Dearest, it must have been a dream,” I said. She threw out her arms wildly. “ No, no l It was 125 DAKK DATS. bo dream. Even now I can see myself standing in the night over that motionless form. I can feel the cold air on my cheek. I can see myself flying through the snow, Basil, I hated that man, and I killed him !” The tears were streaming down my cheeks. I seized her hands, and strove to draw her to me. She tore her- self from my grasp, and throwing herself wildly on the bed, broke into a paroxysm of sobs. As I approached her she turned her head from me. “I killed him! killed him!” she whispered in awe- struck tones. “ Oh, that fearful night ! It has haunted me ever since. I knew not why. Now I know! He wronged me, and I killed him! killed him!” I placed my arm around her neck, and my cheek against hers. As she felt my touch she started up wildly. “No, no !” she cried. “Touch me not! Shun me! Shrink from me! Basil, do you hear? Do you under- stand ? I have murdered a man !” Once more she threw herself on the bed, her whole frame quivering with anguish. “A shamed — a ruined woman !” she muttered. “A villain’s forsaken toy, and now a murderess ! You have chosen your wife well, Basil !” “ Sweetest, I love you,” I whispered. “Love me! How can you love me? Such love is not holy. If you love me, aid me to die, Basil ! Give me something that will kill me ! Why did you save my life ?” “ Because I loved you then, as I love you now.” She was silent, and I hoped was growing calmer. 1 was but waiting for the first shock of her newly-born knowledge to pass away, in order to reason with her, and 126 DARK DAYS. show her that by every moral law she was guiltless of the fearful crime. Suddenly she turned to me. . “ How did I kill him?” she said, with a shudder. “ Dearest, rest. We will talk again presen tly.” “ How did I kill him V ’ she repeated with vehemence. “ He was found shot through the heart,” I answered reluctantly. “Shot through his heart — his wicked heart! Shot by me! How could I have shot him ? With what? Basil, tell me all, or I shall go mad ! I will not have the small- est thing concealed. I will know all !” “ He was shot with a pistol.” “ A pistol ! a pistol ! How did I come by it ? Where is it?” “I threw it away.” “ You ? Then you knew !” I bowed my head. I felt that concealment was useless. She must know all. I told her everything. I told her how she had prom- ised to come for me; how* as she d^d not keep that promise, I went in search of her. ± told her how she had swept past me in the snow-storm ; how I had over- taken her. I repeated her wild words, and told her how the fatal weapon had fallen at my feet, and how I had, on the impulse of the moment, hurled it away into the night; how she had broken away from me, and fled down the lonely road ; how, excited and terrified by her words, I had gone on to learn their meaning; how I had found the body of Sir Mervyn Ferrand; how, without thought of concealing the deed, I had laid the dead man by the roadside; how I had rushed home, and found her, Phi- lippa, waiting for me, and in the full height of temporary Aiaauity. I told her all this, and I swore that from the DARK DATS. 127 moment 1 discovered that her senses had gone astray I held her, although she had done so dreadful a deed, a* innocent of crime as when she slept, a babe, on her mother’s breast. She listened to me with fixed dilated eyes. She inter- rupted me neither by word nor gesture ; but when I had finished speaking she covered her face with her hands, and great tears trickled through her fingers. 44 No hope ! No hope!* she cried. 44 Oh, Basil, I dared to hope that something you would tell me would show me it was not my hand which did this thing! My love, my own love, we have been so happy while I could persuade myself all this was a dream! We shall be happy no more. Basil!” Although she still shrank from me, by force I drew her to me, and laid that poor head on my shoulder. I stroked the smooth black silky hair, I kissed the white forehead, and used every endearing and soothing expres- sion that love such as mine could suggest. In vain ! The moment I loosened my hold my wife fled from my side. 44 Basil,” she cried, 44 you knew it! You knew the blood of a man was on my hands ! Again I say such love is not holy !” 44 Dearest, again I tell you that in my eyes — if the truth were known, in the eyes of all — you are innocent I as a babe.” She shook her head hopelessly, I saw that nothing at present could move her. Perhaps it was more than I had a right to expect. So for the time I gave up argu- ing. I begged her for my sake to retire to rest. I gave her a soothing draught. I sat by her for hours, and held her hand, until at last her eyelids fell, and, worn out by grief, she slept. DARK DAYS. 128 Oh, how right I had been in choosing flight ! Ah though a cursed chance had revealed what I fondly hoped Would be forever buried in oblivion, how right 1 had been ! Had the hands of Justice grasped my sweet wife, although she might no doubt have been found guiltless, the trial, the exposure, would have killed her. Thank heaven, she was safe, and amenable only to the tribunal t>f her own sensitive conscience ! When I heard her breathing grow regular, and knew that she was in a deep sleep, I pressed my lips gently to her fair cheek, and left her. I went in search of my mother, and made the best tale I could think of to ac- count for Philippa’s indisposition. I forced myself to wear a smiling face, and to listen with a show of interest to the account my mother gave me of certain difficulties which had during my absence arisen with some of the native servants. But there was nothing which could really interest me when I thought of my poor love lying there sleeping, to awake, alas ! to sorrow, and remorse. No wonder that, as soon as I had spent with my mother the smallest portion of time which filial duty and grati- tude exacted, I flew back to Philippa’s bedside. I watched beside her until she awoke— until her splen- did dark eyes unveiled themselves. I leaned over and kissed her passionately. Between sleeping and waking, while consciousness was yet in abeyance, she returned my caresses. Then came back memory and its terrors. “ Leave me,” she said ; a I am a murderess ! “ Once more I denied it ; once more I told her she was innocent. My only hope was, that by continued argu- ment I might in time ease her mind. She listened almost apathetically. I grew eloquent and passionate. Was I not pleading for my own sake as well as hers! I DARK DATS. 129 If I could but persuade her she was unaccountable for what she had done, some remnant of the happiness which a few days ago I had promised myself might even now be left. “ Basil,” she whispered, “ I have been dreaming horri- ble tilings. Will they try me — and hang me?” “We are in Spain, dearest. Even if you were guilty, the English law could not reach you.” She started. “ And it was for this you hurried to Spain ? To save me from a felon’s death ?” “To save you from what, in your state at the time, you could not bear. I say again you are innocent, but I dare not risk the trial.” She was silent for some minutes ; then she spoke. “ I am proud, passionate, wicked,” she said ; “ but I could never have meant to do this. I was mad! I must | have been mad ! Basil, you could tell them I was mad. ; They would believe you, and forgive me.” She looked at me imploringly. “ I could stand up,” I said, “ and state on oath that you were at the time in a raging delirium. I could pledge l my professional reputation t^iat your actions were the I result of madness. Fear nothing on that score, my * wife.” I spoke boldly ) but as I spoke a thought shot through me — a thought which blanched my cheek and brought the beads of perspiration to my brow. I knew enough of law to be aware that a husband could not in a criminal v- case give evidence for or against his wife. My marriage with Philippa had deprived her of the benefit of my testimony as to her insanity. I trembled like a leaf as I pictured what might happen in the e^ent of her being tried for the murder of Sir Mervyn Ferrand. The very 130 DA UK DAYS. nurses liad but seen her sane. No one but myself and perhaps my servant had seen her in her madness. My dismay was such that I was bound to leave the room, in order to recover my presence of mind. Again and again I thanked Heaven that we were on foreign soil. The thought that my unreasoning love might have de- stroyed her I loved was almost more than I could bear. I fancy I have lingered long enough over that terrible time, when my wife first learned that the dream which had haunted her was reality — that her hand had unknow- ingly avenged her supposed and premeditated wrong. Let me but say that the mental anguish into which the knowledge plunged her was not unattended by physical evil. In fact, for many days my poor girl was ill, very ill. My mother and I nursed her with every care, and by and by youth and a splendid constitution reasserted themselves, and, a shadow of her former self, she was able to leave her bed. My mother was tenderness itself to her daughter. She knew nothing of the true cause of her illness; indeed, she blamed me roundly for not having taken proper care of my beautiful bride, and vowed laughingly that for the future nothing should induce her to trust Philippa out of her sight. Now that Philippa knew all she had done, I thought it better to tell her that, although he had no intention of so doing, Sir Mervyn Ferrand, in causing a mock marriage to be celebrated, had by a strange chance really made her his wife. This gave her little comfort. “It makes my crime the greater,” she said bitterly. “I have killed my husband instead of my seducer ! I am not fit to live !” Weeks went by. Philippa gradually grew stronger, and, what was even more a cause of joy to me, calmer BARK DATS. 131 and more reasonable on a certain subject. With all the power I conld bring to bear, I l ia d never ceased to im- press upon her that morally she was innocent, and I believed my words were bearing fruit. Pier fits of mental anguish and self-reproach grew of less frequent occurrence. She did not, whenever we were alone, con- tinually harp upon her crime. Calm seemed to settle upon us once more, and I ventured' to hope that the great physician, Time, would one day bring to my wife’s heart something that might be called sorrowful happi- ness; but I knew I must wait years and years for this. She was changed, greatly changed. Her lips seldom smiled: her eyes never brightened, unless when she saw me drawing near. She seemed older and graver. But I knew, m spite of all, she loved me with a deathless love. Although at last we had ceased to discuss the sorrow of our life, I suspected it was seldom absent from her mind. Sometimes as I lay beside her I heard her moan, ing and talking in her troubled dreams, and too well I knew the cause. As my arm stole round her. and assured her of the safety and certainty of my great love, in my heart I cursed the dead man whose evil deed Jiad brought such lasting woe on the fair head pillowed on my bosom. Ah me! what life might have been for us two, now that love reigned between ns! Once— it was shortly after Philippa began to creep, a weak in valid, about the fragrant patio — she said to me, with evident meaning in her voice, “ Basil, do you see the London papers ?” “ Sometimes— not always. I have almost forgotten England.” 6 “ Promise me you will see them every day.” 132 dare days. a t w ;ii if you wish ; bat why ? _ . I win, yv ’ not guess? Basil, listen. Her voice sank. 7 ^ J am praying I have consented to be gn Id 77 think. that the day may come when 1 of the ^ ^ ice d0 f 60 7hintedTt a hy Philippa. No , Sir Me y wi f e at ease should bo posted to me every day. 133 DARK DAYS, CHAPTER XII. TEMPTED TO DISHONOR. T HATE looking back and re-reading words which I have written while the impulse was upon me ; but I fancy I have somewhere called this tale a confession ; if not, I should have done so. It claims no more to be ranked as a work of art than as a work of imagination. How could it ? It holds only two characters — a man and a woman. It treats but of their love and of a few months of their lives. Nevertheless, in telling it I have en- deavored to conceal nothing. I have tried to describe my thoughts, my hopes, my fears, my sorrows, and my joys, as they really were. I have, I believe, suppressed nothing which could lead any one to condemn my actions more strongly than, it may be, they now condemn them. My wish has been to show myself as I was then — no doubt am now — a weak, selfish man; yet, for the love which he bore a woman, one willing to risk fortune, life, even honor. If I have failed in my attempt to represent myself as such a one, believe it is not from intention, but from sheer inability. Bat whether I have so far succeeded or failed in my purpose I know not; but I know that in this chapter I mast, perforce, fail. The language rich and powerful enough to serve my needs has yet to be invented. The writer who could in any fitting way reproduce my thoughts has yet to be born. 134 DARK DATS. And yet the chapter will be a short one. It will be bnt the record of a few hours; bnt such hours 1 Hours during which I struggled against a temptation to com- mit, not only crime, but base, cowardly crime; a tempta- tion stronger, I dare to think, than poor human nature 'has as yet been subjected to. My words sound bold ; but listen. ' . . Oh, that one morning ! How well I can remember 1 . Our breakfast was just over. The quaint-shaped bttle table, with its snowy cloth throwing into relief the deep colors of the luscious fruit upon it, still stood in the awning-roofed patio. I was alone, my mother an Philippa having retired in-doors to see about some do- mestic economy. I lounged lazily and at my ease. 1 rolled and lighted a cigarette, blaming myself as I did so for my barbarity in profaning the blossom-scented air with tobacco-smoke. Then I took from my pocket the London Times, which had arrived by the last post, and listlessly set to work to skim its lengthy columns. . I had no fear as to what the paper might contain. It was not from newspaper reports that I apprehended danger. I had, however, noticed that Philippa, when she saw me with a newspaper in my hand, eyed me anxiously and inquiringly ; so that generally I contrive to dance through it when she was absent. I never per- mitted her to touch it until I had read it ; but my only reason for this prohibition was, that I feared lest some chance allusion to the mysterious and undiscovered crime might distress her. Her own far-fetched fancy that an- other might be accused of it gave me not a moment’s un- easiness. So I turned and doubled back the broad sheets. 1 ran down the topics of the day. I skimmed the leading DAKK DAYS* 135 articles. I glanced at the foreign news; paid scant at- tention to law reports, and disregarded altogether the money-market intelligence. At last I turned my at- tention to the provincial news column. A name caught my eye; a cold shiver of dread ran through me. My cigarette fell on the marble pavement, and lay there un- heeded, as, with agitation which no words can describe, I read a short paragraph placed under the heading of the principal town of the county in which Roding was situ- ated. Read ! “ William Evans, the man accused of the murder of Sir Mervyn Ferrand, Bart., in January last, will be tried at these Assizes, which open on the twentieth. The case, which excites considerable interest, will be taken on t-lie first day. It is reported that although fresh evidence against the prisoner will be forthcoming, it will be of a purely circumstantial nature.” Every word of that accursed paragraph seemed like a blow falling upon my head. For some minutes I sat as one stunned. I felt my teeth chattering. I knew that my cheek was blanched. Philippa’s fanciful dread had come to pass ! Another — an innocent man — was bearing the blame of her own mad act ! Dazed, stupid, scarcely able to comprehend what must be the full effect of what I had just read, I sat motionless, with my eyes fixed upon that fatal sheet. The sound of my mother’s pleasant voice calling to Philippa at last awoke me from my stupor. They were coming. I could not face them. I doubled up the news- paper, thrust it into my pocket, and rushed out into the street. As yet I had not dared to imagine what this in- telligence might mean to us. I must have long hours 136 DARK DATS. of solitude, in order to decide wliat course should be adopted to face this, the last, the worst peril I passed swiftly through the iron gate. I went up the narrow street at a pace which must have made all who saw me think me mad. Whither did I go? I scarcely remember. I think it must have been to one of the pub- lic gardens ; but in that hour all sense of locality left me. I went instinctively in search of solitude. I found, I know not how or where, some shady deserted spot. There, in the anguish of my heart, amid the wreck of my sand-founded happiness, I threw myself on the ground, and dug my finger-nails into the dry soil. At first I thought I was going or had gone mad. Ihe thoughts which rushed through my miijd were disjointed, and wanted coherence. An innocent man accused of the crime ! To be tried on the twentieth ! The twentieth ! and now it is the sixteenth! Fresh evidence forth- coming ! The fools— the utter fools ! This the boasted detective skill ! To arrest on suspicion, to bring to trial a man who must be ignorant of everything connected with the murder ! What is to be done * Wliat can be done ? Oh, my wife ! my poor darling wife ! Then, I believe, I cried like a child. It seemed to me that all was lost. There was but one thing to be done- one course to be taken. My darling must gi ve herself up to justice, and by her confession free this luckless wretch who now stands in peril of his life. She must bear the shame of the trial, and trust to human justice and the mercy which she had a right to expect. Oh, it was piti- ful, pitiful ! For a long while no alternative course sug- gested itself to me. Human justice! What is justice? See how it can err ! It can arrest, try, and — oh, horrible thought !— • DARK DATS, 1S7 perhaps condemn to death an innocent man ! How then would it fare with Philippa? Who, now that marriage has sealed my lips, was there to prove her madness when she slew that man ? I raged at the thought. It seemed to me that we were hard and fast in the toils. I might, it is true, call William, my servant, to swear that her manner was strange and wild upon that night. I might call the nurses to prove that when first they saw her she was recovering from an attack of mania. But would they be credited? Would not a clever lawyer soon con- vince twelve ordinary men that it was not her madness which prompted the crime, but the crime which produced the madness? We were indeed meshed and bound; hemmed in on every side ; helpless and, it seemed, hope- less ! And Philippa must be told this ! I must tell her ! How could I nerve myself to make the truth known to p er — now, of all times, when her health was all but re- stored ; when a kind of sad but placid acquiescence in what fate had wrought seemed to be gradually coming over her ; now, when I was once more building up hopes of happiness for her as well as for me ! For I knew — ah ! think of this, and pity me — that before another half year should pass there might be given to my wife and me a gift which would go far toward sweeping away the memories of gloom and horror which had of late spread over our lives. I even dared to hope, to feel certain, that as she gazed into baby eyes, as she pressed a tiny head to her bosom, some, nay, much of the lost sweetness and glory of life might return to my love. Think of this, and picture me lying on the ground that day, with the damning intelligence fresh on my mind ! Think that in a few hours I must return to my home. 138 DARK DATS. and tell my wife that the bolt had fallen ! There was no alternative ! No alternative? Stay, there is an alternative! The blood seemed to course wildly through my veins, my heart beat fiercely, my lips grew dry, and a choking sen- sation came over me, as for the first time the simple yet certain way of cutting the knot of my difficulties flashed across my mind. So simple, so easy it at first appeared, that I laughed at my stupidity in not having seen it at once. Tear that accursed paper to pieces, Basil North ! Scat- ter those pieces to the winds. Forget what you have read. Go back to your luxurious, flower-bedecked home. Meet the one you love with a smile upon your face : you have forced smiles before now ! Greet her as usual. Say nothing of this morning’s news. Keep your own counsel ; bury all you have learned in your secret heart. Do this, and be happy forever more ! But the man— the man who in a few days’ time is to be tried for another’s act? Well, what of him? The fool will doubtless be acquitted. Fool ! Yes, it is the right term for one who can bring himself under suspicion. But if Justice runs on the wrong track until the end if that man dies ? What then ? What is this miserable life, what are a hundred lives when weighed against Philippa’s happi- ness ? What is conscience ? What is right and wrong ? What is the phantom which men call honor ? What, after all, is crime ? Be silent, aud forget. You are asked to do no more. You have riches, youth, health, and strong will. The fairest woman on the earth adores you. Why hesitate ? Why let one boor 5 s life weigh in the scale ? DARK DAYS. 139 Argue the matter in another way. Are not thousands ©f men slain every year by the whim of a monarch or a statesman? The thought of their death troubles not those who send them forth to fight. Men kill each other for revenge, for money, for a point of honor, and the killer lives on like other men live ! Trust this man to the vaunted array of Justice. He is innocent, and will come from the ordeal unscathed. If found guilty, let him die. He will not be the first innocent man who has died, nor will he be the last to die. It is but one life ! He is nothing to you ; think of him no more. Come what may, you will always have your sunny home and the woman you love. Her children will grow up around you. Why hesitate ? A life’s happiness is to be won by simply sealing your lips. Its cost is but, supposing Justice blunders, to bear the burden of one man’s death. A paltry price! This was the temptation with which I wrestled during those long hours. Again and again I was on the point of yielding. Once or twice I rose to my fept with the fixed determination of destroying that paper, and letting things take their own oourse. Once or twice I even forced my steps some distance in the, direction of home, but each time I turned, went back to the sheltered spot, threw myself again on the ground, and fought the battle anew. No, I could not do this thing. I was a gentleman and a man of honor. Paltry as the price was when compared with what it might buy, I could not pay it. Although my whole soul was merged in Philippa’s welfare, I could not, even for her sake, suffer an innocent man to be done unjustly to death. The crime was too black, too base, too contemptible! I felt sure that, with the man’s blood morally on my head, the supremest joys which life 140 DARK DATS. could give would not lull my conscience to rest. I knew it would not be long before remorse and shame drove me to commit suicide. Let the preachers say that sin is easy ; that wrong is more alluring than right. There may be some sins which are easily committed, but I dare to say that there are others which the average man, educated by the code of honor, and dreading shame and cowardice, finds it far easier to avoid than to bring himself to commit. No, every sin is not easy ! But all the same my struggle was a mortal one. At times I fancy — it may be but fancy — that even now my mind bears some traces of that conflict; a conflict in which my victory meant ruin to my nearest and dearest. Was I not right when I said that my temptation was an all but unparalleled one? Yet in reasserting this let me humbly disclaim all credit for not having yielded. I strove to yield, but could not. It was only when I had conquered, and put the temp- tation from me, that I was able to see how utterly useless such a crime as that urged upon me would have been. Doubtless Philippa, sooner or later, would have learned that Sir Mervyn Ferrand’s supposed murderer had paid the penalty of the crime.. How would it have fared with Us then — then, when reparation was placed out of the question ? Knowing as I did every thought of my wife’s, every turn of her impulsive, sensitive nature, I was fain to tell myself that such news would be simply her death- blow. But what was to be done ? Finding that I could not compass the treachery which I dared to meditate, I cast about for another loophole of escape. What if I were to return to England, and accuse myself of the crime ? To DARK BAYS. 141 insure Philippa’s safety I wouldriglit willingly give away my own life. It showed the state to which my mind was reduced when I say that I considered this scheme in all its bearings, and for a while thought it furnished a solution to my difficulties! I wonder if my brain was wandering? I laughed In bitter merriment as the absurdity of my new plan forced itself upon me. I had forgotten Phi- lippa, and what the effect of such a sacrifice would be upon her. I had forgotten that she loved me, even as I loved her; that my dying for her sake— for the sake of saving her from the consequences of that gruesome night —would make an expiation, if any were due from her, the most fearful which human or diabolical ingenuity could devise. No! Neither by sinning against my fellow-man nor by a voluntary sacrifice of my own life could I save her. After all my protracted mental struggles, all my lonely hours of anguish and wild scheming, I was forced to re- turn to the point from which I started. Philippa must surrender herself, and free this innocent man. There was, indeed, no alternative! And a day gone, or all- but gone! The trial on the twentieth ! To reach England— to reach Tewnliam in time to stop that trial, we must travel day and night. Day and night, across sunny or starlit Spain acioss pleasant France— we must speed on, until we reached our own native land, now lying in all the rich calm of the early autumn. I must lead my wife, my love, to her doom ! I rose from the ground. I felt weary, and as if I had been cudgelled in every limb. 'I dragged myself slowly back to my home. “She must be told; she must be told. But how to tell her ?” 1 muttered as I went along. 142 ' DARK DATS. My appearance must have been wretched ; for I received the impression that several grave-looking Sfivillanos turned and looked after me as I passed by. Even as a cowardly felon who drags himself slowly to the scaffold, I dragged myself to the gate of our pleasant home, and on tottering feet passed into that fragrant space in which the happiest hours of my life had been spent. As I entered, the remembrance of some tale which once I had read flashed through my mind — a tale of the ferocity of a by-gone age. It was of a prisoner who was forced by his captors to strike a dagger into the heart of the woman he loved. I know not where the tale is to be found #r when I read it. But it awmed to me that mine was a parallel <^0 , Pity m4 i DARK DAYS. 143 CHAPTER XIII. THE LAST HOPE, T HEY were sitting in the courtyard, my mother and my wife. They looked the embodiment of serene happiness. Their large fans-the use of the fan came like an inspiration to Philippa, my mother acquired it after much practice— were languidly waving to and fro. Philippa’s rounded arm was outstretched ; her fair left hand was in the clear water which fell from the foun- tain and filled a white marble basin, in which the gold carp darted about in erratic tacks. She was moving her finders gently backward and forward, startling the timid fish, and half smiling at their terror. It seemed to me that my mother was remonstrating at the uproar she was creating in the brilliant-coated republic. _ That picture is still in my mind. That picture . I can sit now in my chair, lay down my pen, and call up every picture of that time. Nothing, save the grief, has ever faded, or ever will fade, from my memory. It was well for both of us that I had fought out the battle with myself in solitude, where no eye could see me where I could see no one. Even as it was, knowing what a change my news must work, I paused, and a ghost of the day’s temptation rose before me. But it rose too late. The die was cast. Philippa had seen me, and my mother’s eyes followed hers. I braced my- self up, and went toward them with as jaunty a manner 144 DARK DATS. as I could assume. My mother began a mock tirade on my shameful desertion of Philippa and herself. Her words carried no meaning to my ears. My eyes met those of my wife. With her I made no attempt at concealment. Where was the good? The worst, the very worst had come. My eyes must have told her the truth. I saw her sweet face catch fire with alarm. I saw her lips quiver. I saw the look of anguish flash into her e J es 5 y e ^ I knew that I was helpless, utterly helpless. She rose. I made some conventional excuse and went to my room. In a moment Philippa was at my side. “ Basil, husband, love,” she whispered, “ it has come !” I laid mv head on the table and sobbed aloud, Phi- lippa’s arms were wreathed around my neck. u Dearest, I knew it must come. I have known it ever so long. Basil, do not weep. Once more, I tell you I am not wortli such love as vours.” «/ I covered lier dear face with kisses. I strained her to my heart. I lavished words of love upon her. She smiled faintly, then sighed hopelessly — a sigh which almost broke my heart. Tell me all, my love,” she said, calmly. “Let me know the very worst.” I could not speak ; for the life of me the words would not come. "With trembling hands I drew out the news- paper, and pointed to the fatal lines. She read them with a calm which almost alarmed me. C( I knew it must be,” was all she said. I threw myself on my knees before her. I embraced her. I was half distraught. Save for my wild ejacula- tions of undying love, there was silence for many min- utes between us. DARK DATS. 143 Presently, with great force, she raised my head, and looked at me with her sweet and sorrowful eyes. “ Basil, my dearest, you have been wrong. The right is right, the wrong is wrong. See what you have done ! Hadyon not striven to save me, only I should have had to answer for this. Now it is you and me, and perhaps a third— an innocent, stainless life, that will be wrecked. “Spare me! Spare me!” I said. “As you love me, spare me !” She kissed me. “Dearest, forgive me. I should not blame you. Only I am to blame.” Then, with a sudden change in her voice, “ When do we start for England, Basil ?” Although I expected this question, I trembled and shuddered as I heard it. Too well I knew what England meant. It meant Philippa’s standing in open court, in a prisoner’s dock, the center of a gaping crowd, self-ac- cused of the murder of her husband ! And as I pictured this, once more, and for the last time, the temptation shook me. I spoke, but I averted my eyes from hers. I could not meet them. My voice was husky and strange ; it sounded like the voice of another man. A sort of under- current of thought ran through me, that if Philippa would but share it, I could bear any burden, any dis- honor. “Listen!” I said, in quick accents. “ We are far away ; safe. We love each other. We can be happy. Let the man take his chance. What does anything matter, so Jong as we love and are together?” L felt that her eyes were seeking mine. I felt a change in the clasp of her hand. I knew that she was nobler and better than I, 146 DARK DAYS. “ Basil,” she said softly, and speaking like one in a dream, “ it was not my husband, not the man I love, who said that. I forgive you for the sake of your great love, for the sake of all you have done, or tried to do, for me. Tell me now, when do we start for England 2” Her words brought back my senses. Never in the wildest height of my passion had I loved Philippa as I loved her at that moment. I besought her pardon. She gave it, and once more repeated her question. With the calm of settled despair I consulted the rail- way-guide, and “found that if we left Seville to morrow morning by the first train, we might, by travelling day and night, early on the morning of the twentieth reach the town in which the trial was to be held. I made the result of my researches known to my wife ; and upon my assuring her that we should have time to spare, she left all the arrangement of the journey to me. After this, another painful question arose. Was my mother to be told 2 Philippa, who may, perhaps, in her secret heart have craved for a woman’s support and sym- pathy in her approaching trial, at first insisted that my mother should be taken into our confidence — a confidence which, alas ! in a few days’ time would be gossip to the world. I besought her to waive the point, to spare my mother’s feelings until the very last moment. We could not take her with us on our hurried journey. We were young ; she was old. The fatigue, combined with the grief, would be more than her frame could endure. I could not bear to think of her waiting lonely in Seville for the bad news which she knew must come in a day or two from England. Let us say nothing respecting the wretched errand on which we are bound. Let us depart in secret, and leave some plausible explanation behind us. DARK DATS. 147 To my relief, Philippa at last, consented to this. Then, after a long, tearful embrace, we steeled ourselves to join my mother at the evening meal, and to bear ourselves so that she should suspect nothing of the tempest within our hearts. We did not very long subject ourselves to this strain upon our nerves. It seemed to me now that every moment spent otherwise than alone with my wife was a precious treasure wasted, a loss which I should for- ever regret. So very early we pleaded fatigue, and re- tired to our rest. Such rest ! Philippa bade my mother good-night with an embrace so long and passionate that I feared it would awaken alarm, especially when it was succeeded by my own veiled, but scarcely less emotional, adieu. For who could say that we should ever meet again ? I do not believe it struck Philippa that in accompanying her I was running the slightest risk. Had she thought so, she would have insisted upon going alone. But I knew that the part I had played in that night’s work would proba- bly bring a severe punishment upon my own head. What did I care for that ? Silently and sadly in the retirement of our room we made our preparations for the journey, which began with the mom. There was no need to cumber ourselves with much luggage. We should rest in no bed until the trial was over. What resting-place might then be Philippa’s, Heaven only knew! So our packing was soon com- pleted. Then I wrote a letter, to be given to or found by my mother in the morning. I told her that an important matter took me post-haste to England ; that, Philippa had determined to accompany me ; that I would write as soon as we reached London. I gave no further explana- 148 DARK DAYS. tion. I hoped she would attribute my sudden flight to the erratic nature which she often averred I possessed; After all, the deception mattered little. In a week’s time nothing would matter. Grief, overwhelming grief, would be my portion ; a portion which, by her affection for me and for Philippa, my poor mother would be forced to share. All being now ready for our start, we strove to win some hours of sleep. Our efforts were mocked to scorn. Through that, the last night we might spend alone to- gether, I believe neither my wife nor myself closed an eyelid. Let me draw a veil over my wild distress and Philippa’s calm acquiescence in her fate. Some grief is too sacred to describe. Morning! Bright, broad, clear, cool, odorous morn- ing ! Our sleeplessness had at least spared us the anguish of awaking, and, while for a moment glorying in the beauty of the world, to remember what this morning meant to us. Giving ourselves ample time to reach the railway-station, we crept from our room, and, with eyes full of blinding tears, crossed the pleasant patio. I paused in the centre, and plucking a lovely spray from the great orange-tree, kissed it and gave it to my wife. Without a word she placed it in the bosom of her dress. As she drew her mantle aside to do so, for the first time I noticed that she wore the very dress which clad her on that fatal night. Although it was utterly unsuited to the almost tropical heat through which we should have to travel, I dared not remonstrate with her. Now, of all times, her slightest wish should be my law. Noiselessly I undid the massive studded wooden gate, which at night-time closed the entrance to the patio. Unseen, we stepped into the shady, narrow street. Our DARK DATS. 149 Wage was light. I could carry it with ease to the sta- tion, which was not a great distance off. We were there only too soon. , , . , , _ We had to wait some time ere the train, which, follow- ing the example of the true Spaniard, declines on any consideration to be hurried, made its appearance We took our seats in silence. At last the dignified train condescended to move onward. We sat side by side, and gazed and gazed in the direction of the beautiful city from which we were flying ; gazed until we saw the very last of it, until even the great towering Giralda was lost to view. Then, and only then, I think we fully realized to what end we were speeding. The next three days and nights seem now little more to me than a whirling dream. On and on we went to work out our fate; over the same ground which i bad traversed, with scarcely less agitated feelings some months ago. I ground my teeth when I thought how little my strenuous and seemingly successful effoits lia availed. Now, not from any omission of precaution; not because the law compelled ; not by the exercise of force; but simply on account of the great dictum of rio-ht and wrong, we were, of our own accord, retracing our steps to face the danger from which we had fled. Oh, bitter irony of destiny ! What was money to me now ? Nothing but so much dross ! It could do one thing, only one, that gold wine 1 I lavished so freely on that journey. It could assure that Philippa and I might travel alone. It could give us pri- vacy for the time that journey lasted, that was all. Yet although alone, we spoke but little. Our thoughts were not such as can be expressed by words. Her hand in mine, her head on my shoulder— sleeping when we 150 DABK DATS. could sleep, waking and looking into each other’s faces—, knowing that every mile of sunny or starlit country over -which we passed brought us nearer to the end. Ah! I understood then how it is that lovers who are menaced by some great sorrow can kill themselves, and die smil- ing in each other’s arms! We might have done so; but our deaths would have left to perish that stranger whom we were speeding to save. So, as in a dream, *the hours, the days, the nights, went by. We might have been travelling through the fairest scenery in the world, or through the most arid desert. I scarcely troubled to glance out of the carriage window. The world for me was inside. It was after we left Paris — Paris, which to-day seemed all but within stone’s-throw of London — that I aroused myself, and braced my energies to discuss finally with Philippa our proper plan of action. I felt that my right course would be to go straight to some solicitor, tell the tale, and ask him to put matters in train. But I could not bring myself to do this. Our secret was as yet our own. Moreover, through the misery of those hours, one ray of hope had broken upon me. If Philippa could be brought to yield to my guidance, to follow my instructions, it was not beyond the bounds of possibility that we might be saved, and saved with clean hands. “Dearest,” I whispered, “to-night we shall be in Lon- don.” Her fingers tightened on mine. “ And at Tewnham ?” she said. '“ We shall be in time V* “In ample time. But, Philippa., listen- — ” “ Basil, as you love me, not one word tp tempt, to dis- suade me !” DARK DAYS. 151 « Not one ; but listen. Sweetest, if you will be guided by me, even now all may go well. This man — •” “ The poor man who is standing in my place ?” “ Yes 5 listen. Heaven forbid that I should tempt you. Think; he is, no doubt, a man of a lowly station in life. Philippa, I am rich, very rich.” “ I do not understand you,” she said, pressing her hand to her brow. “Money will compensate for anything. Let him stand his trial. He is innocent. If there is justice in the land, he may, he must be found not guilty.” “ But the agony of mind he must pass through !” “ For that I will pay him over and over again. He may be but a country boor, to whom a thousand pounds would be inexhaustible wealth. But, whatever his station, the compensation sent to him by an unknown hand shall make him bless the day which laid him under the false accusation. Reflect, look at the matter in every light. I swear to yon that in my opinion we may, with a clear conscience, await the result of the trial.” She sighed, but made no answer. Her silence was a joy to me. It told me that my specious argument car- ried weight. I took her hands and kissed them. I told her again and again that I loved her ; that my life as well as hers depended on her yielding. It was long before she yielded. The thought of a fellow-creature lying in prison, perhaps for months, and to-morrow to stand in shame before his judges, on ac- count of a deed which she herself had done, was anguish to lier noble nature. Then, growing desperate at seeing the only plank which could save us from the wreck spurned for the sake of what, in my present mood, I was able to believe too finely strained a scruple, I used my 152 DARK DAYS. last and, as I rightly judged, my most powerful argm ment. I told lier that it would be not only she who would suffer for that unconscious act, but that I, her husband, must pay the penalty due from an accessory after the crime. Heaven forgive me for the anguish my words caused that loving heart! Philippa, on whom the intelligence of my danger fell like a thunderbolt, sank back in her seat, pale and trembling. Had I ever doubted that my wife’s heart-whole love was my own, that look would have dispelled the doubt. She prayed and besought me to leave her at the next station ; to let her finish the journey and make her avowal alone. My reply was short, but sufficiently long to put all hope of my consenting to such a course out of her head. Then, for my sake, she yielded. “On one condition— one only,” she said. “ Be guided by me in this. In all else you shall do as you like.” “I must be in the court, Basil. I must hear the trial. If the worst happen, there must not be the delay of a moment ; then and there I must proclaim the truth.” “You shall be at hand — close at hand. I will be pres- ent.” “No! I must be there. I must hear and see all. If the man is found guilty, I must, before his horrible sen- tence is pronounced, stand up and declare his innocence.” “All that could be done afterward.” “No ; it must be done then. Basil, fancy — put your- self in his place ! Nothing could atone for liis anguish at hearing himself condemned to death for a crime he knows nothing of. I must be there. Promise me I shall be there, and for your sake I will do as you wish.” - DARK DAYS. 153 It was the best concession I could get. I promised. I concealed the fact that if, when sentence was pro- nounced, a woman rose in the body of the comt an asserted the prisoner’s innocence and her own guilt, the probabilities were she would be summarily ejected. T made no difference. Let Philippa be silent; let the man be found not guilty, and the next tram could bear us back to Seville. Yes, even now there was hope 1 154 DARK DAYS. CHAPTER .XIV. the criminal court# Ty^E reached Charing Cross at fonr o’clock on the mom. ing of September 20tli. The first train by which we could get to Tewnham was timed to leave Liverpool Street at seven, so that we had an hour or two to spare tor such refreshment as we cared to take, such rest as we dared to allow ourselves. What with the fatigue of con- tinuous travel, and the dread of what this day was to bring forth, it may be easily believed that we were thor- oughly worn out. We were, indeed, more fitted to go to bed and sleep for a week, than to proceed upon the last stage of our dismal journey. But there was no help for it. If we meant to be in time, we must go on by the early morning train. I begged my wife to lie down, and endeavor to snatch an lour s sleep She refused firmly. Much of that calm which had characterized her since the moment when I broke the fatal news to her had vanished. Its place was now taken by an excitement, suppressed, but nevertheless clearly manifest to my eyes. The fear that we should iot i each Tewnham in time for the trial seemed to haunt her unceasingly. It was for this reason she so peremp- tonly refused to he down and court sleep. She feared est, our eyes once closed, we should, from sheer exhaus- tion, sleep for hours, and so miss the morning train. She was ever picturing the horror of that poor unknown DARK DATS. 155 man’s being led from the dock, with the death sentence ringing in his ears. So the time which elapsed before we started for Tewn- ham we spent in the hotel. I bespoke rooms by telegram, sent when we reached Folkestone. We made an apology for a meal; in fact, what we could get at that time of night was of itself little more than apology. We sat all but silent, watching the hands of the clock, which told us how fast the precious moments were passing away. We saw the gray morning struggle with, and at last conquer, the yellow gas-light. We heard the hum of traffic grow- ing louder and louder in the streets below us. Then we turned to make what may be rightly called our last adieus. Who could say that to-day .my wife and I might not be parted forever \ While at the hotel I tried to obtain the file of the Times. I wanted to look back and see if I could find the account of magisterial proceedings against this un- lucky William Evans. He must, of course, have appeared before the lesser tribunal, and could I see the account of his appearance, I should be able to judge as to the strength of the case against him. Bnt the file was not forthcoming. Perhaps it did not exist; perhaps the sleepy-eyed Teutonic waiter did not understand what I wanted ; so, still in the dark as to why suspicion should have fallen upon this innocent man, we left the hotel and drove to Liverpool Street Station. At nine o’clock our journey was ended. We stood on tl*e platform of Tewnhani railway-station. My poor wife wore a thick black veil, so her face I could not see ; bnt I knew it was as pale as death. Now and again her hand, which rested on my arm, pressed it convulsively. I think we were the most unhappy pair on the earth ! 166 DARK DATS. We Were even denied the time for any more farewells or expressed regrets. The hour was chiming from the old cathedral tower. The business of the Courts, I knew, always began at ten o’clock, and considering the crowd which would most surely be attracted by so interesting a case as this trial for murder committed so many months '*g°> I felt Bure t,iat unless we proceeded at once to the Slnrehall, our chance of gaining entrance would be but a small one. I hailed one of the close cabs which were waiting outside the station. As I did so 1 felt a heavy hand laid upon my shoulder, and heard a rich, pleasant-sounding, and not unfamiliar voice exclaim, “Bftsil North, as I’m a sinner!” That any oiie should at this moment address Basil N 01 tli in a merry way seemed a positive incongruity. I turned round almost angrily, and found myself face to face with an old friend. He was a barrister named Grant • a man four or five years my senior, but one with whom, before I forswore the society of my fellow-men, I had been on intimate terms. I had not seen him for a con- siderable time; but had heard, casually, that he was making great strides in liis forensic career. In spite of my distress, I returned his greeting, and grasped his hand warmly. After all it seemed a relief to find that I had a firiend left in the world. “ Wliat brings you here ?” I asked. “ The only tliirig that could bring me to such a place —circuit work. I have an important case on to-day. JLJiats the worst of a place so near London as this one. One is tempted to spend the nights in town, which means getting up at an unholy hour in the morning. U -»r^j U ’ W, 7 * re y ou ^ Iei e • I heard you were as rich as Midas, and living abroad in luxury.” DARK DATS. 157 | « I have been abroad for some time. I hope to go back again very soon.” « Happy mail l” lie ejaculated. I could scarcely keep the bitter smile from my lips, as I thought how ill ap- plied were his words. As he spoke he glanced at Philippa, whose grace and beauty of form defied the concealment attempted by thick veil and sombre garments. “ But what brings you to this sleepy old town ?” con- tinued Grant. I hesitated for a moment. Then, thinking that truth, or at least half truth, was the best, told him I had come down to witness the trial for murder. “I should doubt your getting into court,” he said. « The morbid interest excited around about here is, I am told, very great. The sheriff is besieged by applications for tickets.” “ Couldn’t you help me ? The fact is, I have a partic- ular reason, not mere curiosity, for wishing to be present at this trial.” « I don’t think I can,” said Grant. “ Does your— the lady wish to go with you ?” “ My cousin — yes,” I said, seeing that he expected an introduction. He raised his hat, and made some courte- . ous and pleasant remark, to which Philippa, to my sur- prise, replied in a calm and fitting way. Grant knew I had no sister. I called her cousin because I had a wild hope that, if the worst happened, I might be able to conceal the true relationship in which we stood, and so be permitted to give evidence on her behalf. I trusted my wife would guess that I had a good xeasou for tills deception. 158 DARE DAYS. “ Try and manage this for me, Grant,” I said so eaR nestly that my friend made no further demur. “ Take me in your cab, and I will see what I can do ” During our drive to the Shirehall I asked Grant what he knew about the impending trial. “ Nothing,” he said frankly. “ I hate murder cases- hate even to read about them. Of course I know that Sir Mervyn Ferrand was killed, and hidden in the snow for days and days. But I know no more.” u Who is the accused ?” “ I don’t know. I thought, from your anxiety, you must know him.” J J “ Will lie be found guilty ?” I don’t know. Stay, I heard some one who ought to be well informed say yesterday that the case for the prosecution was most feeble. He seemed to doubt if the grand jury would return a true bill.” As I heard this I pressed Philippa’s hand secretly. I felt that she was trembling. The drive to the Shirehall occupied only a few min- utes. We did not go to the public entrance, in front of which I could see a crowd of people nearly blocking up the street. We stopped at another door, and Grant, Tftcr looking round, caught sight of wliat appeared to be an inspector of police. He entered into a little conversation with him, the result of which was that we were given into his care. This is a breach of the law,” whispered my friend as lie bade me good-by. “ You will have to atone for it by a handsome gratuity.” We followed our guide. Philippa, although walking with a firm step, leaned heavily upon my arm. I scarcely know by what door we entered that palace of DARK DATS. 160 justice. The stalwart policeman led us through stone corridors and passages, which re-echoed with the tread of our feet, and at last we found ourselves before a double swinging plain oak door, over which in old English letters was written “ Criminal Court.” I felt Philippa shudder, and knew that the sight of those words brought the horror of the situation fully home to her. Mechanically I pressed a sovereign in the hand of the venial inspector, or whatever he was; then, holding my wife’s hand, I - passed through ,tlie noiseless swinging door into the all but empty court. A few policemen and other officials were lounging about. Two or three people, who had no doubt gained admittance in the same way as we had done, were seated in various coigns of vantage. I led Philippa up the broad steps, and pointed to one of the hard wooden benches provided for the accommodation of the general public. These benches were raised step by step, one above another. We chose our position about half-way up, on the right-band side of the court. Philippa, with her thick veil falling down to her chin, and so defying recognition, sank w'earily into her seat. I placed myself beside her ; my hand crept under the cloak she wore and held her hand. Surely it was all a dream — a dreadful, realistic dream ! I should wake and find myself under the great orange tree in that courtyard in gay Seville, my half-smoked cigar and the book which I had been lazily reading lying at my feet ; my mother opposite me, laughing at my somnolency, and Philippa’s grave dark eyes looking with calm everlasting love into my own. X should wake and find the cool of the evening had succeeded to the glare of the afternoon. We should walk through the merry 160 DARK DAYS- streets, lounge in the Alameda, winder through the glow- ing Alcazar gardens, or drive out miles and miles over the fertile smiling plains. Or I should even wake and find myself nodding over my fire in my lonely cottage, the stolid William the only human creature within hail; Philippa’s return, the snow-storm, the dreadful discovery, the flight, Seville, the marriage— all, all a dream ! In a kind of stupor — the temporary reaction, I suppose, consequent upon such fatigue and trouble — I gazed round me, and wondered where I was. What is this great empty building, lit from one side by large clerestory windows of ecclesiastical design? What are these dull gray vacant walls ; that lofty ceiling crossed and cut into small squares by dark rafters ; this leaded floor, on which feet fall all but noiselessly ? What are those raised boxes on either side of the building — those small railed platforms all but adjoining them, and all but adjoining that panelled oak structure at the end facing me ? What is that rectangular box-shaped erection with overhanging carved cornice ? Let us away from this dismal, colorless place ! Let me wake and find my- self amid the flowers, orange trees, the fair sights and surroundings of our Spanish home. No ! I have but to turn my dazed eyes to the centre of space in which we sat, to know that I am dreaming no dream ; that we must wait here and learn our fates. That oblong wooden enclosure with high sides, topped by a light iron railing, brings reality back to me. It is the prisoner’s dock. In an hour’s time a man will stand there. He will be brought up those stone steps which lead to it from below, the topmost flag of which I can just see. He will stand there for hours. As he leaves the dock. DARK DATS. 161 declared innocent or guilty, so will our lives be declared happy or miserable. My hand holds tny wife’s yet closer; for the last min- utes which may be ours to spend together are slipping by so fast, so very fast ! t * See, the clock under the balcony marks half-past nine, The all but deserted court begins to assume the appear- ance of preparing for business. Policemen and other officials pass to and fro, some arranging papers, some re- plenishing ink-bottles, add placing quill pens ready for the barristers and solicitors who will soon fill those front seats. Some one, with what seems to me bittei iiony, places a magnificent bouquet of flowers on either hand of the judge’s vacant chair. What have flowers in com- mon with such a scene as this ? Flowers, too, which are beautiful enough to recall to my mind the fair Spanish home, which, maybe, we shall see no more. Flowers in this den of sorrow! Bather should every seat, every beam be draped in black. Now the doors on each side of the court open, and remain open. I hear a shuffling of many feet. People, in a continuous stream, pass through the entrance, and wend their way to the portion of the court allotted to the general public. So fast, so thick they come, that in ten minutes this space is thronged almost to suffocation. Philippa and I are pressed closer and closer to each other, as every inch of the bench on which we are seated is ap- propriated. The court is full. f Crowded by respectable-looking, well-dressed people, who have gained admission, as I heard, by favor of the sheriff. Yet, respectable as they are, each man, each woman, rushes in eagerly and strives for the best avail- able seat. And for what reason? To see and hear a 162 daee days. poor wretch tried for liis life ! In my bitter mood I look with hate on these sensation-seekers. I hate them even more when I think that their morbid craving for excitement may be satisfied with such food as they little expect ; and I clinch my teeth as I picture the scene at that moment when Philippa, in pursuance of her immov- able resolution, rises, and makes her effort to proclaim her own guilt and the convicted man’s innocence. Al- though I strive to force the picture from my mind, by telling myself that justice cannot err, that the man will be acquitted, yet again and again the dread of the worst seizes me, and I hate every face in that crowd, which may, by and by, be gaping, with looks of wonder and curiosity, at the woman I love ! As in a haze, I see some faces which are familiar to me. A number of gentlemen enter, and seat themselves on the benches which counsel usually occupy. Some few of these I knew by sight. They are country gentlemen from the neighborhood of Boding, who are now called to serve on the grand jury. I see also the thin-faced, hawk- ish-looking woman who calls herself Mrs. Wilson. I am thankful that she takes a seat in front of us and does not see us. She, like ourselves, must know that an inno- cent man is this day about to be tried. • So for half an hour I sit, gazing now at the crowd of people, now at the empty dock and vacant bench in front of me; listening to the hum of conversation which rises from the packed court; longingfor the moment to come when this dreadful suspense may end ; yet all the same dreading and willing to put off that moment. And all the while Philippa, in her black garb, close to me and, unseen by our neighbors, holding my hand. IIusli ! The door a.t the back of the bench opens, DARK DATS. 1G3 and at ten o’clock to the minute the red-robed judge appears. He bows to the court, seats himself, and by his action signifies that he is ready to begin the business of the day. No trembling prisoner in the dock ever scanned a judge’s face with more anxiety than I scan his lordship’s at this present moment. An old man, too old, it seems to me, for such a respon- sible post ; an amiable, pleasant-looking man — not, I ven- ture to think, one who can bear the reputation of being a u hanging judge.” I breathe a prayer that he may this day be able to direct aright the course of justice. Hush! Hush! Silence in the court! Oh, my poor, sweet wife, let Sue grasp that hand yet closer, for the moment which for days and nights has never been absent from our minds has come ! What will it bring us \ 164 DABK DAYS. CHAPTER XV. THE BLACK CAP. T HERE is silence, or all but silence, in the court The buzz of suppressed conversation sinks almost to nothing— absolutely to nothing as the judge’s marshal rises, and after gabbling through the mysterious procla- mation which begins “ Oyez ! Oyez ! Oyez !” declares the court open. _ Philippa, still closely veiled, sits like a statue. Her hand, which ever grasps mine, scarcely responds to the pressure by which again and again I endeavor to bid her hope for the best. I would give much if even now I could get her to consent to my leading her away. I dare not surest this. I know that doing so would be waste of words. The court is open. The red judge is perusing letters and papers which lie in front of him as calmly and un- concernedly as if the life’s happiness of, at least, one man and woman, did sot greatly depend upon the view lie takes of the case about to be tried. He raises one of his bouquets and inhales the perfume of the flowers. How can one in his position behave like an ordinary mortal 2 Were we not here, he might condemn an innocent man to a shameful death ! I wonder if, with such horrible re- sponsibility resting on him, a judge can ever really be a happy man ? 165 DARK DATS. These thoughts seem trivial ; but my mind is by now in a strange state; it is, indeed, so sensitive that every slight incident, every small ceremonial, of to-day seems to be impressed forever upon it. A bewigged gentleman — the clerk of assize, the man next me tells his neighbor — rises and calls name after name, until he has fixed upon the twenty-three gentlemen needed to form the grand jury. They stand up in their places, and, in batches of four, are rapidly sworn. The absurd proclamation against vice and immorality is read ; much good may it do every one present ! Then the clerk sits down, and the judge, forsaking his papers, begins his work. He arranges his robes to his satisfaction, leans forward, and, placing the tips of his long white fingers together, addresses — charges, I am told, is the right term — the grand jury in a pleasant, colloquial manner. I strain every aural nerve to catch the purport of his glib words. He is sure to say something about this important murder case. I shall, perhaps, be able to learn how it was that the man fell under suspicion. Alas! the judge is one who by dint of years of practice has acquired the knack of using his voice only just so much as is absolutely necessary. The grand jury is close to him, and can, no doubt, hear him ; but to those who, like ourselves, are far away in the background of the court, his remarks are inaudible. All I can catch is a closing caution to the grand jury, to bear in mind that it is not within its province to determine the innocence or guilt of the prisoners, but to simply decide whether there is or is not sufficient evidence for the cases to go to trial. The grand jury files out of court to conduct its solemn deliberations in the place appointed. The judge ad- 166 T>AJtK DAYS. dresses a few smiling words to tlie sheriff and other magnates who, bv right or favor, occupy seats on the bench ; then he returns to the perusal of his papers. For the first time since we entered the court Philippa speaks to me. “ Are they trying him now?” she asks in a low awed whisper, yet in a voice so changed that I know what the suspense is costing her. Briefly I explain the procedure of the law, so far as I know it. She sighs, and savs no more. •/ More monotonous calling of many names, to which summons, however, another class of men respond. The common jurymen are now being called. Probably, to save time, twelve men are sent into the box, where they sit, some appearing to enjoy the dignity of the position, some with stolid indifference, others with acute unhappi- ness plainly manifested. I look at these men with scarcely less interest than I look at the judge. On them, or on 6ome of them, our fate rests as much, perhaps more, than it rests on him. Those men are trying ns — not only the man who will by and by stand in that rail-topped enclosure into which we look down. Twenty long weary minutes pass by. All eyes turn to a wooden gallery in the right-hand corner of the court. A door in the wall opens. The members of the grand jury emerge and fill the gallery. The foreman arms him- self with a gigantic fishing-rod, to which he attaches a paper, which is conveyed by this clumsy method to that busy gentleman, the clerk of assize. What idiotic foolery all this seems to me ! The clerk detaches the document, glances at it, and looks up at the gallery. “ Gentlemen of the grand jury, you return a true bill against William Evans for murder?” DARK DATS. 167 « We do,” answers tlie foreman with shy solemnity. I grind my teeth. Fools 1 If men of culture and stand- , ing err like this, what can be expected from a common jury ? It is well for me that I heard the caution just now given by the judge. I take such comfort as I can by thinking they have tried the evidence, not the man. What can, the evidence be ? Ah ! we shall soon know. The clerk turns, and, addressing no one in particular, says, “ Bring up the prisoner.” Once more I set my teeth. I feel my wife’s arm tremble ; her hand grows cold. I hear a buzz, as of expectation, run through the crowded court. Every eye turns in one direction — toward the empty dock. For a moment a species of dizziness comes over me ; objects swim before my eyes. The sen- sation passes away. I recover myself. The dock is no longer un ten anted. In the centre, with a stalwart police- man on either side of him, stands the accused — the man who, if needs be, must be saved by such a sacrifice ! From my place, far back in the public gallery, I can, of course, see nothing more of the prisoner than his back. I gaze at this with intense curiosity, endeavoring to de- termine the station of the man who is now about to be tried for his life. I can but gather this much : He is tall and slight. II is dress is of a semi-respectable nature, but seems to have seen much service. He might be anything from a broken-down clerk to .a gentleman’s servant out at elbows. I rejoice at his poverty-stricken appearance. Judging from it, money will be welcome to him. Let the jury but assert his innocence, and I feel certain that the liberal pecuniary compensation which it is my inten- tion to mete out will repay him a hundred times for the ordeal which he is undergoing. Ordeal! Yes, it is the right word. It is easy to see 168 DARK DAYS. it is a terrible ordeal to the poor fellow. No need t« look at his face to be told that much. Even as lie emerged from the cells below he seemed to quake with fear. Now he, absolutely falls forward in the dock, sup- porting himself by grasping the iron railing which runs round the top. I notice that his fingers, as they cling to the iron bars, open and close convulsively. Every move- ment of liis back and shoulders betrays fear and anguish of mind. His state is pitiable, so pitiable that one of his custodians places his hand under the wretched man’s arm, and gives him the physical support which he so sorely needs. lie bends his head as in shame, and I know that could I see liis face, it would be white as my own or my wife’s. In spite of the strain upon my mind, I was able to wonder at the prisoner’s hopeless demeanor. Although I had, as it were, torn my very heart out by the roots to insure this man’s safety in the event of things going wrong with him ; although I did not even now regret the course I had taken, I am bound to say that liis cowardly behavior took away much of the sympathy which I should otherwise have felt for him in his unmerited predicament. It is, of course, very easy to say what one Avould do if in another’s place. I certainly felt sure that, were I in that poor fellow’s plight, consciousness of my own inno- cence would give me strength enough to raise my head, and face boldly all the judges, juries, and prosecuting counsel in the world. I was willing to make every allowance for the nervousness natural to such a position; but I groaned inwardly as I gazed upon that miserable, limp, half-standing, half-reclining form. Why does he not stand upright ? Too well I know that another is watching that abject wretch with interest DARK DATS. 169 even more intense than mine. I know that eypry attitude of shame or fear is understood by Philippa, and adds to the scruples which she feels at following my advice and awaiting the result of the trial. Every agonized move- ment of the prisoner in the dock seems to be faintly re- produced by the hand within my own. Every pang he suffers runs through the frame of the woman who knows that he is suffering for her deed. The clerk reads over the indictment: “ That he, Wil- liam Evans, did feloniously, wilfully, and of malice aforethought kill and murder Sir Mervyn Ferrand, Baronet.” As the reading proceeds Philippa draws me toward her. “Basil,” she says in a low whisper, “ this is more dreadful than I dreamed of. I cannot bear it longer. Think of that poor man’s anguish! Basil, he also may have a wife who loves him ; she may be in the court. Think of her ! Oh ! what cap I do 1 What can Ido?” “Nothing — nothing but wait and hope,” I answer. “ Could you not go down and speak to him, or send a message in some way ? Tell him not to be so wretched;; that even at the last moment he will be saved ; that the real murderer will confess and free him. Basil, you must do this.” ' “ I can not. I dare not. It would ruin us. Hush, dearest ; be calm, and listen.” The reading of the indictment is now over. The clerk turns to the prisoner. “ Are you guilty or not guilty ?” he asks in a clear voice. Although every one in that court knows what the answer will be, there is a silence so profound that a pin might be heard drop. Every one seemed desirous *f hearing the prisoner’s voice. Even I, 170 DARK DATS. myself, lean forward, and strain every nerve to hear his plea. There is a long, dread pause. It may be that the prisoner does not understand that he is expected to reply. It may be that his collapsed state deprives him of the power of speech. I notice that one of the policemen touches him on the shoulder and whispers to him. Still for a moment there is silence. It is broken, but not by the prisoner. Philippa gives a low, soft wail, heard only, I think, by me. « I can bear it no longer,” she whispers. She snatches her hand from mine. She throws back her thick, dark veil, and stands erect in the body of the court. I cast one glance at her pale but determined-looking face, then bow my head upon my hands, and wish that death might at that moment smite us both. All is over 1 I am con- quered ! Even as I hide my face I see every eye in that thronged court turning to the tall, majestic, dark-robed figure which rises in the midst of that motley throng. Then, clear and loud, I hear her beloved voice rin^out. “My lord,” I hear her say. I raise my head at the sound. The eyes of bench, bar, jury, and public are fixed upon her. The very prisoner turns in the dock and gazes straight at her. She gets no further than those two words. “ Order in the court! Order in the court!” is shouted so sternly and fiercely that she all but loses her presence of mind. She falters, she hesitates, and glances helplessly around. I seize the moment. By sheer force I drag her back to her seat. I pray her by the love she bears me to wait in silence. I draw the veil over her face, to hide it from the hundreds of curious eyes which are turned upon it PARK DAYS. 171 While so doing, I hear the sharp mandate, “ Turn that person out of court. 55 Had any serious attempt been made to put the order in force, I believe that Philippa would have resisted, and once more attempted to assert the prisoner’s innocence and her own guilt — if it was guilt. Fortunately the policeman who draws near us to carry out the order is my friend of the morning who had accepted my gold. It may be on this account he favors us. It may be, when a momentary disturbance subsides, and the perpetrator does not seem bent upon repeating it, that the expulsion is not insisted upon. It may be that Philippa’s accosting the judge was looked upon as a solecism brought about by the excitement of a weak woman who was in some way connected with the prisoner. I suppose such a scene does sometimes occur; and perhaps, if its repetition is guarded against, a humanely-minded judge will not deny the offender the sorry comfort of seeing her friend’s trial to the end. Perhaps the judge who this day presides is unusually good-natured and easy-going. Any way, our friendly policeman does not carry out his instructions, and the court resumes its business. But many curious looks are cast at the veiled woman by my side. 1 notice that the hawk-faced Mrs. Wilson turns in her seat, and looks always at us; and, strange to say, I notice that the prisoner in the dock is still staring fixedly in our direction. The policemen take him by the arms ; face him round toward the bench. Once more the solemn question, “ Are you guilty or not guilty?” is asked. A short excited pause. The prisoner answers. Well, I know what he says, although he speaks so faintly that I do not hear his voice. Strange to say, his answer 172 DAK& DAYS. seems to create considerable agitation. People who are near to him look back and whisper to those in the rear. A barrister turns in his seat, and stares in a dumbfounded way at a gentleman behind him. This gentleman rises up fussily, and bustles round to the dock, where for a minute he seems to be engaged in earnest conversation with the prisoner. The latter shakes his head sullenly and hopelessly. In an apparently highty-excited state, the gentleman, whom I rightly judge to be solicitor for the defence, hurries back, whispers to the barrister, and seems by his gesture to be washing his hands of some responsibility. What does it all mean ? Why do they not go on with the trial ? The suspense is growing more than I can bear. Hush ! The judge speaks. The excitement is spreading through the court. In spite of the warning looks of the authorities, people are whispering to each other. The judge is speaking earnestly to the prisoner. He seems to be explaining something, counselling something. Still the man shakes his head sullenly. What does it all mean ? Mean ! The next solemn action, the next solemn words of the red-robed judge answer my question, and tell me that a thing has come to pass which never entered within the range of probability. Or have I been asleep? Has the trial been gone through, and the worst, the very worst, happened? No; five minutes ago I pulled Phi- lippa back to her seat, and forced her to withhold her damning words. Even now my grasp is on her to prevent her from rising. Ila! Look! The judge places a square of black silk upon his head. The prisoner cowers down. He would fall, were it not for the arms which support him on either DARK DAYS. 173 side. A rustle of intense feeling runs through the court. Men catch their breath; women’s eyes are distended. The sensation-seekers are rewarded. Hark ! The judge speaks. I can hear him plainly now, although there is deep emotion in his voice. “ Prisoner at the bar, yon are guilty, by your own con- fession, of an atrocious, cold-blooded murder, the motive for which is known but to yourself and your God. For me only the painful duty remains — ” Guilty ! On his own confession ! The man guilty ! The man to save whom we have travelled night and day — he the criminal! Philippa, my peerless Philippa! my wife! my love! Innocent! innocent! This — this revul- sion of feeling is more than human nature can bear! “Order in the court! Order in the court!” What is it? Who is it ? Only a woman in a dead faint. She is borne out tenderly, lovingly, proudly, by a man who clasps his precious burden to a heart full of such rapture as few of his fellow-creatures can ever have known. But let it also be hoped that few have ever endured such grief and anguish! 174 dark days. CHAPTER XVI. “ 'WHERE ARE THE SHOWS THAT FELL LAST Y IS&tt f ALTHOUGH, while engaged in the labor of writing this stoiy, I have many times regretted that I am frothing more than a plain narrator of facts and incidents, not a master of fiction, I think I hare not yet felt the re- gret so strongly as at the moment when I begin this chapter. The sombre acts of the life-drama in which Philippa and I played parts so painful, so full of grief and even if brightened by a ray of joy, of joy fallacious and of uncertain tenure— these acts I have found little difficulty m describing ; I had simply to throw my mind back to the pictures of the past and reproduce them in words. The task, whether well or ill done, was not a liara one. But now, when in one moment and as if by magic every thing changed ; when sorrow seemed to he simply swept out of our lives; when that poor abject wretch’s confession of guilt, forced from him in some mysterious way, not only left onr whole future bright and cloudless, but consigned to rest all the ghosts of the past, whose shadowy forms had hitherto dogged our steps and denied us the happiness rightly due to those who love as we loved ; now it is that I feel my shortcomings acutely, and wish my pen was more powerful than it is. And yet a word will describe the state of my own mmu as, when the last solemn words were spoken by the DARK DAYS. 175 iud ccessful Novell, ¥ Just like this book. 0112 043204798 1 R cb ^Letter Series popular fiction. TITLES AND AUTHORS. 1. 2 . 3* 4 * 5 - 6 . 7 * 8. 9 - 10. 11. 12 . Wee Wifie - Rosa N. Carey piir Bessie - Rosa N. Carey Baron Munchausen R. E. Raspe Beyond Pardon Bertha M. Clay * 3 - * 5 * i6,. * 7 r 18. 19 - Black Beauty - Donovan - Friendship Moths The Sketch Book pjfee Two - Andersen’s Dawn J *'-'■•** The Duchess Duke’s Evil Genius Anna Sewell Edna Lyall " Ouida n Ouida " W. Irving Edna Lyall :s H. Rider Haggard 20 . 22 . ? 3 - 24. 25. 26. *The Duchess • Bertha M. Clay j%|| Wilkie Collins Frozen Pirate - \V. Clark Russell Hon. Mrs Vereker “ The Duchess*’ Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte King Solomon!s Mines M* R idNejr Haggard A Life Interest Mrs. Alexander Master of Ballantrae R. L, Stevenson Merry Men * R. L. Stevenson A Modern Circe “ The Duchess " Mona’s Choice- Mrs. Alexander Mystery of a Hansom ! Cab - - Fergus Hume The Scarlet Letter N, Hawthorne TITLES AND AUTHORS. 27. 284 29: 30. 31. 32. 33 . 34 * 35 - 36. 37 - 38- 39 - 40. P- 42. She - - H. Rider Haggard When a Man's Single J, M. Barrie Averil - - Rosa N. Carey As ina Looking Glass F.C Philips At Bay - - Mrs. Alexander At War with Herself Bertha M. Clay Blind Love - Wilkie Collins Camille - - Alex. DunsM* Jr. Lady Vabrorth's Dia- monds - - M The Duchess Dark Days - Hugh Conway Dora Thcrae - Bertha M. Clay Her Martyrdom Ber|ltt M. Clay In the Golden Days Kith and Kin - jessii A Knight Errant Lady Audley's Si 43 - 44 * 45 - 46. - E. Braddon 49 - 5t>. A Life’s A Lost Wife Mrsy Master of Rory O'Mote Wife in Name Only v :j^^r^Bertha M. Ssliife Won by Waiting - Edna Twenty Thousand Leagues Under thed The Two Orohans R, International Book Com Publishers, 310-318 Sixth Avenue, New