Prev
| Next
| Contents
MARY AND MR. REDMAIN.
A few rudiments of righteousness lurked, in their original
undevelopment, but still in a measure active, in the being of Mr.
Redmain: there had been in the soul of his mother, I suspect, a
strain of generosity, and she had left a mark of it upon him, and
it was the best thing about him. But in action these rudiments
took an evil shape.
Preferring inferior company, and full of that suspicion which
puts the last edge upon what the world calls knowledge of human
nature, he thought no man his equal in penetrating the arena of
motive, and reading actions in the light of motive; and, that the
fundamental principle of all motive was self-interest, he assumed
to be beyond dispute. With this candle, not that of the Lord, he
searched the dark places of the soul; but, where the soul was
light, his candle could show him nothing--served only to blind
him yet further, if possible, to what was there present. And,
because he did not seek the good, never yet in all his life had
he come near enough to a righteous man to recognize that in
something or other that man was different from himself. As for
women--there was his wife--of whom he was willing to think as
well as she would let him! And she, firmly did he believe, was an
angel beside Sepia!--of whom, bad as she was, it is quite
possible he thought yet worse than she deserved: alas for the
woman who is not good, and falls under the judgment of a bad
man!--the good woman he can no more hurt than the serpent can
bite the adamant. He believed he knew Sepia's self, although he
did not yet know her history; and he scorned her the more that he
was not a hair better himself. He had regard enough for his wife,
and what virtue his penetration conceded her, to hate their
intimacy; and ever since his marriage had been scheming how to
get rid of Sepia--only, however, through finding her out: he must
unmask her: there would be no satisfaction in getting rid of her
without his wife's convinced acquiescence. He had been,
therefore, almost all the time more or less on the watch to
uncover the wickedness he felt sure lay at no great depth beneath
her surface; and in the mean time, and for the sake of this end,
he lived on terms of decent domiciliation with her. She had no
suspicion how thin was the crust between her and the lava.
In Cornwall, he began at length to puzzle himself about Mary. Of
course she was just like the rest! but he did not at once succeed
in fitting what he saw to what he entirely believed of her. She
remained, like Sepia, a riddle to be solved. He was not so
ignorant as his wife concerning the relations of the different
classes, and he felt certain there must be some reason, of course
a discreditable one, for her leaving her former, and taking her
present, position. The attack he had in Cornwall afforded him
unexpected opportunity of making her out, as he called it.
Upon this occasion it was also that Mary first ventured to
expostulate with her mistress on her neglect of her husband. She
heard her patiently; and the same day, going to his room, paid
him some small attention--handed him his medicine, I believe, but
clumsily, because ungraciously. The next moment, one of his fits
of pain coming on, he broke into such a torrent of cursing as
swept her in stately dignity from the room. She would not go near
him again.
"Brought up as you have been, Mary," she said, "you can not enter
into the feelings of one in my position, to whom the very tone
even of coarse language is unspeakably odious. It makes me sick
with disgust. Coarseness is what no lady can endure. I beg you
will not mention Mr. Redmain to me again."
"Dear Mrs. Redmain," said Mary, "ugly as such language is, there
are many things worse. It seems to me worse that a wife should
not go near her husband when he is suffering than that he should
in his pain speak bad words."
She had been on the point of saying that a thin skin was not
purity, but bethought herself in time.
"You are scarcely in a position to lay down the law for me,
Mary," said Hesper. "We will, if you please, drop the subject."
Mary's words were overheard, as was a good deal in the house more
than was reckoned on, and reached Mr. Redmain, whom they
perplexed: what could the young woman hope from taking his part?
One morning, after the arrival of Mewks, his man, Mary heard Mr.
Redmain calling him in a tone which betrayed that he had been
calling for some time: the house was an old one, and the bells
were neither in good trim, nor was his in a convenient position.
She thought first to find Mewks, but pity rose in her heart. She
ran to Mr. Redmain's door, which stood half open, and showed
herself.
"Can I not do something for you, sir?" she said.
"Yes, you can. Go and tell that lumbering idiot to come to me
instantly. No! here, you!--there's a good girl!--Oh, damn!--Just
give me your hand, and help me to turn an inch or two."
Change of posture relieved him a little. "Thank you," he said.
"That is better. Wait a few moments, will you--till the rascal
comes?"
Mary stood back, a little behind him, thinking not to annoy him
with the sight of her.
"What are you doing there?" he cried. "I like to see what people
are about in my room. Come in front here, and let me look at
you."
Mary obeyed, and with a smile took the position he pointed out to
her. Immediately followed another agony of pain, in which he
looked beset with demons, whom he not feared but hated. Mary
hurried to him, and, in the compassion which she inherited long
back of Eve, took his hand, the fingers of which were twisting
themselves into shapes like tree-roots. With a hoarse roar, he
dashed hers from him, as if it had been a serpent. She returned
to her place, and stood.
"What did you mean by that?" he said, when he came to himself.
"Do you want to make a fool of me?"
Mary did not understand him, and made no reply. Another fit came.
This time she kept her distance.
"Come here," he howled; "take my head in your hands."
She obeyed.
"Damned nice hands you've got!" he gasped; "much nicer than your
mistress's."
Mary took no notice. Gently she withdrew her hands, for the fit
was over.
"I see! that's the way of you!" he said, as she stepped back.
"But come now, tell me how it is that a nice, well-behaved,
handsome girl like you, should leave a position where, they tell
me, you were your own mistress, and take a cursed place as lady's
maid to my wife."
"It was because I liked Mrs. Redmain so much," answered Mary.
"But, indeed, I was not very comfortable where I was."
"What the devil did you see to like in her? I never saw
anything!"
"She is so beautiful!" said Mary.
"Is she! ho! ho!" he laughed. "What is that to another woman! You
are new to the trade, my girl, if you think that will go down!
One woman taking to another because 'she's so beautiful'! Ha! ha!
ha!"
He repeated Mary's words with an indescribable contempt, and his
laugh was insulting to a degree; but it went off in a cry of
suffering.
"Hypocrisy mustn't be too barefaced," he resumed, when again his
torture abated. "I didn't make you stop to amuse me! It's little
of that this beastly world has got for me! Come, a better reason
for waiting on my wife?"
"That she was kind to me," said Mary, "may be a better reason,
but it is not a truer."
"It's more than ever she was to me! What wages does she give
you?"
"We have not spoken about that yet, sir."
"You haven't had any?"
"I haven't wanted any yet."
"Then what the deuce ever made you come to this house?"
"I hoped to be of some service to Mrs. Redmain," said Mary,
growing troubled.
"And you ain't of any? Is that why you don't want wages?"
"No, sir. That is not the reason."
"Then what is the reason? Come! Trust me. I will be much
better to you than your mistress. Out with it! I knew there was
something!"
"I would rather not talk more about it," said Mary, knowing that
her feeling in relation to Hesper would be altogether incredible,
and the notion of it ridiculous to him.
"You needn't mind telling me! I know all about such
things.--Look here! Give me that pocket-book on the table."
Mary brought him the pocket-book. He opened it, and, taking from
it some notes, held them out to her.
"If your mistress won't pay you your wages, I will. There! take
that. You're quite welcome. What matter which pays you? It all
comes out of the same stocking-foot."
"I don't know yet," answered Mary, "whether I shall accept wages
from Mrs. Redmain. Something might happen to make it impossible;
or, if I had taken money, to make me regret it."
"I like that! There you keep a hold on her!" said Mr. Redmain, in
a confidential tone, while in his heart he was more puzzled than
ever. "There's no occasion, though, for all that," he went on,
"to go without your money when you can have it and she be nothing
the wiser. There--take it. I will swear you any oath you like not
to tell my stingy wife."
"She is not stingy," said Mary; "and, if I don't take wages from
her, I certainly shall not from any one else.--Besides," she
added, "it would be dishonest."
"Oh! that's the dodge!" said Mr. Redmain to himself; but aloud,
"Where would be the dishonesty, when the money is mine to do with
as I please?"
"Where the dishonesty, sir!" exclaimed Mary, astounded. "To take
wages from you, and pretend to Mrs. Redmain I was going without!"
"Ha! ha! The first time, no doubt, you ever pretended anything!"
"It would be," said Mary, "so far as I can, at the moment,
remember."
"Go along," cried Mr. Redmain, losing, or pretending to lose,
patience with her; "you are too unscrupulous a liar for me to
deal with."
Mary turned and left the room. As she went, his keen glance
caught the expression of her countenance, and noted the indignant
red that flushed her cheeks, and the lightning of wronged
innocence in her eyes.
"I ought not to have said it," he remarked to himself.
He did not for a moment fancy she had spoken the truth; but the
look of her went to a deeper place in him than he knew even the
existence of.
"Hey! stop," he cried, as she was disappearing. "Come back, will
you?"
"I will find Mr. Mewks," she answered, and went.
After this, Mary naturally dreaded conference with Mr. Redmain;
and he, thinking she must have time to get over the offense he
had given her, made for the present no fresh attempt to come, by
her own aid, at a bird's-eye view of her character and scheme of
life. His curiosity, however, being in no degree assuaged
concerning the odd human animal whose spoor he had for the moment
failed to track, he meditated how best to renew the attempt in
London. Not small, therefore, was his annoyance to find, a few
days after his arrival, that she was no longer in the house. He
questioned his wife as to the cause of her absence, and told her
she was utterly heartless in refusing her leave to go and nurse
her friend; whereupon Hesper, neither from desire to do right nor
from regard to her husband's opinion, but because she either saw
or fancied she saw that, now Mary did not dress her, she no
longer caused the same sensation on entering a room, resolved to
write to her--as if taking it for granted she had meant to return
as soon as she was able. And to prick the sides of this intent
came another spur, as will be seen from the letter she wrote:
"Dear Mary, can you tell me what is become of my large sapphire
ring? I have never seen it since you brought my case up with you
from Cornwall. I have been looking for it all the morning, but in
vain. You must have it. I shall be lost without it, for
you know it has not its equal for color and brilliance. I do not
believe you intended for a moment to keep it, but only to punish
me for thinking I could do without you. If so, you have your
revenge, for I find I can not do without either of you--you or
the ring--so you will not carry the joke further than I can bear.
If you can not come at once, write and tell me it is safe, and I
shall love you more than ever. I am dying to see you again. Yours
faithfully, H. R."
By this time, Letty was much better, and Tom no longer required
such continuous attention; Mary, therefore, betook herself at
once to Mr. Redmain's. Hesper was out shopping, and Mary went to
her own room to wait for her, where she was glad of the
opportunity of getting at some of the things she had left behind
her.
"While she was looking for what she wanted, Sepia entered, and
was, or pretended to be, astonished to see her. In a strange,
sarcastic tone:
"Ah, you there!" she said. "I hope you will find it."
"If you mean the ring, that is not likely, Miss Yolland," Mary
answered.
Sepia was silent a moment or two, then said:
"How is your cousin?"
"I have no cousin," replied Mary.
"The person, I mean, you have been staying with?"
"Better, thank you."
"Almost a pity, is it not--if there should come trouble about
this ring?"
"I do not understand you. The ring will, of course, be found,"
returned Mary.
"In any case the blame will come on you: it was in your charge."
"The ring was in the case when I left."
"You will have to prove that."
"I remember quite well."
"That no one will question."
Beginning at last to understand her insinuations, Mary was so
angry that she dared not speak.
"But it will hardly go to clear you," Sepia went on. "Don't
imagine I mean you have taken it; I am only warning you how the
matter will look, that you may be prepared. Mr. Redmain is one to
believe the worst things of the best people."
"I am obliged to you," said Mary, "but I am not anxious."
"It is necessary you should know also," continued Sepia, "that
there is some suspicion attaching to a female friend of yours as
well, a young woman who used to visit you--the wife of the other,
it is supposed. She was here, I remember, one night there was a
party; I saw you together in my cousin's bedroom. She had just
dressed and gone down."
"I remember," said Mary. "It was Mrs. Helmer."
"Well?"
"It is very unfortunate, certainly; but the truth must be told: a
few days before you left, one of the servants, hearing some one
in the house in the middle of the night, got up and went down,
but only in time to hear the front door open and shut. In the
morning a hat was found in the drawing-room, with the name
Thomas Helmer in it: that is the name of your friend's
husband, I believe?"
"I am aware Mr. Helmer was a frequent visitor," said Mary, trying
to keep cool for what was to come.
This that Sepia told her was true enough, though she was not
accurate as to the time of its occurrence. I will relate briefly
how it came about.
Upon a certain evening, a few days before Mary's return from
Cornwall, Tom would have gone to see Miss Yolland had he not
known that she meant to go to the play with a Mr. Emmet, a cousin
of the Redmains. Before the hour arrived, however, Count Galofta
called, and Sepia went out with him, telling the man who opened
the door to ask Mr. Emmet to wait. The man was rather deaf, and
did not catch with certainty the name she gave. Mr. Emmet did not
appear, and it was late before Sepia returned.
Tom, jealous even to hatred, spent the greater part of his
evening in a tavern on the borders of the city--in gloomy
solitude, drinking brandy-and-water, and building castles of the
most foolish type--for castles are as different as the men that
build them. Through all the rooms of them glided the form of
Sepia, his evil genius. He grew more and more excited as he
built, and as he drank. He rose at last, paid his bill, and, a
little suspicious of his equilibrium, stalked into the street.
There, almost unconsciously, he turned and walked westward. It
was getting late; before long the theatres would be emptying: he
might have a peep of Sepia as she came out!--but where was the
good when that fellow was with her! "But," thought Tom, growing
more and more daring as in an adventurous dream, "why should I
not go to the house, and see her after he has left her at the
door?"
He went to the house and rang the bell. The man came, and said
immediately that Miss Yolland was out, but had desired him to ask
Mr. Helmer to wait; whereupon Tom walked in, and up the stair to
the drawing-room, thence into a second and a third drawing-room,
and from the last into the conservatory. The man went down and
finished his second, pint of ale. From the conservatory, Tom,
finding himself in danger of havoc among the flower-pots, turned
back into the third room, threw himself on a couch, and fell fast
asleep.
He woke in the middle of the night in pitch darkness; and it was
some time before he could remember where he was. When he did, he
recognized that he was in an awkward predicament. But he knew the
house well, and would make the attempt to get out undiscovered.
It was foolish, but Tom was foolish. Feeling his way, he knocked
down a small table with a great crash of china, and, losing his
equanimity, rushed for the stair. Happily the hall lamp was still
alight, and he found no trouble with bolts or lock: the door was
not any way secured.
The first breath of the cold night-air brought with it such a
gush of joy as he had rarely experienced; and he trod the silent
streets with something of the pleasure of an escaped criminal,
until, alas! the wind, at the first turning, let him know that he
had left his hat behind him! He felt as if he had committed a
murder, and left his card-case with the body. A vague terror grew
upon him as he hurried along. Justice seemed following on his
track. He had found the door on the latch: if anything was
missing, how should he explain the presence of his hat without
his own? The devil of the brandy he had drunk was gone out of
him, and only the gray ashes of its evil fire were left in his
sick brain, but it had helped first to kindle another fire, which
was now beginning to glow unsuspected--that of a fever whose fuel
had been slowly gathering for some time.
He opened the door with his pass-key, and hurried up the stair,
his long legs taking three steps at a time. Never before had he
felt as if he were fleeing to a refuge when going home to his
wife.
He opened the door of the sitting-room--and there on the floor
lay Letty and little Tom, as I have already told.
"Why have I heard nothing of this before?" said Mary.
"I am not aware of any right you have to know what happens in
this house."
"Not from you, of course, Miss Yolland--perhaps not from Mrs.
Redmain; but the servants talk of most things, and I have not
heard a word--"
"How could you," interrupted Sepia, "when you were not in the
house?--And, so long as nothing was missed, the thing was of no
consequence," she added. "Now it is different."
This confused Mary a little. She stopped to consider. One thing
was clear--that, if the ring was not lost till after she left--
and of so much she was sure--it could not be Tom that had taken
it, for he was then ill in bed. Something to this effect she
managed to say.
"I told you already," returned Sepia, "that I had no suspicion of
him--at least, I desire to have none, but you may be required to
prove all you say; and it is as well to let you understand--
though there is no reason why I should take the trouble--
that your going to those very people at the time, and their
proving to be friends of yours, adds to the difficulty."
"How?" asked Mary.
"I am not on the jury," replied Sepia, with indifference.
The scope of her remarks seemed to Mary intended to show that any
suspicion of her would only be natural. For the moment the idea
amused her. But Sepia's way of talking about Tom, whatever she
meant by it, was disgraceful!
"I am astonished you should seem so indifferent," she said, "if
the character of a gentleman with whom you have been so intimate
is so seriously threatened as you would imply. I know he has been
to see you more than once while Mr. and Mrs. Redmain were not yet
returned."
Sepia's countenance changed; an evil fire glowed in her eyes, and
she looked at Mary as if she would search her to the bone. The
poorer the character, the more precious the repute!
"The foolish fellow," she returned, with a smile of contempt,
"chose to fall in love with me!--A married man, too!"
"If you understood that, how did he come to be here so often?"
asked Mary, looking her in the face.
But Sepia knew better than declare war a moment before it was
unavoidable.
"Have I not just told you," she said, in a haughty tone, "that
the man was in love with me?"
"And have you not just told me he was a married man? Could he
have come to the house so often without at least your
permission?"
Mary was actually taking the upper hand with her! Sepia felt it
with scarcely repressive rage.
"He deserved the punishment," she replied, with calmness.
"You do not seem to have thought of his wife!"
"Certainly not. She never gave me offense."
"Is offense the only ground for casting a regard on a fellow-
creature?"
"Why should I think of her?"
"Because she was your neighbor, and you were doing her a wrong."
"Once for all, Marston," cried Sepia, overcome at last, "this
kind of thing will not do with me. I may not be a saint, but I
have honesty enough to know the genuine thing from humbug. You
have thrown dust in a good many eyes in this house, but
none in mine."
By this time Mary had got her temper quite in hand, taking a
lesson from the serpent, who will often keep his when the dove
loses hers. She hardly knew what fear was, for she had in her
something a little stronger than what generally goes by the name
of faith. She was therefore able to see that she ought, if
possible, to learn Sepia's object in talking thus to her.
"Why do you say all this to me?" she asked, quietly. "I can not
flatter myself it is from friendship."
"Certainly not. But the motive may be worthy, for all that. You
are not the only one involved. People who would pass for better
than their neighbors will never believe any good purpose in one
who does not choose to talk their slang."
Sepia had repressed her rage, and through it looked aggrieved.
"She confesses to a purpose," said Mary to herself, and waited.
"They are not all villains who are not saints," Sepia went on. "-
-This man's wife is your friend?"
"She is."
"Well, the man himself is my friend--in a sort of a sense." A
strange shiver went through Mary, and seemed to make her angry.
Sepia went on:
"I confess I allowed the poor boy--he is little more--to talk
foolishly to me. I was amused at first, but perhaps I have not
quite escaped unhurt; and, as a woman, you must understand that,
when a woman has once felt in that way, if but for a moment, she
would at least be--sorry--" Here her voice faltered, and she did
not finish the sentence, but began afresh: "What I want of you
is, through his wife, or any way you think best, to let the poor
fellow know he had better slip away--to France, say--and stop
there till the thing blow over."
"But why should you imagine he has had anything to do with the
matter? The ring will be found, and then the hat will not
signify."
"Well," replied Sepia, putting on an air of openness, and for
that sake an air of familiarity, "I see I must tell you the whole
truth. I never did for a moment believe Mr. Helmer had anything
to do with the business, though, when you put me out of temper, I
pretended to believe it, and that you were in it as well: that
was mere irritation. But there is sure to be trouble; for my
cousin is miserable about her sapphire, which she values more
than anything she has; and, if it is not found, the affair will
be put into the hands of the police, and then what will become of
poor Mr. Helmer, be he as innocent as you and I believe him! Even
if the judge should declare that he leaves the court without a
blot on his character, Newgate mud is sure to stick, and he will
be half looked upon as a thief for the rest of his days: the
world is so unjust. Nor is that all; for they will put you in the
witness-box, and make you confess the man an old friend of yours
from the same part of the country; whereupon the counsel for the
prosecution will not fail to hint that you ought to be standing
beside the accused. Believe me, Mary, that, if Mr. Helmer is
taken up for this, you will not come out of it clean."
"Still you explain nothing," said Mary. "You would not have me
believe it is for my sake you are giving yourself all this
trouble?"
"No. But I thought you would see where I was leading you. For--
and now for the whole truth--although nothing can touch
the character of one in my position, it would be worse than
awkward for me to be spoken of in connection with the poor
fellow's visits to the house: my honesty would not be
called in question as yours would, but what is dear to me as my
honesty might--nay, it certainly would. You see now why I came to
you!--You must go to his wife, or, better still, to Mr. Helmer
himself, and tell him what I have been saying to you. He will at
once see the necessity of disappearing for a while."
Mary had listened attentively. She could not help fearing that
something worse than unpleasant might be at hand; but she did not
believe in Sepia, and in no case could consent that Tom should
compromise himself. Danger of this kind must be met, not avoided.
Still, whatever could be done ought to be done to protect him,
especially in his present critical state. A breath of such a
suspicion as this reaching him might be the death of him, and of
Letty, too.
"I will think over what you have said," she answered; "but I can
not give him the advice you wish me. What I shall do I can not
say--the thing has come upon me with such a shock."
"You have no choice that I see," said Sepia. "It is either what I
propose or ruin. I give you fair warning that I will stick at
nothing where my reputation is concerned. You and yours shall be
trod in the dirt before I allow a spot on my character!"
To Mary's relief they were here interrupted by the hurried
entrance of Mrs. Redmain. She almost ran up to her, and took her
by both hands.
"You dear creature! You have brought me my ring!" she cried.
Mary shook her head with a little sigh.
"But you have come to tell me where it is?"
"Alas! no, dear Mrs. Redmain!" said Mary.
"Then you must find it," she said, and turned away with an
ominous-looking frown. "I will do all I can to help you find it."
"Oh, you must find it! My jewel-case was in your charge."
"But there has been time to lose everything in it, the one after
the other, since I gave it up. The sapphire ring was there, I
know, when I went."
"That can not be. You gave me the box, and I put it away myself,
and, the next time I looked in it, it was not there."
"I wish I had asked you to open it when I gave it you," said
Mary.
"I wish you had," said Hesper. "But the ring must be found, or I
shall send for the police."
"I will not make matters worse, Mrs. Redmain," said Mary, with as
much calmness as she could assume, and much was needed, "by
pointing out what your words imply. If you really mean what you
say, it is I who must insist on the police being sent for."
"I am sure, Mary," said Sepia, speaking for the first time since
Hesper's entrance, "that your mistress has no intention of
accusing you."
"Of course not," said Hesper; "only, what am I to do? I must have
my ring. Why did you come, if you had nothing to tell me about
it?"
"How could I stay away when you were in trouble? Have you
searched everywhere?"
"Everywhere I can think of."
"Would you like me to help you look? I feel certain it will be
found."
"No, thank you. I am sick of looking."
"Shall I go, then?--What would you like me to do?"
"Go to your room, and wait till I send for you."
"I must not be long away from my invalids," said Mary, as
cheerfully as she could.
"Oh, indeed! I thought you had come back to your work!"
"I did not understand from your letter you wished that, ma'am--
though, indeed, I could not have come just yet in any case."
"Then you mean to go, and leave things just as they are?"
"I am afraid there is no help for it. If I could do anything-.
But I will call again to-morrow, and every day till the ring is
found, if you like."
"Thank you," said Hesper, dryly; "I don't think that would be of
much use."
"I will call anyhow," returned Mary, "and inquire whether you
would like to see me.--I will go to my room now, and while I wait
will get some things I want."
"As you please," said Hesper.
Scarcely was Mary in her room, however, when she heard the door,
which had the trick of falling-to of itself, closed and locked,
and knew that she was a prisoner. For one moment a frenzy of
anger overcame her; the next, she remembered where her life was
hid, knew that nothing could touch her, and was calm. While she
took from her drawers the things she wanted, and put them in her
hand-bag, she heard the door unlocked, but, as no one entered,
she sat down to wait what would next arrive.
Mrs. Redmain, as soon as she was aware of her loss, had gone in
her distress to tell her husband, whose gift the ring had been.
Unlike his usual self, he had showed interest in the affair. She
attributed this to the value of the jewel, and the fact that he
had himself chosen it: he was rather, and thought himself very,
knowing in stones; and the sapphire was in truth a most rare one:
but it was for quite other reasons that Mr. Redmain cared about
its loss: it would, he hoped, like the famous carbuncle, cast a
light all round it.
He was as yet by no means well, and had not been from the house
since his return.
The moment Mary was out of the room, Hesper rose.
"I should be a fool to let her leave the house," she said.
"Hesper, you will do nothing but mischief," cried Sepia.
Hesper paid no attention, but, going after Mary, locked the door
of her room, and, running to her husband's, told him she had made
her a prisoner.
No sooner was she in her husband's room than Sepia hastened to
unlock Mary's door; but, just as she did so, she heard some one
on the stair above, and retreated without going in. She would
then have turned the key again, but now she heard steps on the
stair below, and once more withdrew.
Mary heard a knock at her door. Mewks entered. He brought a
request from his master that she would go to his room.
She rose and went, taking her bag with her.
"You may go now, Mrs. Redmain," said her husband when Mary
entered. "Get out, Mewks," he added; and both lady and valet
disappeared.
"So!" he said, with a grin of pleasure. "Here's a pretty
business! You may sit down, though. You haven't got the ring in
that bag there?"
"Nor anywhere else, sir," answered Mary. "Shall I shake it out on
the floor?--or on the sofa would be better."
"Nonsense! You don't imagine me such a fool as to suppose, if you
had it, you would carry it about in your bag!"
"You don't believe I have it, sir--do you?" she returned, in a
tone of appeal.
"How am I to know what to believe? There is something dubious
about you--you have yourself all but admitted that: how am I to
know that robbery mayn't be your little dodge? All that rubbish
you talked down at Lychford about honesty, and taking no wages,
and loving your mistress, and all that rot, looks devilish like
something off the square! That ring, now, the stone of it alone,
is worth seven hundred pounds: one might let pretty good wages go
for a chance like that!"
Mary looked him in the face, and made him no answer. He spied a
danger: if he irritated her, he would get nothing out of her!
"My girl," he said, changing his tone, "I believe you know
nothing about the ring; I was only teasing you."
Mary could not help a sigh of relief, and her eyes fell, for she
felt them beginning to fill. She could not have believed that the
judgment of such a man would ever be of consequence to her. But
the unity of the race is a thing that can not be broken.
Now, although Mr. Redmain was by no means so sure of her
innocence as he had pretended, he did at least wish and hope to
find her innocent--from no regard for her, but because there was
another he would be more glad to find concerned in the ugly
affair.
"Mrs. Redmain," he went on, "would have me hand you over to the
police; but I won't. You may go home when you please, and you
need fear nothing."
He had the house where the Helmers lodged already watched, and
knew this much, that some one was ill there, and that the doctor
came almost every day.
"I certainly shall fear nothing," said Mary, not quite trusting
him; "my fate is in God's hands."
"We know all about that," said Mr. Redmain; "I'm up to most
dodges. But look here, my girl: it wouldn't be prudent in me,
lest there should be such a personage as you have just mentioned,
to be hard upon any of my fellow-creatures: I am one day pretty
sure to be in misfortune myself. You mightn't think it of me, but
I am not quite a heathen, and do reflect a little at times. You
may be as wicked as myself, or as good as Joseph, for anything I
know or care, for, as I say, it ain't my business to judge you.
Tell me now what you are up to, and I will make it the better for
you."
Mary had been trying hard to get at what he was "up to," but
found herself quite bewildered.
"I am sorry, sir," she faltered, "but I haven't the slightest
idea what you mean."
"Then you go home," he said. "I will send for you when I want
you."
The moment she was out of the room, he rang his bell violently.
Mewks appeared.
"Go after that young woman--do you hear? You know her--Miss--damn
it, what's her name?--Harland or Cranston, or--oh, hang it! you
know well enough, you rascal!"
"Do you mean Miss Marston, sir?"
"Of course I do! Why didn't you say so before? Go after her, I
tell you; and make haste. If she goes straight home--you know
where--come back as soon as she's inside the door."
"Yes, sir."
"Damn you, go, or you'll lose sight of her!"
"I'm a-listenin' after the street-door, sir. It ain't gone yet.
There it is now!"
And with the word he left the room.
Mary was too much absorbed in her own thoughts to note that she
was followed by a man with the collar of his great-coat up to his
eyes, and a woolen comforter round his face. She walked on
steadily for home, scarce seeing the people that passed her. It
was clear to Mewks that she had not a suspicion of being kept in
sight. He saw her in at her own door, and went back to his
master.
Prev
| Next
| Contents
|