Chapter 59
He was pa.s.sing through Prior's Ash, and is forced to halt and lie up: he's very ill. I'll soon be back again."
Away he went. Thomas felt unusually well that evening, and exerted himself for his brother. Once out of the house, George hesitated. Should he dash up to Lady G.o.dolphin's Folly first, and ease his mind, or should he go first to the Bell? The Bell was very near, but in the opposite direction to Ashlydyat. He turned first to the Bell, and was soon in the presence of Captain St. Aubyn, an old friend, now bound for Malta.
"I am sorry to have sent for you," exclaimed Captain St. Aubyn, holding out his hand to George. "I hear you have friends this evening."
"It is just the kindest thing you could have done," impulsively answered George. "I would have given a five-pound note out of my pocket for a plea to absent myself; and your letter came and afforded it."
What more he chose to explain was between themselves: it was not much: and in five minutes George was on his way to Lady G.o.dolphin's Folly. On he strode, his eager feet scarcely touching the ground. He lifted his hat and bared his brow, hot with anxiety, to the night air. It was a very light night, the moon high: and, as George pushed on through the dark grove of the Folly, he saw Charlotte Pain emerging from the same at a little distance, a dark shawl, or mantle, thrown completely over her head and figure, apparently for the purpose of disguise or concealment.
Her face was turned for a moment towards the moonlight, and there was no mistaking the features of Charlotte Pain. Then she crouched down, and sped along under the friendly cover of the trees. George hastened to overtake her.
But when he got up with her, as he thought, there was no Charlotte there. There was no any one. Where had she crept to? How had she disappeared? She must have plunged into the trees again. But George was in too much haste then to see Mr. Verrall, to puzzle himself about Charlotte. He crossed to the terrace, and rang the bell.
Were the servants making merry? He had to ring again. A tolerable peal this time. Its echoes might have been heard at Ashlydyat.
"Is Mr. Verrall at home?"
"No, sir. Mrs. Pain is."
"Mrs. Pain is not," thought George to himself. But he followed the man to the drawing-room.
To his indescribable astonishment, there sat Charlotte, at work. She was in evening dress, her gown and hair interlaced with jewels. Calmly and quietly sat she, very quietly for her, her King Charley reposing upon a chair at her side, fast asleep. It was next to impossible to fancy, or believe, that she could have been outside a minute or two ago, racing in and out of the trees, as if dodging some one, perhaps himself. And yet, had it been necessary, George thought he could have sworn that the face he saw was the face of Charlotte. So bewildered did he feel, as to be diverted for a moment from the business which had brought him there.
"You may well be surprised!" cried Charlotte, looking at him; and George noticed as
She pointed to the ground as she spoke. There, half covered by her dress, lay a heap of crinkled cotton; no doubt the unravelled mat.
Charlotte was plying her needle again with a.s.siduity, her eyes studying the instructions at her elbow.
"How very quickly you must have come in!" exclaimed George.
"Come in from where?" asked Charlotte.
"As I went up to the door, I saw you stooping near the grove on the left, something dark over your head."
"You dreamt it," said Charlotte. "I have not been out."
"But I certainly did see you," repeated George. "I could not be mistaken. You--were I fanciful, Charlotte, I should say you were in mischief, and wanted to escape observation. You were stooping under the shade of the trees and running along quickly."
Charlotte lifted her face and looked at him with wondering eyes. "Are you joking, or are you in earnest?" asked she.
"I never was more in earnest in my life. I could have staked my existence upon its being you."
"Then I a.s.sure you I have not stirred out of this room since I came into it from dinner. What possessed me to try this senseless work, I cannot tell," she added, flinging it across the floor in a momentary accession of temper. "It has given me a headache, and they brought me some tea."
"You are looking very poorly," remarked George.
"Am I? I don't often have such a headache as this. The pain is here, over my left temple. Bathe it for me, will you, George?"
A handkerchief and some eau-de-Cologne were lying on the table beside her. George gallantly undertook the office: but he could not get over his wonder. "I'll tell you what, Charlotte. If it was not yourself, it must have been your----"
"It must have been my old blind black dog," interrupted Charlotte. "He has a habit of creeping about the trees at night. There! I am sure that's near enough. I don't believe it was anything or any one."
"Your double, I was going to say," persisted George. "I never saw your face if I did not think I saw it then. It proves how mistaken we may be.
Where's Verrall? A pretty trick he played me this evening."
"What trick?" repeated Charlotte. "Verrall's gone to London."
"Gone to London!" shouted George, his tone one of painful dismay. "It cannot be."
"It _is_," said Charlotte. "When I came in from our ride I found Verrall going off by train. He had received a telegraphic message, which took him away."
"Why did he not call upon me? He knew--he knew--the necessity there was for me to see him. He ought to have come to me."
"I suppose he was in a hurry to catch the train," said Charlotte.
"Why did he not send?"
"He did send. I heard him send a verbal message by one of the servants, to the effect that he was summoned unexpectedly to London, and could not, therefore, attend your dinner. How early you have broken up!"
"We have not broken up. I left my guests to see after Verrall. No message was brought to me."
"Then I will inquire," began Charlotte, rising. George gently pushed her back.
"It is of little consequence," he said. "It might have saved me some suspense; but I am glad I got dinner over without knowing it. I _must_ see Verrall."
Charlotte carried her point, and rang the bell. "If you are glad, George, it is no extenuation for the negligence of the servants. They may be forgetting some message of more importance, if they are left unreproved now."
But forgotten the message had not been. The servant, it appeared, had misunderstood his master, and carried the message to Ashlydyat, instead of to the Bank.
"How very stupid he must have been!" remarked Charlotte to George, when the explanation was given. "I think some people have only half their share of brains."
"Charlotte, I must see Verrall. I received a letter this evening from London which I ought to have had yesterday, and it has driven me to my wits' end."
"About the old business?" questioned Charlotte.
"Just so. Look here."
He took the letter from his pocket: the letter brought back to him by Isaac Hastings, and which he had a.s.sured Maria had not contained bad news: opened it, and handed it to Charlotte for her perusal. Better, possibly, for Mr. George G.o.dolphin that he had made a bosom friend of his wife than of Charlotte Pain! Better for gentlemen in general, it may be, that they should tell their secrets to their wives than to their wives' would-be rivals--however comprehensive the fascinations of these latter ladies may be. George, however, had made his own bed, as we all do; and George would have to lie upon it.
"What am I to do, Charlotte?"
Charlotte sat bending over the note, and pressing her forehead. Her look was one of perplexity; perplexity great as George's.
"It is a dangerous position," she said at length. "If not averted----"
She came to a dead pause, and their eyes met.
"Ay!" he repeated--"if not averted! Nothing would remain for me but----"
"Hush, George," said she, laying her hand upon his lips, and then letting it fall upon his fingers, where it remained.