;*sb»*^ ^ c < « ^■r ^«^ [«rdgo1 <■- ^^--c c tec "•<:_•.«. f '<< . C ( c ^f^ I :- ' c c .' (T C : c : ccc -.cjL cxccc < ,, - a' 180 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. "I'd rather not toucli it, Mr. Laing. said Crake, " I've lost so mucli lately." " Not by me," interrupted Laing, starply. " Have I not always paid to the day ?" " Well, that's true," repHed Crake ; " and if it's all right I can do it for two five. I suppose you've got the title-deeds ?" " Of course I have," said Laing. He took some antique-looking documents from his breast pocket. " You know the place ; you've been down there with me ; there are eight hundred acres of splendid land. I defy you to find sounder security ; and I shouldn't give the interest, only that I want the money in a hurry, for my daugh- ter is going to marry Lord Bellasys." " The devil !" thought Crake. Crake knew Lord Bellasys, but had never lent him money, for the simple reason that chake's den. 181 Lord Bellasys, tliougli the fastest man in London, had an income too vast for his wildest extravagation. Crake thought, however, that this fat fly might some day or other be tempted into his harbour, with Mr. Laing for decoy ; so he said, " Well, Mr. Laing, I will entertain your proposal. You shall have two thousand as soon as the mortgage deed is ready." *' My solicitors shall draw it at once, and send it you. Meanwhile let me have five hundred on an I U, because Lord Bellasys is in a devil of a hurry, and I must throw away a lot of money just now." Mr. Laing got a cheque for five hundred on the Bank of England, where most bill discounters keep their accounts for the sake of respectability. Then the fly had a 182 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. glass of wine with the spider, and went off to cash his cheque. Crake, his customer gone, sat down to ruminate on the state of affairs. He put a little brandy into the glass of champagne which he was drinking, just to quicken the circulation of his ideas. Many trans- actions had there been between himself and Laing : Laing, though the sources of his income were dubious, borrowed money at sixty per cent., and always paid to the day. It is an expensive way of liv- ing, hardly practicable unless you can get a hundred per cent, from somebody else. " Well," soliloquised Crake, over his alcoholic refresher, " that man is an odd fish. I don't think I remember him in such a deuce of a hurry before. He's paid CEAKT^'S DEN. 183 me a lot of money," lie tliouglit, with a grin of great satisfaction. He struck a hand-bell, and the " junior partner " entered. '' Norris," he said, " I want to look at Laing's account with us. And bring me Debrett's Peerage at the same time." The footman did his bidding rapidly. On his return he said — " I doubt if Laing is very safe. They say he's been let in by Erie. I wouldn't give him anything heavy without sound security." " All right," said Crake, and began to study the little account-book, which was marked with a number that in the ledger corresponded to Mr. Laing's name. " A good customer," quoth old Crake to himself ; " a fine customer. He's had 184 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. eleven thousand of mine in six years, and lie's paid it all back, and about six thousand for the use of it. I wonder what his little game is. I can't afford to borrow money at that rate." Crake thought nothing of his junior partner's warning. A man who could afford to borrow money at such a rate was not the man to speculate in Erie. No ; Crake felt certain that he was master of one of the modern alchymies ; he either went on the Stock Exchange, or kept a hell, or had speculative liaisons with the Foreign Offices of Europe. So he felt quite comfortable about that cheque for five hundred which had just passed from his hands. Then he turned to Debrett. Edgar, 17th Baron Bellasys : crest, the lovely ceake's den. 185 foundress of tlie family ; punning motto, Bella Sis. The Bella sys had been as for- tunate as the House of Hapsburg in marrying heiresses, and young Lord Bella- sys "was generally supposed to be the richest noble in England, except the unhappy few "who are so egregiously opulent they have to be managed by committees and allowed pocket-money, and married by treaty. It is a sad thing for a man to have an unmanageable income; almost as bad as an unmanageable wife. Crake pondered the question. Was Bellasys a marrying man ? He had not thought so from his previous career. Edgar Lord Bellasys was 35 ; he had yacht- ed round the world, won a Derby, broken the bank at Homburg, and been co-re- spondent in a divorce case. He was the 186 A FIGHT \YITH TOETUNE. very last man you would expect to settle down and marry a quiet country girl. And Crake could not remember what manner of young woman Miss Laing was. He could imagine Bellasys set on fire by some wild creature full of amorous passion, just as potassium breaks into flame at toucli of oxygen. He could not imagine the cool plausible imperturbable Laing having such a daughter. Your crafty scoundrel needs to study human nature as keenly as a great dramatist ; and Spider Crake was a careful student and skilful handler of men. Dismissing Mr. Laing with the final conclusion that he was not likely to lose by him, Crake returned to the consideration of that newspaper paragraph which had so startled him. He did not like it at all. He hated failures. Besides, these fellows crake's den. 187 being cauglit, wliat might not a dexterous counsel discover as to the person who employed them ? Crake had no fear of Slippery Jack, but the Parson was such a fool. He did not at all like the situation. He read the paragraph a dozen times, and liked it less each time. He could not know what was going on ; he dared not interfere ; he saw that he must wait — and he abhorred waiting. It was therefore with oTeat satisfaction that he saw the junior partner enter with a message to the , effect that Slippery Jack and the Parson wanted to see him. There was a merry twinkle in the junior partner's eye, whick assured Crake that their news was good. " Why, I thought you were lagged," said Crake, on their entry. The Parson was beginning a pompous yarn ; but the Slippery 188 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. One put his hand on his mouth and said — "We were, Mr. Crake. We shall be again, unless you stow us away, for there's a regular hue and cry. You'll find some stones in that bag, Mr. Crake, and I know you'll do what's right by us ; but the first thing is to make us safe somewhere." Crake put the bag into an iron box, and then touched a spring which opened a secret door in the wall. The Slippery One and the Parson followed him silently down a long dark damp flight of steps, which ultimately landed them in the highest story of a water-side public-house, known ^s the Water Eat, though I forget whether that was its sign. Leaving the new-comers in this quaint old room. Crake went in search of the landlord. He had to do this by descending through a trapdoor, for the crake's den. 189' attic was merely a loft, and the communica- tion witb. it was carefully concealed. In- deed the trapdoor opened into the room oc- cupied by a maidservant, who happened to be washing herself (a thing which even London servant-girls do at intervals) when Crake's legs came through the trapdoor. She was not at all astonished ; she helped' him down with her soapy hands. Slippery Jack and the Parson were taken in at the Water Rat, which in fact was one of several outposts of Spider Crake's cob- web. The servant-girl who dwelt below brought them their food, and would virtu- ously have resisted any attempt on the part of the police to search her rooms as indecent beyond measure. Having got rid of his two inferior scoundrels, Crake opened the bag, and 190 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. poured the jewels out on the table. There were diamonds of the purest water, ori- ental sapphires, rubies redder than the planet Mars, emeralds of the darkest green. He knew the stones pretty well ; it was Crake's business to know where there were diamonds worth stealing. Having looked them through, he missed a famous blue diamond, with a core of golden light in its very centre, which Sir Humphrey Davy had much desired to analyse, in order to discover the cause of a phenomenon so curious. A golden light in the heart of an azure diamond is really strange. We all know that diamond is merely pure carbon, and can be turned into charcoal easily enough. But the formation of this unique gem is still a mystery of creation. Is it the product of ceake's den. 191 some sudden crystallisation under infinite pressure caused by geological change ? The inquisitive intellect of our great chymist, Sir Humphrey Davy, was much employed on this question. He exposed carbon to intense heat, both in vacuo and in condensed nitrogen ; and the lustre of the carbon was much increased, and the carbon was hard enouo'h to cut o-lass. It is curious that no chymical experimenter has followed in this inviting track ; but the truth is that our contemporary men love the lecture-room better than the labora- tory, and that even Faraday was a very bad second to the indefatigable Sir Hum- phrey. " I didn't suppose," soliloquised Crake, " that those fellows would bring me all the stones. Some stick to their finirers. 192 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. naturally. But I can't fancy they've dared to take tliat famous diamond, which nobody who knows anything about stones would venture to buy. Where can it be ? I could get a nice sum of money for it from the Shah or the Khedive ; and a jolly trip it would be to go and negotiate with them." Crake was puzzled and disappointed, and could only suppose that Squire Englehurst had put away the famous dia- mond in some less known place than that where the bulk of his daughter's jewels was kept. However, his myrmidons had brought liim a very valuable haul ; and a descriptive telegram in cypher to a con- fidential friend in Amsterdam was prompt- ly despatched, and answered with equal promptitude. The result was that Crake, CRAKE S DEX. 193 having summoned liis junior partner and given him certain instructions, prepared to make an immediate start for the Conti- nent. When he had a big job on hand, he hked to do it personally. But his day's work at home was not over. Presently he had to give audience to the Honourable Clarence Vere, a younger son of the well-known Lord Vaurien, but with- out the resplendent scampishness of his father. A well-preserved and well-dressed man of forty, Vere got himself put in the Peerage a dozen years younger. He had never had any income, for his worthy old father spent all he received and a great deal more ; so Yere had lived by his wits, with ulterior design to marry an heiress. The particular heiress was not yet found ; but Vere was in no hurry ; he VOL. I. O 194 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. wislied to sow liis wild oats first. More- over, lie had hit upon a rather distinguished mode of making a gentlemanly living, and keeping on the surface of society, swind- ling Lord Verisopht and going very far with Lady Veriphast. "When nobody would lend him any more money, and it was a case of Basinghall Street or Bou- logne, a sudden thought struck him, and he went straight to Crake. "I'm off," he said, "unless I can make an arrangement. Don't know what I owe all round ; dare say you know what I owe you ?" And he leaned back in a chair in Crake's sanctum, smoking a cigarette. "Rather," replied Crake, laconically. " Well, it comes to this. I'm in society, and go with the swim. There's lots of crake's den. 195 meiD, and women too for tliat matter, who'll give any price for ready money at a pinch. You stop these fellows that are bothering me, and I'll send you all the best people, and you'll give me a commis- sion. The idea struck Crake as a good one. He could always pull this scapegrace up by insisting on his money. He employed him in this highly honourable way, and the decoy brought him many clients . . . men reckoning on their fathers' death, and women pledging their bridal diamonds. Fashion flies too fast for all but the men with princely incomes, and even they sometimes find it hard to keep steady in the rapids, as this incident goes to show. " Ha ! Crake," said the Honourable Clarence Vere, in his airiest way, " hope o2 196 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. you're not too busy to give me something effervescent and iced ?" " I'm just off to the Continent," said Crake, drily, " and I fear nothing you have to tell me will pay for the hock and seltzer which is your favourite liquid. Still you shall have it." " Wrong for once," said Clarence Vere, as he slaked his thirst. " Come, I'll bet joii a pony that what I am going to tell you will prevent your journey." " Done," said Crake. " Good !" said Vere, quietly registering the bet. " Listen. Bellasys wants money, and I am going to bring him here to- night." " The devil !" said Crake. " Will you have a cheque, or bank-notes ?" " Cheque, thanks," said Vere, getting up ceake's den. 197 sharply. " We'll be liere at midnight ; I must be off, as we dine together, and go to half a dozen places after." Crake, when his sprightly subaltern had left him, sat for some time in a brown study. Why should Bellasys want money ? Nothing outrageous had been attributed to him of late. He had simply carried out the saying, Noblesse oblige, as too many of our modern patricians choose to read it. He had been lucky on the turf, and in other forms of speculation to which our suckling peers are much addicted. But Crake, whose business it was to know more of people's private affairs than all the Pollakies in Europe, could not guess at a reason for this young noble's being hard up. He would not go to Amsterdam, that 198 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. was certain. Was it safe to keep tlie diamonds in England ? He thought not. The police would be on the track pretty soon. There was but one thing to be done. He would send them out by the junior partner, and instruct him as to the amount he ought to get for them. So he summoned Norris, and explained the whole affair. "Get away early in the morning," h.& said. " I don't know about the steamers, but you had better be out of this before sunrise, in case of accidents ; and you can find out everything at London Bridge. There is a line to Focking; mind you don't take a farthinp- less than the sum in my memorandum : get twice as much if you can. The stones are well worth it. And now have supper laid for three in the ceake's den. 199 blue room at twelve : everything first-rate, for Bellasys is a big fish." This arranged, Crake strolled into Picca- dilly, dined at the Criterion, and passed an hour or two at the Criterion Theatre. He did not care about drama, legitimate or illegitimate ; but he found that light and noise, song and dance, relieved a brain that all day had been set upon intrigue and arithmetic. So he almost always dined at a good place, drank sound stimulant wine, and went into a box or stall there- after. He could not, an hour later, have told you the menu of his dinner or the name of his play ; but he got the distraction he needed. Meanwhile Lord Bellasys and Clarence Yere had dined at the Raleigh. Thence, " just for a breath of air," as Bellasys put 200 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. it (and certes, 'twas a sultry niglit), they drove tandem, a noble pair of roans, down to Caprice Cottage, Fulham. " I suppose the fellow will do it," said Bellasys, flicking his leader, so that he sprang off and set all his warning bells into a tremendous tintinnabulation as they drove back to town. " Of course he will," said Yere, lighting a cigar under difficulties. " Fool if he didn't." "And I suppose you think me a fool too," said Bellasys. " Of course I do, my dear fellow, but you need not press one to say it in so definite a way." " I think I'm right," said Bellasys, and gave his leader another sharp touch, and said no more till he reached the door of crake's den. 201 Mr. Crake's chambers, just as Big Beu was saying Midnight. The door opened as they got down, and the junior partner, in his choicest footman's apparel, showed them into a room where supper was laid for three. Lady Mary Wortley Montagu's exclamation — " O wlieu the long hours of the public are past, To meet ■with champagne and a chicken at last," was quite outdone by Crake's suppers. Lord Bellasys and his friend were usher- ed into the room, where Crake received them with infinite servilit}^ Crake, a judge of character by pro- fession, could hardly approximate to a judgment of Lord Bellasys. A man of five feet ten, broad shouldered, the Cornish wrestler's build all through, with brown hair very short, a shaven face, and the 202 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. clearest blue eye Crake liad ever encountered. That eye would liave told Bellasys, if a Lavater had looked at him; but Crake, accustomed to the world's seamiest side, was by no means a Lavater. And the easy style of Lord Bellasys puzzled him even more. " Ah, 3'ou have supper ready, Mr. Crake ; I will just take a biscuit and a glass of noyau, for my horses pulled rather. Then, as to business. Vere tells me you have money, and like to lend it at a profit. I have money, and like to spend it. Now, here is the question, — will you obtain for me, in the course of to-morrow, bank-notes for fifty thousand pounds, if I give you a post-dated cheque on Drummond for sixty thousand. My cheque shall be payable two months hence. I am going to be married, and I want money." ceake's den. 203- Crake hesitated a moment. It was a grand temptation, and all his inquiries about Lord Bellasys had served to show- that he met his engagements. Moreover^ he had been told that Lord Bellasys was about to marry Laing's daughter. What puzzled the usurer was the eccentricity of the proposal. But his hesitation lasted only a moment. " Yes, my lord," he said. " Where shall I send the notes ?" " To Long's. I breakfast at tw^elve. If you or your messenger can be there be- tween twelve and two with the notes, the cheque shall be ready. Don't disappoint me. " Rely on me, my lord," said Crake. Then he went back to where the unused supper was spread, ate some lobster '204 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. salad, and drank some cliampagne. Then lie rang for tbe junior partner, told him he had made a grand coup, and advised him to be off to Amsterdam as soon as possible. Very jolly was Crake that night; a fine burglarious haul of dia- monds, and ten thousand pounds in two months without any risk, were wonderful prizes for a single day. He felt he had done his duty, and Providence had pro- perly rewarded him. As to Lord Bellasys, who was never like other men, he dropt Clarence Vere -at his Jermyn Street rooms, and worked off his excitement by driving his roans a dozen miles out of town, and then back to Long's. London was crimsoned by sun- rise over all its lofty towers and labyrin- thine streets when Bellasys sent his crake's den. 205' sleepy groom off with his horses, and went quietly to bed, telling the night porter to wake him at twelve — and not before, if Doomsday happened to occur. 206 CHAPTER VII. WHO IS THE CEIMIiXAL? -" When life's at the worst, and your brain's in a panic, Don't take refuge in strychnine or hydrocyanic. To leave this our world by an improper portal, Is beneath the high rank of a spirit immortal." Synesius — Be Suicida. TTTHY was Charles Cotton wanted at tlie Hall ? The answer is simple. That shriekino' housemaid who announced o the loss of the jewels, when she was re- duced to comparative calmness and cross- examined, which took a considerable time, WHO IS THE CEDIINAL. 207 stated that she had seen Cotton come out of the Squire's room just before she dis- covered the safe was open. She supposed he had to go and look whether the win- dows were all right. She was quite sure he was there. The Squire and the Marquis were puzzled by this curious bit of evidence. Cotton had professedly gone away to attend to his day's work at that time. He could by no means have any business in Mr. Englehurst's bedroom. They dis- cussed the matter carefully. The house- maid, a simple girl from Englehurst village, of nineteen or twenty, could have no apparent motive for stating an untruth. "I can't understand this," said the Squire. " Cotton seems to me a very honest candid young fellow. I won't be- 208 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. lieve him a thief, in league witli those villains from London. Yet why was he in my room ?" "It is a problem," said Castelcicala, " and we shall have to wait for its solu- tion. I do not believe Cotton was in your room. That girl may have fancied she saw him." " Fancied ? What do you mean ?" " She is at an excitable age. She was frightened when she saw your safe opened and rifled. An attack of the hysterica jMssio may have made her believe she saw Cotton when he was not there. You will find he will deny he was there." "Of course," said the Squire; "guilty or innocent, he'll do that. But who cut the cords of those burglars, and helped them to clear the safe ? And who could WHO IS THE CKIMINAL. 209 have unlocked tlie safe, or picked its lock^ so cleverly ?" " Not Cotton, my friend," said the Mar- quis. " He is not the man for that kind of work. It is one of the most difficult enigmas I have known, and I have passed my life in solving enigmas. I shall find a clue, it is certain. I might almost say I have found a clue, by the Archimedean principle of exhaustion." " "What do you think ?" said the Squire, eagerly. * " I think nothing yet, my friend. I probe the darkness. You may never find your jewels again, but I will find the thief — and he will not be Charles Cotton." Cis Englehurst was of course aware that her diamonds had fled ; but the Squire told her nothing of his suspicions, and when he VOL. I. P 210 A FIGHT WITH FOETONE. found that Cotton would be away till even- ing, ordered out his four in hand, put his daughter on the box, and drove her twenty miles to Garston Mere, where they held an impromptu pic-nic together, on a green promontory which thrust itself defiantly into the lovely lake — a lake where the Fay Morgana might well be seen for an instant, and vanish. The Marquis declined to come ; and father and daughter, who were wondrous good com- rades, enjoyed their time. Cis's young heart was as yet unstirred by the love- trouble ; she loved nobody save her father, and just for the brief time when it is possible for father and daughter thus to love each other, he seeing in the young creature what he saw years ago in her mother, she regarding him as the noblest WHO IS THE CRIMINAL. 211 of men and the most loveable, liow great is tlie deliglit ! Two young lovers could not have got more pleasure out of a pic-nic by the solitary mere, watching the heron fishing the pools for lake-trout, and the falcon hovering high above, waiting for the heron to rise with its prey. The heron found its fish and rose : the haAvk fell from the firmament like a flash of lightning, and clutched the luckless bird. " I wonder if the old Augurs could get anything out of that about my diamonds," thought the Squire. The Marquis de Castelcicala had the little housemaid sent to him, and questioned her as to her seeing Cotton in the Squire's room. She adhered to her story. She was quite certain it was he, and no other. Then he made inquiries as to her family. p 2 212 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. Her name was Julia, but the housekeeper insisted on her being called Ann, which she seemed to think a great grievance ; and her family name was Pinnell ; and her only relation was her maiden aunt, as lived at a cottage just opposite Mr. Jenkins's, and the Squire made her comfortable because she had been in his service years ago, and in his father's time as well. Castelcicala went off to see the maiden aunt, who turned out to be a great aunt. She was in a cos}' little cottage with trees in front, and was reading the Bible quietly. In old age people go back to the Bible, and are apt to wonder they ever left it for the sermons of popular preachers. This quiet old lady, who had passed her eightieth year, reading for the thousandth time the ancient idj\ of Ruth amid the WHO IS THE CRIMINAL. 213 alien corn, and mingling it with vague tlioughts of the poetic might-liave-been of lier own gay girlhood, was a rare picture. The Marquis, a connoisseur of humanity, enjoyed it. After talk of other matters, he led her to talk of Miss Julia Pinnell. It was clear the old lady did not think much of the generation two stages forward. Certes, that pallid aristocratic face had little in common with the florid countenance of the housemaid. The Marquis, carefully humour- ing the old lady, found out that she considered her great-niece not very much better than she should be. " She's a little hussy," she said. " The girls are all alike now. Father would have whipped me well if I'd done what these young things do. Now here's a bit 214 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. of paper she dropt," slie continued, turning to the beginning of her Bible. " I can't make it out ; but perhaps you can, sir ?" Castelcicala started when he saw it. " Yes," he said, " I think I can make it out. May I take it Avith me ?" " 3^es," said the old lady ; whereupon the Marquis, amazed at having strengthen- ed his clue in a quarter hardly expected, gave her a couple of sovereigns, and walked slowly towards Englehurst Hall, much pondering. The louts at the Five Horseshoes beheld him pass, and made uucomplimentary remarks in a cowardly whisper. I wonder whether Earl Eussell, whose quaint little pamphlet on education has just appeared as I write, could have explained to those bucolic beer-consumers who Wellington was — a fact which he WHO IS THE CRIMINAL. 215 seems to think every Englisliman must know. Castelcicala, a subtle Italian, with a somewhat Macchiavellian brain, dimly laboured at his problem as he loitered back towards Englehurst Hall. The solu- tion had suddenly flashed on him, and he now had unexpected corroborative evi- dence ; but he saw clearly that he must wait awhile before acting. There was nothing quite definite enough to satisfy the English magistrate, whose duty it is to give a suspected person the benefit of every doubt. So he kept his opinion to himself, waiting for what might come next. He was standing at the grand entrance of Englehurst Hall, ready to help pretty Cis from her seat, and as she sprang from the wheel, agile as a squirrel, he said, 216 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. " You have enjoyed your day, I am sure." '' Indeed I have," slie replied. "It is always pleasant with papa." At dinner and after nothing was said of the disagreeable affair. They went soon to the drawing-room. Cis Englehurst, after her long drive in open air and the general excitement of the day, was very tired. She leaned back in her chair, a pretty infantile picture, scarce able to keep her soft eyelids from drooping over her opal eyes. "You won't sing to-night," said the Marquis, "I know. Come, shall I sing you a quaint sleepy madrigal that I found in a worm-eaten old music-book in your father's library to-day ?" " do, please," she said, wakening up. WHO IS THE CRIMINAL. 217 Castelcicala, iu a tenor almost equal to Mario's, sang, touching the piano deftly — My beauty speaks. Her speech is song ; Her silver-sounding words Out-do the quiring throng Of musical birds. O speak again, my sweet, O speak again ! Silence is pain. . My beauty sings. Heaven's golden sea, And the inaudible spheres Have a new voice for me ; My spirit hears. O sing again, fair minstrel, sing again That strange sweet strain ! My beauty sleeps. I guess her eyes Beneath those lids pearl-white ; Her sweet breasts sink and rise To dream's delight. O dream of me, sweet sleeper, dream again : And not in vain ! The Marquis's song made pretty Cis sleepier than before, as indeed Avas his design. So she tripped away to her (juiet, cool chamber, fearless of burglars this night 218 A FIGHT WITH TOETUNE. at least, since a second attack seemed an impossibility. Ah, but she was a fearless child always, as our story will show. She sent her maid away, and said short prayers, and was soon in a soft calm sleep, dream- ing of nobody. She had not been gone five minutes when Cotton's arrival was notified to the Squire. " Send him here," said Mr. Englehurst. " Note the young fellow as he comes in," said the Marquis. " It is either hangdog or bluster with guilty people ; the innocent are unsuspicious and unconcerned." Cartes, Charles Cotton looked uncon- cerned enough when shown into the Squire's presence ; and to both gentlemen he seemed the unlikeliest of men to be in league with thieves. WHO IS THE CEIMINAL. 219' " Cotton," said the Squire, " before you left the Hall this morning, did you go into my bedroom ?" Cotton, who was quite unable to under- stand the reason of this sudden question, said — " No, sir. I went straight away and bathed, and went to my work." " AVell," said the Squire, " your answer is frank enough, and no doubt the facts can be proved ; but those thieves you helped so well to catch have ' escaped, somebody cutting their cords, and they took thou- sands of pounds' worth of diamonds from a safe in my bedroom." " Who could have cut the cords ?" said Cotton. " I am sure we tied the scoundrels fast enough." He did not see the drift of the conversa* -220 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. tion, and liad not the remotest idea that he could be suspected. "Well, Cotton," said the Squire, "it •comes to this. The housemaid who dis- covered the robbery declared that you were in the room at the time, or just before." " The little liar !" exclaimed Charles Cotton. " I should like to talk to her. May she come up ?" " It is only fair," said the Squire. "Is it wise ?" asked the Marquis. "Fair before wise," said the Squire, innging the bell and ordering her up. She came, a slightly scrofulous doll, of a tj^pe too common where the sins of parents have been visited on their children. Charles Cotton looked at her with an indignant gaze. Knowing himself incap- WHO IS THE CRIMINAL. 221 able of theft, he felt a courageous con- tempt for anyone who could think theft possible of him. There are men, and women too, who steal with delighted avidity, thinking they have done something clever ; whereas Charles Cotton liked tO' work for his living, and to feel he was earning it. This Julia Pinnell came in with a false look. She curtseyed humbly to the Squire^ who said, " You are sure you saw Mr. Cotton in my room this morning ?" " Quite sure, sir," she said. " What was he doing ?" " I didn't notice, sir. He had a bunch of keys in his hand." "The Lie Circumstantial," thought the Marquis. 222 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. ''You are perfectly sure it was Cotton ?" " yes, sir, I couldn't mistake him. He said, ' How are you, Julia ?' " "You can go," said tlie Squire. " Mr. Engleliurst," said Cotton, when she was gone, " I can't guess why that wench lies, but she does lie. I have never spoken to her in my life, and hadn't an idea her name was Julia. If a man had been lying about me in that way, I'd have twisted his neck before he left the room." Charles Cotton was moved to tears of wrath. He snatched at the handker- chief in his pocket to hide the mist which seldom comes upon a strong man's eyes, though it hovers over those of women. As he did so, something fell on the floor, and the Marquis said, " What have you drop- ped, Mr. Cotton ?" WHO IS THE CEIMINAL. 223 He took a caudle to find out, and to bis utter amazement the sole thing he could find, buried deep in the soft AYilton carpet, was a small diamond ring that Mrs. Engle- hurst used to wear. Cotton laid it on the oak table. The Squire looked puzzled. Castelcicala laughed. " There's something saved," said the Marquis, "though 'tis only a little ring." "Yes," said the Squire, sorrowfully, " but it is of value to me, and will be to Cis, for it was my first gift to my dear wife. But it looks very strange." The Squire's was a stolid and by no means fast-travelling intellect. Give him time, and he'd come to a just judgment on any question. Unfortunately, the one 224 A FIGHT WITH POKTUNE. thing tliat never is given us in this world is time. " It w strange," said the Marquis. " Now, Englehurst, will you let me carry out this matter in my own way ? You don't be- lieve, I am sure, that Cotton stole that rino-." " I don't," said the Squire, emphatically, " though I'm hanged if I see my way out of it." ''I think I do," said the Marquis. ''Trust both the ring and Cotton to me. Now, Cotton, obey orders. Don't go near your home to-night, but walk to the Scrutton Station straight from here, and take the first train to London. Do you want money ?" " I have plenty for the present," said Cotton. U TT, WHO IS THE CRIMINAL. 225 Very well. When you get to Loudon go to this address," he continued, giving- him a card that had Soho as its final word. " The people are old servants of mine. Wait there till you hear from me or see me. Don't be long away from the place. They will make you comfortable." Charles Cotton showed that he mio-ht CD have been a good soldier, by at once obey- ing orders. Off he went ; caught his train ; got to the quaint foreign courtyard in Soho, in time for a late supper of all manner of things never tasted by him before. The Marquis's commands made the owners of the place treat him en Prince. " I don't quite understand your game, Castelcicala," said the Squire; "but I hope it is all right." " I fancy so," he said. " Matters more VOL. I. Q 226 A HGHT \TTTH FORTUNE. important than even your priceless diamonds are involved. Take your rest easily. We'll get at the truth." " And get back some more of the diamonds, I hope. I wonder how Cotton happened to have that ring in his pocket. Do you think somebody put it there ?" "If so, who was somebody? and why should he put it there ?" said the Marquis. " It's a complex puzzle, Englehurst, but we'll solve it." The Squire went to bed. The Marquis did not. He rang for Kedi, stripped to his shirt and trousers, and woke himself up with a fencing bout. Then he sat down to a glass of something iced, and read Byron's Beppo — a poem that it is easy to read many times over. This done, he opened a small antique casket, delicately WHO IS THE CRIMINAL. 227 carved by some fine Italian hand, with four ivory chess rooks at each corner, and golden grasshoppers all over it. It con- tained a row of small books, all differently bound, and on each a title in a different cypher. Choosing one of these, the Mar- quis opened its gold clasp with a tiny key of the same metal, looked carefully through a few pages written in cypher, and then added half a page of memoranda, also in cypher, written with a crowquill in the finest conceivable characters. " Now," he said to himself, " I shall checkmate this intriguer, who thinks him- self born to control the policy of Europe." Charles Cotton awoke in the morning in the Soho Court with a half-stifled feeling. He had a clean and airy room on the third floor, for the house was old, and had once q2 228 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. been a stately residence, as the carved cornices and mantelpieces attested. His bed occupied just a corner of tlie large room ; over the rest of it were scattered chairs and tables of many patterns, and on the tables were clocks under glass shades, dagger paj)er knives, quaint candelabra, carved caskets, old miniatures on ivory, books in many languages antiquely bound. The walls, too, were hung with pictures and prints of value for their rarity. Cotton could not make it out ; but he dressed as fast as he could, anxious to get a breath of fresh air, if any such thing existed in London. It was only five o'clock, his watch told him, and he doubted being able to get out, but resolved to try. What with yesterday's excitement and the close atmosphere which seemed so horrible a WHO IS THE CEIMINAL. 229 contrast to the odour of honeysuckles and roses which greeted him through his uncle's cottasfe window, when the s^arrulous star- lings woke him at sunrise, his brain was in a whirl. He had obeyed the Marquis's orders, and come away to London secretly ; but now he wondered whether he ought to have allowed his own will to be thus subjected to the will of another. It was difiB.cult for a youngster like himself to resist the commanding style of the accom- plished diplomatist ; but he began to think of what all the village would say — his uncle, old Wrangel, Wrangel's gossiping daughters; last, and by no means least, Miss Englehurst. "They will all think me a thief," he bitterly reflected. "And that she should think me one, if she condescends to think 230 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. o£ me at all, is intolerable. What strange plot is there against me ? How can I have any enemies ? How came that ring in my pocket ?" Cotton felt desperate. His perplexity was not lightened by the crass London air. He opened his door and descended the broad stone stairs quietly, not desiring to waken any other lodgers. But he was not the first man awake in that house by any means. As he crossed the hall he noticed a small glass enclosure, with shelves to the roof, covered with all sorts of glass and china and plate; and therein stood bald-headed rosy-cheeked Monsieur Dulau, polishing away at glass, and singing in a low voice — " Commissaire ! commissaire ! Colin bat sa menagere." WHO IS THE CEIMINAL. 231 An act of impiety of wliich Acliille Dulau would certainly not have been guilty, since he worshipped Madame, and was also slightly afraid of her. He turned on hearing Cotton's step, and said : — " Ah, monsieur, you are matinal. Nor do you look well. It is migraine. No wonder. London is close you know, thick, epaisseT Dulau had been the Marquis's travelling valet, and his language was in a conglo- merate state. " I want a breath of fresh air," said Cotton. "Fresh air! It shall you have. But first, some medicine 1 will prepare, tisane, excellent for mal de iete. Vois f Charles Cotton with some curiosity be- held the Frenchman put a wine-glass into 232 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. a tumbler, and into the wine-glass pour a greenish fluid. Then he took pure water, and poured it into the wine-glass till all the spirit had flowed over into the tumbler, leaving only clear lymph behind. Then, taking out the wine-glass, he handed the tumbler to Cotton, saying, "Drink!" Cotton drank, and did not like it. But he soon liked the effect. His veins grew warm ; the dull feeling departed from his brain. He had tasted absinthe, the essence of the embittering wormwood (that perilous flower beloved by Artemis), the deadly drink of which Alfred de Musset perished. " One glass medicine," laconically said Achille Dulau, " two, poison. Come. I am away to Billingsgate to buy fish. I WHO IS THE CRIMINAL. 233 have a great prince liere, a friend, like you, of his Excellency, who must have fish for breakfast always, always. So I go to Billin2:so^ate." Right glad was Cotton, refreshed by the nepenthe of Paris, to go out and see the unknown city. Dulau took a basket, and started at a brisk pace, chattering all the way. His companion happened to mention the curious things in his room, and Dulau said — " yes. I buy them cheap when I see chance. Gentlemen know me. They come and say, 'Well, Dulau, anything fresh.' I pay shillings. I get pounds by- and-by — livres, you know." The air seemed fresher in Trafalg^ar Square. Cotton stared round him with amazement. He was a born villager, and 234 A FIGHT WITH FOKTUNE. had never entered a town of above twenty thousand people, wliicli seemed immense to him. He was as wonder-struck as was Virgil's shepherd when first he beheld Rome. The great towers of Westminster, as yet clear and bright in the sunny morning air, seemed to him miraculous. Dulau, delighted to act in the new situa- tion of Qfuide to an Eno^lishman who had never seen London, was garrulous and ex- planatory ; but Cotton was a bad listener, and could do nothing but stare at the mighty massive forms around him. They stood on the beautiful bridge of West- minster and looked up and down the stream; and Cotton, who had known no river larger than the lovely flashing Engle, fruitful of trout, trembled at the might of imperial Thames, and remem- WHO IS THE CRIMINAL. 235 bered again his passion for seeing the world. " There is air on this bridge," said Dulau, " and on that granite walk : they are almost worthy of Paris. Our river, the Seine — well, it is not like your Tamise, wide, but 0, parbleu, its bridges ! You in London have, like the Pont Neuf, no- thing." Cotton did not listen much to his chattering companion. A man of imagina- tive mind feels his brain open and expand as he gazes for the first time on something noble. The primal sight of a rose-tinged Alp, whose peak pierces the sky — of a wide river with vast ships upon it — of a great city throbbing with the life of millions — is a memory for ever. Cotton was so absorbed with -the sig-ht before him that •^36 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. Dulau had some difficulty in making liim understand that the river steamer was •approaching the pier. They went on board, and Cotton got fresh air enough. The little boat, with waspish energy, flashed down the stream, revealing to Cotton new marvels with every splash of her paddle wheels. Land- ing at London Bridge, Dulau led his com- panion to Billingsgate, there to be astound- ed by the graphic eloquence of the salesmen, ^nd the beauty of the mighty salmon on the cool marble slabs. "Fine fish!" said Dulau to the fish- monger, of whom he was purchasing a lobster for the breakfast, and some red mullet for the dinner of his illustrious incognito. It was a glorious salmon, of •seventy pounds or so. WHO IS THE CRIMINAL. 237 " Yes," said the other. " Grove's mau has bespoke it for the Archbishop of Canterbury, who's got a big dinner at Lambeth to-day — not curates, you know, but Royalty and bigwigs. I'm one of those who object to the Church being, disestablished. It would help to dis- establish me !" Dulau and Cotton took another steamer up the river. The summer morning was still peaceful and beautiful, though already a thin veil of smoke, from myriads of kitchen chimneys, was poised in the air like a giant cobweb. As the steamer shot under Waterloo Bridge, Cotton, standing at the stern, looking backward, was startled by a wild, despairing shriek, such as had never fallen on his ear before. He looked up, and saw a woman falling headlong from 238 A FIGHT WITH FOllTUNB. the parapet into the river. It was the infinite division of an instant, yet her form was burnt on his brain, and he knew what it meant at a glance. He sprang from the deck into the water, and swam to her aid. 239 CHAPTER VIII. VILLAGE GOSSIP. " Jack on his alehouse bench has as many lies as a Czar." Tennyson. rriHE disapppearance of Charles Cotton was a deliglitfiil topic of converse for the people of Englehurst village. His uncle Richard sat up late for him, and at last gave in, and went to bed with a happy conviction that somethinq; terrible had happened. The Plymouth Brother was like a certain famous Irishman — never happy unless he was miserable. He re- 240 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. solved to go and see tlie most eminent Plymouth Brother in the neighbourhood, one Granville, an insolvent linen-draper, the first thing next morning. So he went to bed, and wept himself asleep. When he arose, he walked straight to his erratic nephew's room, and beheld an untouched bed ! Horror of horrors ! Charles Cot- ton had not come home to sleep, which he might have done, as he always carried the key of a back entrance. The Plymouth Brother was paralysed. He sat down to breakfast, ate a yard of bacon and a dozen eggs, drank a quart of weak tea, and then set off, with tears in his eyes, to ask advice of Granville. This Granville was an oddity. After failing conspicuously in many lines of business, he had fallen on his feet by VILLAGE GOSSIP. 241 marrying an elderly spinster who kept a girls' school. Although unsuccessful in matters secular, his fine fluency had made him a great light among the Brethren ; and it was generally supposed that Miss Crowder, the proprietress of Hawker Academy, had accepted him as an adver- tisement. She kept him in perfect order. She curled his hair, limited his diet, told him exactly what to say at Bethesda Chapel. This same chapel, a quiet little building up a lane that seemed not to lead anywhere, was a great sorrow to the Rector (a firm believer in Apostolic Suc- cession), and an immense amusement to the Squire. Mr. Englehurst, though a holder of very strong opinions, had not the slightest desire to force those opinions on other people. Indeed, his wish was VOL. I. R 242 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. rather tlie other way. He preferred being in tlie minority. He had an aristocratic idea that a gentleman ought to have a creed of his own quite different from that of ordinary people. He was the last man in the world to make a proselyte or vote with a party. So, when his good friend the Rector, a kid-gloved Ritualist with a slight tendency towards the confessional, bemoaned the existence in Englehurst of this clique of Plymouth Brethren, the stal- wart Squire laughed at him. The Reverend Yicesimus Wigney was the twentieth child of the Squire's college tutor, a fine old mathematician who married at forty-five, and found himself at seventy with a populous household. The Squire, taking pity on the perplexed old gentleman, did all he could to help him ; and one thing VILLAGE GOSSIP. 243 he did was to give liis son, Yicesimus, the Englehurst living. It was against his conscience, for he saw that Yicesimus Wignej was a weak young fellow, who would blindly follow any leader ; but the Squire, as is too often the case, sacrificed his convictions in his desire to serve a friend. So Vicesimus got the living, which was a good one ; and he played many foolish tricks, which old-fangled Englehurst understood not ; and he was decidedly unpopular with the men, though the young women all adored him. He was fond of seeing his female parishioners in his study, and probing their consciences, and giving them pious advice ; he had, moreover, an intense thirst for gossip, and loved nothing half so well as a cup of tea and a scandalous story. Once or twice he nearly r2 244 A FIGHT WITH FOfiTUNE. got into serious difficulty in consequence of this tendency. Indeed, when he hawked about a villanous rei^ort, entirely untrue, about Mr. Stanley Gay, that impulsive young quadrigarius was with much diffi- culty prevented from horsewhipping him. Old Richard Cotton found his W' ay down to Mrs. Granville's seminary just at the time when all the young female folk of Engiehurst village were demurely tripping in that direction. It was a school for the children of farmers and tradespeople, where the diet was rough, but plentiful, and the teaching quite old-fashioned. There was French, of Stratford-atte-Bow, and Lindley Murray, and good plain needlework. Of course the piano had its way, much dis- turbing the pious lucubrations of Mr. Granville. However, it was a good sort VILLAGE GOSSTP. 245 of school for the class of girls who came there, whether as boarders or day-scholars ; they got no new-fangled notions or ambi- tions, and went home contented to help their fathers in their shops, or their mothers in the dairy and the housework. There are a few country villages in which such schools remain ; but it cannot be long before the rising wave of omniscience, fostered by the School Boards, will wash them away. Richard Cotton was shown in to Mr. Granville. That luminary of theology, who looked very wise indeed, was in dressing-gown and slippers, with a black velvet skull-cap, and sat with pen and ink before him. He looked rather like an elderly magpie. Two books were open be- fore him — Luther's Commentary on the 246 A FIGHT WITH TORTUNE. Galatians and Walker's Dictionary. He was in the highest spirits, for he had just been offered five pounds by a London pubHsher for a telling tract ; and as a con- sequence, Mrs. Granville had been more than usually liberal with the bacon at his breakfast. Like all men of his class, he was fond of heavy eating. It may not be generally known that tracts are a particu- larly remunerative form of literature, both for author and publisher ; and, sad to say, there are a good many fast young literary men who have no particular creed who make a very nice income by tract writing. I recollect Harry Keymer, when he went down to his maiden aunt in Northampton- shire, was moved almost to laughter by finding the dear old lady in tears over a tract called "The Converted Highway- VILLAGE GOSSIP. 247 man," which he had written to pay his holi- day expenses. He was undecided whether to tell her that he wrote the tract or not. If he did the keen old lady might detect his hypocrisy. Unable to decide, he tossed up ; heads, yes ; tails, no. It was tails. So he said no word ; and Miss Theodosia Keymer left all her money to the society which published that tract — with, however, the fortunate provision that they should continue to employ the inspired pen of its gifted author. Harry has made five hun- dred a year out of tracts ever since. " Sit down, Brother Cotton,," said Gran- ville, effusively. He had begun his painful * labours by taking Martin Luther, and diluting him through the medium of Walker, and he was not altogether sorry 248 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. to be interrupted. "You seem to be disturbed." "Ay, indeed," quotli Cotton. "My nephew, Charles, has run away, or some- thing. He was sent for up to the Hall last nio^ht, and he's never been seen since. What had I better do, Brother Gran- ville ? " " Have you inquired at the Hall ? Per- haps he was wanted to do some particu- lar work early this morning, and the Squire kept him there. You know the Squire's always in a hurry." " There now ! What a thing it is to be a man of learning ! My poor old head would never have thought of that! Of course, the boy's up at the Squire's at work." " Better go and satisfy yourself," said ^^LLAGE Gossir. 249 Granville, oracularly ; " tliougli no doubt it IS so. Richard Cotton walked off at a slow pace to Englehurst Hall. He went round by the back entrance, and encountered a foot- man crossing the wide courtyard, on one side of which were the stables and coach- houses, where many grooms were hissing at their work. " Have you got my nephew, Charlie, up here ?" he asked. The footman, a Londoner, who knew nothing of the Englehurst villagers, gave him a supercilious stare, and said, "Really I don't know anything about your nephew, old gent." Just at that moment the Marquis de Castelcicala crossed the yard. Cis Engle- hurst had taken the fancy that hawking 250 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. would be a pleasant amusement ; so tlie Squire had set up a falconer, and bouglit liawks, wliicli were now in course of train- ing. Castelcicala was as fond of the sport as that loyal Italian of Boccaccio's who killed his pet falcon to entertain his lady- love, and it was his matutinal custom to look after the hawks. So he chanced to note the interview between Cotton and the footman, and inquired courteously of the old man w^hat he wanted. Cotton, some- what shy of the brilliant easy Italian, ex- plained rather blunderingly. " 0," said the Marquis, catching his meaning at last ; " young Charles Cotton is your nephew. He was here last night to see Mr. Englehurst, and went away again. Is he not gone to his work at the plumber and glazier's ?" VILLAGE GOSSIP. 251 Ricliard Cotton got more and more puzzled over this business; however, he thought he would go to Wrangel's, hoping to find his runaway nephew there. When he reached the place, he found the old plumber and glazier in a lovely temper, swearing at everybody, and especially at his daughters. He seemed quite delighted to have a new object on which to wreak his wrath, and turned upon poor old Cotton with absolute fury. "Where's that rascally nephew of yours ?" he exclaimed. " Why doesn't he come to his work ? He's a bad lot, Dick Cotton. Here I've got a letter this morn- ing from Mr. Laing, the new man over to Scudamore, saying that he behaved impro- perly to Miss Laing when he was over there to attend to the green-house yester- 252 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. day. Nice tiling for me, wlien I've always been respectable, to liave a journeyman "tliat insults ladies. And now, where is lie ? I should like to know ; and all my •work standing still." " I never thought he would do well, father," said Sarah Wrangel. " He wouldn't go to Sunday-school, you know." " Idle hussy !" cried the fierce old man, turning suddenly on his demure eldest dauo-hter, and boxino- her ears. "Be off with you to your work, you and your two sluts of sisters. How dare you come here talking to me !" The girls hurried off in frightened fashion. Wrangel was excessively angry, because he thoroughly liked Charles Cot- ton, and had always thoroughly trusted him; and now, when Mr. Laing made a VILLAGE GOSSIP. 255- complaint against him, and lie failed to come to work, Wrangel was perfectly puzzled. Cotton was his right hand ; he could not execute half his orders without his help. The frightened girls fluttered their petticoats across the garden, and went quietly to their work. " So he has not been here this morning," said Richard Cotton, timidly. " Here ! Not he. I don't want to see his face again ; and you can tell him so if ever you set eyes on him. Good-bye. I can't stop to talk. I've got to do his work and my own too." Richard Cotton walked off through the old-fashioned archway which led round to "Wrangel's shop, and felt so extremely low that he thought he would have a glass of ale at the Five Horseshoes. It was for 254 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. the worthy old Plymouth Brother an un- usual dissipation ; but there are times when the juice of malt has much to do with quieting the minds of men. He walked into the bar and sat down ; and it was some little time after he had strengthened his soul with beer that he noted who else was in the bar, and what was the conversation. The monstrous Jenkins was listening with a sort of stolid interest to a dapper young fellow, who was Mr. Laing's groom. " She's run away, that's a fact," he said. " The governor's gone off to London to look for her. He suspects a young fellow that came over to mend the greenhouse windows." " Cotton," said Jenkins. " That's your man. He was talking to the girl in the greenhouse, I hear. She's VILLA.GE GOSSIP. 255 a stupid sort of thing, that anybody might get over if he thought it worth while. I don't know whether they're gone off to- gether, but it looks like it. If the glazier thinks he'll get some money from the governor, he's under a mistake The governor wants all he's got, and twice as much more." The groom buried his ruddy countenance in a pewter pot. Jenkins's female folk were listenino^ with intense delight ; Richard Cotton with horror and dismay. His brain was in a whirl. There was the damning^ fact that Charles was nowhere to be found, and now he heard that Miss Laing was missing, and supposed to be in his nephew's company. It was too much for the poor old boy, who could scarcely stag^g^er to the door to walk homeward : 256 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. but Jenkins, who had a sort of rough kindness about him, helped him on his way. The stout landlord was going to his orchard to ofet some oTeeno^ag-es for preserving. The lady by courtesy called Mrs. Jen- kins, and her sister, and her daughter, chattered freely when the busy landlord had departed. " That conceited young upstart will come to no good," said Mrs. Jenkins. " I hate those prim hypocritical people." " 1 never liked him, mamma," said Miss Jane, who was a careful student of the Family Herald. " He is one of those plausible persons who pretend to be vu-tu- ous when they are ready for any criminal action." " Jane is right," said her stout and VILLAGE GOSSIP. 257 sentimental Aunt, enthusiastically. That Aunt was a gushing creature, with the sweet thoughts of seventeen in the palpi- tating bosom of seven and forty, " The wretch has enticed away that poor Miss Laing in the hopes of getting money from her father. 0, it is only too plain ! What a mercenary wretch he must be !" Miss Jane, who at this very moment was doing her utmost to fascinate the Squire's head gardener — a fine fellow in his way, but rather too fast — entirely coincided. Of course, she suggested, no- body would think of that poor Miss Laing except for her money. Alack for luckless Jane ! " wad some power the giftie gi'e us To see oursels as others see us," cries Burns, and if Jane could have seen VOL. 1. S 258 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. herself as tliat handsome wicked gardener saw her, she would have had a severe lesson. " A dumpy freckled little fool," was his confidential verdict upon her when a friend chaffed him about his flirtation. "I wonder what Mr. Laing will do?" said the puffy Miss Sprowl, Mrs. Jenkins's sister. " Of course he will follow his dauo^hter and brins^ her back. How old is the girl, I wonder? She is a gawky- looking thing, and might be any age from fifteen to twenty." " She is nothing like twenty," said the soi-disant Mrs. Jenkins. " Upon my word, I'd no idea that young Cotton was such a scamp. Why, butter wouldn't melt in his mouth, you'd have said . And he so high and mighty, never entering a public-house, or standing anybody a glass of beer. It is laughable." VILLAGE GOSSIP. 259 She lauglied an unpleasant half- hysterical laugh. The poor woman, ac- cepting with a brave spirit a miserably false position, had intervals of anguish which were almost too much for her en- durance. I often wonder how it is that women of rather a fine type become the wives (ay, and even the mistresses) of bullies and cads. Is it that their imasfina- tion transforms these men into something wholly different from what they really are ? The man, a mere hulking brute ; the woman, almost a lady, but with just that delicate difference which is so obvious to all true judges. What is it tliat makes these foolish women deliver themselves up, soul and body, for this world and the next, to brutal animals of a type that is swinish ? I am often puzzled by that s 2 260 A "FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. problem. There must be a reason for it, seeing there is a reason for all things in this infinite universe ; but the reason is not easy to find. Englehurst village, not usually a lively corner of the world, was in a great state of excitement over recent events. The buro;- lary at the Hall, the escape of the burg- lars, the double disappearance of Charles Cotton and Miss Laing, furnished fine food for the lovers of gossip. They had not had such delightfully suggestive topics for ages. The tongues of all the villagers, men and women, boys and girls, were loosened ; everybody talked, and no one listened ; the babble of Babel could scarcely have surpassed this village charivari. At twelve sharp, Mr. Stanley Gay's VILLAGE GOSSIP. 261 coacli changed horses at the Five Horse- shoes. You might hear the blast of the guard's horn a couple of miles away, when the wind was south. His route was just twenty miles, from Palmer stown to Castle- ton : a pleasant road all through, with undulating common land, and hills crowned with beech woods, and the river Engle crossing the way at intervals. Mr. Gay drove con amove ; liked horses that could go and passengers that could enjoy their drive ; chaffed the people on the road with a buoyant humour; and kept grooms and ostlers up to the mark by uttering in a sonorous voice what may be called the lout-language of this happy land. Boast as we may of our advanced civilisation, nobody can deny that we have an un- manageable proletariat, to use an expres- 262 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. sive Eomau phrase, which exists p'o- creandae prolis gratia. You give such people s^otes, aud immediately {vide Nor- wich and Boston) they try to sell them ; you give them duties, for doing which they will be paid, and they do their utmost to shirk them. Such people cannot live in large towns where there is immense ac- tivity, without coming in due time into the clutches of the police. But in small towns and country places they are rampant, and live by inexplicable means. Jenkins had a lot of such fellows hanging about his place, and when Mr.' Stanley Gay arranged to change horses there, he carelessly engaged some of those unhelp- ful louts. He soon discovered his mis- take. The coach drove up, a team of bright •V^LLAGE GOSSIP. 263 bays, just as the village clock ( which, kept by the Rev. Vicesimus's watch, was seldom right) struck twelve. It was a very new clock indeed ; and its maker, one Smith, had put his name upon it in ag- gressive brazen letters, and it struck on that bell of the church which was also used for tolling for the dead. " That isn't twelve, it's a funeral," said Gay, as he threw the reins on his leaders' backs, and glanced at the chronometer on the footboard. " That precious clock of Smith's is too fast, like your parson, who writes me letters to say that a four-in- hand coach demoralises his parish. Now, Davis, wheelers. Davis, those oats are not up to sample. Come into Palmers- town to-morrow, and bring the lot." " To-morrow's Sunday," growled Davis ; 264 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. "I'm not paid to work on Sunday." " All right. You can leave this evening. I'll send a man over in a fly to take your place. Leaders ! Hallo, Jenkins, what have you got there ?" The orbicular landlord was waddling down from his orchard with a huge basket of greengages. "Bring 'em here," cried Gay. " Just as you like, sir," said the landlord, calculating how much he should charge for them. "If you'd any sense," said Gay, "you'd bring out some sherry and biscuits. Never mind : fruit's wholesomer. Guard, hand them up to the ladies and gentlemen outside. Pull up /" Away went the coach, to the admiration of the crowd. There was always a crowd. MLLAGE GOSSIP. 265 what with Jenkins's regiment of idlers, and the children just out of school; but on this occasion there was a larger number than usual, for the air was full of rumour and fiction, and all the little Euglehurst world was wondering what next would happen. A good many of the bystanders adjourned to the bar, where Mrs. Jenkins and her sister and daughter were inside, ready to make themselves agreeable, and to supply them with salted beer. Old Spike was there, leaning upon crutches, like the devil on two sticks ; he had grown hoary in iniquity, and seemed to enjoy it. Give him a long clay pipe and a pot of beer, and he was perfectly happy. If he had an immortal soul, he certainly did not know it, and would rather have been without so unmanageable a possession. The same 266 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. may be said of the stout and stolid Jenkins, that man-mountain, in whose vast volume there was not room for a soul as big as a flea. This, by the way, leads to the difficult metaphysical question whether a soul can occupy space — a pro- blem which I leave to the hair-splitting speculators who try to calculate what number of angels can dance on the point of a needle. Jenkins was on this occasion as sulky as a bear with a sore ear — not at all an unusual condition with him. He had lost his greengages ; his ostler, who had acted under his orders in reference to the oats, had received his discharge ; and he, who bullied everybody over whom he had any control, felt a sad loss of personal dignity when treated by Gay as the mere scum of the earth. The sole thing that VILLAGE GOSSIF. 267 gave liim any satisfaction was the dis- appearance of Charles Cotton, whom he hated with an unreasoning hatred. AYrangel, who seldom left his workshop, was among the company in the bar to-day, as savage as possible, since Cotton's sud- den absence had prevented his doing a lot of necessary work. And another visitor was the unfathomable and reticent Redi, who was much amused with the dull scandal- mongers of an English village, wholly devoid of the ready invention of the quick- witted Italians. " I won't have that Gay changing horses here much longer," said Jenkins. " He thinks he's everybody. I'm as good as he is, any day." " I should think so," said Mrs. Jenkins's shrill harsh voice. "He's nobody, that 268 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. ever I heard of, and you're pretty well known in the county. If a man pays his way he's as good as any other man." " Of course he is," said Asmodeus Spike. " These fellows with their four-in-hands want to ride over us. They won't do it, though. Now that Dr. Kenealy has started his Magna Charta, we shall soon be free ; and them aristocrats will have to give up the property that belongs to the people. Why, what's Squire Englehurst ilone that he should own all the land about here ?" "Ay, what indeed?" quoth Jenkins. ■" Much good he does in these parts. 0, that there Doctor Kenealy ! He and old Garry" (affectionate term for Garibaldi) "are the only right good uns now-a-days. Why, •do you know, mates, one evening when VILLAGE GOSSIP. 269^ I was coming down from London tliere were a lot of swells in the carriage that swore T must be Sir Roger. I never felt so proud in my life." At this moment another four-in-hand, passed the bow window of the bar at the Five Horeshoes. It was the Squire, with pretty Cis beside him, and a couple of powdered footmen on the back seat, sitting as immoveable as the Sphinx. " Look at those slaves!" hissed Spike. " Fancy having to wear flour in your hair, and to sit like a wax figure ! Slaves I call them. Suppose they think their master the finest fellow in the world." " They're paid to do it," said the land- lord. " Money goes a long way. I sup- pose that little stuck-up creature on the box '11 marry a lord, or some such thing." 270 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. " Slie isn't at all pretty," said Miss Sprowl. '' I call her ugly," said Jane. Eedi listened to this conversation with much amusement. Presently the talk turned upon Cotton, for whom nobody seemed to have a good word. It was voted at last that he had run away with Mr. Laing's daughter as well as the Squire's diamonds. "He'll be caught," said Spike. "Do you think he will?" asked Redi. " Certain. He can't get away from our detectives. He'll be brought back and tried, you'll see. Serve him right. I hate a thief." Nobody made any comment on this last remark, though all present were aware VILLAGE GOSSir. 271 that no greater thief than Spike could be found in the county. Leaving these gossiping dolts, let us follow Mr. Stanley Gay, who has reached Castleton, seen in the London coach, which is twenty minutes later than his own, and sat down to a well-spread lunch at the Castle Hotel. He was in high spirits, notwithstanding the insubordination of his idiotic stablemen. He has a pleasant epicurism about him, and expatiates elo- quently on the fitness of a glass of Pom- mery and Greno with a slice of ham. One of the passengers is a man with a grievance ; he had taken the box-seat, and was obliged to give way to a lady. Place aux dames was Mr. Stanley Gay's guiding rule ; be- sides, when you are driving four-in-hand, how charming it is to have a lovely lady 272 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. on tlie near side, ready to admire your capital management of the whip, and the delicate way in which you manipulate that off leader with the tender mouth ! So it was scarcely to be expected that Mr. Stanley Gay should allow an elderly duffer to sit by his side when he could be cheered by the companionship of beaut}^ ; and this Palmers- town magnate (I believe he was a grocer and Town Councillor) had to sit behind and look sulky all the time. But he could not help cheering up when luncheon was served at the Castle, and Mr. Gay said — "Very sorry, old fellow, that you couldn't have the box. Ladies must have their way, as I dare say you know, if you're married — and you look married. Let's have a glass of dry champagne together. VILLAGE GOSSIP. 273 And look here, you may have my seat drivino' back. Will that suit vou ?" That highly respectable inhabitant of Palmerstown looked as if he would rather not. And he didn't. VOL. I. 274 CHAPTER IX. THE PURLOINED LETTER. Raphael : How sudden moments spoil the work of centuries ! Do trifles rule the world ? AsTROLOGOS : In faith, they do, my lord. A butterfly may overset a dynasty. A pretty girl may make a realm Republican. Alouette : A pretty girl's no trifle, you must own, papa. The Comedy of Dreams. /^ASTELOICALA, awaking early, order- ed out Red Roland, a noble horse that the Squire had placed at his service, and rode across the fells to Garston Mere. He wanted to think out fully the game he THE PURLOINED LETTEE. 275 was playing ; and lie found tliafc to stimulate thouglit there is nothing like rapid motion through solitary places. Thought of a certain sort comes freely enough in society ; Parliament is the hotbed of eloquence, and the dinner-table of wit ; but the ideas thus generated are not a man's own — they belong to the company. He happens to express what everybody is thinking. If you want to get at your very own ideas, gentle reader — and they are much harder to read than other people s^-linger on lonely moor or in silent wood and question your soul. The Divine Powers shun society ; the music of Apollo's lute is hush- ed when the devil blows the bagpipes of politics, and turns the hurdy-gurdy of scandal. All men who think know this ; men who T 2 276 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. merely tliink they think are ignorant of it. The Marquis rode his horse to the margin of the mere, and left him to graze, knowing that he would come at call, and lay upon the virgin turf, full of thyme and heather, and looked upon the wide calm water. How perfect a calm! Nowindrippled the lake — the trees upon its islets seemed asleep. Wordsworth's vision of the swans on Saint Mary's Lake was reahsed : they scarcely moved upon the water, and their reflex was so clear that the swan of the lake mieht have been mistaken for the swan in upper air. The pendulous silver- rinded birch trees on the margin were mirrored to a leaf ; and if Castelcicala had seen a mermaid combing her hair on one of the islets, or beheld the turrets of a drowned city far down in the depths of THE PURLOINED LETTER. 277 tlie lake, lie was not in the mood to be surprised. However, nothing happened. His horse nibbled the short sweet grass enjoyingly. The Marquis unconsciously thought over the complex business wherewith he was concerned. " Odd," he reflected, " that a kind of electric chain binds the strongest brain in Europe to the brainless flabby landlord of a small village inn, neither knowing it. Odd that the attempt to steal a girl's jewels should give me the key to the mystery that has perplexed me so long. Ah ! I shall now have my revenge — on both." " After all," he thought, having watched a windhover high above the mere, "it is hardly worth while to care for revenge. 278 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. What I do is for Italy. Italy, in its infinite glory of the future, can forget traitors and cowards — can forgive its ene- mies. Still I like the idea of spoiling that fellow's game just as he thought he had checkmated me." In the beauty of the morning the unharmonious topic tired him ; so he closed his eyes to " make pictures," and he opened them to see pictures. That stretch of lovely lake ! Its tranquil beauty gave him strange delight ; and he forgot his enemies and enigmas ; and thought only of Cis Englehurst. She was no "phantom of delight," but the prettiest simplest maiden that ever laughed through life. " She likes my love-songs," thought Castelcicala, " and she likes my talk ; and THE PURLOINED LETTER. 279 she looks at me with pure changeful unawakened eyes, that seem to say, ' Give me a soul, please. I could love you if I had a soul.' Will the right man come to give her a soul ? It seems to me that I have not the magnetic power. Yet is she just the very girl that I could love to death, and beyond. I remember the old West Country ballad on the question of sex I got hold of years ago. It had one good verse ' What's the odds 'twixt we and they ? ' Anybody can tell it thus : We and they each wants our own way ; We loves they, and they laughs at us.' Were I to 2:0 and tell an amorous tale to little Cis, in earnest fashion, she'd laugh in my face. Faith, I won't try. She's as difficult as Horace's Chloe, hinnuleo similis. 280 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. I'll allure her with amorous gaieties, and see what comes thereof : — ' And if she wiU she AviU, you may depend on't, And if she won't she won't, and there's an end on't.' " The Marquis was perfectly right in his judgment of Cecilia Englehurst's character. She was in no way precocious. We are just now in an age of development, notice- able in every region of life. Ben Jonson wrote : — " Ere, cherries ripe! and strawberries ! be gone, Unto the cries of London I'U add one ; Ripe^ statesmen, ripe! They grow in every street, At six-and-twenty, ripe." If we could resuscitate rare Ben Jonson, how amused would he be at the ripeness of our modern state boys ! Why, even the girls in their teens talk politics. Ay, but are they girls ? or tomboys of a new description, developed by laws as yet THE PURLOINED LETTEK. 281 unanalysed by Darwin? The true un- suspicious innocent girl develops into tlie perfect lady, as tlie rose-bud to the rose ; but the girl of coarser growth, who, a generation or two ao-o, would have become an ordinary hoyden, is now a literary, or scientific, or theological hoyden. She rushes madly into the arms of a weak publisher with her silly experiences in the form of a novel ; or of a weak professor with admiration for his hasty intuitions ; or of a weak curate, with a wild eagerness to confess her sins and receive sacerdotal absolution. American writers, as might be expected, accept the theory, that each generation transcends the last, with perfect satisfac- tion. For example, I find Oliver Holmes, the Autocrat of the Breakfast Table, in an 282 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. address to a literary society, speaking thus: — "Each generation strangles and devours its predecessor. The young Fee- jeean carries a cord in his girdle for his father's neck; the young American, a string of syllogisms or propositions in his brain to finish the same relation. The old man says : ' Son, I have swallowed and digested the wisdom of the past.' The young man says : ' Sire, I proceed to swal- low and dio^est thee and all thou knowest.' " This is a humorous account of an age whose foible is omniscience ; but both son and sire are mere smatterers, and have no real knowledge after all. For the only real knowledge is from experience. Books and pictures are good as guides merely, showing you where to find the real thing. Much of our modern science is of the same value THE PURLOINED LETTER. 283 as tlie bird-lore of a person who, having been informed that a robin has a red breast, should never trouble himself to look at the bird and verify the fact. Any chemist can tell you how to make that tre- mendous explosive agent, chloride of nitro- gen, but is there one alive who has made it? A man who has thoroughly explored one English county is a better geographer than if his head contained all the facts in M'Culloch's Dictionary. Castelcicala rode home slowly. His horse's hoofs brought fragrance from the trampled thyme, and a myriad larks made music in the air, while now and then there came a plover's cry; but with an unlifted eye, he rode quietly toward Englehurst Hall, with the picture of the glassy un- rippled loch still delighting his mind. The • 284 A FIGHT ^VITH FOETUNE. power of imprinting a beautiful scene on tlie mental retina, so as to recall it in days far remote, is a gift worth having; and not fair landscapes only can be thus traced on the mind's eye, but beautiful faces, made more beautiful by friendship. This is a development of the memory which grows by practice. I have cheered many a sleep- less night and dull journey by conjuring up snowy peaks and shining streams, and dim green valleys — by summoning " old familiar faces " in a mood less melancholy than Charles Lamb's. The scenes pass like a celestial panorama; the faces are those of visitino- angels. The road from the moor to Englehurst crosses that which comes from Scrutton station ; and at the juncture the Marquis's attention was attracted by the trot of a THE PUELOINED LETTEE. 285 pony. It was ridden by a stable-boy from the Hall, who went to and fro for tlie letters. The Marquis hailed him, looked at the bag, which had a lock, but the key had long been lost, saw at a glance that for himself there were three letters, and then returned the bag to the lad without taking his own correspondence. " This will make assurance doubly sure," he said to himself. The stable-boy had cantered on, and the Marquis walked Roland home indolently. When he reached the breakfast-room he found only the Squire. A pleasant room, that summer breakfast-room, with two large bay windows opening on a velvety lawn, and a rose-garden just beyond, with a fountain sparkling in the midst of it. In one of the window bays the table was set, 286 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. and there was a quaint contrast in the arrangement. By the Squire's cover was a silver tankard of the famous Euglehurst ale ; by the Marquis's, a slim bottle of light wine ; by Cis Englehurst's, a delicate tea equipage of eggshell china. " I saw you riding up the avenue, Mar- quis," said the Squire. "You seemed in no hurry." "I had ample time. Eed Roland took me at a grand pace across Garston Moor to the Mere. What a lovely lake that is, in the perfect quiet of such a summer morn- ing as this !" *' Yes, I'm very proud of that beautiful bit of my estate. There are some queer legends about it. They say that on Saint John's Eve, at midnight, a procession of female spectres cross the lake — victims of THE PUELOINED LETTER. 287 some wicked foi^efather of mine. You should ask Lancel about these traditions ; lie lias ferreted out a lot of queer old MSS., that I have never had time to read. It would make him eternally happy if you were to show an interest in his researches." " I have found him rather taciturn." " The Abbe is proud," replied the Squire. " A man of great genius, and a brilliant mathematical discoverer, he is content to be the curator of my library. He is an obsti- nate Legitimist, and would not set foot on French soil unless the white flag floated again. I have been told he is a Jesuit and an intrio-uer, but that is all rubbish. He works at my library and at his own mathe- matics about sixteen hours a day. He can talk well, but he is too proud to talk 288 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. familiarly with auyone whose station is nominally superior to his own, without special in vita Ion." " A man worth intimate knowleda^e. I shall ask him to unlock your historic treasures for my benefit this very morning. But where is Miss Englehurst ?" " Cis, you hussy," cried the Squire from the open window, " where are you ? We want our tea." Ois came tripping over the lawn from the rose-garden, in a simple pink morning dress, with snowy frills about her dainty throat and bosom. Her apron was full of choice roses. Her face was flushed, and her eyes brightened with +he fresh morning air. She looked a daughter of the morn- ing — a happy younger sister of the rosy- fingered Dawn. She flung down her roses, THE PUELOINED LETTER. 289 and kissed her sire, and sliook liands with the Marquis, and exclaimed, " I didn't know I was late. ^ I thought I had only been five minu+es cutting these flowers." ''With all things lovely time flies fast,'^ said the Marquis. " Oh, you may flatter me as much as you please," said Cis, "you can't make me much vainer than I am. I see in my glass a pretty little figure : and I feel that I ought to be pretty ... to please papa." The Marquis laughed. " To please papa ! Mayn't a few other folk be pleased also ?" *'0 dear, yes ''^^'''^'' now have some tea. And try those kidneys ; I assure you our cook does them delightfully. I am sure VOL. I. u 290 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. the kind of breakfast you eat can not be wholesome." The Marquis was eating figs, for which the Squire's gardens were so famous that they often tempted beccaficas across the sea, and drinking Liebfraumilch. The Squire had not yet commenced his break- fast ; he was looking through letters and telegrams which referred to the burglary. He said nothing about them in his daugh- ter's presence, but passed them on to Castelcicala, who discovered soon enough that only one of them contained any in- formation. This was a letter from Scotland- yard, stating that two dexterous thieves had been observed by a detective near Charing Cross, one carrying a bag. They came down through Trafalgar Square, and went over to the railway station. One, THE PURLOINED LETTEll. 291 well-known as the Parson, was dressed in a clerical suit; the other looked like his servant. They walked straight into the Charing Cross Hotel, whither the detective followed them ; but amid the passages o£ the hotel and station he had lost sio^ht of them. That these were the men was clear to the Marquis, from the description ; and he was not at all surprised that, if they noticed a detective following them, they contrived to elude him in that Charing Cross labyrinth. The noble society of thieves keep private detectives of their own, to watch the detectives ; and an officer of police never goes out in plain clothes without an officer of thievery being set to watch him. If Slippery Jack heard a cer- tain shrill whistle as they passed Morley's u2 292 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. Hotel, it would warn tliem of the presence of a detective. To walk boldly into the Charing Cross Hotel would be the Parson's natural tactic ; and anybody who knows the ground will see that there would then be a dozen ways of escape. The Squire, having finished his pile of letters, made a breakfast worthy of a squire of the old type — cold round of beef, cold grouse, a tankard of old ale. As to Cis, well, she breakfasted daintily, in young ladylike fashion — eating some delicate omelet, and drinking the tea of Assam. There was one letter by her plate, but she did not open it. It was from a young "person " — the word lady would not apply — who had been received very kindly at Englehurst Hall, and who had begged Cis Englehurst to help somebody who was in THE PUKLOINED LETTER. 293 distress. This she had asked her father to do, believing the piteous plausible tale ; but accidentally it was discovered that the somebody in distress was the young person herself. Now the young person, to whom it was discovered the game was by no means new, was writing fluent letters to Cis, with a new lie in each letter. Cis Englehurst, shocked to the heart that she had ever given sisterly confidence to a person who, though moving in good society, was an accomplished swindler, opened none of her letters. At the Marquis's right hand lay two letters, also unopened. When he met the stable-boy that morning he had seen three. He smiled quite a pleasant smile when he saw the letters on the white table-cloth ; for he took delight in move and counter- 294 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. move, in all the difficulties of a delicate game of skill. Not till the Squire's corre- spondence had passed through his hands did he take up and scrutinise the two letters which lay beside him; they were both from abroad, and both from ladies. " You do not seem to care much about your letters," said Cis. " I know all that is in them beforehand. They are from ladies." " Do you mean to say," she asked, " that ladies' letters are never worth the trouble of reading ?" " dear, no," he said, with a laugh. " Write me a letter, Miss Englehurst, and I will read it as long as the paper lasts. But one of my correspondents is a scien- tific lady, who has discovered something or other that I cannot understand, and indeed THE PUELOINED LETTEE. 295 would rather not; while the other is a political lady, who thinks the Pope ought to be assassinated. Besides, they both cross." He tore open the envelope, and showed her. They did cross, terrifically. "Read them if you like," he said. "I never shall." As one was in Russian and the other in Danish, Miss Englehurst declined. " I rode over to Garston Mere this morning," he said. " That lake is dehcious in the tranquil majesty of sunrise. Every spray of the woods around was delicately doubled in its unrippled water. I was reminded of some verses by a poet of my country, which I tried to turn into English years ago. 296 A PIGHT WITH FORTUNE. ' What sees the swan in that clear mirror bright ? Another swan as white. What sees the hawk on his aerial throne ? A ha\\'k in deeps unknown. What sees the girl braiding her wave-drench'd hair ? A girl almost as fair. What sees the lover passionate and true ? You, lovely maiden, you.' " " That is very pretty," she said. " I don't think our English poets say anything so elegant as you Italians. But poetry is all nonsense, you know. Good-bye." She went away into the rose garden for more spoils. The Squire followed her with happy eyes. If she had lost her diamonds, was she not queen of the diamonds herself ? A very sunbeam was Cis Englehurst. The Squire and the Marquis had a talk over their correspondence. " Those fellows have been so closely THE PUELOINED LETTER. 297 tracked," said the Marquis, " that they ought now to be run to earth. If you don't think it unwise interference on my part, I'll go up to town to-day, and see if I cannot quicken the intellects of those gentlemen in Scotland Yard. I am far from questioning the capacit}^ of your English detective police, but they generally rise from the ranks by sheer force of genius, and have had no special training. -Hence an unusual case perplexes them. I have had occasion to employ several of them, and uncommonly clever I found them ; regular anthropologists, if they once saw a man they never forgot him. The man who caught the murderer Manning in Jersey, for example — that was real divina- tion. There was a faint trace of Manning 298 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. to Jersey ; this fellow went over, but could get no clue ; till one nigbt, in a public-liouse, a little girl came in for a bottle of brandy. ' AYliat a lot of brandy your lodger drinks !' said the landlady ; ' that's his third bottle to-day.' ' That's my man,' thought the detective — and it was. But in this case of ours there are complications which require delicate treat- ment ; and I am inclined to think that we may not only get hold of the scoundrels and punish them, but also get some of the jewels back. Shall I try ?" " I shall be thoroughly obliged to you if you will. I don't care about the value of the things, but I hate being robbed." " So do I," said the Marquis. " I will go u]3 this afternoon. There is a capital train at four, and I want to go and talk to THE PUELOINED LETTER. 299' the Abbe, whose reticent originality piques me." " All right," said the Squire. "I shall see you again. I am going to take Cis for a gallop." " Then I'll come and put her in her saddle," said Castelcicala. "Which he did : and father and daughter rode off through the sunny air, as fine ex- amples of the English race in two different forms as could be found anywhere. The Squire was as well set up as a colonel of horse ; his daughter was as refined and dauntless as any princess. He was only an English country gentleman : but to be an English country gentleman is, even in these days, something. Meanwhile the Marquis, having gladden- ed his eyes with the beautiful child riding 300 A FIGHT WJTH FORTUNE. away on her bay mare by her father's side, went to see the Abbe. There he sat in the library, tranquil and macilent, poring over papers on which multitudinous alge- braic symbols appeared. He was just on the verge of something that should super- sede Sir William Hamilton's theory of quaternions — but the crystallising inspira- tion was wanting. So the Abbe, waiting for the electric current, was not very ami- able. Castelcicala found him more reticent than usual. The Marquis cared not. He was a san- guine Italian Liberal, with full belief that Italy was the greatest nation in the world. He had once written a pamphlet (worthy of Mr. Gladstone's consideration) to prove that Homer was born in Corsica — and that in Achilles Pelides he prophesied of the THE PURLOINED LETTER. 301 great Corsican, Napoleon Buonaparte. He drew the Abbe out in time ; and they soon fell upon a pleasant discursive talk about the history of the House of Englehurst ; and it was clear the Abbe had made won- derful collections from the forgotten stores in that ancient library. *'Here," he said, "is an old black-letter rhyme, with an illuminated initial. The initial was a green islet on a blue lake, with an ano-el above in menacine' flight through air ; the legend was : — " When an island rises on Garston ^Mere, End of the Englehurst is near." " There was no island there this morn- ing," said the Marquis, laughing, " so the Englehurst will last another day." They had much more chat together, the Marquis wishing to ascertain whether the Abbe was, as rumoured, a Jesuit ; but he -302 A FIGHT WITH FORTUNE. very soon came to the conclusion that tins was quite a mistake, and that Lancel's love for abstract mathematics would keep him quite clear of mystic absurdities. Geome- try brightens the brain ; and Euclid, much as Professor Sylvester hates him, is an author from whom a young lady might learn more than from half-a-dozen young ladyish novels. And one who has once mastered the notion that the three angles of a triangle are always equal to two right angles, would scarce condescend to notice the triangular questions which have recent- ly been puzzling the Old Catholics and their impulsive English allies. After a pleasant chat with the Abbe Lancel, whom he had never before tried to cultivate, Castelcicala went to his own apartment, and rang for Redi. THE PURLOINED LETTER. 303 " I am going to London this afternoon," lie said, " pack just enough for two nights." " You will not require me, Excellency," he said. " No ; I go to a friend, whose house is small. I want to inquire about this robbery, to which we seem to have a clue." " A clue !" said the valet, surprised. "A trifling one, but in such a case trifles must not be lost sight of. Send any letters that may arrive to-day or to- morrow to the hotel. By-the-way, I fully expected one of much importance this morning, but it has not arrived. Be sure to send it on ; it is from Signer Corsi, whose handwriting you know very well." " The Signer is in London ?" " No, at Brighton, whence perhaps the 304 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. delay. I hope he will meet me in town, as he goes back to Italy next week." " To Italy, Excellency ! Then is there anything prepared ? Will there be deci- sive action at last ?" " I hope so, for it is almost time. Corsi goes to Rome, I know, and the letter which I expected was to tell me his plans when there. 'No matter ; doubtless we shall meet in London." The Squire and his daughter returned to lunch with appetites such as a gallop over a breezy moor is apt to produce. " I wouldn't o-ive Garston Moor and Mere for as many acres of the city of London, Marquis. The pure air you breathe there is the best medicine in the world." ''You and Miss Englehurst both show THE PURLOINED LETTEE. 305 it," lie said. " Englaud is a rare place for beautiful complexions, but I know wliere the finest I have seen may be found." "What a flatterer you are. Marquis!' said Cecilia, laughinp^. " Handsome is that handsome does, a governess of mine used to warn me. I am sure it must have been a consolatory proverb, poor thing, for she was one of the plainest persons I ever saw. Wasn't she, papa ?" " She was no beauty, certainly. Her fiofure reminded one of a child's wooden doll. But didn't we hear she got married, Cis ?" " yes, married very well — to a highly respectable grocer in Bridgwater. I'm sure she ought to be able to keep his ac- counts, for she had a perfect mania for teaching me arithmetic, and I never could VOL. I. X B06 A FIGHT WITH FOETUNE. learn the multiplication-table. Now when the Abbe used to give me lessons in geo- metry, I used to see what he meant at once, even though his explanations were all in French, which he said was the lan- guage of mathematics." " Do you think the Abbe, who is so strong a Legitimist, has any political cor- respondence ?" said Castelcicala to the Squire. " I know he has. The Chambord party have great belief in his ability. He writes and receives numerous letters in cypher. It does not concern me, and I suppose it amuses him." "With all this wonderful correspond- ence, why don't you lock your letter-bag ?" asked the Marquis, laughing. " 0, it's no affair of mine ; I never lost THE PUELOINED LETTEPw 307 a letter in my life. But how about your train ? Cis shall drive you to the station in her pony-carriage if you like. I'm obliged to see my bailiff about something." Castelcicala found the arrangement only too pleasant, and would have liked to pro- long the drive behind the lively little chestnuts. When they parted, he said, " Tell your papa I shall bring him a present from town — a new post bag, with a Hobbs lock." END OF THE FIHST VOLUME. 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