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The Master of the Ceremonies
How long this had lasted they did not know, but all at once, as Mellersh turned, he gripped Richard Linnell by the arm and pointed.
Linnell saw it at the same moment: the figure of a man climbing over a balcony; and as they watched they could just see the gleam of one of the windows as it was evidently opened and he passed in.
“Dick!” whispered Mellersh; “what does that mean?”
“The same as the night that poor old woman was slain. Quick! Come on!”
“Stop!” said Mellersh. “Here’s another!”
Volume Two – Chapter Fifteen.
Mrs Burnett’s Seizure
“I think we had better go too,” said Mrs Barclay at last. “But are you quite sure we can do no good?”
“No: indeed no, Mrs Barclay; and I am so much obliged to you for staying,” replied Claire.
“It was the least I could do, my dear, after making all that miserable rumpus about a few paltry guineas. Your papa will never forgive me.”
“Indeed, there is nothing to forgive, my dear Mrs Barclay. It was natural that you should be indignant,” said Denville politely.
“Thank you very much for saying so, but it’s always the way if I go out, and I shouldn’t be at all surprised if there’s something else wrong,” cried Mrs Barclay piteously. “I’m a most unfortunate creature.”
“There, put on your things and let’s go,” said Barclay huffily. “Give me that case. I’ll carry it now, or you’ll lose that.”
Mrs Barclay began to thrust her hand into her pocket, and Denville was talking to his son-in-law at the other end of the room, while Claire bent over and kissed her sister.
“Are you better now, dear?”
“No-o! Oh, my head! – my head!”
“My darling!” cried Burnett, coming back and bringing with him a strong smell of cigars and bad wine.
“Don’t, Frank. Don’t you see how ill I am?”
“Yes, yes, my own, but the carriage is waiting. Let me help you down, and let’s go home.”
“Oh! My gracious! Oh!” shrieked Mrs Barclay.
“Oh! – oh! – oh! – oh!” sobbed May Burnett, again in a worse fit than before.
“Now you’ve done it again,” cried Barclay angrily. “There never was such a woman. Here, come along home.”
“The case – the bracelet, Jo-si-ah!”
“Well. What about it?”
“I knew something would happen. I felt it coming.”
“Stop! Where’s that diamond bracelet, woman?”
“It’s gone, Jo-si-ah. I’ve lost it. It’s gone.”
“A two hundred pound bracelet, and gone!” roared Barclay. “Eh, what? Thank ye, Denville. How did you come by it?”
Denville, who was standing in a graceful attitude, smilingly offering the case, explained that Mrs Barclay had let it fall beneath the seat when she thought that she was placing it in her pocket.
“Oh, Mr Denville,” cried Mrs Barclay, “you are a dear good man!”
“Denville! Thank ye!” said Barclay, shaking hands. “You might have stuck to that, and I should have been no wiser. I shan’t forget this. Good-night, old man, good-night.”
“Coarse, but very kindly,” said Denville, after Mrs Barclay had made Claire’s face wet with tears and kisses, and he had seen the pair to the door.
“Yes,” said Burnett; “they’re a rough couple. Come, May, no nonsense. Get up. I’m not going to have my horses kept waiting all night.”
May made an effort to rise, but sank back, sobbing hysterically:
“My head! – my head!”
“Here, give her some brandy, Claire,” cried Burnett.
“No, no, no. It makes it worse.”
“Well, it will be better to-morrow. Come along.”
“No, no, I cannot bear it. Oh, my head! – my head!”
“Let me bathe it with the eau de Cologne,” said Claire tenderly.
“No, no. I cannot bear it.”
“Then come home,” cried Burnett.
“No, no,” moaned his wife. “I’m so ill – so ill. Papa – couldn’t I stay here to-night – my own old little room?”
“Yes, yes, my darling,” said Denville tenderly.
“I am so ill, papa. My head throbs so if I move it.”
“Let her stay, Frank,” said Claire sympathisingly.
“Not I. What! go home without her? I’ll be hanged if I do!” cried Burnett pettishly. “She’ll be all right as soon as she gets out into the air. Now, May, jump up.”
He caught her by the arm, but May uttered a wail.
“Frank, dear, you are cruel,” said Claire.
“You mind your own business,” said the irritable little fellow sharply. “She has got to come home with me.”
“I – I – I can’t, Frank. I am so ill.”
“Nonsense! Sick headache. I often have them. You’ve taken too much wine.”
“She has not had any, Frank,” said Claire indignantly.
“Then she ought to have had some. That’s the reason. You hold your tongue. Now, madam, jump up.”
The MC had stood looking on, with his face working, but saying no word till now that Burnett caught his wife roughly by both hands and tried to pull her to her feet.
“Stop!” he cried firmly. “Really, Frank Burnett, you are ungentle in the extreme.”
“Here, I know what I’m doing,” he retorted. “She’s my wife.”
“And she’s my daughter, sir,” cried Denville haughtily; “and while I am by no half-tipsy man shall insult her.”
“Half-tipsy? Who’s half-tipsy? This is the result of coming here, sir.”
“Where I have been on thorns for the last two hours, lest my guests should see what a state you were in.”
“State? What do you mean?”
“I will not expose you more before your young wife,” said Denville quietly. “We are both angry, and had better say good-night. May, do you feel well enough to go home?”
“No; oh no, papa.”
“You hear, Frank Burnett. Claire, you can easily get her bedroom ready.”
“Look here, I shan’t stay,” cried Burnett. “I shan’t stay here.”
“Well, go home then. We will take care of her, you may depend.”
“It’s all nonsense. She shall come home.”
“My child is not well enough to go home,” retorted Denville.
“Frank dear, don’t be obstinate, for May’s sake,” said Claire. “There, go home, dear. I’ll get her to bed soon, and she’ll be better in the morning.”
Burnett looked from one to the other with his teeth set, and was about to burst out into an angry tirade; but he met the firm, cold gaze of his father-in-law fixed upon him, and it was irresistible. It literally looked him down; and, with an impatient curse, he left the house and banged the door.
Directly after they heard the rattle of carriage-wheels, and May uttered a sigh of relief as she watched the MC walk round the room extinguishing the candles.
“Oh, papa dear,” she sobbed, “he does behave so badly to me!”
“My child!” said Denville sadly, as he bent down and kissed her. “You are weary and excited to-night. Pray say no more.”
He left the room, and went downstairs to bid the servants leave everything till morning, and go to bed; and as the door closed Claire knelt down beside her sister, and laid her hand upon her burning forehead.
“That’s nice,” sighed May; and then she sat up suddenly, glanced round, and flung her arms round Claire’s neck to hide her face in her breast, and burst into a passionate fit of sobbing.
“Oh, hush, hush, May, my darling,” whispered Claire tenderly, as she kissed and caressed the pretty little head, which was jerked up again in an angry, spasmodic way.
“You saw – you heard,” she cried, with her face flushed and her eyes flashing, as she talked in a quick, low, excited manner. “You blamed me for loving poor Louis. Why, he was all that was gentle and kind. He loved me in his fierce Italian way, and he was so jealous that he would have killed me if I had given him cause. But so tender and loving; while this nasty, hateful little Frank – ”
“May: oh, hush!”
“I won’t hush. I hate him. I despise him. A mean, shabby, spiteful little wretch! You saw him to-night. He pinched me, and wrung my wrists. He often hurts me.”
“May! – May!”
“It’s true. He strikes me, too; and I tell you I hate him.”
“May! Your husband, whom you have sworn to honour and love!”
“And I don’t either, and I never shall,” cried May sharply.
“You must, you must, May, my darling. There, there; you are flushed and excited with your head being so bad, and Frank was not so gentle as he might have been. He was vexed because you had turned ill.”
“Nasty, fretful wretch!”
“May!”
“I don’t care; he is,” cried the little foolish thing, looking wonderfully like an angry child as she spoke.
“Hush! I will not let you speak of your husband like that, May.”
“Husband! A contemptible little tipsy wretch who bought me of papa because I was pretty. I loathe him, I tell you. Papa ought to have been ashamed of himself for selling me as he did.”
“May! May! little sister!” said Claire, weeping silently as she drew her baby head to her bosom, and tried to stay the flow of bitter words that came.
“Horses and carriages, and servants and dresses, and nothing else but misery. I tell you – I don’t care! If he ever beats me again I’ll run away from him, that I will.”
“No, no, little passionate, tender heart,” said Claire lovingly. “You are ill and troubled to-night. There, there. You shall sleep quietly to-night under the old roof. Why, May dear, it seems like the dear old times, and you are the little girl again whom I am going to undress and put to bed. There, you are better now.”
“Old times? What, of misery and poverty and wretchedness, and having servants that you cannot pay, and struggling to keep up appearances, and all for what?”
“Oh, hush, hush, little May!” said Claire, holding her to her breast, and half sadly, half playfully, rocking herself to and fro.
“You don’t know what trouble is. You don’t know what it is to have your tenderest feelings torn. You never knew what it was to suffer as I have. I hate him.”
She could not see Claire’s ghastly face, nor the agonised twitching of the nerves about her lips which her sister was striving to master.
“No one knows what I have had to suffer,” she went on; “and it’s too hard – it’s too hard to bear. No one loves me, no one cares for me. It’s all misery and wretchedness, and – and I wish I was dead.”
“No, no, no, darling,” said Claire, as she drew the sobbing little thing closer to her breast; “don’t say that. I love you dearly, my own sister, and it breaks my heart to see you unhappy. But there, there, you are so weary and ill to-night that it makes everything look so black. I suffer too, darling, for your sake – for all our sakes, and now I will not scold you.”
“Scold me?” cried May, in affright.
“No, not one word; only pray to you to be careful of your dear, sweet little self. My darling, I am so proud of my beautiful little sister. You will not be frivolous again, and give me so much pain?”
“N-no,” sighed May, with her face buried in her sister’s breast.
“Frank – ”
“Don’t – don’t speak of him.”
“Yes, yes; he is your husband, and you must try to win him over to you by gentleness, instead of being a little angry tyrant.”
“Clairy!”
“Yes, but you can be,” said Claire playfully, as she pressed her lips upon the soft, flossy hair. “I can remember how these little hands used to beat at me, and the little tearful eyes flash anger at me in the old times.”
Just then Denville entered the room softly, with a weary, dissatisfied air; but, as he stood in the doorway unnoticed, his whole aspect changed, and the tears stood in his eyes.
“God bless them!” he said fervently; and then, as he saw May raise her head, and look excitedly in her sister’s face, he stepped forward.
“Well, little bird,” he said, bending down to kiss May’s forehead, “back once more in the old nest?”
Claire looked searchingly at him as she rose from her knees; and then she sighed as she saw May fling herself into her father’s arms.
“There, there, I shall make the head ache again,” he said, with a calm, restful smile upon his lips, such as Claire had not seen for months.
“How he loves her!” she thought; and then another idea flashed through her breast. Suppose May knew!
“Claire, my child, is her room ready?”
“Yes; Morton’s room is prepared in case he came back. She will sleep there unless – May, will you come to me?”
“Yes, yes,” cried the little girlish thing, in a quick excited way. “No, no; I’ll be alone. Let me go now – at once.”
Claire fetched and gave her a lighted candle, finding her clinging passionately to her father, looking, as it seemed to the thoughtful woman, like some frightened child.
She kissed him hastily, and seemed to snatch the candle from her sister’s hand.
“Good-night, Claire,” she cried, holding up her face, and clinging tightly to her sister’s arm.
“I am going with you, dear – as I used to in the old times,” said Claire, smiling; and they left the room together.
“Without one word to me,” said Denville, as he stood with clasped hands gazing at the door. “Well, why should I be surprised? What must I be in her sight? Her father! Yes, but a monster without pity – utterly vile.”
He heaved a piteous sigh, as he sank into a chair.
“No,” he said to himself, “I will not influence her in any way. I will not stir. It would be too cruel. But if – if she should lean towards him – who knows? – women have accepted the wealth and position such as he offers. No, I will not stir.”
He sighed again, walked to the drawing-room window to see that the bar was across the shutter; and, this done, he turned hastily and gazed back into the room that had been Lady Teigne’s chamber, and as he did so the dew stood upon his forehead, for he seemed to see the bed with its dragged curtains, the empty casket on the floor, and by it the knife that he had picked up and hidden in his breast.
Yes, there it all was, and Claire standing gazing at him with that horrified look of suspicion in her beautiful face, as the thought came which had placed an icy barrier between them ever since. Yes, there she was, staring at him so wildly, and it was like a horrible nightmare, and —
“Father – are you ill?”
“Claire! Is it you? No, no; nothing the matter. Tired; wearied out. So long and anxious an evening. Good-night!”
She had come in to find him staring back into that room in a half cataleptic state; and the sight of his ghastly face brought all back to her. For a few moments she could not move, but at last, by an effort, she spoke, and he seemed to be snatched back by her voice into life and action.
“Good-night, father,” she said, trembling as she read the agonies of a conscious-stricken soul in his countenance, and she was moving towards the door, when, with an agonised cry, he turned to her.
“Claire, my child, must it be always so?” he cried, as he clasped his hands towards her as if in prayer.
“Father!” she said, in a voice almost inaudible from emotion.
“Claire, my child,” he moaned, as he sank upon his knees before her: “you do not know the burden I have to bear.”
She did what she had not done for months, as she stood trembling before him; laid one hand upon his head, while her lips parted as if to speak, but they only quivered and no words came.
At last, with a sobbing cry, she flung herself upon his neck, and he clasped her in his arms.
“Not to me, father,” she sobbed, “not to me; I am not your judge.”
“No,” he said softly, as he reverently kissed her brow; “you are not my judge.”
His lips parted to speak again, but he shook his head, while a sad smile came into and brightened his countenance.
“The load is lighter, Claire,” he said softly. “No, you are not my judge. If you were you would not condemn me unheard, and I cannot – dare not speak.”
He led her towards the door, and stood watching her as she passed upstairs and out of sight, turning her face to him once before she closed the door.
“The sweet pure angel and good genius of my home,” he said softly, with bent head, and with a calmer, more restful look in his countenance he went slowly to his own room.
All was soon dark and silent in the house so lately busy with the noise and buzz of many guests. Five minutes had not elapsed when the door was softly pushed open, and a slight little figure entered, and crossed to the window.
The noise made was very slight, as the swinging bar across the shutters was lifted and lowered, one of the shutters folded back, the fastening raised, and the window pushed ajar.
The figure stood in the semi-darkness in the attitude of one listening, and then drew back with a peculiar sigh as of one drawing in breath.
A couple of minutes passed, and then there was a scraping, rustling noise outside, the semi-darkness was deepened by a figure in the balcony, the window was drawn outwards, and a man passed in, whispering:
“May – sweet – are you there?”
A faintly uttered sigh was the response, and quick as thought the French window was closed, a step or two taken into the silent drawing-room, and May Burnett was tightly clasped in the arms of the nocturnal intruder.
“My darling!”
“No, no. Now one word, and you must go,” she whispered quickly. “I have done as I promised; now keep your word – to stay only one minute – say one word and go.”
“And I will keep it,” he cried, “my beautiful little love, my – Damnation!”
May started from his arms, for at that moment there was a thundering knock at the front door, and a violent drag at the bell.
Volume Two – Chapter Sixteen.
For her Sister’s Sake
“Oh, go – go quickly,” cried May excitedly. “It is my husband come back; what shall I do?”
“Stop!” cried Sir Harry. “Listen!”
“No, no; they are knocking again. My father will hear.”
“But – ”
“No, no, you must not stay. Go,” she panted, and as she spoke, in her hurry and alarm, she pushed him towards the window.
“Confound it all!” he muttered, as he opened it softly. “Pray, pray be quick,” she cried. “Oh, do – do go.”
“Impossible!” he whispered back. “They would see. Hide me.”
“I can’t – I can’t.”
“You must. Somewhere here.”
“No, no! You must go. Oh, what shall I do? I am lost – undone.”
“Hush, little woman! Be calm,” he said in a hoarse whisper. “I don’t know much about this house. Here, I will go downstairs.”
“But you cannot; the footman will see you.”
“Then, curse it all, hide me upstairs,” cried Sir Harry impatiently.
“My father – my sister – what shall I do! – Oh!”
That was all the visitor heard, and the faint cry that ended the sentence was drowned in a second tremendous peal at knocker and bell.
“Confound her! she’s gone. May! hist! – May! – Don’t leave me like this!”
He felt about for the door, but could not find it in his dread and confusion. Only one part of the room could he make out, and that was the window, by which flight was impossible without being seen.
“Little wretch!” he muttered. “What a fool I am! Where is the cursed door? There were three here somewhere. What the devil am I to do? Curse – ”
He kicked against a chair, and nearly knocked it over, and then stumbled against a couch.
“The door must be here somewhere,” he muttered. “Yes, there.”
It was plain enough where the door was now, for a light shone beneath it, and the sides looked light, showing its shape, just as another peal came from knocker and bell.
He had just time to drop down behind the sofa when the door opened, and the Master of the Ceremonies appeared in his long dressing-gown, candle in hand, crossed the drawing-room, and, opening the farther door, went through, and it swung to, leaving the intruder once more in darkness.
He started up again as he heard the rattle of locks and bolts below, and made for the window, meaning to escape by it as soon as those who had alarmed the house had entered.
“Curse him! Mellersh left to watch,” he muttered, as voices were heard from below – loud and angry voices – mingled with those of remonstrance.
“I tell you we saw a man climb up and enter by the balcony,” came up; and in his alarm and horror the intruder knocked over an ornament now, as he made for the door that led to the bedrooms – his last chance of escaping unseen.
“Ah, there she is,” he said beneath his breath, as the door was made visible once more by the rays of light all round.
“Come up, then, and I will search the place,” came from below.
“Don’t be alarmed: I’m going to see,” said a voice outside the door leading to the upper staircase; and the next moment the door opened, and Claire, in her white dressing-gown, entered candle in hand.
“Sir Harry Payne!” she cried, as the light fell on the figure of the visitor.
“Hush! For heaven’s sake, quick! Hide me somewhere. Quick! Before it is too late.”
He had caught her by the arm and laid one hand upon her lips; and as she was trying to release herself, the other door opened, and Denville entered, closely followed by Frank Burnett and Richard Linnell.
“Claire! Sir Harry Payne!” cried the Master of the Ceremonies.
“Oh, that’s it, is it?” said Burnett, with a grin. “No murder this time, except reputation. I had made up my mind to come and stop to-night, as my wife’s here; but, after this, the sooner she’s out of this place the better. Here, call her, some of you. Where’s her room?”
Claire did not speak, but stood there, as if turned to stone, her eyes fixed upon the cold, stern face of Richard Linnell, as he stood back by the door.
“Sir Harry Payne, speak, I insist,” cried Denville fiercely. “What does this mean?”
“Hush, sir! Hush! pray, gentlemen. A little bit of gallantry, nothing more.”
“Sir!” cried Denville.
“Hush, sir, pray!” cried Sir Harry, who was white and trembling with dread. “No noise – the neighbours – the scandal. Perfectly innocent, I assure you. An assignation. I came to see Miss Denville here.”
Claire turned her eyes slowly from Richard Linnell, whose look seemed to wither her, and fixed them on the despicable scoundrel, who was screening her sister before her husband, but who would not meet her stern gaze.
“I thought as much,” said Burnett, with a sneer. “I tell you what – ”
“Silence!” hissed a voice in his ear, and a broad, strong hand came down on his shoulder with a grip like a vice.
Claire saw it – the brave, true effort to defend her in her disgrace, and she lifted her eyes once more to Linnell’s. Then she let them close, and stood there silent, with the sweet little girlish innocent-looking face of her sister before her, as she stayed listening to the condemnation of husband and father – little May, her father’s darling – in her place. One word would save her, would clear her in the sight of the man who loved her, and of the father who stood sternly there; but she must condemn May to save herself, and she stood there as if convicted of the shameful act.
For she spoke no word, and her sister’s fame was saved.
Volume Two – Chapter Seventeen.
A Staunch Friend
“No, Miss Clode; I can be angry, and I can speak my own mind, but I’m not going to be so mean and shabby as to take my custom somewhere else, though it is so tempting; but what I say is this – don’t you never say a word to me again about that young lady, or I shall fly out.”
“I’m very sorry, ma’am, I’m sure, and you and Mr Barclay are such good customers, besides being my landlord and landlady.”
“Oh, there’s nothing in that, Miss Clode. You pay your rent to the day, and, as Mr Barclay says, it’s a business transaction.”
“Of course, it’s very painful to me, Mrs Barclay, and I shouldn’t have told you what I did, only you know you came and asked me what people were saying.”
“Well, so I did. Yes, you’re right, I did. But it isn’t true, Miss Clode. Miss Claire Denville is as good as gold, and people tell most horrible stories, and where you get to know so much I can’t think. But does everybody talk about it?”
“Yes, ma’am, everybody; and Mr and Mrs Burnett haven’t been there since.”
“I don’t care: I won’t believe it. And is it a fact that she goes regularly to Fisherman Miggles’s to see that little girl?”
“Yes, ma’am, regularly.”
“Then she has a good reason for it. There!”
“It’s a terrible blow for Mr Denville, of course, ma’am; and they say the young gentleman who has only just joined the dragoons is horribly put out, and challenged Sir Harry Payne, only the Colonel would not let them fight.”
“Dear – dear – dear! Poor Denville! he has nothing but misfortunes. I am sorry for him; I am indeed. Well, I must go; but mind this, Miss Clode: Claire Denville is a particular friend of mine, and no one shall say ill of her in my presence.”