Run to Earth by Mary Elizabeth Braddon (have you read this book TXT) 📖
- Author: Mary Elizabeth Braddon
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impression that had been made upon his brother by the ballad-singer’s
beauty.
“_I think that this girl and these two men, her father, Thomas Milsom,
and Dennis Wayman, the landlord of the ‘Jolly Tar’, are in the secret—
are, between them, the murderers of your brother. I think that when he
broke his promise to me, and came back to this end of London, before
the fifth, he came lured by that girl’s beauty. It is to the girl we
must look for a key to the secret of his death. I do not expect to
extort anything from the fears of the men. They are both hardened
villains; and if, as I believe, they are guilty of this crime, it is
not likely to be the first in which they have been engaged. The police
are on the watch, and I have promised a liberal reward for any
discoveries they may make; but it is very slow work_.”
This, and much more, Joyce Harker wrote to George Jernam. The letter
was written immediately after the inquest; and on the night succeeding
that inquiry, Joyce went to the ‘Jolly Tar’, in the hope of seeing
Jenny Milsom. But he was doomed to disappointment; for in the concert-room at Dennis Wayman’s tavern he found a new singer—a fat, middle-aged woman, with red hair.
“What has become of the pretty girl who used to sing here?” he asked
the landlord.
“Milsom’s daughter?” said Wayman. “Oh, we’ve lost her She was a regular
she-devil, it seems. Her father and she had a row, and the girl ran
away. She can get her living anywhere with that voice of hers; and I
don’t suppose Milsom treated her over well. He’s a rough fellow, but an
honest one.”
“Yes,” answered Joyce, with a sneer; “he seems uncommonly honest.
There’s a good deal of that sort of honesty about this neighbourhood, I
think, mate. I suppose you’ve heard about my captain?”
“Not a syllable. Is there anything wrong with him?”
“Ah! news seems to travel slowly down here. There was an inquest held
this morning, not so many miles from this house.”
The landlord shrugged his shoulders.
“I’ve been busy in-doors all day, and I haven’t heard anything,” he
said.
Joyce told the story of his captain’s fate, to which Dennis Wayman
listened with every appearance of sympathy.
“And you’ve no idea what has become of the girl?” Harker asked, after
having concluded his story.
“No more than the dead. She’s cut and run, that’s all I know.”
“Has her father gone after her?”
“Not a bit of it. He’s not that sort of man. She has chosen to take
herself off, and her father will let her go her own way.”
“And her grandfather, the old blind man?”
“He has gone with her.”
There was no more to be said about the girl after this.
“I’ll tell you what it is, Mr. Wayman,” said Joyce, “I’m likely to be a
good bit down in this neighbourhood, while I’m waiting for directions
about my poor captain’s ship from his brother Captain George, and as
your house suits me as well as any other, I may as well take up my
quarters here. I know you’ve got plenty of room, and you’ll find me a
quiet lodger.”
“So be it,” answered the landlord, promptly. “I’m agreeable.”
Joyce deliberated profoundly as he walked away from the ‘Jolly Tar’
that night.
“He’s too deep to be caught easily,” he thought. “He’ll let me into his
house, because he knows there’s nothing I can find out, watch as I may.
Such a murder as that leaves no trace behind it. If I had been able to
get hold of the girl, I might have frightened her into telling me
something; but it’s clear to me she has really bolted, or Wayman would
never let me into his house.”
For weeks Joyce Harker was a lodger at the ‘Jolly Tar’; always on the
watch; always ready to seize upon the smallest clue to the mystery of
Valentine Jernam’s death; but nothing came of his watching.
The police did their best to discover the key to the dreadful secret;
but they worked in vain. The dead man’s money had been partly in notes
and gold, partly in bills of exchange. It was easy enough to dispose of
such bills in the City. There were men ready to take them at a certain
price, and to send them abroad; men who never ask questions of their
customers.
So there was little chance of any light being thrown on this dark and
evil mystery. Joyce watched and waited with dog-like fidelity, ready to
seize upon the faintest clue; but he waited and watched in vain.
*
CHAPTER III.
DISINHERITED.
Nearly a year had elapsed since the murder of Valentine Jernam, and the
March winds were blowing amongst the leafless branches of the trees in
the Green Park.
In the library of one of the finest houses in Arlington Street, a
gentleman paced restlessly to and fro, stopping before one of the
windows every now and then, to look, with a fretful glance, at the dull
sky. “What weather!” he muttered: “what execrable weather!”
The speaker was a man of some fifty years of age—a man who had been
very handsome and who was handsome still—a man with a haughty
patrician countenance—not easily forgotten by those who looked upon
it. Sir Oswald Eversleigh, Baronet, was a descendant of one of the
oldest families in Yorkshire. He was the owner of Raynham Castle, in
Yorkshire; Eversleigh Manor, in Lincolnshire; and his property in those
two counties constituted a rent-roll of forty thousand per annum.
He was a bachelor, and having nearly reached his fiftieth year it was
considered unlikely that he would marry.
Such at least was the fixed idea of those who considered themselves the
likely inheritors of the baronet’s wealth. The chief of these was
Reginald Eversleigh, his favourite nephew, the only son of a younger
brother, who had fallen gloriously on an Indian battle-field.
There were two other nephews who had some right to look forward to a
share in the baronet’s fortune. These were the two sons of Sir Oswald’s
only sister, who had married a country rector, called Dale. But Lionel
and Douglas Dale were not the sort of young men who care to wait for
dead men’s shoes. They were sincerely attached to their uncle; but they
carefully abstained from any demonstration of affection which could
seem like worship of his wealth. The elder was preparing himself for
the Church; the younger was established in chambers in the Temple,
reading for the bar.
It was otherwise with Reginald Eversleigh. From his early boyhood this
young man had occupied the position of an adopted son rather than a
nephew.
There are some who can bear indulgence, some flowers that flourish best
with tender rearing; but Reginald Eversleigh was not one of these.
Sir Oswald was too generous a man to require much display of gratitude
from the lad on whom he so freely lavished his wealth and his
affection. When the boy showed himself proud and imperious, the baronet
admired that high, and haughty spirit. When the boy showed himself
reckless and extravagant in his expenditure of money, the baronet
fancied that extravagance the proof of a generous disposition,
overlooking the fact that it was only on his own pleasures that
Reginald wasted his kinsman’s money. When bad accounts came from the
Eton masters and the Oxford tutors, Sir Oswald deluded himself with the
belief that it was only natural for a high-spirited lad to be idle, and
that, indeed, youthful idleness was often a proof of genius.
But even the moral blindness of love cannot last for ever. The day came
when the baronet awoke to the knowledge that his dead brother’s only
son was unworthy of his affection.
The young man entered the army. His uncle purchased for him a
commission in a crack cavalry regiment, and he began his military
career under the most brilliant auspices. But from the day of his
leaving his military tutor, until the present hour, Sir Oswald had been
perpetually subject to the demands of his extravagance, and had of late
suffered most bitterly from discoveries which had at last convinced him
that his nephew was a villain.
In ordinary matters, Sir Oswald Eversleigh was by no means a patient or
long-suffering man; but he had exhibited extraordinary endurance in all
his dealings with his nephew. The hour had now come when he could be
patient no longer.
He had written to his nephew, desiring him to call upon him at three
o’clock on this day.
The idea of this interview was most painful to him, for he had resolved
that it should be the last between himself and Reginald Eversleigh. In
this matter he had acted with no undue haste; for it had been
unspeakably distressing to him to decide upon a step which would
separate him for ever from the young man.
As the timepiece struck three, Mr. Eversleigh was announced. He was a
very handsome man; of a refined and aristocratic type, but of a type
rather effeminate than powerful. And pervading his beauty, there was a
winning charm of expression which few could resist. It was difficult to
believe that Reginald Eversleigh could be mean or base. People liked
him, and trusted him, in spite of themselves; and it was only when
their confidence had been imposed upon, and their trust betrayed, that
they learned to know how despicable the handsome young officer could
be. Women did their best to spoil him; and his personal charms of face
and manner, added to his brilliant expectations, rendered him an
universal favourite in fashionable circles.
He came to Arlington Street prepared to receive a lecture, and a severe
one, for he knew that some of his late delinquencies had become known
to Sir Oswald; but he trusted in the influence which he had always been
able to exercise over his uncle, and he was determined to face the
difficulty boldly, as he had faced it before.
He entered the room with a smile, and advanced towards his uncle, with
his hand outstretched.
But Sir Oswald drew back, refusing that proffered hand.
“I shake hands only with gentlemen and honest men,” he said, haughtily.
“You are neither, Mr. Eversleigh.”
Reginald had been used to hear his uncle address him in anger; but
never before had Sir Oswald spoken to him in that tone of cool
contempt. The colour faded from the young man’s face, and he looked at
his uncle with an expression of alarm.
“My dear uncle!” he exclaimed.
“Be pleased to forget that you have ever addressed me by that name, or
that any relationship exists between us, Mr. Eversleigh,” answered Sir
Oswald, with unaltered sternness. “Sit down, if you please. Our
interview is likely to be a long one.”
The young man seated himself in silence.
“I have sent for you, Mr. Eversleigh,” said the baronet, “because I
wished to tell you, without passion, that the tie which has hitherto
bound us has been completely broken. Heaven knows I have been patient;
I have endured your misdoings, hoping that they were the thoughtless
errors of youth, and not the deliberate sins of a hardened and wicked
nature. I have trusted till I can trust no longer; I have hoped till I
can hope no more. Within the past week I have learned to know you. An
old friend, whose word I cannot doubt, whose honour is beyond
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