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a free entr� here.”
“Good,” said Carrington, rising. “And now there is nothing more to be
said just at present.”
“Pardon me; you have not told me why an intimacy with Mr. Dale is
essential to your purpose.”
“Because I must watch his proceedings and intentions—in fact, know all
about him—in order to discover whether it will suit my interests best
to forward Eversleigh’s plans with respect to Lady Verner, or to betray
them to Dale.”
Miss Brewer looked at him with something like admiration. She thought
she understood him so perfectly now, that she need ask nothing farther.
So they parted with the understanding that she was to report fully on
Douglas Dale’s visit, and Carrington was to call on Paulina on the day
succeeding it. When she was alone, Miss Brewer remembered that
Carrington had not explained why it was he felt certain Dale would not
form any intimacy with him as Victor Carrington. As he walked
homewards, Victor muttered to himself—
“Heavens, what a clever fool that woman is. Once more I have won, and
by boldness.”
*
The feelings with which Douglas Dale prepared for his visit to Hilton
House on the day following that on which Victor Carrington had made
his full and candid explanation to Miss Brewer, were such as any
woman—the purest, the noblest, the best—might have been proud of
inspiring. They were full of love, trust, pity, and hope. Douglas Dale
had by no means ceased to feel his brother’s loss. No, the death of
Lionel, and, even more, the terrible manner of that death, still
pursued him in every waking hour—still haunted him in his dreams; but
sorrow, and especially its isolating tendency, does but quicken and
intensify feelings of tenderness in true and noble hearts.
He drove up to Hilton House with glad expectancy, and his eyes were dim
as he was ushered into the drawing-room in which Paulina sat.
Madame Durski’s emotions on this occasion were unspeakably painful. So
well had Miss Brewer played her part, that she had persuaded Paulina
her only chance of escape from immediate arrest lay in borrowing money,
that very day, from Douglas Dale. Paulina’s pride revolted; but the
need was pressing, and the unhappy woman yielded.
As she rose to return her visitor’s greeting, and stood before him in
the cold January sunset, she was indeed, in all outward seeming, worthy
of any man’s admiration.
Remorse and suffering had paled her cheeks; but they had left no
disfiguring traces on her perfect face.
The ivory whiteness of her complexion was, perhaps, her greatest charm,
and her beauty would scarcely have been enhanced by those rosy tints
so necessary to some faces.
To-day she had dressed herself to perfection, fully conscious of the
influence which a woman’s costume is apt to exercise over the heart of
the man who loves her.
Half an hour passed in conversation of a general nature, and then
luncheon was announced. When Paulina and her visitor returned to the
dreary room, they were alone; Miss Brewer had discreetly retired.
“My dear Madame Durski!” exclaimed Douglas, when the widow had seated
herself and he had placed himself opposite to her, “I cannot tell you
what intense pleasure it gives me to see you again, and most of all
because it leads me to believe that I can in some manner serve you. I
know how secluded your habits have been of late, and I fancy you would
scarcely so depart from them in my favour if you had not some real need
of my service.”
This speech was peculiarly adapted to smoothe away the difficulties of
Paulina’s position. Douglas had long guessed the secret of her poverty,
and had more than half divined the motive of her letter. He was eager
to save her, as far as possible, from the painfulness of the request
which he felt almost sure she was about to make to him.
“Your cordial kindness affects me deeply, Mr. Dale,” said Paulina, with
a blush that was the glow of real shame. “You are right; I should be
the last woman in the world to appeal to you thus if I had not need of
your help—bitter need. I appeal to you, because I know the goodness
and generosity of your nature. I appeal to you as a beggar.”
“Madame Durski, for pity’s sake, do not speak thus,” cried Douglas,
interrupting her. “Every penny that I possess in the world is at your
command. I am ready to begin life again, a worker for my daily bread,
rather than that you should suffer one hour’s pain, one moment’s
humiliation, that money can prevent.”
“You are too generous, too noble,” exclaimed Paulina, in a broken
voice. “The only way in which I can prove my gratitude for your
delicate goodness is by being perfectly candid. My life has been a
strange one, Mr. Dale—a life of apparent prosperity, but of real
poverty. Before I was old enough to know the value of a fortune, I was
robbed of that which should have been mine, and robbed by the father
who should have protected my interests. From that hour I have known
little except trouble. I was married to a man whom I never loved—
married at the command of the father who had robbed me. If I have not
fallen, as many other women so mated have fallen, I take no pride in my
superior strength of mind. It may be that temptation such as lures
other women to their ruin never approached me. Since my husband died,
my life, as you too well know, has been a degraded one. I have been the
companion and friend of gamesters. It is, indeed, only since I came to
England that I have myself ceased to be a gambler. Can you remember all
this, Mr. Dale, and yet pity me?”
“I can remember it all, and yet love you, Paulina,” answered Douglas,
with emotion. “We are not masters of our own affections. From the hour
in which I first saw you I have loved you—loved you in spite of
myself. I will admit that your life has not been that which I would
have chosen for the woman I love; and that to remember your past
history is pain to me. But, in spite of all, I ask you to be my wife;
and it shall be the business of my future life to banish from your
remembrance every sorrow and every humiliation that you have suffered
in the past. Say that you will be my wife, Paulina. I love you as few
women are loved. I am rich, and have the power to remove you far from
every association that is painful to you. Tell me that I may be the
guardian of your future existence.”
Paulina contemplated her lover for a few moments with singular
earnestness. She was deeply impressed by his generous devotion, and she
could not but compare this self-sacrificing love with the base
selfishness of Reginald Eversleigh’s conduct.
“You do not ask me if I can return your affection,” she said, after
that earnest look. “You offer to raise me from degradation and poverty,
and you demand nothing in return.”
“No, Paulina,” replied Douglas; “I would not make a bargain with the
woman I love. I know that you have not yet learned to love me, and yet
I do not fear for the future, if you consent to become my wife. True
love, such as mine, rarely fails to win its reward, sooner or later. I
am content to wait. It will be sufficient happiness to me to know that
I have rescued you from a miserable and degrading position.”
“You are only too generous,” murmured Paulina, softly; “only too
generous.”
“And now tell me the immediate object of this most welcome summons. I
will not press you for a prompt reply to my suit; I will trust that
time may be my friend. Tell me how I can serve you, and why you sent
for me to-day?”
“I sent for you that I might ask you for the loan of two hundred
pounds, to satisfy the claims of my most urgent creditors, and to
prevent the necessity of an ignominious flight.”
“I will write you a cheque immediately for five hundred,” said Douglas.
“You can drive to my banker’s, and get it cashed there. Or stay; it
would not be so well for my banker to know that I lent you money. Let
me come again to you this evening, and bring ink sum in bank-notes.
That will give me an excuse for coming.”
“How can I ever thank you sufficiently?”
“Do not thank me at all. Only let me love you, looking forward
hopefully to the day in-which you may learn to love me.” “That day must
surely come ere long,” replied Paulina, thoughtfully. “Gratitude so
profound as mine, esteem so sincere, must needs grow into a warmer
feeling.”
“Yes, Paulina,” said Douglas, “if your heart is free. Forgive me if I
approach a subject painful to you and to me. Reginald Eversleigh—my
cousin—have you seen him often lately?”
“I have not seen him since he left London for Hallgrove. I am not
likely to see him again.”
“I am very glad of that. There is but one fear in my mind when I think
of our future, Paulina.”
“And that is?”
“The fear that Reginald Eversleigh may come between you and me.”
“You need no longer fear that,” replied Madame Durski. “You have been
so noble, so devoted in your conduct to me, that I must be indeed a
worthless wretch if I shrink from the painful duty of laying my heart
bare before you. I have loved your cousin Reginald, foolishly, blindly;
but there must come an end to all folly; there must come a day when the
bandage falls from the eyes that have obstinately shunned the light.
That day has come for me; and Sir Reginald Eversleigh is henceforward
nothing more to me than the veriest stranger.”
“A thousand thanks, dearest, for that assurance,” exclaimed Douglas;
“and now trust in me. Tour future shall be so bright and happy that the
past will seem to you no more than a troubled dream.”
CHAPTER XXVIII.
PREPARING THE GROUND.
Black Milsom made his appearance in the little village of Raynham
immediately after Lady Eversleigh’s departure from the castle. But on
this occasion it would have been very difficult for those who had seen
him at the date of Sir Oswald Eversleigh’s funeral to recognize, in the
respectable-looking, well-dressed citizen of to-day, the ragged tramp
of that period.
While Honoria Eversleigh was living under a false name in Percy Street,
Tottenham Court Road, the man who called himself her father,
established himself in a little river-side public-house, under the
shadow of Raynham Castle. The house in question had never borne too
good a character; and its reputation was in nowise improved when, on
the death of its owner, it passed into the custody of Mr. Milsom, who
came down to Raynham one November morning, almost immediately after
Lady Eversleigh’s departure, saw the “Cat and Fiddle” public-house
vacant, and went straight to the attorney who had the letting of it, to
offer himself as a tenant, announcing himself to the lawyer as Thomas
Maunders.
The attorney at first looked rather suspiciously at the gentleman who
had earned for himself the ominous nickname of Black Milsom; but when
the would-be tenant offered to pay a year’s rent in advance down on the
nail, the man of law melted, and took
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