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"I was a fool not to suspect what was going on. She was head over ears in debt. What she must have been spending on clothes it frightens me to think of. She told me that she had got somebody to make them for almost nothing, but I might have known that was nonsense, if I'd thought about it at all. I remember now some woman or other laughing at me when I told her she dressed herself on two hundred a year. 'I suppose you mean two thousand,' she said, and I should think it couldn't have been much less than that. She had things put away that I'd never seen. She didn't disclose half what she owed when you helped us two years ago. Then she'd been playing Bridge with a lot of harpies--Auction--at sixpenny points--and she's no more head for it than an infant in arms."
"Sixpenny points!" repeated the Squire.
"Well, it means she could easily lose forty or fifty pounds in an afternoon, and probably did, often enough. She had to find ready money for that. I haven't got at it all yet, but when we went down to Brummels she didn't know which way to turn, and was desperate--ready to do anything. I know there was a---- No, I can't tell you that; and it doesn't matter. I'm not sure it isn't as well for her, and for me, that she did get the money in the way she did."
The Squire's face was very grave. "You know, Humphrey, if she has deceived you, and is capable of this horrible theft, you ought to satisfy yourself----"
Humphrey broke down again, but recovered himself quickly. "Thank G.o.d, I know everything," he said. "Everything that matters. She was terrified. She turned to me. There's nothing between us. It's all partly my fault. I'd been in debt myself, and hadn't helped her to keep straight. And we'd had rows, and she was afraid to tell me things."
"Go on, my dear boy," said the Squire very kindly.
"It's soon told. She heard Lady Sedbergh and Mrs. Amberley talking about the hiding-place."
"Was she in the room?"
"She was just outside. The door was open."
"She listened?"
"Yes. She stayed outside, and listened. They went out by another door, and she went into the room at once and took the necklace. She p.a.w.ned pearls here and there, going out in the evening, veiled, but in a foolish, reckless way. I can't conceive why something didn't come out at the trial. It was she who gave Rachel Amberley's name at that place in the city. She's about the same height. But imagine the folly of it! She says that it 'came over her' to do it, and she only did it that once. She seems to have made up names at the other places."
"Did she get rid of all the pearls?"
"That's what I can't make out yet. She got enough money to pay up everything; but not more. She can't say how much, but it can't possibly have been what the pearls were worth. Perhaps she let some of them go at an absurd value, which would be a reason for those who had got them to lie low. I couldn't get at everything; there was so much that I had to ask about; and she wasn't in a state---- Oh, she'd have been capable of any folly--even throwing some of them away, if she got frightened. We've been dancing on gunpowder. Clark knew all along; or almost from the first."
"Did she help her?"
"Oh no. She was fond of her; she was the daughter of one of their gardeners."
"Are you _sure_ she didn't help her? What do you mean--she was fond of her?"
"I mean that she might have given her away."
"She knew at the time of the trial?"
"Yes."
"Did she threaten Susan, then?"
"No. I think she never meant to do anything at all. Susan had given her a lot of things. She was in with her to that extent--knew about her dressmaking bills. And she wanted to marry Gotch, and Gotch is loyal to us. She didn't want to make trouble. It was only Gotch being kept hanging on about Canada that put it into her head that she had a weapon."
"But you say she threatened you. She must be a bad woman."
"Well, I put her back up. She came to me and said she wanted something done at once, and hinted that she knew things. I was angry at being pressed in that way, and made her speak out. I believe, at first, she thought I was in it; or she wouldn't have come to me in the way she did. I soon disabused her of that idea, if she really held it, and I was furious. I thought it was blackmail, as you did. I threatened to have her up. That scandalised her, and she convinced me that she was telling the truth. She told me to go and ask Susan, if I didn't believe her. It was then, when she had burnt her boats, that she threatened."
"Well--however you look at it--it is blackmail. She's ready to compound a felony. And we are asked to do the same. Humphrey, this is a terrible story. It's the blackest day I've ever known. I don't think I've quite taken it all in yet. Susan a thief! All that we've said and thought about that other woman--and justly too, if she'd been guilty--applies to--to one of ourselves--to a Clinton. I feel stunned by it. I don't know what to say or do."
His face was grey. His very tranquillity showed how deeply he had been hit.
"What we have to do," said Humphrey, "is to avert the disgrace to our name. Fortunately that can be done. It isn't blackmail; Clark never thought of it in that light, or she would have moved long ago. She thought we were not treating Gotch well in refusing him what he asked, after what he had done, and the promises we had made him. _He'll_ never know anything about it. Have him in and tell him that you will lend him the money he wants. That cuts the whole horrible knot."
The Squire made no answer to this. "She is _more_ guilty than the other woman," he went on, as if Humphrey had not spoken. "She stood by and saw an innocent woman suffer. Humphrey, it was very base."
"Mrs. Amberley _wasn't_ innocent," said Humphrey. "She went to steal the necklace, and found it gone. She _did_ steal the star, and that was what she was punished for. Her punishment was deserved. Besides, it's over now. You know that she was let out. She has gone to America. We shall never hear of her over here again."
"It's a very terrible story," said the Squire again. "I don't know what's to be done. I'm all at sea. I must---- Humphrey, why did you make me promise to keep this a secret? d.i.c.k ought to be told. He's got a cooler head than I have."
"d.i.c.k shall _not_ be told," said Humphrey, almost with violence. "Nor anyone else. We've got to settle this between ourselves. n.o.body must suspect anything, and n.o.body must be put in the position of treating Susan so that others will be tempted to talk about it. If she came down here, and there were two besides you--and me--who knew what she had done, it would be an impossible position. I've made up my mind absolutely about that, and you gave me your word."
"Susan down here!" repeated the Squire, in a tone that made Humphrey wince.
"You won't be asked to have more to do with her than is necessary to keep away all suspicion," he said. "It isn't Susan you have to think of--that's my business--it's yourself, and the whole lot of us. The scandal doesn't bear thinking of if it comes out. Think what it would mean. Think of all you said yourself about Mrs. Amberley. Think of the whole country saying that about one of us; and saying much more, because of what you said--of her keeping quiet about it. Oh, I'm not trying to defend her--but think of the ghastly disgrace. We should never hold up our heads again. Think of the dock for her--and prison!
Father, you must put an end to it. Thank G.o.d it can be done, without touching your honour."
The knife had gone right home. The Squire sprang up from his chair and strode down the room again. "My honour!" he cried. "Oh, Humphrey, what honour is left to us after this?"
"Susan is sorry," Humphrey went on quickly. "Bitterly sorry. She has been quite different lately. She had a terrible shock. She is spending next to nothing now, and----"
"Oh!" The Squire glared at him, looking more like himself than he had done since Humphrey's disclosure. "She paid her debts out of stolen money. Yes, she was different, when she thought the danger had been removed, and that other woman was safe in prison. She was gay and light-hearted when she came here at Christmas, with that--that crime on her conscience. You say that as if it was to her credit!"
"I don't!" said Humphrey sullenly. "But she is sorry now. She's punished. It isn't for us to punish her again; and punish ourselves.
It's too ghastly to think about. Oh, what's the use of going on talking about it, father, while the risk is still hanging over us? Let me send a wire to Clark; or let Gotch do it, this evening. Then we can breathe freely, and talk about all the rest later."
The Squire took another turn down the room. "I won't be hurried into anything," he said with some indignation. "I won't think of what may happen until I've made up my mind, in case I should do something wrong, out of fear. Oh, why can't you let me call in d.i.c.k?"
"I won't. And you've _got_ to think of what will happen. The name of Clinton horribly disgraced--held up to the most public scorn--not a corner to hide yourself in. It will last all _your_ lifetime, and mine too, and go on to your grandchildren. You will never know another happy moment. The stain will never come out; it will stick to every one of us."
"Oh, that's enough," said the Squire, seating himself again.
He turned sharply round again. "What do you want me to do?" he asked angrily.
"Send for Gotch--send for him now this moment--and tell him that you have changed your mind. You will arrange to let him have the money he has asked for, and he can go off as soon as he likes."
"I'm to say I've changed my mind?"
"Yes, of course. You don't want to set him wondering."
"Then he will let this woman, Clark, know----" He began to speak more slowly.
"Yes. I shall go back to-morrow morning and see her. I shall have a hold over her, and she will certainly keep quiet, for her own sake."
"She will be liable to prosecution if the truth becomes known from any other source."
"It won't be. She is the only person who knows anything."
"And _I_ shall have compounded a felony too, if it becomes known."
"No. That isn't so. _You_ will have nothing to do with her at all.