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"I went for a walk through the Park; it is such a nice morning," she replied.
Irene heard her voice and started at the sound. It was familiar. Where had she heard it before? She felt she was on the verge of a startling discovery, and became agitated. She determined not to appear at a disadvantage, and therefore controlled her feelings.
Janet entered, unaware there was anyone in the room, and as Irene was hidden from view behind the opened door she did not see her. She walked to the table to put down a parcel and Irene saw her. At first she was too bewildered to speak; then she said sharply--
"Janet, what are you doing here?"
Janet Todd looked round, frightened and startled at the unexpected question. When she saw Irene she staggered back and sank into a chair, covered with shame and confusion. She made no answer, and Irene stood looking at her, still unable to grasp the full meaning of the situation.
"How is it you are living here?" she asked. "Are you a friend of Mrs.
Hoffman or Mrs. Warren?"
Janet looked at her with tears in her eyes, and said, in a broken voice--
"Oh, why have you come here? Please go away and leave me; I am a miserable, wretched woman."
It was far from Irene's intention to leave her without learning the truth. The appearance of Janet was totally unexpected, and she could not account for it.
"I shall not leave you until you tell me why you are in this house, and who induced you to leave your home. I know it was not Mr. Maynard."
"It was not; he is a good, brave man, and would never wrong any woman,"
said Janet. "I cannot tell you why I am here--I dare not."
"I was told to ask for Mrs. Warren. Where is she?"
"Who told you to ask for her?"
"That does not matter." Then it suddenly occurred to her that Janet might be Mrs. Warren, and the thought seemed to freeze the blood in her veins. She came forward and, bending over her, said in a low voice--
"You are not Mrs. Warren, are you? Tell me you are not, Janet, for pity's sake."
She made no reply, but sobbed convulsively, her body shook, and she s.h.i.+vered painfully.
"Are you Mrs. Warren?" asked Irene again, in a tone which demanded an answer.
"Yes," faintly sobbed Janet.
"And Mr. Warren is my husband. Janet, how could you do me such a bitter wrong? I have always been your friend," said Irene.
Despite the trouble and confusion she was in, Janet saw there was a misunderstanding, and she must do all in her power to make the best of things.
"I did not wrong you," said Janet. "I ran away with Mr. Courtly before you were married to him. If there be any wrong, you did it to me by taking the place I ought to have occupied."
Irene started; Janet was putting a different complexion on the case.
"So it was my husband who induced you to leave your home?" she asked.
"Yes, and he promised to marry me."
"And you believed him?"
"Yes."
"Did you leave your father's house with him the night Mr. Maynard had the quarrel about you?"
"I did."
"You saw him that night?"
"Yes, and he told me everything, but forbid me to speak about it to the Squire. He was very angry, and said his father had no right to accuse him, and that he would not return to Hazelwell until he asked his forgiveness."
"Did you tell him you had arranged to leave home with Mr. Courtly?"
"No, I dare not; he would have told my father, and I should have been detained."
"And you have known all this time that suspicion rested upon Mr.
Maynard, and that he was suspected of having gone away with you?" asked Irene.
"That is so, but he has forbidden me to speak about it."
"He knows you are here!" exclaimed Irene.
"Promise you will not mention it to anyone, and I will tell you all,"
said Janet.
Irene sat down and, as she did so, said--
"If I promise I will not mention what you tell me to anyone but my husband, will that satisfy you?"
"Why inform him?"
"Because I may find it necessary," said Irene.
"It will be better not to do so."
"I am the best judge of that," she replied.
Janet then gave Irene a full account of her life since leaving home with Warren Courtly, and how Ulick had called to see her, after accidentally catching sight of her in Feltham, and of his presence in the house when Warren Courtly called.
"Mr. Maynard knows all?" exclaimed Irene, in consternation.
"Everything," replied Janet, "and he was most anxious you should not discover the truth. He will be very angry if he finds out I have told you."
Then it was to save her pain and shame Ulick had allowed the blame to rest upon his shoulders, knowing at the same time her husband was guilty. Why had he done this for her sake? Her heart answered her, and she knew he loved her and that she loved him. What a mistake it had all been. The Squire had blundered, and Ulick had thrown away his chance of happiness and her own by his hasty conduct. It was done, and could not be undone, and she must bear it as well as she was able. How she wished Janet had told him, the night he left Hazelwell, that she was about to leave her home with Warren Courtly. Ulick would have prevented it, and everything would have been so different.
It was some time before she spoke; then she asked--
"What is my husband to you now?"