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"But--I don't understand you, Thickens; you do not mean that you--"
"That I, Mr Bayle!" cried the clerk pa.s.sionately. "Shame upon you!--do you think I could be such a scoundrel--such a thief?"
"But these deeds, and this scrip, what are they all?"
"Valuable securities placed in Dixons' hands for safety."
"And they are gone?"
"To an enormous amount."
"But, tell me," panted Bayle, with the horror vague no longer, but seeming to have a.s.sumed form and substance, and to be crus.h.i.+ng him down, "who has done this thing?"
"Who had the care of them, sir?"
"Thickens," cried Bayle, starting from his chair, and catching at the mantelpiece, for the room seemed to swim round, and he swept an ornament from the shelf, which fell with a crash, "Thickens, for heaven's sake, don't say that."
"I must say it, sir. What am I to do? I've doubted him for years."
"But the money--he has lived extravagantly; but, oh! it is impossible.
It can't be much."
"Much, sir? It's fifty thousand pounds if it's a penny!"
"But, Thickens, it means felony, criminal prosecution, a trial."
He spoke hoa.r.s.ely, and his hands were trembling. "It means transportation for one-and-twenty years, sir--perhaps for life."
Bayle's face was ashy, and with lips apart he stood gazing at the grim, quiet clerk.
"Man, man!" he cried at last; "it can't be true."
"Do you doubt too, sir? Well, it's natural. I used to, and I tried to doubt it; a hundred times over when I was going to be sure that he was a villain, I used to say to myself as I went and fed my fish, it's impossible, a man with a wife and child like--"
"Hus.h.!.+ for G.o.d's sake, hus.h.!.+" cried Bayle pa.s.sionately, and then with a burst of fury, he caught the clerk by the throat. "It is a lie; Robert Hallam could not be such a wretch as that!"
"Mr Bayle, sir," said Thickens calmly, and in an appealing tone; "can't you see now, sir, why I sent to you? Do you think I don't know how you loved that lady, and how much she and her bright little fairy of a child are to you? Why, sir, if it hadn't been for them I should have gone straight to Sir Gordon, and before now that scoundrel would have been in Lincoln jail."
"But you are mistaken, Thickens. Man, man, think what you are saying.
Such a charge would break her heart, would brand that poor innocent child as the daughter of a felon. Oh, it cannot be!" he cried excitedly. "Heaven would not suffer such a wrong."
"I've been years proving it, sir; years," said Thickens slowly; "and until I was sure, I've been as silent as the dead. Fifty thousand pounds' worth of securities at least have been taken from that safe, and dummies filled up the s.p.a.ces. Why, sir, a score of times people wanted these deeds, and he has put them off for a few days till he could go up to London, raise money on others, and get those wanted from the banker's hands."
"But you knew something of this, then?"
"Yes, I knew it, sir--that is, I suspected it. Until I got the keys made, I was not sure."
"Does--does any one else know of this?"
"Yes, sir."
"Ah!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Bayle, with quite a moan.
"Robert Hallam, sir."
"Ah!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Bayle, drawing a breath full of relief. "You have not told a soul?"
"No, sir. I said to myself there's that sweet lady and her little child; and that stopped me. I said to myself, I must go to the trustiest friend they have, sir, and that was you. Now, sir, I have told you all. The simple truth. What am I to do?"
Christie Bayle dropped into a chair, his eyes staring, his blanched face drawn, and his lips apart, as he conjured up the scene that must take place--the arrest, the wreck of Mrs Hallam's life, the suffering that would be her lot. And at last, half maddened, he started up, and stood with clenched hands gazing fiercely at the man who had fired this train.
"Well, sir," said Thickens coldly, "will you get them and the old people away before the exposure comes?"
"No," cried Bayle fiercely, "this must not--shall not be. It must be some mistake. Mr Hallam could not do such a wrong. Man, man, do you not see that such a charge would break his wife's heart?"
"It was in the hope that you would do something for them, sir, that I told you all this first."
"But we must see Mr Dixon and Sir Gordon at once."
"And they will--you know what."
"Hah! the matter must be hushed up. It would kill her!" cried Bayle incoherently. "Mr Thickens, you stand there like this man's judge; have you not made one mistake?"
Thickens shook his head and tightened his lips to a thin line.
"Do you not see what it would do? Have you no mercy?"
"Mr Bayle, sir," said Thickens slowly, "this has served you as it served me. It's so stunning that it takes you off your head. Am I, the servant of my good masters, knowing what I do, to hide this from them till the crash comes first--the crash that is only a matter of time? Do you advise--do you wish me to do this?"
Christie Bayle sat with his hands clasping his forehead, for the pain he suffered seemed greater than he could bear. He had known for long enough that Hallam was a harsh husband and a bad father; but it had never even entered his dreams that he was other than an honest man. And now he was asked to decide upon this momentous matter, when his decision must bring ruin, perhaps even death, to the woman he esteemed, and misery to the sweet, helpless child he had grown to love.
It was to him as if he were being exposed to some temptation, for even though his love for Millicent had long been dead, to live again in another form for her child, Christie Bayle would have gone through any suffering for her sake. As he bent down there the struggle was almost greater than he could bear.
And there for long he sat, crushed and stunned by the terrible stroke that had fallen upon him, and was about to fall upon the helpless wife and child. His mind seemed chaotic. His reasoning powers failed, and as he kept clinging to little sc.r.a.ps of hope, they seemed to be s.n.a.t.c.hed away.
It was with a heart full of grief mingled with rage that he started to his feet at last, and faced Thickens, for the clerk had again spoken in measured tones. "Mr Bayle, what am I to do?"
The curate gazed at him piteously, as he essayed to speak; but the words seemed smothered as they struggled in his breast.
Then, by a supreme effort, he mastered his emotion, and drew himself up.
"Once more, sir, what am I to do?"
"Your duty," said Christie Bayle, and with throbbing brain he turned and left the house.
VOLUME TWO, CHAPTER SEVEN.
CHRISTIE BAYLE CHANGES HIS MIND.