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Let him think you have returned to London."
"Is his mind quite right again?"
"By no means. But he has lucid intervals. I a.s.sure your ladys.h.i.+p it is of the very utmost importance that he should be kept tranquil.
Otherwise, I will not answer for the consequences."
Lady Level took the advice in all humility. Bitterly though she was feeling upon some scores towards her husband, she did not want him to die; no, nor to have brain-fever. So she kept the door closed between her room and his, and was as quiet as a mouse at all times. And the days began to pa.s.s on.
Blanche found them monotonous. She explored the house, but the number of pa.s.sages, short and long, their angles and their turnings, confused her. She made the acquaintance of the steward, Mr. Drewitt, an elderly gentleman who went about in a plum-coloured suit and a large cambric frill to his s.h.i.+rt. One autumn morning when Blanche had traversed the long corridor, beyond the rooms which she and Lord Level occupied, she turned into another at right angles with it, and came to a door that was partly open. Pa.s.sing through it, she found herself in a narrow pa.s.sage that she had not before seen. Deborah, the good-natured housemaid, suddenly came out of one of the rooms opening from it, carrying a brush and dustpan. Deborah was the only servant kept in the house, so far as Lady Level saw, apart from the cook, who was fat and experienced.
"What a curious old house!" exclaimed Lady Level. "Nothing but dark pa.s.sages that turn and wind about until you don't know where you are."
"It is that, my lady," answered Deborah. "In the late lord's time the servants took to calling it the maze, it puzzled them so. The name got abroad, and some people call it the maze to this day."
"I don't think I have been in this pa.s.sage before. Does anyone live or sleep here?" added Lady Level, looking at the household articles Deborah carried.
It was a dark, narrow pa.s.sage, closed in by a door at each end. The door at the upper end was of oak; heavy, and studded with nails. Four rooms opened from the pa.s.sage, two on each side.
"All these rooms are occupied by the master and missis," said Deborah, alluding to the steward and his sister. "This is Mrs. Edwards's chamber, my lady," pointing to the one she had just quitted. "That beyond it is Mr. Drewitt's; the opposite room is their sitting-room, and the one beside it is not used."
"Where does that heavy door lead to?" continued Lady Level.
"It leads into the East Wing, my lady," replied Deborah. "I have never entered that wing all the two years I've lived here," continued the gossiping girl. "I am not allowed to do so. The door is kept locked; as well as the door answering to it in the pa.s.sage below."
"Does no one ever go into it?"
"Why, yes, my lady; Mr. Drewitt does, and spends a good part of his time there. He has a business-room there, in which he keeps his books and papers relating to the estate. Mrs. Edwards is in there, too, with him most days. And my lord goes in when he is down here."
"Then no one really inhabits that wing?"
"Oh yes, my lady, John Snow and his wife live in it; he's the head gardener. A many years he has been in the family; and one of the last things the late lord did before he died was to give him that wing to live in. An easy life Snow has of it now; working or not, just as he pleases. When there's any unusual work to be done, our gardener on this side is had in to help with it."
Lady Level did not feel much interested in the wing, or in Snow the gardener. But it happened that not half an hour after this conversation, she chanced to see Mrs. Snow.
Leaning, in her listlessness, out of an open window that was just above the side entrance, to which she had been conducted by the boy on her way from the station, she was noticing how high the wall was that separated the garden of the house from the garden of the East Wing.
Lofty trees, closely planted, also flanked the wall, so that not the slightest glimpse could be had on either side of the other garden. The East Wing, with its grounds, was as completely hidden from view as though it had no existence. While rather wondering at this--for the East Wing was, after all, a part of the house, and not detached from it--Lady Level saw a woman emerge from a little sheltered doorway in the wall, lock it after her, and come up the path, key in hand. This obscure doorway, and another at the foot of the East Wing garden opening to the road, were apparently the only means of entrance to it.
To the latter door, always kept locked, was attached a large bell, which awoke the surrounding echoes whenever tradespeople or other applicants rang at it.
"Is that you, Hannah Snow?" cried the cook, stepping forward to meet the other as she came up the path. "And how are you to-day? Do you want anything?"
Catching the name, Lady Level looked out more closely. She saw a tall, strong, respectable woman of middle age, with a smiling, happy face, and laughing hazel eyes. She wore a neat white cap, a clean cotton gown and gray-checked ap.r.o.n.
"Yes, cook," was the answer, given in a merry voice. "I want you to give me a handful of candied peel. I am preparing a batch of cakes for my old man, never supposing I had not all the ingredients at hand, and I find I have no peel. I'm sure I had some; and I tell John he must have stolen it."
"What a shame!" cried the cook, taking the words more literally than they were intended. Mrs. Snow laughed.
"Fact is, I suppose I used the last of it in the bread-and-b.u.t.ter pudding I made last week," said she.
"You are always making cakes for that man o' yours, seems to me, Hannah," grumbled the cook. "We can smell them over here when they're baking, and that's pretty often."
"Seems I am: he's always asking for them," a.s.sented Hannah. "He likes to eat one now and then between meals, you see.
"Well, he's a rare one for his inside," retorted the cook, as she went in for the candied peel.
"They seem to do very much as they like here," was the only thought that crossed Lady Level.
On this same day Lord Level, who had grown so much better as to be out of danger, dismissed his doctor. Presenting him with a handsome cheque, he told him that he required no further attendance. Blanche received the news from Mrs. Edwards.
"But is he so well as that?" she asked, in surprise.
"Well, my lady, he is very much better, there's no doubt of that. He will be out of bed to-morrow or the next day, and, if he takes care, will have no relapse," was the housekeeper's answer. "No doubt it might be safer for the doctor to continue to come a little longer, if it were only to enjoin strict quiet; but you see my lord does not like him."
"I fancied he did not."
"He is not our own doctor, as perhaps your ladys.h.i.+p has heard,"
pursued Mrs. Edwards. "_He_ is a Mr. Hill: a clever, pleasant man, of a certain age, who was very intimate with the late lord. They were close friends, I may say. When his lords.h.i.+p met with this accident, it put him out uncommonly that we had to send for the young man, Dr.
Macferraty, Mr. Hill being away."
"If Lord Level is so well as to do without a doctor, I might go into his room. Don't you think so, Mrs. Edwards?"
"Better not for a day or two, my lady; better not, indeed. I'm afraid my lord will be angry at your having stayed here--there being no fitting establishment or accommodation for your ladys.h.i.+p; and----"
"That is such nonsense!" interrupted Lady Level. "With Sanders and Timms here, I am more attended to than is really necessary. And even if I had to put up with discomfort for a short time, I dare say I should survive it."
"And it might cause his lords.h.i.+p excitement, I was about to say,"
quickly continued Mrs. Edwards. "A very little thing would bring the fever back again."
Blanche sighed rebelliously, but recognised the obligation to condemn herself a little longer to this dreary existence.
CHAPTER XI.
THE QUARREL.
The following day was charmingly fine: the sun brilliant, the air warm as summer. In the afternoon Lady Level went out to take a walk. Lord Level was not up that day, but would be, all being well, on the morrow. It was the injury to the knee more than his general health that was keeping him in bed now.
Outside the gate Blanche looked about her, and decided to take the way towards the railway station. Upper Marshdale lay close beyond it, and she thought she would see what the little town was like. If she felt tired after exploring it, she could engage the solitary railway fly to bring her home again.
She went along the deserted road, pa.s.sing a peasant's cottage now and then. Very near to the station she met the surly boy. He was coming along with a leap and a whistle, and stopped dead at sight of Lady Level.
"I say," said he, in a low tone, all his glee and his impudence gone out of him, "be you going _there_?"
"Yes," answered Lady Level, half smiling, for the boy amused her. He had pointed to indicate the station, but so awkwardly that she thought he pointed to the roofs and chimneys beyond it. "Yes, I am. Why?"
His face fell. "Not to tell of _me_?" he gasped.