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"Why do you object to the police being called in?"
"It was Lord Level who objected. When he recovered from his faintness, and heard them speaking of the police, he called Mr. Drewitt to him--who is master of the house under Lord Level--and charged him that nothing of the kind should be done. I would rather they were here," she added after a pause. "I should feel safer. This morning I went to my husband and told him if he would not have in the police, the house searched, and the facts investigated, I should die with terror. He replied, jestingly, then if I chose to be so foolish, I must die: the hurt was his, not mine, and if he saw no occasion for having in the police, and did not choose to have them in, surely I need not want them. I was perfectly safe, and so was he, he continued, and he would see that I was kept so. He would not even have the doctor called in at first; but towards midday, when the fever returned and he became delirious, Mr. Drewitt sent for him."
"That seems more strange than all--refusing to have a doctor. He----"
The arrival of coffee interrupted them. Sanders brought it in in a silver coffeepot on a silver tray, with biscuits and other light refreshments; and Mrs. Edwards attended to pour it out. Mr.
Ravensworth repeated to her what he had just said about the doctor.
"The fact is, sir, my lord does not like Dr. Macferraty," she rejoined. "None of us in this house do like him; we cannot endure him.
He has not long been in practice, and we look upon him as an upstart.
It is a great misfortune that Mr. Hill is away just now."
"The usual attendant, I presume, Mrs. Edwards?"
"Yes, sir; and a friend besides. He and the late lord seemed almost like brothers, so intimate were they. Mr. Hill's mother is going on for ninety; she is beginning to break, and he has gone over to see her. She lives in the Isle of Man. It is almost a month since he went away."
"The late lord? Let me see. He was the present lord's uncle, was he not?"
"Why, no, sir; he was his father," returned Mrs. Edwards, surprised at the mistake. "The late peer, Archibald Lord Level, had two sons, Mr.
Francis the heir, and Mr. Archibald. Mr. Francis died of consumption, and lies buried in the family vault in Marshdale Church; and Mr.
Archibald, the only son left, succeeded to his father."
"Yes, yes, I had forgotten," said Mr. Ravensworth. "An idea was floating in my mind that the present peer had not been always the heir-apparent."
CHAPTER XII.
MYSTERY.
Silence had fallen upon the room. Coffee had been taken, and the tray carried away by Mrs. Edwards. It was yet only eight o'clock. Mr.
Ravensworth sat in mental perplexity, believing he had not come to the bottom of this dreadful affair; no, nor half-way to it.
But Lady Level was in still greater perplexity, her mind buried in miserable reverie. A conviction that she was being frightfully wronged in some way, and that she would not bear it, lay uppermost with her.
Since meeting with the railway boy, Sam Doughty, the previous afternoon, and hearing the curious information he had disclosed, her temper had been gradually rising. It was temper that had caused her to declare herself to Lord Level while the servants (as related in a former chapter) were at supper in the kitchen, and Mrs. Edwards and the old steward were shut up in their sitting-room, waiting for their own supper to be served. The coast thus clear, in went Blanche to her lord's chamber. Not to open out the budget of her wrongs--he might not be sufficiently well for that--but to announce herself. To let him see that she was still in the house, that she had disregarded his injunction to quit it; and to a.s.sure him, in her rebellious spirit, that she meant to remain in it as long as she pleased. Not a word of suspected and unorthodox matters did Lady Level breathe, and the quarrel that arose between them was wholly on the score of her disobedience. Lord Level was pa.s.sionately angry, thus to have been set at naught. He told her that as his wife she owed him obedience, and must give it to him. She retorted that she would not do so. The dispute went no further than that; but loud and angry words pa.s.sed on both sides. And the next episode in the drama, some three or four hours later, was the mysterious attack upon Lord Level.
"Arnold," suddenly spoke her ladys.h.i.+p, looking up from her chair, "I mean to take a very decisive step."
"In what way?" he quietly asked, from his seat on the other side of the fireplace. "To send for the police?"
"No, no, no; not that. I shall separate from Lord Level."
"Oh," said Mr. Ravensworth, taken by surprise, and thinking she was jesting.
"As soon as he is well again, and able to discuss matters, I shall demand a separation. I shall _insist_ upon it. If he will not accord it to me privately, I shall apply for it publicly."
"Blanche, you will do no such thing!" he exclaimed, rising in excitement. "You do not know what you are saying."
"And you do not know how much cause I have for saying it," she answered. "Lord Level has--has--insulted me."
"Hush," said Mr. Ravensworth. "I don't quite know what you mean by insult----"
"And I cannot tell you," she interrupted, her pretty black satin slipper beating its indignation on the hearthrug, her cheeks wearing a delicate rose-flush. "It is a thing I can speak of only to himself."
"But--I was going to say--Lord Level does not, I feel sure, intrude personal insult upon you. Anything that may take place outside your knowledge you had better neither notice nor inquire into."
Lady Level shook her head defiantly. "I mean to do it."
"I will not hear another word upon this point," said Mr. Ravensworth sternly. "You are as yet not much more than a child, young lady; when you are a little older and wiser, you will see how foolish such ideas are. For your own sake, Blanche, put them away from you."
"I wish my dear brother Tom were here!" she petulantly returned. "It was a shame his regiment should be sent out to India!"
Mr. Ravensworth drew in his stern lips. He had suspected that of the dreadful fate of Tom Heriot she must still be ignorant. The suspicion was now confirmed.
At that moment the steward, Mr. Drewitt, appeared; and Lady Level introduced him by name. Mr. Ravensworth saw a pale, venerable man of sixty years, still strong and upright, looking like a gentleman of the old, old school, in his plum-coloured suit and white silk stockings, his silver knee-buckles, his low shoes, and his voluminous cambric s.h.i.+rt-frill. He brought a message from his lord, who wished to see Mr.
Ravensworth.
"Who told his lords.h.i.+p that Mr. Ravensworth was here?" exclaimed Lady Level quickly.
"Madam, it was I. My lord heard someone being shown in to your ladys.h.i.+p, and inquired who had come. I am sorry he has asked for you, sir," candidly added the steward, as they left the room together.
"The fever has abated, but the least excitement will bring it on again."
Lady Level was sorry also. She did not care that Mr. Ravensworth's presence in the house should be known upstairs. The fact was that one day when she and her husband were on their homeward journey from Savoy, and Blanche was indulging in odds and ends of grievances against her lord, as in her ill-feeling towards him she was then taking to do, she had spoken a few words in sheer perverseness of spirit to make him jealous of Arnold Ravensworth. Lord Level said nothing, but he took the words to heart. He had not liked that gentleman before; he hated him now. Blanche blushed for herself as she recalled it.
Of course, it was not the visitor likely to give most pleasure to Lord Level. As the steward introduced Mr. Ravensworth and left them together, Lord Level regarded him with a cold, stern glance.
"So it is you!" he exclaimed. "May I ask what brings you down here?
Did my lady send for you?"
"No," answered Mr. Ravensworth, advancing towards the bed. "Major Carlen called at my house this morning and requested me to come down.
I could not reach Marshdale before to-night."
"Major Carlen? Oh! very good. Major Carlen dare not interfere between me and my wife; and he knows that."
"So far as I believe, Major Carlen has no intention or wish to interfere. Lady Level sent to him in her alarm, and he requested me to come down in his place."
"If Major Carlen has entered into an arrangement with you to come to my house and pry into matters that concern myself alone----"
"I beg your lords.h.i.+p's pardon," was the curt interruption. "I do not like or respect Major Carlen sufficiently well to enter into any 'arrangement' with him. I came down here, certainly in compliance with his desire, but in a spirit of kindness towards Lady Level, and to be of a.s.sistance to yourself if it were possible."
"How came you to bring Lady Level over from Germany?"
"She wished to come over."
"And I wished and desired her to stay there until I could join her. Do you call _that_ interference?"
"It was nothing of the kind. On the morning of our departure from the inn, Lady Level told my wife and myself that she should take the opportunity to travel with us. She and her servants were even then dressed for the journey, and her travelling-carriage stood ready packed in the yard. If she did this against your wish, I am in no way responsible for it. It was not my place to dictate to her; to say she should go, or should remain. Be a.s.sured, my lord, I am the last man in the world unduly to interfere with other people; and my coming down now was entirely brought about by Major Carlen."