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"Yes; you had no business here," cried Mrs Barclay.
"And mixing with such low people," cried Lady Drelincourt.
"Low people? Better be low than not honest."
"Oh! oh!--Denville, are you going to allow this insult to my face--from such a woman as that?" cried Lady Drelincourt.
"Hush, ladies! Pray--pray!" cried Denville.
"Hold your tongue and come away, old lady," said Barclay, in a croaking whisper.
"I won't, Jo-si-ah; not till she pays me my four guineas, I declare,"
cried Mrs Barclay aloud. "She's been doing nothing but cheat and rook ever since I sat down to play."
"Sir Matthew Bray, my carriage."
"And gone on shameful, and pretending it was all mistakes. I declare it's abominable."
"Ladies--ladies!"
"Will you be quiet, old girl? Hold your tongue."
"I will not, Josiah," cried Mrs Barclay, who, like many good-tempered, amiable women, took a great deal to make her angry, but when she was really excited, was not to be suppressed. "What I say is--"
"Oh--oh--oh--oh!"
A series of wild, hysterical cries from a couch in the front room, and Claire ran gladly from the painful scene to where her sister was in a violent hysterical fit, which, with the exit of Lady Drelincourt on Sir Matthew Bray's arm, after a withering glance round, quite stopped Mrs Barclay's vituperative attack.
"Think of that now," cried the latter lady. "Me again. I ought not to come out."
"That you oughtn't," growled Barclay. "Next thing will be you've lost that bracelet."
"Nonsense, Josiah. Let me help you, Claire dear. I am so sorry, but that wretched cheating old woman was either kicking me under the table in mistake for that Sir Matthew Bray, or else cheating. I am so--so sorry. It's 'sterricks, that's what it is."
"Yes, that's what it is," said Mrs Dean; "and if I might say a word, I should tell Mr Denville that he couldn't do better than behave like Lady Macbeth."
"Oh, mother!" whispered Cora impatiently.
"Now what's the good of you 'oh mothering' me, my dear? What could be better than for Mr Denville to say to his guests, 'Don't be on the order of your going, but go at once'?"
"Miss Dean," said Sir Harry, "your mamma speaks the words of wisdom. It is the wisest thing. Come, gentlemen, we can be of no service here. By Jove, she does it to perfection."
Mrs Dean's words broke up the party, and the visitors had nearly all gone, when, in answer to cold bathing and smelling-salts, Mrs Burnett began to recover; and just then Frank Burnett, who had been, no one but Isaac knew where, came up to make a fresh scene as he threw himself upon his knees beside the couch, imploring in maudlin tones his darling May to speak and tell him what it was.
"Oh, my head, my head!" sobbed the stricken wife. "My head, my head!"
"You'd better let her be, Mr Burnett, sir," said Mrs Barclay. "It's my belief that quiet's the thing."
"Yes, and we'll go," said Mrs Dean. "Good-night, Miss Denville.
Good-night, Mr Denville, and thank you so much. Come, Cora, love."
Cora Dean glanced at Richard Linnell and Mellersh as she advanced to say good-night; for they were going to the same house, and it was possible, as the distance was short, that they would see them home.
"Good-night, Mr Denville," she said.
"We will say good-night too," said Mellersh, "unless we can be of any use."
"Oh, no," said their host. "She will soon be better--a mere trifle."
"Yes, please let me be," said Mrs Burnett. "I shall soon be better now."
"Good-night," said Cora, holding out her hand to the woman she told herself she hated with all her heart.
But it was in a spirit of triumph, for Richard Linnell was going to walk home with her.
"Good-night," said Claire, smiling in her face with a calm ingenuous look. "I am glad we have met."
How it came about they neither of them knew, but it was Claire's seeking; she was suffering so from that heart hunger--that painful searching for the love and sympathy of some woman of her age, while Cora Dean's handsome face was so near to her, and she kissed her as one sister might another.
"Well, I never," muttered Mrs Dean as she went down the stairs. "Think of that, and you as don't like her."
The next minute Cora Dean and her mother were walking along the Parade with Linnell and Mellersh on either side, chatting about the evening.
"One cigar, d.i.c.k, before we go to bed," said Mellersh, when they had been sitting together in his room for some time, after parting from their upstairs neighbours.
"I'm willing," said Linnell, "for I feel as if I could not sleep."
They lit their cigars, let themselves out, strolled down to the edge of the water, walked along by it in front of the Parade, and went upon the cliff again, to go back silently along the path till they neared the house where they had pa.s.sed the evening, walking very slowly, and ending by stopping to lean over the cliff rails and gaze out to sea.
How long this had lasted they did not know, but all at once, as Mellersh turned, he gripped Richard Linnell by the arm and pointed.
Linnell saw it at the same moment: the figure of a man climbing over a balcony; and as they watched they could just see the gleam of one of the windows as it was evidently opened and he pa.s.sed in.
"d.i.c.k!" whispered Mellersh; "what does that mean?"
"The same as the night that poor old woman was slain. Quick! Come on!"
"Stop!" said Mellersh. "Here's another!"
Volume Two, Chapter XV.
MRS BURNETT'S SEIZURE.
"I think we had better go too," said Mrs Barclay at last. "But are you quite sure we can do no good?"
"No: indeed no, Mrs Barclay; and I am so much obliged to you for staying," replied Claire.
"It was the least I could do, my dear, after making all that miserable rumpus about a few paltry guineas. Your papa will never forgive me."