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"I have just heard from Sibylla--from Milldean. She encloses a letter for you, which she says I am to send on to you _to-morrow_.
She insists that I am not to send it before; and if I won't do as she asks, I am to burn it. You are _not_ to have it to-day. I cannot disobey her in this; but she says nothing about my telling you she has sent a letter; the only thing is that I must not deliver it to you till to-morrow. I had no idea you had let her go down to Milldean alone. How could you let her do this? There is one other thing I must say to you. Walter Blake was to have dined here to-night. This morning he wired excuses, saying he was going for a cruise in his yacht. You must consider what that means. I beg you not to wait for the letter, but to go to Milldean _this afternoon_.
Say nothing of having heard from me. Just go as if it was by accident; say you got your work done sooner than you expected, or anything you like; but go. I believe you'll be sorry all your life if you don't go. Let nothing stop you, for your own sake, and still more for _hers_.--C.F."
That was the letter; the sentence he had turned back to re-read was the one in which Walter Blake's movements were mentioned.
Grantley looked across to Jeremy.
"Have you heard from Sibylla since she went to Milldean?" he asked.
"Not a line. But she doesn't write much to me."
Again Grantley looked at the paper. Then he laid it down and took up his pen.
"Now for the deed," he said, and drew it to him.
He signed. Thompson fulfilled the formality for which he was required, and then left them alone. Jeremy did not break out into new thanks. That unexplained something in Grantley's face forbade him.
"I can only say that I'll try to justify your extraordinary kindness,"
he said soberly.
Grantley nodded absently, as he rose and put Christine's letter into the fire. It was better there--and there was no danger that he would forget the contents.
"I say, there's no bad news, is there?" Jeremy could not help asking.
"No news at all, good or bad," answered Grantley, as he held out his hand. "Good-bye and good luck, Jeremy."
Jeremy took his hand and gripped it hard, emotion finding a vent that way. Grantley returned the pressure more moderately.
"Remember, under no circ.u.mstances, a word about it to Sibylla!" he said.
"I give you my honour."
"Good."
He released Jeremy's hand and turned away. He had much self-control, but he could not be sure of what was showing on his face.
Jeremy had his great good-fortune, but his joy was dashed. Grantley looked like a man whom heavy calamity finds unprepared.
"All the finer of him to sign the deed then and there," Jeremy muttered as he left the house. "Whatever has happened, he didn't forget his word to me."
But it had not been of Jeremy or of his word that Grantley had been thinking when he signed. His signature was a defiance of his wife and of his fate.
CHAPTER XV
IN THE TEETH OF THE STORM
An instinct of furtiveness, newly awakened by the suggestion of Christine Fanshaw's letter, had led Grantley Imason to send no word of his coming. He hired a fly at the station, and drove over the downs to Milldean. It was a wild evening. A gale had been blowing from the south-west all day, and seemed to be increasing in violence. A thick rain was driven in sharp spats against the closed windows. The old horse toiled slowly along, while the impatient man chafed helplessly inside.
At last he stopped at Old Mill House and dismissed the carriage. Mrs.
Mumple's servant-girl came to the door, and said her mistress was up at his house, and was, she thought, to stay there all night. Grantley nodded, and began to trudge up the hill. He had no thought but to seek and find Sibylla. It was now between seven and eight, and dusk had fallen.
He saw a light in the dining-room windows. He walked into the hall and took off his hat. A servant saw him and ran to help him. Saying briefly that he would want some dinner, he went into the dining-room. Mrs.
Mumple sat there alone over a chop.
"You come home, Mr. Imason!" she exclaimed. "Sibylla didn't expect you, did she?"
"No, I didn't expect to come. I didn't think I could get away, and it wasn't worth wiring. Where is Sibylla?"
"How unlucky! She's gone away--to Fairhaven. She didn't expect you.
She's to sleep the night there."
He came to the table and poured himself out a gla.s.s of sherry. He was calm and quiet in his manner.
"To sleep at Fairhaven? Why, who's she going to stay with?"
"Mrs. Valentine. You know her? She lives by the church--a red house with creepers."
Mrs. Valentine was, as he knew, an old, but not an intimate, acquaintance. He shot a keen glance at Mrs. Mumple's simple broad face.
"I'm here to look after baby. But of course since you've come----"
"No, no, you stay here; and go on with your dinner. They'll bring something for me directly."
He pulled up a chair and sat down.
"To sleep at Mrs. Valentine's? Has she often done that before when I've been away?"
"She used to as a girl sometimes, Mr. Imason; but no, never lately, I think--not since she married."
There were no signs of disturbance or distress about Mrs. Mumple.
Grantley sat silent while the servant laid a place for him and promised some dinner in ten minutes.
"Has Sibylla been all right?"
"Oh, yes! A little fretful the last day or two, I think. But Mr. Blake came over from Fairhaven yesterday, and she had a nice walk with him; and she was with baby all the morning."
"All the morning? When did she go to Fairhaven?"
"I think it was about three o'clock. It's a terrible evening, Mr.
Imason."
"Very rough indeed."
"The wind rose quite suddenly this morning, and it's getting worse every minute."