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She was so astonished she could not speak. She looked at him with fear in her eyes.
"Dartmoor?" she whispered. "I did not know there were mines on Dartmoor."
"Oh, yes, there are--copper mines. I was fool enough to believe there was money in them, but I was mistaken; there is copper there, no doubt, but I did not find it," he said.
She felt as though a snake fascinated her, that she must ask questions about it.
"I have been to Torquay, but I did not go to Dartmoor," she said.
"You ought to have done so; it is a wonderful place. I was there a long time. When were you in Torquay?"
She told him.
"Strange," he said; "I was there at that time."
She felt a curious dread, not of him, but of something unknown.
"I went to the races--a friend of mine was riding there. He won four events. Lucky, was it not?"
"Yes," she said faintly. "Who was he?"
"Picton Woodridge. His yacht the _Sea-mew_ was in the bay. I was on it."
"You!" she exclaimed, and he saw the fear in her eyes.
"Yes, why not? Is there anything strange about it?" he asked, smiling.
"He lives at Haverton. He is rich, but he is not quite happy."
"Why not, if he has everything he wants?"
"He has not everything he wants; no one has, as a matter of fact. It would not be good for us. You have not all you want."
"No, I have not; but I get along very well."
"What is missing out of your life?" he asked.
"I can hardly tell you."
"My friend's life is overcast by a great calamity that befell his family some years ago."
"What was it?" she asked, and a slight s.h.i.+ver pa.s.sed through her.
"His brother was accused of murder, of shooting the husband of the woman he had fallen in love with. He was condemned and reprieved; he is at Dartmoor now. That is enough to make his brother's life unhappy; it killed the Admiral, their father."
"How shocking!" she said.
"I never thought of it before, but, strange to say, the man's name was Elroy. It is your name," he said.
She laughed uneasily; she could not tell him now.
"I hope you do not connect me with the lady in question?"
"No, of course not. How absurd! But still it is strange--the name is uncommon," he said.
"I suppose you never saw his brother at the prison?"
"I did--I wish I had not."
"Did he look very ill, broken down?"
"He was a terrible wreck. He suffered awful agony, of mind more than body. I never saw such a change in a man in my life. When I knew Hector Woodridge he was a fine, well set up, handsome man, in the army, a soldier's career before him. The breakdown was complete; it made me suffer to look at him. I never went again and I do not think he wanted it. If ever a man was living in h.e.l.l upon earth he was; the wonder is it did not kill him."
"How terrible!" she said.
"I wonder if the woman suffers? He did it on her account. I do not believe he is guilty--I am certain he is not. His brother believes in his innocence, so does Captain Bruce, and all his friends. I believe it is the knowledge that he is innocent sustains him in his awful life; he told me he hoped one day to prove his innocence, but that his lips were sealed, he could not speak. I told him that was foolish, that it was due to himself to speak, but he shook his head and said, 'Impossible!'"
"Is it a very terrible place at Dartmoor?"
"I suppose it is like all such prisons; but think what it must be for an innocent man to be caged there with a lot of desperate criminals, the sc.u.m of the earth. What must it be for such a man as Hector Woodridge, cultured, refined, an army man, well-bred--and on the top of it all the knowledge that the disgrace killed his father. It would drive me mad."
"And me too," she said. "You say he is there still?"
"Yes; there is no chance of his escaping. I wish he could."
"A prisoner escaped when I was at Torquay. I saw it in the local paper," she said.
"So did I; the fellow had a terrible fight with a bloodhound and strangled it. A desperate man has desperate strength," he said.
"I met an old boatman named Brack there; he told me the man must be dead."
"No doubt; fell down a disused mine, or drowned himself, poor devil. I don't wonder at it," he said.
"I wonder how the woman feels about it?" she said in a low voice. "She must suffer, her conscience must trouble her, in a way her life must be as hard to bear as his."
"That depends on the woman," he said. "I believe she can prove his innocence; something tells me she can; his brother believes it too. If this be so, she ought to speak and save him, no matter at what cost to herself."
"Do you think she will?"
"No; or she would have spoken before. She must be callous, hard-hearted, dead to all sense of human feeling. Such a woman would make me shudder to come in contact with her," he said.
She smiled as she thought: "He little knows I am that woman. I must wait. If he loves me later on I can tell him."
"Perhaps the woman cannot prove his innocence. She may believe him guilty."
"Impossible. There were only three persons present: the husband, the wife, and Hector Woodridge."
"It seems very strange that if he is innocent she has not declared the truth."