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"Not regret her," he repeated with emphasis. "Why, Nancy, I regret her every hour of the day. But I do not make a parade of my regrets. Why should I?--to what end? Come, come, my dear; you will be all the better for eating your dinner."
He went on with his own as he spoke. Nancy took up her knife and fork with a hopeless sigh.
Dinner over, Captain Fennel went to his cupboard and brought in some of the chartreuse. Two gla.s.ses, this time, instead of three. He might regret Lavinia, as he said, every hour of the day; possibly he did so; but it did not seem to affect his appet.i.te, or his relish for good things.
Most events have their dark and their light sides. It could hardly escape the mind of Edwin Fennel that by the death of Lavinia the whole income became Nancy's. To him that must have been a satisfactory consolation.
In the afternoon he went with Nancy for a walk on the pier. She did not want to go; said she had no spirits for it; it was miserable at home; miserable out; miserable everywhere. Captain Fennel took her off, as he might have taken a child, telling her she should come and see the fis.h.i.+ng-boats. After tea they went to church--an unusual thing for Captain Fennel. Lavinia and Nancy formerly went to evening service; he, never.
That night something curious occurred. Nancy went up to bed leaving the captain to follow, after finis.h.i.+ng his gla.s.s of grog. He generally took one the last thing. Nancy had taken off her gown, and was standing before the gla.s.s about to undo her hair, when she heard him leave the parlour. Her bedroom-door, almost close to the head of the stairs, was not closed, and her ears were on the alert. Since Lavinia died, Nancy had felt timid in the house when alone, and she was listening for her husband to come up. She heard him lock up the spirit bottle in the little cupboard below, and begin to ascend the stairs, and she opened her door wider, that the light might guide him, for the staircase was in darkness.
Captain Fennel had nearly gained the top, when something--he never knew what--induced him to look round sharply, as though he fancied some one was close behind him. In fact, he did fancy it. In a moment, he gave a shout, dashed onwards into the bedroom, shut the door with a bang, and bolted it. Nancy, in great astonishment, turned to look at him. He seemed to have shrunk within himself in a fit of trembling, his face was ghastly, and the perspiration stood upon his brow.
"Edwin!" she exclaimed in a scared whisper, "what is the matter?"
Captain Fennel did not answer at first. He was getting up his breath.
"Has Flore not gone?" he then said.
"_Flore!_" exclaimed Nancy in surprise. "Why, Edwin, you know Flore goes away on Sundays in the middle of the afternoon! She left before we went on the pier. Why do you ask?"
"I--I thought--some person--followed me upstairs," he replied, in uneasy pauses.
"Oh, my goodness!" cried timid Nancy. "Perhaps a thief has got into the house!"
She went to the door, and was about to draw it an inch open, intending to peep out gingerly and listen, when her husband pulled her back with a motion of terror, and put his back against it. This meant, she thought, that he _knew_ a thief was there. Perhaps two of them!
"Is there more than one?" she whispered. "Lavinia's silver--my silver, now--is in the basket on the console in the salon."
He did not answer. He appeared to be listening. Nancy listened also. The house seemed still as death.
"Perhaps I was mistaken," said Captain Fennel, beginning to recover himself after a bit. "I dare say I was."
"Well, I think you must have been, Edwin; I can't hear anything. We had better open the door."
She undid the bolt as she spoke, and he moved away from it. Nancy cautiously took a step outside, and kept still. Not a sound met her ear.
Then she brought forth the candle and looked down the staircase. Not a sign of anything or any one met her eye.
"Edwin, there's nothing, there's n.o.body; come and see. You must have fancied it."
"No doubt," answered Captain Fennel. But he did not go to see, for all that.
Nancy went back to the room. "Won't you just look downstairs?" she said.
"I--I don't much mind going with you."
"Not any necessity," replied he, and began to undress--and slipped the bolt again.
"Why do you bolt the door to-night?" asked Nancy.
"To keep the thief out," said he, in grim tones, which Nancy took for jesting. But she could not at all understand him.
His restlessness kept her awake. "It _must_ have been all fancy," she more than once heard him mutter to himself.
When he rose in the morning, his restlessness seemed still to hang upon him. Remarking to Nancy, who was only half-awake, that his nerves were out of order, and he should be all the better for a sea-bath, he dressed and left the room. Nancy got down at the usual hour, half-past eight; and was told by Flore that monsieur had left word madame was not to wait breakfast for him: he was gone to have a dip in the sea, and should probably take a long country walk after it.
Flore was making the coffee at the kitchen stove; her mistress stood by, as if wanting to watch the process. These last few days, since Lavinia had been carried from the house, Nancy had felt easier in Flore's company than when alone with her own.
"That's to steady his nerves; they are out of order," replied Nancy, who had as much idea of reticence as a child. "Monsieur had a great fright last night, Flore."
"Truly!" said Flore, much occupied just then with her coffee-pot.
"He was coming up to bed between ten and eleven; I had gone on. When nearly at the top of the stairs he thought he heard some one behind him. It startled him frightfully. Not being prepared for it, supposing that the house was empty, you see, Flore, of course it would startle him."
"Naturally, madame."
"He cried out, and dashed into the bedroom and bolted the door. I never saw any one in such a state of terror, Flore; he was trembling all over; his face was whiter than your ap.r.o.n."
"Vraiment!" returned Flore, turning to look at her mistress in a little surprise. "But, madame, what had terrified him? What was it that he had seen?"
"Why, he could have seen nothing," corrected Mrs. Fennel. "There was nothing to see."
"Madame has reason; there could have been nothing, the house being empty. But then, what could have frightened him?" repeated Flore.
"Why, he must have fancied it, I suppose. Any way, he fancied some one was there. The first question he asked me was, whether you were in the house."
"Moi! Monsieur might have known I should not be in the house at that hour, madame. And why should he show terror if he thought it was me?"
Mrs. Fennel shrugged her shoulders. "It was a moment's scare; just that, I conclude; and it upset his nerves. A sea-bath will put him all right again."
Flore carried the coffee into the salon, and her mistress sat down to breakfast.
Now it chanced that this same week a guest came to stay with Madame Carimon. Stella Featherston, from b.u.t.termead, was about to make a sojourn in Paris, and she took Sainteville on her route that she might stay a few days with her cousin, Mary Carimon, whom she had not seen for several years.
Lavinia and Ann Preen had once been very intimate with Miss Featherston, who reached Madame Carimon's on the Thursday. On the Friday morning Mrs.
Fennel called to see her--and, in Nancy's impromptu way, she invited her and Mary Carimon to take tea at seven o'clock that same evening at the Pet.i.te Maison Rouge.
Nancy went home delighted. It was a little divertiss.e.m.e.nt to her present saddened life. Captain Fennel knitted his brow when he heard of the arrangement, but made no objection in words. His wife shrank at the frown.
"Don't you like my having invited Miss Featherston to tea, Edwin?"
"Oh! I've no objection to it," he carelessly replied. "I am not in love with either Carimon or his wife, and don't care how little I see of them."
"He cannot come, having a private cla.s.s on to-night. And I could not invite Miss Featherston without Mary Carimon," pleaded Nancy.
"Just so. I am not objecting."
With this somewhat ungracious a.s.sent, Nancy had to content herself.
She ordered a gateau Suisse, the nicest sort of gateau to be had at Sainteville; and told Flore that she must for once remain for the evening.