A gleam of light.
Next day but one, the Companion of
St. Michael and St. George came in to Craighton with
evil tidings. He had heard in the village that
Sir Gilbert Gildersleeve was ill—very seriously
ill. The judge had come home from the Holkers’
the other evening much upset by the arrival of Gwendoline’s
telegram.
“Though why on earth should
that upset him,” Mr. Clifford continued, screwing
up his small face with a very wise air, “is more
than I can conceive; for I’m sure the Gildersleeves
angled hard enough in their time to catch young Kelmscott,
by hook or by crook, for their gawky daughter; and
now that young Kelmscott telegraphs over to say he’s
coming home post haste to marry her, Miss Gwendoline
faints away, if you please, as she reads the news,
and the judge himself goes upstairs as soon as he
gets home, and takes to his bed incontinently.
But there, the ways of the world are really inscrutable!
What reconciles me to life, every day I grow older,
is that it’s so amusing—so intensely
amusing! You never know what’s going to
turn up next; and what you least expect is what most
often happens.”
Elma, however, received his news with
a very grave face.
“Is he really ill, do you think,
papa?” she asked, somewhat anxiously; “or
is he only—well—only frightened?”
Mr. Clifford stared at her with a
blank leathery face of self-satisfied incomprehension.
“Frightened!” he repeated
solemnly; “Sir Gilbert Gildersleeve frightened!
And of Granville Kelmscott, too! That’s
true wit, Elma; the juxtaposition of the incongruous.
Why, what on earth has the man got to be frightened
of, I should like to know? ... No, no; he’s
really ill; very seriously ill. Humphreys says
the case is a most peculiar one, and he’s telegraphed
up to town for a specialist to come down this afternoon
and consult with him.”
And indeed, Sir Gilbert was really
very ill. This unexpected shock had wholly unmanned
him. To say the truth, the judge had begun to
look upon Guy Waring as practically lost, and upon
the matter of Montague Nevitt’s death as closed
for ever. Waring, no doubt, had gone to Africa—under
a false name—and proceeded to the diamond
fields direct, where he had probably been killed in
a lucky quarrel with some brother digger, or stuck
through with an assegai by some enterprising Zulu;
and nobody had even taken the trouble to mention it.
It’s so easy for a man to get
lost in the crowd in the Dark Continent! Why,
there was Granville Kelmscott, even—a young
fellow of means, and the heir of Tilgate, about whom
Gwendoline was always moaning and groaning, poor girl,
and wouldn’t be comforted—there was
Granville Kelmscott gone out to Africa, and, hi, presto,
disappeared into space without a vapour or a trace,
like a conjurer’s shilling. It was all
very queer; but, then, queer things are the way in
Africa.
To be sure, Sir Gilbert had his qualms
of conscience, too, over having thus sent off Guy
Waring, as he believed, to his grave in Cape Colony.
He was not at heart a bad man, though he was pushing,
and selfish, and self-seeking, and to a certain extent
even—of late—unscrupulous.
He had his bad half-hours every now and again with
his own moral consciousness. But he had learnt
to stifle his doubts and to keep down his terrors.
After all, he had told Guy no more than the truth;
and if Guy in his panic-terror chose to run away and
get killed in South Africa, that was no fault of his—he’d
only tried to warn the fellow of an impending danger.
All’s well that ends well; and, to-day, Guy
Waring was lost or dead, while he himself was a judge,
and a knight to boot, with all trace of his crime
destroyed for ever.
So he said to himself, rejoicing,
the very day Granville Kelmscott’s telegram
arrived. But now that he stood face to face again
with that pressing terror, his thoughts on the matter
were very different. Strange to say, his first
idea was this: what a disgraceful shame of that
fellow Waring to come to life again thus suddenly
on purpose to annoy him! He was really angry,
nay, more, indignant. Such shuffling was inexcusable.
If Waring meant to give himself up and stand his
trial like a man, why the dickens didn’t he do
it immediately after the—well, the accident?
What did he mean by going off for eighteen months
undiscovered, and leaving one to build up fresh plans
in life, like this—and then coming home
on a sudden just on purpose to upset them? It
was simply disgraceful. Sir Gilbert felt injured;
this man Waring was wronging him. Eighteen months
before he was keenly aware that he was unjustly casting
a vile and hideous suspicion on an innocent person.
But in the intervening period his moral sense had
got largely blunted. Familiarity with the hateful
plot had warped his ideas about it. Their places
were reversed. Sir Gilbert was really aggrieved
now that Guy Waring should turn up again, and should
venture to vindicate his deeply-wronged character.
The man was as good as dead.
Well, and he ought to have stopped so; or else he
ought never to have died at all. He ought to have
kept himself continually in evidence. But to
go away for eighteen months, unknown and unheard
of, till one’s sense of security had had time
to re-establish itself, and then to turn up again like
this without one minute’s warning—oh,
it was infamous, scandalous. The fellow must
be devoid of all consideration for others. Sir
Gilbert wiped his clammy brow with those ample hands.
What on earth was he to do for his wife, and for Gwendoline?
And Gwendoline was so happy, too,
over Granville Kelmscott’s return! How
could he endure that Granville Kelmscott’s return
should be the signal for discovering her father’s
sin and shame to her! If only he could have married
her off before it all came out! Or if only he
could die before the man was tried
Sir Gilbert’s eyes started from his head with
horror. What was that Elma Clifford suggested
the other night? Why—if the man was
arrested, he would be arrested at Plymouth, the moment
he landed, and would be tried for murder at the Western
Assizes. And it was he himself, Sir Gilbert Gildersleeve,
who was that term to take the Western Circuit.
He would be called upon to sit on
the bench himself, and try Guy Waring for the murder
he had himself committed!
No wonder that thought sent him ill
to bed at once. He lay and tossed all night
long in speechless agony and terror. It was an
appalling night. Next morning he was found delirious
with fever.
When the news reached Elma, she saw
its full and fatal significance. Cyril had stopped
on for three days at the Holkers’, and he came
over in the course of the morning to take a walk across
the fields with her. Elma was profoundly excited,
Cyril could hardly see why.
“This is a terrible thing,”
she said, “about Sir Gilbert’s illness.
What I’m afraid of now is that he may die before
your brother returns. The shock must have been
awful for him; mamma noticed it every bit as much
as I did; and so did Miss Ewes. They both said
at once, ‘This blow will kill him!’ And
they both knew why, Cyril, as well as I did.
It’s the Ewes’ intuition. We’ve
all of us got it, and we all of us say, at once and
unanimously—it was Sir Gilbert Gildersleeve.”
“But suppose he did die,”
Cyril asked, still sceptical, as he always was when
Elma got upon her instinctive consciousness; “what
difference would that make? If Guy’s innocent,
as I suppose in some way he must be, from the tone
of his telegram, he’ll be acquitted whether
Sir Gilbert’s alive or not. And if he’s
guilty—”
He broke off suddenly with an awful
pause; the other alternative was too terrible to contemplate.
“But he’s not guilty,”
Elma answered with confidence. “I know
it more surely now than ever. And the difficulty’s
this. Nobody knows the real truth, I feel certain,
except Sir Gilbert Gildersleeve. And if Sir Gilbert
dies unconfessed, the truth dies with him. And
then—” She paused a moment. “I’m
half afraid,” she went on with a doubtful sigh,
“your brother’s been too precipitate in
coming home to face it.”
“But, Elma,” Cyril cried,
“I can’t bear to say it—yet
one must face the facts—how on earth can
he be innocent, when I tell you again and again he
wrote to me himself saying he really did it?”
“You never showed me that letter,”
Elma answered, with a faint undercurrent of reproach
in her tone.
“How could I?” Cyril replied.
“Even to you, Elma, there are some things
a man can hardly bear to speak about.”
“I have more faith than you,
Cyril,” Elma answered. “I’ve
never given up believing in Guy all the time.
I believe in him still—because I know he’s
your brother.”
There was a short pause, during which
neither spoke. They walked along together, looking
at each other’s faces with half downcast eyes,
but with the not unpleasant sense of mute companionship
and sympathy in a great sorrow. At last Elma
spoke again.
“There was one thing in Guy’s
telegram,” she said, “I didn’t quite
understand. ‘Coming home immediately to
repay everything.’ What did he mean by
that? What has that got to do with Mr. Nevitt’s
disappearance?”
“Oh, that was quite another
matter,” Cyril answered, blushing deep with
shame, for he couldn’t bear to let Elma know
Guy was a forger as well as a murderer. “That
was something purely personal between us two.
He—he owed me money.”
Elma’s keen eyes read him through at a glance.
“But he said it all in one sentence,”
she objected, “as if the two went naturally
together. Coming home immediately to repay everything
and stand my trial. Cyril, Cyril, you’ve
held something back. I believe there’s
some fearful mistake here somewhere.”
“You think so?” Cyril
answered, feeling more and more uncomfortable.
“I’m sure of it,”
Elma replied, with a thrill, reading his thoughts
still deeper. “Oh, Cyril”—she
seized his arm with a convulsive grip—“for
Heaven’s sake, go and get it; let me see that
letter!”
“I have it here,” Cyril
answered, pulling it out with some shame from Montague
Nevitt’s pocket-book, which he wouldn’t
destroy, and dared not leave about for prying eyes
to light upon. “I’ve carried it day
and night, ever since, about with me.”
Elma seized it from his hands, and
sat down upon a stile, and read it through with profound
attention.
At the end she handed it back and
tears stood in her eyes. “Cyril,”
she said, half laughing hysterically and half crying
as she spoke, “you’ve been doing that
poor fellow a deep injustice. Oh, don’t
you see—don’t you see it? That
isn’t the letter of a man who has committed
a murder. It’s the letter of a man who has
unwittingly and unwillingly done you some personal
wrong, and is eager to repair it. My darling,
my darling, you’ve misread it altogether.
It isn’t about Montague Nevitt’s death
at all; it’s about nothing an earth but some
private money matter. More than that, when it
was written, Guy didn’t yet know Mr. Nevitt
was dead. He didn’t know he was suspected.
He didn’t know anything. I wonder you don’t
see! I wish to Heaven you’d shown me that
letter months ago! Sir Gilbert fastened suspicion
on the wrong man; and this letter has made you accept
it too easily. Guy went to Africa—that’s
as plain as words can put it—to make money
of his own to repay what he owed you. And it’s
this, the purely personal and unimportant charge, he’s
coming home to give himself up upon.”
A light seemed to burst on Cyril’s
mind as she spoke. For the very first time, he
felt a gleam of hope. Elma was right, after all,
he believed. Guy was wholly innocent of the greater
crime; and his heart-broken letter had only meant
to deal with the question of the forgery.
But Cyril had heard of the murder
first, and had had that most in his mind when the
letter reached him; so he interpreted it at once as
referring to the capital charge, and never dreamt for
a moment of its real narrower meaning.
That evening, when the messenger came
back from “kind inquiries” at Woodlands,
Elma asked, with hushed awe, how Sir Gilbert was going
on.
“Very poorly, miss,” the
servant answered. “The doctor says he’s
sunk dreadful low; and the butler thinks he has something
on his mind he can’t get out in his wanderings.
He’s in a terrible bad way. They wouldn’t
be astonished if he don’t live to morning.”
So Elma went to bed that night trembling
most for the result of Sir Gilbert’s illness.