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"Daniel Mortimer."
Valentine had opened the letter with a preconceived notion as to its contents, and this, together with excessive surprise, made him fail for the moment to perceive one main point that it might have told him.
When Brandon just as he finished reading came back, he found Valentine seated before the letter amazed and pale.
"What does it mean?" he exclaimed, when the two had looked searchingly at one another. "What on earth can it mean?"
"I have no idea," said Giles.
"But you have had it for years," continued Valentine, very much agitated. "Surely you have tried to find out what it means. Have you made no inquiries?"
"Yes. I have been to Melcombe. I could discover nothing at all. No," in answer to another look, "neither then, or at any other time."
"But you are older than I am, so much older, had you never any suspicion of anything at all? Did nothing ever occur before I was old enough to notice things which roused in you any suspicions?"
"Suspicions of what?"
"Of disgrace, I suppose. Of crime perhaps I mean; but I don't know what I mean. Do you think John knows of this?"
"No. I am sure he does not. But don't agitate yourself," he went on, observing that Valentine's hand trembled. "Remember, that whatever this secret was that your father kept buried in his breast, it has never been found out, that is evident, and therefore it is most unlikely now that it ever should be. In my opinion, and it is the only one I have fully formed about the matter, this crime or this disgrace--I quote your own words--must have taken place between sixty and seventy years ago, and your father expressly declares that he had nothing to do with it."
"But if the old woman had," began Valentine vehemently, and paused.
"How can that be?" answered Giles. "He says, 'I know not in her case what I could have done,' and that he has never judged her."
Valentine heaved up a mighty sigh, excitement made his pulses beat and his hands tremble.
"What made you think," he said, "that it was so long ago? I am so surprised that I cannot think coherently."
"To tell you why I think so, is to tell you something more that I believe you don't know."
"Well," said the poor fellow, sighing restlessly, "out with it, Giles."
"Your father began life by running away from home."
"Oh, I know that."
"You do?"
"Yes, my dear father told it to me some weeks before he died, but I did not like it, I wished to dismiss it from my thoughts."
"Indeed! but will you try to remember now, how he told it to you and what he said."
"It was very simple. Though now I come to think of it, with this new light thrown upon it--Yes; he did put it very oddly, very strangely, so that I did not like the affair, or to think of it. He said that as there was now some intercourse between us and Melcombe, a place that he had not gone near for so very many years, it was almost certain, that, sooner or later, I should hear something concerning himself that would surprise me. It was singular that I had not heard it already. I did not like to hear him talk in his usual pious way of such an occurrence; for though of course we know that all things _are_ overruled for good to those who love G.o.d----"
"Well?" said Brandon, when he paused to ponder.
"Well," repeated Valentine, "for all that, and though he referred to that very text, I did not like to hear him say that he blessed G.o.d he had been led to do it; and that, if ever I heard of it, I was to remember that he thought of it with grat.i.tude."
Saying this, he turned over the pages again. "But there is nothing of that here," he said, "how did you discover it?"
"I was told of it at Melcombe," said Brandon, hesitating.
"By whom?"
"It seemed to be familiarly known there." He glanced at the _Times_ which was laid on the table just beyond the desk at which Valentine sat.
"It was little Peter Melcombe," he said gravely, "who mentioned it to me."
"What! the poor little heir!" exclaimed Valentine, rather contemptuously. "I would not be in his shoes for a good deal! But Giles--but Giles--you have shown me the letter!"
He started up.
"Yes, there it is," said Giles, glancing again at the _Times_, for he perceived instantly that Valentine for the first time had remembered on what contingency he was to be told of this matter.
There it was indeed! The crisis of his fate in a few sorrowful words had come before him.
"At Corfu, on the 28th of February, to the inexpressible grief of his mother, Peter, only child of the late Peter Melcombe, Esq., and great-grandson and heir of the late Mrs. Melcombe, of Melcombe. In the twelfth year of his age."
"Good heavens!" exclaimed Valentine, in an awestruck whisper. "Then it has come to this, after all?"
He sat silent so long, that his brother had full time once more to consider this subject in all its bearings, to perceive that Valentine was trying to discover some reasonable cause for what his father had done, and then to see his countenance gradually clear and his now flashing eyes lose their troubled expression.
"I know you have respected my poor father's confidence," he said at last.
"Yes, I have."
"And you never heard anything from him by word of mouth that seemed afterwards to connect itself with this affair?"
"Yes, I did," Brandon answered, "he said to me just before my last voyage, that he had written an important letter, told me where it was, and desired me to observe that his faculties were quite unimpaired long after the writing of it."
"I do not think they could have been," Valentine put in, and he continued his questions. "You think that you have never, never heard him say anything, at any time which at all puzzled or startled you, and which you remembered after this?"
"No, I never did. He never surprised me, or excited any suspicion at any time about anything, till I had broken the seal of that letter."
"And after all," Valentine said, turning the pages, "how little there is in it, how little it tells me!"
"Hardly anything, but there is a great deal, there is everything in his having been impelled to write it."
"Well, poor man" (Giles was rather struck by this epithet), "if secrecy was his object, he has made that at least impossible. I must soon know all, whatever it is. And more than that, if I act as he wishes, in fact, as he commands, all the world will set itself to investigate the reason."
"Yes, I am afraid so," Brandon answered, "I have often thought of that."
Valentine went on. "I always knew, felt rather, that he must have had a tremendous quarrel with his elder brother. He never would mention him if he could help it, and showed an ill-disguised unforgiving sort of--almost dread, I was going to say, of him, as if he had been fearfully bullied by him in his boyhood and could not forget it; but,"
he continued, still pondering, "it surely is carrying both anger and superst.i.tion a little too far, to think that when he is in his grave it will do his son any harm to inherit the land of the brother he quarrelled with."
"Yes," said Giles, "when one considers how most of the land of this country was first acquired, how many crimes lie heavy on its various conquerors, and how many more have been perpetrated in its transmission from one possessor to another;" then he paused, and Valentine took up his words.
"It seems incredible that he should have thought an old quarrel (however bitter) between two boys ought, more than half a century afterwards, to deprive the son of one of them from taking his lawful inheritance."