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"Was anything ever _seen_ in the room, Miss Gay?"
"Nothing," she answered, "or heard either; nothing whatever. The room is as nice a room as could be wished for in all respects, light, large, cheerful, and airy; and yet n.o.body can get to sleep in it. I shall never understand it, sir."
I'm sure I never shall. It remains one of those curious experiences that cannot be solved in this world. But it is none the less true.
ROGER BEVERE.
I.
"There's trouble everywhere. It attaches itself more or less to all people as they journey through life. Yes, I quite agree with what you say, Squire: that I, a man at my ease in the world and possessing no close ties of my own, ought to be tolerably exempt from care. But I am not so. You have heard of the skeleton in the closet, Johnny Ludlow.
Few families are without one. I have mine."
Mr. Brandon nodded to me, as he spoke, over the silver coffee-pot. I had gone to the Tavistock Hotel from Miss Deveen's to breakfast with him and the Squire--who had come up for a week. You have heard of this visit of ours to London before, and there's no need to say more about it here.
The present skeleton in Mr. Brandon's family closet was his nephew, Roger Bevere. The young fellow, now aged twenty-three, had been for some years in London pursuing his medical studies, and giving perpetual trouble to his people in the country. During this present visit Mr.
Brandon had been unable to hear of him. Searching here, inquiring there, nothing came of it: Roger seemed to have vanished into air. This morning the post had brought Mr. Brandon a brief note:
"SIR,
"Roger Bevery is lying at No. 60, Gibraltar Terrace (Islington District), with a broken arm.
"Faithfully yours, "T. PITT."
The name was spelt Bevery in the note, you observe. Strangers, deceived by the p.r.o.nunciation, were apt to write it so.
"Well, this is nice news!" had been Mr. Brandon's comment upon the short note.
"Any way, you will be more at your ease now you have found him,"
remarked the Squire.
"I don't know that, Todhetley. I have found, it seems, the address of the place where he is lying, but I have not found _him_. Roger has been going to the bad this many a day; I expect by this time he must be nearing the journey's end."
"It is only a broken arm that he has, sir," I put in, thinking what a gloomy view he was taking of it all. "That is soon cured."
"Don't you speak so confidently, Johnny Ludlow," reproved Mr. Brandon.
"We shall find more the matter with Roger than a broken arm; take my word for that. He has been on the wrong tack this long while. A broken arm would not cause him to hide himself--and that's what he must have been doing."
"Some of those hospital students are a wild lot--as I have heard," said the Squire.
Mr. Brandon nodded in answer. "When Roger came from Hampshire to enter on his studies at St. Bartholomew's, he was as pure-hearted, well-intentioned a young fellow as had ever been trained by an anxious mother"--and Mr. Brandon poured a drop more weak tea out of his own tea-pot to cover his emotion. "Fit for heaven, one might have thought: any way, had been put in the road that leads to it. Loose, reckless companions got hold of him, and dragged him down to their evil ways."
Breakfast over, little time was lost in starting to find out Gibraltar Terrace. The cab soon took us to it. Roger had been lying there more than a week. Hastening up that way one evening, on leaving the hospital, to call upon a fellow-student, he was knocked down by a fleet hansom rounding the corner of Gibraltar Terrace. Pitt the doctor happened to be pa.s.sing at the time, and had him carried into the nearest house: one he had attended patients in before. The landlady, Mrs. Mapping, showed us upstairs.
(And she, poor faded woman, turned out to have been known to the Squire in the days long gone by, when she was pretty little Dorothy Grape.
But I have told her story already, and there's no need to allude to it again.)
Roger lay in bed, in a small back-room on the first-floor; a mild, fair, pleasant-looking young man with a white bandage round his head. Mr. Pitt explained that the arm was not absolutely broken, but so much contused and inflamed as to be a worse hurt. This would not have kept him in bed, however, but the head had also been damaged, and fever set in.
"So this is where he has lain, hiding, while I have been ransacking London for him!" remarked Mr. Brandon, who was greatly put out by the whole affair; and perhaps the word "hiding" might have more truth in it than even he suspected.
"When young Scott called last night--a fellow-student of your nephew's who comes to see him and bring him changes of clothes from his lodgings--he said you were making inquiries at the hospital and had left your address," explained Pitt. "So I thought I ought to write to you, sir."
"And I am much obliged to you for doing it, and for your care of him also," said Mr. Brandon.
And presently, when Pitt was leaving, he followed him downstairs to Mrs.
Mapping's parlour, to ask whether Roger was in danger.
"I do not apprehend any, now that the fever is subsiding," answered Pitt. "I can say almost surely that none will arise if we can only keep him quiet. That has been the difficulty throughout--his restlessness. It is just as though he had something on his mind."
"What should he have on his mind?" retorted Mr. Brandon, in contention.
"Except his sins. And I expect _they_ don't trouble him much."
Pitt laughed a little. "Well, sir, he is not in any danger at present.
But if the fever were to come back again--and increase--why, I can't foresee what the result might be."
"Then I shall send for Lady Bevere."
Pitt opened his eyes. "Lady Bevere!" he repeated. "Who is she?"
"Lady Bevere, sir, is Roger's mother and my sister. I shall write to-day."
Mr. Brandon had an appointment with his lawyers that morning and went out with the Squire to keep it, leaving me with the patient. "And take care you don't let him talk, Johnny," was his parting injunction to me.
"Keep him perfectly quiet."
That was all very well, and I did my best to obey orders; but Roger would not be kept quiet. He was for ever sighing and starting, now turning to this side, now to that, and throwing his undamaged arm up like a ball at play.
"Is it pain that makes you so restless?" I asked.
"Pain, no," he groaned. "It's the bother. The pain is nothing now to what it was."
"Bother of what?"
"Oh--altogether. I say, what on earth brought Uncle John to London just now?"
"A matter connected with my property. He is my guardian and trustee, you know." To which answer Bevere only groaned again.
After taking a great jorum of beef-tea, which Mrs. Mapping brought up at mid-day, he was lying still and tranquil, when there came a loud knock at the street-door. Steps clattered up the stairs, and a tall, dark-haired young man put his head into the room.
"Bevere, old fellow, how are you? We've been so sorry to hear of your mishap!"
There was nothing alarming in the words and they were spoken gently; or in the visitor either, for he was good-looking; but in a moment Bevere was sitting bolt upright in bed, gazing out in fright as though he saw an apparition.
"What the deuce has brought you here, Lightfoot?" he cried, angrily.