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he added, with a sigh. "Bless her, I don't get along with her as I could wish."
He was quiet and thoughtful for a few moments, and then began tapping the table.
"Gartram had that forty--one thousand. His books say so, and he was correct as an actuary. Some one knew the secret of this room, and got at that cash."
"Yes. I should like to find that out. It would please little Mary, too."
Volume Three, Chapter IV.
WIMBLE SEIZES THE CLUE.
"Love is blind," said Michael Wimble, with a piteous sigh. "Yes, love is blind."
He had been a great many times past Mrs Sarson's cottage, always with a stern determination in his breast to treat her with distance and resentment, as one who shunned him for the sake of her lodger; but so surely as he caught a glimpse of the pleasant lady at door or window, his heart softened, and he knew that if she would only turn to him, there was forgiveness for her and more.
Upon the morning in question he had had his const.i.tutional, and found a splendid specimen of an auk washed up, quite fresh, which he meant to stuff and add to his museum.
An hour later a neat little servant-maid came to the door with a parcel and a letter.
"With missus's compliments."
Wimble took the letter and parcel, his hands trembling and a mist coming before his eyes, for it was Mrs Sarson's little maid.
"We are all wrong," he said, as he hurried in, his heart beating complete forgiveness, happiness in store, and everything exactly as he wished.
He turned back to the door, slipped the bolt, and then seated himself at the table with his back to the window, and cut the string of the parcel with a razor.
"She has relented, and it is a present," he said to himself, as he tingled with pleasure; "a present and a letter."
He stopped, with his fingers twitching nervously and his eyes going from parcel to note and back again.
Which should he open first--note or parcel?
He took the parcel, unfastened the paper, and found a neat cardboard box; and he had only to take off the lid to see its contents, but he held himself back from the fulfilment of his delight by taking up the note, opening it, and reading--
"Mrs Sarson would be greatly obliged by Mr Wimble's attention to the enclosed at once. To be returned within a week."
"Attention--returned--a week!" faltered Wimble; and with a sudden s.n.a.t.c.h he raised the lid, and sat staring dismally at its contents.
"And me to have seen her all these times and not to know that," he groaned, as he rested his elbows on the table and his brow upon his hands, gazing the while dismally into the box. "Ah! false one--false as false can be. Why, I've gazed at her fondly hundreds o' times, but love is blind, and--yes," he muttered, as he took the object from the box and rested it upon his closed fist in the position it would have occupied when in use, "there is some excuse. As good a skin parting as I ever saw. One of Ribton's, I suppose."
There was a long and dismal silence as Michael Wimble, feeling that he was thoroughly disillusioned, slowly replaced the object in its box.
"How can a woman be so deceitful, and all for the sake of show? And me never to know that she wore a front!"
"All, well!" he sighed, "I can't touch it to-day," and rising slowly he replaced it in the box, dropped the note within, roughly secured the packet, and opened a drawer at the side.
As he pulled the drawer sharply out, something rolled from front to back, and then, as the drawer was out to its full extent, rolled down to the front.
He picked it out, dropped the cardboard box within, and shut it up, ignoring the bottle he held in his hand as he walked away to slip the bolt back and throw open the door.
He was just in time to receive a customer in the shape of Doctor Asher, who entered and nodded.
"I want you, Wimble," he said. "When can you come up? Beginning to show a little grey about the roots, am I not?"
"Yes, sir, decidedly," said Wimble, as the doctor took off his hat, and displayed his well-kept dark hair.
"When will you come, then?"
"When you like, sir," said Wimble, unconsciously rubbing the tip of his nose with the cork of the little bottle he held in his hand.
"To-morrow afternoon, then," said the doctor sharply; "and you needn't shake the hair dye in my face."
"Beg pardon, sir? Oh, I see! That's not hair dye, sir."
"What is it, then? New dodge for bringing hair on bald places?"
He held out his hand for the bottle, and the barber pa.s.sed it at once.
"Oh, no, sir," he said, "nothing of that kind."
With the action born of long habit, the doctor took out the cork, sniffed, held the bottle up to the light, shook it, applied a finger to the neck, shook the bottle again, tasted the drug at the end of his finger, and quickly spat it out.
"Why, Wimble, what the d.i.c.kens are you doing with chloral?"
"Nothing, sir, nothing; only an old bottle."
"Throw it away, then," said the doctor hastily. "Don't take it. Very bad habit. Recollect that's how poor Mr Gartram came to his end.
Good-day. Come round, then, at three."
"Yes, sir, certainly, sir; but you forgot to--"
"Oh, I beg pardon. Yes, of course," said the doctor, handing back the bottle, and then, beating himself with his right-hand glove, he walked hastily out of the place.
Wimble stood looking after his visitor till he was out of sight, and then walked slowly back into his museum to operate upon the dead bird, which lay where he had placed it upon a shelf ready for skinning.
"Ah," he said mournfully, as he rubbed his nose slowly with the cork of the little bottle, "what a world of deception it is. There is nothing honest. Were all more or less like specimens. A front, and me not to have known it all this time. If she had taken me sooner into her confidence, I wouldn't have cared. The doctor did. Hah! I wonder who ever suspected him, with his clear dark locks, as I keep so right. Yes, he's a deceiver, and without me what would he look like in a couple of months?--Deceit, deceit, deceit.--And I trusted her so. It's taking a mean advantage of a man.
"Well, it was a mark of confidence, and perhaps I have been all wrong.
It shows she is waiting to trust me, and ought I to? Well, we shall see."
Michael Wimble looked a little brighter, and then his eyes fell upon the bottle, which he shook as the doctor had shaken it, took out the cork, applied a finger to it, and tasted in the same way, quickly spitting it out as he became aware of the sharp taste.
"What did he say: chloral? Don't take any of it. No, I sha'n't do that."
Wimble suddenly became thoughtful and dreamy as he replaced the cork, and he seemed to see the bright ray of light once more on the dry patch of sand beyond where the tide had reached.
Then he thought about Gartram's death by chloral.