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"Tell her I felt too unwell, dear," said Louise imploringly, for her father's persistence seemed to trouble her more and more; and he looked at her wonderingly, she seemed so agitated.
"But I don't like to leave you like this, my child."
"Yes, yes; please go, dear. I shall be so much better alone. There, it is growing late. You will not stop very long."
"No; an hour or two. I must be guided by circ.u.mstances. If that man is there--I cannot help it--I shall stay a very short time."
"That man, father?"
"Yes," said Vine, with a shudder. "Crampton. He makes me shiver whenever we meet."
His face grew agonised as he spoke; and he rose hastily and kissed Louise.
"You will not alter your mind and come?" he said tenderly.
"No, no, father; pray do not press me. I cannot go to-night."
"Strange!" said George Vine thoughtfully. "Strange that she should want to stay." He had crossed the little rock garden, and closed the gate to stand looking back at the old granite house, dwelling sadly upon his children, and mingling thoughts of the determined refusal of Louise to come, with projects which he had had _in petto_ for the benefit of his son.
He shuddered and turned to go along the level platform cut in the great slope before beginning the rapid descent.
Volume 2, Chapter XXIII.
A STARTLING VISITATION.
"Fine night, master, but gashly dark," said a gruff voice, as Vine was nearly at the bottom of the slope.
"Ah, Perrow! Yes, very dark," said Vine quietly. "Not out with your boat to-night?"
"No, Master Vine, not to-night. Sea brimes. Why, if we cast a net to-night every mash would look as if it was a-fire. Best at home night like this. Going down town?"
"Yes, Perrow."
"Ah, you'll be going to see Master Van Heldre. You don't know, sir, how glad my mates are as he's better. Good-night, sir. You'll ketch up to Master Leslie if you look sharp. He come up as far as here and went back."
"Thank you. Good-night," said Vine, and he walked on, but slackened his pace, for he felt that he could not meet Leslie then. The poor fellow would be suffering from his rebuff, and Vine shrank from listening to any appeal.
But he was fated to meet Leslie all the same, for at a turn of the steep path he encountered the young mine-owner coming towards him, and he appeared startled on finding who it was.
"Going out, Mr Vine?" he stammered. "I was coming up to the house, but--er--never mind; I can call some other time."
"I would turn back with you, only I promised to go down to Mr Van Heldre's to-night."
"Ah, yes, to Van Heldre's," said Leslie confusedly. "I'll walk with you if you will not mind."
"I shall be glad of your company," said Vine quietly; and they continued down to the town, Leslie very thoughtful, and Vine disinclined to converse.
"No, I am not going in, Mr Vine. Will you let me come and say a few words to you to-morrow?"
"Yes," replied Vine gently.
He had meant to speak firmly and decisively, but a feeling of pity and sympathy for the young man, whose heart he seemed to read, changed his tone. It had been in his heart, too, to say, "It will be better if you do not come," but he found it impossible, and they parted.
Leslie hesitated as soon as he was alone. What should he do? Go home?
Home was a horrible desert to him now; and in his present frame of mind, the best thing he could do was to go right off for a long walk. By fatiguing the body he would make the brain ask for rest, instead of keeping up that whirl of anxious thought.
He felt that he must act. That was the only way to find oblivion and repose from the incessant thought which troubled him. He started off with the intention of wearying his muscles, so as to lie down that night and win the sleep to which he was often now a stranger.
His first intent was to go right up by the cliff-path, by Uncle Luke's, and over the hill by his own place, but if he went that way there was the possibility of finding Uncle Luke leaning over the wall, gazing out at the starlit sea, and probably he would stop and question him.
That night his one thought was of being alone, and he took the opposite direction, went down to the ferry, hunted out the man from the inn hard by, and had himself rowed across the harbour, so as to walk along the cliff eastwards, and then strike in north and round by the head of the estuary, where he could recross by the old stone bridge, and reach home--a walk of a dozen miles.
At the end of a couple of miles along the rugged pathway, where in places the greatest care was needed to avoid going over some precipitous spot to the sh.o.r.e below, Leslie stopped short to listen to the hollow moaning sound of the waves, and he seated himself close to the cliff edge, in a dark nook, which formed one of the sheltered look-outs used by the coastguard in bad weather.
The sea glittered as if the surface were of polished jet, strewn with diamonds, and, impressed by the similarity of the scene to that of the night on which the search had been carried on after Harry Vine, Leslie's thoughts went back to the various scenes which repeated themselves before his mental gaze from the beginning to that terrible finale when the remains lay stark and disfigured in the inn shed, and the saturated cards proclaimed who the dead man was.
"Poor girl!" he said half aloud, "and with all that trouble fresh upon her, and the feeling that she and her family are disgraced for ever, I go to her to press forward my selfish, egotistical love. G.o.d forgive me! What weak creatures we men are!"
He sat thinking, taking off his hat for the cool, moist sea air to fan his feverish temples, when the solemn silence of the starry night seemed to bring to him rest and repose such as he had not enjoyed since the hour when Aunt Marguerite planted that sharp, poisoned barb in his breast.
"It is not that," he said to himself, with a sigh full of satisfaction.
"She never felt the full force of love yet for any man, but if ever her gentle young nature turned towards any one, it was towards me. And, knowing this, I, in my impatience and want of consideration, contrived my own downfall. No, not my downfall; there is hope yet, and a few words rightly spoken will remove the past."
The feverish sensation was pa.s.sing away swiftly. The calm serenity of the night beneath the glorious dome of stars was bringing with it restfulness, and hope rose strongly, as, far away in the east, he saw a glittering point of light rise above the sea slowly higher and higher, a veritable star of hope to him.
"What's that?" he said to himself, as above the boom of the waves which struck below and then filled some hollow and fell back with an angry hiss, he fancied he heard a sob.
There was no mistake; a woman was talking in a low, moaning way, and then there came another sob.
He rose quickly.
"Is anything the matter?" he said sharply.
"Ah! Why, how you frightened me! Is that you, Master Leslie?"
"Yes. Who is it? Poll Perrow?"
"Yes, Master Leslie, it's me."
"Why, what are you doing here?" said Leslie, as cynical old Uncle Luke's hints about the smuggling flashed across his mind.
"Nothing to do with smuggling," she said, as if divining his thoughts.
"Indeed, old lady! Well, it looks very suspicious."
"No, it don't, sir. D'you think if I wanted to carry any landed goods I should take 'em along the coastguard path?"
"A man would not," said Leslie, "but I should say it's just what a cunning old woman's brain would suggest, as being the surest way to throw the revenue men off the scent."