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She drank it thirstily, and felt a momentary thrill of returning strength. Rising on her elbow she looked at them all languidly.
"You time your visit late, gentlemen," she said, with a slight inflection of scorn on the concluding word.
"We are obliged to consult our own convenience rather than yours, Lily.
Pardon our informal and ill-timed visit," said Mr. Colville, coming forward to her side.
She flashed a look of scorn upon him, but deigned no reply. He turned to the two old people who stood waiting.
"You may go," he said. "We will apprise you when we are about to leave."
"No, let them remain," said Lily, imperiously. "I have something to say to you, Mr. Colville, and I desire that these, _your friends_, may hear it."
Old Peter and Haidee looked at each other in some trepidation at her words and manner, but stood still, curious and a little frightened.
"My _friends_," muttered Colville, indignantly; "Miss Lawrence, I do not choose my friends from among such rabble, I a.s.sure you!"
"Do you not?" said she, contemptuously. "Yet if you had a precious treasure, Mr. Colville, and desired to guard it very carefully, you would entrust it to your best friends rather than your enemies--would you not?"
"a.s.suredly," he answered, wondering what she meant by her strange words and manner.
"You would? and yet you have professed to regard me as the thing most precious upon earth to you while you have given the lie to the a.s.sertion by leaving me here in the keeping of these wretches whom you disdain to own as your friends. Is it not so?"
He quailed before the scorn in her ringing voice, and the proud gesture of her lifted finger.
"You were safe with them," he muttered. "My dearest friends could not have guarded you more faithfully than they have done."
"It is false," she said, scornfully. "My life has been in constant jeopardy at their hands ever since I first entered this house."
"Miss Lawrence, you are raving," said Doctor Pratt. "These people have been paid to keep you here: it is to their interest to do so. And why should you fancy yourself in danger from them?"
"It is no fancy," she answered, coldly, while her scathing glance fell upon the cowering pair of interrupted murderers like lightning a moment, then returned to the faces of those she addressed. "I a.s.sure you, Doctor Pratt, and you, Mr. Colville, that your sudden coming interrupted her--I was on the point of being _murdered_ by that woman there!"
"She lies!" cried Haidee and Peter, simultaneously.
"Silence, wretches!" thundered Dr. Pratt, furiously, reading guilt in their very faces. "Let the lady tell her story, then deny it if you can."
"It is the wine that has got into her head," whined Peter, abjectly.
"Silence, fellow! Now, go on with your story, Miss Lawrence," said the physician, impatiently.
Thus encouraged, Lily related every word of the frightful conversation that was indelibly stamped on her memory. There was no discrediting her a.s.sertions. The truth was unmistakable.
"She was just opening the door," concluded Lily, "when your loud knocking frightened her away. My relief from the pressure of over-wrought feeling was so great that I fainted when I attempted to stand up again!"
Dr. Pratt was foaming at the mouth with such furious rage that he could not speak. Colville, pale, trembling, with chattering teeth and staring eyes, found his voice first.
"Wretches! Devils!" he shouted, in a voice hoa.r.s.e with pa.s.sion, as he pointed to the door. "Go hide yourselves from my sight before I rend you limb from limb!"
The craven wretches slunk away and locked themselves into their room in wild fear lest the two infuriated men should put their threat into execution. Colville came forward and stood by the bedside of the young girl who had fallen back panting from weariness after her denunciation of the would-be murderers.
"Lily," he said abjectly, "I am so unnerved by the thought of the horrible fate you have just escaped that I can scarcely speak: but, believe me, my dearest girl, I thought you perfectly safe in this place, I never dreamed of such perfidy in these hired servants of my will."
"This is no time for apologies," interrupted the doctor abruptly. "Make them hereafter when you have more leisure and better command of your feelings. At present the most important thing is to remove Miss Lawrence from this house immediately, and place her in a safer retreat."
He drew Colville aside one moment.
"I know of a place a few miles from here," he whispered, "to which I have the _entree_. The place is a private mad-house, and is kept by a doctor who is a very particular friend of mine. I know of no better retreat at present for our fair little friend. He will receive her with pleasure, and you can represent her as insane if it pleases you."
"Let us take her there then," answered Colville.
Doctor Pratt took down a dark cloak with a hood attached which hung against the wall.
"Miss Lawrence," he said, quite courteously, "my carriage is at the gate and I find it necessary to remove you at once from the perils that environ you here. Put on this cloak and let us go. I will find means afterward to punish these wretches for their perfidy."
Lily obeyed in silence, and was led down between them to the waiting carriage.
The Leverets did not appear again, nor did the hound offer to molest them.
Placing their prisoner in the carriage the two confederates drove rapidly away over the country road.
CHAPTER XXIX.
The inquest that was held over the dead bodies of Peter and Haidee Leveret developed no information that could lead to the conviction of their destroyer.
An expert examined the bodies and declared that the cause of their death was strychnine poison.
Large quant.i.ties of this baneful drug was found in the tea pot and in the partly emptied cups of the victims.
Mr. Shelton testified to the accidental finding of the bodies, and to his extinguishing the flames which had been lighted for their funeral pyre--also to the finding of the chained prisoner in the gloomy dungeon.
His evidence threw no light on the subject.
f.a.n.n.y Colville testified to the names and general bad character of the deceased, but knew nothing which was calculated to enlighten the jury as to the mystery of their death.
She had not seen Peter for two years. Haidee had been in the habit of bringing her some bread and water once a week, but had neglected to return the last time, and nine days had elapsed since f.a.n.n.y had seen her, two of which days she was entirely without food.
She supposed that the old witch was putting into execution her often-reiterated threat of starving her to death.
This was all they learned of f.a.n.n.y. She had given her evidence with many pauses and turns of faintness. At length she became so ill and exhausted that it seemed cruel to weaken her with farther questioning, and it was decided to defer it until she became stronger and better.
The jury, in accordance with the facts elicited, rendered a verdict that the pair had come to their death by strychnine poisoning at the hands of some person unknown.
Search was made for the hidden treasure the misers were supposed to have concealed about the house, but nothing of value was found, and the bodies of the iniquitous pair were committed to burial at the expense of the city. They had lived their evil life, and the world being rid of them was better off.
Mrs. Colville was removed to the home of Mrs. Mason, and the kind soul was shocked at the spectacle of human misery thus presented to her view.