take too long, and spoil our perfect happiness, darling. We<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[414]</SPAN></span>
must not be so selfish. No more kisses, until we have done
our duty. Just put me into trim again, and let me do my hair
up, and we must both run down to Uncle Corny’s. Nobody
has seen me yet, but you. What do you think I did? I was
quite resolved that no one should see me, but my own husband.
So I left my things at Feltham, and ran all the way—flew all
the way, I ought to say, and came through Love Lane all
alone. Oh, we will never part again, not even for a day, Kit,
or half a day. You must never let me out of your sight any
more.”</p>
<p>“And not out of my arms, when I can help it,” I said,
as with my dear wife still enclasped, and her hair waving over
my bounding heart, I took her through the quiet alleys of the
summer night, just to show her for a minute—for I could not
spare her more—to the loyal and good Uncle Corny.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<h2>CHAPTER LXIV.<br/> <small>A MENSÂ ET TORO.</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">It</span> is out of my power to say, because I have never studied
human nature—having more than I can properly get through
with trees and animals—but according to the little I have seen,
the spirit of revenge is stronger in women, than it usually is in
us. Whatever wrong a man may have done me, if he only
says that he is sorry for it, or if without that I have got the
better of him, I am quite content that he should go, and settle
the question as between him and the Lord. I wish him no
ill, but what he may do himself; and even if I hear of his
getting his deserts, I feel no elation, but endeavour to be
sorry.</p>
<p>But my Uncle Corny, who understands the fair sex—at
least according to his own account—declares that they not only
cannot forgive a deadly wrong done to them, but continue to
think that the world is a bad place and sadly neglected by
Providence, until they see the people, who have made them
unhappy, paying out for it, as they ought to do.</p>
<p>My Kitty was the very best of all her sex—which is saying
a great deal more than some men may imagine, and means
much more than if it were said of them—but still I could see<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[415]</SPAN></span>
that she was not contented even with our new honeymoon
(which was ten times sweeter than the first one, though that
had been most delicious), from a lofty desire for perfect justice;
which a man is quite satisfied to do without, knowing (as he
does) that otherwise he never could have satisfaction at all.</p>
<p>And yet I could see that she trembled, whenever she had
hinted at that little drawback, for fear of the danger that it
might involve to me; for she never seemed to think that I
could take care of myself, as well as she took care of me.</p>
<p>It is not for me to say, how these things are, or rather how
they ought to be; and I am free to acknowledge that if Downy
Bulwrag had come down meddling with my wife again, I
should have killed him; and risked the chance of being hanged
for a fellow unworthy of it. And when I read aloud that
wicked letter, in the presence of Kitty and my uncle, the next
day, there were times when I longed to have him by the throat,
and prevent more lies coming out of it. For the Devil himself
must have stood at his elbow, and gone into his brain as well,
while he was about it. And he had made the ground ready
for his lies to grow, by a black mysterious note beforehand,
signed—“A well-wisher in Sunbury.” This we had not in
our possession yet; but Kitty knew the effect of it upon her
father’s mind.</p>
<p>As I read the vile forgery, bearing my name, Uncle Corny
fell back in his chair, and shut his lips. Then he closed his
fist also, and from time to time he kept stamping with his
boots, as if his feet were tingling. But Kitty put her tender
hand into mine, and her breath was short, and her bosom heaved,
and her eyes flashed like the summer-lightning, or sometimes
filled with heavy drops.</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p><span class="smcap">My dear and respected Father-in-law</span>,—“I have a sad
confession to make to you, which I ought to have made long
ago, but I knew that I must have lost your daughter by it. I
will not pretend to excuse my conduct, for I know that I have
behaved shamefully. But I could not foresee the frightful
danger to which she is now exposed daily. My heart is almost
broken, for I love her wildly, savagely, and in plain truth
madly.</p>
<p>“Last Autumn I committed a very base act, and I am
justly punished for it. To keep your sweet Kitty here a little
longer, and give me more chances of seeing her, I was mean
enough to steal Miss Coldpepper’s favourite dog, a mongrel<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[416]</SPAN></span>
called <i>Regulus</i>. I hid him in my uncle’s garden, while the
country was being searched for him; and thus, as perhaps you
remember, I obtained the honour of your acquaintance. But I
was punished for that sneakish trick. The cur bit me thrice
in the legs and thigh, and I am doomed to a horrible death I
fear; for the dog has gone mad, and the disease was in him
then.</p>
<p>“I have been, without any one’s knowledge, to the first
authority in London on such matters, and he says that I ought
to be watched, and must hold aloof from all family ties for a
while. He asked if I was married, and then he told me the
most horrible story I ever heard; and he conjured me, unless I
wished to kill my wife, to separate from her for at least two
years. When I would not promise that, he was anxious to
write to her relatives himself; but I gave him a false address,
and nothing came of that.</p>
<p>“I hoped that he might be mistaken, but now I feel that
he was only too correct. Your Kitty is not safe with me
another day. I have the most awful sensations sometimes.
The malady has got hold of me too surely, though nobody yet
suspects it. I have felt a wild desire to tear her to pieces;
and the only atonement I can make for my offence is to beg
you to take her immediately. You are likely to be away for
about two years; and when you return, if I am still alive, which
is most unlikely, I may safely reclaim her.</p>
<p>“I implore you not to let her know the cause of this sad
parting. It would keep her in awful suspense and misery, and
perhaps be as fatal to her, as I myself should be. She is so
good and dutiful, and trusts me so entirely, that if you say it is
my wish, for reasons you approve of—however she may grieve
about it, she will not rebel. Come for her, or send for her,
without my knowledge, without the knowledge of any one near
our place; for if the story got abroad, I should go mad at once.
My only hope lies in perfect quiet; therefore she must not write
to me, and I must not hear a word, even from yourself, about
her. She must not stop to pack up clothes, or anything whatever;
for if I came in, I should destroy her, if I saw it. But order
particularly that she shall take every farthing in the house she
knows of, to equip her for her long voyage in a seaport town.
The money is her own; and she must take it.</p>
<p>“I send this by hand, as I know not where you are; but
the bearer knows how to find you. There is no answer, except
to do what I implore most pitifully, if you wish to save your<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[417]</SPAN></span>
only child from a fearful death, at the hands of the one who
loves her <i>so madly</i>. I pray God that you may be yet in time.
I feel a little calmer after writing this. This morning I was in
agony at the sight of water. May the Lord have you, and my
darling in his keeping. Oh, how base I have been, but I have
done no murder yet!</p>
<p class="sig">
<span style="margin-right: 6em;">“Your heart-broken son-in-law,</span><br/>
“<span class="smcap">C. Orchardson</span>.”<br/></p>
</div>
<p>When I had finished, my uncle spoke; for Kitty could
only press my hand, and sometimes look at me, and sometimes
turn her eyes away and blush.</p>
<p>“These are the things,” my uncle said, “that make one
ashamed of being called a man. No snake could do such a
thing, and no dog would, however mankind might train him.
And the bit of piety towards the end! The father was a
blackguard, the mother a Fury, the son is the Devil with all
his angels. Oh Kit, Kit, I am old, and have met with a great
deal of wickedness, but none like this.”</p>
<p>“But you know, Uncle Corny, you must not be disturbed,”
said Kitty going up to him, and kissing his forehead, in her
sweet and graceful way, “just because there happen to be bad
people in the world. It has always been so, and I fear it
always must. And you must not imagine that Kit meant any
harm, by—by just borrowing Auntie Coldpepper’s dog. He
did it—oh, so cleverly—just for the sake of seeing me; and
he quite changed the character of that dog. But how can that
bad man have found it out?”</p>
<p>“Through Harker,” I exclaimed, “through that wretch of
a Harker, who was always spying on these premises. Sam
Henderson knew it, most likely through him; but Sam would
never have spoken of it.”</p>
<p>“It is true, then,” said my uncle. “Well, I thought it was
a lie. I am surprised to find that I have a dogstealer for my
nephew.”</p>
<p>“It was Tabby made him do it. And I am very glad she
did. But the first thing Dr. Cutler said to me, when my heart
was nearly broken with his message, was—‘Did your husband
steal that dog?’ And of course I said ‘Yes;’ for Kit had
told me all about it, when we were at Baycliff; and no doubt
that convinced the good doctor that all the rest of that sad
wicked letter was true. You know, Uncle Corny, that it was
impossible for my father to leave the ship, and he sent his old<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[418]</SPAN></span>
friend Dr. Cutler to fetch me. Oh, how I did cry all the way!
I thought there never would be any more happiness for me.
And of course they never told me why I was to go. I thought
that Kit must be tired of me; and yet I could not quite
believe that, you know. Oh, Kit, I shall never be tired of
you.”</p>
<p>“Don’t cry, my darling,” said my uncle kindly. “We have
had enough tears to drown that devilish letter. Now sit on
Kit’s lap, to make sure of him, and tell me your own adventures,
for I have only guessed them yet.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I had no adventures, and I never noticed anything,
only to ask how far we were from England, and to count the
days till we should have finished all the work. I made a little
calendar, as the girls do at school, the girls I mean who have
real mothers, and I blotted out every day when it was over,
and thought—‘one less now before I see Kit again.’ Of
course I asked my father what had made him send for me, and
he said it was my husband’s most earnest entreaty, and if I
loved him I must ask no more, but keep up my spirits and
obey his orders. Father never showed me this letter, or I
think—though I can’t be quite sure—that I should have
doubted about it. The writing is exactly like Kit’s in some
places, but in others it is different, and the style is not like
Kit’s. That wicked man stole several letters of Kit’s; I
suspected it then, and now I know it.</p>
<p>“My father had not the smallest doubt, of course, but he
was puzzled when I spoke about that telegram, you know what
I mean—the one from Captain Jenkins at Falmouth, to say
the ship was on her voyage, and to send good-bye to us. He
had sent no such message, and had spoken no such ship, and
said that it must be some extraordinary mistake. But you see
now it was another piece of falsehood, to make it look impossible
that I could be with my father.</p>
<p>“It was father himself who went to Baycliff to inquire,
knowing that we had been there, and being near it. But he
could not come here, and so he sent Dr. Cutler, who knows all
this neighbourhood well, and managed it all to perfection with
the help of some one, who was sent by agreement to meet him.
Oh dear, when I think of that dreadful time; and I was not
allowed to leave a line for my husband, except what I wrote,
on the sly, in the Prayer-book. Well, that did him some good,
at any rate; didn’t it, my own darling?</p>
<p>“I am quite ashamed to talk of my own sorrow, when I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[419]</SPAN></span>
think of what Kit has been through for me. But I am sure
I ate nothing for at least a month, and Dr. Cutler, who was
in charge of the health of the ship’s company, became quite
uneasy about me. As for their experiments, deep-sea dredging,
and soundings, and temperatures, and all that, I did not even
care to look at them, and I am not a bit more scientific than
when I went out, though perhaps I shall talk as if I was,
by-and-by. The only thing I felt any interest in was the
rescue of a poor afflicted man—I think they called him a
Spaniard, though he seemed to me more like an Englishman—who
was kept as a prisoner among some savages in a desert
place in South America. He was terribly afflicted with some
horrible disease; and the sailors would not go near him, until
they were ashamed when they saw me do it. We were all
very kind to him, but he left us, and got on board another
ship bound for home.</p>
<p>“Oh, how I used to tremble, Kit, whenever we saw a ship
in the distance, hoping for news of you, my dear, and of Uncle
Corny, and everybody. But we met very few ships, being
generally employed in out-of-the-way places, and only landing
anywhere two or three times, for water, or fruit, or vegetables.</p>
<p>“But when we got to Ascension Island, which is an English
place, you know, what a joyful surprise there was for me! I
shall always bless that little rocky spot, for it gave me back my
life again. When father received my husband’s letter, for the
first time in his life, he was in a real fury. Something or other
had occurred before, besides that affair of the telegram, which
made him a little doubtful about this wicked, wicked letter.
And now he saw at once that he had been imposed upon most
horribly. We were all afraid that he would have had a fit, but
Dr. Cutler saved him.</p>
<p>“‘My poor injured child!’ he kept on exclaiming;
‘wretched for at least a year, and injured for life, by this
monstrous villainy!’ He would have thrown up his command
at once, if he could have done it honourably, and brought me
home by the very next ship. But if he had done so, the cruise
must have ended; for Lieutenant Morris, who was next to him,
was invalided at Fort George. I was quite ready to come home
alone, by any ship, English or foreign; but as it happened, Dr.
Cutler received by the same mail an urgent request from his
wife for his return; and so the very gentleman I ran away
with brought me back to my husband. It was a long time
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />