<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER VII. </h2>
<p>LATE that evening, when Magdalen and Mrs. Wragge came back from their walk
in the dark, the captain stopped Magdalen on her way upstairs to inform
her of the proceedings of the day. He added the expression of his opinion
that the time had come for bringing Noel Vanstone, with the least possible
delay, to the point of making a proposal. She merely answered that she
understood him, and that she would do what was required of her. Captain
Wragge requested her in that case to oblige him by joining a walking
excursion in Mr. Noel Vanstone's company at seven o'clock the next
morning. "I will be ready," she replied. "Is there anything more?" There
was nothing more. Magdalen bade him good-night and returned to her own
room.</p>
<p>She had shown the same disinclination to remain any longer than was
necessary in the captain's company throughout the three days of her
seclusion in the house.</p>
<p>During all that time, instead of appearing to weary of Mrs. Wragge's
society, she had patiently, almost eagerly, associated herself with her
companion's one absorbing pursuit. She who had often chafed and fretted in
past days under the monotony of her life in the freedom of Combe-Raven,
now accepted without a murmur the monotony of her life at Mrs. Wragge's
work-table. She who had hated the sight of her needle and thread in old
times—who had never yet worn an article of dress of her own making—now
toiled as anxiously over the making of Mrs. Wragge's gown, and bore as
patiently with Mrs. Wragge's blunders, as if the sole object of her
existence had been the successful completion of that one dress. Anything
was welcome to her—the trivial difficulties of fitting a gown: the
small, ceaseless chatter of the poor half-witted creature who was so proud
of her assistance, and so happy in her company—anything was welcome
that shut her out from the coming future, from the destiny to which she
stood self-condemned. That sorely-wounded nature was soothed by such a
trifle now as the grasp of her companion's rough and friendly hand—that
desolate heart was cheered, when night parted them, by Mrs. Wragge's kiss.</p>
<p>The captain's isolated position in the house produced no depressing effect
on the captain's easy and equal spirits. Instead of resenting Magdalen's
systematic avoidance of his society, he looked to results, and highly
approved of it. The more she neglected him for his wife the more directly
useful she became in the character of Mrs. Wragge's self-appointed
guardian. He had more than once seriously contemplated revoking the
concession which had been extorted from him, and removing his wife, at his
own sole responsibility, out of harm's way; and he had only abandoned the
idea on discovering that Magdalen's resolution to keep Mrs. Wragge in her
own company was really serious. While the two were together, his main
anxiety was set at rest. They kept their door locked by his own desire
while he was out of the house, and, whatever Mrs. Wragge might do,
Magdalen was to be trusted not to open it until he came back. That night
Captain Wragge enjoyed his cigar with a mind at ease, and sipped his
brandy-and-water in happy ignorance of the pitfall which Mrs. Lecount had
prepared for him in the morning.</p>
<p>Punctually at seven o'clock Noel Vanstone made his appearance. The moment
he entered the room Captain Wragge detected a change in his visitor's look
and manner. "Something wrong!" thought the captain. "We have not done with
Mrs. Lecount yet."</p>
<p>"How is Miss Bygrave this morning?" asked Noel Vanstone. "Well enough, I
hope, for our early walk?" His half-closed eyes, weak and watery with the
morning light and the morning air, looked about the room furtively, and he
shifted his place in a restless manner from one chair to another, as he
made those polite inquiries.</p>
<p>"My niece is better—she is dressing for the walk," replied the
captain, steadily observing his restless little friend while he spoke.
"Mr. Vanstone!" he added, on a sudden, "I am a plain Englishman—excuse
my blunt way of speaking my mind. You don't meet me this morning as
cordially as you met me yesterday. There is something unsettled in your
face. I distrust that housekeeper of yours, sir! Has she been presuming on
your forbearance? Has she been trying to poison your mind against me or my
niece?"</p>
<p>If Noel Vanstone had obeyed Mrs. Lecount's injunctions, and had kept her
little morsel of note-paper folded in his pocket until the time came to
use it, Captain Wragge's designedly blunt appeal might not have found him
unprepared with an answer. But curiosity had got the better of him; he had
opened the note at night, and again in the morning; it had seriously
perplexed and startled him; and it had left his mind far too disturbed to
allow him the possession of his ordinary resources. He hesitated; and his
answer, when he succeeded in making it, began with a prevarication.</p>
<p>Captain Wragge stopped him before he had got beyond his first sentence.</p>
<p>"Pardon me, sir," said the captain, in his loftiest manner. "If you have
secrets to keep, you have only to say so, and I have done. I intrude on no
man's secrets. At the same time, Mr. Vanstone, you must allow me to recall
to your memory that I met you yesterday without any reserves on my side. I
admitted you to my frankest and fullest confidence, sir—and, highly
as I prize the advantages of your society, I can't consent to cultivate
your friendship on any other than equal terms." He threw open his
respectable frock-coat and surveyed his visitor with a manly and virtuous
severity.</p>
<p>"I mean no offense!" cried Noel Vanstone, piteously. "Why do you interrupt
me, Mr. Bygrave? Why don't you let me explain? I mean no offense."</p>
<p>"No offense is taken, sir," said the captain. "You have a perfect right to
the exercise of your own discretion. I am not offended—I only claim
for myself the same privilege which I accord to you." He rose with great
dignity and rang the bell. "Tell Miss Bygrave," he said to the servant,
"that our walk this morning is put off until another opportunity, and that
I won't trouble her to come downstairs."</p>
<p>This strong proceeding had the desired effect. Noel Vanstone vehemently
pleaded for a moment's private conversation before the message was
delivered. Captain Wragge's severity partially relaxed. He sent the
servant downstairs again, and, resuming his chair, waited confidently for
results. In calculating the facilities for practicing on his visitor's
weakness, he had one great superiority over Mrs. Lecount. His judgment was
not warped by latent female jealousies, and he avoided the error into
which the housekeeper had fallen, self-deluded—the error of
underrating the impression on Noel Vanstone that Magdalen had produced.
One of the forces in this world which no middle-aged woman is capable of
estimating at its full value, when it acts against her, is the force of
beauty in a woman younger than herself.</p>
<p>"You are so hasty, Mr. Bygrave—you won't give me time—you
won't wait and hear what I have to say!" cried Noel Vanstone, piteously,
when the servant had closed the parlor door.</p>
<p>"My family failing, sir—the blood of the Bygraves. Accept my
excuses. We are alone, as you wished; pray proceed."</p>
<p>Placed between the alternatives of losing Magdalen's society or betraying
Mrs. Lecount, unenlightened by any suspicion of the housekeeper's ultimate
object, cowed by the immovable scrutiny of Captain Wragge's inquiring eye,
Noel Vanstone was not long in making his choice. He confusedly described
his singular interview of the previous evening with Mrs. Lecount, and,
taking the folded paper from his pocket, placed it in the captain's hand.</p>
<p>A suspicion of the truth dawned on Captain Wragge's mind the moment he saw
the mysterious note. He withdrew to the window before he opened it. The
first lines that attracted his attention were these: "Oblige me, Mr. Noel,
by comparing the young lady who is now in your company with the personal
description which follows these lines, and which has been communicated to
me by a friend. You shall know the name of the person described—which
I have left a blank—as soon as the evidence of your own eyes has
forced you to believe what you would refuse to credit on the unsupported
testimony of Virginie Lecount."</p>
<p>That was enough for the captain. Before he had read a word of the
description itself, he knew what Mrs. Lecount had done, and felt, with a
profound sense of humiliation, that his female enemy had taken him by
surprise.</p>
<p>There was no time to think; the whole enterprise was threatened with
irrevocable overthrow. The one resource in Captain Wragge's present
situation was to act instantly on the first impulse of his own audacity.
Line by line he read on, and still the ready inventiveness which had never
deserted him yet failed to answer the call made on it now. He came to the
closing sentence—to the last words which mentioned the two little
moles on Magdalen's neck. At that crowning point of the description, an
idea crossed his mind; his party-colored eyes twinkled; his curly lips
twisted up at the corners; Wragge was himself again. He wheeled round
suddenly from the window, and looked Noel Vanstone straight in the face
with a grimly-quiet suggestiveness of something serious to come.</p>
<p>"Pray, sir, do you happen to know anything of Mrs. Lecount's family?" he
inquired.</p>
<p>"A respectable family," said Noel Vanstone—"that's all I know. Why
do you ask?"</p>
<p>"I am not usually a betting man," pursued Captain Wragge. "But on this
occasion I will lay you any wager you like there is madness in your
housekeeper's family."</p>
<p>"Madness!" repeated Noel Vanstone, amazedly</p>
<p>"Madness!" reiterated the captain, sternly tapping the note with his
forefinger. "I see the cunning of insanity, the suspicion of insanity, the
feline treachery of insanity in every line of this deplorable document.
There is a far more alarming reason, sir, than I had supposed for Mrs.
Lecount's behavior to my niece. It is clear to me that Miss Bygrave
resembles some other lady who has seriously offended your housekeeper—who
has been formerly connected, perhaps, with an outbreak of insanity in your
housekeeper—and who is now evidently confused with my niece in your
housekeeper's wandering mind. That is my conviction, Mr. Vanstone. I may
be right, or I may be wrong. All I say is this—neither you, nor any
man, can assign a sane motive for the production of that incomprehensible
document, and for the use which you are requested to make of it."</p>
<p>"I don't think Lecount's mad," said Noel Vanstone, with a very blank look,
and a very discomposed manner. "It couldn't have escaped me, with my
habits of observation; it couldn't possibly have escaped me if Lecount had
been mad."</p>
<p>"Very good, my dear sir. In my opinion, she is the subject of an insane
delusion. In your opinion, she is in possession of her senses, and has
some mysterious motive which neither you nor I can fathom. Either way,
there can be no harm in putting Mrs. Lecount's description to the test,
not only as a matter of curiosity, but for our own private satisfaction on
both sides. It is of course impossible to tell my niece that she is to be
made the subject of such a preposterous experiment as that note of yours
suggests. But you can use your own eyes, Mr. Vanstone; you can keep your
own counsel; and—mad or not—you can at least tell your
housekeeper, on the testimony of your own senses, that she is wrong. Let
me look at the description again. The greater part of it is not worth two
straws for any purpose of identification; hundreds of young ladies have
tall figures, fair complexions, light brown hair, and light gray eyes. You
will say, on the other hand, hundreds of young ladies have not got two
little moles close together on the left side of the neck. Quite true. The
moles supply us with what we scientific men call a Crucial Test. When my
niece comes downstairs, sir, you have my full permission to take the
liberty of looking at her neck."</p>
<p>Noel Vanstone expressed his high approval of the Crucial Test by smirking
and simpering for the first time that morning.</p>
<p>"Of looking at her neck," repeated the captain, returning the note to his
visitor, and then making for the door. "I will go upstairs myself, Mr.
Vanstone," he continued, "and inspect Miss Bygrave's walking-dress. If she
has innocently placed any obstacles in your way, if her hair is a little
too low, or her frill is a little too high, I will exert my authority, on
the first harmless pretext I can think of, to have those obstacles
removed. All I ask is, that you will choose your opportunity discreetly,
and that you will not allow my niece to suppose that her neck is the
object of a gentleman's inspection."</p>
<p>The moment he was out of the parlor Captain Wragge ascended the stairs at
the top of his speed and knocked at Magdalen's door. She opened it to him
in her walking-dress, obedient to the signal agreed on between them which
summoned her downstairs.</p>
<p>"What have you done with your paints and powders?" asked the captain,
without wasting a word in preliminary explanations. "They were not in the
box of costumes which I sold for you at Birmingham. Where are they?"</p>
<p>"I have got them here," replied Magdalen. "What can you possibly mean by
wanting them now?"</p>
<p>"Bring them instantly into my dressing-room—the whole collection,
brushes, palette, and everything. Don't waste time in asking questions;
I'll tell you what has happened as we go on. Every moment is precious to
us. Follow me instantly!"</p>
<p>His face plainly showed that there was a serious reason for his strange
proposal. Magdalen secured her collection of cosmetics and followed him
into the dressing-room. He locked the door, placed her on a chair close to
the light, and then told her what had happened.</p>
<p>"We are on the brink of detection," proceeded the captain, carefully
mixing his colors with liquid glue, and with a strong "drier" added from a
bottle in his own possession. "There is only one chance for us (lift up
your hair from the left side of your neck)—I have told Mr. Noel
Vanstone to take a private opportunity of looking at you; and I am going
to give the lie direct to that she-devil Lecount by painting out your
moles."</p>
<p>"They can't be painted out," said Magdalen. "No color will stop on them."</p>
<p>"<i>My</i> color will," remarked Captain Wragge. "I have tried a variety
of professions in my time—the profession of painting among the rest.
Did you ever hear of such a thing as a Black Eye? I lived some months once
in the neighborhood of Drury Lane entirely on Black Eyes. My flesh-color
stood on bruises of all sorts, shades, and sizes, and it will stand, I
promise you, on your moles."</p>
<p>With this assurance, the captain dipped his brush into a little lump of
opaque color which he had mixed in a saucer, and which he had graduated as
nearly as the materials would permit to the color of Magdalen's skin.
After first passing a cambric handkerchief, with some white powder on it,
over the part of her neck on which he designed to operate, he placed two
layers of color on the moles with the tip of the brush. The process was
performed in a few moments, and the moles, as if by magic, disappeared
from view. Nothing but the closest inspection could have discovered the
artifice by which they had been concealed; at the distance of two or three
feet only, it was perfectly invisible.</p>
<p>"Wait here five minutes," said Captain Wragge, "to let the paint dry—and
then join us in the parlor. Mrs. Lecount herself would be puzzled if she
looked at you now."</p>
<p>"Stop!" said Magdalen. "There is one thing you have not told me yet. How
did Mrs. Lecount get the description which you read downstairs? Whatever
else she has seen of me, she has not seen the mark on my neck—it is
too far back, and too high up; my hair hides it."</p>
<p>"Who knows of the mark?" asked Captain Wragge.</p>
<p>She turned deadly pale under the anguish of a sudden recollection of
Frank.</p>
<p>"My sister knows it," s he said, faintly.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Lecount may have written to your sister," suggested the captain:</p>
<p>"Do you think my sister would tell a stranger what no stranger has a right
to know? Never! never!"</p>
<p>"Is there nobody else who could tell Mrs. Lecount? The mark was mentioned
in the handbills at York. Who put it there?"</p>
<p>"Not Norah! Perhaps Mr. Pendril. Perhaps Miss Garth."</p>
<p>"Then Mrs. Lecount has written to Mr. Pendril or Miss Garth—more
likely to Miss Garth. The governess would be easier to deal with than the
lawyer."</p>
<p>"What can she have said to Miss Garth?"</p>
<p>Captain Wragge considered a little.</p>
<p>"I can't say what Mrs. Lecount may have written," he said, "but I can tell
you what I should have written in Mrs. Lecount's place. I should have
frightened Miss Garth by false reports about you, to begin with, and then
I should have asked for personal particulars, to help a benevolent
stranger in restoring you to your friends." The angry glitter flashed up
instantly in Magdalen's eyes.</p>
<p>"What <i>you</i> would have done is what Mrs. Lecount has done," she said,
indignantly. "Neither lawyer nor governess shall dispute my right to my
own will and my own way. If Miss Garth thinks she can control my actions
by corresponding with Mrs. Lecount, I will show Miss Garth she is
mistaken! It is high time, Captain Wragge, to have done with these
wretched risks of discovery. We will take the short way to the end we have
in view sooner than Mrs. Lecount or Miss Garth think for. How long can you
give me to wring an offer of marriage out of that creature downstairs?"</p>
<p>"I dare not give you long," replied Captain Wragge. "Now your friends know
where you are, they may come down on us at a day's notice. Could you
manage it in a week?"</p>
<p>"I'll manage it in half the time," she said, with a hard, defiant laugh.
"Leave us together this morning as you left us at Dunwich, and take Mrs.
Wragge with you, as an excuse for parting company. Is the paint dry yet?
Go downstairs and tell him I am coming directly."</p>
<p>So, for the second time, Miss Garth's well-meant efforts defeated their
own end. So the fatal force of circumstance turned the hand that would
fain have held Magdalen back into the hand that drove her on.</p>
<p>The captain returned to his visitor in the parlor, after first stopping on
his way to issue his orders for the walking excursion to Mrs. Wragge.</p>
<p>"I am shocked to have kept you waiting," he said, sitting down again
confidentially by Noel Vanstone's side. "My only excuse is, that my niece
had accidentally dressed her hair so as to defeat our object. I have been
persuading her to alter it, and young ladies are apt to be a little
obstinate on questions relating to their toilet. Give her a chair on that
side of you when she comes in, and take your look at her neck comfortably
before we start for our walk."</p>
<p>Magdalen entered the room as he said those words, and after the first
greetings were exchanged, took the chair presented to her with the most
unsuspicious readiness. Noel Vanstone applied the Crucial Test on the
spot, with the highest appreciation of the fair material which was the
subject of experiment. Not the vestige of a mole was visible on any part
of the smooth white surface of Miss Bygrave's neck. It mutely answered the
blinking inquiry of Noel Vanstone's half-closed eyes by the flattest
practical contradiction of Mrs. Lecount. That one central incident in the
events of the morning was of all the incidents that had hitherto occurred,
the most important in its results. That one discovery shook the
housekeeper's hold on her master as nothing had shaken it yet.</p>
<p>In a few minutes Mrs. Wragge made her appearance, and excited as much
surprise in Noel Vanstone's mind as he was capable of feeling while
absorbed in the enjoyment of Magdalen's society. The walking-party left
the house at once, directing their steps northward, so as not to pass the
windows of Sea-view Cottage. To Mrs. Wragge's unutterable astonishment,
her husband, for the first time in the course of their married life,
politely offered her his arm, and led her on in advance of the young
people, as if the privilege of walking alone with her presented some
special attraction to him! "Step out!" whispered the captain, fiercely.
"Leave your niece and Mr. Vanstone alone! If I catch you looking back at
them, I'll put the Oriental Cashmere Robe on the top of the kitchen fire!
Turn your toes out, and keep step—confound you, keep step!" Mrs.
Wragge kept step to the best of her limited ability. Her sturdy knees
trembled under her. She firmly believed the captain was intoxicated.</p>
<p>The walk lasted for rather more than an hour. Before nine o'clock they
were all back again at North Shingles. The ladies went at once into the
house. Noel Vanstone remained with Captain Wragge in the garden. "Well,"
said the captain, "what do you think now of Mrs. Lecount?"</p>
<p>"Damn Lecount!" replied Noel Vanstone, in great agitation. "I'm half
inclined to agree with you. I'm half inclined to think my infernal
housekeeper is mad."</p>
<p>He spoke fretfully and unwillingly, as if the merest allusion to Mrs.
Lecount was distasteful to him. His color came and went; his manner was
absent and undecided; he fidgeted restlessly about the garden walk. It
would have been plain to a far less acute observation than Captain
Wragge's, that Magdalen had met his advances by an unexpected grace and
readiness of encouragement which had entirely overthrown his self-control.</p>
<p>"I never enjoyed a walk so much in my life!" he exclaimed, with a sudden
outburst of enthusiasm. "I hope Miss Bygrave feels all the better, for it.
Do you go out at the same time to-morrow morning? May I join you again?"</p>
<p>"By all means, Mr. Vanstone," said the Captain, cordially. "Excuse me for
returning to the subject—but what do you propose saying to Mrs.
Lecount?"</p>
<p>"I don't know. Lecount is a perfect nuisance! What would you do, Mr.
Bygrave, if you were in my place?"</p>
<p>"Allow me to ask a question, my dear sir, before I tell you. What is your
breakfast-hour?"</p>
<p>"Half-past nine."</p>
<p>"Is Mrs. Lecount an early riser?"</p>
<p>"No. Lecount is lazy in the morning. I hate lazy women! If you were in my
place, what should you say to her?"</p>
<p>"I should say nothing," replied Captain Wragge. "I should return at once
by the back way; I should let Mrs. Lecount see me in the front garden as
if I was taking a turn before breakfast; and I should leave her to suppose
that I was only just out of my room. If she asks you whether you mean to
come here today, say No. Secure a quiet life until circumstances force you
to give her an answer. Then tell the plain truth—say that Mr.
Bygrave's niece and Mrs. Lecount's description are at variance with each
other in the most important particular, and beg that the subject may not
be mentioned again. There is my advice. What do you think of it?"</p>
<p>If Noel Vanstone could have looked into his counselor's mind, he might
have thought the captain's advice excellently adapted to serve the
captain's interests. As long as Mrs. Lecount could be kept in ignorance of
her master's visits to North Shingles, so long she would wait until the
opportunity came for trying her experiment, and so long she might be
trusted not to endanger the conspiracy by any further proceedings.
Necessarily incapable of viewing Captain Wragge's advice under this
aspect, Noel Vanstone simply looked at it as offering him a temporary
means of escape from an explanation with his housekeeper. He eagerly
declared that the course of action suggested to him should be followed to
the letter, and returned to Sea View without further delay.</p>
<p>On this occasion Captain Wragge's anticipations were in no respect
falsified by Mrs. Lecount's conduct. She had no suspicion of her master's
visit to North Shingles: she had made up her mind, if necessary, to wait
patiently for his interview with Miss Bygrave until the end of the week;
and she did not embarrass him by any unexpected questions when he
announced his intention of holding no personal communication with the
Bygraves on that day. All she said was, "Don't you feel well enough, Mr.
Noel? or don't you feel inclined?" He answered, shortly, "I don't feel
well enough"; and there the conversation ended.</p>
<p>The next day the proceedings of the previous morning were exactly
repeated. This time Noel Vanstone went home rapturously with a keepsake in
his breast-pocket; he had taken tender possession of one of Miss Bygrave's
gloves. At intervals during the day, whenever he was alone, he took out
the glove and kissed it with a devotion which was almost passionate in its
fervor. The miserable little creature luxuriated in his moments of stolen
happiness with a speechless and stealthy delight which was a new sensation
to him. The few young girls whom he had met with, in his father's narrow
circle at Zurich, had felt a mischievous pleasure in treating him like a
quaint little plaything; the strongest impression he could make on their
hearts was an impression in which their lap-dogs might have rivaled him;
the deepest interest he could create in them was the interest they might
have felt in a new trinket or a new dress. The only women who had hitherto
invited his admiration, and taken his compliments seriously had been women
whose charms were on the wane, and whose chances of marriage were fast
failing them. For the first time in his life he had now passed hours of
happiness in the society of a beautiful girl, who had left him to think of
her afterward without a single humiliating remembrance to lower him in his
own esteem.</p>
<p>Anxiously as he tried to hide it, the change produced in his look and
manner by the new feeling awakened in him was not a change which could be
concealed from Mrs. Lecount. On the second day she pointedly asked him
whether he had not made an arrangement to call on the Bygraves. He denied
it as before. "Perhaps you are going to-morrow, Mr. Noel?" persisted the
housekeeper. He was at the end of his resources; he was impatient to be
rid of her inquiries; he trusted to his friend at North Shingles to help
him; and this time he answered Yes. "If you see the young lady," proceeded
Mrs. Lecount, "don't forget that note of mine, sir, which you have in your
waistcoat-pocket." No more was said on either side, but by that night's
post the housekeeper wrote to Miss Garth. The letter merely acknowledged,
with thanks, the receipt of Miss Garth's communication, and informed her
that in a few days Mrs. Lecount hoped to be in a position to write again
and summon Mr. Pendril to Aldborough.</p>
<p>Late in the evening, when the parlor at North Shingles began to get dark,
and when the captain rang the bell for candles as usual, he was surprised
by hearing Magdalen's voice in the passage telling the servant to take the
lights downstairs again. She knocked at the door immediately afterward,
and glided into the obscurity of the room like a ghost.</p>
<p>"I have a question to ask you about your plans for to-morrow," she said.
"My eyes are very weak this evening, and I hope you will not object to
dispense with the candles for a few minutes."</p>
<p>She spoke in low, stifled tones, and felt her way noiselessly to a chair
far removed from the captain in the darkest part of the room. Sitting near
the window, he could just discern the dim outline of her dress, he could
just hear the faint accents of her voice. For the last two days he had
seen nothing of her except during their morning walk. On that afternoon he
had found his wife crying in the little backroom down-stairs. She could
only tell him that Magdalen had frightened her—that Magdalen was
going the way again which she had gone when the letter came from China in
the terrible past time at Vauxhall Walk.</p>
<p>"I was sorry to her that you were ill to-day, from Mrs. Wragge," said the
captain, unconsciously dropping his voice almost to a whisper as he spoke.</p>
<p>"It doesn't matter," she answered quietly, out of the darkness. "I am
strong enough to suffer, and live. Other girls in my place would have been
happier—they would have suffered, and died. It doesn't matter; it
will be all the same a hundred years hence. Is he coming again tomorrow
morning at seven o'clock?"</p>
<p>"He is coming, if you feel no objection to it."</p>
<p>"I have no objection to make; I have done with objecting. But I should
like to have the time altered. I don't look my best in the early morning—-I
have bad nights, and I rise haggard and worn. Write him a note this
evening, and tell him to come at twelve o'clock."</p>
<p>"Twelve is rather late, under the circumstances, for you to be seen out
walking."</p>
<p>"I have no intention of walking. Let him be shown into the parlor—"</p>
<p>Her voice died away in silence before she ended the sentence.</p>
<p>"Yes?" said Captain Wragge.</p>
<p>"And leave me alone in the parlor to receive him."</p>
<p>"I understand," said the captain. "An admirable idea. I'll be out of the
way in the dining-room while he is here, and you can come and tell me
about it when he has gone."</p>
<p>There was another moment of silence.</p>
<p>"Is there no way but telling you?" she asked, suddenly. "I can control
myself while he is with me, but I can't answer for what I may say or do
afterward. Is there no other way?"</p>
<p>"Plenty of ways," said the captain. "Here is the first that occurs to me.
Leave the blind down over the window of your room upstairs before he
comes. I will go out on the beach, and wait there within sight of the
house. When I see him come out again, I will look at the window. If he has
said nothing, leave the blind down. If he has made you an offer, draw the
blind up. The signal is simplicity itself; we can't misunderstand each
other. Look your best to-morrow! Make sure of him, my dear girl—make
sure of him, if you possibly can."</p>
<p>He had spoken loud enough to feel certain that she had heard him, but no
answering word came from her. The dead silence was only disturbed by the
rustling of her dress, which told him she had risen from her chair. Her
shadowy presence crossed the room again; the door shut softly; she was
gone. He rang the bell hurriedly for the lights. The servant found him
standing close at the window, looking less self-possessed than usual. He
told her he felt a little poorly, and sent her to the cupboard for the
brandy.</p>
<p>At a few minutes before twelve the next day Captain Wragge withdrew to his
post of observation, concealing himself behind a fishing-boat drawn up on
the beach. Punctually as the hour struck, he saw Noel Vanstone approach
North Shingles and open the garden gate. When the house door had closed on
the visitor, Captain Wragge settled himself comfortably against the side
of the boat and lit his cigar.</p>
<p>He smoked for half an hour—for ten minutes over the half-hour, by
his watch. He finished the cigar down to the last morsel of it that he
could hold in his lips. Just as he had thrown away the end, the door
opened again and Noel Vanstone came out.</p>
<p>The captain looked up instantly at Magdalen's window. In the absorbing
excitement of the moment, he counted the seconds. She might get from the
parlor to her own room in less than a minute. He counted to thirty, and
nothing happened. He counted to fifty, and nothing happened. He gave up
counting, and left the boat impatiently, to return to the house.</p>
<p>As he took his first step forward he saw the signal.</p>
<p>The blind was drawn up.</p>
<p>Cautiously ascending the eminence of the beach, Captain Wragge looked
toward Sea-view Cottage before he showed himself on the Parade. Noel
Vanstone had reached home again; he was just entering his own door.</p>
<p>"If all your money was offered me to stand in your shoes," said the
captain, looking after him—"rich as you are, I wouldn't take it!"</p>
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