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<h2> CHAPTER XII. </h2>
<p>TOWARD three o'clock in the afternoon Captain Wragge stopped at the
nearest station to Ossory which the railway passed in its course through
Essex. Inquiries made on the spot informed him that he might drive to St.
Crux, remain there for a quarter of an hour, and return to the station in
time for an evening train to London. In ten minutes more the captain was
on the road again, driving rapidly in the direction of the coast.</p>
<p>After proceeding some miles on the highway, the carriage turned off, and
the coachman involved himself in an intricate network of cross-roads.</p>
<p>"Are we far from St. Crux?" asked the captain, growing impatient, after
mile on mile had been passed without a sign of reaching the journey's end.</p>
<p>"You'll see the house, sir, at the next turn in the road," said the man.</p>
<p>The next turn in the road brought them within view of the open country
again. Ahead of the carriage, Captain Wragge saw a long dark line against
the sky—the line of the sea-wall which protects the low coast of
Essex from inundation. The flat intermediate country was intersected by a
labyrinth of tidal streams, winding up from the invisible sea in strange
fantastic curves—rivers at high water, and channels of mud at low.
On his right hand was a quaint little village, mostly composed of wooden
houses, straggling down to the brink of one of the tidal streams. On his
left hand, further away, rose the gloomy ruins of an abbey, with a
desolate pile of buildings, which covered two sides of a square attached
to it. One of the streams from the sea (called, in Essex, "backwaters")
curled almost entirely round the house. Another, from an opposite quarter,
appeared to run straight through the grounds, and to separate one side of
the shapeless mass of buildings, which was in moderate repair, from
another, which was little better than a ruin. Bridges of wood and bridges
of brick crossed the stream, and gave access to the house from all points
of the compass. No human creature appeared in the neighborhood, and no
sound was heard but the hoarse barking of a house-dog from an invisible
courtyard.</p>
<p>"Which door shall I drive to, sir?" asked the coachman. "The front or the
back?"</p>
<p>"The back," said Captain Wragge, feeling that the less notice he attracted
in his present position, the safer that position might be.</p>
<p>The carriage twice crossed the stream before the coachman made his way
through the grounds into a dreary inclosure of stone. At an open door on
the inhabited side of the place sat a weather-beaten old man, busily at
work on a half-finished model of a ship. He rose and came to the carriage
door, lifting up his spectacles on his forehead, and looking disconcerted
at the appearance of a stranger.</p>
<p>"Is Mr. Noel Vanstone staying here?" asked Captain Wragge.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," replied the old man. "Mr. Noel came yesterday."</p>
<p>"Take that card to Mr. Vanstone, if you please," said the captain, "and
say I am waiting here to see him."</p>
<p>In a few minutes Noel Vanstone made his appearance, breathless and eager—absorbed
in anxiety for news from Aldborough. Captain Wragge opened the carriage
door, seized his outstretched hand, and pulled him in without ceremony.</p>
<p>"Your housekeeper has gone," whispered the captain, "and you are to be
married on Monday. Don't agitate yourself, and don't express your feelings—there
isn't time for it. Get the first active servant you can find in the house
to pack your bag in ten minutes, take leave of the admiral, and come back
at once with me to the London train."</p>
<p>Noel Vanstone faintly attempted to ask a question. The captain declined to
hear it.</p>
<p>"As much talk as you like on the road," he said. "Time is too precious for
talking here. How do we know Lecount may not think better of it? How do we
know she may not turn back before she gets to Zurich?"</p>
<p>That startling consideration terrified Noel Vanstone into instant
submission.</p>
<p>"What shall I say to the admiral?" he asked, helplessly.</p>
<p>"Tell him you are going to be married, to be sure! What does it matter,
now Lecount's back is turned? If he wonders you didn't tell him before,
say it's a runaway match, and the bride is waiting for you. Stop! Any
letters addressed to you in your absence will be sent to this place, of
course? Give the admiral these envelopes, and tell him to forward your
letters under cover to me. I am an old customer at the hotel we are going
to; and if we find the place full, the landlord may be depended on to take
care of any letters with my name on them. A safe address in London for
your correspondence may be of the greatest importance. How do we know
Lecount may not write to you on her way to Zurich?"</p>
<p>"What a head you have got!" cried Noel Vanstone, eagerly taking the
envelopes. "You think of everything."</p>
<p>He left the carriage in high excitement, and ran back into the house. In
ten minutes more Captain Wragge had him in safe custody, and the horses
started on their return journey.</p>
<p>The travelers reached London in good time that evening, and found
accommodation at the hotel.</p>
<p>Knowing the restless, inquisitive nature of the man he had to deal with,
Captain Wragge had anticipated some little difficulty and embarrassment in
meeting the questions which Noel Vanstone might put to him on the way to
London. To his great relief, a startling domestic discovery absorbed his
traveling companion's whole attention at the outset of the journey. By
some extraordinary oversight, Miss Bygrave had been left, on the eve of
her marriage, unprovided with a maid. Noel Vanstone declared that he would
take the whole responsibility of correcting this deficiency in the
arrangements, on his own shoulders; he would not trouble Mr. Bygrave to
give him any assistance; he would confer, when they got to their journey's
end, with the landlady of the hotel, and would examine the candidates for
the vacant office himself. All the way to London, he returned again and
again to the same subject; all the evening, at the hotel, he was in and
out of the landlady's sitting-room, until he fairly obliged her to lock
the door. In every other proceeding which related to his marriage, he had
been kept in the background; he had been compelled to follow in the
footsteps of his ingenious friend. In the matter of the lady's maid he
claimed his fitting position at last—he followed nobody; he took the
lead!</p>
<p>The forenoon of the next day was devoted to obtaining the license—the
personal distinction of making the declaration on oath being eagerly
accepted by Noel Vanstone, who swore, in perfect good faith (on
information previously obtained from the captain) that the lady was of
age. The document procured, the bridegroom returned to examine the
characters and qualifications of the women-servants out of the place whom
the landlady had engaged to summon to the hotel, while Captain Wragge
turned his steps, "on business personal to himself," toward the residence
of a friend in a distant quarter of London.</p>
<p>The captain's friend was connected with the law, and the captain's
business was of a twofold nature. His first object was to inform himself
of the legal bearings of the approaching marriage on the future of the
husband and the wife. His second object was to provide beforehand for
destroying all traces of the destination to which he might betake himself
when he left Aldborough on the wedding-day. Having reached his end
successfully in both these cases, he returned to the hotel, and found Noel
Vanstone nursing his offended dignity in the landlady's sitting-room.
Three ladies' maids had appeared to pass their examination, and had all,
on coming to the question of wages, impudently declined accepting the
place. A fourth candidate was expected to present herself on the next day;
and, until she made her appearance, Noel Vanstone positively declined
removing from the metropolis. Captain Wragge showed his annoyance openly
at the unnecessary delay thus occasioned in the return to Aldborough, but
without producing any effect. Noel Vanstone shook his obstinate little
head, and solemnly refused to trifle with his responsibilities.</p>
<p>The first event which occurred on Saturday morning was the arrival of Mrs.
Lecount's letter to her master, inclosed in one of the envelopes which the
captain had addressed to himself. He received it (by previous arrangement
with the waiter) in his bedroom—read it with the closest attention—and
put it away carefully in his pocketbook. The letter was ominous of serious
events to come when the housekeeper returned to England; and it was due to
Magdalen—who was the person threatened—to place the warning of
danger in her own possession.</p>
<p>Later in the day the fourth candidate appeared for the maid's situation—a
young woman of small expectations and subdued manners, who looked (as the
landlady remarked) like a person overtaken by misfortune. She passed the
ordeal of examination successfully, and accepted the wages offered with
out a murmur. The engagement having been ratified on both sides, fresh
delays ensued, of which Noel Vanstone was once more the cause. He had not
yet made up his mind whether he would, or would not, give more than a
guinea for the wedding-ring; and he wasted the rest of the day to such
disastrous purpose in one jeweler's shop after another, that he and the
captain, and the new lady's maid (who traveled with them), were barely in
time to catch the last train from London that evening. It was late at
night when they left the railway at the nearest station to Aldborough.
Captain Wragge had been strangely silent all through the journey. His mind
was ill at ease. He had left Magdalen, under very critical circumstances,
with no fit person to control her, and he was wholly ignorant of the
progress of events in his absence at North Shingles.</p>
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