<SPAN name="Chapter_Seventeen" id="Chapter_Seventeen"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG border="0" src="images/chapter_17.png" width-obs="475" height-obs="275" class="center" alt="Chapter Seventeen" />
<p><span class="dropcapa_crown"><span class="dropcap">A</span></span> few minutes later a knock at the door being replied to by Hester's
curt "Come in!" produced the modest entry of Jane Cupp, who had come to
make a necessary inquiry of her mistress. "Her ladyship is not here; she
has gone out." Jane made an altogether involuntary step forward. Her
face became the colour of her clean white apron.</p>
<p>"Out!" she gasped.</p>
<p>Hester turned sharply round.</p>
<p>"To the lake," she said. "What do you mean by staring in that way?"</p>
<p>Jane did not tell her what she meant. She incontinently ran from the
room without any shadow of a pretence at a lady's maid's decorum.</p>
<p>She fled through the rooms, to make a short cut to the door opening on
to the gardens. Through that she darted, and flew across paths and
flowerbeds towards the avenue of limes.</p>
<p>"She shan't get to the bridge before me," she panted. "She shan't, she
shan't. I won't let her. Oh, if my breath will only hold out!"</p>
<p>She did not reflect that gardeners would naturally think she had gone
mad. She thought of nothing whatever but the look in Ameerah's downcast
eyes when the servants had talked of the bottomless water,—the eerie,
satisfied, sly look. Of that, and of the rising of the white figure from
the ground last night she thought, and she clutched her neat side as she
ran.</p>
<p>The Lime Avenue seemed a mile long, and yet when she was running down it
she saw Lady Walderhurst walking slowly under the trees carrying her
touching little basket of sewing in her hand. She was close to the
bridge.</p>
<p>"My lady! my lady!" she gasped out as soon as <ins class="correction"
title="Transcriber's Note: The original text reads 'dare'">she dared</ins>. She could not
run screaming all the way. "Oh, my lady! if you please!"</p>
<p>Emily heard her and turned round. Never had she been much more amazed in
her life. Her maid, her well-bred Jane Cupp, who had not drawn an
indecorous breath since assuming her duties, was running after her
calling out to her, waving her hands, her face distorted, her voice
hysteric.</p>
<p>Emily had been just on the point of stepping on to the bridge, her hand
had been outstretched towards the rail. She drew back a step in alarm
and stood staring. How strange everything seemed to-day. She began to
feel choked and trembling.</p>
<p>A few seconds and Jane was upon her, clutching at her dress. She had so
lost her breath that she was almost speechless.</p>
<p>"My lady," she panted. "Don't set foot on it; don't—don't, till we're
sure."</p>
<p>"On—on what?"</p>
<p>Then Jane realised how mad she looked, how insane the whole scene was,
and she gave way to her emotions. Partly through physical exhaustion and
breathlessness, and partly through helpless terror, she fell on her
knees.</p>
<p>"The bridge!" she said. "I don't care what happens to me so that no harm
comes to you. There's things being plotted and planned that looks like
accidents. The bridge would look like an accident if part of it broke.
There's no bottom to the water. They were saying so yesterday, and <i>she</i>
sat listening. I found her here last night."</p>
<p>"She! Her!" Emily felt as if she was passing through another nightmare.</p>
<p>"Ameerah," wailed poor Jane. "White ones have no chance against black.
Oh, my lady!" her sense of the possibility that she might be making a
fool of herself after all was nearly killing her. "I believe she would
drive you to your death if she could do it, think what you will of me."</p>
<p>The little basket of needlework shook in Lady Walderhurst's hand. She
swallowed hard, and without warning sat down on the roots of a fallen
tree, her cheeks blanching slowly.</p>
<p>"Oh Jane!" she said in simple woe and bewilderment. "I don't understand
any of it. How could—how <i>could</i> they want to hurt me!" Her innocence
was so fatuous that she thought that because she had been kind to them
they could not hate or wish to injure her.</p>
<p>But something for the first time made her begin to quail. She sat, and
tried to recover herself. She put out a shaking hand to the basket of
sewing. She could scarcely see it, because suddenly tears had filled her
eyes.</p>
<p>"Bring one of the men here," she said, after a few moments. "Tell him
that I am a little uncertain about the safety of the bridge."</p>
<p>She sat quite still while Jane was absent in search of the man. She held
her basket on her knee, her hand resting on it. Her kindly, slow-working
mind was wakening to strange thoughts. To her they seemed inhuman and
uncanny. Was it because good, faithful, ignorant Jane had been rather
nervous about Ameerah that she herself had of late got into a habit of
feeling as if the Ayah was watching and following her. She had been
startled more than once by finding her near when she had not been aware
of her presence. She had, of course, heard Hester say that native
servants often startled one by their silent, stealthy-seeming ways. But
the woman's eyes had frightened her. And she had heard the story about
the village girl.</p>
<p>She sat, and thought, and thought. Her eyes were fixed upon the
moss-covered ground, and her breath came quickly and irregularly several
times.</p>
<p>"I don't know what to do," she said. "I am sure—if it is true—I don't
know what to do."</p>
<p>The under-gardener's heavy step and Jane's lighter one roused her. She
lifted her eyes to watch the pair as they came. He was a big, young man
with a simple rustic face and big shoulders and hands.</p>
<p>"The bridge is so slight and old," she said to him, "that it has just
occurred to me that it might not be quite safe. Examine it carefully to
make sure."</p>
<p>The young man touched his forehead and began to look the supports over.
Jane watched him with bated breath when he rose to his feet.</p>
<p>"They're all right on this side, my lady," he said. "I shall have to get
in the boat to make sure of them that rest on the island."</p>
<p>He stamped upon the end nearest and it remained firm.</p>
<p>"Look at the railing well," said Lady Walderhurst. "I often stand and
lean on it and—and watch the sunset."</p>
<p>She faltered at this point, because she had suddenly remembered that
this was a habit of hers, and that she had often spoken of it to the
Osborns. There was a point on the bridge at which, through a gap in the
trees, a beautiful sunset was always particularly beautiful. It was the
right-hand rail facing these special trees she rested on when she
watched the evening sky.</p>
<p>The big, young gardener looked at the left-hand rail and shook it with
his strong hands.</p>
<p>"That's safe enough," he said to Jane.</p>
<p>"Try the other," said Jane.</p>
<p>He tried the other. Something had happened to it. It broke in his big
grasp. His sunburnt skin changed colour by at least three shades.</p>
<p>"Lord A'mighty!" Jane heard him gasp under his breath. He touched his
cap and looked blankly at Lady Walderhurst. Jane's heart seemed to
herself to roll over. She scarcely dared look at her mistress, but when
she took courage to do so, she found her so white that she hurried to
her side.</p>
<p>"Thank you, Jane," she said rather faintly. "The sky is so lovely this
afternoon that I meant to stop and look at it. I should have fallen into
the water, which they say has no bottom. No one would have seen or heard
me if you had not come."</p>
<p>She caught Jane's hand and held it hard. Her eyes wandered over the
avenue of big trees, which no one but herself came near at this hour. It
would have been so lonely, so lonely!</p>
<p>The gardener went away, still looking less ruddy than he had looked when
he arrived on the spot. Lady Walderhurst rose from her seat on the mossy
tree-trunk. She rose quite slowly.</p>
<p>"Don't speak to me yet, Jane," she said. And with Jane following her at
a respectful distance, she returned to the house and went to her room to
lie down.</p>
<p>There was nothing to prove that the whole thing was not mere chance,
mere chance. It was this which turned her cold. It was all impossible.
The little bridge had been entirely unused for so long a time, it had
been so slight a structure from the first; it was old, and she
remembered now that Walderhurst had once said that it must be examined
and strengthened if it was to be used. She had leaned upon the rail
often lately; one evening she had wondered if it seemed quite as steady
as usual. What could she say, whom could she accuse, because a piece of
rotten wood had given away.</p>
<p>She started on her pillow. It was a piece of rotten wood which had
fallen from the balustrade upon the stairs, to be seen and picked up by
Jane just before she would have passed down on her way to dinner. And
yet, what would she appear to her husband, to Lady Maria, to anyone in
the decorous world, if she told them that she believed that in a
dignified English household, an English gentleman, even a deposed heir
presumptive, was working out a subtle plot against her such as might
adorn a melodrama? She held her head in her hands as her mind depicted
to her Lord Walderhurst's countenance, Lady Maria's dubious, amused
smile.</p>
<p>"She would think I was hysterical," she cried, under her breath. "He
would think I was vulgar and stupid, that I was a fussy woman with
foolish ideas, which made him ridiculous. Captain Osborn is of his
family. I should be accusing him of being a criminal. And yet I might
have been in the bottomless pond, in the bottomless pond, and no one
would have known."</p>
<p>If it all had not seemed so incredible to her, if she could have felt
certain herself, she would not have been overwhelmed with this sense of
being baffled, bewildered, lost.</p>
<p>The Ayah who so loved Hester might hate her rival. A jealous native
woman might be capable of playing stealthy tricks, which, to her strange
mind, might seem to serve a proper end. Captain Osborn might not know.
She breathed again as this thought came to her. He could not know; it
would be too insane, too dangerous, too wicked.</p>
<p>And yet, if she had been flung headlong down the staircase, if the fall
had killed her, where would have been the danger for the man who would
only have deplored a fatal accident. If she had leaned upon the rail and
fallen into the black depths of water below, what could have been blamed
but a piece of rotten wood. She touched her forehead with her
handkerchief because it felt cold and damp. There was no way out. Her
teeth chattered.</p>
<p>"They may be as innocent as I am. And they may be murderers in their
hearts. I can prove nothing, I can <ins class="correction"
title="Transcriber's Note: The original text has a close quote after the period.">prevent nothing.</ins> Oh! <i>do</i> come home."</p>
<p>There was but one thought which remained clear in her mind. She must
keep herself safe—she must keep herself safe. In the anguish of her
trouble she confessed, by putting it into words, a thing which she had
not confessed before, and even as she spoke she did not realise that her
words contained confession.</p>
<p>"If I were to die now," she said with a touching gravity, "he would care
very much."</p>
<p>A few moments later she said, "It does not matter what happens to me,
how ridiculous or vulgar or foolish I seem, if I can keep myself
safe—until after. I will write to him now and ask him to try to come
back."</p>
<p>It was the letter she wrote after this decision which Osborn saw among
others awaiting postal, and which he stopped to examine.</p>
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