Part 64 (2/2)

”The same man,” he answered. ”Do you know who he is?”

She found somehow breath to say, ”How can I? How is it possible?”

”I will tell you,” said Lee. ”There, sitting in front of Mr.

Troubridge, hardly altered in all these long years, sat George Hawker, formerly of Drumston,--your husband!”

She gave a low cry, and beat the hard rail with her head till it bled.

Then, turning fiercely round, she said, in a voice hoa.r.s.e and strangely altered,--

”Have you anything more to tell me, you croaking raven?”

He had something more to tell, but he dared not speak now. So he said, ”Nothing at present, but if laying down my life----”

She did not wait to hear him, but, with her hands clasped above her head, she turned and walked swiftly towards the house. She could not cry, or sob, or rave; she could only say, ”Let it fall on me, O G.o.d, on me!” over and over again.

Also, she was far too crushed and stunned to think precisely what it was she dreaded so. It seemed afterwards, as Frank Maberly told me, that she had an indefinable horror of Charles meeting his father, and of their coming to know one another. She half feared that her husband would appear and carry away her son with him, and even if he did not, the lad was reckless enough as it was, without being known and pointed at through the country as the son of Hawker the bushranger.

These were after-thoughts, however; at present she leaned giddily against the house-side, trying, in the wild hurrying night-rack of her thoughts, to distinguish some tiny star of hope, or even some glimmer of reason. Impossible! Nothing but swift, confused clouds everywhere, driving wildly on,--whither?

But a desire came upon her to see her boy again, and compare his face to his father's. So she slid quietly into the room where Tom and Charles were still talking together of Tom's adventure, and sat looking at the boy, pretending to work. As she came in, he was laughing loudly at something, and his face was alive and merry. ”He is not like what his father was at his age,” she said.

But they continued their conversation. ”And now, what sort of man was he, Tom?” said Charles. ”Was he like any one you ever saw?”

”Why, no. Stay, let's see. Do you know, he was something like you in the face.”

”Thank you!” said Charles, laughing. ”Wait till I get a chance of paying you a compliment, old fellow. A powerful fellow--eh?”

”Why, yes,--a tough-looking subject,” said Tom.

”I shouldn't have much chance with him, I suppose?”

”No; he'd be too powerful for you, Charley.”

A change came over his face, a dark, fierce look. Mary could see the likeness NOW plain enough, and even Tom looked at him for an instant with a puzzled look.

”Nevertheless,” continued Charles, ”I would have a turn with him if I met him; I'd try what six inches of cold steel between----”

”Forbear, boy! Would you have the roof fall in and crush you dead?”

said Mary, in a voice that appalled both of them. ”Stop such foolish talk, and pray that we may be delivered from the very sight of these men, and suffered to get away to our graves in peace, without any more of these horrors and surprises. I would sooner,” she said, increasing in rapidity as she went on, ”I would far sooner, live like some one I have heard of, with a sword above his head, than thus. If he comes and looks on me, I shall die.”

She had risen and stood in the firelight, deadly pale. Somehow one of the bands of her long black hair had fallen down, and half covered her face. She looked so unearthly that, coupling her appearance with the wild, senseless words she had been uttering, Tom had a horrible suspicion that she was gone mad.

”Cousin,” he said, ”let me beseech you to go to bed. Charles, run for Mrs. Barker. Mary,” he added, as soon as he was gone, ”come away, or you'll be saying something before that boy you'll be sorry for. You're hysterical; that's what is the matter with you. I am afraid we have frightened you by our talk about bushrangers.”

”Yes, that is it! that is it!” she said; and then, suddenly, ”Oh! my dear old friend, you will not desert me?”

”Never, Mary; but why ask such a question now?”

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