Part 25 (1/2)

”And why should you want to spite her? If she is Mary's child, she is your brother's child also. If she is my niece, she must be your niece too. Why should you want to spite her? Why should you try to do her such a terrible injury?”

”I do not want to spite her.”

”Where is she? Who is she? What is she called? Where does she live?”

The doctor did not at once answer all these questions. He had made up his mind that he would tell Sir Roger that this child was living, but he had not as yet resolved to make known all the circ.u.mstances of her history. He was not even yet quite aware whether it would be necessary to say that this foundling orphan was the cherished darling of his own house.

”Such a child, is, at any rate, living,” said he; ”of that I give you my a.s.surance; and under your will, as now worded, it might come to pa.s.s that that child should be your heir. I do not want to spite her, but I should be wrong to let you make your will without such knowledge, seeing that I am possessed of it myself.”

”But where is the girl?”

”I do not know that that signifies.”

”Signifies! Yes; it does signify a great deal. But, Thorne, Thorne, now that I remember it, now that I can think of things, it was--was it not you yourself who told me that the baby did not live?”

”Very possibly.”

”And was it a lie that you told me?”

”If so, yes. But it is no lie that I tell you now.”

”I believed you then, Thorne; then, when I was a poor, broken-down day-labourer, lying in jail, rotting there; but I tell you fairly, I do not believe you now. You have some scheme in this.”

”Whatever scheme I may have, you can frustrate by making another will. What can I gain by telling you this? I only do so to induce you to be more explicit in naming your heir.”

They both remained silent for a while, during which the baronet poured out from his hidden resource a gla.s.s of brandy and swallowed it.

”When a man is taken aback suddenly by such tidings as these, he must take a drop of something, eh, doctor?”

Dr Thorne did not see the necessity; but the present, he felt, was no time for arguing the point.

”Come, Thorne, where is the girl? You must tell me that. She is my niece, and I have a right to know. She shall come here, and I will do something for her. By the Lord! I would as soon she had the money as any one else, if she is anything of a good 'un;--some of it, that is.

Is she a good 'un?”

”Good!” said the doctor, turning away his face. ”Yes; she is good enough.”

”She must be grown up by now. None of your light skirts, eh?”

”She is a good girl,” said the doctor somewhat loudly and sternly. He could hardly trust himself to say much on this point.

”Mary was a good girl, a very good girl, till”--and Sir Roger raised himself up in his bed with his fist clenched, as though he were again about to strike that fatal blow at the farm-yard gate. ”But come, it's no good thinking of that; you behaved well and manly, always.

And so poor Mary's child is alive; at least, you say so.”

”I say so, and you may believe it. Why should I deceive you?”

”No, no; I don't see why. But then why did you deceive me before?”

To this the doctor chose to make no answer, and again there was silence for a while.

”What do you call her, doctor?”