Part 70 (2/2)
”Willingly!” Emily replied. ”Am I right in supposing that you don't despair of proving his innocence, even yet'?”
”I don't quite despair. But my hopes have grown fainter and fainter, as the years have gone on. There is a person a.s.sociated with his escape from Zeeland; a person named Jethro--”
”You mean Miss Jethro!”
”Yes. Do you know her?”
”I know her--and my father knew her. I have found a letter, addressed to him, which I have no doubt was written by Miss Jethro. It is barely possible that you may understand what it means. Pray look at it.”
”I am quite unable to help you,” Mrs. Delvin answered, after reading the letter. ”All I know of Miss Jethro is that, but for her interposition, my brother might have fallen into the hands of the police. She saved him.”
”Knowing him, of course?”
”That is the remarkable part of it: they were perfect strangers to each other.”
”But she must have had some motive.”
”_There_ is the foundation of my hope for Miles. Miss Jethro declared, when I wrote and put the question to her, that the one motive by which she was actuated was the motive of mercy. I don't believe her. To my mind, it is in the last degree improbable that she would consent to protect a stranger from discovery, who owned to her (as my brother did) that he was a fugitive suspected of murder. She knows something, I am firmly convinced, of that dreadful event at Zeeland--and she has some reason for keeping it secret. Have you any influence over her?”
”Tell me where I can find her.”
”I can't tell you. She has removed from the address at which my brother saw her last. He has made every possible inquiry--without result.”
As she replied in those discouraging terms, the curtains which divided Mrs. Delvin's bedroom from her sitting-room were drawn aside. An elderly woman-servant approached her mistress's couch.
”Mr. Mirabel is awake, ma'am. He is very low; I can hardly feel his pulse. Shall I give him some more brandy?”
Mrs. Delvin held out her hand to Emily. ”Come to me to-morrow morning,”
she said--and signed to the servant to wheel her couch into the next room. As the curtain closed over them, Emily heard Mirabel's voice.
”Where am I?” he said faintly. ”Is it all a dream?”
The prospect of his recovery the next morning was gloomy indeed. He had sunk into a state of deplorable weakness, in mind as well as in body.
The little memory of events that he still preserved was regarded by him as the memory of a dream. He alluded to Emily, and to his meeting with her unexpectedly. But from that point his recollection failed him.
They had talked of something interesting, he said--but he was unable to remember what it was. And they had waited together at a railway station--but for what purpose he could not tell. He sighed and wondered when Emily would marry him--and so fell asleep again, weaker than ever.
Not having any confidence in the doctor at Belford, Mrs. Delvin had sent an urgent message to a physician at Edinburgh, famous for his skill in treating diseases of the nervous system. ”I cannot expect him to reach this remote place, without some delay,” she said; ”I must bear my suspense as well as I can.”
”You shall not bear it alone,” Emily answered. ”I will wait with you till the doctor comes.”
Mrs. Delvin lifted her frail wasted hands to Emily's face, drew it a little nearer--and kissed her.
CHAPTER LXIV. ON THE WAY TO LONDON.
The parting words had been spoken. Emily and her companion were on their way to London.
For some little time, they traveled in silence--alone in the railway carriage. After submitting as long as she could to lay an embargo on the use of her tongue, Mrs. Ellmother started the conversation by means of a question: ”Do you think Mr. Mirabel will get over it, miss?”
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