Part 37 (1/2)
said Mr. Oldfield, regretfully.
”Well, but you are a lawyer, and you have always beaten them hitherto.”
”I had law and fact on my side. It is not so now. To be frank, Lady Ba.s.sett, I don't see what I can do but watch the case, on the chance of some error or illegality. It is very hard to fight a case when you cannot put your client forward--and I suppose that would not be safe.
How unfortunate that you have no children!”
”Children! How could they help us?”
”What a question! How could Richard Ba.s.sett move the Court if he was not the heir at law?”
After a long conference Mr. Oldfield returned to town to see what he could do in the way of procrastination, and Lady Ba.s.sett promised to leave no stone unturned to cure Sir Charles in the meantime. Mr.
Oldfield was to write immediately if any fresh step was taken.
When Mr. Oldfield was gone, Lady Ba.s.sett pondered every word he had said, and, mild as she was, her rage began to rise against her husband's relentless enemy. Her wits worked, her eyes roved in that peculiar half-savage way I have described. She became intolerably restless; and any one acquainted with her s.e.x might see that some strange conflict was going on in her troubled mind.
Every now and then she would come and cling to her husband, and cry over him; and that seemed to still the tumult of her soul a little.
She never slept all that night, and next day, clinging in her helpless agony to the nearest branch, she told Mary Wells what Ba.s.sett was doing, and said, ”What shall I do? He is not mad; but he is in so very precarious a state that, if they get at him to torment him, they will drive him mad indeed.”
”My lady,” said Mary Wells, ”I can't go from my word. 'Tis no use in making two bites of a cherry. We must cure him: and if we don't, you'll never rue it but once, and that will be all your life.”
”I should look on myself with horror afterward were I to deceive him now.”
”No, my lady, you are too fond of him for that. Once you saw him happy you'd be happy too, no matter how it came about. That Richard Ba.s.sett will turn him out of this else. I am sure he will; he is a hard-hearted villain.”
Lady Ba.s.sett's eyes flashed fire; then her eyes roved; then she sighed deeply.
Her powers of resistance were beginning to relax. As for Mary Wells, she gave her no peace; she kept instilling her mind into her mistress's with the pertinacity of a small but ever-dripping fount, and we know both by science and poetry that small, incessant drops of water will wear a hole in marble.
”Gutta cavat lapidem non vi sed saepe cadendo.”
And in the midst of all a letter came from Mr. Oldfield, to tell her that Mr. Ba.s.sett threatened to take out a commission _de lunatico,_ and she must prepare Sir Charles for an examination; for, if reported insane, the Court would administer the estates; but the heir at law, Mr. Ba.s.sett, would have the ear of the Court and the right of application, and become virtually master of Huntercombe and Ba.s.sett; and, perhaps, considering the spirit by which he was animated, would contrive to occupy the very Hall itself. Lady Ba.s.sett was in the dressing-room when she received this blow, and it drove her almost frantic. She bemoaned her husband; she prayed G.o.d to take them both, and let their enemy have his will. She wept and raved, and at the height of her distress came from the other room a feeble cry, ”Childless! childless! childless!”
Lady Ba.s.sett heard that, and in one moment, from violent she became unnaturally and dangerously calm. She said firmly to Mary Wells, ”This is more than I can bear. You pretend you can save him--do it.”
Mary Wells now trembled in her turn; but she seized the opportunity.
”My lady, whatever I say you'll stand to?”
”Whatever you say I'll stand to.”
CHAPTER XVIII.
MARY WELLS, like other uneducated women, was not accustomed to think long and earnestly on any one subject; to use an expression she once applied with far less justice to her sister, her mind was like running water.
But gestation affects the brains of such women, and makes them think more steadily, and sometimes very acutely; added to which, the peculiar dangers and difficulties that beset this girl during that anxious period stimulated her wits to the very utmost. Often she sat quite still for hours at a time, brooding and brooding, and asking herself how she could turn each new and unexpected event to her own benefit.
Now so much does mental force depend on that exercise of keen and long attention, in which her s.e.x is generally deficient, that this young woman's powers were more than doubled since the day she first discovered her condition, and began to work her brains night and day for her defense.