In a few days the pair were able to meet, and to take up again the life over which a dark veil had suddenly descended, contrasting with the sunshine of those last few years. To hold up one another, and do their duty on their way to the better world, was evidently the one thought, though they said little.
Still neither was yet in a condition to return to ordinary life, and it was determined that as soon as they were disinfected, they should leave the house to undergo the same process, and spend a few weeks at some health resort. Only Mary shuddered at the notion of hearing the sound of the sea, and Malvern was finally fixed upon. Lady Adela would go with them, and she wrote to beg that Constance, so soon as her term was over, might bring Amice thither, to be in a separate lodging at first, till there had been time to see whether the little girl's company would be a solace or a trial to the bereaved parents.
Bertha, as soon as the chief anxiety was over, joined Mrs. Bury in a mountaineering expedition. She declared that she had never dared to leave Cea before, lest the wretched father, now proved to be a myth, should come and abstract the child.
CHAPTER XXXIV. THE PHANTOM OF THE STATION
There was a crash in Mrs. Morton's kitchen, where an elegant five o'clock tea was preparing, not only to greet Herbert, who had just come home to await the news of his fate after the last military examination open to him, but also for a friend or two of his mother's, who, to his great annoyance, might be expected to drop in on any Wednesday afternoon.
Every one ran out to see what was the matter, and the maid was found picking up Mrs. Morton's silver teapot, the basket-work handle of which had suddenly collapsed under the weight of tea and tea-leaves. The mistress's exclamations and objurgation of the maid for not having discovered its frail condition need not be repeated. It had been a wedding-present, and was her great pride. After due examination to see whether there were any bruises or dents, she said-
'Well, Ida, we must have yours; run and fetch it out of the box. You have the key of it.' And she held out the key of the cupboard where the spoons were daily taken out by herself or Ida.
The teapot had been left to Ida by a godmother, who had been a farmer's wife, with a small legacy, but was of an unfashionable make and seldom saw the light.
'That horrid, great clumsy thing!' said Ida. 'You had much better use the blue china one.'
'I'll never use that crockery for company when there's silver in the house! What would Mrs. Denham say if she dropped in?'
'I won't pour out tea in that ugly, heavy brute of a thing.'
'Then if you won't, I will. Give me the key this instant!'
'It is mine, and I am not going to give it up!'
'Come, Ida,' said Herbert, weary of the altercation; 'any one would think you had made away with it! Let us have it for peace's sake.'
'It's no business of yours.'
He whistled. However, at that moment the door-bell rang.
It was to admit a couple of old ladies, whom both the young people viewed as very dull company; and the story of the illness of 'my brother, Lord Northmoor,' as related by their mother, had become very tedious, so that as soon as possible they both sauntered out on the beach.
'I wonder when uncle will send for you!' Ida said. 'He must give you a good allowance now.'
'Don't talk of it, Ida; it makes me sick to think of it. I say-is that the old red rock where they saw the last of the poor little kid?'
'Yes; that was where his hat was.'
'Did you find it? Was it washed up?'
'Don't talk of such dreadful things, Bertie; I can't bear it! And there's Rose Rollstone!'
Ida would have done her utmost to keep her brother and Rose Rollstone apart at any other time, but she was at the moment only too glad to divert his attention, and allowed him, without protest, to walk up to Rose, shake hands with her, and rejoice in her coming home for good; but, do what Ida would, she could not keep him from recurring to the thought of the little cousin of whom he had been very fond.
'Such a jolly little kid!' he said; 'and full of spirit! You should have seen him when I picked him up before me on the cob. How he laughed!'
'So good, too,' said Rose. 'He looked so sweet with those pretty brown eyes and fair curls at church that last Sunday.'
'I can't make out how it was. The tide could not have been high enough to wash him off going round that rock, or the other children would not have gone round it.'
'Oh, I suppose he ran after a wave,' said Ida hastily.
'Do you know,' said Rose mysteriously, 'I could have declared I saw him that very evening, and with his nursery-maid, too!'
'Nonsense, Rose! We don't believe in ghosts!' said Ida.
'It was not like a ghost,' said Rose. 'You know I had come down for the bank-holiday, and went back to finish my quarter at the art embroidery. Well, when we stopped at the North Westhaven station, I saw a man, woman, and child get in, and it struck me that the boy was Master Michael and the woman Louisa Hall. I think she looked into the carriage where I was, and I was going to ask her where she was taking him.'
'Nonsense, Rose! How can you listen to such folly, Herbert?'
'But that's not all! I saw them again under the gas when I got out. I was very near trying to speak to her, but I lost sight of her in the throng; but I saw that face so like Master Michael, only scared and just ready to cry.'
'You'll run about telling that fine ghost-story,' said Ida roughly.
'But Louisa could not have been a ghost,' said Rose, bewildered. 'I thought she was his nursery-maid taking him somewhere! Didn't she-' then with a sudden flash-'Oh!'
'Turned off long ago for flirting with that scamp Rattler,' said Herbert. 'Now she has run off with him.'
'There was a sailor-looking man with her,' said Rose.
'I never heard such intolerable nonsense!' burst out Ida. 'Mere absurdity!'
Herbert looked at her with surprise at the strange passion she exhibited. He asked-
'Did you say the Hall girl had run away?'
'Oh, never mind, Herbert!' cried Ida, as if unable to command herself. 'What is it to you what a nasty, horrid girl like that does?'
'Hold your tongue, Ida!' he said resolutely. 'If you won't speak, let Rose.'
'She did,' said Rose, in a low, anxious, terrified voice. 'I only heard it since I came home. She was married at the registrar's office to that man Jones, whom they call the Rattler, and went off with him. It must have been her whom I saw, really and truly; and, oh, Herbert, could she have been so wicked as to steal Master Michael!'
'Somebody else has been wicked then,' said Herbert, laying hold of his sister's arm.
'I don't know what all this means,' exclaimed Ida, in great agitation; 'nor what you and Rose are at! Making up such horrible, abominable insinuations against me, your poor sister! But Rose Rollstone always hated me!'
'She does not know what she is saying,' sighed Rose; and, with much delicacy, she moved away.
'Let me go, Herbert!' cried Ida, as she felt his grip on her hand.
'Not I, Ida-till you have answered me! Is this so-that Michael is not drowned, but carried off by that woman?' demanded Herbert, holding her fast and looking at her with manly gravity, not devoid of horror.
'He is a horrid little impostor, palmed off to keep you out of the title and everything! That's why I did it!' sobbed Ida, trying to wrench herself away.
'Oh, you did it, did you? You confess that! And what have you done with him?'
'I tell you he is no Morton at all-just the nurse-woman's child, taken to spite you. I found it all out at-what's its name?-Botzen; only ma would not be convinced.'
'I should suppose not! To think that my uncle and aunt would do such a thing-why, I don't know whether it is not worse than stealing the child!'
'Herbert! Herbert! do you want to bring your sister to jail, talking in that way?'
'It is no more than you deserve. I would bring you there if it is the only way to get back the child! I do not know what is bad enough for you. My poor uncle and aunt! To have brought such misery on them!' He clenched his hands as he spoke.