but clement hazeldine's business at stavering was by no means at an end. a certain purpose, the outcome of his visit to broome, had taken him back to ashdown; but that accomplished to his satisfaction, which it was in the course of a few days, he lost no time in returning to the scene of his further operations.
among other information for which he was indebted to lucy grice, he had learned that her uncle, barney dale, was in the habit of spending a couple of hours, two or three evenings a week, in the bar-parlor of the "chequers" inn at dritton, where he smoked his pipe and imbibed his tankard of ale in the company of sundry cronies whose tastes in that respect were similar to his own. on inquiry, clem found that they had one spare bed at the "chequers," which he at once engaged, and there he proceeded to take up his quarters, leaving his portmanteau, however, in his old lodging at stavering. dritton was a tiny hamlet of some three or four hundred inhabitants, and as there were more than one good trout stream in the neighborhood, clem, who had brought his rod and tackle with him, passed for a disciple of the gentle craft, and was welcomed as such among the frequenters of the bar-parlor. the advent of a stranger who was in no way "stuck-up," and not above hobnobbing with one or another of them, made a pleasant break in the monotony of their meetings, and freshened up their provincial wits for the time in a way which surprised no one more than themselves.
but it was to barney dale that clem paid the most assiduous court, so contriving matters as to occupy the seat next his, and to engage him in talk about such subjects as the old man was likely to take an interest in. he soon found that under a somewhat crabbed and forbidding exterior, barney hid a personality at once quaint and kindly, and, in some respects, of an almost childlike simplicity. on more than one occasion, as they sat side by side, clem tried to bring the conversation round to broome and its mistress; but barney became at once so stolidly dull, and was so evidently disinclined to touch on the subject in any way, that, for fear of rendering him suspicious as to his ulterior motives, he felt it best to lead back the talk into other and less personal channels.
it was clem's object to take the old man unawares, in the hope that, in the first moment of surprise, he might unwittingly let fall some exclamation or remark which would help to indicate the direction in which his next step should be taken.
on a certain evening, after he had been about a week at the "chequers," clem was lounging purposely at the door when barney, with the help of his stout blackthorn, came limping slowly up. after greetings had passed, clem said:
"just come into this room for a moment, mr. dale. i have something i want to show you."
with that he opened the door of a side room, and, barney followed him in. having shut the door and turned up the gas, clem took from the table a "tinted" cabinet-size photograph, and placed it in the old man's hands. it was hermia's portrait, which he had that morning received from an ashdown photographer. in it she was represented in a short-waisted white robe, a blue sash, and a grey, broad-brimmed hat with a feather of the same color; while, under her lover's directions, her chestnut locks had been arranged after a fashion to which they had never had to submit before, and in all probability never would again.
"put on your glasses, mr. dale," said clem, "and look at this, and tell me whether you recognize it as the likeness of anyone you have ever seen or known."
putting down the photograph for a moment till he had got his spectacles astride his nose, barney took it up again, and moving closer under the gaslight, brought his eyes to bear upon it. after staring at it for a full half-minute, his hands began to tremble, and he turned on clem a face that was working with suppressed emotion.
"whose likeness is this?" he demanded, hoarsely.
"do you not recognize it as a photograph of a certain picture in the gallery at broome, with which you are doubtless well acquainted?"
again the old man turned his gaze on the portrait. "aye, aye, to be sure, i know it now," he said; and yet there was an echo of doubt in his tone. "it's a likeness of miss elinor pengarvon, who lived eighty or ninety years syne, and was engaged to lord doverley, but died a week afore her wedding-day. i mind me of the picture well. but--but how did you come by it?" he added glowering at the other with eyes which had suddenly become charged with a sort of fierce suspicion.
"it is time to undeceive you," said clement. "the likeness in your hands is not that of the elinor pengarvon of ninety years ago, but of another young lady who is alive and well at this moment. it is the portrait of miss hermia rivers."
clement had nothing to go upon as to whether the mention of the name would wake any dormant echo in barney's memory. he could only trust to chance that it might do so. as it proved, his hit was a fortunate one.
"of miss hermia rivers!" repeated the old man, in a sort of awed whisper. "can the dead come back to life?" then his eyes went again to the portrait. "but you say that she isn't dead--that she is alive and well; is it the truth you are telling me?"
"i was in the company of miss rivers less than a fortnight ago."
"thank goodness that she still lives! m'appen, then, it may not be too late."
"too late! what do you mean?" asked clem.
but the old man sank into a chair and took no heed of the question.
"and i to have got it into my doited old head that the darling died long years ago!" he said presently, with the air of one who is talking to himself. "to be sure it was the mistress herself that led me to think so, and how was i to guess that she wanted to hide the truth?"
presently he roused himself, and after staring at clem for a few moments like one collecting his faculties, he said, laying a finger on the photograph:
"and you say, sir, that you know her, and that she is alive and well?"
"i do say so," answered clement, in his most impressive tones.
"tell me about her--tell me all you know," exclaimed barney, with trembling eagerness.
accordingly, without going into any superfluous details, clement proceeded to give his hearer an outline of hermia's history from the date of her adoption by john brancker onward. he was careful to speak slowly and distinctly, and as barney's intelligence took in one point of the narrative after another, he nodded his head and muttered a word or two under his breath, but otherwise he kept silent till clem had come to an end.
"and now that i have told you so much, mr. dale," continued clem, after a pause, "i trust that you, in your turn, will be able to answer me one or two questions. in the first place, will you be good enough to inform me what relation miss hermia rivers is to miss pengarvon?"
barney blinked at his questioner and sucked in his under-lip for a moment or two, then he said:
"i darena tell you aught, and you mustna ask me. years and years ago my mistress bound me down by oath, never without her leave to open my lips about certain things to man, woman, or child. it was a very solemn oath, and i darena break it."
clement was nonplussed. "at least, you can tell me this," he said presently. "is either of miss rivers's parents still living?"
"i darena answer, and you mustna ask me," was the old man's dogged reply.
clem made a gesture of annoyance. "come, then, mr. dale," he said, "you can hardly refuse to tell me what you meant by your remark just now, that, perhaps, it 'may not be too late.'"
barney was sitting with rounded shoulders, resting his chin on his hands, which were crossed over his stick. for a little while he did not answer.
"bring her down to stavering," he said, at last, bending a slow look on the young surgeon, "and i'll contrive for the mistress to see her. who can tell what may come of it?" then for the second time he said: "and i to have got it into my doited old head that the darling died ever so many years ago!"
he rose with a little difficulty, and possessed himself of his hat which he had taken off on entering the room. then, laying a hand on clem's shoulder, he said, impressively,
"eh, but there's a great change come over the mistress! she had a sort of fit in the night about a week ago, and now the doctor comes to see her every day. but she's getting round again--oh, yes, she's getting round; and m'appen, by-and-bye, she'll be just the same as she allus was. and now, sir, do you listen to this: don't say a word to a soul about miss hermia, or what brings her to stavering. the lord only knows what'll come of it all, but i'll try my best--i'll try my best."
in the course of the next day, clement returned to ashdown, where a great surprise awaited him. he reached nairn cottage soon after five o'clock, but found no hermia there to greet him. instead, a note was put into his hand by aunt charlotte.
"dear clement"--it ran.
"i have had to set off, all in a hurry, for london, where i purpose staying for the next few days with my friend, mrs. wingate, who was a schoolfellow of mine. i have what seem to me amply sufficient reasons for taking this step, but i do not feel at liberty to enter into any particulars until after my return, when i may have much to tell you, or, on the other hand, very little. anyway, i hope you won't worry the least bit about me, because there is really no occasion to do so. i received your telegram this morning announcing your return, but, under the circumstances, have thought it better not to wait and see you. i will explain everything when we meet, which i hope will not be later than two or three days hence.
"yours now and always,
"hermia rivers."
clement, when he had read the note, stared at aunt charlotte with an air of stupefaction. "what does it mean?" he asked.
"i can tell you very little more than the note tells you," was the reply. "yesterday was hermia's afternoon for visiting among the poor widows and others whom she is in the habit of calling upon once a week, and oftener in cases of sickness or necessity. on reaching home last evening rather later than usual, she told us that mrs. varrel, a widow whom both of us have known for some years, was dead. she was very quiet during the rest of the evening, and seemed to be deep in thought. this morning, at breakfast, she announced her intention of starting for london by the eleven o'clock train. in answer to the questions john and i naturally put to her, she simply said that we must forgive her for not telling us anything at present, but that all should be explained the moment she returned. she assured us that nothing but a matter of extreme importance would have induced her to take such a step, but that we might be quite satisfied as to her safety under the roof of mrs. wingate. so you see, my dear mr. clement, that we shall just have to stifle our curiosity as best we can, till it pleases her ladyship to return and lift us off the tenterhooks of suspense."