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    Chapter 1 - Page 2

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    you."

    "It is nothing, Alice, except my natural anxiety for you--Well,
    Kingston, what do you want?"

    Trevlyn's tender tones grew sharp as he addressed the entering servant,
    and the smile on his lips vanished, leaving them dry and white as he
    glanced at the card he handed him. An instant he stood staring at it,
    then asked, "Is the man here?"

    "In the library, sir."

    "I'll come."

    Flinging the card into the fire, he watched it turn to ashes before he
    spoke, with averted eyes: "Only some annoying business, love; I shall
    soon be with you again. Lie and rest till I come."

    With a hasty caress he left her, but as he passed a mirror, his wife saw
    an expression of intense excitement in his face. She said nothing, and
    lay motionless for several minutes evidently struggling with some strong
    impulse.

    "He is ill and anxious, but hides it from me; I have a right to know,
    and he'll forgive me when I prove that it does no harm."

    As she spoke to herself she rose, glided noiselessly through the hall,
    entered a small closet built in the thickness of the wall, and, bending
    to the keyhole of a narrow door, listened with a half-smile on her lips
    at the trespass she was committing. A murmur of voices met her ear. Her
    husband spoke oftenest, and suddenly some word of his dashed the smile
    from her face as if with a blow. She started, shrank, and shivered,
    bending lower with set teeth, white cheeks, and panic-stricken heart.
    Paler and paler grew her lips, wilder and wilder her eyes, fainter and
    fainter her breath, till, with a long sigh, a vain effort to save
    herself, she sank prone upon the threshold of the door, as if struck
    down by death.

    "Mercy on us, my lady, are you ill?" cried Hester, the maid, as her
    mistress glided into the room looking like a ghost, half an hour later.

    "I am faint and cold. Help me to my bed, but do not disturb Sir
    Richard."

    A shiver crept over her as she spoke, and, casting a wild, woeful look
    about her, she laid her head upon the pillow like one who never cared to
    lift it up again. Hester, a sharp-eyed, middle-aged woman, watched the
    pale creature for a moment, then left the room muttering, "Something is

    wrong, and Sir Richard must know it. That black-bearded man came for no
    good, I'll warrant."

    At the door of the library she paused. No sound of voices came from
    within; a stifled groan was all she heard; and without waiting to knock
    she went in, fearing she knew not what. Sir Richard sat at his writing
    table pen in hand, but his face was hidden on his arm, and his whole
    attitude betrayed the presence of some overwhelming despair.

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