of mind, and the happiness of a person very dear to her, were
   concerned alike in the opinion which Mr. Camp might give when he
   had been placed in possession of the facts.
   She then proceeded to state the facts, without mentioning names:
   relating in every particular precisely the same succession of
   events which Geoffrey Delamayn had already related to Sir Patrick
   Lundie--with this one difference, that she acknowledged herself
   to be the woman who was personally concerned in knowing whether,
   by Scottish law, she was now held to be a married woman or not.
   Mr. Camp's opinion given upon this, after certain questions had
   been asked and answered, differed from Sir Patrick's opinion, as
   given at Windygates. He too quoted the language used by the
   eminent judge--Lord Deas--but he drew an inference of his own
   from it. "In Scotland, consent makes marriage," he said; "and
   consent may be proved by inference. I see a plain inference of
   matrimonial consent in the circumstances which you have related
   to me and I say you are a married woman."
   The effect produced on the lady, when sentence was pronounced on
   her in those terms, was so distressing that Mr. Camp sent a
   message up stairs to his wife; and Mrs. Camp appeared in her
   husband's private room, in business hours, for the first time in
   her life. When Mrs. Camp's services had in some degree restored
   the lady to herself, Mr. Camp followed with a word of
   professional comfort. He, like Sir Patrick, acknowledged the
   scandalous divergence of opinions produced by the confusion and
   uncertainty of the marriage-law of Scotland. He, like Sir
   Patrick, declared it to be quite possible that another lawyer
   might arrive at another conclusion. "Go," he said, giving her his
   card, with a line of writing on it, "to my colleague, Mr. Crum;
   and say I sent you."
   The lady gratefully thanked Mr. Camp and his wife, and went next
   to the office of Mr. Crum.
   Mr. Crum was the older lawyer of the two, and the harder lawyer
   of the two; but he, too, felt the influence which the charm that
   there was in this woman exercised, more or less, over every man
   who came in contact with her. He listened with a patience which
   was rare with him: he put his questions with a gentleness which
   was rarer still; and when _he_ was in possession of the
   circumstances---behold, _his_ opinion flatly contradicted the
   opinion of Mr. Camp!
   "No marriage, ma'am," he said, positively. "Evidence in favor of
   perhaps establishing a marriage, if you propose to claim the man.
   But that, as I understand it, is exactly what you don't wish to
   do."
   The relief to the lady, on hearing this, almost overpowered her.
   For some minutes she was unable to speak. Mr. Crum did, what he
   had never done yet in all his experience as a lawyer. He patted a
   client on the shoulder, and, more extraordinary still , he gave a
   client permission to waste his time. "Wait, and compose
   yourself," said Mr. Crum--administering the law of humanity. The
   lady composed herself. "I must ask you some questions, ma'am,"
   said Mr. Crum--administering the law of the land. The lady bowed,
   and waited for him to begin.
   "I know, thus far, that you decline to claim the gentleman," said
   Mr. Cram. "I want to know now whether the gentleman is likely to
   claim _you._"
   The answer to this was given in the most positive terms. The
   gentleman was not even aware of the position in which he stood.
   And, more yet, he was engaged to be married to the dearest friend
   whom the lady had in the world.
   Mr. Crum opened his eyes--considered--and put another question as
   delicately as he could. "Would it be painful to you to tell me
   how the gentleman came to occupy the awkward position in which he
   stands now?"
   The lady acknowledged that it would be indescribably painful to
   her to answer that question.
   Mr. Crum offered a suggestion under the form of an inquiry:
   "Would it be painful to you to reveal the circumstances--in the
   interests of the gentleman's future prospects--to some discreet
   person (a legal person would be best) who is not, what I am, a
   stranger to you both?"
   The lady declared herself willing to make any sacrifice, on those
   conditions--no matter how painful it might be--for her friend's
   sake.
   Mr. Crum considered a little longer, and then delivered his word
   of advice:
   "At the present stage of the affair," he said, "I need only tell
   you what is the first step that you ought to take under the
   circumstances. Inform the gentleman at once--either by word of
   mouth or by writing--of the position in which he stands: and
   authorize him to place the case in the hands of a person known to
   you both, who is competent to decide on what you are to do next.
   Do I understand that you know of such a person so qualified?"
   The lady answered that she knew of such a person.
   Mr. Crum asked if a day had been fixed for the gentleman's
   marriage.
   The lady answered that she had made this inquiry herself on the
   last occasion when she had seen the gentleman's betrothed wife.
   The marriage was to take place, on a day to be hereafter chosen,
   at the end of the autumn.
   "That," said Mr. Crum, "is a fortunate circumstance. You have
   time before you. Time is, here, of very great importance. Be
   careful not to waste it."
   The lady said she would return to her hotel and write by that
   night's post, to warn the gentleman of the position in which he
   stood, and to authorize him to refer the matter to a competent
   and trust-worthy friend known to them both.
   On rising to leave the room she was seized with giddiness, and
   with some sudden pang of pain, which turned her deadly pale and
   forced her to drop back into her chair. Mr. Crum had no wife; but
   he possessed a housekeeper--and he offered to send for her. The
   lady made a sign in the negative. She drank a little water, and
   conquered the pain. "I am sorry to have alarmed you," she said.
   "It's nothing--I am better now." Mr. Crum gave her his arm, and
   put her into the cab. She looked so pale and faint that he
   proposed sending his housekeeper with her. No: it was only five
   minutes' drive to the hotel. The lady thanked him--and went her
   way back by herself.
   "The letter!" she said, when she was alone. "If I can only live
   long enough to write the letter!"
   CHAPTER THE THIRTIETH.
   ANNE IN THE NEWSPAPERS.
   MRS. KARNEGIE was a woman of feeble intelligence and violent
   temper; prompt to take offense, and not, for the most part, easy
   to appease. But Mrs. Karnegie being--as we all are in our various
   degrees--a compound of many opposite qualities, possessed a
   character with more than one side to it, and had her human merits
   as well as her human faults. Seeds of sound good feeling were
   scattered away in the remoter corners of her nature, and only
   waited for the fertilizing occasion that was to help them to
   sp 
					     					 			ring up. The occasion exerted that benign influence when the
   cab brought Mr. Crum's client back to the hotel. The face of the
   weary, heart-sick woman, as she slowly crossed the hall, roused
   all that was heartiest and best in Mrs. Karnegie's nature, and
   said to her, as if in words, "Jealous of this broken creature?
   Oh, wife and mother is there no appeal to your common womanhood
   _here?_"
   "I am afraid you have overtired yourself, ma'am. Let me send you
   something up stairs?"
   "Send me pen, ink, and paper," was the answer. "I must write a
   letter. I must do it at once."
   It was useless to remonstrate with her. She was ready to accept
   any thing proposed, provided the writing materials were supplied
   first. Mrs. Karnegie sent them up, and then compounded a certain
   mixture of eggs and hot wine. for which The Sheep's Head was
   famous, with her own hands. In five minutes or so it was
   ready--and Miss Karnegie was dispatched by her mother (who had
   other business on hand at the time) to take it up stairs.
   After the lapse of a few moments a cry of alarm was heard from
   the upper landing. Mrs. Karnegie recognized her daughter's voice,
   and hastened to the bedroom floor.
   "Oh, mamma! Look at her! look at her!"
   The letter was on the table with the first lines written. The
   woman was on the sofa with her handkerchief twisted between her
   set teeth, and her tortured face terrible to look at. Mrs.
   Karnegie raised her a little, examined her closely--then suddenly
   changed color, and sent her daughter out of the room with
   directions to dispatch a messenger instantly for medical help.
   Left alone with the sufferer, Mrs. Karnegie carried her to her
   bed. As she was laid down her left hand fell helpless over the
   side of the bed. Mrs. Karnegie suddenly checked the word of
   sympathy as it rose to her lips--suddenly lifted the hand, and
   looked, with a momentary sternness of scrutiny, at the third
   finger. There was a ring on it. Mrs. Karnegie's face softened on
   the instant: the word of pity that had been suspended the moment
   before passed her lips freely now. "Poor soul!" said the
   respectable landlady, taking appearances for granted. "Where's
   your husband, dear? Try and tell me."
   The doctor made his appearance, and went up to the patient.
   Time passed, and Mr. Karnegie and his daughter, carrying on the
   business of the hotel, received a message from up stairs which
   was ominous of something out of the common. The message gave the
   name and address of an experienced nurse--with the doctor's
   compliments, and would Mr. Karnegie have the kindness to send for
   her immediately.
   The nurse was found and sent up stairs.
   Time went on, and the business of the hotel went on, and it was
   getting to be late in the evening, when Mrs. Karnegie appeared at
   last in the parlor behind the bar. The landlady's face was grave,
   the landlady's manner was subdued. "Very, very ill," was the only
   reply she made to her daughter's inquiries. When she and her
   husband were together, a little later, she told the news from up
   stairs in greater detail. "A child born dead," said Mrs.
   Karnegie, in gentler tones than were customary with her. "And the
   mother dying, poor thing, so far as _I_ can see."
   A little later the doctor came down. Dead? No.--Likely to live?
   Impossible to say. The doctor returned twice in the course of the
   night. Both times he had but one answer. "Wait till to-morrow."
   The next day came. She rallied a little. Toward the afternoon she
   began to speak. She expressed no surprise at seeing strangers by
   her bedside: her mind wandered. She passed again into
   insensibility. Then back to delirium once more. The doctor said,
   "This may last for weeks. Or it may end suddenly in death. It's
   time you did something toward finding her friends."
   (Her friends! She had left the one friend she had forever!)
   Mr. Camp was summoned to give his advice. The first thing he
   asked for was the unfinished letter.
   It was blotted, it was illegible in more places than one. With
   pains and care they made out the address at the beginning, and
   here and there some fragments of the lines that followed. It
   began: "Dear Mr. Brinkworth." Then the writing got, little by
   little, worse and worse. To the eyes of  the strangers who looked
   at  it, it ran thus: "I should ill re quite * * * Blanche's
   interests * * * For God's sake! * * * don't think of _me_ * * *"
   There was a little more, but not so much as one word, in those
   last lines, was legible
   The names mentioned in the letter were reported by the doctor and
   the nurse to be also the names on her lips when she spoke in her
   wanderings. "Mr. Brinkworth" and "Blanche"--her mind ran
   incessantly on those two persons. The one intelligible thing that
   she mentioned in connection with them was the letter. She was
   perpetually trying, trying, trying to take that unfinished letter
   to the post; and she could never get there. Sometimes the post
   was across the sea. Sometimes it was at the top of an
   inaccessible mountain. Sometimes it was built in by prodigious
   walls all round it. Sometimes a man stopped her cruelly at the
   moment when she was close at the post, and forced her back
   thousands of miles away from it. She once or twice mentioned this
   visionary man by his name. They made it out to be "Geoffrey."
   Finding no clew to her identity either in the letter that she had
   tried to write or in the wild words that escaped her from time to
   time, it was decided to search her luggage, and to look at the
   clothes which she had worn when she arrived at the hotel.
   Her black box sufficiently proclaimed itself as recently
   purchased. On opening it the address of a Glasgow trunk-maker was
   discovered inside. The linen was also new, and unmarked. The
   receipted shop-bill was found with it. The tradesmen, sent for in
   each case and questioned, referred to their books. It was proved
   that the box and the linen had both been purchased on the day
   when she appeared at the hotel.
   Her black bag was opened next. A sum of between eighty and ninety
   pounds in Bank of England notes; a few simple articles belonging
   to the toilet; materials for needle-work; and a photographic
   portrait of a young lady, inscribed, "To Anne, from Blanche,"
   were found in the bag--but no letters, and nothing whatever that
   could afford the slightest clew by which the owner could be
   traced. The pocket in her dress was searched next. It contained a
   purse, an empty card-case, and a new handkerchief unmarked.
   Mr. Camp shook his head.
   "A woman's luggage without any letters in it," he said, "suggests
   to my mind a woman who has a motive of her own for keeping her
   movements a secret. I suspect she has destroyed her letters, and
   emptied her card-case, with that view." Mrs. Karnegie's report,
   after examining the linen which the so-called "Mrs. Graham" had
   worn when she arrived at the inn, proved the soundness of the
   lawyer's o 
					     					 			pinion. In every case the marks had been cut out. Mrs.
   Karnegie began to doubt whether the ring which she had seen on
   the third finger of the lady's left hand had been placed there
   with the sanction of the law.
   There was but one chance left of discovering--or rather of
   attempting to discover--her friends. Mr. Camp drew out an
   advertisement to be inserted in the Glasgow newspapers. If those
   newspapers happened to be seen by any member of her family, she
   would, in all probability, be claimed. In the contrary event
   there would be nothing for it but to wait for her recovery or her
   death--with the money belonging to her sealed up, and deposited
   in the landlord's strongbox.
   The advertisement appeared. They waited for three days afterward,
   and nothing came of it. No change of importance occurred, during
   the same period, in the condition of the suffering woman. Mr.
   Camp looked in, toward evening, and said, "We have done our best.
   There is no help for it but to wait."
   Far away in Perthshire that third evening was marked as a joyful
   occasion at Windygates House. Blanche had consented at last to
   listen to Arnold's entreaties, and had sanctioned the writing of
   a letter to London to order her wedding-dress.
   SIXTH SCENE.--SWANHAVEN LODGE.
   CHAPTER THE THIRTY-FIRST
   SEEDS OF THE FUTURE (FIRST SOWING).
   "NOT SO large as Windygates. But--shall we say snug, Jones?"
   "And comfortable, Smith. I quite agree with you."
   Such was the judgment pronounced by the two choral gentlemen on
   Julius Delamayn's house in Scotland. It was, as usual with Smith
   and Jones, a sound judgment--as far as it went. Swanhaven Lodge
   was not half the size of Windygates; but it had been inhabited
   for two centuries when the foundations of Windygates were first
   laid--and it possessed the advantages, without inheriting the
   drawbacks, of its age. There is in an old house a friendly
   adaptation to the human character, as there is in an old hat a
   friendly adaptation to the human head. The visitor who left
   Swanhaven quitted it with something like a sense of leaving home.
   Among the few houses not our own which take a strong hold on our
   sympathies this was one. The ornamental grounds were far inferior
   in size and splendor to the grounds at Windygates. But the park
   was beautiful--less carefully laid out, but also less monotonous
   than an English park. The lake on the northern boundary of the
   estate, famous for its breed of swans, was one of the curiosities
   of the neighborhood; and the house had a history, associating it
   with more than one celebrated Scottish name, which had been
   written and illustrated by Julius Delamayn. Visitors to Swanhaven
   Lodge were invariably presented with a copy of the volume
   (privately printed). One in twenty read it. The rest were
   "charmed," and looked at the pictures.
   The day was the last day of August, and the occasion was the
   garden-party given by Mr. and Mrs. Delamayn.
   Smith and Jones--following, with the other guests at Windygates,
   in Lady Lundie's train--exchanged their opinions on the merits of
   the house, standing on a terrace at the back, near a flight of
   steps which led down into the garden. They formed the van-guard
   of the visitors, appearing by twos and threes from the reception
   rooms, and all bent on going to see the swans before the
   amusements of the day began. Julius Delamayn came out with the
   first detachment, recruited Smith and Jones, and other wandering
   bachelors, by the way, and set forth for the lake. An interval of
   a minute or two passed--and the terrace remained empty. Then two
   ladies--at the head of a second detachment of visitors--appeared
   under the old stone porch which sheltered the entrance on that
   side of the house. One of the ladies was a modest, pleasant
   little person, very simply dressed. The other was of the tall and
   formidable type of "fine women," clad in dazzling array. The