"I can not trust myself to speak of it clearly and composedly
   to-night," said Sir Patrick. "Be satisfied if I tell you that I
   have thought it all out--and wait for the rest till to-morrow."
   Other persons concerned in the coming drama had had past
   difficulties to think out, and future movements to consider,
   during the interval occupied by Arnold and Blanche on their
   return journey to England. Between the seventeenth and the
   twentieth of September Geoffrey Delamayn had left Swanhaven, on
   the way to his new training quarters in the neighborhood in which
   the Foot-Race at Fulham was to be run. Between the same dates,
   also, Captain Newenden had taken the opportunity, while passing
   through London on his way south, to consult his solicitors. The
   object of the conference was to find means of discovering an
   anonymous letter-writer in Scotland, who had presumed to cause
   serious annoyance to Mrs. Glenarm.
   Thus, by ones and twos, converging from widely distant quarters,
   they were now beginning to draw together, in the near
   neighborhood of the great city which was soon destined to
   assemble them all, for the first and the last time in this world,
   face to face.
   CHAPTER THE THIRTY-SEVENTH.
   THE WAY OUT.
   BREAKFAST was just over. Blanche, seeing a pleasantly-idle
   morning before her, proposed to Arnold to take a stroll in the
   grounds.
   The garden was blight with sunshine, and the bride was bright
   with good-humor. She caught her uncle's eye, looking at her
   admiringly, and paid him a little compliment in return. "You have
   no idea," she said, "how nice it is to be back at Ham Farm!"
   "I am to understand then," rejoined Sir Patrick, "that I am
   forgiven for interrupting the honey-moon?"
   "You are more than forgiven for interrupting it," said
   Blanche--"you are thanked. As a married woman," she proceeded,
   with the air of a matron of at least twenty years' standing, "I
   have been thinking the subject over; and I have arrived at the
   conclusion that a honey-moon which takes the form of a tour on
   the Continent, is one of our national abuses which stands in need
   of reform. When you are in love with each other (consider a
   marriage without love to be no marriage at all), what do you want
   with the excitement of seeing strange places? Isn't it excitement
   enough, and isn't it strange enough, to a newly-married woman to
   see such a total novelty as a husband? What is the most
   interesting object on the face of creation to a man in Arnold's
   position? The Alps? Certainly not! The most interesting object is
   the wife. And the proper time for a bridal tour is the time--say
   ten or a dozen years later--when you are beginning (not to get
   tired of each other, that's out of the question) but to get a
   little too well used to each other. Then take your tour to
   Switzerland--and you give the Alps a chance. A succession of
   honey-moon trips, in the autumn of married life--there is my
   proposal for an improvement on the present state of things! Come
   into the garden, Arnold; and let us calculate how long it will be
   before we get weary of each other, and want the beauties of
   nature to keep us company."
   Arnold looked appealingly to Sir Patrick. Not a word had passed
   between them, as yet, on the se rious subject of Anne Silvester's
   letter. Sir Patrick undertook the responsibility of making the
   necessary excuses to Blanche.
   "Forgive me," he said, "if I ask leave to interfere with your
   monopoly of Arnold for a little while. I have something to say to
   him about his property in Scotland. Will you leave him with me,
   if I promise to release him as soon as possible?"
   Blanche smiled graciously. "You shall have him as long as you
   like, uncle. There's your hat," she added, tossing it to her
   husband, gayly. "I brought it in for you when I got my own. You
   will find me on the lawn."
   She nodded, and went out.
   "Let me hear the worst at once, Sir Patrick," Arnold began. "Is
   it serious? Do you think I am to blame?"
   "I will answer your last question first," said Sir Patrick. "Do I
   think you are to blame? Yes--in this way. You committed an act of
   unpardonable rashness when you consented to go, as Geoffrey
   Delamayn's messenger, to Miss Silvester at the inn. Having once
   placed yourself in that false position, you could hardly have
   acted, afterward, otherwise than you did. You could not be
   expected to know the Scotch law. And, as an honorable man, you
   were bound to keep a secret confided to you, in which the
   reputation of a woman was concerned. Your first and last error in
   this matter, was the fatal error of involving yourself in
   responsibilities which belonged exclusively to another man."
   "The man had saved my life." pleaded Arnold--"and I believed I
   was giving service for service to my dearest friend."
   "As to your other question," proceeded Sir Patrick. "Do I
   consider your position to be a serious one? Most assuredly, I do!
   So long as we are not absolutely certain that Blanche is your
   lawful wife, the position is more than serious: it is
   unendurable. I maintain the opinion, mind, out of which (thanks
   to your honorable silence) that scoundrel Delamayn contrived to
   cheat me. I told him, what I now tell you--that your sayings and
   doings at Craig Fernie, do _not_ constitute a marriage, according
   to Scottish law. But," pursued Sir Patrick, holding up a warning
   forefinger at Arnold, "you have read it in Miss Silvester's
   letter, and you may now take it also as a result of my
   experience, that no individual opinion, in a matter of this kind,
   is to be relied on. Of two lawyers, consulted by Miss Silvester
   at Glasgow, one draws a directly opposite conclusion to mine, and
   decides that you and she are married. I believe him to be wrong,
   but in our situation, we have no other choice than to boldly
   encounter the view of the case which he represents. In plain
   English, we must begin by looking the worst in the face."
   Arnold twisted the traveling hat which Blanche had thrown to him,
   nervously, in both hands. "Supposing the worst comes to the
   worst," he asked, "what will happen?"
   Sir Patrick shook his head.
   "It is not easy to tell you," he said, "without entering into the
   legal aspect of the case. I shall only puzzle you if I do that.
   Suppose we look at the matter in its social bearings--I mean, as
   it may possibly affect you and Blanche, and your unborn
   children?"
   Arnold gave the hat a tighter twist than ever. "I never thought
   of the children," he said, with a look of consternation.
   "The children may present themselves," returned Sir Patrick,
   dryly, "for all that. Now listen. It may have occurred to your
   mind that the plain way out of our present dilemma is for you and
   Miss Silvester, respectively, to affirm what we know to be the
   truth--namely, that you never had the slightest intention of
   marrying each other. Beware of founding any hopes on any such
					     					 			br />
   remedy as that! If you reckon on it, you reckon without Geoffrey
   Delamayn. He is interested, remember, in proving you and Miss
   Silvester to be man and wife. Circumstances may arise--I won't
   waste time in guessing at what they may be--which will enable a
   third person to produce the landlady and the waiter at Craig
   Fernie in evidence against you--and to assert that your
   declaration and Miss Silvester's declaration are the result of
   collusion between you two. Don't start! Such things have happened
   before now. Miss Silvester is poor; and Blanche is rich. You may
   be made to stand in the awkward position of a man who is denying
   his marriage with a poor woman, in order to establish his
   marriage with an heiress: Miss Silvester presumably aiding the
   fraud, with two strong interests of her own as inducements--the
   interest of asserting the claim to be the wife of a man of rank,
   and the interest of earning her reward in money for resigning you
   to Blanche. There is a case which a scoundrel might set up--and
   with some appearance of truth too--in a court of justice!"
   "Surely, the law wouldn't allow him to do that?"
   "The law will argue any thing, with any body who will pay the law
   for the use of its brains and its time. Let that view of the
   matter alone now. Delamayn can set the case going, if he likes,
   without applying to any lawyer to help him. He has only to cause
   a report to reach Blanche's ears which publicly asserts that she
   is not your lawful wife. With her temper, do you suppose she
   would leave us a minute's peace till the matter was cleared up?
   Or take it the other way. Comfort yourself, if you will, with the
   idea that this affair will trouble nobody in the present. How are
   we to know it may not turn up in the future under circumstances
   which may place the legitimacy of your children in doubt? We have
   a man to deal with who sticks at nothing. We have a state of the
   law which can only be described as one scandalous uncertainty
   from beginning to end. And we have two people (Bishopriggs and
   Mrs. Inchbare) who can, and will, speak to what took place
   between you and Anne Silvester at the inn. For Blanche's sake,
   and for the sake of your unborn children, we must face this
   matter on the spot--and settle it at once and forever. The
   question before us now is this. Shall we open the proceedings by
   communicating with Miss Silvester or not?"
   At that important point in the conversation they were interrupted
   by the reappearance of Blanche. Had she, by any accident, heard
   what they had been saying?
   No; it was the old story of most interruptions. Idleness that
   considers nothing, had come to look at Industry that bears every
   thing. It is a law of nature, apparently, that the people in this
   world who have nothing to do can not support the sight of an
   uninterrupted occupation in the hands of their neighbors. Blanche
   produced a new specimen from Arnold's collection of hats. "I have
   been thinking about it in the garden," she said, quite seriously.
   "Here is the brown one with the high crown. You look better in
   this than in the white one with the low crown. I have come to
   change them, that's all." She changed the hats with Arnold, and
   went on, without the faintest suspicion that she was in the way.
   "Wear the brown one when you come out--and come soon, dear. I
   won't stay an instant longer, uncle--I wouldn't interrupt you for
   the world." She kissed her hand to Sir Patrick, and smiled at her
   husband, and went out.
   "What were we saying?" asked Arnold. "It's awkward to be
   interrupted in this way, isn't it?"
   "If I know any thing of female human nature," returned Sir
   Patrick, composedly, "your wife will be in and out of the room,
   in that way, the whole morning. I give her ten minutes, Arnold,
   before she changes her mind again on the serious and weighty
   subject of the white hat and the brown. These little
   interruptions--otherwise quite charming--raised a doubt in my
   mind. Wouldn't it be wise (I ask myself), if we made a virtue of
   necessity, and took Blanche into the conversation? What do you
   say to calling her back and telling her the truth?"
   Arnold started, and changed color.
   "There are difficulties in the way," he said.
   "My good fellow! at every step of this business there are
   difficulties in the way. Sooner or later, your wife must know
   what has happened. The time for telling her is, no doubt, a
   matter for your decision, not mine. All I say is this. Consider
   whether the disclosure won't come from you with a better grace,
   if you make it before you are fairly driven to the wall, and
   obliged to open your lips."
   Arnold rose to his fee t--took a turn in the room--sat down
   again--and looked at Sir Patrick, with the expression of a
   thoroughly bewildered and thoroughly helpless man.
   "I don't know what to do," he said. "It beats me altogether. The
   truth is, Sir Patrick, I was fairly forced, at Craig Fernie, into
   deceiving Blanche--in what might seem to her a very unfeeling,
   and a very unpardonable way."
   "That sounds awkward! What do you mean?"
   "I'll try and tell you. You remember when you went to the inn to
   see Miss Silvester? Well, being there privately at the time, of
   course I was obliged to keep out of your way."
   "I see! And, when Blanche came afterward, you were obliged to
   hide from Blanche, exactly as you had hidden from me?"
   "Worse even than that! A day or two later, Blanche took me into
   her confidence. She spoke to me of her visit to the inn, as if I
   was a perfect stranger to the circumstances. She told me to my
   face, Sir Patrick, of the invisible man who had kept so strangely
   out of her way--without the faintest suspicion that I was the
   man. And I never opened my lips to set her right! I was obliged
   to be silent, or I must have betrayed Miss Silvester. What will
   Blanche think of me, if I tell her now? That's the question!"
   Blanche's name had barely passed her husband's lips before
   Blanche herself verified Sir Patrick's prediction, by reappearing
   at the open French window, with the superseded white hat in her
   hand.
   "Haven't you done yet!" she exclaimed. "I am shocked, uncle, to
   interrupt you again--but these horrid hats of Arnold's are
   beginning to weigh upon my mind. On reconsideration, I think the
   white hat with the low crown is the most becoming of the two.
   Change again, dear. Yes! the brown hat is hideous. There's a
   beggar at the gate. Before I go quite distracted, I shall give
   him the brown hat, and have done with the difficulty in that
   manner. Am I very much in the way of business? I'm afraid I must
   appear restless? Indeed, I _am_ restless. I can't imagine what is
   the matter with me this morning."
   "I can tell you," said Sir Patrick, in his gravest and dryest
   manner. "You are suffering, Blanche, from a malady which is
   exceedingly common among the young ladies of England. As a
   disease it is quite incurable--and the nam 
					     					 			e of it is
   Nothing-to-Do."
   Blanche dropped her uncle a smart little courtesy. "You might
   have told me I was in the way in fewer words than that." She
   whisked round, kicked the disgraced brown hat out into the
   veranda before her, and left the two gentlemen alone once more.
   "Your position with your wife, Arnold," resumed Sir Patrick,
   returning gravely to the matter in hand, "is certainly a
   difficult one." He paused, thinking of the evening when he and
   Blanche had illustrated the vagueness of Mrs. Inchbare's
   description of the man at the inn, by citing Arnold himself as
   being one of the hundreds of innocent people who answered to it!
   "Perhaps," he added, "the situation is even more difficult than
   you suppose. It would have been certainly easier for _you_--and
   it would have looked more honorable in _her_ estimation--if you
   had made the inevitable confession before your marriage. I am, in
   some degree, answerable for your not having done this--as well as
   for the far more serious dilemma with Miss Silvester in which you
   now stand. If I had not innocently hastened your marriage with
   Blanche, Miss Silvester's admirable letter would have reached us
   in ample time to prevent mischief. It's useless to dwell on that
   now. Cheer up, Arnold! I am bound to show you the way out of the
   labyrinth, no matter what the difficulties may be--and, please
   God, I will do it!"
   He pointed to a table at the other end of the room, on which
   writing materials were placed. "I hate moving the moment I have
   had my breakfast," he said. "We won't go into the library. Bring
   me the pen and ink here."
   "Are you going to write to Miss Silvester?"
   "That is the question before us which we have not settled yet.
   Before I decide, I want to be in possession of the facts--down to
   the smallest detail of what took place between you and Miss
   Silvester at the inn. There is only one way of getting at those
   facts. I am going to examine you as if I had you before me in the
   witness-box in court."
   With that preface, and with Arnold's letter from Baden in his
   hand as a brief to speak from, Sir Patrick put his questions in
   clear and endless succession; and Arnold patiently and faithfully
   answered them all.
   The examination proceeded uninterruptedly until it had reached
   that point in the progress of events at which Anne had crushed
   Geoffrey Delamayn's letter in her hand, and had thrown it from
   her indignantly to the other end of the room. There, for the
   first time, Sir Patrick dipped his pen in the ink, apparently
   intending to take a note. "Be very careful here," he said; "I
   want to know every thing that you can tell me about that letter."
   "The letter is lost," said Arnold.
   "The letter has been stolen by Bishopriggs," returned Sir
   Patrick, "and is in the possession of Bishopriggs at this
   moment."
   "Why, you know more about it than I do!" exclaimed Arnold.
   "I sincerely hope not. I don't know what was inside the letter.
   Do you?"
   "Yes. Part of it at least."
   "Part of it?"
   "There were two letters written, on the same sheet of paper,"
   said Arnold. "One of them was written by Geoffrey Delamayn--and
   that is the one I know about."
   Sir Patrick started. His face brightened; he made a hasty note.
   "Go on," he said, eagerly. "How came the letters to be written on
   the same sheet? Explain that!"
   Arnold explained that Geoffrey, in the absence of any thing else
   to write his excuses on to Anne, had written to her on the fourth
   or blank page of a letter which had been addressed to him by Anne
   herself.
   "Did you read that letter?" asked Sir Patrick.
   "I might have read it if I had liked."
   "And you didn't read it?"
   "No."
   "Why?"
   "Out of delicacy."
   Even Sir Patrick's carefully trained temper was not proof against
   this. "That is the most misplaced act of delicacy I ever heard of