<h4><SPAN name="CHAPTER_THE_LAST" id="CHAPTER_THE_LAST"></SPAN>CHAPTER THE LAST.</h4>
<h3>"IF ANY CALM, A CALM DESPAIR."</h3>
<p>Lady Gwendoline kept her promise. What promises are so sacred as those
that are made to the dying, and which become solemn engagements binding
us to the dead—the dead whom we have wronged, most likely; for who is
there amongst us who does not do some wrong to the creature he most
tenderly loves? Gwendoline Pomphrey repented her jealous anger against
her cousin; she bitterly lamented those occasions upon which she had
felt a miserable joy in the probing of his wounds. She looked back, now
that the blindness of passion had passed away with the passing of the
dead, and saw herself as she had really been-unchristian, intolerant,
possessed by a jealous anger, which she had hidden under the useful
womanly mask of outraged propriety. It was not Roland's sin that had
stung her proud spirit to the quick: it was her love for the sinner that
had been outraged by his devotion to another woman.</p>
<p>She never knew that she had sent the man she loved to his death.
Inflexible to the last, Roland Lansdell had kept the secret of that
fatal meeting in Nessborough Hollow. The man who had caused his death
was Isabel's father. If Roland had been vindictively disposed towards
his enemy, he would, for her sake, have freely let him go: but no very
vengeful impulse had stirred the failing pulses of his heart. He was
scarcely angry with Jack the Scribe; but rather recognized in what had
occurred the working of a strange fatality, or the execution of a divine
judgment.</p>
<p>"I was ready to defy heaven and earth for the sake of this girl," he
thought. "I fancied it was an easy thing for a man to make his own
scheme of life, and be happy after his own fashion. It was well that I
should be made to understand my position in the universe. Mr. Sleaford
was only a brutal kind of Nemesis waiting for me at the bottom of the
hill. If I had tried to clamber upwards,—if I had buckled on my armour,
and gone away from this castle of indolence, to fight in the ranks of my
fellow-men,—I need never have met the avenger. Let him go, then. He has
only done his appointed work; and I, who made so pitiful a use of my
life, have small ground for complaint against the man who has shortened
it by a year or two."</p>
<p>Thus it was that Mr. Sleaford went his own way. In spite of that
murderous threat uttered by him in the Old Bailey dock, in spite of the
savage violence of his attack upon Roland Lansdell, he had not, perhaps,
meant to kill his enemy. In his own way of expressing it, he had not
meant to go too far. There is a wide gulf between the signing of other
people's names, or the putting an additional y after the word <i>eight</i>,
and an unauthorized 0 after the numeral on the face of a cheque—there
is an awful distance between such illegal accomplishments and an act of
deliberate homicide. Mr. Sleaford had only intended to "punish" the
"languid swell" who had borne witness against him; to spoil his beauty
for the time being; and, in short, to give him just cause for
remembering that little amateur-detective business by which he had
beguiled the elegant idleness of his life. Isabel's father had scarcely
intended to do more than this. But when you beat a man about the head
with a loaded bludgeon, it is not so very easy to draw the line of
demarcation between an assault and a murder; and Mr. Sleaford did go a
little too far: as he learned a few days afterwards, when he read in the
"Times" supplement an intimation of the sudden death of Roland Lansdell,
Esq., of Mordred Priory, Midlandshire.</p>
<p>The strong man, reading this announcement in the parlour of a low
public-house in one of the most obscure purlieus of Lambeth, felt an icy
sensation of fear that he had never experienced before amidst all the
little difficulties attendant upon the forging of negotiable autographs.
This was something more than he had bargained for. <i>This</i> Midlandshire
business was murder, or something so nearly resembling that last and
worst of crimes, that a stupid jury might fail to recognize the
distinction. Jack the Scribe, armed with Roland Lansdell's fifty pounds,
had already organized a plan of operations which was likely to result in
a very comfortable little income, without involving anything so
disagreeable to the feelings of a gentleman as the illegal use of other
people's names. It was to the science of money-lending that Mr. Sleaford
had turned his attention; and during the enforced retirement of the last
few years he had woven for himself a very neat little system, by which a
great deal of interest, in the shape of inquiry-fees and preliminary
postage-stamps, could be extorted out of simple-minded borrowers without
any expenditure in the way of principal on the part of the lender. With
a view to the worthy carrying out of this little scheme, Mr. Sleaford
had made an appointment with one of his old associates, who appeared to
him a likely person to act as clerk or underling, and to double that
character with the more dignified <i>r�le</i> of solicitor to the MUTUAL AND
CO-OPERATIVE FRIEND-IN-NEED AND FRIEND-IN-DEED SOCIETY; but after
reading that dismal paragraph respecting Mr. Lansdell in the supplement
of the "Times," Jack the Scribe's ideas underwent a considerable change.
It might be that this big pleasant metropolis, in which there is always
such a nice little crop of dupes and simpletons ready to fall prone
beneath the sickle of the judicious husbandman, would become, in vulgar
parlance, a little too hot to hold Mr. Sleaford. The contemplation of
this unpleasant possibility led that gentleman's thoughts away to fairer
and more distant scenes. He had a capital of fifty pounds in his pocket.
With such a sum for his fulcrum, Jack the Scribe felt himself capable of
astonishing—not to say uprooting—the universe; and if an indiscreet
use of his bludgeon had rendered it unadvisable for him to remain in his
native land, there were plenty of opportunities in the United States of
America for a man of his genius. In America—on the "other side," as he
had heard his Transatlantic friends designate their country—he might
find an appropriate platform for the MUTUAL AND CO-OPERATIVE
FRIEND-IN-NEED AND FRIEND-IN-DEED SOCIETY. The genus dupe is
cosmopolitan, and the Transatlantic Arcadian would be just as ready with
his postage-stamps as the confiding denizen of Bermondsey or Camden
Town. Already in his mind's eye Mr. Sleaford beheld a flaming
advertisement of his grand scheme slanting across the back page of a
daily newspaper. Already he imagined himself thriving on the simplicity
of the New Yorkers; and departing, enriched and rejoicing, from that
delightful city just as the Arcadians were beginning to be a little
impatient about the conclusion of operations, and a little backward in
the production of postage-stamps.</p>
<p>Having once decided upon the advisability of an early departure from
England, Mr. Sleaford lost no time in putting his plans into operation.
He strolled out in the dusk of the evening, and made his way to some
dingy lanes and waterside alleys in the neighbourhood of London Bridge.
Here he obtained all information about speedily-departing steam-vessels
bound for New York; and early the following morning, burdened only with
a carpet-bag and the smallest of portmanteaus, Jack the Scribe left
Euston Square on his way to Liverpool, whence he departed, this time
unhindered and unobserved, in the steam-vessel <i>Washington</i> bound for
New York. And here he drops out of my story, as the avenging goddess
might disappear from a classic stage when her work was done. For him too
a Nemesis waits, lurking darkly in some hidden turning of the sinuous
way along which a scoundrel walks.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>"If any calm, a calm despair." Such a calm fell at last upon Isabel
Gilbert; but it was slow to come. For a long time it seemed to her as if
a dreadful darkness obscured all the world; a darkness in which she
groped blindly for a grave, where she might lie down and die. Was not
<i>he</i> dead? What was there left in all the universe now that he was gone?</p>
<p>Happily for the sufferer there is attendant upon all great mental
anguish a kind of numbness, a stupefaction of the senses, which in some
manner deadens the sharpness of the torture. For a long time Isabel
could not think of what had happened within the last few troubled weeks.
She could only sit hopeless and tearless in the little parlour at
Graybridge while the funeral preparations went quietly on about her, and
while Mrs. Jeffson and the young woman, who went on to work at
eighteenpence a day, came in every now and then to arouse her from her
dull stupor for the trying-on of mourning garments which smelt of dye
and size, and left black marks upon her neck and arms. She heard the
horrible snipping of crape and bombazine going on all day, like the
monotonous accompaniment of a nightmare; and sometimes when the door had
been left ajar, she heard people talking in the opposite room. She heard
them talking in stealthy murmurs of the two funerals which were to take
place on successive days—one at Graybridge, one at Mordred. She heard
them speculate respecting Mr. Lansdell's disposal of his wealth; she
heard the name, the dear romantic name, that was to be nothing
henceforward but an empty sound, bandied from lip to lip; and all this
pain was only some portion of the hideous dream which bound her night
and day.</p>
<p>People were very kind to her. Even Graybridge took pity upon her youth
and desolation; though every pang of her foolish heart was the subject
of tea-table speculation. But the accomplished slanderer is not always a
malevolently disposed person. He is only like the wit, who loves his
jest better than his friend; but who will yet do his friend good service
in the day of need. The Misses Pawlkatt, and many other young ladies of
standing in Graybridge, wrote Isabel pretty little notes of condolence,
interlarded with quotations from Scripture, and offered to go and "sit
with her." To "sit with her;" to beguile with their frivolous stereotype
chatter the anguish of this poor stupefied creature, for whom all the
universe seemed obscured by one impenetrable cloud.</p>
<p>It was on the second day after the surgeon's funeral, the day following
that infinitely more stately ceremonial at Mordred church, that Mr.
Raymond came to see Isabel. He had been with her several times during
the last few days; but he had found all attempts at consolation utterly
in vain, and he, who had so carefully studied human nature, knew that it
was wisest and kindest to let her alone. But on this occasion he came on
a business errand; and he was accompanied by a grave-looking person,
whom he introduced to Isabel as the late Mr. Lansdell's solicitor.</p>
<p>"I have come to bring you strange news, Mrs. Gilbert," he said—"news
that cannot fail to be very startling to you."</p>
<p>She looked up at Charles Raymond with a sad smile, whose meaning he was
not slow to interpret. It said so plainly, "Do you think anything that
can happen henceforward upon this earth could ever seem strange to me?"</p>
<p>"When you were with—him—on the last day of his life, Isabel," Mr.
Raymond continued, "he talked to you very seriously. He changed—changed
wonderfully with the near approach of death. It seemed as if the last
ten years had been blotted away, and he was a young man again, just
entering life, full of noble yearnings and aspirations. I pray God those
ten idle years may never be counted against him. He spoke to you very
earnestly, my dear; and he urged you, if ever great opportunities were
given you, which they might be, to use them faithfully for his sake. I
heard him say this, and was at a loss to understand his full meaning. I
comprehend it perfectly now."</p>
<p>He paused; but Isabel did not even look up at him. The tears were slowly
pouring down her colourless cheeks. She was thinking of that last day at
Mordred; and Roland's tenderly-earnest voice seemed still sounding in
her ears.</p>
<p>"Isabel, a great charge has been entrusted to you. Mr. Lansdell has left
you the bulk of his fortune."</p>
<p>It is certain that Mr. Raymond expected some cry of surprise, some token
of astonishment, to follow this announcement; but Isabel's tears only
flowed a little faster, and her head sank forward on the sofa-cushion by
her side.</p>
<p>"Had you any idea that Roland intended to leave his money in this
manner?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no, no! I don't want the money; I can do nothing with it. Oh, give
it to some hospital, please: and let the hospital be called by his name.
It was cruel of him to think that I should care for money when he was
dead."</p>
<p>"I have reason to believe that this will was made under very peculiar
circumstances," Mr. Raymond said presently; "when Roland was labouring
under a delusion about you—a delusion which you yourself afterwards
dispelled. Mr. Lansdell's solicitor fully understands this; Lord
Ruysdale and his daughter also understand it; and no possible discredit
can attach to you from the inheritance of this fortune. Had Roland
lived, he might very possibly have made some alteration and
modifications of this will. As it stands, it is as good a will as any
ever proved at Doctors' Commons. You are a very rich woman, Isabel. Lady
Gwendoline, her father, and myself are all legatees to a considerable
amount; but Mordred Priory and the bulk of the Lansdell property are
left to you."</p>
<p>And then Mr. Raymond went on to explain the nature of the will, which
left everything to himself and Mr. Meredith (the London solicitor) as
trustees, for the separate use and maintenance of Isabel Gilbert, and a
great deal more, which had no significance for the dull indifferent ears
of the mourner. There had been a time when Mrs. Gilbert would have
thought it a grand thing to be rich, and would have immediately imagined
a life spent in ruby velvet and diamonds; but that time was past. The
blessings we sigh for are very apt to come to us too late; like that
pension the tidings of which came to the poet as he lay upon his
deathbed.</p>
<p>Mordred Priory became the property of Isabel Gilbert; and for a time all
that Shakespearian region of Midlandshire had enough to employ them in
the discussion of Mr. Lansdell's will. But even the voice of slander was
hushed when Mrs. Gilbert left England in the company of Lord Ruysdale
and his daughter for a lengthened sojourn on the Continent. I quote here
from the "Wareham Gazette," which found Isabel's proceedings worthy of
record since her inheritance of Mr. Lansdell's property.</p>
<p>Lady Gwendoline had promised to be the friend of Isabel; and she kept
her word. There was no bitterness in her heart now; and perhaps she
liked George Gilbert's widow all the better on account of that foolish
wasted love that made a kind of link between them.</p>
<p>Lord Ruysdale's daughter was not the sort of woman to feel any base envy
of Mrs. Gilbert's fortune. The Earl had been very slow to understand the
motives of his kinsman's will; but as he and his daughter received a
legacy of ten thousand pounds apiece, to say nothing of sundry
Cromwellian tankards, old-fashioned brooches and bracelets in
rose-diamonds, a famous pearl necklace that had belonged to Lady Anna
Lansdell, a Murillo and a Rembrandt, and nineteen dozen of Madeira that
connoisseurs considered unique, Lord Ruysdale could scarcely esteem
himself ill-treated by his late nephew.</p>
<p>So Mrs. Gilbert was permitted to possess her new wealth in peace,
protected from any scandal by the Ruysdale influence. She was permitted
to be at peace; and she went away with Lady Gwendoline and the Earl to
those fair foreign lands for which she had pined in the weedy garden at
Camberwell. Even during the first bitterness of her sorrow she was not
utterly selfish. She sent money to Mrs. Sleaford and the boys—money
which seemed enormous wealth to them; and she instructed her solicitor
to send them quarterly instalments of an income which would enable her
half-brothers to receive a liberal education.</p>
<p>"I have had a great sorrow," she wrote to her step-mother, "and I am
going away with people who are very kind to me; not to forget—I would
not for the world find forgetfulness, if such a thing was to be found;
only that I may learn to bear my sorrow and to be good. When I come
back, I shall be glad to see you and my brothers."</p>
<p>She wrote this, and a good deal more that was kind and dutiful, to poor
Mrs. Sleaford, who had changed that tainted name to Singleton, in the
peaceful retirement of Jersey; and then she went away, and was taken to
many beautiful cities, over all of which there seemed to hang a kind of
mist that shut out the sunshine. It was only when Roland Lansdell had
been dead more than two years, that she began to understand that no
grief, however bitter, can entirely obscure the beauty of the universe.
She began to feel that there is something left in life even when a first
romantic love is nothing but a memory; a peace which is so nearly akin
to happiness, that we scarcely regret the flight of the brighter spirit;
a calm which lies beyond the regions of despair, and which is unruffled
by those vague fears, those shadowy forebodings, that are apt to trouble
the joyful heart.</p>
<p>And now it seems to me that I have little more to do with Isabel
Gilbert. She passes away from me into a higher region than that in which
my story has lain,—useful, serene, almost happy, but very constant to
the memory of sorrow,—she is altogether different from the foolish wife
who neglected all a wife's duties while she sat by the mill-stream at
Thurston's Crag reading the "Revolt of Islam." There is a great gulf
between a girl of nineteen and a woman of five-and twenty; and Isabel's
foolish youth is separated from her wiser womanhood by a barrier that is
formed by two graves. Is it strange, then, that the chastening influence
of sorrow has transformed a sentimental girl into a good and noble
woman—a woman in whom sentiment takes the higher form of universal
sympathy and tenderness? She has faithfully employed the trust confided
to her. The money bequeathed to her by the ardent lover, who fancied
that he had won the woman of his choice, and that his sole duty was to
protect her from worldly loss or trouble,—the fortune bequeathed under
such strange circumstances has become a sacred trust, to be accounted
for to the dead. Only the mourner knows the exquisite happiness involved
in any act performed for the sake of the lost. Our Protestant creed,
which will not permit us to pray for our dead, cannot forbid the
consecration of our good works to those departed and beloved creatures.</p>
<p>Charles Raymond has transferred to Isabel something of that affection
which he felt for Roland Lansdell; and he and the orphans, grown into
estimable young persons of sixteen and seventeen, spend a great deal of
their time at Mordred Priory. The agricultural labourer, who had known
the Doctor's Wife only as a pale-faced girlish creature, sitting under
the shelter of a hedgerow, with a green parasol above her head, and a
book in her lap, has good reason to bless the Doctor's Widow; for model
cottages have arisen in many a pleasant corner of the estate which was
once Roland Lansdell's—pretty Elizabethan cottages, with peaked gables
and dormer windows. Allotment gardens have spread themselves here and
there on pleasant slopes; and coming suddenly upon some woody hollow,
you find yourself face to face with the Tudor windows of a schoolhouse,
a substantial modern building, set in an old-world garden, where there
are great gnarled pear-trees, and a cluster of beehives in a bowery
corner, sheltered by bushes of elder and hazel.</p>
<p>Sigismund Smith appears sometimes at Mordred Priory, always accompanied
by a bloated and dilapidated leathern writing-case, unnaturally
distended by stuff which he calls "copy," and other stuff which he
speaks of as "proofs."</p>
<p>Telegrams from infuriated proprietors of penny journals pursue him in
his calm retreat, and a lively gentleman in a white hat has been known
to arrive per express-train, vaguely declaring his intention of
"standing over" Mr. Smith during the production of an urgently-required
chapter of "The Bride of the Bosphorus; or, the Fourteen Corpses of the
Caspian Sea."</p>
<p>He is very happy and very inky; and the rustic wanderers who meet a
pale-faced and mild-looking gentleman loitering in the green lanes about
Mordred, with his hat upon the back of his head, and his insipid blue
eyes fixed on vacancy, would be slow to perceive in him the deliberate
contriver of one of the most atrocious and cold-blooded schemes of
vengeance that ever outraged the common dictates of human nature and
adorned the richly-illustrated pages of a penny periodical. Amongst the
wild roses and new-mown hay of Midlandshire, Mr. Smith finds it sweet to
lie at ease, weaving the dark webs of crime which he subsequently works
out upon paper in the dingy loneliness of his Temple chambers. He is
still a bachelor, and complains that he is not the kind of man to fall
in love, as he is compelled to avail himself of the noses and eyes, ruby
lips, and golden or raven tresses—there are no other hues in Mr.
Smith's vocabulary—of every eligible young lady he meets, for the
decking out of his numerous heroines. "Miss Binks?" he will perhaps
remark, when a lady's name is mentioned to him; "oh yes: <i>she's</i> Bella
the Ballet Girl (one of Bickers's touch-and-go romances; the first five
numbers, and a magnificent engraving of one of Landseer's best pictures,
for a penny); I finished her off last week. She poisoned herself with
insect-powder in a garret near Drury Lane, after setting fire to the
house and grounds of her destroyer. She ran through a hundred and
thirteen numbers, and Bickers has some idea of getting me to write a
sequel. You see there <i>might</i> be an antidote to the insect-powder, or
the oilman's shop-boy might have given Bella patent mustard in mistake."</p>
<p>But it has been observed of late that Mr. Smith pays very special
attention to the elder of the two orphans, whom he declares to be too
good for penny numbers, and a charming subject for three volumes of the
quiet and domestic school, and he has consulted Mr. Raymond respecting
the investment of his deposit-account, which is supposed to be something
considerable; for a gentleman who lives chiefly upon bread-and marmalade
and weak tea may amass a very comfortable little independence from the
cultivation of sensational literature in penny numbers.</p>
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