<h2>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
<h3>CAPTAIN BAYLEY.</h3>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/i024-d.png" width-obs="100" height-obs="100" alt="D" title="" /></div>
<div class='unindent'><br/>URING the time which had elapsed between
the departure of Frank Norris from England,
and his arrival at the gold-diggings
in California, much had happened at home
which he would have been interested to learn had he
maintained any communication with his relatives there.
On the morning when Frank had been accused by Dr.
Litter of abstracting the note from his table, the latter
had, as he had informed Frank he intended to do,
sent a note to Captain Bayley informing him that a most
painful circumstance had taken place with reference to
his nephew, and begging him to call upon him between
twelve and one.</div>
<p>Captain Bayley had done so, and had, as Fred Barkley
stated, been furious at the news which the Doctor conveyed
to him; his fury, however, being in no degree
directed towards his nephew, but entirely against the
head-master for venturing to bring so abominable an
accusation against Frank.</p>
<p>The evidence which Dr. Litter adduced had no effect
whatever in staying his wrath, and so vehement and angry
was the old officer, that Dr. Litter was obliged to ring the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</SPAN></span>
bell and order the servant to show him out. From Dean's
Yard he took a cab, and drove direct to his solicitor, and
requested him instantly to take proceedings against the
head-master for defamation of character.</p>
<p>"But, Captain Bayley," the lawyer urged, "we must
first see whether this gentleman had any reasonable cause
for his belief. If the evidence is what may be considered
as strong, we must accept his action as taken <i>bonâ fide</i>."</p>
<p>"Don't tell me, sir," Captain Bayley exclaimed
angrily. "What do I care for evidence? Of course he
told me a long rigmarole story, but he could not have
believed it himself. No one but a fool could believe my
nephew Frank guilty of theft; the idea is preposterous,
it was as much as I could do to restrain myself from
caning him when he was speaking."</p>
<p>The lawyer smiled inwardly, for Dr. Litter was a tall,
stately man, six feet two in height, while Captain
Bayley was a small, slight figure, by no means powerful
when in his prime, and now fully twenty years the senior
of the head-master.</p>
<p>"Well, Captain Bayley," he said, "in the first place it
is necessary that I should know the precise accusation
which this gentleman has brought against your nephew.
Will you be good enough to repeat to me, as nearly as
you can, the statement which he made, as, of course, if
we proceed to legal measures, we must be exact in the
matter?"</p>
<p>"Well, this is about the story he told me," Captain
Bayley said, more calmly. "In the first place, it seems
that the lad broke bounds one night, and went with a man
named Perkins—who is a prize-fighter, and who I know
gave him lessons in boxing, for I gave Frank five pounds<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</SPAN></span>
last half to pay for them—to a meeting of these Chartist
blackguards somewhere in the New Cut.</p>
<p>"Well, there was a row there, as there naturally would
be at such a place, and it seems Frank knocked down
some Radical fellow—a tailor, I believe—and broke his
nose. Well, you know, I am not saying this was right;
still, you know, lads will be lads, and I used to be fond of
getting into a row myself when I was young, for I could
spar in those days pretty well, I can tell you, Griffith.
I would have given a five-pound note to have seen Frank
set to with that Radical tailor. Still, I dare say, if the lad
had told me about it I should have got into a passion and
blown him up."</p>
<p>"I shouldn't be surprised at all," the lawyer said
drily.</p>
<p>"No. Well that would do him no harm; he knows me,
and he knows that I am peppery. Well, it seems this
fellow found out who he was, and threatened to report the
thing to the head-master, in which case this Dr. Litter
said he should have expelled him for being out of
bounds, a thing which in itself I call monstrous. Now,
here is where Frank was wrong. He ought to have come
straight to me and told me the whole affair, and got his
blowing-up and his money. Instead of that, he asked three
or four of the other boys—among them my nephew Fred—to
lend him the money, but they were all out of funds.
Well, somebody, it seems, sent Frank a ten-pound note
in an envelope, with the words, 'From a friend,' and
no more. Frank showed the envelope to the others,
and they all agreed that it was a sort of godsend, and
Frank sent the note to the tailor. Now it seems that
the day before Frank got the note, the head-master, when<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</SPAN></span>
he was hearing his form, had put a ten-pound note, with
some other things, on the table, and being called out, he,
like a careless old fool, left them lying there.</p>
<p>"Some time afterwards he missed the note, and does
not remember taking it up from the table; still, he says,
he did not suspect any of the boys of his form of taking
it, and thinking that he had dropt it on the way to his
house, he stopped the note at the bank, happening to have
its number. A few days afterwards the note was presented;
it was traced to the tailor, who admitted having
received it from Frank; and would you believe it, sir,
this man now pretends to believe that my nephew stole it
from the table, and sent it to himself in an envelope.
It's the most preposterous thing I ever heard."</p>
<p>Mr. Griffith looked grave.</p>
<p>"Of course, Captain Bayley, having met your nephew
at your house several times, I cannot for a moment
believe him guilty of taking the note; still, I must admit
that the evidence is strongly circumstantial, and were it a
stranger who was accused, I should say at once the thing
looked nasty."</p>
<p>"Pooh! nonsense, Griffith," the old officer said angrily;
"there's nothing in it, sir—nothing whatever. Somebody
found the note kicking about, I dare say, and didn't know
who it belonged to; he knew Frank was in a corner, and
sent it to him. The thing is perfectly natural."</p>
<p>"Yes," the lawyer assented doubtfully; "but the
question is, Who did know it? Was the fact of your
nephew requiring the money generally known in the
school?"</p>
<p>"No," Captain Bayley admitted. "The doctor examined
the four boys before Frank. They all declared<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</SPAN></span>
that they knew nothing of the note, and that they had
not mentioned the circumstance to a soul; but my
opinion is that one of them is a liar."</p>
<p>"It is certainly necessary to believe," Mr. Griffith said
slowly, "that one of them is either a liar or a thief. Of
course there may be some other solution of the matter,
but the only one that I can see, just at the present
moment, is this: Your nephew is the sort of lad to be
extremely popular among his schoolmates; either one of
these four boys took the note from the master's table, with
the good-natured but most mistaken idea of getting
him out of a scrape, or they must have mentioned his
need of money to some of their school-fellows, one of
whom finding the note, perhaps in the yard, where the
head-master may have dropped it, sent it to Frank to
relieve him of the difficulty.</p>
<p>"These are possible solutions of the mystery, at any
rate. But if you will take my advice, Captain Bayley, you
will not, in the present state of affairs, take the steps
which you propose to me against Dr. Litter. It will be
time enough to do that when your nephew's innocence is
finally and incontestably proved. Of course," he said,
seeing that his listener was about to break out again,
"you and I, knowing him, know that he is innocent; but
others who do not know him might entertain some doubt
upon the subject, and a jury might consider that the
Doctor was justified, with the evidence before him, in
acting as he did, in which case an immense deal of
damage might be done by making the matter a subject
of general talk."</p>
<p>With some difficulty Captain Bayley was persuaded to
allow his intention to rest for a while.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"It is late now," he said, "but I shall go and see Frank
to-morrow. I wish I had seen him this afternoon before
I came to you. However, I have no doubt when I get
home I shall find a letter from him—not defending himself,
of course, as he would know that to be unnecessary,
but telling me the story in his own way."</p>
<p>But no letter came that evening, to Captain Bayley's
great irritation. He told Alice Hardy the whole circumstances,
and she was as indignant as himself, and warmly
agreed that the head-master should be punished for his
unjust suspicions.</p>
<p>"And do you say he is really going to be expelled
to-morrow?" she asked, in a tone of horror.</p>
<p>"So the fellow said, my dear; but he shall smart for it,
and the laws of the land shall do Frank justice."</p>
<p>At half-past nine the next morning Fred Barkley
arrived at Captain Bayley's.</p>
<p>"Well," his uncle exclaimed, as he entered, "I suppose
you have been sent to tell me they have got to the bottom
of this rigmarole affair."</p>
<p>"No, uncle," Fred said, "I have, I am sorry to say,
been sent to tell you that Frank last night left his
boarding-house and is not to be found."</p>
<p>Captain Bayley leapt from his seat in great wrath.</p>
<p>"The fool! the idiot! to run away like a coward instead
of facing it out; and not a line or a message has he sent
to me. Did you know, sir, that your cousin was going to
run away?"</p>
<p>Fred hesitated.</p>
<p>"Yes, uncle, I knew that he was going, and did my
best to dissuade him, but it was useless."</p>
<p>Captain Bayley walked up and down the room with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</SPAN></span>
quick steps, uttering exclamations testifying his anger
and annoyance.</p>
<p>"Has he got any money?" he said suddenly, halting
before Fred. "Did he get any money from you?"</p>
<p>Fred hesitated again, and then said.</p>
<p>"Well, uncle, since you insist upon knowing, I did let
him have twenty pounds which I got for the sale of my
books."</p>
<p>"I believe, sir," the old officer said furiously, "that you
encouraged him in this step, a step which I consider fatal
to him."</p>
<p>Fred hesitated again, and then said.</p>
<p>"Well, uncle, I am sorry that you should be so angry
about it, but I own that I did not throw any obstacle in
the way."</p>
<p>"You did not, sir," Captain Bayley roared, "and why
did you not? Are you a fool too? Don't you see that
this running away instead of facing matters out cannot
but be considered, by people who do not know Frank, as
a proof of his guilt, a confession that he did not dare to
stay to face his accusers?"</p>
<p>Fred was silent.</p>
<p>"Answer me, sir," Captain Bayley said; "don't stand
there without a word to explain your conduct. Do you
or do you not see that this cowardly flight will look like a
confession of guilt?"</p>
<p>"I did see that, uncle," Fred said, "but I thought that
better than a public expulsion."</p>
<p>"Oh! you did, did you?" his uncle said sarcastically,
"when you knew that if he had stopped quietly at home
we should have proved his innocence in less than no
time."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Fred made no reply.</p>
<p>"Do you think we shouldn't have proved his innocence?"
roared his uncle.</p>
<p>"I am sorry to say anything which is displeasing to
you, uncle, but I fear that you would never have proved
Frank's innocence."</p>
<p>The words seemed to have a sobering effect on Captain
Bayley. The blood seemed to die out of his face; he put
one hand on a chair, as if to steady himself, while he
looked fixedly in his nephew's face.</p>
<p>"Do you mean, Fred," he said, in a low voice, "do you
mean that you have a doubt of Frank's innocence?"</p>
<p>"I should rather not say anything about it," Fred
replied. "I hope with all my heart that Frank is not
guilty, but——"</p>
<p>"What do you think?" Captain Bayley repeated; "have
you any grounds whatever for believing him guilty?"</p>
<p>"No, sir, and I do not wish you to be in the slightest
degree influenced by what I said." He paused, but
Captain Bayley's eyes were still fixed upon him, as if
commanding a complete answer.</p>
<p>"Well, sir," he went on hesitatingly, "I must own that,
sad as it is to say so, I fear Frank did it."</p>
<p>"Did he confess it to you?" Captain Bayley asked, in
a strained, strange voice.</p>
<p>"No, uncle, not in so many words, but he said things
which seemed to me to mean that. When I tried to dissuade
him from running away, and urged him to remain
till his innocence could be proved, he said angrily,
'What's the use of talking like that, when you know as
well as I do that it can't be proved.' Afterwards he said,
'It is a bad job, and I have been an awful fool. But<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</SPAN></span>
who could have thought that note would ever be traced
back to Litter?' and other remarks of the same kind.
He may be innocent, uncle—you know how deeply I wish
we could prove him so—but I fear, I greatly fear, that
we shall be doing Frank more service by letting the
matter drop. You know the fellows in the school all
believe him innocent, and though his going away has
staggered some of them, the general feeling is still all in
his favour; therefore they are sure to speak of him as a
sort of victim, and when he returns, which of course he
will do in a few years' time, the matter will have died
away and have been altogether forgotten."</p>
<p>The old officer sat down at the table and hid his face
in his hands.</p>
<p>All this time Alice, pale and silent, had sat and listened
with her eyes fixed upon the speaker, but she now leapt
up to her feet.</p>
<p>"Uncle," she said, "don't believe him, he is not
speaking the truth, I am sure he is not. He hates Frank,
and I have known it all along, because Frank is bigger
and better than he; because Frank was generous and
kind-hearted; because every one liked Frank and no one
liked him. He is telling a lie now, and I believe every
word he has said since he came into the room is false."</p>
<p>"Hush! child," the old officer said; "you must not
speak so, my dear. If it was only the word of one lad
against another, it would be different; but it is not so.
The proof is very strong against Frank. I would give
all I am worth if I could still believe him innocent, and
had he come to me and put his hand in mine, and said,
'Uncle, I am innocent,' I would have believed him against
all the evidence in the world. It is not I who condemn<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</SPAN></span>
him, he has condemned himself. He sends me no word;
he cannot look me in the face and declare himself innocent.
He runs away at night, knowing well that there could be
but one construction as to this, and that all would judge
him guilty. No, Alice, it breaks my heart to say so, but
I can struggle no longer against these facts. The lad whom
I have loved as a son has turned out a thief."</p>
<p>"No, uncle, no," the girl cried passionately, "I will
never believe it, not to the end of my life. I cannot
prove him innocent, but I know he is so, and some day
it will be proved; but till then I shall still think of him
as my dear brother, as my true-hearted brother, who has
been wrongfully accused, and who is the victim of some
wicked plot of which, perhaps, Fred Barkley knows more
than any one else," and, bursting into a passion of tears,
she ran from the room. Fred looked after her with an
expression of pity and sorrow.</p>
<p>"Poor child!" he said, "it is a terrible blow for her,
and she scarce knows what she is saying."</p>
<p>"It is a terrible blow," Captain Bayley said, in a dreary
voice, "a most terrible blow to me and to her. No
wonder she feels it; and I have been planning and
hoping that some day, a few years hence, those two
would get to like each other in a different way. I had,
by my will, divided my fortune equally between you and
him, but I have liked him best. Of course, I brought
him up, and he has been always with me; it was natural
that I should do so. Still I wanted to be fair, and I
divided it equally. But I was pleased at the thought that
her fortune, which is, as you know, a very large one,
would be his, and enable him to make a great figure in
the world if he had chosen; and now it is all over.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Go away now, my boy, the blow has been too much
for me. I am getting an old man, and this is the second
great blow I have had. Do not take to heart the wild
words of poor little Alice. You see she scarcely knows
what she is saying."</p>
<p>Without another word Fred took his departure.
When once out of sight of the house his steps quickened,
and he walked briskly along.</p>
<p>"Splendid!" he said to himself; "a grand stroke
indeed, and perfectly safe. Frank is not likely to return
for twenty years, if ever, and I don't think the old man
is good for another five. I expect I shall have some
trouble with that little cat, Alice; but she is only a child,
and will come round in time, and her fortune will be
quite as useful to me as it would have been to him. I
always knew he was little better than a fool, but I could
hardly have hoped that he would have walked into the
trap as he has done. I suppose that other blow old
Bayley spoke of was that affair of his daughter. That
was a lucky business for me too."</p>
<p>Fred Barkley was not mistaken, it was of his daughter
Captain Bayley had been thinking when he spoke. He
had married young when he first went out to India, and
had lost his wife two years later, leaving him with a
daughter six months old. He had sent her home to
England, and after a twenty years' absence he had returned
and found her grown up.</p>
<p>She had inherited something of her father's passionate
disposition, and possessed, in addition, an amount of
sullen obstinacy which was wholly alien to his nature.
But her father saw none of these defects in her character.
She was very beautiful, with an air of pride and hauteur<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</SPAN></span>
which he liked. She had a right to be proud, he thought,
for she was a very wealthy heiress, for, his two elder
brothers having died childless while he was in India,
the fine property of their father had all descended to
him.</p>
<p>Though the girl had many suitors, she would listen to
none of them, having formed a strong attachment to a
man in station altogether beneath her. He had given
lessons in drawing at the school which had been her
home as well as her place of education during her father's
absence, for Captain Bayley had quarrelled with his
sisters, both of whom, he considered, had married beneath
them.</p>
<p>The fact that Ella Bayley was an only child, and that
her father was a wealthy man, was known in the school,
and had, in some way, come to the ears of the drawing-master,
who was young, and by no means ill-looking.
He had played his cards well. Ella was romantic and
impetuous, and, before long, returned the devotion which
her teacher expressed for her.</p>
<p>When her father returned home, and Ella left school
to take her place at the head of his establishment, she
had hoped that she should be able to win from him a
consent to her engagement; but she found his prejudices
on the subject of birth were strong, and she waited two
years before she broached the subject.</p>
<p>The wrath of Captain Bayley was prodigious; he
heaped abusive epithets upon the man of her choice,
till Ella's temper rose also. There was a passionate
quarrel between father and daughter. The next morning
Ella was missing; a week afterwards Captain Bayley
received a copy of the certificate of her marriage, with a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</SPAN></span>
short note from Ella, saying that when he could make
his mind up to forgive her and her husband, and to
acknowledge that the latter did not deserve the abusive
language that he had applied to him, she should be glad
to return and resume her place as his affectionate and
loving daughter. She gave an address at which he could
communicate to her.</p>
<p>Three years passed before Captain Bayley's anger had
sufficiently calmed down for him to write to his daughter
saying that he forgave her. The letter was returned by
the people at the house, with a note saying that many
months had elapsed since any inquiries had been made
for letters for Mrs. Smedley, and that they had altogether
lost sight of her. Now that the Captain had once made
up his mind to forgive his daughter, he was burning with
impatience to see her again, and he at once employed a
detective to find out what had become of her.</p>
<p>From the person to whose house the letter had been
directed the detective learned the address where she and
her husband had resided while in London.</p>
<p>For a time it seemed they had lived expensively, the
sale of Ella's jewels keeping them in luxury for some
months. Then hard times had come upon them; the man
had altogether lost his connection as a teacher, and could,
or would, do nothing to support his wife and himself;
they had moved from the place they had first lived at,
and taken much smaller lodgings.</p>
<p>Here the people of the house reported their life had
been very unhappy; the husband had taken to drink, and
there had been fierce and frequent quarrels between them,
arising—the landlady had gleaned, from the loud and
angry utterance of the husband—from the wife's refusal<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</SPAN></span>
to appeal to her father for assistance. They had left this
place suddenly, and in debt; thence they had moved from
lodging to lodging at short intervals, their position
getting worse, until they were last lodged in a wretched
garret. From this point they were traced with great
trouble down to Nottingham, where the husband obtained
a precarious living by producing designs for embroidery
and curtains.</p>
<p>Had he been steady he might have soon done fairly,
but a great part of his time was spent in public-houses,
and he was seldom sober. When returning home one
night in a state of drunkenness, he was run over by a heavy
van and killed. As his wife possessed but a few shillings
in the world, he was buried at the expense of the parish
and his widow at once left the town.</p>
<p>The people where she lodged believed that she had
gone to London, taking with her her six months old child,
and had started to tramp the way on foot. The woman
said that she doubted whether she could ever have got
there. She was an utterly broken woman, with a constant
racking cough, which was like to tear her to pieces,
and before she set out her landlady had urged upon her
that the idea of her starting to carry a heavy child to
London was nothing short of madness.</p>
<p>After this all trace of Ella had been lost. Advertisements
offering large rewards appeared in the papers;
the books of every workhouse between Nottingham and
London, and indeed of almost every workhouse in England,
were carefully searched to see if there was any record of
the death of a woman with a child about the time of her
disappearance. A similar search was made at all the
London hospitals, and at every institution where she might<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</SPAN></span>
have crawled to die; but no trace had ever been found of
her.</p>
<p>That she was dead was not doubted; for it was found
that at Nottingham she had once gone to the parish
doctor for some medicine for her child. The physician
had taken particular notice of her, had asked her some
questions, and had made a note in his case-book that
the mother of the child he had prescribed for was in an
advanced stage of consumption, and had probably but a
few weeks, certainly not more than a few months, to live.</p>
<p>It was long before the search was given up as hopeless,
and many hundreds of pounds were spent by Captain
Bayley before he abandoned all hope of discovering, if not
his daughter, at least her child. During the year which
elapsed before he was forced to acknowledge that it was
hopeless, Captain Bayley had suffered terribly. His self-reproaches
were unceasing, and he aged many years in
appearance.</p>
<p>It was three years after this, on the death of his
sister, Mrs. Norris, whose husband had died some years
before, that he took Frank into his house and adopted
him as his son, stating, however, to all whom it might
concern, that he did not regard him as standing nearer to
him as his heir than his other nephew, Fred Barkley,
but that his property would be divided between them as
they might show themselves worthy of it. It was three
years later still, that, at the death of her father, an old
fellow-officer, his household was increased by the addition
of Alice, who had been left to his guardianship, but who
had soon learned, like Frank, to address him as uncle.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</SPAN></span></p>
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