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he begged Wylie to go on. “Give me all the details,” said he. “Leave me to judge their relative value. You scuttled the ship?”

“Don’t say that! don’t say that!” cried Wylie, in a low but eager voice. “Stone walls have ears.” Then rather more loudly than was necessary, “Ship sprung a leak that neither the captain, nor I, nor anybody could find, to stop. Me and my men, we all think her seams opened, with stress of weather.” Then, lowering his voice again, “Try and see it as we do; and don’t you ever use such a word as that what come out of your lips just now. We pumped her hard; but ‘twarn’t no use. She filled, and we had to take to the boats.”

“Stop a moment. Was there any suspicion excited?”

“Not among the crew. And suppose there was, I could talk ‘em all over, or buy ‘em all over, what few of ‘em is left. I’ve got ‘em all with me in one house, and they are all square, don’t you fear.”

“Well, but you said ‘among the crew!’ Whom else can we have to fear?”

“Why, nobody. To be sure, one of the passengers was down on me; but what does that matter now?”

“It matters greatly—it matters terribly. Who was this passenger?”

“He called himself the Reverend John Hazel. He suspected something or other; and what with listening here, and watching there, he judged the ship was never to see England, and I always fancied he told the lady.”

“What, was there a lady there?”

“Ay, worse luck, sir; and a pretty girl she was. Coming home to England to die of consumption; so our surgeon told me.”

“Well, never mind her. The clergyman! This fills me with anxiety. A clerk suspecting us at Sydney, and a passenger suspecting us in the vessel. There are two witnesses against us already.”

“No; only one.”

“How do you make that out?”

“Why, White’s clerk and the parson, they was one man.

Wardlaw stared in utter amazement.

“Don’t ye believe me?” said Wylie. “I tell ye that there clerk boarded us under an alias. He had shaved off his beard; but, bless your heart, I knew him directly.”

“He came to verify his suspicions,” suggested Wardlaw, in a faint voice.

“Not he. He came for love of the sick girl, and nothing else; and you’ll never see either him or her, if that is any comfort to you.”

“Be good enough to conceal nothing. Facts must be faced.”

“That is too true, sir. Well, we abandoned her, and took to the boats. I commanded one.”

“And Hudson the other?”

“Hudson! No.”

“Why, how was that? and what has become of him?”

“What has become of Hudson?” said Wylie, with a start. “There’s a question! And not a drop to wet my lips and warm my heart. Is this a tale to tell dry? Can’t ye spare a drop of brandy to a poor devil that has earned ye 150,000 pounds, and risked his life, and wrecked his soul to do it?”

Wardlaw cast a glance of contempt on him, but got up and speedily put a bottle of old brandy, a tumbler and a caraffe of water on the table before him.

Wylie drank a wineglassful neat, and gave a sort of sigh of satisfaction. And then ensued a dialogue, in which, curiously enough, the brave man was agitated, and the timid man was cool and collected. But one reason was, the latter had not imagination enough to realize things unseen, though he had caused them.

Wylie told him how Hudson got to the bottle, and would not leave the ship. “I think I see him now, with his cutlass in one hand, and his rum bottle in the other, and the waves running over his poor, silly face, as she went down. Poor Hiram! he and I had made many a trip together, before we took to this.”

And Wylie shuddered, and took another gulp at the brandy.

While he was drinking to drown the picture, Wardlaw was calmly reflecting on the bare fact. “Hum,” said he, “we must use that circumstance. I’ll get it into the journals. Heroic captain. Went down with the ship. Who can suspect Hudson in the teeth of such a fact? Now pray go on, my good Wylie. The boats!”

“Well, sir, I had the surgeon, and ten men, and the lady’s maid, on board the longboat; and there was the parson, the sick lady, and five sailors aboard the cutter. We sailed together, till night, steering for Juan Fernandez; then a fog came on and we lost sight of the cutter, and I altered my mind and judged it best to beat to win’ard, and get into the track of ships. Which we did, and were nearly swamped in a sou’ wester; but, by good luck, a Yankee whaler picked us up, and took us to Buenos Ayres, where we shipped for England, what was left of us, only four, besides myself; but I got the signatures of the others to my tale of the wreck. It is all as square as a die, I tell you.”

“Well done. Well done. But, stop! the other boat, with that sham parson on board, who knows all. She will be picked up, too, perhaps.”

“There is no chance for that. She was out of the tracks of trade; and, I’ll tell ye the truth, sir.” He poured out half a tumbler of brandy, and drank a part of it; and, now, for the first time, his hand trembled as he lifted the glass. “Some fool had put the main of her provisions aboard the longboat; that is what sticks to me, and won’t let me sleep. We took a chance, but we didn’t give one. I think I told you there was a woman aboard the cutter, that sick girl, sir. Oh, but it was hard lines for her, poor thing! I see her pale and calm; oh, Lord, so pale and calm; every night of my life; she kneeled aboard the cutter with her white hands a-clasped together, praying.”

“Certainly, it is all very shocking,” said Wardlaw; “but then, you know, if they had escaped, they would have exposed us. Believe me, it is all for the best.”

Wylie looked at him with wonder. “Ay,” said he, after staring at him a long time; “you can sit here at your ease, and doom a ship and risk her people’s lives. But if you had to do it, and see it, and then lie awake thinking of it, you’d wish all the gold on earth had been in hell before you put your hand to such a piece of work.”

Wardlaw smiled a ghastly smile. “In short,” said he, “you don’t mean to take the three thousand pounds I pay you for this little job.”

“Oh, yes, I do; but for all the gold in Victoria I wouldn’t do such a job again. And you mark my words, sir, we shall get the money, and nobody will ever be the wiser.” Wardlaw rubbed his hands complacently. His egotism, coupled with his want of imagination, nearly blinded him to everything but the pecuniary feature of the business. “But,” continued Wylie, “we shall never thrive on it. We have sunk a good ship, and we have as good as murdered a poor dying girl.”

“Hold your tongue, ye fool!” cried Wardlaw, losing his sang-froid in a moment, for he heard somebody at the door.

It opened, and there stood a military figure in a traveling-cap—General Rolleston.

 

CHAPTER XVI.

 

As some eggs have actually two yolks, so Arthur Wardlaw had two hearts; and, at sight of Helen’s father, the baser one ceased to beat for a while.

He ran to General Rolleston, shook him warmly by the hand, and welcomed him to England with sparkling eyes.

It is pleasant to be so welcomed, and the stately soldier returned his grasp in kind.

“Is Helen with you, sir?” said Wardlaw, making a movement to go to the door; for he thought she must be outside in the cab.

“No, she is not,” said General Rolleston.

“There, now,” said Arthur, “that cruel father of mine has broken his promise and carried her off to Elmtrees!”

At this moment Wardlaw senior returned, to tell Arthur he had been just too late to meet the Rollestons. “Oh, here he is!” said he; and there were fresh greetings.

“Well, but,” said Arthur, “where is Helen!”

“I think it is I who ought to ask that question,” said Rolleston, gravely. “I telegraphed you at Elmtrees, thinking of course she would come with you to meet me at the station. It does not much matter, a few hours; but her not coming makes me uneasy, for her health was declining when she left me. How is my child, Mr. Wardlaw? Pray tell me the truth.”

Both the Wardlaws looked at one another, and at General Rolleston, and the elder Wardlaw said there was certainly some misunderstanding here. “We fully believed that your daughter was coming home with you in the Shannon.”

“Come home with me? Why, of course not. She sailed three weeks before me. Good Heavens! Has she not arrived?”

“No,” replied old Wardlaw, “we have neither seen nor heard of her.”

“Why, what ship did she sail in?” said Arthur.

“In the Proserpine.”

 

CHAPTER XVII.

 

ARTHUR WARDLAW fixed on the speaker a gaze full of horror; his jaw fell; a livid pallor spread over his features; he echoed in a hoarse whisper, “The Proserpine!” and turned his scared eyes upon Wylie, who was himself leaning against the wall, his stalwart frame beginning to tremble.

“The sick girl,” murmured Wylie, and a cold sweat gathered on his brow.

General Rolleston looked from one to another with strange misgivings, which soon deepened into a sense of some terrible calamity; for now a strong convulsion swelled Arthur Wardlaw’s heart; his face worked fearfully; and, with a sharp and sudden cry, he fell forward on the table, and his father’s arm alone prevented him from sinking like a dead man on the floor. Yet, though crushed and helpless, he was not insensible; that blessing was denied him.

General Rolleston implored an explanation.

Wylie, with downcast and averted face, began to stammer a few disconnected and unintelligible words; but old Wardlaw silenced him and said, with much feeling, “Let none but a father tell him. My poor, poor friend—the Proserpine! How can I say it?”

“Lost at sea,” groaned Wylie.

At these fatal words the old warrior’s countenance grew rigid; his large, bony hands gripped the back of the chair on which he leaned, and were white with their own convulsive force; and he bowed his head under the blow, without one word.

His was an agony too great and mute to be spoken to; and there was silence in the room, broken only by the hysterical moans of the miserable plotter, who had drawn down this calamity on his own head. He was in no state to be left alone; and even the bereaved father found pity in his desolate heart for one who loved his lost child so well; and the two old men took him home between them, in a helpless and pitiable condition.

 

CHAPTER XVIII.

 

BUT this utter prostration of his confederate began to alarm Wylie, and rouse him to exertion. Certainly, he was very sorry for what he had done, and would have undone it and forfeited his three thousand pounds in a moment, if he could. But, as he could not undo the crime, he was all the more determined to reap the reward. Why, that three thousand pounds, for aught he knew, was the price of his soul; and he was not the man to let his soul go gratis.

He finished the rest of

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