question for me to run away, and leave you all here in Paris unprotected. Such a thing would have been preposterous.'

'You think so, Harry, because you have a good heart; but most people would have thought of themselves, and would not have run all sorts of risks for the sake of three girls with no claim upon them.'

'Well, Marie, you allow then that a person with a good heart would naturally do as I did.'

'Well, supposing I do, Harry, what then?'

'You must still further allow that a person with a good heart, and upon whom you had a great claim, would all the more have remained to protect you.'

'What are you driving at, Harry, with your supposition?' she said, her cheek growing a little paler as a suspicion of the truth flashed upon her.

'Well, Marie, you mustn't be agitated, and I hope you will not be angry; but I ask you how, as he has a good heart, and you have claims upon him, could you expect Victor de Gisons to run away like a coward and leave you here?'

Marie had risen to her feet and gazed at him with frightened eyes.

'What, is it about him that you deceived me! Is it true that he did not go away? Has anything happened to him? Oh, Harry, do not say he is dead!'

'He is not dead, Marie, but he has been very, very ill. He was with me at La Force on that terrible night, and saw his father brought out to be murdered. The shock nearly killed him. He has had brain fever, and has been at death's door. At present he is mending, but very, very slowly. He knows no one, not even me, but I trust that your voice and your presence will do wonders for him.'

'Where is he, Harry?' Marie said as she stood with clasped hands, and a face from which every vestige of colour had flown. 'Take me to him at once.'

'He is in the house, Marie; that is why I have brought you here. These good people have nursed and concealed him for five months.'

Marie made a movement towards the door.

'Wait, Marie, you cannot go to him till you compose yourself. It is all-important that you should speak to him, when you see him, in your natural voice, and you must prepare yourself for a shock. He is at present a mere wreck, so changed that you will hardly know him.'

'You are telling me the truth, Harry? You are not hiding from me that he is dying?'

'No, dear; I believe, on my honour, that he is out of danger now, and that he is progressing. It is his mind more than his body that needs curing. It may be a long and difficult task, Marie, before he is himself again; but I believe that with your care and companionship he will get round in time, but it may be months before that.'

'Time is nothing,' Marie said. 'But what about the girls?'

'They must still be under my charge, Marie. I shall start with them in a day or two and try to make for the sea-shore, and then across to England. Suspicions have been aroused; they have already been denounced, and may be arrested at any time. Therefore it is absolutely necessary that they should fly at once; but I thought that you would consider it your first duty to stay with Victor, seeing that to him your presence is everything, while you could do nothing to assist your sisters, and indeed the fewer of us there are the better.'

'Certainly it is my duty,' Marie said firmly.

'You will be perfectly safe here under the care of Jacques and his wife. They have already given out to their neighbours that Victor's fiance is coming to help nurse him, and even if by any possibility a suspicion of your real position arises, you have Robespierre's pardon as a protection. This state of things cannot last for ever; a reaction must come; and then if Victor is cured, you will be able to escape together to England.'

'Leave me a few minutes by myself, Harry. All this has come so suddenly upon me that I feel bewildered.'

'Certainly,' Harry said. 'It is best that you should think things over a little. No wonder you feel bewildered and shaken with all the trials you have gone through.'

Marie went to her room and returned in a quarter of an hour.

'I am ready now,' she said, and by the calm and tranquil expression of her face Harry felt that she could be trusted to see Victor.

'I have a feeling,' she went on, 'that everything will come right in the end. I have been saved almost by a miracle, and I cannot but feel that my life has been spared in order that I might take my place here. As to the girls, it was a shock at first when you told me that fresh danger threatened them, and that I should not be able to share their perils upon their journey; but I could not have aided them, and God has marked out my place here. No, Harry, God has protected me so far, and will aid me still. Now I am ready for whatever may betide.'

'One moment before you enter, Marie. You are prepared, I know, to see a great change in Victor, but nevertheless you cannot but be shocked at first. Do not go up to him or attract his attention till you have overcome this and are able to speak to him in your natural voice. I think a great deal depends upon the first impression you make on his brain. Your voice has a good deal changed in the last six months; it would be strange if it had not; but I want you to try and speak to him in the bright cheerful tone he was accustomed to hear.'

Marie nodded. 'One moment,' she said, as she brushed aside the tears which filled her eyes, drew herself up with a little gesture that reminded Harry of old times, and then with a swift step passed through the door into Victor's room. Whatever she felt at the sight of the wasted figure lying listlessly with half-closed eyes on the couch, it only showed itself by a swift expression of pain which passed for a moment across her face and then was gone.

'Victor,' she said in her clear ringing voice, 'Victor, my well beloved, I am come to you.' The effect upon Victor was instantaneous. He opened his eyes with a start, half rose from his couch and held out his arms towards her.

'Marie,' he said in a faint voice, 'you have come at last. I have wanted you so much.'

Then, as Marie advanced to him, and kneeling by his side, clasped him in her arms, Elise and Harry stole quietly from the room. It was nearly an hour before Marie came out. There was a soft glow of happiness on her face, though her cheeks were pale.

'Not yet!' she said, as she swept past them into her own room.

In a few minutes she reappeared.

'Pardon me,' she said, holding out her hands to Harry and Elise, 'but I had to thank the good God first. Victor is quite sensible now, but oh, so weak! He remembers nothing of the past, but seems to think he is still in Burgundy, and has somehow had an illness. Then he spoke of the duke and my dear father and mother as being still alive, and that he hoped they would let me come to him now. I told him that all should be as he wished as soon as he got stronger, but that he must not think of anything now, and that I would nurse him, and all would be well. He seemed puzzled about my dress'—for Marie had already put on the simple attire which had been prepared for her —'but I told him that it was fit for a sick-room, and he seemed satisfied. He has just dozed off to sleep, and I will go in and sit with him now till he wakes.'

'When he does, mademoiselle, I will have some broth and a glass of good burgundy ready for him,' Elise said.

'Thank you; but please call me Marie in future. There are no mesdemoiselles in France now, and I shall call you Elise instead of Madame. And Harry, would you mind telling the girls that I will meet them to-morrow instead of this evening. I long to see them, oh so, so much; but I should not like to leave him for a moment now. I fear so that his memory might go again if he were to wake and miss me.'

'I was going to propose it myself, Marie,' Harry said. 'It is all-important to avoid any agitation now. To- morrow, I hope, it will be safer, and the doctor will give him a sleeping-draught, so that he shall not wake while you are away. But, Marie, remember it will be a farewell visit, for I dare not let them stay more than another day. They may be denounced again at any hour, for the man who wrote to Robespierre, if he finds that nothing comes of it, may go to the local committee, and they will not lose an hour, you may be sure.'

'I must see them this evening, then,' Marie said hurriedly. 'The doctor will be here, you say, soon. Victor must have his sleeping-draught this afternoon instead of to- morrow. They must go at once. I should never forgive myself if, by putting off our parting for twenty-four hours, I caused them to fall into the hands of these wretches; so please hurry on all the arrangements so that they may leave the first thing to-morrow morning.'

'It will be best,' Harry said, 'if you will do it, Marie. I own that I am in a fever of apprehension. I will go there at once to tell them that all must be in readiness by to-night. They will be glad indeed to hear that your presence

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