if this trouble were to end in the scaffold, she would be with him to the last, clinging to him and holding by him as other brave women had held by their loved ones, face to face with death. But no, it would not come to that. She was so convinced, in her own mind, of his innocence, that she could not suppose there would be much difficulty in proving the fact in a court of law.

“You will take your maid with you, of course?” said Treverton.

“Yes, I should like to take Mary.”

“Where am I to be during this inquiry?” asked Treverton, turning to the detective.

“At the House of Detention, Clerkenwell.”

“Not the most desirable neighbourhood, but it might be worse,” said Treverton.

“They are surely not going to put you in prison, John, before they have proved anything against you?” cried his wife, with a look of horror.

“It’s only a form, dear. We needn’t call it prison; but I shan’t be exactly at large. I think, perhaps, the best plan would be for you to take quiet lodgings at Islington, say in Colebrook Row, for instance. That’s a decent place. You’d prefer that to an hotel, wouldn’t you?”

“Infinitely.”

“Very well. You had better put up at the Midland Hotel tonight, and tomorrow morning you and Mary can drive about in a cab till you find a nice lodging. I shall write a line to Sampson, asking him to follow us as soon as he can. He may be of use to us in London.”

Everything was settled as quietly as if they had been starting on a pleasure trip. The brougham was at the door in time to take them to the Station. Celia, who was ready dressed to drive to the meet, was the only person who appeared excited or bewildered.

“What does it all mean, Laura?” she asked. “Have you and Mr. Treverton gone suddenly mad? At eight o’clock you send up to tell me you are going to take me to the meet; and at nine I find you are starting for London, with two strange men. What can you mean by it?”

“It means very serious business, Celia,” Laura answered, quietly. “Do not worry yourself about it. You will know everything, by-and-by.”

“By-and-by,” echoed Celia, scornfully. “I suppose you mean when I go to heaven, and look down upon you with a new pair of eyes? I want to know now. By-and-by will not be the least use. I remember when I was a child, if people told me I should have anything by-and-by, I never got it.”

“Goodbye, Celia, dearest. John will write to your father.”

“Yes, and my father will keep the letter all to himself. When will you be back?”

“Soon, I hope; but I cannot say how soon.”

“Now, madam,” said the police-officer, “the time is up.”

Laura embraced her friend, and stepped into the carriage. Her husband followed, then the detective, and lastly, the faithful Mary, who had had hard work to get a couple of portmanteaus packed for her master and mistress, and a few things huddled into a carpetbag for herself. She had no idea where they were going, or the motive of this sudden journey. A few hasty words had been said to Trimmer, as to the conduct of the household, and that was all.

At the station Mr. Palby, the detective, contrived to secure a compartment for Mr. and Mrs. Treverton and himself. His subordinate was to travel with Mary in a second-class carriage.

“You needn’t be afraid of his talking,” said Mr. Palby to his prisoner. “Grummles is as close as wax.”

“It can matter very little whether he talks or not,” answered Treverton, indifferently. “Everybody will know everything in a day or two. The newspapers will make my story public.”

He thought with supreme bitterness how much easier it would have been for him to face this accusation as Jack Chicot than as John Treverton, alias Chicot; how much less there would have been for the newspapers to say about him, had he stood boldly forward at the inquest and faced his difficulty. About Jack Chicot, the literary Bohemian, the world would have been a little curious. How much greater was the scandal now that the accused was a man of fortune, a country squire, the bearer of a good old name.

At five o’clock that winter afternoon the doors of the House of Detention closed upon John Treverton. There was some deference shown to the accused even here, and much consideration for the lovely young wife, who remained quietly with her husband to the last moment, and gave vent to none of the lamentations which were wont to disturb the orderly silence of those stony halls. Laura made herself acquainted with the rules and regulations to which her husband would be subject⁠—the hours at which she would be allowed to see him, and then bade him goodbye without a tear. It was only when she and Mary were alone in the cab, on their way to the Midland Hotel, that her fortitude broke down, and she burst into convulsive sobs.

“Oh, please don’t,” cried Mary, putting her friendly arms round her mistress. “You mustn’t give way, indeed you mustn’t. It’s so dreadful bad for you. Everything’s bound to come right, ma’am. Look at master, how cheerful he is, and how brave and handsome he looked in that horrid place.”

“Yes, Mary, he pretended to be cheerful and confident for my sake, just as I try to keep myself calm in order to sustain him. But it is a mere pretence on both sides. I shall be a miserable woman until this inquiry is over.”

“Well, ma’am, of course it’s an anxious time.”

“We have hardly a friend who can help us. What does Mr. Sampson know of criminal law? What does my husband know as to what he ought to do to protect himself in his present position? We are like children lost in a dark wood⁠—a wood where there are beasts of prey that may devour us.”

Mr. Sampson seems very clever, ma’am. Depend

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