you, Louis.”

“I am sorry that our troubles should have deprived you of the home you had been taught to expect.” To this Nora made no reply, but escaped, and went up to her sister. “My poor little boy,” said Trevelyan, taking the child and placing it on his knee. “I suppose you have forgotten your unfortunate father.” The child, of course, said nothing, but just allowed himself to be kissed.

“He is looking very well,” said Mrs. Outhouse.

“Is he? I dare say he is well. Louey, my boy, are you happy?” The question was asked in a voice that was dismal beyond compare, and it also remained unanswered. He had been desired to speak nicely to his papa, but how was it possible that a child should speak nicely under such a load of melancholy? “He will not speak to me,” said Trevelyan. “I suppose it is what I might have expected.” Then the child was put off his knee on to the floor, and began to whimper. “A few months since he would sit there for hours, with his head upon my breast,” said Trevelyan.

“A few months is a long time in the life of such an infant,” said Mrs. Outhouse.

“He may go away,” said Trevelyan. Then the child was led out of the room, and sent up to his mother.

“Emily has done all she can to make the child love your memory,” said Mrs. Outhouse.

“To love my memory! What;⁠—as though I were dead. I will teach him to love me as I am, Mrs. Outhouse. I do not think that it is too late. Will you tell your husband from me, with my compliments, that I shall cause him to be served with a legal demand for the restitution of my child?”

“But Sir Marmaduke will be here in a few days.”

“I know nothing of that. Sir Marmaduke is nothing to me now. My child is my own⁠—and so is my wife. Sir Marmaduke has no authority over either one or the other. I find my child here, and it is here that I must look for him. I am sorry that you should be troubled, but the fault does not rest with me. Mr. Outhouse has refused to give me up my own child, and I am driven to take such steps for his recovery as the law has put within my reach.”

“Why did you turn your wife out of doors, Mr. Trevelyan?” asked Mrs. Outhouse boldly.

“I did not turn her out of doors. I provided a fitting shelter for her. I gave her everything that she could want. You know what happened. That man went down and was received there. I defy you, Mrs. Outhouse, to say that it was my fault.”

Mrs. Outhouse did attempt to show him that it was his fault; but while she was doing so he left the house. “I don’t think she could go back to him,” said Mrs. Outhouse to her husband. “He is quite insane upon this matter.”

“I shall be insane, I know,” said Mr. Outhouse, “if Sir Marmaduke does not come home very quickly.” Nevertheless he quite ignored any legal power that might be brought to bear against him as to the restitution of the child to its father.

LXI

Parker’s Hotel, Mowbray Street

Within a week of the occurrence which is related in the last chapter, there came a telegram from Southampton to the parsonage at St. Diddulph’s, saying that Sir Marmaduke and Lady Rowley had reached England. On the evening of that day they were to lodge at a small family hotel in Baker Street, and both Mrs. Trevelyan and Nora were to be with them. The leave-taking at the parsonage was painful, as on both sides there existed a feeling that affection and sympathy were wanting. The uncle and aunt had done their duty, and both Mrs. Trevelyan and Nora felt that they ought to have been demonstrative and cordial in their gratitude;⁠—but they found it impossible to become so. And the rector could not pretend but that he was glad to be rid of his guests. There were, too, some last words about money to be spoken, which were grievous thorns in the poor man’s flesh. Two bank notes, however, were put upon his table, and he knew that unless he took them he could not pay for the provisions which his unwelcome visitors had consumed. Surely there never was a man so cruelly ill-used as had been Mr. Outhouse in all this matter. “Another such winter as that would put me in my grave,” he said, when his wife tried to comfort him after they were gone. “I know that they have both been very good to us,” said Mrs. Trevelyan, as she and her sister, together with the child and the nurse, hurried away towards Baker Street in a cab, “but I have never for a moment felt that they were glad to have us.” “But how could they have been glad to have us,” she added afterwards, “when we brought such trouble with us?” But they to whom they were going now would receive her with joy;⁠—would make her welcome with all her load of sorrows, would give to her a sympathy which it was impossible that she should receive from others. Though she might not be happy now⁠—for in truth how could she be ever really happy again⁠—there would be a joy to her in placing her child in her mother’s arms, and in receiving her father’s warm caresses. That her father would be very vehement in his anger against her husband she knew well⁠—for Sir Marmaduke was a vehement man. But there would be some support for her in the very violence of his wrath, and at this moment it was such support that she most needed. As they journeyed together in the cab, the married sister seemed to be in the higher spirits of the two. She was sure, at any rate, that those to whom she

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