very bad, my lord.”

“It is very bad. He knows all about the murder;⁠—I am convinced he does. He went bail for the young man. He used to associate with him on most intimate terms. As to the sister;⁠—there’s no doubt about that. They live on the land of a person who owns a small estate in the parish.”

Mr. Gilmore, my lord?”

“Exactly so. This Mr. Fenwick has got Mr. Gilmore in his pocket. You can have no idea of such a state of things as this. And now he writes me this letter! I know his handwriting now, and any further communication I shall return.” The Marquis ceased to speak, and the lawyer at once buried himself in the letter.

“It is meant to be offensive,” said the lawyer.

“Most insolent, most offensive, most improper! And yet the bishop upholds him!”

“But if he is right about the bit of land, my lord, it will be rather awkward.” And as he spoke, the lawyer examined the sketch of the vicarage entrance. “He gives this as copied from the terrier of the parish, my lord.”

“I don’t believe a word of it,” said the Marquis.

“You didn’t look at the plan of the estate, my lord?”

“I don’t think we did; but Packer had no doubt. No one knows the property in Bullhampton so well as Packer, and Packer said⁠—”

But while the Marquis was still speaking the lawyer rose, and begging his client’s pardon, went to the clerk in the outer room. Nor did he return till the clerk had descended to an iron chamber in the basement, and returned from thence with a certain large tin box. Into this a search was made, and presently Mr. Boothby came back with a weighty lump of dusty vellum documents, and a manuscript map, or sketch of a survey of the Bullhampton estate, which he had had opened. While the search was being made he had retired to another room, and had had a little conversation with his partner about the weather. “I am afraid the parson is right, my lord,” said Mr. Boothby, as he closed the door.

“Right!”

“Right in his facts, my lord. It is glebe, and is marked so here very plainly. There should have been a reference to us⁠—there should, indeed, my lord. Packer, and men like him, really know nothing. The truth is, in such matters nobody knows anything. You should always have documentary evidence.”

“And it is glebe?”

“Not a doubt of it, my lord.”

Then the Marquis knew that his enemy had him on the hip, and he laid his old head down upon his folded arms and wept. In his weeping it is probable that no tears rolled down his cheeks, but he wept inward tears⁠—tears of hatred, remorse, and self-commiseration. His enemy had struck him with scourges, and, as far as he could see at present, he could not return a blow. And he must submit himself⁠—must restore the bit of land, and build those nasty dissenters a chapel elsewhere on his own property. He had not a doubt as to that for a moment. Could he have escaped the shame of it⁠—as far as the expense was concerned he would have been willing to build them ten chapels. And in doing this he would give a triumph, an unalloyed triumph, to a man whom he believed to be thoroughly bad. The Vicar had accused the Marquis of spreading reports which he, the Marquis, did not himself believe; but the Marquis believed them all. At this moment there was no evil that he could not have believed of Mr. Fenwick. While sitting there an idea, almost amounting to a conviction, had come upon him, that Mr. Fenwick had himself been privy to the murder of old Trumbull. What would not a parson do who would take delight in insulting and humiliating the nobleman who owned the parish in which he lived? To Lord Trowbridge the very fact that the parson of the parish which he regarded as his own was opposed to him, proved sufficiently that that parson was⁠—scum, dregs, riffraff, a low radical, and everything that a parson ought not to be. The Vicar had been wrong there. The Marquis did believe it all religiously.

“What must I do?” said the Marquis.

“As to the chapel itself, my lord, the Vicar, bad as he is, does not want to move it.”

“It must come down,” said the Marquis, getting up from his chair. “It shall come down. Do you think that I would allow it to stand when it has been erected on his ground⁠—through my error? Not for a day!⁠—not for an hour! I’ll tell you what, Mr. Boothby⁠—that man has known it all through;⁠—has known it as well as you do now; but he has waited till the building was complete before he would tell me. I see it all as plain as the nose on your face, Mr. Boothby.”

The lawyer was meditating how best he might explain to his angry client that he had no power whatsoever to pull down the building⁠—that if the Vicar and the dissenting minister chose to agree about it the new building must stand, in spite of the Marquis⁠—must stand, unless the churchwardens, patron, or ecclesiastical authorities generally should force the Vicar to have it removed⁠—when a clerk came in and whispered a word to the attorney. “My lord,” said Mr. Boothby, “Lord St. George is here. Shall he come in?”

The Marquis did not wish to see his son exactly at this minute; but Lord St. George was, of course, admitted. This meeting at the lawyer’s chambers was altogether fortuitous, and father and son were equally surprised. But so great was the anger and dismay and general perturbation of the Marquis at the time, that he could not stop to ask any question. St. George must, of course, know what had happened, and it was quite as well that he should be told at once.

“That bit of ground they’ve built the chapel on at Bullhampton, turns out to be⁠—glebe,” said the Marquis.

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