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"Unconditionally." He added with strange fervour: "She is the noblest, the sweetest, and most beautiful woman in the world.” "Then why on earth do you hesitate?" asked Cholmondeley. "You are a lucky fellow."

"I hesitate for the reason I have told you. She had placed her love, her life, her fortune at my feet, devotedly and unreservedly. As a clergyman of the Church, as one who might have devoted his lifetime to the re-establishment of his religion and the regeneration of his order, one, moreover, whom the world might have honoured and approved as a good and faithful servant, I might have accepted the sacrifice; indeed, after some hesitation, I did accept it. But now it is altogether different. I cannot consent to her martyrdom, even though it would glorify mine."

Although Bradley exercised the strongest control over his emotions, and endeavoured to discuss the subject as dispassionately and calmly as possible, it was clear to his listener that he was deeply and strangely moved. Cholmondeley was touched, for he well knew the secret tenderness of his friend's nature. Under that coldly cut, almost stern face, with its firm eyebrows and finely chiselled lips, within that powerful frame which, so far at least as the torso was concerned, might have been used as a model for a Hercules, there throbbed a heart of almost feminine sensitiveness and sweetness; of feminine passion too, if the truth must be told, for Bradley possessed the sensuousness of most powerful men. Bradley was turned thirty years of age, but he was as capable of a grande passion as a boy of twenty-as romantic, as high-flown, as full of the fervour of youth and the brightness of dream. With him, to love a woman was to love her with all his faith and all his life; he was far too earnest to trifle for a moment with the most sacred of all human sentiments. Cholmondeley was aware of this, and gauged the situation accordingly.

"If my advice is worth anything," he said, "you will dismiss from your mind all ideas of martyrdom. You are really exaggerating the horrors of the situation; and for the rest, where a woman loves a man as I am sure Miss Craik loves you, sacrifice of the kind you mention becomes easy, even delightful. Marry her, my dear Bradley, and from the very altar of pagan Hymen smile at the thunder-bolts of the Church."

Bradley seemed plunged in deep thought, and sat silent, leaning back and covering his face with one hand. At last he looked up, and exclaimed with unconcealed emotion,—

"No, I am not worthy of her! Even if my present record were

clean, what could I say of my past? Such a woman should have a stainless husband! I have touched pitch, and been defiled."

"Come, come!" said the journalist, not a little astonished. "Of all the men I ever knew-and I have known many-you are about the most irreproachable."

The clergyman bent over the table, and said in a low voice, "Do you remember Mary Goodwin?"

"What is it pos

"Of course," replied the other with a laugh. sible that you are reproaching yourself on that account? Absurd! You acted by her like a man of honour; but little Mary was too knowing for you, that was all."

"You knew I married her?"

"I suspected it, knowing your high-flown notions of duty. We all pitied you-we all--"

"Hush!" said the clergyman, still in the same low agitated voice. "Not a word against her. She is asleep and at peace; and if there was any sin I shared it—I who ought to have known better. Perhaps, had I been a better man, I might have made her truly happy; but she didn't love me--I did not deserve her love—and so, as you know, we parted."

"I know she used you shamefully," returned Cholmondeley, with some impatience. "Come, I must speak! You picked her from the gutter, and made her what Mrs. Grundy calls an honest woman. How did she reward you? By bolting away with the first rascal who offered her the run of his purse and a flash set of diamonds. By-the-by, I heard of her last in India, where she was a member of a strolling company; did she die out there?"

"Yes," answered the clergyman, very sadly. "Nine years ago." "You were only a boy," continued Cholmondeley, with an air of infinite age and experience, "and Mr. Verdant Green was nothing to you. You thought all women angels at an age when most youngsters know them to be devils. Well, that's all over, and you have nothing to reproach yourself with. I wish I could show as clean a book, old fellow."

"I'do reproach myself, nevertheless," was the reply. “That boyish episode has left its taint on my whole life; yes, it is like the mark of a brand burned into the very flesh. I had no right to woo another woman; yet I have done so, to my shame, and now Heaven is about to punish me by stripping me bare in her sight and making me a social outlaw. I have deserved it all."

The two remained together for some time longer, but Bradley, though he listened gently to his friend's remonstrances, could not be

persuaded to take a less gloomy view of the situation. He was relieved unconsciously, nevertheless, by the other's cheery and worldly counsel. It was something, at least, to have eased his heart, to have poured the secret of his sorrow and fear into a sympathetic bosom.

They had dined very early, and when they rose to separate it was only half past eight o'clock.

"Will you go on to my chambers?" asked Cholmondeley. "I can give you a bed, and I will join you after I have done my duties at the office."

"No; I shall sleep at Morley's Hotel, and take the early morning express down home."

They strolled together along Pall Mall and across Leicester Square, where they separated, Cholmondeley sauntering airily, with that sense of superhuman insight which sits so lightly on the daily journalist, towards the newspaper office in Cumberland Street, and the clergyman turning into Morley's, where he was well known, to arrange for his room.

As it was still so early, however, Bradley did not stay in the hotel, but lighted his pipe and strolled thoughtfully along the busy Strand.

At a little after nine o'clock he found himself close to the Lyceum Theatre, where "Hamlet" was then being performed for over the hundredth night. He had always been a lover of the theatre, and he now remembered that Mr. Aram's performance of the Danish prince was the talk of London. Glad to discover any means of distracting his dreary thoughts, he paid his two shillings, and found a place at the back of the pit.

The third act was just beginning as he entered, and it was not until its conclusion that he began to look around the crowded house. The assemblage was a fashionable one, and every box as well as every stall was occupied. Many of the intelligent spectators held in their hands books of the play, with which they might be supposed to be acquainting themselves for the first time; and all wore upon their faces more or less of that bored expression characteristic of audiences which take their pleasures sadly, not to say stupidly. In all the broad earth there is nothing which can quite equal the sedate unintelligence of an English theatrical audience.

Suddenly, as he gazed, his eyes became attracted by a face in one of the private boxes-he started, went pale, and looked againas he did so, the head was turned away towards the back of the box. Trembling like one that had seen an apparition, he waited for

it to incline again his way-and when it did so he watched it in positive horror. As if to convince himself of its identity, he borrowed an opera-glass from a respectable-looking man seated near him, and fixed it on the face in the box.

The face of a woman, splendidly attired, with diamonds sparkling on her naked throat and arms, and other diamonds in her hair. The hair was jet-black, and worn very low down on the forehead, almost reaching to the thick black eyebrows, beneath which shone a pair of eyes as black and bold as those of Circe herself. Her complexion had the olive clearness of a perfect brunette, and her mouth, which was ripe and full, was crimson red as some poisonous flower-not with blood, but paint. She was certainly very handsome, though somewhat petite and over-plump. Her only visible companion was a plainly dressed elderly woman, with whom she seldom exchanged a word, and a little boy of seven, elegantly dressed.

Bradley looked again and again, and the more he looked the more his wonder and horror grew. During all the rest of the performance he scarcely withdrew his eyes, but just before the curtain fell he slipped out of the pit, and passed round to the portico in front of the theatre.

There he waited, in the shadow of one of the pillars, till the throng began to flow forth, and the linkmen began summoning the carriages and cabs to take up their elegant burthens. The vestibule of the theatre was full of gentlemen in full dress and ladies in opera cloaks, laughing and chatting over the evening's performance. He drew close to the glass doors and looked in, pale as death.

At last he saw the lady he sought, standing with the woman and the child, and talking gaily with an elderly gentleman who sported an eyeglass. How bold and beautiful she looked! He watched her in fascination, always taking care to keep out of the range of her vision.

At last she shook hands with the gentleman, and moved towards the door. He drew back into the shadow.

She stood on the threshold, looking out into the night, and the linkman ran up to her, touching his cap.

"Mrs. Montmorency's carriage," she said in a clear silvery voice; and the man ran off to seek the vehicle.

Presently a smart brougham came up, and, accompanied by her elderly companion and the child, she stepped in. Almost simultaneously, Bradley crossed the pavement and leapt into a hansom.

"Keep that carriage in view," he said to the driver, pointing to

the brougham, "and I will give you a sovereign."

The man laughed and nodded, and immediately the pursuit began.

CHAPTER V.

"MRS. MONTMORENCY."

Ay me, I sowed a seed in youth,
Nor knew that 'twas a dragon's tooth,

Whereof hath sprung to bring me shame

Legions of woes without a name. —Fausticulus.

THE brougham passed rapidly up Wellington Street into Long Acre, thence into Oxford Street, passing westward till it came to Regent Circus, then it was driven up Portland Place to the gates of Regent's Park. It entered, and the hansom followed about fifty yards behind. Passing to the left around the park, it reached Cranwell Terrace, and drew up before one of the large houses fronting the artificial water.

The hansom paused too, but Bradley kept his seat until he saw the lady and her companion alight, knock at the door, and enter in; while the brougham drove round to the stables at the rear. Then he sprang out, paid the man his sovereign, and prepared to follow.

For a moment he hesitated on the steps of the house, as if undecided whether to knock or fly; but recovering his determination he knocked loudly. The sound had scarcely died away when the door was opened by the same elderly woman he had noticed at the theatre.

"Mrs. Montmorency?" he said, for he had got the name by heart.

The woman looked at him in surprise, and answered with a strong French accent.

"Madame has only just come in, and you cannot to-night."

see her

"I must see her," returned the clergyman, entering the hall. "It is a matter of very important business."

"But it is so late. To-morrow, monsieur?"

"To-morrow I am leaving London. I must see her at once." Seeing his persistence, and observing that he had the manners of a gentleman, the woman yielded,

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