He...stakes this ring;
And would so, had it been a carbuncle
Of Phoebus' wheel; and might so safely, had it
Been all the worth of his car.
Cymbeline.
Hugh, of course, had an immediate attack of jealousy. Wishing to
show it in one quarter, and hide it in every other, he carefully
abstained from looking once in the direction of Euphra; while,
throughout the dinner, he spoke to every one else as often as there
was the smallest pretext for doing so. To enable himself to keep
this up, he drank wine freely. As he was in general very moderate,
by the time the ladies rose, it had begun to affect his brain. It
was not half so potent, however, in its influences, as the parting
glance which Euphra succeeded at last, as she left the room, in
sending through his eyes to his heart.
Hugh sat down to the table again, with a quieter tongue, but a
busier brain. He drank still, without thinking of the consequences.
A strong will kept him from showing any signs of intoxication, but
he was certainly nearer to that state than he had ever been in his
life before.
The Bohemian started the new subject which generally follows the
ladies' departure.
"How long is it since Arnstead was first said to be haunted, Mr.
Arnold?"
"Haunted! Herr von Funkelstein? I am at a loss to understand you,"
replied Mr. Arnold, who resented any such allusion, being subversive
of the honour of his house, almost as much as if it had been
depreciative of his own.
"I beg your pardon, Mr. Arnold. I thought it was an open subject of
remark."
Mr. Arnold was struck dumb with indignation. Before he had
recovered himself sufficiently to know what to say, the conversation
between the other two had assumed a form to which his late
experiences inclined him to listen with some degree of interest.
But, his pride sternly forbidding him to join in it, he sat sipping
his wine in careless sublimity.
"You have seen it yourself, then?" said the Bohemian.
"I did not say that," answered Hugh. "But I heard one of the maids
say once--when--"
"'That soul and body, on the whole,
Are odds against a disembodied soul.'"
"Bravo!" cried the count. "You despise all these tales about Lady
Euphrasia, wandering about the house with a death-candle in her
hand, looking everywhere about as if she had lost something, and
couldn't find it?"
But Hugh was too much of a Scotchman to give a hasty opinion, or
rather a direct answer--even when half-tipsy; especially when such
was evidently desired. He only shook and nodded his head at the
same moment.
"Do you really mean you would meet her if you could?"
"Then, if all tales are true, you may, without much difficulty. For
the coachman told me only to-day, that you may see her light in the
window of that room almost any night, towards midnight. He told me,
too (for I made quite a friend of him to-day, on purpose to hear his
tales), that one of the maids, who left the other day, told the
groom--and he told the coachman--that she had once heard talking;
and, peeping through the key-hole of a door that led into that part
of the old house, saw a figure, dressed exactly like the picture of
Lady Euphrasia, wandering up and down, wringing her hands and
beating her breast, as if she were in terrible trouble. She had a
light in her hand which burned awfully blue, and her face was the
face of a corpse, with pale-green spots."
"You think to frighten me, Funkelstein, and make me tremble at what
I said a minute ago. Instead of repeating that. I say now: I will
sleep in Lady Euphrasia's room this night, if you like."
"I lay you a hundred guineas you won't!" cried the Bohemian.
"Done!" said Hugh, offering him his hand. Funkelstein took it; and
so the bet was committed to the decision of courage.
"Well, gentlemen," interposed Mr. Arnold at last, "you might have
left a corner for me somewhere. Without my permission you will
hardly settle your wager."
"I beg your pardon, Mr. Arnold," said Funkelstein. "We got rather
excited over it, and forgot our manners. But I am quite willing to
give it up, if Mr. Sutherland will."
"Not I," said Hugh;--"that is, of course, if Mr. Arnold has no
objection."
"Of course not. My house, ghost and all, is at your service,
gentlemen," responded Mr. Arnold, rising.
They went to the drawing-room. Mr. Arnold, strange to say, was in a
good humour. He walked up to Mrs. Elton, and said:
"By sleep I suppose you mean spend the night?" said Hugh to
Funkelstein. "I cannot be certain of sleeping, you know."
"Of course, I mean that," answered the other; and, turning to
Euphrasia, continued:
"I must say I consider it rather courageous of him to dare the
spectre as he does, for he cannot say he disbelieves in her. But
come and sing me one of the old songs," he added, in an under tone.
Euphra allowed him to lead her to the piano; but instead of singing
a song to him, she played some noisy music, through which he and she
contrived to talk for some time, without being overheard; after
which he left the room. Euphra then looked round to Hugh, and
begged him with her eyes to come to her. He could not resist,
burning with jealousy as he was.
"Are you sure you have nerve enough for this, Hugh?" she said, still
playing.
"I have had nerve enough to sit still and look at you for the last
half hour," answered Hugh, rudely.
She turned pale, and glanced up at him with a troubled look. Then,
without responding to his answer, said:
"I daresay the count is not over-anxious to hold you to your bet."
"Pray intercede for me with the count, madam," answered Hugh,
sarcastically. "He would not wish the young fool to be frightened, I
daresay. But perhaps he wishes to have an interview with the ghost
himself, and grudges me the privilege."
She turned deadly pale this time, and gave him one terrified glance,
but made no other reply to his words. Still she played on.
"But don't forget the secret door through which we came that night,
Hugh. I distrust the count."
The last words were spoken in a whisper, emphasized into almost a
hiss.
"Tell him I shall be armed. I tell you I shall meet him
bare-handed. Betray me if you like."
Hugh had taken his revenge, and now came the reaction. He gazed at
Euphra; but instead of the injured look, which was the best he could
hope to see, an expression of "pity and ruth" grew slowly in her
face, making it more lovely than ever in his eyes. At last she
seemed on the point of bursting into tears; and, suddenly changing
the music, she began playing a dead-march. She kept her eyes on the
keys. Once more, only, she glanced round, to see whether Hugh was
still by her side; and he saw that her face was pale as death, and
wet with silent tears. He had never seen her weep before. He would
have fallen at her feet, had he been alone with her. To hide his
feelings, he left the room, and then the house.
He wandered into the Ghost's Walk; and, finding himself there,
walked up and down in it. This was certainly throwing the lady a
bold challenge, seeing he was going to spend the night in her room.
The excitement into which jealousy had thrown him, had been suddenly
checked by the sight of Euphra's tears. The reaction, too, after
his partial intoxication, had already begun to set in; to be
accounted for partly by the fact that its source had been chiefly
champagne, and partly by the other fact, that he had bound himself
in honour, to dare a spectre in her own favourite haunt.
On the other hand, the sight of Euphra's emotion had given him a far
better courage than jealousy or wine could afford. Yet, after ten
minutes passed in the shadows of the Ghost's Walk, he would not have
taken the bet at ten times its amount.
But to lose it now would have been a serious affair for him, the
disgrace of failure unconsidered. If he could have lost a hundred
guineas, it would have been comparatively a slight matter; but to
lose a bet, and be utterly unable to pay it, would be
disgraceful--no better than positive cheating. He had not thought
of this at the time. Nor, even now, was it more than a passing
thought; for he had not the smallest desire to recede. The ambition
of proving his courage to Euphra, and, far more, the strength just
afforded him by the sight of her tears, were quite sufficient to
carry him on to the ordeal. Whether they would carry him through it
with dignity, he did not ask himself.
And, after all, would the ghost appear? At the best, she might not
come; at the very worst, she would be but a ghost; and he could say
with Hamlet--
"for my soul, what can it do to that,
Being a thing as immortal as itself?"
But then, his jealousy having for the moment intermitted, Hugh was
not able to say with Hamlet--
"I do not set my life at a pin's fee;"
and that had much to do with Hamlet's courage in the affair of the
ghost.
He walked up and down the avenue, till, beginning to feel the night
chilly, he began to feel the avenue eerie; for cold is very
antagonistic to physical courage. But what refuge would he find in
the ghost's room?
He returned to the drawing-room. Von Funkelstein and Euphra were
there alone, but in no proximity. Mr. Arnold soon entered.
"Shall I have the bed prepared for you, Mr. Sutherland?" said
Euphra.
"Which of your maids will you persuade to that office?" said Mr.
Arnold, with a facetious expression.
"I must do it myself," answered Euphra, "if Mr. Sutherland
persists."
Hugh saw, or thought he saw, the Bohemian dart an angry glance at
Euphra, who shrank under it. But before he could speak, Mr. Arnold
rejoined:
"You can make a bed, then? That is the housemaid's phrase, is it
not?"
"Yes," she answered, with a low lingering on the sibilant; looking
round, at the same time, with an expression that implied a hope that
Hugh had heard it; as indeed he had.
"What! Euphra too?" said Mr. Arnold, in a tone of gentle contempt.
"Do not disturb the ghost's bed for me," said Hugh. "It would be a
pity to disarrange it, after it has lain so for an age. Besides, I
need not rouse the wrath of the poor spectre more than can't be
helped. If I must sleep in her room, I need not sleep in her bed.
I will lie on the old couch. Herr von Funkelstein, what proof
shall I give you?"
"Your word, Mr. Sutherland," replied Funkelstein, with a bow.
"Oh! I don't know. By eleven I should think. Oh! any time before
midnight. That's the ghost's own, is it not? It is now--let me
see--almost ten."
"Then I will go at once," said Hugh, thinking it better to meet the
gradual approach of the phantom-hour in the room itself, than to
walk there through the desolate house, and enter the room just as
the fear would be gathering thickest within it. Besides, he was
afraid that his courage might have broken down a little by that
time, and that he would not be able to conceal entirely the
anticipative dread, whose inroad he had reason to apprehend.
"I have one good cup of tea yet, Mr. Sutherland," said Euphra. "Will
you not strengthen your nerves with that, before we lead you to the
tomb?"
"Then she will go with me," thought Hugh. "I will, thank you, Miss
Cameron."
He approached the table at which she stood pouring out the cup of
tea. She said, low and hurriedly, without raising her head:
"Don't go, dear Hugh. You don't know what may happen."
"I will go, Euphra. Not even you shall prevent me."
"I will pay the wager for you--lend you the money."
Hugh went to his room, and washed his face and hands. Before doing
so, he pulled off his finger a ring of considerable value, which had
belonged to his father. As he was leaving the room to return to the
company, he remembered that he had left the ring on the
washhand-stand. He generally left it there at night; but now he
bethought himself that, as he was not going to sleep in the room, it
might be as well to place it in the escritoire. He opened the
secret place, and laid the diamond beside his poems and the crystal
ring belonging to Mr. Arnold. This done, he took up his book again,
and, returning to the drawing-room, found the whole party prepared
to accompany him. Mr. Arnold had the keys. Von Funkelstein and he
went first, and Hugh followed with Euphra.
"We will not contribute to your discomfiture by locking the doors on
the way, Mr. Sutherland," said Mr. Arnold.
"That is, you will not compel me to win the wager in spite of my
fears," said Hugh.
"But you will let the ghost loose on the household," said the
Bohemian, laughing.
"I will be responsible for that," replied Mr. Arnold.
They reached the room, and entered. Hugh would have begged them to
lock him in, had he not felt that his knowledge of the secret door,
would, although he intended no use of it, render such a proposal
dishonourable. They gave him the key of the door, to lock it on the
inside, and bade him good night. They were just leaving him, when
Hugh on whom a new light had broken at last, in the gradual
restoration of his faculties, said to the Bohemian:
"One word with you, Herr von Funkelstein, if you please."
Funkelstein followed him into the room; when Hugh half-closing the
door, said:
"I trust to your sympathy, as gentleman, not to misunderstand me. I
wagered a hundred guineas with you in the heat of after-dinner talk.
I am not at present worth a hundred shillings."
"Oh!" began Funkelstein, with a sneer, "if you wish to get off on
that ground--"
"Herr von Funkelstein," interrupted Hugh, in a very decided tone, "I
pointed to your sympathy as a gentleman, as the ground on which I
had hoped to meet you now. If you have difficulty in finding that
ground, another may be found to-morrow without much seeking."
Hugh paused for a moment after making this grand speech; but
Funkelstein did not seem to understand him: he stood in a waiting
attitude. Hugh therefore went on:
"Meantime, what I wanted to say is this:--I have just left a ring in
my room, which, though in value considerably below the sum mentioned
between us, may yet be a pledge of my good faith, in as far as it is
of infinitely more value to me than can be reckoned in money. It
was the property of one who by birth, and perhaps by social position
as well, was Herr von Funkelstein's equal. The ring is a diamond,
and belonged to my father."
"I beg your pardon, Mr. Sutherland, for misunderstanding you. The
ring is quite an equivalent." And making him a respectful bow, he
turned and left him.